Swedish Meatballs
12 hours ago
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is pressing the U.S. Congress to enact a sweeping intellectual-property bill that would increase criminal penalties for copyright infringement, including "attempts" to commit piracy.... The Bush administration is throwing its support behind a proposal called the Intellectual Property Protection Act of 2007, which is likely to receive the enthusiastic support of the movie and music industries, and would represent the most dramatic rewrite of copyright law since a 2005 measure dealing with prerelease piracy....Oh where to begin?
The IPPA would, for instance:
* Criminalize "attempting" to infringe copyright. Federal law currently punishes not-for-profit copyright infringement with between 1 and 10 years in prison, but there has to be actual infringement that takes place....
* Permit more wiretaps for piracy investigations. Wiretaps would be authorized for investigations of Americans who are "attempting" to infringe copyrights....
* Allow computers to be seized more readily. Specifically, property such as a PC "intended to be used in any manner" to commit a copyright crime would be subject to forfeiture, including civil asset forfeiture....
* Require Homeland Security to alert the Recording Industry Association of America. That would happen when CDs with "unauthorized fixations of the sounds, or sounds and images, of a live musical performance" are attempted to be imported.
"He's lying. Everybody knows it. He just makes stuff up and says it, knowing the media will never question him on it. Well, we are questioning him on it: He's lying."It's one thing for him not to want benchmarks or not to want us to pull out, but he won't be able to justify to the American people why he shouldn't show us some progress before he gets the entire enchilada.
"In hostility to American history, the radical secularists insist that religious belief is inherently divisive," Gingrich said, deriding what he called the "contorted logic" and "false principles" of advocates of secularism in American society.Basic fairness demands that religion not be used as a weapon against other Americans. And, it is wrong to single out anyone for discrimination. But that's what Falwell, Pat Robertson, James Dobson and Newt all do. Frank Rich summed up Falwell's legacy of hate in one well-written sentence:
"Basic fairness demands that religious beliefs deserve a chance to be heard," he said during his 26-minute speech. "It is wrong to single out those who believe in God for discrimination. Yet, today, it is impossible to miss the discrimination against religious believers."
Mr. Falwell was always on the wrong, intolerant side of history. He fought against the civil rights movement and ridiculed Desmond Tutu’s battle against apartheid years before calling AIDS the “wrath of a just God against homosexuals” and, in 1999, fingering the Antichrist as an unidentified contemporary Jew.But, Falwell and his followers are the victims according to Gingrich. Newt's not just a notorious adulterer, he's a notorious panderer. Read More......
"He has done nothing wrong," Bush said in an impassioned defense of his longtime friend and adviser during a news conference at his Texas ranch.Of course you do. But then again, you're an idiot, incompetent, a liar, and the WORST PRESIDENT EVER. So it's no great surprise that under the Bush standard of excellence, Gonzales excels. Read More......
Despite Bush's comments, support for Gonzales is eroding, even in the president's own party. The Senate is prepared to hold a no-confidence vote, possibly by week's end, and five Republican senators have joined many Democrats in calling for Gonzales' resignation.
The attorney general is under investigation by Congress in last year's firing of eight federal prosecutors.
The president told the Democrats to get back to more pressing matters.
"I stand by Al Gonzales, and I would hope that people would be more sober in how they address these important issues," Bush said. "And they ought to get the job done of passing legislation, as opposed to figuring out how to be actors on the political theater stage."
...."I frankly view what's taking place in Washington today as pure political theater," Bush said, sounding exasperated with the furor swirling around his longtime friend.
“There are some sensitivities over the timing of this. We have had communications from our counterparts in the United States, and they have asked us questions about how we’ve handled it and how it’s gone on the ground. There does seem to be some debate going on over how long the current policy will be sustainable.”Now back to the Times' ill-advised choice of a photo of some drag queens to illustrate how "normal" British gay soldiers are.
