Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Bring on the $5 Gallon of Gas

"What this country needs is a good, seven-cent nickel." --Groucho Marx
Last week, I came just short of my first $60 transaction at the gas station. It was startling. What's going on? Where are the gas lines?

Gas prices are slowly going up, and we're slowly adjusting to the pain. Now John McCain and Hilary Clinton are calling for a repeal of the gas tax until (if?) prices go back down.

This position reveals an ignorance of supply-and-demand economics that is shocking for a U.S. Senator. As far as I'm concerned, this position all but disqualifies either of them from the office of President of the United States.

Gas prices are rising because demand is growing (China and India are buying more oil to support their growing economies) and because supply is shrinking (conflict in the Middle East, fewer and smaller new fields being developed).

Gas prices are also rising in this country because the value of the dollar is sinking relative to other currencies. This is happening primarily because we're so far in debt to other nations, like China, to support our lifestyle. So, even if crude oil prices stabilized, we would still need more dollars to buy a barrel as the value of the dollar slips.

So, as Thomas L. Friedman points out in his op-ed New York Times editorial Dumb as We Wanna Be, cutting the gas tax will make our current problems worse. It will encourage gas consumption by artificially lowering the retail price of gas and by putting us deeper in debt thanks to the loss of tax revenue.

People are struggling, but there has to be a better way to help them then by cutting the gas tax. McCain and Clinton both know this, but they're desperate for votes. I think we should freeze the retail price of gas at $5 per gallon. That way, for every gallon we buy, OPEC and oil companies get $3.50 and the U.S. Treasury gets $1.50. People will naturally economize (I had better stop at the store on my way home from work since I'm now more conscious of the costs of travel), and the price of crude might go down due to decreased demand. If we kept the gas price frozen, though, the treasury will receive the cost savings and we would continue to discourage frivolous consumption.

What might we do with all the tax dollars coming in? I don't know...maybe improve our public transportation or put in some bike lanes. Maybe we'll retire some of our debt and shore up the value of the dollar.

Either way, gas is heading to $5 per gallon. It's up to us as voters to decide if we want to keep any of that money in the U.S.

Photo credit: "Fire and Water" by peasap

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Monday, February 25, 2008

When the Enemy Calls America

"291 enemy of the state" by Mahi Teshneh
"To put it bluntly [long pause] to put it bluntly, if the enemy is calling into America, we really need to know what they're saying, and we need to know what they're thinking." --President George W. Bush, this morning
This was how the President urged lawmakers to give his administration free reign to eavesdrop on international calls. It also might signal that he's approved covert CIA psychic, telepathic, and ESP programs because of our need to know what they're thinking.

But really, Mr. President, don't we need to know how the enemy is feeling?

Before we do all of this, let's find out where the enemy is. First, do we have the enemy's phone number? If so, I hope that you will resist the urge to call the enemy, wait for him to pick up, and then hang up on him. That is so junior high.

What do we do if the enemy calls from a phone booth, or a neighbor's house? Ugh, that's a problem. We should probably filter all calls coming from the enemy's neighborhood -- no, country. Countries.

Damn it! America has so many enemies. Why? It's not fair.

Oh, wait. I get it. We'll need to filter all incoming international phone calls. Now you're talking. But isn't that a lot of work? Well, we'll leave it to the NSA to figure that out. It won't do us any good unless we tap the outgoing calls, too. Let's put that in the bill. Don't forget to monitor Internet traffic, too. The enemy will soon have access to DSL, but you didn't hear that from me.

I'll admit it kind of bothers me that this kind of eavesdropping will inhibit, say, our media's ability to gather accurate news worldwide since, you know, anyone conveying sensitive information that is critical of U.S. policy would kind of be an enemy (not you Joe Wilson, but I'm looking at you, Daniel Ellsberg.). Oh well, you can't make an omelete without breaking some eggs. Given the choice between freedom of the press and safety from the enemy, I know which I would choose!

There, now we're safe. I feel such a relief! Congress can leisurely investigate steroid use in baseball without having to worry about the enemy.

But here comes that worried feeling again, Mr. President. What if this plan doesn't work? What if there's another attack that was planned through homing pigeons, satellite phones or, shit, I don't know, telegraphs or something? What will save us then? Detention camps? Suspended elections? Loyalty oaths? Dude, we have one...it's called the Pledge of Allegiance and it sill works like a charm.

Sometimes, though, I catch myself wishing there was a way to talk to the enemy once we get him on the phone. At the very least, we might honestly appraise what we did, decades ago, to start this war and what we've done in the years since to feed the flames.

God, that's so naive! I wish I hadn't said it. We're America, and we're at war! We're in it to win it! Hooah!

Just one thing, Mr. President. If Congress gives you the authority to use this power, you must promise not to abuse it this time.

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Friday, February 08, 2008

Obama for President

Barack'n the Mic, courtesy of barackobamadotcom on Flickr
I saw a sticker on a pick-up truck yesterday with the word Clinton on it. The "C" in Clinton was in the shape of a hammer and sickle, insinuating that Bill Clinton or Hilary or both are closet Soviets, which is just dumb. The Clintons have been the most conservative, business-friendly Democrats to come to power in the last 100 years.

Many republicans have held a vitriolic hatred for Bill Clinton and his presidency that I think is due, in part, to his encroachment on their territory. He's the man who reformed welfare and reduced Federal spending during his tenure.

I can't understand, however, why so many people hate Hillary Clinton. Is it because she bucked the narcotized, smiling First Lady persona so capably reinstated by Laura Bush? Was it the way Hilary tried to orchestrate health care reform in this country, or merely that she got involved at all?

I don't know. I've never been a Hillary hater. I think she would make a capable president. I just don't think she would be elected to the office if given the nomination.

Hillary's electability is not why I'm voting for Barack Obama in tomorrow's caucus. I'm voting for him because he's the first leader I've ever had the chance to vote for.

