Andy Borowitz : Change we can Actually Understand!

William Buckley Syndrome? Barack Obama, interviewed by Steve Krofft on 60 Minutes, spoke in complete sentences and the show still scored record ratings. Go figure.

Stunning Break with Last Eight Years:
Obama’s Use of Complete Sentences Stirs Controversy

By Andy Borowitz / November 18, 2008

In the first two weeks since the election, President-elect Barack Obama has broken with a tradition established over the past eight years through his controversial use of complete sentences, political observers say.

Millions of Americans who watched Mr. Obama’s appearance on CBS’ “Sixty Minutes” on Sunday witnessed the president-elect’s unorthodox verbal tick, which had Mr. Obama employing grammatically correct sentences virtually every time he opened his mouth.

But Mr. Obama’s decision to use complete sentences in his public pronouncements carries with it certain risks, since after the last eight years many Americans may find his odd speaking style jarring.

According to presidential historian Davis Logsdon of the University of Minnesota, some Americans might find it “alienating” to have a President who speaks English as if it were his first language.

“Every time Obama opens his mouth, his subjects and verbs are in agreement,” says Mr. Logsdon. “If he keeps it up, he is running the risk of sounding like an elitist.”

The historian said that if Mr. Obama insists on using complete sentences in his speeches, the public may find itself saying, “Okay, subject, predicate, subject predicate – we get it, stop showing off.”

The President-elect’s stubborn insistence on using complete sentences has already attracted a rebuke from one of his harshest critics, Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska.

“Talking with complete sentences there and also too talking in a way that ordinary Americans like Joe the Plumber and Tito the Builder can’t really do there, I think needing to do that isn’t tapping into what Americans are needing also,” she said.

Source / Borowitz Report

Thanks to Steve Russell / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Gulf War Syndrome: Self-Poisoned Under Orders


Panel: 1 in 4 Gulf War vets is sick
By Anne Usher / November 17, 2008

Report blames exposure to toxic chemicals and other causes, demands more research and spending.

WASHINGTON — At least one in four U.S. veterans of the 1991 Gulf War suffers from a multisymptom illness caused by exposure to toxic chemicals during the conflict, says a congressionally mandated report that is being released today.

For most of the past 17 years, government officials said that the health problems of the veterans — more than 175,000 out of about 697,000 deployed — were the effects of wartime stress, even as more people have come forward with severe ailments.

“The extensive body of scientific research now available consistently indicates that ‘Gulf War illness’ is real, that it is the result of neurotoxic exposures during Gulf War deployment, and that few veterans have recovered or substantially improved with time,” says the report from a panel of scientists and veterans. A copy was obtained by Cox Newspapers.

The panel said in a 2004 draft report that many of the veterans were suffering from neurological damage and pointed to toxic chemicals as a possible cause. The new report goes further by pinpointing known causes, and it criticizes past U.S. studies, which have cost more than $340 million, as “overly simplistic and compartmentalized.”

The panel is urging Congress to spend at least $60 million annually on research. It notes that no effective treatments have been found.

Two things that the military provided to troops in large quantities to protect them in combat — pesticides and pyridostigmine bromide tablets, aimed at thwarting the effects of nerve gas — are the most likely culprits, the panel found.

Gulf War illness is typically characterized by a combination of memory and concentration problems, persistent headaches, unexplained fatigue and widespread pain. It may also include chronic digestive problems, respiratory symptoms and rashes.

The Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans’ Illnesses, created by Congress in 1998 , will present the 450-page report to Secretary of Veterans Affairs James Peake. The panel said its report is the first to review the hundreds of U.S. and international studies on Gulf War veterans conducted since the mid-1990s.

It recommends that the Department of Veterans Affairs order a redo of past Gulf War health reports, calling them “skewed” because they did not include evaluations of toxic exposure studies in laboratory animals, as Congress had requested. The panel examined such tests and notes that recent ones have identified biological effects from Gulf War exposures that were previously unknown.

Although the report calls some new VA and Defense Department programs promising, it notes that overall federal funding for Gulf War research has dropped sharply in recent years. The studies that have been funded, it says, “have little or no relevance to the health of Gulf War veterans.”

The report also faults the Pentagon, saying that it clearly recognized scientific evidence substantiating Gulf War illness in 2001 but did not acknowledge it publicly.

“The VA has accepted and implemented prior recommendations of the committee and values the work represented in the report presented today,” said press secretary Alison Aiekele. “Secretary Peake thanked the committee for its report and recommendations and directed VA to review and respond to the committee’s recommendations in the near future.”

The panel focused its research on comparing the brains and nervous systems of healthy adults with those of sick Gulf War veterans, as well as analyzing changes to the neuroendocrine and immune systems. It found that in terms of brain function, exposure to pesticides and the pyridostigmine bromide pills is damaging to memory, attention and mood. Some people, it notes, are genetically more susceptible to exposure than others.

About half of Gulf War personnel are thought to have taken the tablets during deployment, with the greatest use among ground troops and those in forward positions. Many veterans say they were forced to take the pills, which had not been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Some say they fell ill immediately.

“Many of us got sick from the pills,” said retired Staff Sgt. Anthony Hardie, a Wisconsin native who was with a multinational unit that crossed from Saudi Arabia into Kuwait and then Iraq. He said he was required to take them for several weeks and soon had watery eyes and vision problems, diarrhea, muscle twitching and a runny nose. A fellow special operations forces officer, he said, lost about 20 pounds.

To ward off sand flies in Kuwait City and the eastern Saudi province of Dhahran, Hardie said, trucks would come through at 3 a.m. and spray “clouds” of pesticides.

“The pesticide use was far and away (more) than what you’d see in daily life,” he said.

Several soldiers who were interviewed said they were ordered to dunk their uniforms in the pesticide DEET and to spray pesticide on exposed skin and in their boots to ward off scorpions.

The federal panel also said it could not rule out an association between Gulf War illness and the prolonged exposure to oil fires, as well as low-level exposures to nerve agents, injections of many vaccines and combinations of neurotoxic exposures.

Retired Sgt. Randy Stamm of Mesquite was among the 100,000 U.S. troops who may have been exposed to low levels of sarin gas as a result of large-scale U.S. demolitions of Iraqi munitions near Khamisiyah in 1991. Troops who were downwind from the demolitions have died from brain cancer at twice the rate of other Gulf War veterans, the report says.

