Mystery surrounds Indian child deaths. Fifteen deaths so far and over 3000 taken ill in Assam eight days after UNICEF-sponsored administration of vitamin A supplements in anti-blindness campaign. Incorrect dosing? reaction to co-administered polio vaccine? Contamination of the vitamin supplements? No one is sure, and charges and countercharges are flying. New Scientist

Particle physics telescope explodes: “The underground Super-Kamiokande Observatory in Japan detects elusive neutrino particles from space by using photomultiplier tubes to register the flashes of light they produce when they pass through a huge tank of water.

On 12 November, one of the photomultiplier tubes exploded causing a chain reaction that resulted in most of the other 11,200 light detectors also blowing up.

Scientists say the accident is a major setback, as Super-Kamiokande has produced spectacular results, helping to answer long-standing questions about the Universe. Super-Kamiokande was the very first detector to establish that neutrinos can change into different types.” BBC

UK denies rift over Afghan troops: ‘Downing Street has denied any rift with the US and the Northern Alliance over deployment of troops in Afghanistan.

There have been reports that Tony Blair wants to commit a significant number of troops to establish order in the country, while President Bush favours a smaller force.

But the prime minister’s official spokesman said such reports were “simply not true”. ‘ BBC

Taliban offer up Kunduz, rebels say — “The Taliban offered on Sunday to surrender their last northern stronghold if Arab and other foreign fighters loyal to Osama bin Laden in the city are spared, an anti-Taliban commander said. The northern alliance, meanwhile, agreed to a conference on neutral ground to plan a multiethnic government.

The offer to surrender Kunduz came after U.S. bombers unleashed their heaviest strikes so far on the city. Warplanes were also reported in action near the Taliban southern stronghold of Kandahar and areas of eastern Afghanistan where bin Laden is believed to maintain camps and hide-outs.” AP [Salon]

“The sky was dancing”, as Hal Rager puts it at blivet. Up on a cold, silent dark hillside with a 360-degree horizon, crystal-clear night sky, largely free from light pollution, no need to be doing anything except letting my eyes dark-adapt, no point in directing my gaze to any special spot in the sky. I’m guessing I was seeing 10-15 per minute. At one moment, I was lucky enough to see one of these, exploding, just where I was looking. The meteor-viewing experience of a lifetime, I’m guessing… If you’re reading this early enough, go out tonight for one last chance.

Robert Fisk: Forget the cliches, there is no easy way for the West to sort this out

.

‘Afghanistan — as the armies of the West are about to realise — is not a country. You can’t “occupy” or even “control” Afghanistan because it is neither a state nor a nation.

Nor can we dominate Afghanistan with the clichés now being honed by our journalists. We may want a “broad-based” government, but do the Afghans? We may regard cities as “strategic” — especially if reporters are about to enter them — but the Afghans have a different perspective on their land.

As for the famous loya jirga, a phrase which now slips proudly off the lips of cognoscenti, it just means “big meeting”. Even more disturbingly, it is a uniquely Pashtun phrase and thus represents the tribal rules of only 38 per cent of Afghan society.’ Independent UK

Marylaine Block: The Game of the Name:

‘One of the things that makes me despair of the Democratic party is that its leaders don’t understand why their own issues are always discussed on terms set by Republicans. They simply do not grasp the power of naming: those who name a problem define it, decide which field the game will be played on, and set the rules of play. Because Republicans have been so good at naming issues, Democrats have found themselves voting to keep the death tax, not the estate tax. Since Republicans also have an uncanny ability to get there first with a catchy name for any issue, and to get all of their members to use that name and spout the party line, they constantly force Democratic leaders to react to Republican definitions rather than to define their own issues.

Democrats haven’t grasped the fact that the name game can be played by more than one side…’ Vocabula Review

How Not To Find The Neural Correlate of Consciousness

There are two concepts of consciousness that are easy to confuse with one another, access-consciousness and phenomenal consciousness. However, just as the concepts of water and H2O are different concepts of the same thing, so the two concepts of consciousness may come to the same thing in the brain. The focus of this paper is on the problems that arise when these two concepts of consciousness are conflated. I will argue that John Searle?s reasoning about the function of consciousness goes wrong because he conflates the two senses. And Francis Crick and Christof Koch fall afoul of the ambiguity in arguing that visual area V1 is not part of the neural correlate of consciousness. Crick and Koch?s work raises issues that suggest that these two concepts of consciousness may have different (though overlapping) neural correlates–despite Crick and Koch?s implicit rejection of this idea.

“People tried to donate blood, and they were turned away. Then they tried to donate supplies, but after a short while that wasn’t really needed. What they were left to do was contribute their words and their pictures.”

History Is Impatient to Embrace Sept. 11

“New York September 11 by Magnum Photographers,” an exhibition that opens on Tuesday at the New-York Historical Society, … is one of the first museum shows about the terrorist attacks that are already up or in the works. It’s also the first of at least six exhibitions on the events of Sept. 11 that the historical society plans to present in the next few years in what it calls its History Responds Project.

“We don’t want to become the World Trade Center Museum,” said Kenneth T. Jackson, director of the society. “But we do want to respond.”

They are not alone. Last month, the Museum of the City of New York and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History gathered representatives of 33 museums and other institutions for a meeting to discuss how to collect and preserve the countless artifacts and images that have documented the event. “We are all trying to grope our way through an event that is still painful,” said Robert Macdonald, director of the Museum of the City of New York.

If there is agreement about an urgent need to preserve the materials, there seems to be little about when to display them. Some people think the right time is now.

‘The Pentagon yesterday denied that it had deliberately targeted al-Jazeera, but said it could not explain why the office was hit.’ Al-Jazeera suggests US bombing of its Kabul office was deliberate:

‘(An al-Jazeera spokesperson) said he believed that al-Jazeera’s office in Kabul had been on the Pentagon’s list of targets since the beginning of the conflict but the US did not want to bomb it while the broadcaster was the only one based in Kabul.