I started voting in 1988. I voted then for Michael Dukakis, a politician, who lost. In '92, I voted for Bill Clinton, a politician, who won. Over the years, I've voted for politicians for governor, mayor, and so on down to dog catcher. Not one of them, however, inspired me as a leader. I considered records, experience, and political philosophy when voting. I figured that inspiring figures -- people like JFK and FDR -- just didn't exist any more in these days of speech writers and campaign consultants.

And then, one night, I heard Obama speaking to an audience at the University of Washington, broadcast on the local NPR station. This was back in 2006, before he decided to run. I just heard the end of the speech, but listened as he took questions from the audience. The force of his intellect and compassion came ringing through in every spontaneous answer. He provided a stark contrast to our current microphone-shy dummy of a president.

I thought, "I want this man to be our next president."

Sure, Obama has no direct executive experience, but neither does Hilary, unless you give her credit for Bill's eight years in office (by that reasoning, I'd be an expert in animation). Also, intelligence and hope do not always combine for the best presidencies (case in point, Jimmy Carter). But I think Obama has a better chance to unite us as a country than Hillary Clinton or John McCain, for that matter.

I'll vote for him tomorrow. I hope to vote for him in November, too.

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Thursday, September 06, 2007

Stop the Nazi Comparisons

Comparing by The Department
Mike Godwin, perhaps in despair of the reductive reasoning becoming so common in the Internet's newsgroup arguments, coined "Godwin's Law," which reads:
"As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one."
The Nazi comparison was evoked, usually in heated debate, on almost any subject, but especially in political discussions. It may be less so now, but only because Godwin's Law has been a successful counter-argument.

The Nazi comparison is the doomsday device in a debate. It is powerful and immediate. It is the apex of human horror. It is meant to swiftly and completely annihilate an opponent's arguments and rebuttals.

I thought about this last night while listening to NPR's Fresh Air. The September 4, 2007 show had two guests discussing with show host Terry Gross the influence the Israel lobby has on the American government. First, author Steven Walt asserted some of the arguments of his new book, The Israel Lobby, which is basically that a loose confederation of Jewish and non-Jewish groups in this country skews this country's Israel policy toward a particularly right-wing, hawkish view of the Middle East that runs counter to U.S. interests--and even Israel's interests. During the interview, he clearly denounced antisemitism and stressed a distinction between the broad range of views held by Jewish people, both here and abroad, and the narrow focus of the Israel lobby.

Walt was followed by Anti-Defamation League national director Abraham Foxman who did everything he could to muddy the debate, including, yes, invoking the Nazis. He also tried to conflate the Israel Lobby with all Jewish people everywhere.

Even though it wasn't a head-to-head debate, Walt was a lot more convincing than Foxman.

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Friday, July 13, 2007

RIAA Killed the Internet Radio Star

Setup for Webcast by davidking
I haven't been following the whole battle over Internet radio because I don't really listen to it that often and that I just figured that the Record Industry Association of America (RIAA) was only shooting themselves in the foot. This morning I was asked to write a blog post for Amazon about a new development in Internet radio's impending demise: SoundExchange decided not to enforce its crippling new royalty fees, which were due on Monday.

So, because I haven't been paying attention to this issue, I did a little research and was surprised what I learned. According to Wikipedia, SoundExchange doesn't just collect royalties for its members, but collects royalties for non-members as well. Gosh, that's awfully nice of them. If I write a song and it gets played on an Internet radio station, they will collect the royalties, but for me to claim those royalties, I will have to pay them a fee for administrative expenses. Well, okay, that only seems fair.

But here's where I gasped. There is no way to opt out of the collection. That means that Sound Exchange collects royalties on Creative Commons works! Creative Commons is a copyright alternative that allows creators to retain some rights to their work while giving away other rights for the public good. For example, the image I'm using in this blog post is covered under a Creative Commons license that allows me to use the image for free as long as I give credit for the image and don't use the image to make money.

This is why I thought the RIAA was shooting itself in the foot. Clearly, they want to kill Internet radio. It's a mostly hobby industry that generates little revenue and yet opens their assets to piracy. Since there is an obvious demand for Internet radio, I thought the stations could survive by playing independent acts using Creative Commons to bypass the industry, create an audience, and get their music heard.

This ruling by the Copyright Office effectively cuts off the retreat of webcasters into CC. Let that sink in for a moment. It makes it illegal for you to write and perform a song and give it to a webcaster to play for free. You can give it away as a free download, but you can't stream a song for free.

That made me mad. It's just one more brass-knuckle tactic that makes the RIAA so easy to dislike. They realize that their 20th century purpose as quality gatekeepers and music suppliers has been made obsolete by digital music. They're getting desperate to hold onto their power. Media bubbles up now. It no longer trickles down.

I called local offices for my two Senators and my Congressman and urged them to support the Internet Radio Equality Act, S. 1353 in the Senate and H.R. 2060 in the House of Representatives. I hope you will, too.

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Friday, June 29, 2007

Bicycling is the Answer, Part II

I now buy the frozen, canned orange juice concentrate. It's lighter and smaller than the gallon jug.
It's taken me ten months, from the time I posted the first part until this week, to actually reduce my car trips and bicycle to town.

It's 12 miles round trip with a few tough hills, but it's mostly flat. The reason why it's taken me so long to get around to actually riding my bike in a utilitarian way is because most of the trip is along the bike lane of the two-lane highway 305. Cars and trucks whiz by at plus or minus 55 mph. A couple of months ago I baby-stepped this fear by walking to town along the highway. It probably wasn't any safer, but it seemed like it was a good idea at the time.

It's not such a big deal. Any morning you can see dozens of bicycle commuters in the road's luxuriously wide bike lane. But it did take mental leap to do for the first time this week.

I met a friend for coffee this morning and told him I rode to town. He bikes regularly around the island, but when it came out I took the highway, he blurted out, "Jesus! Don't ever do that again!" He favors the longer, more hilly scenic route to town that has narrow or non-existant bike lanes but slower traffic.

At the risk of sounding righteous, I think biking down the highway is a political act. What let me take the risk was seeing others do it every day for years. When someone sees me huffing up a hill, I hope they think, "Damn, if that fat slob can do it, so can I."