His unit was nearby during the demolitions and near the burning oil fires for 31\/2 months. He said he took the pyridostigmine bromide pills for more than a month.

Stamm now takes 63 pills a day to treat health problems that include gastritis and esophagitis.

“My intestinal system is hosed,” he said, adding that he is losing vision in his right eye. “I lost eight wives because of this.”

A panel member, Dr. Roberta White, chairwoman of environmental health at the Boston University School of Public Health, found evidence last year that links low-level exposure to nerve gas among Gulf War troops with lasting brain problems. The extent of the deficits — less brain “white matter” and reduced cognitive function — corresponded to the extent of the exposure.

In addition, the panel said, Gulf War veterans have significantly higher rates of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, than other veterans.

White said that although there is a lot of anecdotal evidence of Gulf War veterans contracting multiple sclerosis, studies haven’t confirmed a combat link to that degenerative disease. Questions also remain about rates of cancers, disease-specific mortality rates in veterans and the health of their children.

Conversely, the panel said, little evidence supports an association or major link with depleted uranium, anthrax vaccine, fuels, solvents, sand and particulates, infectious diseases or chemical agent-resistant coatings.

That veterans’ complaints are still repeatedly met with cynicism, White said, “upsets me as a scientist, as someone who cares about veterans.”

Source / Austin American-Statesman

Thanks to Janet Gilles / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Texas : Arraignment Set for Cheney and Gonzales

Judge J. Manuel Banales has set arraignment for Dick Cheney and Alberto Gonzales in Raymondvill, TX.

Former Atty. Gen. Alberto Gonzales and veep Dick Cheney shown at the White House in 2006. Photo by Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP.

The highest-profile indictment charges Cheney and Gonzales with engaging in organized criminal activity. It alleges that the men neglected federal prisoners and are responsible for assaults in the facilities.

By Christopher Sherman / November 19, 2008

RAYMONDVILLE, Texas — A Texas judge has set a Friday arraignment for Vice President Dick Cheney, former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, a state senator and others named in indictments accusing them of responsibility for prisoner abuse in a South Texas federal detention center.

Presiding Judge Manuel Banales said Wednesday he will allow them to waive arraignment or have their attorneys present rather than appear in person at the hearing.

Banales also said he would issue summonses rather than warrants for the indicted since all have served in some public capacity. That would allow them to avoid arrest and the need to post bond.

After the prosecutor who won the indictments, lame duck Willacy County District Attorney Juan Angel Guerra, was a no-show in court, Banales ordered Texas Rangers to go to his house, check on his well-being and order him to court on Friday.

That was only the latest development in a situation that has lawyers from Texas to Washington, D.C., scratching their heads.

Half of the eight high-profile indictments returned Monday by a Willacy County grand jury are tied to privately-run federal detention centers in the sparsely populated South Texas county and the other half target judges and special prosecutors who played a role in an earlier investigation of Guerra.

“The state of Texas is not present, which is a rarity,” Banales said Wednesday. “I will not have a hearing when one of the parties is not present.”

Tony Canales, an attorney speaking on behalf of attorneys for Cheney and Gonzales and representing private prison operator The GEO Group, subpoenaed Guerra’s office manager to stand in for her boss.

Banales questioned Hilda Ramirez about her boss’ whereabouts, but got nowhere.

“I have been calling Mr. Guerra all day. I have not had him answer,” Ramirez told the judge. “I don’t know what to do.”

If Guerra does not appear Friday, Banales said he would likely appoint a temporary replacement.

The chance for further delay frustrated a courtroom packed with attorneys. Even though Banales said he would not hear their motions until Friday, they argued the indictments were improperly handled and the product of a vindictive prosecutor. All of the defendants had filed motions to dismiss indictments. They complained that Guerra had time to talk to the media about the indictments Tuesday, but did not show up for court Wednesday.

David Oliveira, Canales’ partner, said after the hearing, “the news media told him there was a hearing today and he ran.” Canales asked Banales to consider holding Guerra in contempt. Canales said if Guerra shows up Friday, he will put him on the stand.

The highest-profile indictment charges Cheney and Gonzales with engaging in organized criminal activity. It alleges that the men neglected federal prisoners and are responsible for assaults in the facilities.

The grand jury traced a sketchy line between Cheney’s influence over the U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agency, which oversees the county’s federal immigrant detention center, and his substantial holdings in the Vanguard Group, which invests in private prison companies.

Combining those interests, the grand jury accused Cheney of a conflict of interest because the more the prison companies were paid to hold inmates, the better he did financially.

“It is appalling to find that numerous elected officials from different levels of our government throughout our country to our U.S. Vice President Richard B. Cheney, defendant, are profiting from depriving human beings of their liberty,” the indictment said.

The indictment accuses Gonzales of stopping an investigation into abuses at the federal detention center.

Canales filed two motions Wednesday accusing Guerra of “prosecutorial vindictiveness” and of not presenting the indictments to the trial court.

In one motion, Canales said Guerra had hijacked “the grand jury process and disregarded the requirements of the Code of Criminal Procedure designed to protect defendants’ due process rights.”

T. Gerald Treece, a constitutional law specialist and professor at the South Texas College of Law in Houston, questioned Guerra’s jurisdiction over federal officials and federally-run buildings.

“You can’t have district attorneys across the country bringing charges against federal officials,” Treece said. If there are issues at the federal detention centers, then Guerra should turn the investigation over to the federal government, he said.

And even in a federal probe, Cheney and Gonzales have a “qualified privilege” that would protect them so long as they were acting within their jobs, Treece said.

The attorney for state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr., who was indicted on a charge of profiting from his position through his consulting work for private prison companies, said that on the chance the indictment was not dismissed he wanted to go to trial before Guerra’s term ended this year. Banales set a Dec. 8 trial date, if necessary.

“I think it shows that this has just been a game,” Michael Cowen, Lucio’s attorney, said of Guerra’s absence after the hearing.

At times Wednesday it did seem like a bizarre game.

Since District Clerk Gilbert Lozano is under indictment, Banales decided he needed to appoint a temporary replacement to handle the cases. He asked Lozano for a recommendation, but Lozano said his top deputy is a witness and his next choice was out of town. Banales instead turned to his left and gave the job to a clerk from the 197th district, whose boss District Judge Migdalia Lopez is also under indictment.