By this week, however, the BBC had reopened its Kabul office under Taliban supervision, with the correspondents William Reeve and Rageh Omar.’ Guardian UK

Upgraded version of Alltheweb.com search engine offers near real-time searches in over 3,000 online news sources. Sure, it’s just a press release in the guise of a news story, but sounds like it may be worth a look, as searching for breaking news is not one of the Web’s strong suits:

‘Entering “Anthrax,” for example, can bring up news stories that were updated less than an hour ago from both national and local news organizations from various countries, and in a multitude of languages. The advanced search allows a user to set language preferences and also to pick what sections of the news to search.

Fast has added a new search “vertical,” allowing specific news searches. However, the most recent results from the news vertical are also displayed in a gray box on top of the general search results page.

“We want to show our customers that we can crawl fast, this is a subsecond index,” said Rob Rubin, executive vice president and general manager of Fast’s Internet division. “We are now continuously spidering and indexing over 3,000 news sources.” ‘

Here, for a start, is an Alltheweb search on “alltheweb”. I haven’t added any filtering options so it comes up with hits in many languages.

Evidence on engines puzzling in crash probe — ‘The White House and the safety board said Monday the crash appeared to be an accident, but the spread of aircraft parts – and the inability to blame the crash on an engine explosion immediately – raised some doubts about that conclusion.

”It’s a very mysterious and disturbing turn of events,” said the former official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to maintain the investigators’ confidence.

In presenting the news to the public, the NTSB chairwoman, Marion Blakey, put on a positive face. The investigation is her first; she was sworn into office on Sept. 26.’ Boston Globe

“People tried to donate blood, and they were turned away. Then they tried to donate supplies, but after a short while that wasn’t really needed. What they were left to do was contribute their words and their pictures.”

History Is Impatient to Embrace Sept. 11

“New York September 11 by Magnum Photographers,” an exhibition that opens on Tuesday at the New-York Historical Society, … is one of the first museum shows about the terrorist attacks that are already up or in the works. It’s also the first of at least six exhibitions on the events of Sept. 11 that the historical society plans to present in the next few years in what it calls its History Responds Project.

“We don’t want to become the World Trade Center Museum,” said Kenneth T. Jackson, director of the society. “But we do want to respond.”

They are not alone. Last month, the Museum of the City of New York and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History gathered representatives of 33 museums and other institutions for a meeting to discuss how to collect and preserve the countless artifacts and images that have documented the event. “We are all trying to grope our way through an event that is still painful,” said Robert Macdonald, director of the Museum of the City of New York.

If there is agreement about an urgent need to preserve the materials, there seems to be little about when to display them. Some people think the right time is now.

Astonishing conclusion from conservative columnist Cal Thomas: George McGovern Was Right

A staggering 58,000 Americans are dead because Johnson would not listen to his inner voice, revealed on the tapes, or the voices of McGovern, Hatfield, Gruening and Morse, who many conservatives at the time labeled un-American.

Among the many lessons of Vietnam, which, as Beschloss notes, can teach us something about present and future conflicts, is that no president should have exclusive power when it comes to committing so many American lives and resources to a war.

The Johnson tapes should also teach conservatives a lesson. Many anti-war activists love this country as much as those who supported the Vietnam War. Just because someone is of a different party or persuasion does not necessarily mean they are wrong.

The Private Business of Public Radio

: “NPR’s Ratings, Revenue and Reputation Are All Surging. But with Rate Hikes Coming and Foes in Congress, Management Is Touchy about NPR’s Being Seen for What It Really Is: A Pretty Darn Good Business… The fact is that underneath its quirky, bohemian image, NPR – which by its own estimation is the biggest producer of news, information and cultural programming in radio – subtly has evolved into something that in many ways resembles a well-run, aggressively entrepreneurial company.” Washington Business Forward

“This is the year for people to go out and see the event…” Coming Soon: Prime View of a Meteor Shower — ‘On Sunday morning, well before sunrise, astronomers expect the skies to be streaked with light in what could be the most impressive Leonid meteor shower in three and a half decades.

The ebb and flow of this year’s Leonid shower will offer a multi- part spectacle across the globe. The opening act is predicted to peak around 5 a.m. Eastern time on Nov. 18, with the East Coast of North America getting the prime view.’ NY Times

The Road to Baghdad: ‘In 1998, a group of 40 conservatives wrote an open letter to President Clinton calling for the United States to overthrow Saddam Hussein. Today many of the signers of that letter hold important government posts, including Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, his chief deputy Paul Wolfowitz, and Richard Perle, chairman of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board. Together with right-wing activists in the private sector, they see the post-September 11 military campaign as the perfect opportunity to achieve their goal of toppling the Iraqi leader.’ The American Prospect

Are ObL nuclear weapons fears a hoax? Declan McCullagh, in his mailing list, has done alot of footwork on this issue; I’m retracing his steps:

As I noted below, The Times of London reported last week that partly burnt documents in a hastily abandoned

safe house indicated that al Qaeda could have nuclear weapons.

Quite bizarrely, rotten.com after analysis of photos of the documents claims that at least one is a well-known geek-driven spoof which originally appeared in 1979 in the wonderful, and now defunct (but succeeded by the Annals of Improbable Research) Journal of Irreproducible Results:

The project will cost between $5,000 and $30,000, depending on how

fancy you want the final product to be. Since last week’s column,

“Let’s Make a Time Machine”, was received so well in the new

step-by-step format, this month’s column will follow the same

format.

Did al Qaeda not recognize the tongue-in-cheek nature of the article? Did they recognize it and think they could deceive US intelligence? Did someone else plant the documents in order to attribute them falsely to the terrorists?

US Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge conceded the information could

have been found on the internet but administration sources remain concerned. Among those who follow the nuclear threat, there’s pretty much a consensus that your average college physics major could make a bomb, given the materials.

Interestingly enough, the United States government conducted a

controlled experiment called the Nth Country Experiment to see how

much effort was actually required to develop a viable fission weapon

design starting from nothing. In this experiment, which ended on 10

April 1967, three newly graduated physics students were given the task

of developing a detailed weapon design using only public domain

information. The project reached a successful conclusion, that is,

they did develop a viable design (detailed in the classified report

UCRL-50248) after expending only three man-years of effort over two

and a half calendar years. In the years since, much more information

has entered the public domain so that the level of effort required has

obviously dropped further.