What I find surprising about biking to town this way is that it doesn't really take that much more time. Driving to town takes 10 to 20 minutes, depending on traffic. Biking there takes a half hour.

Also surprising is what people cast out of their cars. I rode around a pair of knee-high tan leather boots in the bike lane.

I hope I can keep it up. It's easy now. Lots of daylight, not too hot or too cold, not much rain.

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Ron Paul Vs. Rudy Giuliani

Congressman Ron Paul has commandered the Straight Talk Express since John McCain isn't using it.
Here we are, almost six years after the start of the "War on Terror," and a Republican Congressman running for president has the balls to say that honestly look at the causes of terrorism. Don't expect him to last very long on the campaign trail.

In a May 15 Republican debate, Ron Paul (R, Texas) had this exchange with Rudy:
PAUL: No. Non-intervention was a major contributing factor. Have you ever read the reasons they attacked us? They attack us because we've been over there; we've been bombing Iraq for 10 years. We've been in the Middle East -- I think Reagan was right.

We don't understand the irrationality of Middle Eastern politics. So right now we're building an embassy in Iraq that's bigger than the Vatican. We're building 14 permanent bases. What would we say here if China was doing this in our country or in the Gulf of Mexico? We would be objecting. We need to look at what we do from the perspective of what would happen if somebody else did it to us. (Applause.)

[Debate moderator Wendell Goler]: Are you suggesting we invited the 9-11 attack, sir?

PAUL: I'm suggesting that we listen to the people who attacked us and the reason they did it, and they are delighted that we're over there because Osama bin Laden has said, "I am glad you're over on our sand because we can target you so much easier." They have already now since that time -- (bell rings) -- have killed 3,400 of our men, and I don't think it was necessary.

GIULIANI: Wendell, may I comment on that? That's really an extraordinary statement. That's an extraordinary statement, as someone who lived through the attack of September 11, that we invited the attack because we were attacking Iraq. I don't think I've heard that before, and I've heard some pretty absurd explanations for September 11th. (Applause, cheers.)
Whoa. Do you see how fast and hard the Republican establishment pounced on him for "blaming the victim?"

Let me be clear about one thing: No sane person in this world could fail to see those who died on September 11, their families, and those who were injured and displaced, as completely innocent victims of a stupendously evil crime. That crime, though, is in response to an American foreign policy that has valued access to oil and strategic interests over human life and national sovereignty for more than 60 years.

Most of this country, however, want to see our 9/11 dead as martyrs. Some would like to see us kill a dozen for each person who died that day (conservative estimates show we have already done that and more; many of as innocent). Giulianni and his ilk would like us to continue trying to stomp out a swarm of flies using a boot. The boot industry would like to see that, too.

As horrible as September 11 was, it pales in comparison to the misery we've brought to Iraq. It eclipses even the horror of Hussein's brutal rule, if you use violent deaths and infrastructure collapse as a measurement, which this administration never has.

The Republicans will continue to use 9/11 in their campaigns, warning us that we should never forget what a group of 19 men and probably a dozen planners did to us and yet never once ask why. "They hate us for our lifestyle." That's bullshit. They hate us because we defile their holy land with our presence. They use terrorism as a way to leverage our strength and size against ourselves. We could no better "War" Al Qaida out of existence than war a virus out of our body.

The turmoil won't end until we leave Iraq.

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Friday, September 01, 2006

The Administration's Bad News Friday

They've done it again. The Bush administration releases bad news on a Friday.

This time, it's a Pentagon report called "Measuring Security and Stability in Iraq." It's a report required by Congress from the Pentagon quarterly. This latest installment is bleak and details the growth in fighting between religious factions in Iraq over the last three months. The report also shows a decline in Iraqi public opinion about Iraq's future.

Certainly, this is bad political news for the President and his Republican supporters. Is it coincidence that the report was released on the Friday afternoon before a three-day holiday weekend? Of course not! The Sunday news shows have already been safely taped, most journalists are off, and most Americans are happily enjoying the last of the summer away from newspapers, radios, and TVs.

They do this every time.

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Monday, August 21, 2006

The Fire That May One Day Burn Us All

Terror by eerkman
The War on Terrorism is oxymoronic in that terrorism, a tactic used to incite fear in a general public, is provoking in us a predictable fear response: War. We lose the war by fighting it. This war makes us more vulnerable to terrorism, not less.

So where are we almost five years later? We've lost almost as many U.S. soldiers in Iraq since 2003 as citizens killed on 9/11 and, by some estimates, 20 times that in Iraqi civilian death. OBL is still at large, the Taliban is still causing trouble in Afghanistan, Iran has grown in power and influence, oil prices have climbed, Arab moderates all over the region are sidelined by extremists, and America's standing in the world has greatly diminished--we inspire less fear and less hope in the world.

Can anyone seriously argue that our response to 9/11 has been a net benefit to anyone other than Al Qaida and Iran? We're all glad that Saddam is behind bars, but that by itself does not justify turning Iraq into a proving ground for foreign jihadists and a shooting gallery for sectarian revolutionaries.

We're overdue for new leadership and a new direction. We need less war and more good-faith diplomacy. We need to stop fueling the fire that may one day burn us all.

President Bush said this morning that we can't leave Iraq now because that would cede too much power to the Iranians. Too late, I say. They already have it, and he was the one to give it to them.

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Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Bicycling is the Answer

Just Ride It
Lately, I've been thinking that bicycling is the answer for America's problems. Gas prices too high? Bicycle. Growing rates of obesity and depression? Bicycle. Stuck in traffic? Bicycle. Worried about greenhouse gasses? Bicycle. I risk sounding like the monomaniacal George Bush, whose answer to every problem was "Tax cuts."

Certainly, if it worked for China, then it can work here.

I notice bicycles and bicyclists everywhere now. Yesterday I stopped and complimented a woman who had a sign on the back of her bike that read, "Powered by Ben & Jerry's. 100 miles to the gallon." There's an H.G. Wells quote on the wall of Bainbridge Island Bakers, saying, "When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of the human race." Critical Mass, a bicycle advocacy group, has been making headlines all around the country by grouping together into mobs and taking over traffic, much to the ire of motorists.

