Sunday, May 03, 2009

Dubai sounds like a real paradise


It's no wonder Halliburton moved to this dreamy location. For all of the bankster types who don't want to be regulated by anyone and work without hassle, they will surely want to take advantage of such a lovely working climate where anything goes. Their families will find this a great place as well. The Guardian:
The wealthy Gulf prince at the centre of a "torture tape" scandal has been accused of attacking at least 25 other people in incidents that have also been caught on film, it has been claimed.

Sheikh Issa bin Zayed al-Nahyan is now under investigation in the United Arab Emirates after the shocking tape showed him beating a man with a nailed plank, setting him on fire, attacking him with a cattle prod and running him over.

But now lawyers for American businessman Bassam Nabulsi, who smuggled the tape out of the UAE, have written to the justice minister of Abu Dhabi - the most powerful of the emirates that make up the UAE - claiming to have considerably more evidence against Issa.
Maybe, just maybe, it doesn't make sense to share nuclear technology with Dubai. Call me old fashioned, but maybe it's time to go retro and move beyond being a country of torturers and supporter of torturers. Building a future with brutal thugs like the prince doesn't sound very progressive. Read More......

Sunday night sunset





Unfortunately it wasn't this Sunday but it was still a Sunday. This from inside the courtyard at the Louvre last Sunday. Somehow we've never made it there for sunset but it worked out pretty well. We were chased away from our favorite location on the Pont des Arts (a walking bridge over the Seine) while showing new friends around Paris. The bridge has now become overrun with drug dealers and junkies, some of whom are itching to get violent. I don't know what the heck is going on in Paris these days between seeing charred motor scooters and now this horrible experience. Over decades of visiting Paris including sleeping on the streets back in the 1980s while traveling as a student and then living in this fabulous city, I'm witnessing some low points.

Our favorite Pont des Arts is flooded with drug dealers, one of whom flipped out and started to become aggressive with us and four women. Somehow the police are nowhere to be found and the second you step on the bridge you see your first dealer. They walk back and forth all night looking for business. I suspected our crazed dealer who wanted to get violent with us was a runner, delivering supplies to his friends walking the bridge who he knew. For a traditionally safe city that welcomes tourists from around the world, Paris has some problems right now. Letting violent drug dealers occupy such a heavily visited tourist sight in the middle of town is disappointing.

All of this comes not too long after seeing and hearing of countless burned motor scooters in otherwise safe neighborhoods. This is also not that long after a visiting friend had the back pocket of his pants slashed while three (there are always three) hooligans jammed the Metro Solferino escalator near the Musee d'Orsay. Apparently that gig was going on for quite some time but I hear the Orsay isn't very popular with tourists so it probably doesn't matter, right? Is it a sign of the times or are these experiences simply one-off examples? I don't know but I sure never saw much of this in the past here. On the positive side of things, it did give us an opportunity to find a new spot for photos. Hooray for that. Read More......

Another $10 billion for Citi?


OK, time to give Citi the "GM" treatment and send CEO Vikram Pandit packing. Failure to lower the boom on these bozos (and then start breaking the beast apart) will be a clear sign that Wall Street gets as many chances as they need compared to Detroit. CNNMoney:
Citigroup Inc. may need to generate up to $10 billion in new capital to meet the requirements of the U.S. government's stress tests, the Wall Street Journal reported on its Web site Friday.

Like other financial institutions, the bank is in talks with the Federal Reserve about whether it needs more capital.
Read More......

Star Trek computer finally arrives


The Independent:
The biggest internet revolution for a generation will be unveiled this month with the launch of software that will understand questions and give specific, tailored answers in a way that the web has never managed before....

Wolfram Alpha will not only give a straight answer to questions such as "how high is Mount Everest?", but it will also produce a neat page of related information – all properly sourced – such as geographical location and nearby towns, and other mountains, complete with graphs and charts.

The real innovation, however, is in its ability to work things out "on the fly", according to its British inventor, Dr Stephen Wolfram. If you ask it to compare the height of Mount Everest to the length of the Golden Gate Bridge, it will tell you. Or ask what the weather was like in London on the day John F Kennedy was assassinated, it will cross-check and provide the answer. Ask it about D sharp major, it will play the scale. Type in "10 flips for four heads" and it will guess that you need to know the probability of coin-tossing. If you want to know when the next solar eclipse over Chicago is, or the exact current location of the International Space Station, it can work it out.
Read More......

Wild boars killed at Baghdad zoo


Idiots.
Three wild boars were put to sleep in Iraq on Friday because of swine flu fears, a zoo official said.

The decision to kill the 10-year-old wild boars in Baghdad was a precautionary measure by the government to prevent an outbreak of swine flu, said Adel Musa, the zoo director.

It was done "to break a barrier of fear" zoo visitors had developed in recent days because of the spread of swine flu worldwide, he said.
Read More......

Where's Our 'Fierce Advocate'?


Former Clinton adviser Richard Socarides argues in the Washington Post that Obama needs to get more aggressive on gay issues:
In December, while trying to quiet the furor over his invitation of Rick Warren to take part in his inauguration, Barack Obama reminded us that he had been a "consistent" and "fierce advocate of equality for gay and lesbian Americans." But at the end of its first 100 days, his administration has been neither....

I understand that the president has his hands full saving the economy. But across a broad spectrum of issues -- including women's rights, stem cell research and relations with Cuba -- the Obama administration has shown a willingness to exploit this change moment to bring about dramatic reform.

So why not on gay rights? Where is our New Deal?
Richard goes on to suggest a few things Obama could, should, do.