A Hard Look at Iraq Sanctions: “The humanitarian disaster resulting from sanctions against Iraq has been frequently cited as a factor that motivated the September 11 terrorist attacks. Osama bin Laden himself mentioned the Iraq sanctions in a recent tirade against the United States. Critics of US policy in Iraq claim that sanctions have killed more than a million people, many of them children. Saddam Hussein puts the death toll at one and a half million. The actual numbers are lower than that, although still horrifying.

Changing American policy in Iraq is an urgent priority, both for humanitarian reasons and as a means of addressing an intensely felt political grievance against the United States. An opportunity for such a change may come soon, as the UN Security Council considers a “smart sanctions” plan to ease civilian sanctions. As we work to change US policy and relieve the pain of the Iraqi people, it is important that we use accurate figures and acknowledge the shifting pattern of responsibility for the continuing crisis.” The Nation

Urban Legend Machine: make your own urban legend. “When you’re finished, e-mail it to everyone you know and see how long it takes to come back to you. Remember, when you’re connected to the Internet it’s important to believe everything that you read.”

From reading & writing:

‘…a reaction to my reading of the news about the “American aid workers” who have escaped from the Taliban. I’m glad they were not harmed. That said, the Taliban were right about them–they were whacko Christians from Waco, Texas who were caught with video & audio tapes that could have only one purpose: to convert Afghans to Christianity… I grew up among people like this, people who believe A) that there is a literal hell & B) You are going there if you don’t accept their religious beliefs. (Remind you of certain other people in the news recently?) Missionaries have done as much damage in the world in the last 200 years as armies–indeed, they are often the thin end of the wedge, the fat end of the wedge being colonial armies of occupation. So I have no sympathy for these “young women” & even less for their sanctimonious pastor in Waco who said on NPR this evening that they “were not afraid of death” because they believed in Jesus. Last night on NPR there was a story that quoted a young Muslim man as saying that his friend, who had died while on jihad in Afghanistan, was “already in Paradise with seventy black-eyed virgins.” He hadn’t been afraid of death either, nor was the speaker, unless it was mere bravado. I don’t see much of a difference between these two world views myself. None of these people have an irony organ. How about a crack team of secular humanists for Afghanistan? Ah, that wouldn’t work either, even with irony, as we should have learned in Vietnam & Iran with our self-serving attempts at “nation building.” ‘

Magical Thinking is forthcoming poetry from reading & writing‘s Joseph Duemer. An example:



Abandoned Bluetick Bitch

Numbed with self-loathing,
we abandon the emissaries
of grace. Chained to a tree

beside the empty rental
she hollowed out a den
for herself & her young.

By the time we found her
the water they'd left her
was a couple of days gone.

When it was gone she would have
slept, not dreaming, letting the pups
nurse her sparse milk

& when the smallest died
she ate it to keep
her strength & cleanse the den,

depriving coy dogs & foxes
an expedient scent.
It's likely there were two more

before we found her.
Ribs covered by a tissue of dry skin,
she was nothing -- a shadow

on the dirt & was just able
to raise her head & take
a little water from my hand

before turning to nose
her three live pups awake.
Reader, it is true, there is

horror everywhere worse
than this & cruelty that beggars
imagination, but this

is my horror, local & particular;
these were my neighbors did this,
who, without even the excuse

of racial or religious psychosis,
committed this wrong. Who live
in this same light & shadow I live in.

Let us kill one another
with heedless abandon -- we deserve it --
but not these poor relations

whose lives are without malice
& whose motives are transparent.
Let us kill one another.

Report: Al-Qaida Had Poison Formula: ‘Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida network had a formula for making ricin, one of the deadliest known poisons, The Times newspaper reported Friday.

The Times said it found instructions for making the biological chemical ricin ? an untraceable poison that is twice as deadly as cobra venom ? in an al-Qaida safehouse in Kabul.’

Washington Post

Further into Ferlinghetti: gordon.coale was thinking about Lawrence Ferlinghetti when he noticed the snippet I used in my anniversary epistle below. So he dives in.

In observance of this site’s second birthday, I just checked in on my Bloghop account. To date, 34 people have rated me. Of those, nine think FmH either “sucks” or “hate it.” Now this may be a little like the joke in which I ask you to let me know if you don’t get this message; it’s not likely you’re still reading here. I sincerely hope not — life seems too short to waste your surfing time on something you revile. But on the other hand, there are some people who love to hate, and you fascinate me. So if you, or anyone else like you, is out there, why not write me and let me know what it is you don’t like about Follow Me Here. Is it my choice of subject matter? my manner and tone? my politics? my muddled thinking? my tortured language? my design sense? the slow load time of the page? or what? As an enticement, I’ll publish your comments here if you request me to. Use some choice adjectives…

“When I saw the dead and dying Afghani children on TV, I felt a newly recovered sense of national security. God Bless America.”

Katie Sierra, 15 (Charleston WV)

Is there going to be an America left worth defending? From the westerby report, on the occasion of govt contemplation of the revocation of Posse Comitatus:

“I cannot name a single enumerated liberty that following September 11 has not been brutally interrogated and tortured either in that sham of democracy known as Congress or by the jibbering appartchiks of the op-ed pages. There has always been a huge gulf between the promise of America and its reality, but since September 11, the already rickety bridge between the two, is being burned. If the attack on freedom continues, America will come to exist simply as a morally empty, morally indefensible land mass between two oceans. I cannot send my children to die for that.”

Now, how much can US tighten the vise?: ‘…the Soviet Union controlled many Afghan cities and much of the country for years, yet came to grief in the mountainous redoubts to which the Taliban is now retreating.

But in their glory years, the mujahideen had both the civilian population and large stocks of US weapons behind them. Today, the fighting men in the caves have neither. Their adversaries include not only US special-operations groups, but also local warlords who sense that history is no longer on the Taliban’s side.’ Christian Science Monitor

RAWA’s appeal to the UN and World community: ‘The people of Afghanistan do not accept domination of the Northern Alliance!

