Goat head sent to Palermo GM

OHMIGOD! Business as usual in Sicily?

Al Gore Endorses Steve Jobs 100%

Al Gore (Apple Board member) and Apple’s audit committee stated they were sure any “irregularities” with Jobs’ options (fraud and lying) had been completely corrected and they had total confidence Steve could continue to be Knight of Apple, warrior of all things not Microsoft, defender of real creative and community code.

Top 25 Censored Stories of 2007

Top Ten Ways the US Enabled Saddam Hussein

The tendency to treat Saddam and Iraq in a historical vacuum, and in isolation from the superpowers, however, has hidden from Americans their own culpability in the horror show that has been Iraq for the past few decades. Initially, the US used the Baath Party as a nationalist foil to the Communists. Then Washington used it against Iran. The welfare of Iraqis themselves appears to have been on no one's mind, either in Washington or in Baghdad.

Club America-Chivas Guadalajara on Univision drew highest U.S. TV viewership for a professional club soccer match in 12 years

The Club America-Chivas Guadalajara match, dubbed the superclasico because the match pits the two biggest professional soccer clubs in Mexico, drew 2.048 million U.S. TV households (1.8% rating), and 3.956 million U.S. TV viewers age 2 and over when it aired live in the U.S. on Univision on Sunday December 10 at 9pm Eastern Time/6pm Pacific Time.

Not only did the viewership of the superclasico surpass the viewership of any other professional club soccer match on U.S. television (including both Major League Soccer and the Mexican First Division) in the past 12 years, the US TV viewership of the match surpassed the U.S. TV viewership of every National Hockey League (NHL) telecast on both NBC Sports and OLN (now known as Versus) during the 2005-2006 NHL season with the exception of Game 7 of the 2006 Stanley Cup Final series on NBC Sports (which drew 5.45 million viewers age 2 and over).

DAMN!

Steve Jobs Allegedly Steals $455,625,000 Worth of Apple Shares in 2001

CEO’s and Apple behave like this for two reasons: one, the $450 million payout comes from suckers in the stock market, lied to and fooled that Apple is a reputable company. The money isn’t earned in the traditional sense, there’s never any screaming that $450 million were taken out of cash revenues of the company. Two, until very recently under American accounting rules that $450 million wasn’t even expensed as a cost!

Normally $450 million in CEO compensation would be subtracted from Apple’s profit statement at the end of the year, but since they were options, incredibly, $450 million would never appear on the books as the compensation payout it is. Free money from the market, free money in accounting. A setup like that was irresistible to thousands of CEO’s who abused it terribly, netting vast fortunes for literally nothing.

"Say It Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud"

A small tribute to the Godfather of Soul. The wife and I were lucky enough to catch JB in concert back in 2003 in Battery Park for a free concert. He didn't do the splits but he did get funky!

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Happy New Year from California. Haven't been posting as much since I have been on holiday. Hope you are yours are having a nice break as well.

Kebmodee...

Giant squid caught in Sea of Japan

A Japanese research team has succeeded in filming a giant squid live — possibly for the first time — and says the elusive creatures may be more plentiful than previously believed, a researcher said Friday.

Man vs. Toad?


The Australian military is being asked to help fight a ground war with cane toads in that country's north.

The redacted Iran op-ed revealed

The New York Times has taken the unusual step of publishing an op-ed in which parts of the contents have been "redacted" or blacked out by government censors, who believe that its contents would reveal "sensitive" information that the White House wants to withold. Below is RAW STORY's best informed guess at what might hide behind the redactions.

Study: Psilocybin Relieves OCD Symptoms


TUCSON, Ariz. - A preliminary study of the active ingredient in psychedelic mushrooms has found it is effective in relieving the symptoms of people suffering from severe obsessive compulsive disorder, a University of Arizona psychiatrist reports.

Dr. Francisco A. Moreno led the first FDA-approved clinical study of psilocybin since it was outlawed in 1970. The results of the small-scale study are published in the latest edition of the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.

U.S. trips to Canada plummet


An unprecedented number of Americans avoided the hassle and cost of a same-day cross-border car trip in October, as overall U.S. travel to Canada dropped to its lowest level since record-keeping began in 1972.

In all, Americans made 2.29 million trips to Canada in October, according to a report from Statistics Canada. That marks a 2.2-per-cent drop from September and a 12.1-per-cent tumble from a year ago.

The largest monthly plunge was in September, 2001, and in the five years since terrorist attacks brought down the World Trade Center towers, day-long U.S. visits to Canada have never topped two million.