Some attorneys argued that Banales may not even have the authority to schedule an arraignment because the indictments before him were invalid. One lawyer said Guerra never should have been allowed to present the cases to the grand jury because at least four of the indictments deal with people who had some role in the investigation of his office last year.

“He is the witness, the victim and the prosecutor,” said the attorney for Mervyn Mosbacker Jr., a former U.S. attorney who was appointed special prosecutor to investigate Guerra.

Lozano, the county clerk, District judges Janet Leal and Lopez, and special prosecutors Mosbacker and Gustavo Garza, a longtime political opponent of Guerra, were all indicted on charges of official abuse of official capacity and official oppression.

The grand jury tied all of their charges to an earlier investigation of Guerra’s office.

Banales dismissed an indictment against Guerra last month charging him with extorting money from a bail bond company and using his office for personal business. An appeals court had earlier ruled that Garza was improperly appointed as special prosecutor to investigate Guerra.

After Guerra’s office was raided as part of the investigation early last year, he camped outside the courthouse in a borrowed camper with a horse, three goats and a rooster. He threatened to dismiss hundreds of cases because he believed local law enforcement had aided the investigation against him.

Guerra has been in office nearly 20 years, but was defeated for re-election in the March Democratic primary.

© 2008 The Associated Press

Source / AP / Houston Chronicle

Also see Ritmo: Inhumane Texas Detention Center Should be a Crime. Cheney or No Cheney. by Will Bunch / The Rag Blog / Nov. 19, 2008

And Cheney and Gonzales Indicted in Texas : Abuse of Federal Prisoners / The Rag Blog / Nov. 18, 2008

Thanks to S. M. Wilhelm / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Thorne Dreyer : Our Progressive Opportunity

New Start / mogallery.com.

‘Millions have been newly engaged and motivated as a result of the recent electoral process and most are not traditional players who automatically buy in to the traditional assumptions.’
By Thorne Dreyer / The Rag Blog / November 20, 2008

History has taken an unexpected turn and, astounding as it may seem to those of us made numb by decades of disappointment, the possibility of building a viable progressive movement is before us.

Millions have been newly engaged and motivated as a result of the recent electoral process and most are not traditional players who automatically buy in to the traditional assumptions. Add to that the critical and tantalizing fact that these people need not fall back into the woodwork thanks to the unprecedented communications networks that we now have at our disposal.

The emergence and consolidation of a serious progressive movement is nowhere near a given, and we certainly have a tradition of blowing it — especially through turning in on ourselves rather than intelligently identifying and directing our energies at the real enemy — but we’d be fools not to bust our butts trying to make it happen.

We must recognize and be tolerant of our differences in ideology and approach, but we must also recognize that our only power is in unity. It is not only our right but our responsibility to address the Obama presidency with a critical eye; we must always hold Obama accountable to a progressive vision.

But we must likewise be supportive and leave the Obama-bashing to those who are best at it — the rabid right. The resurgent clout of the racists and the fear-mongers will be underestimated only at our serious peril.

The crises we face now scream of catastrophic potential and there may not be another chance.

Rag Blog reading list on the task at hand (much more to come):

I highly recommend that everyone read Carl Davidson’s Bumpy Road Ahead: Obama and the Left posted on The Rag Blog Nov. 18, 2008.

Few of us will agree with every word, but I believe it to be a bold and thoughtful beginning. Please join in the discussion by clicking the “comments” at the end of this (and every) post.

Other articles recently published on The Rag Blog that analyze the election from a left perspective and address the question of the day: what do we do now?

Robert Jensen : Real Hope: Facing Difficult Truths About an Uncertain Future by Robert Jensen / The Rag Blog / Nov. 18, 2008

‘Two Party’ or Not ‘Two Party’ : A Rag Blog Discussion on Change with articles by David P. Hamilton and Scott Trimble / The Rag Blog / Nov. 16, 2008

Bert Garskof on the Obama ‘Movement’ : Shoot Where the Ducks are by Bert Garskof / The Rag Blog / Nov. 10, 2008

Paul Buhle : The American Elections of 2008: A First Take by Paul Buhle / The Rag Blog / Nov. 8, 2008

Makani Themba-Nixon : A Black Woman Looks at the Election by Makani Themba-Nixon / The Rag Blog / Nov. 8, 2008

Obama Presidency : What the Left Should Expect by David P. Hamilton / Nov. 8, 2008

Ayers Seems Relieved That the Election is Over by Bill Ayers / Nov. 7, 2008

The Crash of 2008 : More ‘Washington as Usual’ Under Obama? by Dr. S. R. Keister / The Rag Blog / Nov. 7, 2008

Ron Ridenour on Obama : Conditional Hope from Across the Seas by Ron Ridenour / The Rag Blog / Nov. 6, 2008

Tim Wise : Tuesday Night Obama Made History; Now the Work Begins by Tim Wise / Nov. 5, 2008

Paul Buhle : FDR, Obama and a new Popular Front by Paul Buhle / The Rag Blog / Nov. 5, 2008

Michael Moore : Pinch Me! by Michael Moore / Nov. 5, 2008

[Thorne Dreyer was a pioneering underground journalist in the sixties and seventies and was active with SDS in Texas and nationally. He lives in Austin where he works with MDS/Austin and Progressives for Obama. A writer, editor and bookseller, he is a contributing editor to Next Left Notes and is co-editor of The Rag Blog.]

The Rag Blog

Posted in Rag Bloggers | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Barack Obama on Climate Change : Crystal Clear


‘Obama on the environment is why I managed to “stuff it” over FISA, the Clintons, and everything else that was upsetting in the campaign.’
By Thomas Cleaver / The Rag Blog / November 19, 2008

See ‘Obama sends clear message on global warming’ by Steve Benen, and Video, Below.

This is refreshing.

This past summer, going through boxes of books in the garage, I ran across my copy of “The Limits to Growth,” by the Club of Rome, published in 1974, and a text for my MPA in Environmental Management. At the time, the book was excoriated for being “commie trash” and “alarmist.” I sat down and read it again, and EVERY ONE of the forecasts it had for events over the next 30 years (i.e., through 2004) can be seen in 34 years of hindsight as either dead-on or conservative.