Now it is confirmed that the Taliban have left Kabul and the Northern Alliance has entered the city.

The world should understand that the Northern Alliance is composed of some bands who did show their real criminal and inhuman nature when they were ruling Afghanistan from 1992 to 1996.

The retreat of the terrorist Taliban from Kabul is a positive development, but entering of the rapist and looter NA in the city is nothing but a dreadful and shocking news for about 2 million residents of Kabul whose wounds of the years 1992-96 have not healed yet.’

Demanding to Be Heard: ‘Advocates for Afghanistan’s women are pushing to ensure that women’s freedoms are protected under a post-Taliban government.

…As they have seized territory across northern Afghanistan, Northern Alliance officials have announced that women would no longer be forced to live under such severe limitations. Women, they announced, are free to return to work and girls would be allowed to attend schools once more. Still, it remains unclear whether the Alliance will actively protect and ensure women’s freedoms.

Given that most women’s groups have little if any political clout, their political concerns may be largely ignored by foreign diplomats and Afghan politicians alike.’ Mother Jones

Meanwhile, Dan Hartung, at lake effect, opines:

“Signs of defeatism: The defeatists will not recognize that there were Afghans who appreciated our intervention (however self-serving it was in ultimate purpose); who will play down Afghans’ newly reacquired freedoms to play music, watch television, fly kites (a reminder: not child’s play, but a traditional Afghan sport), discard burqas, or to use a soccer stadium for soccer instead of public stonings and executions; who will not celebrate the release of the aid workers (perhaps even legitimizing the nonsense “preaching” charges, which should be offensive to anyone who believes in liberal, secular democracy); who will not recognize the dramatically changed nature of the military operations; who will emphasize that the Taliban executed a “strategic retreat”, a trap into which we are walking (always possible; if so, bring it on); who will scoff at the notion that we are pursuing al Qaeda, even as we target them ever more precisely; who will attribute our strategy to secret plans and motives; who continue to demand “evidence” even as admissions and threats emanate from the cabal.

These people are insane, and the compassionate approach should be to get them help immediately.”

I’m partly with you Dan, but, oh, at least half defeatist. You have clearly chosen sides, but keep your eyes open! Only time, not strength of fervency, will tell.

More defeatist news:

Victorious Alliance says: ‘We don’t want your peacekeepers’:

‘The victorious Northern Alliance provided a foretaste of trouble by insisting yesterday that it would take care of security in Afghanistan and that an international peacekeeping force was unnecessary.

Within the last 48 hours, the alliance has defied the US by capturing Kabul and has rejected calls from America, Britain and the United Nations to create a broad-based government that would include moderate elements of the Taliban.

The latest alliance rebuff and the re-emergence of feudal warlords in the south of the country dampened celebrations in Washington and London over the ease with which Kabul fell on Tuesday.’ Guardian UK

Massacre threat to Taleban’s foreigners:

‘Northern Alliance forces have threatened to massacre up to 6,000 foreigners fighting with the Taleban in the besieged province of Konduz.

Local fighters would be given a chance to surrender, but Alliance commanders said they had given their troops explicit orders to shoot every foreign fundamentalist ? including a handful of British Muslims ? among the enemy ranks.’ Times of London

Afghans Returning Home, Vindicated and Vengeful

:

‘Drenched with joy, shadowed by bloodlust, the self-repatriation of Iran’s huge Afghan population is under way. This border town, about 10 miles from Afghanistan, has for years been a way station for Afghans coming to Iran to work or escape persecution. Now the traffic is flowing the other way….

(Some) made clear that the war was far from over, and that it could continue on a disturbingly intimate scale. Some said they were going home to finish off the Taliban for good, and suggested that neighbors who had not sufficiently opposed the Taliban would also be called to account.

After their relatives had been killed, their property taken, their dignity assaulted, some returnees said it was impossible to simply go home and pick up their plows, pretending nothing had happened.’ NY Times [“FMHreader”, “FMHreader”]

ACLU Action Alert: Bush Administration Plans Threaten Protections Guaranteed by the Constitution — ‘Congress has already given the Administration virtually everything it asked for to fight terrorism. But in the days since a sweeping new anti-terrorism bill was signed into law, the Administration has continued to announce questionable policy after questionable policy. Congress must take action now to ensure that the President preserves the constitutionally guaranteed checks and balances that are so central to our democracy.’ One-click messaging to your Congressional delegation to oppose the military tribunals.

Feeling our way to democracy: review of philosopher Martha Nussbaum’s ‘cognitive’ theory of emotions as embodied in her Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotions.

In Nussbaum’s view, our emotions are not mere inner forces that buffet us about, constantly threatening to unseat reason. They are themselves modes of responsive intelligence that express our conscious and unconscious judgments of what we value and what we believe will promote the flourishing of our lives.

All the evaluative judgments implicit in emotions, she is careful to say, connect to specific historical, social and individual life circumstances. San Francisco Chronicle

Without being Freudian, Nussbaum has an essentially psychoanalytic notion of emotion, viz. that it is essentially narrative in structure — “The understanding of any single emotion is incomplete until its narrative history is grasped and studied for the light it sheds on present response.” She also apparently makes a great case for compassion, discussed at length, dismantling conservative critiques which regard it as politically irrelevant.

Bruce Jay Friedman: Some Thoughts on Clint Eastwood and Heidegger: ‘As far as I’m concerned, he’s more alienated than the whole pack of them. I think he’s as every bit as alienated as Beckett himself; what do you think of that?’ From a witty essay that originally appeared in 1976 and now resurfaces in Friedman’s recent collection of nonfiction pieces, Even the Rhinos Were Nymphos.