As Congress and the American public begin to ask for tangible and quantitative measures of whether the troop increase in Iraq is creating improvement or presiding over failure, it would be wise to remember the kind of place where the United States is dispatching — metaphorically, at least — its statisticians.With so little access to the ground truth, it is extraordinarily difficult to evaluate the current situation, let alone what the trends are. Many observers, especially within the administration, desperately want their positions to be right and their programs to be successful, which biases their view -- often to the detriment of Americans' understanding of the facts. Further, another significant problems is that people become adept at telling U.S. officials what they want to hear, rather than reality.
Iraq is the place where there are still wildly conflicting estimates of something as fundamental as how many civilians have died as a result of the war. It is a place where some government officials will swear that there are 348,000 wonderfully trained, motivated and equipped Iraqis in the security forces and other officials will tell you that most of those troops and police either have questionable loyalties, lack equipment or simply do not always report for duty. The precision is very important: 348,000, according to Wednesday’s update from the Pentagon. Or, perhaps, hundreds of thousands less.
How can a single country look so kaleidoscopically different depending on the point of view? Part of the answer is clearly that competing political entities strain with all their might to see a reality that fits their convictions — and that includes official entities that are determined to show progress . . .It is increasingly difficult to get good intelligence, reliable information on macro-level metrics, or even updates on the political process. The obfuscation will only increase as the administration comes under more criticism about the war; attempts to show progress will become the most important part of keeping the war going. If you think the administration will ever admit that progress simply isn't happening, you're crazy. And with the situation so messy and confused, it will be hard to sort fact from fiction. Read More......
Another difficulty for the United States is the remarkable weakness American officials seem to have for people who say what Americans want to believe about whatever country they happen to be in. The effect has been obvious at least since “The Quiet American” by Graham Greene, set in 1950s Vietnam, and Iraq has been fertile ground for this particular brand of bad information.
It is now clear that United States attorneys were pressured to act in the interests of the Republican Party, and lost their job if they failed to do so. The firing offenses of the nine prosecutors who were purged last year were that they would not indict Democrats, they investigated important Republicans, or they would not try to suppress the votes of Democratic-leaning groups with baseless election fraud cases.It is shocking. In some ways, it's too shocking for many in the Washington punditry to grasp. I really think some reporters and columnists just can't bring themselves to believe what Bush and his lackeys have been doing. Last week, because the Bush spinmeisters told them the scandal was over, the consensus among the D.C. brain trust was the Gonzales had survived. Wrong.
The degree of partisanship in the department is shocking.
In the newspaper interview, Carter said Bush had taken a "radical departure from all previous administration policies" with the Iraq war.The Bushies don't want a discussion of the substance of what Carter said. They want to turn this into a political war of words. And, the media dutifully follows suit. CNN's GOP apologist Candy Crowley said this morning that the White House was "emboldened" and "figured, hey, this is a guy we can take on." It would be way too much work for Crowley and her colleagues to discuss the substance of what Carter said. But even if the pundits want to discuss politics, they could look at the polls showing Americans think Bush's main foreign policy initiative, the Iraq war, is a disaster. Crowley could even read CNN's latest poll for some insight.
"We now have endorsed the concept of pre-emptive war where we go to war with another nation militarily, even though our own security is not directly threatened, if we want to change the regime there or if we fear that some time in the future our security might be endangered," Carter said.
Rising from the dust of the city's Green Zone it is destined, at $592m (£300m), to become the biggest and most expensive US embassy on earth when it opens in September.Read More......
It will cover 104 acres (42 hectares) of land, about the size of the Vatican. It will include 27 separate buildings and house about 615 people behind bomb-proof walls. Most of the embassy staff will live in simple, if not quite monastic, accommodation in one-bedroom apartments.
The US ambassador, however, will enjoy a little more elbow room in a high-security home on the compound reported to fill 16,000 square feet (1,500 sq metres). His deputy will have to make do with a more modest 9,500 sq ft.
They will have a pool, gym and communal living areas, and the embassy will have its own power and water supplies.
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