Obama on the environment is why I managed to “stuff it” over FISA, the Clintons, and everything else that was upsetting in the campaign. Let’s remember that the nearest identified planet is 24 light years away (500 years one-way at maximum possible sub-light speed), and is like Jupiter. There are no identified planets anywhere that humans could live on, in this solar system or any other discovered so far. This little blue jewel in the vastness and blackness of space is all we’ve got.

Obama sends clear message on global warming
By Steve Benen / November 18, 2008

A two-day gathering called the Bi-Partisan Governors Global Climate Summit convened this morning in Los Angeles, and Barack Obama made an unexpected video presentation, vowing a “new chapter in American leadership on climate change.”

If you can’t watch clips online, the Washington Post has a full transcript of the text, but I’d note that Obama offered unambiguous remarks on the issue, criticizing the federal government’s recent failures, touting a federal cap and trade system, promising to “invest $15 billion each year to catalyze private sector efforts to build a clean energy future,” and citing specific annual targets on emission reductions.

Obama also spoke to the international delegations (12 counties sent representatives to this week’s event) on hand in L.A. “Let me also say a special word to the delegates from around the world who will gather in Poland next month: your work is vital to the planet,” Obama said. “While I won’t be President at the time of your meeting and while the United States has only one President at a time, I’ve asked members of Congress who are attending the conference as observers to report back to me on what they learn there. And once I take office, you can be sure that the United States will once again engage vigorously in these negotiations, and help lead the world toward a new era of global cooperation on climate change.”

In other words, don’t worry about that Bush guy; hope is on the way.

As Greg Sargent noted,”Pretty refreshing to have an adult as incoming president.”

Source / Political Animal / Washington Monthly

A New Chapter on Climate Change

The Rag Blog

Posted in Rag Bloggers | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Homophobia : The Great Unifier

Button: Rainbow Youth Niagra.

‘That complete strangers could be so unequivocally united in their homophobia was a chilling reminder that hatred of queers is not quarantined to one community.’
By Luna M. Yasui

On Nov. 5, I awoke to the uncomfortable realization that more Californians had voted to protect the living conditions of chickens than to preserve my civil rights. Chickens deserve a good life; they bring exquisite joy when fried up and served with a side of biscuits. I may not be as delicious, but why hate?

My bittersweet post-Election Day was foreshadowed by this street corner exchange near my polling site: on Election Day, I joined a few young queer women of color in handing out No on 8 flyers at my polling place. (Yes, I was a safe, non-electioneering 100 feet from the polls.) A construction crew of men approached two of the women and informed them that in order to protect their children, they had voted yes on 8. The posse of men then sat on a stoop to enjoy their sandwiches and entertained themselves by tossing homophobic slurs our way. Soon after, we were brushed back from the curb by a roaring SUV, full of venomous, epithet-screaming young men. The construction crew joined the jeering. Men of color in worn work boots and doo-rags echoed the hate spewed by the SUV-riding white men in baseball caps and polo shirts. Homophobia the great unifier, bridges fashion and racial divides.

It was just one incident, but my hopes died somewhere in that convergence of vitriol. That complete strangers could be so unequivocally united in their homophobia was a chilling reminder that hatred of queers is not quarantined to one community.

Yet, that was not the post-Election Day message, for every failed campaign must find a scapegoat. I wanted to revel in the promise of a New Day full of Hope and Change, but instead was confronted with the tired old Blame Black People mantra. “Seventy percent of African Americans voted Yes on 8!” went the indignant assertions by the liberal and not so liberal media. Culled from one exit poll of 2,240 voters, this “finding” was based on the responses of a mere 224 African American voters. Some 224 people speak for the entire African American electorate in California? The poll only included 90 African American men — too few to produce any statistics.

For the sake of argument, let’s accept this 7 out of 10 statistic. According to the U.S. Census, African Americans are 6.7 percent of the entire California electorate — that’s 2.3 million people. White people comprise 43 percent, or 22 million people. Our “venerable” exit poll says white people were evenly split on 8, which means about 11 million white people voted Yes on 8. Simple arithmetic reveals… whoa… way more white people voted Yes on 8. Wait… that’s almost five times the entire black electorate.

If we want to play the blame game with this exit poll, the groups to blame for the passage of Proposition 8 are white Republicans (82 percent for Prop. 8) and voters of all races who attend church on a weekly basis (84 percent for Prop. 8).

I’ve also heard a few Asian Americans attempting to claim Moral Model Minority status based on our purported majority opposition to Proposition 8. To them, a few words of caution: always be wary of polls that lump all Asian Americans together. Some 134 “Asians” polled represent the ever-mythical unified Asian America? As the most ethnically and linguistically diverse racial group in the United States, we are rarely, if ever, one blended happy South Asian-Filipino-Chinese-Japanese-Tongan-Samoan-Vietnamese-American family. Talk to your parents, aunts, uncles or born-again cousin about queerness lately? Catch the hundreds of Yes on 8 Chinese Christians rallying in Portsmouth Square Park? There’s a lot of in-house work to do.

Every community has its homophobes — even in San Francisco 24 percent of the voters approved of Prop. 8. That’s right, 1 in 4 residents of the purported “Gay Mecca” voted to discriminate against gays and lesbians.

A majority of California voters decided to write discrimination into the state constitution. If questionable exit polls tell us anything, it is that homophobia is everywhere. It is not confined to a single race, religion or county. So let’s quit the blame game and start confronting the hate and homophobia embedded in each of our lives. Then, maybe next time California votes on my rights, I’ll fare as well as the chickens.

[For more than a decade, Luna Yasui has worked as an attorney and organizer on behalf of low-wage immigrant workers, communities of color, and the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. The views expressed in the preceding commentary are not necessarily those of the Nichi Bei Times. The Nichi Bei Times is a Japanese American news weekly.]

Source / Nichi Bei Times / Posted Nov. 13, 2008

Thanks to Jeff Jones / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Note to Self : Pot May Actually HELP the Memory

OR NOT!!

Researchers at Ohio State say that THC ‘can reduce inflammation in the brain and might even stimulate the production of new brain cells.’
By Mary Ann Roser / November 19, 2008

How many Baby Boomers have blamed pot smoking for their forgetful middle-aged memories?