Leader of the pack

In the American reportage of Afghanistan one byline stands out in the fog of war: Seymour Hersh of the New Yorker. In one scoop after another, the 64-year-old Hersh has thrashed his colleagues, including his old rival Bob Woodward, of the Washington Post and Watergate. Hersh led the pack on the intelligence failure on the September 11 attack on the World Trade Centre; he had the best insider account of disarray at the CIA; he revealed US wiretaps on the ugly shenanigans within the Saudi royal family, he reported US contingency plans to disarm Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, and, most controversially, he reported that a raid behind Taliban lines by US elite commandos was far from the “flawless” operation the Pentagon claimed. It was an “outrage” that left several US troops wounded, a military officer told Hersh. And all this from the freelance Hersh’s tiny, cramped Washington office. Guardian UK

The dog trots freely in the street…

and the things he sees

are his reality

–Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Happy birthday everyone — Follow Me Here, and following me here and there, are two years old today.

From The Daily Brew: “The really scary part isn’t the military courts, the wiretapping of lawyers, or the arrests without charges. We expected that. After all, the Republicans had sent a mob, hired and paid for with American taxpayer dollars, to seize power in the first place. If the GOP was willing to stage a riot in broad daylight to deny Americans their right to vote in Florida, it is hardly surprising they would use Executive Orders to deny Americans their right to a fair trial back in D.C.



No, the scary part is the almost complete silence that has greeted these actions!
Americans, understandably shell shocked by one disaster after another, seem unable to as much as complain as one after another of their freedoms are stripped away.” [emphasis added]

Bin Laden’s nuclear secrets found: “Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network held detailed plans for nuclear devices and other terrorist bombs in one of its Kabul headquarters.

The Times discovered the partly burnt documents in a hastily abandoned safe house in the Karta Parwan quarter of the city. Written in Arabic, German, Urdu and English, the notes give detailed designs for missiles, bombs and nuclear weapons.” The Times of London

Seizing Dictatorial Power: ‘Misadvised by a frustrated and panic-stricken attorney general, a president of the United States has just assumed what amounts to dictatorial power to jail or execute aliens. Intimidated by terrorists and inflamed by a passion for rough justice, we are letting George W. Bush get away with the replacement of the American rule of law with military kangaroo courts.’ NY Times William Safire, bless his heart, adds his conservative spleen to the rising hue and cry about what it has occurred to some for the past several weeks to call the Bush Dictatorship.



Brain scans can reveal liars
— ‘Brain scans can reveal whether someone is lying or telling the truth, US researchers have discovered. When people lied, fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) scans revealed significant increases in activity in several brain regions.

Daniel Langleben and his colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania hope fMRI could be used for more accurate forensic lie detection.’

“The fact that deception requires extra work in a number of brain regions may indicate that the deception involves inhibition of the ‘default’ response – truth,” adds Langleben. “Interestingly, this agrees with the traditional definition of deception dating back to Saint Augustine: ‘Deception is denial of truth’.”

New Scientist

A particularly bad time for the development of such an intrusive technology, with the massive abrogation of rights underway in the US. And a saintly notion that there is nothing between total candor and outright deception, demonizing the private spaces between, won’t help.

Nuclear warhead reduction could leave plutonium at risk: ‘The US and Russia may have promised to take 9000 nuclear warheads out of service but they have no idea of how to dispose of the plutonium they contain, experts say.

Programmes for locking the plutonium into radioactive waste or burning it in nuclear reactors are being abandoned by the Bush administration because of their high cost. The default option, storage, could leave the plutonium more vulnerable to being stolen and made into bombs by terrorists.’ New Scientist

Jim Crace’s Being Dead was one of the most disturbing novels I’d read in a long time, unflinchingly looking at (literally) death and decay. Now his The Devil’s Larder, here reviewed in the London Review of Books by Ian Sansom, promises more of the same on the tip of the tongue.

Jubilation at the fall of Kabul and apparent collapse of the Taliban all over Afghanistan is rampant. It’s obligatory to mention Kabuli men’s headlong rush to the barber for a shave. But, hey folks, the war’s not over by a longshot, and it gets dicier from here, as the Taliban retreat to the Pashtun areas of the south where they have enjoyed popular support; and to the mountains and caves. On the other hand, there is word of indigenous uprising against the Taliban even in Kandahar, euphemistically referred to as their “stronghold” in just about every news report I’ve read; anti-Taliban sentiment may be widespread, and the Taliban may be fleeing population centers in general. However, this may not be a rout but rather a strategic regrouping either for a counterattack or the kind of protracted guerrilla war that defeated the Russians. Analysts caution about the perils of assuming things are as they seem. Northern Alliance capture of Kabul accompanied by atrocities and looting; Robert Fisk comments that we ought not be surprised, and Simon Jenkins wonders if we ought to regret having this tiger by the tail, reminding us that it was factional fighting among these same people, when they were the mujahideen fighting the Russians, that gave the Taliban their ‘in’ seven years ago. Here’s an interview with foreign correspondent Robert Kaplan, whose travels with the mujahideen in 1990 were chronicled in his Soldiers of God. International stabilization may be necessary in post-Taliban areas. ObL, of course, is nowhere to be found; perhaps it would be a good idea to ask the ‘remote viewers’ US intelligence is reportedly using to predict future terrorist attacks to tell us what cave he’s in? In fact, why not let the remote viewers act as spotters for US bombing runs? The US and the Northern Alliance seem to have it out for al-Jazeera, whose Kabul office was hit by two American bombs (it seems, because its coverage has been seen in some circles as pro-terrorist) and whose Kabul correspondent fled after threats that he would be killed if found in Kabul when the Northern Alliance arrived. I’d been wondering, but some undisputable good news is that the Western aid workers imprisoned by the Taliban in Kabul have been freed.

Woman pregnant twice — ‘An Italian woman is due to give birth in a hospital in Rome this week to a baby girl – before returning three months later to have triplets.

If both deliveries are successful, it is thought that this will be the first such case in history.’ BBC

For those who share my interest in art brut (‘outsider art’): The Mystery Gallery: ‘Van Freeman decorated his rented home with crosses and biblical mosaics, then vanished. What will happen to his work?’ Los Angeles Times

In Minnesota, “… a man arrested for shoplifting hundreds of dollars worth of Nicorette gum claimed he was recruited to steal the stuff so it could be sent to Pakistan to aid terrorism.