I'm divided. I think both Joe and I, because of our years (decades) in politics, have a sometimes nuanced, but also sometimes too tame, approach to politics (which might surprise those who we've targeted in the past). When pushing for change, sometimes you need to be aggressive, other times you need to bide your time and wait until the right moment to strike. But that nuance can sometimes force you to be too cautious, making you miss an opportunity for success.

Thus the Obama conundrum. Joe and I both have felt in the past that it's wise for Obama to wait a bit before doing anything huge on gay issues. The first 100 days, we thought, was better spent on the economy, lest the public wonder why Obama is dilly-dallying on gay issues instead of dealing with the impending depression.

But Richard raises a good point. It's not like Obama hasn't "dilly-dallied" on other issues that have nothing to do with the economy. Pushing through Sebelius appointment in spite of pro-lifers' objections. Opening to Cuba and Iran. Stems cells. Torture. Gitmo. In fact, gay rights is one of the only hot-button issues Obama has not addressed in the first hundred days, as Richard rightly notes.

While I still think Obama needs to tread very carefully on any gay rights advances, lest he repeat the mistakes of Bill Clinton's gays in the military debacle, he also needs to remember that Clinton's mistake wasn't trying to help the gays. It was doing it without a well thought out plan for success.

Times have changed. We are a much different country today than we were in 1993. As evidenced by the AP story I posted yesterday, that noted that gay marriage was now a potential winner for Dems and loser for Republicans. Democrats cannot let past failures on gay rights, or health care reform, convince them that those issues aren't winnable, or worse, worth winning. Politics is the art of the possible, and our control of the House, Senate and White House, after years of being in the minority, shows that no matter how great the defeat in the past, the future always holds hope.

Obama has a lot of issues on his plate. And our civil rights should be one of them. Openly-gay appointees are laudable, but they're also expected. You don't get kudos for hiring a black man, a woman, or a Jew. You hire them because they're qualified, and because you're not a racist, a sexist, or an anti-Semite. At some point, Obama needs to show more support for the gay community than simply not discriminating against us. Especially when Bill Clinton didn't discriminate against us either, 18 years ago. In two decades, we have earned the right to demand more.

We need more. We expect more. We deserve more. Read More......

The Catholic Bishops are cranky, but American Catholics aren't listening


The Catholic Bishops are still bitching about Notre Dame inviting Obama to its graduation. Because, in the warped world of the American Catholic hierarchy, that's a big issue. But, the bishops are out of touch with their parishioners:
Polls show Catholics giving high job approval ratings to Obama, and Catholic attitudes about abortion and stem-cell research largely mirror the public's.

"I think the bishops who believe abortion is the ultimate litmus test look at the polls and realize Catholics are not listening to them," said the Rev. Mark Massa, co-director of the Curran Center for American Catholic Studies at Fordham University. "They're playing a very dangerous game because they do not have the moral authority they had before the sex abuse crisis, and they're trying to find a toehold and get heard."

So far, the Notre Dame saga doesn't seem to be resonating. Only about half of Catholics surveyed by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life from April 23 to 27 had heard about the controversy.
Of course it isn't resonating. The Bishops, Archbishops and Cardinals often border on the absurd in terms of their outspoken priorities. A speech by the presdident at Notre Dame doesn't bother most Catholics. It's not a real issue.

Sounds like the Catholic bishops are spending too much time listening to Rush. Read More......

Sunday Talk Shows Open Thread


Here's what we've got today: a lot of flu, some Specter, a bit of the Supreme Court and a small slice of the "new" GOP.

We'll get the H1N1 story from Secretary Sebelius, Secretary Napolitano and Richard Besser from CDC. Those three have a busy day, appearing on all five major shows. Specter speaks for himself on "Face the Nation." (The fading "Meet the Press" has the same exact guests as CBS.) Specter's potential Democratic primary opponent, Congressman Joe Sestak, also gets some face time. There are several other Senators who can talk Specter and the Supreme Court.

Cantor and Mitt can talk about the little pizza party they had yesterday.

Here's the lineup:
ABC's "This Week" — Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah; Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius; Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano; acting CDC Director Richard Besser.

___

CBS' "Face the Nation" — Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa.; Besser; Sebelius; Napolitano.

___

NBC's "Meet the Press" — Sebelius; Napolitano; Besser; Specter.

___

CNN's "State of the Union" — Leahy; House Minority Whip Eric Cantor, R-Va.; Rep. Joe Sestak, D-Pa.; former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney; Napolitano; Sebelius; Besser.


"Fox News Sunday" _ Napolitano; Sebelius; Besser; Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and John Ensign, R-Nev.
Read More......

Is your neighborhood a walker's paradise?


Mine clocked in somewhere between the 40s and the 90s (I live basically in two overlapping neighborhoods on the list). Is your neighborhood on there? Seems very DC and NY centric. Read More......

Canadian pigs have got the flu, but experts say remote chance of transmitting to humans


Still, you know they're gonna panic worldwide. Read More......

Warren Buffett: Govt response to economic crisis was appropriate


CNNMoney:
Berkshire Hathaway chief Warren Buffett defended the government's handling of the economic crisis, but warned that the purchasing power of the dollar may fall as policymakers stretch to finance expensive rescue plans.

Reflecting on the near implosion of the financial system last fall, Buffett said officials should be judged more leniently when facing "as close to a total meltdown as you can imagine."

....

Buffett defended federal efforts to support the economy, ranging from last fall's financial rescues to the the $787 billion stimulus plan enacted earlier this year.

"Government does need to step in," Buffett said, referring to the 6% contraction of the U.S. economy in the fourth quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009.
Read More......