Like a lot of things, bicycling has been an activity more for the inside of my head than for my body. But that is changing. In the last couple of weeks, I've gone on progressively longer and longer rides. I started with two-mile rides, and last night completed a five-mile ride. It's a lot of hard work, and the hills around here can be pretty tough. But it is fun, especially when you're coasting downhill.

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Thursday, June 29, 2006

Two Years of Sitting on Our Hands

I came across an old news story at the Guardian this morning about a suppressed 2004 Pentagon report that predicts in the next 20 years, or 18 years since this report is two years old, climate change will provoke widespread rioting and the use of nuclear threats to defend dwindling food and energy supplies. Other highlights:
  • The UK going "Siberian," meaning covered in ice
  • Several European cities lost to rising seas
  • Climate change is a much bigger threat to global stability than terrorism
Part of the article voices the frustration of scientists who felt their warnings had been ignored by the Bush administration.

Bob Watson, chief scientist for the World Bank, is quoted in the article saying, "Can Bush ignore the Pentagon? It's going be hard to blow off this sort of document. Its hugely embarrassing. After all, Bush's single highest priority is national defence. The Pentagon is no wacko, liberal group, generally speaking it is conservative. If climate change is a threat to national security and the economy, then he has to act. There are two groups the Bush Administration tend to listen to, the oil lobby and the Pentagon."

Well, considering this administration's lack of action on climate change, we know for sure which of those two sources he favors.

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Monday, June 05, 2006

Why Gay Marriage Was No Threat in 2005

Gay marriage was a big issue in 2004, and is starting again to be in 2006, but why was it no issue in 2005? I bet you've already figured out this conundrum. The answer is there were no national elections in 2005.

When a politician says that gay unions is a threat to the institution of marriage, they really mean that everything but gay unions are a threat to their majority:

  • The Iraq war
  • Osama bin Laden
  • The federal budget deficit
  • The U.S. trade deficit
  • NSA's warrantless wire-
    tapping of U.S. citizens
  • FEMA
  • Oil prices
  • Darfur
  • The Valerie Plame affair
  • Global warming
  • New Orleans
  • The Jack Abramoff scandal

  • bill-frist
    Bill Frist thinks Christians are suckers
    With all these difficult, unresolved problems keeping good, honest, hard-working Americans awake at night, Senate majority leader Bill Frist pushed this amendment to the floor for debate today even though he knew he was nowhere close to the 66 votes needed to pass. Rather than doing something for America, he's decided to waste the Senate's time with this odious, overtly political gesture. That's the power of the Senate majority leader.

    You see, he wants to make sure that conservative Christians come out and vote for him and his ilk despite the grand-scale larceny of his tenure and the Old Testament-style bloodletting of the Iraq war. If they really cared at all about gay marriage, wouldn't they have been working on it since the last time they talked up this amendment?

    Sadly, it might work for him, but I hope that Jesus helps people see right through his evil, self-serving motive.

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    Wednesday, February 08, 2006

    What's at Stake with Domestic Spying

    My hat is off to Congresswoman Heather Wilson (R, New Mexico), who is calling for full investigations into the NSA domestic wiretapping scandal. She is chairwoman of the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Technical and Tactical Intelligence, a watchdog for the NSA, and she is made suspicious of this program by the lack of information coming from the administration. According to the New York Times, she is apprehensive "about whom the agency is monitoring and why."

    According to this poll, "64% of Americans believe the National Security Agency (NSA) should be allowed to intercept telephone conversations between terrorism suspects in other countries and people living in the United States." In polls, everything boils down to the language. Sure, two-thirds believe Uncle Sam should listen to all of bin Laden's incoming calls. I do too. In fact, we have a legal process that allows our government to do that: The FISA court.

    Now, ask yourself whether the NSA should be allowed to also surveil Americans who receive those calls and the people they call. Not as much, huh? What about bin Laden's wrong numbers? What about any incoming call from a suspicious region of the world? Terrorists do use pay phones, you know.

    Of course, we don't know if the NSA is going this far or further since no one in the administration will discuss the program's limits with Congress. They assure us that a line is being drawn, but they clam up whenever Congress or the press ask for even the most vague details of the line. The administration doesn't even want us talking about this issue, since it alerts Al Qaida about the program--as if they couldn't have already guessed.

    So here are a few reasons why we, as Americans, should not tolerate domestic spying:
    1. We have no evidence it works. Cheney et al claim that this program could have prevented the September 11 attacks. This assertion totally forgets the intelligence and leadership failures leading up to the attacks. Remember the memo, "bin Laden Determined to Attack Inside U.S.?" They tell us now that the program has foiled several terrorist plots. So where's the evidence? Our leaders in Congress have the clearance to see this evidence. Convince them and you'll convince me.
    2. It's a slippery slope. The administration says we need this tool in the War on Terror. Don't we need this tool in the War on Drugs? Will we be able to use it in coming wars on deadbeat dads, tax evasion, and armed robbery? How can we keep from using a useful tool that is totally outside any supervision of Congress? In Monday's hearing, Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez implored Congress to trust the administration would not abuse this power. But the whole reason we have this FISA law is because previous administrations did abuse this power, even spying on journalists and civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr. Considering the track record of Bush & Co., they do not deserve this kind of trust.
    3. It will change us. What do I care? I've got nothing to hide from the government. But what about the professions that rely on secrecy and confidence, such as lawyers, psychiatrists, clergy, and especially journalists. When we know that these people could be wiretapped, we will believe that they are wiretapped. This is vitally important to our media. If people inside our government can't safely blow the whistle on things going on inside--like they did with this program, and Watergate, and many other scandals--then our republic will crumble. The three branches of our government check each other's power; the press checks them all.
    Clearly we need to defend ourselves from foreign threats, but it makes no sense to saw off our arm just to use it as a club.

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    Monday, October 17, 2005

    Tiny Tractor, Tiny Farm

    lawn-tractor
    Toys for Old Boys
    I went for a walk around my neighborhood yesterday and noticed a guy down the street was putting a bundle of sticks into a wagon. Well, it wasn't really a wagon but wagon-sized trailer for a mini tractor. As I was walking past, I saw him get on top of this loud contraption, drive it about 10 feet to another part of his front yard, and start unloading the bundle of sticks.