America: Think of It as a Brand Name

Osama bin Laden is the greatest brand manager in the world. He has a niche product with limited appeal, a relatively small budget and limited distribution. Yet his Al Qaeda brand has 100% unaided awareness and is gaining share in a market segment that we should own: decent Islamic men and women in Kuwait, Egypt, Nigeria and even the U.S. Los Angeles Times

Why ‘Gilligan’s Island’ and ‘The X-Files’ Hold the Key to America’s Global Reach

Paul A. Cantor is a strange creature: a conservative professor of English at the University of Virginia who specializes in Shakespeare, loves pop culture and is flat-out funny (he once referred to Mel Gibson’s “Hamlet” as “Lethal Bodkin”). In his new book, Gilligan Unbound: Pop Culture in the Age of Globalization, Cantor examines four of his favorite television shows–“Gilligan’s Island,” “Star Trek,” “The Simpsons” and “The X-Files”–and explores how they speak to America’s understanding of its place in the world. Cantor is a proponent of a thoughtful conservatism that should be interesting to liberals and instructive for conservatives, for he has the courage to say out loud that not everything on television is dross and that some of it is not only entertaining but significant as well. Los Angeles Times

I love it! Coming back to this page after 24 hrs. away, it seems you are starting to use the ‘comments’ facility. Thank you, and keep it up.

Playing the WWII Card

Perhaps it was like this even before 9/11, but lately it seems as though every guy in every plane I’ ve been on is reading either a Tom Clancy novel, or one or another book by flag-waving historian, Stephen Ambrose. The hot sellers at the airport bookstores, and indeed bookstores in general, are tales of wartime heroism, with retrospectives on World War Two and the so-called “Greatest Generation” leading the pack.

This bodes well for the Bush Administration, which needs the public to continue thinking about victory and the triumph of good over evil (a constant in Ambrose’s history offerings and Clancy’s provincial spy stories), especially as the war on Afghanistan drags out, and weeks go by with no terrorists “brought to justice.”

Listening to commentators and everyday folks discuss the current war in Central Asia, one gets the distinct impression that Americans are in fact desperate for another “greatest generation.”

Tim Wise deconstructs the WWII analogies. AlterNet

Adbusters Magazine‘s annual anti-consumerist call for a Buy Nothing Day on the day after Thanksgiving runs headlong into post-nine-eleven patriotic shopping exhortations (“Shop While the Bombs Drop”) , polarizing its readers.

New Harrison Song A Telling Sign? — ‘When it comes to music, apparently, George Harrison isn’t afraid of “knock-knock-knockin’ on heaven’s door.”

Harrison, 58, who was reported to have undergone more cancer treatment for a brain tumor in New York recently, has recorded his first song since radiotherapy. It’s part of musician Jools Holland’s new album, and the song’s publishing credit is RIP Ltd. 2001.’ Thje Boston Channel

A Yugoslav journalist’s advice to US media: ‘Jasmina Teodosijevic-Ryan is a broadcast journalist with an extensive background in Yugoslav media, and served as an analyst for the United Nations Liaison Office in Belgrade’:

“How and when does journalism become propaganda? As a writer, broadcaster and media analyst from the former Yugoslavia, I have observed the process first-hand. It starts slowly, then spreads like a stain.” Tompaine.com

Heard on my local NPR station one day last week: “One morning late this summer, Turners Falls

poet Patricia Pruitt woke up and wrote a poem full of abstract, disturbing,

apocalyptic images
. She says she has no idea what prompted her to write it, but she didn’t think too

much about it until she found the poem again in late September. Suddenly,

those strange images had an almost eerie significance in the post September

11 world.”



Attempt
August 28, 2001


The last mark
the red mark
was decisive
It oblit....(O don't say
obliterated again.)
START OVER

The last mark
the red mark
was decisive
It hit walls
and sidewalk
It fell from
helicopter
propellers
dripped out
of concrete into
the bulldozer's maw
it became the sole
color
day and night
A kind of red weather
and.. (Not and. Not decisive. It was not
decisive.)

START AGAIN

The last mark
the red mark
created red weather
Day and night
It was the sole color
A sort of rain
or fog
envelopping cafes
Graves everywhere
No one could make it STOP
Not the ones with power
The ones without STOP
we're or were helpless
roofs in the dark...
START OVER

The hard thing
can't be held
or tied down,
turned off or
on This red
weather eludes
helicopters
floats alone
out of reach

As roofs
ones with
ones without

START AGAIN

The last mark
Red walls
sidewalks slid
into concrete maw
Rooves cafes powerless
ones with
ones without
can't be held
tied down
It floats everywhere
helpless STOP

NOT HELPLESS NOT POWERLESS
start over

The ones with
the ones without
can't be held
or tied down
turned off or on...

Good. Stop There.

Study says touch-tone phone systems could be used to help detect callers’ dementia

Automated touch-tone phone answering systems could help screen older callers for early signs of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, researchers say.

In a study of 155 patients, a touch-tone system identified warning signs in 80 percent of patients who had been diagnosed with mental impairments by their doctors. It also gave passing grades to 80 percent of patients diagnosed as normal.

The results appear in Monday’s Archives of Internal Medicine.

Participants were given recorded instructions such as “Spell ‘fun’ on the touch-tone pad,” and “Press ‘1’ if the following sentence makes sense: ‘We wanted to cut down the tree in the yard so we went to the garage to get a hammer,”‘ said psychologist James Mundt, a research scientist at Healthcare Technology Systems Inc. in Madison, Wis., and lead author of the study. SF Chronicle

William Safire: Prague Connection: Czech counterintelligence has revealed it was tracking Mohammed Atta as he met in Prague in April, 2001 with the Iraqi consul to the Czech Republic; their assumption is that the consul was trying to recruit Atta to blow up the headquarters of Radio Free Europe, whose ideological influence on the Iraqi opposition apparently irks Saddam Hussein. But Safire prefers to believe Iraq was assisting Atta with his Sept 11th plans. Not only what they talked about, but whether the Czechs informed American intelligence agencies at that time, remains in question. Safire explains that Saddam’s assistance might have been incognito, as ObL has no high regard for the Iraqi regime but it would be in Saddam’s interest to facilitate an attack on the US. Safire also mentions “an unpublished report” suggesting that Saddam facilitated a leading Iraqi physician’s trip to minister to ObL in Afghanistan in May, 2001.