As a Boomer myself, I was surprised to read this today: Researchers at Ohio State University say they are accumulating mounting evidence that certain properties in a legal drug that mimics marijuana can be good for the aging brain and might prevent Alzheimer’s disease. They contend that properties like those in tetrahydrocannabinol — or THC, the active ingredient in marijuana — can reduce inflammation in the brain and might even stimulate the production of new brain cells.

It is believed that chronic inflammation in the brain contributes to Alzheimer’s disease, according to a news release about the research on EureakAlert, a resource for journalists.

“Could people smoke marijuana to prevent Alzheimer’s disease if the disease is in their family?” asked lead researcher Gary Wenk, professor of psychology at Ohio State. “We’re not saying that, but it might actually work. What we are saying is it appears that a safe, legal substance that mimics those important properties of marijuana can work on receptors in the brain to prevent memory impairments in aging. So that’s really hopeful.”

So far, his team has shown that a man-made THC-like drug can improve memory in rats. But that’s not the same thing as proving it works in humans, which will take more time and more research.

And here’s another caution: The research has not been published. It merely is being described in a poster presentation today at the Society for Neuroscience meeting in Washington, D.C. But that’s a first step, and it’s interesting.

Source / Statesman.com

Thanks to Jim Baldauf / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Detroit Bailout : We Can Save Capitalism But We Can’t Tell it to Behave

Streetcar in Portland: Detroit killed the streetcar system. Photo by Steven Nehl / The Oregonian.

‘We need government to chain down capitalism and set up rules that force it to start using its innovative powers for the public benefit.’
By Roger Baker / The Rag Blog / November 19, 2008

I sort of focus on transportation, energy, and economics and obviously have strong opinions on related issues.

The thread of continuity running through current government policy is that (A) we have the responsibility to save capitalism like in Detroit but (B) we have no right to dictate the rules for how capitalists must behave — now that they have nearly run the UKS whole US industrial system into the ground.

That thinking is absurd; we provide the money and we have every right to call the tunes to prevent even greater disasters.

As for Detroit, they killed the streetcar system to the point that I hear there is only ONE manufacturer still building light rail cars in the whole USA (Siemens in California), and they are way overbooked on orders.

If Detroit built tanks and bombers during WWIII, it can certainly refocus on what most transpo experts agree we now need — a strong rail program to deal with global warming and peak oil. Just because the oil price has suddenly collapsed due to a world recession does not mean that world oil production won’t continue to decline and soon enough leave us in even worse shape.

We need government to chain down capitalism and set up rules that force it to start using its innovative powers for the public benefit, rather than enslaving us to the demands of what has become what James Galbraith calls a “Predator State”.

In other words, we need to demand DEEP CHANGE in our government philosophy, away from privatization, based on public need and expert opinion unsullied by special interest influence.

Will Obama challenge capitalism even as much as FDR? We don’t know yet. We only know that our very survival depends on him doing so. We need to demand that public control needs to replace the greed and anarchy of a system that has spun out of control, and has indeed invented numerous tricks and tactics to shield itself from democratic control (try fighting the Texas road lobby and you’ll see what I mean).

The Rag Blog

Posted in Rag Bloggers | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Neil Young : How to Save a Major Automobile Company


‘We need visionary people now with business sense to create automobiles that do not contribute to global warming.’
By Neil Young

See ‘Neil Young’s car heads west’ by Chris Frank and Video, Below.

Find a new ownership group. The culture must change. It is time to turn the page. In the high technology sector there are several candidates for ownership of a major car and truck manufacturer. We need forward looking people who are not restricted by the existing culture in Detroit. We need visionary people now with business sense to create automobiles that do not contribute to global warming.

It is time to change and our problems can facilitate our solutions. We can no longer afford to continue down Detroit’s old road. The people have spoken. They do not want gas guzzlers (although they still like big cars and trucks). It is possible to build large long-range vehicles that are very efficient. People will buy those vehicles because they represent real change and a solution that we can live with.

The government must take advantage of the powerful position that exists today. The Big 3 are looking for a bailout. They should only get it if they agree to stop building autos that contribute to global warming now. The stress on the auto manufacturers today is gigantic. In order to keep people working in their jobs and keep factories open, this plan is suggested:

The big three must reduce models to basics. a truck, an SUV, a large family sedan, an economy sedan, and a sports car. Use existing tooling.

Keep building these models to keep the workforce employed but build them without engines and transmissions. These new vehicles, called Transition Rollers, are ready for a re-power. No new tooling is required at this stage. The adapters are part of the kits described next.

At the same time as the new Transition Rollers are being built, keeping the work force working, utilize existing technology now, create re-power kits to retrofit the Transition Rollers to SCEVs (self charging electric vehicles) for long range capability up to and over 100mpg. If you don’t think this technology is realistic or available, check out the Progressive Insurance Automotive X prize. Alternatively, check out Lincvolt.com or other examples.

A bailed out Auto manufacturer must open or re-purpose one or more factories and dedicate them to do the re-power/retrofit assembly. These factories would focus on re-powering the Transition Rollers into SCEVs but could also retrofit and re-power many existing vehicles to SCEVs. These existing vehicles are currently sitting unsold at dealerships across America.

Auto manufacturers taking advantage of a government bailout must only sell clean and green vehicles that do not contribute to global warming. No more internal combustion engines that run exclusively on fossil fuels can be sold period.

No Big Three excuses like “new tooling takes time”. New tooling is not a requirement for SCEV transition rollers.

Build only new vehicles that attain the goal of reversing global warming and enhancing National Security.

Government legislation going with the bailout should include tax breaks for purchasers of these cars with the new green SCEV technology. The legislation accompanying the bailout of major auto manufacturers must include directives to build only vehicles that attain the goal of reversing global warming while enhancing National security, and provide the financial assistance to make manufacturing these cars affordable in the short term while the industry re-stabilizes.

Eventually the SCEV technology could be built into every new car and truck as it is being assembled and the stop gap plan described above would have completed its job of keeping America building and working through this turbulent time.