    "This guy is pretending he's a farmer," I thought.

    I've long been curious who lived there. It's a nicely kept place that was marred last year by horrible "Re-Elect George Bush" signs. I feel bad about ridiculing the guy since he's older and quite heavy. Maybe he has mobility issues and, in order to work in his beloved yard, he has to use his tiny toy tractor. But I was bothered by the sheer waste of it all. Didn't he hear the call of our Dear Leader to reduce our fuel consumption by avoiding unnecessary car trips?

    Maybe the Prez should add unnecessary tractor trips to his speech next time.

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    Saturday, August 20, 2005

    The Repeated Headline: Bush Invokes Sept 11 to Defend Iraq War

    I wish I had a nickel for every time I have heard this news story in the last year.

    I'm starting to think that our Dear Leader is a monomaniac. Before September 11, 2001, tax cuts were his mantra. Every problem, ever solution was tied to passing his proposed tax cuts. Jobs? Tax cuts. Tech boom? Tax cuts. California energy crisis? Tax cuts.

    Now, when the country is more and more skeptical of our Iraq adventure, he talks about September 11th as the reason we need to stay the course. I can imagine the warm, wet whispers in his ears from his oil and war profiteer friends, telling him to speak frequently and seriously about 9/11.

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    Sunday, May 01, 2005

    It's the Fundamentalism, Stupid

    There is no war on terrorism. It just doesn't exist. It's a code that means a war on Islamic Fundamentalism -- that group of believers who feel that Islam is the only truth and that its truth is to be applied to everyone regardless of their will. That's the real danger here. If you want to be a devout Muslim, fine. If you want your family to adhere to orthodox Islam, that's fine, too. When you want Islam to be the basis for the law that governs all men, including non-Muslims, that's unfair.

    Of course, we have our own homegrown fundamentalists here, too. The May 2005 issue of Harper's magazine has two stories about Fundamentalist Christians who are building armies who are going to fight for their way of life.

    Even though they are reportedly credited with handing the election to George Bush, these Fundamentalist Christians see themselves as underdogs and view the present has a pitched, foretold battle between good and evil. They're the type of people who skip the gospels about love to go straight for the parts about angels with swords and galloping horsemen. These people are militantly anti-gay, anti-feminist, and they openly sneer at anything with the words "secular" or "humanist" in them.

    In short, they're a threat to this country's safety and welfare.

    This isn't the first time in American history where we've had ne'er-do-wells stirring up the bottom of the barrel of our politics and culture. In the past, we've been saved by the irresistibility of widow's pocketbooks, which usually brings down the top of their organization. Or these groups eventually breakdown along lines of dogma, finding some obscure bible verse to disagree and disband over.

    What's different about this movement, though, is that it seems a natural reaction to the September 11th attacks. People in this country have been told by our own President that Al Queda has attacked us because they hate "our way of life." Despite the fact that this is patently wrong--Al Queda has many more concrete grievances against us, namely our presence in the Middle East--polls show that many Americans believe it's true. Sects normally at war with each other over dogma now join together in a coalition of Christ. Many of them openly call for a reconfiguration of this country along Christian lines. It's as if by sharpening the contrast between "us" and "them," we have a better chance of winning this inchoate "war."

    Just as the atheistic element of Soviet communism rallied American Christians around the cross, so too does jihad and abortion. Their followers, nudged forward by "Left Behind" books and cultural war issues, think that they're living in a nascent spiritual war. Certainly, it is an idea fostered by movement leaders like James Dobson, head of Focus on the Family.

    All of this worries me. When people are tricked into thinking they're at war and they're tricked about the reasons and basis for that war, all sorts of bad things start cascading down. Think of the misery of Viet Nam and the folly of the Spanish American war.

    I've got nothing against Christians. Just don't tread on me or my rights.

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    Sunday, October 17, 2004

    John Kerry for President

    © 2004 The New York Times Company

    Senator John Kerry goes toward the election with a base that is built more on opposition to George W. Bush than loyalty to his own candidacy. But over the last year we have come to know Mr. Kerry as more than just an alternative to the status quo. We like what we've seen. He has qualities that could be the basis for a great chief executive, not just a modest improvement on the incumbent.

    We have been impressed with Mr. Kerry's wide knowledge and clear thinking - something that became more apparent once he was reined in by that two-minute debate light. He is blessedly willing to re-evaluate decisions when conditions change. And while Mr. Kerry's service in Vietnam was first over-promoted and then over-pilloried, his entire life has been devoted to public service, from the war to a series of elected offices. He strikes us, above all, as a man with a strong moral core.



    There is no denying that this race is mainly about Mr. Bush's disastrous tenure. Nearly four years ago, after the Supreme Court awarded him the presidency, Mr. Bush came into office amid popular expectation that he would acknowledge his lack of a mandate by sticking close to the center. Instead, he turned the government over to the radical right.

    Mr. Bush installed John Ashcroft, a favorite of the far right with a history of insensitivity to civil liberties, as attorney general. He sent the Senate one ideological, activist judicial nominee after another. He moved quickly to implement a far-reaching anti-choice agenda including censorship of government Web sites and a clampdown on embryonic stem cell research. He threw the government's weight against efforts by the University of Michigan to give minority students an edge in admission, as it did for students from rural areas or the offspring of alumni.

    When the nation fell into recession, the president remained fixated not on generating jobs but rather on fighting the right wing's war against taxing the wealthy. As a result, money that could have been used to strengthen Social Security evaporated, as did the chance to provide adequate funding for programs the president himself had backed. No Child Left Behind, his signature domestic program, imposed higher standards on local school systems without providing enough money to meet them.

    If Mr. Bush had wanted to make a mark on an issue on which Republicans and Democrats have long made common cause, he could have picked the environment. Christie Whitman, the former New Jersey governor chosen to run the Environmental Protection Agency, came from that bipartisan tradition. Yet she left after three years of futile struggle against the ideologues and industry lobbyists Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney had installed in every other important environmental post. The result has been a systematic weakening of regulatory safeguards across the entire spectrum of environmental issues, from clean air to wilderness protection.



