Saturday, December 1, 2007

Taxi Drivers for Torture

The Free World Radio NetworkI want to thank my guest, Dr. Andy Opel for joining me on today's broadcast of Situation Awareness (click here to listen to the broadcast).

Here is a list of resources from today's program:


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Tuesday, September 18, 2007

The Cineplex's Complex War on The American Prospect

The American ProspectThe Cineplex's Complex War

In his new film, In the Valley of Elah, Paul Haggis offers a portrait of returned Iraq soldiers which critiques not just the war, but also the way we treat our veterans.

by Kay Steiger | September 18, 2007

Two-time Oscar winner, for Crash and Million Dollar Baby, Paul Haggis uses a powerful and heavy-handed image in the opening scenes of his new film: an American flag flying upside down. “Do you know what that means?” the main character Hank, played by Oscar-winner Tommy Lee Jones, asks the Salvadoran groundskeeper he encounters on his drive out of town to look for his missing veteran son. When the response is negative, he tells the man it’s an international distress signal -- and instructs him on how to fly the flag correctly.

The far left has been opposing the Iraq war for some time, but In the Valley of Elah tells the story of moderate, middle America coming to grips with the with its grim realities. In a stock murder mystery format, it shows young men (female soldiers are noticeably absent from the film) who go away to war as heroes and return capable of frightening violence. The movie is finally getting people to talk about something on the fringe of most discussions about the Iraq War: What happens to returning soldiers?

(read the entire article)

Requires free Adobe Acrobat Reader - Click to installAdobe Acrobat copy of The Cineplex's Complex War

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Saturday, September 8, 2007

Preview: No End in Sight

This past Monday I posted a review by Roger Ebert of the new documentary No End In Sight.

Here is the trailer for this highly recommended and much anticipated movie:


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Review: Crashing the States

OpEd News



September 5, 2007

Documentary Review: "Crashing the States" A Journey into the Netroots
by Kim Grant
http://www.opednews.com/

Gary Abramson and Dante Atkins embarked on a mission into netroots anthropology: track netroots candidates and supporters in their native habitat. "Crashing the States," a documentary slated for release in early 2008 is more of a study in the power of the netroots movement than a documentary.

2006's mid-term election victories for progressive candidates signalled what should comfortably be referred to as a second coming of American democracy in the digital age. Across America -- on computers, in living rooms-turned war rooms, hotels, conventions, and banquet halls -- open political dialogues between candidates and their prospective constitutencies rolled along at a comfortable pace. Candidates in the run-up to Election Day did something that most currently seated officials regularly avoid even today - they spoke to voters and listened intently to their feedback.

(read the entire article)

Requires free Adobe Acrobat Reader - Click to installAdobe Acrobat copy of Documentary Review: "Crashing the States" A Journey into the Netroots

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Monday, September 3, 2007

Review: No End in Sight

No End In Sight
No End in Sight
August 10, 2007
by Roger Ebert

Remember the scene in "A Clockwork Orange" where Alex has his eyes clamped open and is forced to watch a movie? I imagine a similar experience for the architects of our catastrophe in Iraq. I would like them to see "No End in Sight," the story of how we were led into that war, and more than 3,000 American lives and hundreds of thousands of other lives were destroyed.

They might find the film of particular interest because they would know so many of the people appearing in it. This is not a documentary filled with anti-war activists or sitting ducks for Michael Moore. Most of the people in the film were important to the Bush administration. They had top government or military jobs, they had responsibility in Iraq or Washington, they implemented policy, they filed reports, they labored faithfully in service of U.S. foreign policy and then they left the government. Some jumped, some were pushed. They all feel disillusioned about the war and the way the White House refused to listen to them about it.

The subjects in this film now feel that American policy in Iraq was flawed from the start, that obvious measures were not taken, that sane advice was disregarded, that lies were told and believed, and that advice from people on the ground was overruled by a cabal of neo-con goofballs who seemed to form a wall around the president.

The president and his inner circle knew, just knew, for example, that Saddam had or would have weapons of mass destruction, that he was in league with al-Qaida and bin Laden, and that in some way, it was all hooked up with Sept. 11. Not all of the advice in the world could penetrate their obsession, and they fired the bearers of bad news.

It is significant, for example, that a Defense Intelligence Agency team received orders to find links between al-Qaida and Hussein. That there were none was ignored. Key adviser Paul Wolfowitz's immediate reaction to Sept. 11 was "war on Iraq." Anarchy in that land was all but assured when the Iraqi army was disbanded against urgent advice from our people in the field. That meant that a huge number of competent military men, most of them no lovers of Saddam, were rendered unemployed -- and still armed. How was this disastrous decision arrived at? People directly involved said it came as an order from administration officials who had never been to Iraq.

Did Bush know and agree? They had no indication. Perhaps not. A National Intelligence report commissioned in 2004 advised against the war. Bush, who apparently did not read it, dismissed it as guesswork -- a word that seems like an ideal description of his own policies.

Who is Charles Ferguson, director of this film? A one-time senior fellow of the Brookings Institute, software millionaire, originally a supporter of the war, visiting professor at MIT and Berkeley, he was trustworthy enough to inspire confidences from former top officials. They mostly felt that orders came from the precincts of Vice President Cheney, that Cheney's group disregarded advice from veteran American officials, and in at least one case, channeled a decision to avoid Bush's scrutiny. The president signed, but didn't read, and you can see the quizzical, betrayed looks in the eyes of the men and women in the film, who found that the more they knew about Iraq, the less they were heeded.

Although Bush and the war continue to sink in the polls, I know from some readers that they still support both. That is their right. And if they are so sure they are right, let more young men and women die or be maimed. I doubt if they will be willing to see this film, which further documents an administration playing its private war games. No, I am distinctly not comparing anyone to Hitler, but I cannot help being reminded of the stories of him in his Berlin bunker, moving nonexistent troops on a map, and issuing orders to dead generals.