Detroit has had a long time to adapt to the new world and now the failure of Detroit’s actions is costing us all. We pay the bailout. Let’s make a good deal for the future of America and the Planet. Companies like UQM (Colorado) and others build great electric motors right here in the USA. Use these domestic electric motors. Put these people to work now. This plan reverses the flow from negative to positive because people need and will buy clean and green cars to be part of World Change. Unique wheel covers will identify these cars on the road so that others can see the great example a new car owner is making. People want America to win!

This plan addresses the issue of Global warming from our automobiles while enhancing our National Security and keeping Detroit working.

Neil Young, activist (Bridge School, Farm Aid) rock legend, has assembled a team that is in the process of transforming his gargantuan 1959 Lincoln Continental from a gas guzzler into a showcase for green technology and sustainability. The car will be entered into the Automotive X Prize that offers a $10 million prize to develop a vehicle that can get 100 miles per gallon or better. The almost 50 year old Lincoln, one of the biggest, heaviest production cars of all time, has been re-named “Linc Volt” and is the subject of a feature documentary called “Repowering The American Dream” that is now in production under the aegis of Young’s Shakey Pictures.

Source / The Huffington Post / Posted Nov. 13, 2008

Neil Young’s car heads west
By Chris Frank / November 19, 2008

The ’59 Lincoln is from the days of when cars came with lots of chrome, lots of weight and guzzled more 30-cent-a-gallon fuel than a camel in the dessert.

Over the past 14 months, Neil Young has come to Wichita to oversee some of the conversion work and take it for a spin around town.

Now, the car is headed west.

“This is it. This is the very last day in Wichita for probably at least six months,” said Jonathan Goodwin, H-Line Conversions

Goodwin and his crew have turned Young’s Lincoln from a nine mile per gallon car to a car that gets more than 75 miles to the gallon.

They had to completely replace the original engine.

“What we’ve done is installed an electric motor. And this motor generates 500 foot pounds of torque. That’s more than a diesel pickup truck,” Goodwin said.

The car makes a popping sound as the hydrogen bubbles from water are being used to enhance fuel efficiency.

“We’re not at the point of being able to use water as a fuel source yet,” Goodwin said.

They are, however, at the point of using the Lincoln to demonstrate how a car can generate more electricity than it needs to run.

“But you’ll probably want to plug this into your house. Not to power the car, but to actually take your house off the grid,” Goodwin said.

That means instead of taking electricity to recharge the car the way hybrids are now, this car will have electricity left over to power your house.

The Lincvolt is now on its way to California, then later to Las Vegas to demonstrate its capabilities to the world.

Source / KAKE.com

Also see Long May You Run: Neil Young’s Eco-Lincoln by Dan Fost / New York Times / Oct. 29, 2008

Neil Young 1959 Lincoln Electric Car Conversion Project

Thanks to Carl Davidson / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Dr. Stephen R. Keister : On Aging

Sir William Osler: “Pneumonia is the old man’s friend.”

‘In the United States, for oh so many years we have merely warehoused the disabled, senile and near senile elderly, in nursing homes of variable competence.’
By Dr. Stephen R. Keister
/ The Rag Blog / November 19, 2008

I do not imagine that my thoughts will engender accolades from many readers; however, I honestly desire to share some inner thoughts. At the age of 87, with a mind remaining fairly alert, but with a gradually failing body, one is bound at times to become introspective. In today’s world, with the impending equivalent of The Great Depression of 1929, one develops an increased concern and urgency regarding ones impending fate. Have you looked at your IRA or brokerage account recently?

I may tread on some cultural precepts or religious teachings, but so be it. My attitude is that of the secular humanist; although some of my friends are quite “religious,” a fact, that among intelligent individuals, causes no concern or impaired relationship. We share ethical and moral values (“moral” in the broad sense as per Matthew 5-7), and make no effort to dispute our theological differences, as civilized, thinking individuals. Further, we agree on many concepts in which disagreement would be anticipated.

I am influenced largely by the thinking of Rene Descartes: “I think therefore I am,” and memories of Sir William Osler’s statement, made in the early part of the 20th Century, when he was professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins, and prior to the antibiotic era; “Pneumonia is the old man’s friend.” I am influenced by, in my days of active practice, attending a patient in a nursing home, and seeing gray haired individuals, diapered, sitting in wheelchairs, blankly watching a television screen. I would finish my rounds, depart and think to myself, “can this be me someday”?

We have a gradually increasing number of the elderly in our population, as do the Western European nations. I do note in scanning the European press that the individual countries, as well as the EU as a unit, are starting to make the care of the aging a priority issue. In the International Herald Tribune of April 13, 2007, there is an article entitled “In Europe, care for the elderly is being transformed.” The United States is in arrears as would be expected after the past eight years of the Bush administration’s neo-liberal economics which according to script has ignored social programs, poverty, and care of the helpless. I would trust that the Obama administration would face this issue early by appointing an active, dedicated under-secretary on aging in HHS.

In the United States, for oh so many years we have merely warehoused the disabled, senile and near senile elderly, in nursing homes of variable competence. The costs to individuals, families, states, have ranged up to $3000-$4000 monthly. To allow an individual with a blank mind, or totally despondent, not wishing to live, to sit all day in front of a TV set is not realistic or kind. This is a matter that is rapidly going to become a major issue as the various fundings fade and the disposition of these poor folks becomes an overwhelming issue. I would not be arrogant enough to presume to know the final solution. However, we are faced by some basic ethical as well as financial challenges.

The State of Oregon, and I believe, more recently, Washington, as well as various European nations, have shown the moral and intellectual courage to permit individuals to determine their own fates rather than be tied to laws engendered by medieval theological rite. We need as well to have the elderly population educated in depth about the need for advanced directives, i.e. living wills. We can have overwhelming ad campaigns for Viagra, or for fuel consuming automobiles, abounding in our society; hence, why not a major educational push to educate the public as to the fact that one need not put up with interminable dialysis, or be kept for days, brain dead, on artificial ventilation?

I feel that Dr. Osler was correct in his observation, but that point in time has passed, and life has become very much more complicated thanks to medical ‘science’. Yet, two out of three folks I talk to know little or nothing about advance directives. The nation needs to move on this. As I recall, the majority of Medicare funding goes to support those in the last month or two of life.