    The president who lost the popular vote got a real mandate on Sept. 11, 2001. With the grieving country united behind him, Mr. Bush had an unparalleled opportunity to ask for almost any shared sacrifice. The only limit was his imagination.

    He asked for another tax cut and the war against Iraq.

    The president's refusal to drop his tax-cutting agenda when the nation was gearing up for war is perhaps the most shocking example of his inability to change his priorities in the face of drastically altered circumstances. Mr. Bush did not just starve the government of the money it needed for his own education initiative or the Medicare drug bill. He also made tax cuts a higher priority than doing what was needed for America's security; 90 percent of the cargo unloaded every day in the nation's ports still goes uninspected.

    Along with the invasion of Afghanistan, which had near unanimous international and domestic support, Mr. Bush and his attorney general put in place a strategy for a domestic antiterror war that had all the hallmarks of the administration's normal method of doing business: a Nixonian obsession with secrecy, disrespect for civil liberties and inept management.

    American citizens were detained for long periods without access to lawyers or family members. Immigrants were rounded up and forced to languish in what the Justice Department's own inspector general found were often "unduly harsh" conditions. Men captured in the Afghan war were held incommunicado with no right to challenge their confinement. The Justice Department became a cheerleader for skirting decades-old international laws and treaties forbidding the brutal treatment of prisoners taken during wartime.

    Mr. Ashcroft appeared on TV time and again to announce sensational arrests of people who turned out to be either innocent, harmless braggarts or extremely low-level sympathizers of Osama bin Laden who, while perhaps wishing to do something terrible, lacked the means. The Justice Department cannot claim one major successful terrorism prosecution, and has squandered much of the trust and patience the American people freely gave in 2001. Other nations, perceiving that the vast bulk of the prisoners held for so long at Guantánamo Bay came from the same line of ineffectual incompetents or unlucky innocents, and seeing the awful photographs from the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, were shocked that the nation that was supposed to be setting the world standard for human rights could behave that way.



    Like the tax cuts, Mr. Bush's obsession with Saddam Hussein seemed closer to zealotry than mere policy. He sold the war to the American people, and to Congress, as an antiterrorist campaign even though Iraq had no known working relationship with Al Qaeda. His most frightening allegation was that Saddam Hussein was close to getting nuclear weapons. It was based on two pieces of evidence. One was a story about attempts to purchase critical materials from Niger, and it was the product of rumor and forgery. The other evidence, the purchase of aluminum tubes that the administration said were meant for a nuclear centrifuge, was concocted by one low-level analyst and had been thoroughly debunked by administration investigators and international vetting. Top members of the administration knew this, but the selling went on anyway. None of the president's chief advisers have ever been held accountable for their misrepresentations to the American people or for their mismanagement of the war that followed.

    The international outrage over the American invasion is now joined by a sense of disdain for the incompetence of the effort. Moderate Arab leaders who have attempted to introduce a modicum of democracy are tainted by their connection to an administration that is now radioactive in the Muslim world. Heads of rogue states, including Iran and North Korea, have been taught decisively that the best protection against a pre-emptive American strike is to acquire nuclear weapons themselves.



    We have specific fears about what would happen in a second Bush term, particularly regarding the Supreme Court. The record so far gives us plenty of cause for worry. Thanks to Mr. Bush, Jay Bybee, the author of an infamous Justice Department memo justifying the use of torture as an interrogation technique, is now a federal appeals court judge. Another Bush selection, J. Leon Holmes, a federal judge in Arkansas, has written that wives must be subordinate to their husbands and compared abortion rights activists to Nazis.

    Mr. Bush remains enamored of tax cuts but he has never stopped Republican lawmakers from passing massive spending, even for projects he dislikes, like increased farm aid.

    If he wins re-election, domestic and foreign financial markets will know the fiscal recklessness will continue. Along with record trade imbalances, that increases the chances of a financial crisis, like an uncontrolled decline of the dollar, and higher long-term interest rates.

    The Bush White House has always given us the worst aspects of the American right without any of the advantages. We get the radical goals but not the efficient management. The Department of Education's handling of the No Child Left Behind Act has been heavily politicized and inept. The Department of Homeland Security is famous for its useless alerts and its inability to distribute antiterrorism aid according to actual threats. Without providing enough troops to properly secure Iraq, the administration has managed to so strain the resources of our armed forces that the nation is unprepared to respond to a crisis anywhere else in the world.



    Mr. Kerry has the capacity to do far, far better. He has a willingness - sorely missing in Washington these days - to reach across the aisle. We are relieved that he is a strong defender of civil rights, that he would remove unnecessary restrictions on stem cell research and that he understands the concept of separation of church and state. We appreciate his sensible plan to provide health coverage for most of the people who currently do without.

    Mr. Kerry has an aggressive and in some cases innovative package of ideas about energy, aimed at addressing global warming and oil dependency. He is a longtime advocate of deficit reduction. In the Senate, he worked with John McCain in restoring relations between the United States and Vietnam, and led investigations of the way the international financial system has been gamed to permit the laundering of drug and terror money. He has always understood that America's appropriate role in world affairs is as leader of a willing community of nations, not in my-way-or-the-highway domination.

    We look back on the past four years with hearts nearly breaking, both for the lives unnecessarily lost and for the opportunities so casually wasted. Time and again, history invited George W. Bush to play a heroic role, and time and again he chose the wrong course. We believe that with John Kerry as president, the nation will do better.

    Voting for president is a leap of faith. A candidate can explain his positions in minute detail and wind up governing with a hostile Congress that refuses to let him deliver. A disaster can upend the best-laid plans. All citizens can do is mix guesswork and hope, examining what the candidates have done in the past, their apparent priorities and their general character. It's on those three grounds that we enthusiastically endorse John Kerry for president.