Cast & Credits

With Campbell Scott (narrator), Barbara Bodine, Chris Allbritton, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, Col. Paul Hughes, Walter Slocombe, Seth Moulton, David Yancey, Gen. Jay Garner, George Packer, Gerald Burke, Hugo Gonzalez, Samantha Power, James Fallows, Linda Bilmes, Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton, Marc Garlasco, Matt Sherman, Nir Rosen, Paul Pillar, Ray Jennings, Richard Armitage, Robert Hutchings and Yaroslav Trofimov.

Magnolia Pictures presents a documentary written and directed by Charles Ferguson. Running time: 122 minutes.

(read the original post)


Requires free Adobe Acrobat Reader - Click to installAdobe Acrobat copy of No End in Sight

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In The Spotlight: Holding Politicians Accountable

HansMeyer.net Links In the SpotlightWelcome to In the Spotlight, a semi-regular feature of this blog, where I highlight one or more of the links on my personal Web site, www.HansMeyer.net.

Today I'll be highlighting two sites dedicated to "Holding Politicians Accountable" by examining their words and advertisements, and highlighting truths, half-truths, half-lies, and outright lies.

First up is Annenberg Political Fact Check, which is a project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania:

FactCheck.org
The next site, PolitiFact.org, is a new site, established by the St. Petersburg Times of Florida and Congressional Quarterly of Washington, D.C., to monitor truth in 2008 presidential claims.

PoltiFact.org On a side note, I have been reading the St. Petersburg Times for almost forty years now. Fortunately, it is available each day here in Tallahassee. I highly recommend this newspaper for its journalistic integrity, whether in print or on-line.

St. Petersburg Times From the St. Petersburg Times Web site:

In 1975, Nelson Poynter established the Modern Media Institute (now known as the Poynter Institute for Media Studies) as a non-profit educational institution to teach and research journalism, and to which he left his stock in the Times Publishing Company. (read the entire history of the St. Petersburg Times)


It was this move which enabled the St. Petersburg Times to remain independent and to keep it from being taken over by a media conglomerate.

With thanks to Randy Wooden, of the Wooden Foundation, for alerting me to FactCheck.org and PoltiFact.org.

Go to www.HansMeyer.net/Links, then click on Information for FactCheck.org and PoltiFact.org, or click on Traditional Media Sites for the St. Petersburg Times.

Click here for this and previous In The Spotlight posts.

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Raptured: The Final Daze of the Late, Great Planet Earth


As a follow-up to this past Sunday's In The Spotlight, Earl Lee, author of Kiss My Left Behind, has a new book coming out, the latest in his Kiss My Left Behind series:

Raptured: The Final Daze of the Late, Great Planet Earth

I have already added it to my Amazon Wish List!

(read the author's blog).


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Monday, August 13, 2007

Bush is a Jerk

The New RepublicRove Reading:
The Plank - The New Republic
by Jonathan Chait

From the article: "Dick Armey, the House Republican majority leader when Bush took office (and no more a shrinking violet than DeLay), told me a story that captures the exquisite pettiness of most members of Congress and the arrogance that made Bush and Rove so inept at handling them." (read the entire article)

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Sunday, August 12, 2007

Review of 'Frost/Nixon'

St. Petersburg TimesWatching 'Frost/Nixon' leads me back to Bush
By Robyn Blumner
Published August 12, 2007

From the article: "Who would have thought that reliving the constitutional crimes of a president 30 years later would be so timely?" (read the entire article)

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RUN... don't walk to buy your copy of The Crack Book

The Crack Book-Click for larger imageThe Crack Book
by: Eric Decetis, introduction by The New Yorker cartoonist Tom Cheney
Copyright © 2007 Eric Decetis
Sellers Publishing Inc. 2007
ISBN: 1569069751
279 pages

This book will *ahem* crack you up! I generally only read a couple of pages before putting it down (have to breathe, don't you know?). For me, the product description from the Amazon.com site put it best: "Those who possess a taste for the offbeat and the irreverent are sure to be fans of Eric Dectis' engaging satire. " A "taste for the offbeat and the irreverent"... that would be me!

Here's a good review of this book from The Serious Comedy Site.

You can purchase The Crack Book from these on-line sources:


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Thursday, August 9, 2007

Remembering August 9th

The Fat Man mushroom cloud

While Hiroshima has the unfortunate distinction of being the first city destroyed by an atomic bomb, Nagasaki was the second.

62 years ago today the atomic bomb "Fat Man" was dropped on Nagasaki.







Here are a couple of movies I would recommend:


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Fear and Loathing in Middle America

Deer Hunting With Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War An article from the July 20, 2007 edition of The American Prospect:

Sasha Abramsky reviews Deer Hunting With Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War by Joe Bageant (Crown, 288 pages)

Every so often, you pick up a book and two pages in your nose is glued to it. Not necessarily because of the subject matter per se -- though good subject matter certainly helps -- but because the prose is so damned electric.

Usually, I've found, when it comes to reportage like this, the book's author has a single name: Hunter S. Thompson. Recently, though, I've added another name to my stuck-nose lexicon, having been utterly ensnared by Joe Bageant's Deer Hunting With Jesus.

Bageant grew up in a fundamentalist Christian, ultra-working-class family in a claustrophobic little Virginia town named Winchester. Then, in his own terminology, he made his escape. He moved west and made a pretty decent career for himself in the world of journalism. A few years ago, though, he felt a craving for his childhood home and, now deep into middle-age, decided to relocate once more.

So the self-proclaimed socialist, atheist, heavy-drinking, three-times-married Joe returned home ... (Read the entire article)

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