I can see families facing bankruptcy in the next year or two in an effort to pay the nursing home. Perhaps we should consider government subsidized home care which can be much less expensive than inpatient care in a profit making facility. For example, hereabouts a “non-profit” retirement community has increased its monthly fee by 7% (roughly $200), in spite of being aware that their residents savings accounts are rapidly being depleted, The corporate managers are well aware that the residents are not well enough informed, or motivated, and are too passive to respond to such a swindle. I am aware, as well, that this problem is being faced by the local religiously sponsored homes, Catholic, Presbyterian, or Episcopalian in an effort, perhaps futile, to reach an accommodation with the declining economy.

I note as well that the elderly who signed up for the severely flawed “Medicare Prescription Plan” are once again going to be taken to the cleaners. As per ARA. Nov. 14, 2008, their deductibles and co-payments are going to rise as of January 1, 2009. Further, according to an analysis of Medicare data by Alvalere Health, the largest drug plans will raise their premiums by an average of 31% and some by more than 60%. Seniors who signed up for Humana’s standard plan, a policy marketed as the low price leader in 2006, will pay $40.83 monthly next year up from $9.51 in 2006. Once again the matter of profits exceeds that of ethics or morality. Congress must modify this plan to work for the Medicare beneficiary rather than for the profits of the insurance and pharmaceutical industries, and at the same time do away with the “Medicare Advantage Plans,” the Bush administration’s subtle way to privatize and gradually do away with Medicare as a program.

Finally, to take the burden off future generations this country must get in step with Western Europe in quality and extent of health care for all. According to the Commonwealth Fund our health care rates 26th in the world and as of Nov. 13 UPI.com reports that, according to the Commonwealth Fund, U.S. patients, compared to seven other countries, suffer the highest number of medical errors. 44% of chronically ill patients did not get recommended care, fill a prescription, or see a doctor when sick because of costs. 41% of U.S. patients spent more than $1000 in the past year on out of pocket costs, compared to 4% in Britain or 8% in the Netherlands. We must make sure our elected representatives are not taking baksheesh from the pharmaceutical and insurance industries and support single payer, universal health care devoid of insurance company participation. The nation and your family depend on you not sitting idly on your butt. Call, E-mail, demonstrate!

In the overall aspect of cost containment regarding elder-care and health care costs, one would take a hard look at the multiplicity of tax-free, “non-profit” facilities and institutions involved. The Congress should be aware of their costs, their overhead, their depreciation, executive and other managerial salaries, bonuses, and perks, including executive seminars at fine golf resorts. One may
note that in financial reports, when available, one does not see the word “profit,” but instead “surplus” or a variety of terms. I find that the general public, especially the elderly, confuse the term “non-profit” with something akin to a legitimate charitable institution, which it may well be. However, a retirement home should not be confused with Doctors Without Borders, Catholic Charities or The Friends Service Committee.

I grow weary and frequently feel that eternal sleep might be a viable option, but there is so darned much needs to be done!

The Rag Blog

Posted in Rag Bloggers | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Ritmo : Inhumane Texas Detention Center Should be a Crime. Cheney or No Cheney.

Federal detention center in Raymondville, Texas.

‘Willacy County is home to the largest of a new generation of detention camps where thousands of undocumented immigrants live in massive tents with poor food, non-existent health care, facing months if not years deprived of their basic liberty.’
By Will Bunch / November 19, 2008

“I call it ‘Ritmo’ — like Gitmo, but it’s in Raymondville,” said Jodi Goodwin, an immigration lawyer from nearby Harlingen.

Washington Post, Feb. 2, 2007

OK, first of all, the bad news. Dick Cheney is not going to jail, not any time soon, at least, and not because of the bizarre report that the vice president of the United States has been indicted in a small, obscure county deep in the heart of South Texas in a scandal over federal prison and detention abuses there. Aside from the obvious fact that a Willacy County, Texas, grand jury lacks authority over federal actions, the indictment of Cheney, former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and other is not even signed by a judge, and the result of a wacky — controversial wouldn’t do the man justice — renegade lame duck DA.

It’s almost not even worth noting that Cheney’s alleged tie — investing his millions in Vanguard mutual funds that are major owners of publicly traded federal prison contractors — is weak beyond belief; by the grand jury’s reasoning, one could surmise that others with Vanguard 401K plans (example: journalists at the Philadelphia Daily News and Inquirer!) could be charged as well.

That’s a shame, because a) as noted here many times, Cheney’s role in authorizing torture and other unlawful practices in the Bush administration deserves a real criminal probe and b) the strange false-alarm over this vice presidential indictment will probably obscure the fact that what has been taking place in Raymondville, Texas, during Bush and Cheney’s time in office is a crime — maybe statutory, maybe not, but definitely a moral one.

Willacy County, scene of today’s indictments, is also home to the largest of a new generation of detention camps where thousands of undocumented immigrants — the vast majority of whom have committed no crime other than seeking America’s promise of a new life, without proper papers — are now detained in conditions that could be described ironically as hot, flat, and crowded — living in massive tents with poor food, non-existent health care and facing months if not years deprived of their basic liberty.

It wasn’t always that way. For years, American policy was to catch and release undocumented immigrants, but that all changed with the GOP’s politically charged crackdown on illegal immigration, which led in 2005 to a new policy of detaining undocumented non-Mexicans until they receive a deportation hearing and are usually booted from the country. The new policy meant doling out millions to politically connected prison firms and contractors (including the formerly Cheney-run Hallibuton) to hastily build these detention centers, including $65 million for the one in poverty-stricken Willacy County, some 260 miles south of Austin, that isn’t even a structure but, as most simply call it, “Tent City.”

Remember, these immigrants — the majority at “Ritmo” hail from El Salvador, torn apart by years of civil strife — have committed no crime beyond seeking to enter America without paperwork, and yet the Willacy County facility is in many ways quite simply a prison, like Gitmo, stark and surrounded by barbed wire. Here’s how “Tent City” was described by the American Civil Liberties Union:

The Willacy County Detention Facility is the largest immigration detention facility in the country. The facility is made up of ten large tents, each of which is designed to house 200 people. The tents are windowless and lights are on around-the-clock, making it difficult to sleep. No partitions exist to separate the showers, toilets, sinks, and eating areas, and detainees report that they are occasionally forced to eat with their hands because no utensils are provided.

The Washington Post article fills in more details:

Because lights are on around the clock, a visitor finds many occupants buried in their blankets throughout the day. The stillness and torpor of the pod’s communal room, where 50 to 60 people dwell, are noticeable.