Although Statscan does not track the reasons for shifts in travel, economists and experts believe the drop is being driven by the weaker U.S and stronger Canadian dollars, the high cost of gasoline, and the U.S. push to tighten security.


us officials were quoted as saying, "stay at home, do not travel and experience life, work work work."

Slaughter asks Bush why he censored op-ed

"If, indeed, redacting the information from the op-ed was necessary for national security purposes, then the CIA's failure to deem the information in the previously published version of the article as classified may have put our security at risk. If classifying information in the previously published version of the article was not necessary, then I am left to believe that your Administration redacted information for political purposes."

It's not a bear, it's a man

Unbelievable, but apparently true.

The Virgin Komodo

It's a festivus miracle!

No money to treat 9/11 workers, $3 billion a week to fight Iraq?

Is this a new 9/11 conspiracy The New York Times is reporting? That “roughly $40 million that was set aside by the federal government to treat rescue workers, volunteers and firefighters who became ill after helping with the 9/11 cleanup and recovery will run out in months, physicians and federal officials said yesterday.” And the fund goes broke while the war meter ticks in Iraq at nearly $3 billion a week?

Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park

NYC violated Constitution by jailing protesters

NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York City violated the U.S. Constitution for more than two months in 2001 with a policy to detain arrested protesters overnight instead of giving them summonses to appear in court, a U.S. federal jury found on Monday.

The suit stemmed from the city's handling of the mass protests and arrests in New York immediately after the 1999 killing by police of unarmed Guinean immigrant Amadou Diallo, who was hit by 19 shots.

An eight-person jury in Manhattan federal court found that the city's police department violated the First Amendment right to free speech and the 14th Amendment right to due process between May 1, 2001, and July 13, 2001, by its policy of locking up protesters overnight in city jails.

However, the same jury ruled that the 350 protester plaintiffs failed to show that in the two years before 2001 the city followed an unwritten policy of locking up protesters.

and what about all those jailed protestors during the republican convention, eh?

Animation Legend Joe Barbera Dead At 95

Another popular offering from Hanna-Barbera featured a cowardly Great Dane named Scooby-Doo, who eventually made his own place in television history. The popular series "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?" remained in production for 17 years and maintains the title as television's longest-running animated series.

We all grew up with Hanna-Barbera, eh? Quality.

War on the homeless in Sin City

Getting thrown in the slammer for sleeping within 500 ft of a feces would be tough on a lot of levels. Not to mention there are better way to get in trouble in Vegas!

Catastrophic Failure. Foundations, Nonprofits, and the Continuing Crisis in New Orleans.

In conversations this week with scores of New Orleans residents, including organizers, social welfare advocates, health care providers, educators, artists and media makers, I heard countless stories of diverted funding and unmet needs. While many stressed that they have had important positive experiences with national allies, few received anything close to the funding, resources, or staff they need for their work, and most are working unsustainable hours while living in a devastated city.

Research backs up the anecdotal reports. A January 2006 article in The Chronicle of Philanthropy argued that the amount given to post-Katrina New Orleans was “small-potato giving for America's foundations, which collectively have $500-billion in assets.” The article added, “just as deplorable as the small sums poured into the region, are the choices foundations have made about where the money should go.” In other words, little had gone to organizations directed by or accountable to New Orleanians. One prominent New Orleans-born advocate and lobbyist called this phenomenon the “Halliburtization of the nonprofit sector.”

Iran to replace dollar with euro in foreign deals

Caught in a tight squeeze

A lesson in the hazards of big snake ownership.

Protest at SMU Targets Bush Library

Objections to Bush library mount at Texas university

...regret to see SMU enshrine attitudes and actions widely deemed as ethically egregious: degradation of habeas corpus, outright denial of global warming, flagrant disregard for international treaties, alienation of long-term U.S. allies, environmental predation, shameful disrespect for gay persons and their rights, a pre-emptive war based on false and misleading premises, and a host of other erosions of respect for the global human community and for this good Earth on which our flourishing depends.

Diplomat's suppressed document lays bare the lies behind Iraq war

No surprise here but good to see the proof nonetheless: And I quote:

"His hitherto secret evidence threatens to reopen the row over the legality of the conflict, under which Mr Blair has sought to draw a line as the internecine bloodshed in Iraq has worsened."

Methinks one wouldn't see that sentence in an American pape, eh?

Fattest People on Planet? Americans Take the Cake.

Americans consumed more than twice as much high-fructose corn syrup per person as in 1980 and remained the fattest inhabitants of the planet, although Mexicans, Australians, Greeks, New Zealanders and Britons are not too far behind.