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    Tuesday, October 12, 2004

    WMD Found in Iraq

    There was a very important weapon of mass destruction found in Iraq, and we knew about it all along. Other countries that have this weapon are Russia, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Mexico, among others. It's a weapon that the U.S. State Department has been trying to neutralize for the last 50 years. It doesn't kill anyone, it doesn't destroy any buildings. It's called "The Oil Weapon."

    Anyone who thinks that oil had nothing to do with our invasion into Iraq should ask themselves why we don't have troops occupying North Korea. Sure, Iraqi oil is for the Iraqi people--just like coffee beans are for coffee growers. As American capitalists, we're compelled to pay you for your oil...we just don't want to pay too much. We can't.

    But the oil weapon works like this: Demand for oil grows exponentially as developing nations become industrialized and Western consumption grows. Meanwhile, finding oil becomes harder and harder. We know there's a finite amount of oil available to us--it could be 60 years worth, it could be 6 years worth. Since we don't know exactly how much is there and we don't know what demand will be tomorrow, we find ourselves in the precarious position of being cut off or falling victim to the same market forces we love so much.

    In fact, you can think of our armed forces in the middle east as a brute form of price controls.

    It's been said that Al Qaida does not want to destroy us militarily. No one on the planet could. But, they might be able to destroy us economically. If the fundamentalist Islamic ideology took control of Iraq and Saudi Arabia (already it owns Iran), as well as other members of OPEC, it would have enormous power over oil prices. What would happen in this country if gasoline suddenly shot up to over $10 a gallon? It would be a huge recessionary shock. It might even throw us and the other Western countries into a depression. What if it went over $20 a gallon? What if they decided to sell to China for significantly less?

    Neither candidate is talking about this problem in such direct terms, and you have to wonder why. Probably it's because we don't want other nations to hear our candidates talk about this in public. It's also likely that they don't want confuse voters with such detailed policy discussions--there's nothing here that could help either candidate.

    But I've been thinking about it a lot. Kerry is the better candidate for this issue because Bush and his administration are too close to big oil. While both see it as a major threat, I think that Bush, Cheney, et al are aligned with the status quo--a return to American dominance over foreign oil. Kerry (I hope) is better suited to a long-range solution to this energy problem.

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    Saturday, October 09, 2004

    I'm No Pundit

    Is Kerry's hair a political tool?
    The first thing I did when I got up this morning was to check the news to see what the consensus was about last night's debate. There were a couple times early on in the debate where I thought Kerry smoked Bush--particularly the line, "It's the military's job to win the war, but it's the President's job to win the peace" and "The president gave the top 1 percent of income-earners in America...$89 billion last year, more than the 80 percent of people who earn $100,000 or less all put together." All of that happened in the first half-hour. I gave Bush a couple of points later in the debate, and Kerry lost a couple points toward the end when he double-talked a couple answers. Still, I thought Bush fell on his face during the "name three mistaken decisions" and he made a laughing stock of himself by saying he would definitely not appoint a Supreme Court Justice that supported slavery (the 1857 Dred Scott decision). Overall, I thought Kerry beat Bush by about 60-40. This morning's news is calling it even. Go figure.

    Still, it was the best presidential debate I've ever seen. It was filled with surprise moments. We Tivo'd it and were able to go back over each of Bush's creepy winks and that one moment where Kerry wiped something from the corner of his mouth and then rubbed it on his pant leg. There were a couple of long shots during the debate of Kerry writing during Bush's rambles, where Kerry's head was turned down and tilted--as if he was aiming his scalp at the camera. Wendy and I were captivated by his hair. It's become more silver during the campaign, and it's now ringed by dark brown. We speculated that this was on purpose; the silver hair makes voters think he's wise, but that brown border reminds them that, yes, he was a young man who went to Viet Nam. Also, the hair makes people imagine him as the JFK who wasn't assasinated but lived to become our elder statesman. It even worked on Bush--he referred to him near the end of the debate as "Senator Kennedy."

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    Debates and Baseball

    Let me tell you about my 2004 Presidential Baseball theory. It came to me near the start of the baseball season, when I heard that the Democratic and Republican conventions were going to be held in Boston and New York, respectively. Since the best baseball post-season in recent memory happened last year between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees, I wondered aloud to a few that maybe there's an analogy--or even a superstitious connection--this year between the teams, the cities, the parties, and the presidential candidates. Two wins are crucial to me this fall: that Boston beats New York and that John Kerry beats George Bush.

    In a few ways, the pennant race has mirrored the campaign. The Red Sox came out swinging in the first week but then fell behind as the Yankees set the pace. In fact, other than some problems with their starting pitching, the Yankees have done everything right. But then, a few months ago, there was a fight between Jason Varitek and Alex Rodriguez that somehow inspired the whole Boston team. They went on a tear, winning a long string of games and rapidly gained ground on the Yankees.

    This week, both teams entered the Division Playoffs, and Boston swept the Anaheim Angels in an exciting Game 3 yesterday. The Yankees won against Minnesota and it looks as though they're headed for a showdown in the American League Championship Series--just like last year.


    The Boston Red Sox after winning the ALDS

    The Kerry campaign, too, got a big boost from several Democratic nomination debates in the spring. He sort of hit the skids after the convention, though, as the Swift Boat front group successfully directed the media's attention toward what he did or didn't do while he was in Viet Nam. It was a sucker-punch, to be sure. No one on the Kerry side was expecting an attack on his war record because his opponent sat out the war in a patrician draft dodge.

    Like the Varitek/A-Rod fight, the swift boat nonsense rallied and focused the campaign. For the last three weeks, Kerry has come out swinging in debates and on TV interviews and his poll numbers are climbing.

    There's less than a month to go, and we're at a critical point in our collective history. I hope Kerry gets the job and lets America be America again.

    Vote Kerry! Go Red Sox!

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    Wednesday, April 14, 2004

    The Bush Press Conference, in a Nut Shell

    President Bush held a press conference last night to tell the American people why we should continue to support the war in Iraq (because failure there would be unthinkable--true, despite the massive pile-ups of failure upon failure since the end of the first Gulf War), why going to war there was the right thing to do despite the lack of WMD (because Saddam Hussein was a dangerous man in the most dangerous part of the world; the same worn-out talking point his administration has tirelessly trotted out to every Sunday morning news show going back to December), why we should re-elect him in November (because he has a plan for winning the war on terrorism, or at least he has a time table and hopefully a list of actionable items, but certainly no specifics at this time). Stick with me, he tells us, and democracy will ring through Middle East cash registers in no time.