Goodwin described a group of women who huddled in a recreation yard on a recent 40-degree day with a 25-mph wind. “They had no blanket, no sweat shirt, no jacket,” she said. “Officers were wearing earmuffs, and detainees were outside for an hour with short-sleeved polyester uniforms and shower shoes and not necessarily socks.”

Perhaps more troubling, lawyers said, large numbers of immigrants have been transferred from Boston, New York, New Jersey and Florida, far from their families and lawyers. Because some immigration judges do not permit hearings by teleconference, detainees are essentially deprived of counsel.

There have been other problems inside “Tent City” — mealworms were found inside some of the food there last year, for example, and another study found a stunning lack of available healthcare at Willacy — but by now you probably get the idea. In many ways, this immigrant detention program is a metaphor for what we’ve seen time and time again during the Cheney-Bush years, a rushed and ill-conceived federal action (despite the harsh impact on those captured, the program’s effect on solving the undocumented immigration problem is fairly minimal) that’s meant big bucks for a few connected contractors, with little or no thought toward its degrading impact on real human beings, or on how America is perceived by the rest of the world.

Now, a nation that famously asked for the world’s tired, poor, hungry and sick is taking refugees from a war-torn and poverty stricken corner of our own continent, and making them more hungry and depriving them of sleep before sending then away. How sad. That’s not just an indictment of Dick Cheney, though. That’s an indictment for all of us who allowed a harsh tent city called “Ritmo” to rise on our watch.

Source / Philly.com

Also see Cheney and Gonzales Indicted in Texas : Abuse of Federal Prisoners / The Rag Blog / Nov. 18, 2008

Thanks to S. M. Welhelm / The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Guantanamo Irregularities Yield Broken Men


Cal study finds ex-Guantanamo prisoners broken
By Bob Egelko / November 17, 2008

The first extensive study of prisoners released from the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, finds that many of them are physically and psychologically traumatized, debt-ridden and shunned in their communities as terrorist suspects.

“I’ve lost my property. I’ve lost my job. I’ve lost my will,” said an Afghan man, one of 62 former inmates in nine countries interviewed anonymously by UC Berkeley researchers for a newly released report.

Another man, jobless and destitute, said his family kicked him out after he returned, and his wife went to live with her relatives. “I have a plastic bag holding my belongings that I carry with me all the time,” he said. “And I sleep every night in a different mosque.”

The report, “Guantanamo and its Aftermath,” also found that two-thirds of former prisoners interviewed between July 2007 and July 2008 suffered from psychological problems, including nightmares, angry outbursts, withdrawal and depression.

Many also reported recurring or constant pain from their treatment in captivity. Six men said that for them, the treatment included being suspended from the ceiling in chains at a U.S. air base.

Investigation urged

The authors called for a commission to investigate conditions at Guantanamo and other prisons where terrorist suspects are held and, if warranted, recommend criminal investigations “at all levels of the civilian and military command.”

“We cannot sweep this dark chapter in our nation’s history under the rug by simply closing the Guantanamo prison camp,” said Eric Stover, director of UC Berkeley’s Human Rights Center. “The new administration must investigate what went wrong and who should be held accountable.”

Other co-authors are Laurel Fletcher, director of UC Berkeley’s International Human Rights Law Clinic, and Vincent Warren, executive director of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a nonprofit legal group representing some Guantanamo inmates.

President-elect Barack Obama has said he plans to close Guantanamo. During the campaign, he criticized the military commissions that President Bush established to try a small number of prisoners at the base and said he preferred regular civilian or military courts, where defendants have more rights. But Obama has not yet announced his plans for the trials or for the majority of inmates who are being held without charges.

Asked for comment on the report, Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, the government’s spokesman on Guantanamo, said, “Our policy is, and always has been, to treat detainees humanely.”

A few former inmates, their lawyers and interrogators have given personal accounts of Guantanamo and other prisons in memoirs and court affidavits. The 136-page UC Berkeley report is the first to examine the fate of large numbers of released prisoners.

The report acknowledged that the inmates’ narratives often lack independent confirmation. But it said they can be considered credible because they’re consistent with other accounts – by other former prisoners, and by 50 past and present U.S. officials, lawyers and others with firsthand knowledge of Guantanamo who were interviewed for the survey.

The 62 men in the study spent an average of three years at Guantanamo. Most were classified as enemy combatants before being released without charges, like two-thirds of the 775 men who have been held at the naval base. Of the 255 remaining prisoners, 23 have been charged with war crimes.

More than one-third of the 62 said they had been turned over to U.S. authorities in Pakistan for a bounty; one man described standing outside an airplane with other detainees, hooded and shackled, and hearing an American voice tell the Pakistanis, “Each person is $5,000.”

Others said they had been arrested on flimsy grounds – for carrying guns that they used for personal protection, for possessing binoculars that one man used for hunting birds, or for failing to pay bribes to local officials.

According to the men’s accounts, their most brutal treatment occurred at a U.S. air base in Bagram, Afghanistan, where half of them were held before being flown to Guantanamo. The men said American guards regularly beat them, left them in freezing temperatures with thin blankets, used dogs to terrorize them, and, in the cases of six men, hung them from ceilings by chains for hours.

At Guantanamo, 24 of the 55 men who were willing to discuss their interrogations reported no problems, and a few described their questioners as “very nice.” But others said they had been shackled in contorted positions and subjected to extreme heat or cold, both during interrogation and afterward.

Chained and cold

Eight men said their worst ordeal was being chained to the floor in a refrigerated isolation room, unable to move without being cut by the shackles. The report quoted a former U.S. military guard as saying prisoners were sometimes kept in such rooms in cramped positions for more than 10 hours.

Other men described sexual humiliation and barrages of loud music and strobe lights for extensive periods.

The cumulative effect of such treatment over time, combined with the prospect of indefinite confinement, would “in some cases clearly rise to the level of torture,” the report said.

Warren, the Center for Constitutional Rights director and attorney, said the nation owes the men an apology, compensation and a chance to clear their names.

Read the report

To read “Guantanamo and its Aftermath,” go to: links.sfgate.com/ZFJQ

Source /

The Rag Blog

Posted in RagBlog | Tagged , , | 1 Comment