At the same time, we spent more of our lives than ever -- about 8 1/2 hours a day -- watching television, using computers, listening to the radio, going to the movies or reading.

About Face: Soldiers Call for Iraq Withdrawal

After appearing only seven weeks ago on the Internet, the Appeal for Redress, brainchild of 29-year-old Navy seaman Jonathan Hutto, has already been signed by nearly 1,000 US soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen, including dozens of officers--most of whom are on active duty. Not since 1969, when some 1,300 active-duty military personnel signed an open letter in the New York Times opposing the war in Vietnam, has there been such a dramatic barometer of rising military dissent.

Amazing Christmas Lights Display!

Rice: No talks will happen with Syria or Iran

Condoleeza Rice will not actively recruit Iran or Syria to help stabilize Iraq, despite it being a major recommendation of the Baker bi-partisan panel. Stubborness and a lack of effort to reach out and utilize diplomacy will be included in the "new" course of action on Iraq by the Bush team. We've seen this movie before.

AI!-Congrats!

Federal judge issues split decision on new Military Commissions Act


WASHINGTON — In the first legal decision on a federal law that denies access to U.S. courts to detainees in the war on terrorism, a federal judge ruled Wednesday that foreign prisoners held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, could not sue for freedom.

But, in a split decision, U.S. District Judge James Robertson also ruled that the law's denial of that right to the more than 12 million legal immigrants living in the United States was unconstitutional

U.S. Breast Cancer Rate Falls


thank you god!

New York Underwater?

By 2100, storms could make it happen.

TrueMajority Foldable Frisbee

Impeach the President: The Case Against Bush and Cheney

Impeach the President is a comprehensive analysis of a criminal administration. It unearths the stories behind voter fraud in 2000 and 2004, the overt lies used to justify pre-emptive war on Iraq, the extensive, ongoing commission of war crimes and torture, the tragic failures in the lead-up to and aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and lesser-known but equally alarming offences of propaganda and disinformation, illegal spying, environmental destruction, and the violation of the separation of church and state. Loo and Phillips chillingly reveal the full threat behind the radical right-wing force that has taken over the most powerful office in the world.

The collection includes a striking introduction by Howard Zinn and contributions from Dennis Loo, Peter Phillips, Judith Volkart, Dahr Jamail, Jeremy Brecher, Jill Cutler, Brendan Smith, Larry Everest, Greg Palast, Nancy Snow, Barbara J. Bowley, Mark Crispin Miller, Kevin Wehr, Richard Heinberg, Lyn Duff, Dennis Bernstein, Bridget Thornton, Lew Brown, Andrew Sloan, Cynthia Boaz, and Michael Nagler

New Forecast: Severe Space Storm Headed to Earth


Space weather forecasters revised their predictions for storminess after a major flare erupted on the Sun overnight threatening damage to communication systems and power grids while offering up the wonder of Northern Lights.

"We're looking for very strong, severe geomagnetic storming" to begin probably around mid-day Thursday, Joe Kunches, Lead Forecaster at the NOAA Space Environment Center, told SPACE.com this afternoon.

The storm is expected to generate aurora or Northern Lights, as far south as the northern United States Thursday night. Astronauts aboard the International Space Station are not expected to be put at additional risk, Kunches said.

Radio communications, satellites and power grids could face potential interruptions or damage, however.

Solar flares send radiation to Earth within minutes. Some are also accompanied by coronal mass ejections (CME), clouds of charged particles that arrive in a day or two. This flare unleashed a strong CME that's aimed squarely at Earth.

The baiji is gone

Very sad news for the environment. A rare species of white dolphin that had evolved and survived for over 20 millions of years was declared extinct yesterday, due mainly to overfishing, ship traffic and pollution. The baiji had been fighting for survival for many years, but ultimately lost out to man. More at:

http://www.baiji.org/

Conference Call with Sunil Gulati and Bob Bradley, the new US Soccer head coach

For the soccer junkies...

NI soldiers convicted of 1,300 offences

"People will be shocked at the extent to which criminality permeates the ranks of the British Army serving in the six counties (Northern Ireland)," the North Antrim MLA said.

"Well over 1,000 members of the British Army serving in the six counties have received criminal convictions in magistrates' and crown courts over the past six years."

Another loss for the GOP...in Texas

The democrats pick up another House seat in W's home state.

Luke, let go, search your feelings...

Not the best idea


Well, this guy won't be invited to join the mensa club anytime soon after calling 911 to report that someone stole his spleef.