    And then, the next day, he announces support for Isreal's unilateral decision to leave certain Jewish settlements in the West Bank--a decision that goes against his own administration's "roadmap" for peace.

    So let's hear it for planning!

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    Thursday, April 08, 2004

    Our Dear Leader

    President Bush, scratching his head

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    Thursday, April 01, 2004

    America is Catching On

    Rummy tells the 9/11 commission how it is
    Is there any way that George Bush can win in November? I just can't imagine how. I just can't imagine how anyone in his own party--aside from those who still work in his administration--would want to vote for him.

    Woke up this morning to hear that four Americans were killed in Fallujah, Iraq, and their corpses were mutilated by people in the streets, dragged behind cars, and one was suspended from a bridge as though he had been hanged. And this kind of horror show has come on a near-daily basis.

    Coming with this has been other news that spell disaster for this regime:
    • Paul O'Neal's whistleblowing on their economic policies

    • Richard Clark's book detailing how this administration ignored daily warnings of impending terrorist attack prior to Septermber 11, 2001

    • Details of the Republican Attack Machine's character assasination attempts (Robert Novack tried to insinuate on Crossfire that Richard Clark had a "problem" with Condoleeza Rice because she's African American).

    • Republicans in Congress threatening to shut down funding for the GAO unless it drops its suit against Dick Cheney that demands he release records from the closed-door energy meetings he had in the early days of the administration

    • Still no movement on the Valerie Plame investigation, where administration sources broke Federal law by identifying an under-cover intelligence agent

    • And much more, including all the information handling involved with the 911 committee, Medicare bill, and weapons of mass destruction that was the cornerstone of this Administrations reasons for sending our soldiers to die in Iraq

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    Tuesday, March 25, 2003

    My Beliefs Regarding This War

    I believe...

    ...we are on the wrong path.
    ...that this war is unnecessary.
    ...we've too often put ourselves above others in the world.
    ...that there has not been sufficient public debate on this issue.
    ...that the Bush administration did not make an adequate case for war.
    ...that we are uniting nations against us.
    ...that we risking long-term economic damage by engaging in this war.
    ...that fear and nationalism is sweeping over this country.
    ...that we've compromised the ideals of our founding fathers, the spirit of our Constitution, and most of what makes our nation great.
    ...this administration's stated interests in bringing human-rights progress or democratic change to the people of Iraq are insincere, and that its only real aim is to control the price and quantity of oil coming out of the region.
    ...that a corrupt U.S. administration can do much more harm to the world than an evil Iraqi regime.
    ...that the Bush administration has done nothing to address the reasons why so many people in other countries hate and fear our nation.
    ...our policies in the middle east are leading young Arab men to turn to terrorism and fundamentalist Islam out of desperation.
    ...this country has wrongfully used the tragic events of September 11 to leverage domestic support for this war.
    ...that Al Qaeda will use this war to leverage regional support for more terrorism directed against innocent Americans.
    ...a nation reaps what it sows.
    ...this nation initially supported Saddam's regime as a force against the fundamentalist government in Iran.
    ...that the U.S. unwittingly helped to create the fundamentalist revolution in Iran by supporting the brutal, anti-communist shah.
    ...that by choosing war over diplomacy, weapons over words, aggression over patience that we are greatly increasing the likelihood of economic, political, and physical catastrophe in our lifetimes.
    ...Saddam Hussein is an evil man; I hope that he is permanently removed from power.
    ...that George Bush is not an evil man, but I believe that his administration is misleading the American people by preying on our collective fear of terrorism and by warping the recent renewal of patriotism into nationalism and xenophobia.
    ...that our children's generation will judge us poorly because we were too scared or too complacent to stand up for what's right.

    I am hoping I'll be proven wrong.

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    Sunday, March 16, 2003

    Propaganda

    For now, the war on Iraq is over. I am willing to admit it went faster and smoother than I expected. Well, it went faster than I thought it would, but I really don't know how "smooth" it was because I don't know what I can believe any more. It seems like we're surrounded by propaganda.

    I'm not one of those conspiracy theorists who sees dark corners in every bright room, but I've heard too much "reporting" on this war that doesn't make sense. This morning was the last straw for me.
    The Story
      Yesterday, Army Special Forces captured Abul Abbas, the man who organized the hijacking of the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro. During that hijacking, American Leon Klinghoffer was shot in the head and thrown overboard. Abbas is also the head of a group called the Palestine Liberation Front, which was helping Saddam deliver payments to the families of suicide bombers. According to the Washington Post article, President Bush mentioned Abbas in a speech last October in Cincinati, "in which he made the case that Iraq posed an immediate threat to U.S. national security." Major General Tommy Franks said at a news briefing that the arrest proves the connection between the Hussein regime and terrorism.
    So where's the propaganda in that? There is none. In the 20th century, propaganda was in the message but now, as Marshal McCluen's claim that the media is the message has come true, propaganda is now embedded in the media. You see, now that communication has sped up, the news cycle has shortened. A story that came under a reporter's nose had until the end of the day to be filed, a whole process for copyediting and fact checking--at least 12 hours before it hit the morning papers. Now that we have the Internet and 24-hour news networks, that story is up and out within the hour and is competing for our attention against dozens of other sources. There's no way for an average person to consume that much media--especially with careers and families--so the simple message boils up and stays: U.S. Captures Terrorist Mastermind.

    The problem is that stories are almost always much more complicated than can be told in a headline designed to sell newspapers. Here's what gets missed: Abul Abbas was pretty much living in plain site since the highjacking. The U.S. had an indictment against him under seal right after the hijacking but withdrew it that same year. U.S. Navy jets forced down a plane he was in Italy--and the Italian government let him go. The man spent time in the 1990s living in the West Bank and Isreal even granted him Amnesty.

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