In other coverage of Iraq, Defectors Tell of Kuwaitis

in Secret Jail in Baghdad
: “Two Iraqi

defectors, veterans of the country’s

intelligence service, say they worked in a secret

site outside of Baghdad where 80 Kuwaitis

captured during the 1991 war were detained in

an underground prison.” One of the defectors, who had befriended several of the prisoners despite strict orders not to fraternize and to refer to them only by number, provided names of four detainees which Kuwaiti officials have confirmed are among the missing from the Gulf War. NY Times [“FMHreader”, “FMHreader”]

One of a series of ‘songs for the City’ written for the New York Times Magazine:

‘Laurie Sadly Listening’ by Lou Reed

Laurie if you're sadly listening

The birds are on fire The sky glistening
While I atop my roof stand watching
Staring into the spider's clypeus
Incinerated flesh repelling
While I am on the rooftop yearning
Thinking of you

Laurie if you're sadly listening
Selfishly I miss your missing
The boundaties of our world now changing
The air is filled with someone's sick reasons
And I had thought a beautiful season was
Upon us

Laurie if you're sadly listening
The phones don't work
The bird's afire
The smoke curls black
I'm on the rooftop
Liberty to my right still standing
Laurie evil's gaunt desire is
Upon we

Laurie if you're sadly listening
Know one thing above all others
You were all I really thought of
As the TV blared the screaming
The deathlike snowflakes
Sirens screaming
All I wished was you to be holding
Bodies frozen in time jumping
Bird's afire
One thing me thinking
Laurie if you're sadly listening
Love you
Laurie if you're sadly listening
Love you

Oh, no, Kesey is gone at 66. New York Times obituary

“As I’ve often told Ginsberg, you can’t blame the President for the state of

the country, it’s always the poets’ fault. You can’t expect politicians to

come up with a vision, they don’t have it in them. Poets have to come up

with the vision and they have to turn it on so it sparks and catches hold.”

–Ken Kesey

Web woos Nessie — ‘Fans of the Loch Ness monster who hope to catch a glimpse of the legendary creature could be in luck thanks to a moving Webcam now filming the murky depths of the Scottish lake.’ globetechnology.com

Better Killing through Chemistry: ‘Buying chemical weapons material through the mail is quick and easy… “It’s a cinch” to obtain off-the-shelf chemicals needed to make sarin nerve gas, as Scientific American editor George Musser found out.

Study reveals self-esteem inflation among US kids: ‘According to the report, in a recent issue of Personality and Social Psychology Review, self-esteem among America’s youth in general and college students in particular has been on the rise for the past 30 years. Meantime, societal indicators that these feelings are warranted, such as higher SAT scores and lower rates of teen pregnancy, have not kept pace with attitudes.’ Self-esteem ‘based on nothing,’ as the study’s author puts it, sets people up for disappointment. ‘(He) blames the trend on the self-esteem movement in schools, which teaches children slogans and affirmations such as “I am lovable and capable.” ‘ Reuters Health

Call for Action – Safeguard Communications Privacy:

  • President Bush has asked the head of the European Union to

    amend privacy laws in Europe so as to allow law enforcement

    access to records of personal communications

  • The proposal is contrary to international human rights norms

    and has been rejected by European Privacy Commissioners and

    by Members of the European Parliament

  • The proposal also adversely impacts the privacy interests

    of US citizens

  • US and European groups are asked to endorse the letter to

    EU President Guy Verhofstadt expressing respectful but

    firm opposition to proposal

  • To endorse: send name of organization and URL, email and fax

    for contact person to eu_letter@epic.org.

    If questions, contact Cedric Laurant [chlaurant@epic.org]. [via Declan McCullagh’s Politech newsletter]

Journal issues treatment guidelines: ‘Anthrax infection became part of doctors’ daily repertoire yesterday as the world’s most influential medical journal published detailed guidelines on diagnosing and treating the deadly bacteria.

Doctors are now expected to consider anthrax as a possible cause for the thousands of skin lesions and flu-like symptoms they encounter every day.

The guidelines [link lead to .pdf of article –FmH], published yesterday on the New England Journal of Medicine‘s Web site, are based on close study of the 17 Americans stricken with the disease in recent weeks.

…”Most physicians haven’t ever seen a case of anthrax. [The article] was to bring people up to speed in a medical sense,” said the article’s author, Dr. Morton Swartz of Massachusetts General Hospital’s department of medicine.’ Boston Globe

U.S. Army gassed the turnpike in ’50s

For two decades, from 1949 to 1969, the federal government conducted biological warfare experiments without warning in locations stretching from the New York City subway to San Francisco Bay. Instead of a deadly germ, the Army used dust or bacteria that were thought at the time to be harmless.

But some of the substances ultimately turned out to be not so harmless after all – with one death and 10 additional cases of pneumonia or related infections often blamed on a fog spewed over San Francisco in 1950. Philadelphia Daily News

New York wildlife group calls hunting a terror threat. Protesters call for the suspension of New York State’s hunting season this year; ‘aghast that being armed and disguised in camouflage is legally permitted in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Hunting “is just a wonderful opportunity for someone who would want to do a terrorist act,” (Anne Muller of Wildlife Watch) said. “They don’t have to report their whereabouts and can be lurking anywhere. They can lurk in groups.” ‘ Fox News

Orlando Sentinel columnist says: America needs a briefing consolidation: ‘There will be hell to pay if, in the process of trying to topple an extremist Islamic government in Afghanistan, we inadvertently install one in Pakistan, which has a fine army and nuclear weapons. That?s why the president of Pakistan is urging us to move fast. He knows that the longer the bombing campaign goes on, the stronger the opposition will grow.

Unfortunately, the picture emerging in Washington is one of confusion. One day the Pentagon says that we bombed Red Cross food warehouses a second time by mistake and that central command is investigating to determine how the mistake was made. The next day the central command says we bombed the warehouses on purpose because the Taliban is stealing the food. Don?t the joint chiefs know what the central command is doing? Apparently not.’

Red Cross Collected Unneeded Blood — too much to store; thousands of pints of blood collected after the emergency, perhaps 1:5 of the pints collected overall, will be destroyed now they’re reaching the end of their shelf life. Washington Post

Police state: A coalition of liberals and conservatives begins to coalesce around disquiet about the absurdly-named USA PATRIOT — “Uniting and Strentghtning America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism” — (honest!) Act.

Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, one of only three Republican lawmakers to buck the House leadership and the Bush administration to vote against this legislation, is outraged not only by what is contained in the antiterrorism bill but also by the effort to stigmatize opponents. Paul tells Insight, “The insult is to call this a ‘patriot bill’ and suggest I’m not patriotic because I insisted upon finding out what is in it and voting no. I thought it was undermining the Constitution, so I didn’t vote for it ? and therefore I’m somehow not a patriot. That’s insulting.”

Paul confirms rumors circulating in Washington that this sweeping new law, with serious implications for each and every American, was not made available to members of Congress for review before the vote. “It’s my understanding the bill wasn’t printed before the vote ? at least I couldn’t get it. They played all kinds of games, kept the House in session all night, and it was a very complicated bill. Maybe a handful of staffers actually read it, but the bill definitely was not available to members before the vote.”

And why would that be? “This is a very bad bill,” explains Paul, “and I think the people who voted for it knew it and that’s why they said, ‘Well, we know it’s bad, but we need it under these conditions.'” Meanwhile, efforts to obtain copies of the new law were stonewalled even by the committee that wrote it. Insight Magazine

Why Trade Center Towers Stood, Then Fell — ‘Exactly which failure began the sequence — which occurred under extraordinary conditions never envisioned in the buildings’ design — remains a matter of intense debate. Some analysts hold that too much evidence was destroyed in the collapses to say for certain.

But a leading theory has emerged as teams have sifted through the wreckage, examined photographs and videos and run computer simulations on aspects of the disaster. Many engineers now believe that relatively lightweight steel trusses holding up the reinforced concrete floors sagged in the heat and failed first when the connections that held them to the tightly spaced palisade of steel columns on the outside of the buildings gave way.’ NY Times [“FMHreader”, “FMHreader”]

“Sheep may be brighter than we think.

According to British scientists, they probably experience some degree of emotion and could even be capable of conscious thought. [So… referring to us as a “nation of sheep”, as has been fashionable in certain sociologically but apparently not ethologically astute circles since William Lederer’s seminal book by that name in the ’50’s, actually is disparaging… to the sheep?? -FmH]

This astonishing verdict is based on the ability of sheep to remember old faces, be it a member of the flock or even a shepherd.

Sheep may be capable of using the same system (as humans) to remember and respond emotionally to individuals in their absence…

New studies have revealed that sheep can remember up to 50 sheep faces as well as familiar human faces, such as their shepherd.” BBC

FBI Press Briefing on linguistic and behavioral analysis of the anthrax letters by the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime. We now have a catchy media-friendly title and a glitzy logo for our anthrax alarm — look at the web page. By the way, could the perpetrator have been a weblogger?? To wit:

He may have exhibited significant behavioral changes at various critical periods of time throughout the course of the Anthrax mailings and related media coverage. These may include the following:

  1. Altered physical appearance.

  2. Pronounced anxiety.

  3. Atypical media interest.

  4. Noticeable mood swings.

  5. More withdrawn.

  6. Unusual level of preoccupation.

  7. Unusual absenteeism.

  8. Altered sleeping and/or eating habits.

Today’s New York Times op-ed columnists suggest aspects of Bush Administration (or, after Counterpunch, “Bush Dictatorship”) cluelessness:

  • Frank Rich: War Is Heck:

    “Disingenuous official claims

    of our allies’ strengths and

    our enemies’ weaknesses

    will come back to haunt the

    administration if all does not

    go smoothly.”

  • Anthony Lewis: Ideology As Usual:

    “George W. Bush has not yet

    understood what a wartime

    president has to do at home:

    Put aside ideological politics

    so he can be president of all

    the people.”

Bin Laden Has Nuclear Arms, He Tells Paper — ‘A leading

Pakistani newspaper published an interview with Osama

bin Laden today in which he said, “We have chemical and

nuclear weapons as a deterrent and if America used them

against us, we reserve the right to use them.” ‘ He declined to answer an interviewer’s question about how and where he had obtained the weapons.

(A)sked… if he could justify the deaths of “innocent

people,” including hundreds of Muslims, in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on

the United States, Mr. bin Laden called this a “major point of jurisprudence,” replying that,

“America and its allies are massacring us in Palestine, Chechnya, Kashmir

and Iraq. The Muslims have the right to attack America in reprisal.” He

said, “The Sept. 11 attacks were not targeted at women and children. The real targets were America’s

icons of military and economic power.”

Mr. bin Laden blamed the “entire America” for “anti-Muslim policies.”

“The American people should remember that they pay taxes to their government, they elect their

president, their government manufactures arms and gives them to Israel and Israel uses them to massacre

Palestinians,” he said.

Late in the interview, Mr. bin Laden allowed that “there are many innocent and good-hearted people in

the West.” But, he said, “The Jewish lobby has taken America and the West hostage.”

[US analysts, while recognizing that bin Laden has made efforts to acquire nuclear materials, consider it unlikely that he has succeeded. How much can we rely on such assurances, especially in the face of such a convoluted reasoning that would rationalize and propel their indiscriminate use?]

Ananova, admittedly one of those more sensationalistic British media sites, goes further:

Bin Laden may have shipped nuclear bomb to US: “Osama bin Laden may have already shipped weapons of mass destruction to the US.

Pakistan’s Frontier Post says the Al-Qaida network has transported nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons there.

It claims at least two briefcases containing nuclear weapons may have reached US shores.

The report says Pakistani and US investigators have been able to identify that at least one such weapon has been acquired by Al Qaida from Central Asian groups.

The device of Russian origin, can be activated through a timer or cell phone command.”