Texas city haunted by 'no blacks after dark' past

Just unbelievable that this sort of thing still exists.

Columnist claims soy products reduce penis size, make men gay

Uh-oh!

Dancing Water in Texas


What could possibly make more sense for a perenially drought-stricken city than to help build a $3 million water fountain to decorate a ritzy shopping mall? Plano City Council members approved the use of $1 million of tax payer money towards the fountain which was designed by the creator of the famous Bellagio Fountains in Las Vegas and requires 220,000 gallons of water to operate. What's in the water down there?

Also see: http://cbs11tv.com/topstories/local_story_339212422.html

http://www.planostar.com/articles/2006/12/01/plano_star-courier/news/0001news.txt

EPA May Delist Lead as a Pollutant


Environmental PROTECTION Agency? Well, only in name when powerful lobbyists keep speed-dialing the boss, and that's exactly what has been happening between the lead smelter industry (and others) and the Bush Administration. Ironic since the President said in 2004 he wanted to be considered a "good steward of the environment." What, the broken promise to reduce CO2 emissions wasn't enough?

Congress Demands Answers on Anthrax


Thirty-three members of Congress have written Attorney General Alberto Gonzales demanding that the FBI update lawmakers on the investigation into the anthrax attacks five years ago that paralyzed the nation with bio-terror fears.

The bipartisan letter escalates efforts by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., to get the FBI to tell lawmakers what it has learned during the five-year case that remains unsolved. The FBI has refused, citing concerns about possible leaks.

Soldier killed three days after returning armour

Samantha Roberts, the dead man's widow, campaigned to find out the truth about his death and called for an apology from Mr Hoon for the "unfillable void" it left in her life.

Before yesterday's hearing in Oxford, she said: "I'm just going to go with an open mind and see what happens."

Initially it had been believed that Sgt Roberts had been shot by an Iraqi who had been throwing stones at him.

But a later investigation revealed he was hit by a gunner in a Challenger tank 20 yards away, who was unaware that the L94 machinegun he used was known to be inaccurate at short range.

Congress must call for a re-vote in Florida

Desmond Tutu cancels UN mission to Gaza, blames Israel


Geneva- The South African Archbishop and Nobel peace prize winner, Desmond Tutu has called off his UN mission to Gaza, Monday blaming delays by the Israeli Government.

He had been due to depart on Sunday on a visit on behalf of the Human Rights Council to Beit Hanoun, the northern Gaza town which came under a barrage of artillery fire by Israel last month. Nineteen people were killed.

The Archbishop said Monday that an important part of his mission would have involved meeting high-level government officials but the necessary visas did not arrive in time.

Impeachment rallies held coast to coast

As her final legislative act on Friday, outgoing Georgia Rep. Cynthia McKinney introduced an impeachment bill, although it was just a "symbolic parting shot" by the controversial Democrat and has no chance of passing. Incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had promised before the midterm elections that impeachment would be "off the table," and after the Democrats regained control of Congress, Rep. John Conyers, the soon-to-be chairman for the Judiciary Committee agreed.

Renowned Cancer Scientist Was Paid by Chemical Firm for 20 Years

While he was being paid by Monsanto, Sir Richard wrote to a royal Australian commission investigating the potential cancer-causing properties of Agent Orange, made by Monsanto and used by the US in the Vietnam war. Sir Richard said there was no evidence that the chemical caused cancer...

Sir Richard died last year. Among his papers in the Wellcome Foundation library archive is a contract he signed with Monsanto. Dated April 29 1986, it extends for a year the consulting agreement that began on May 10 1979 and offers improved terms. "During the one-year period of this extension your consulting fee shall be $1,500 per day," it says.

Monsanto said yesterday it did not know how much work Sir Richard did for the company, but said he was an expert witness for Solutia, a chemical business spun off from Monsanto, as recently as 2000.

Watch out for Phlogs!

A "WHOIS" search of the domain name for the website claims that it is registered to one "Aaron Wilson" of Van Nuys, CA, and provides a phone number and e-mail address for the registrant of the website. However, one watcher of this website and others suggested in October that the name is fake, although the e-mail address associated with the registration had been used for other websites as well.

USSF acts fast after Klinsmann snub with Bradley hire


The conditions attached to Bradley's hiring are hardly ideal. It's not clear yet how long his interim period will last, but it would be silly not to let Bradley coach the U.S. men through the 2007 Gold Cup and Copa América. (The guy deserves a legitimate chance.) If Bradley can get results, he may well earn the job permanently (as Steve Sampson did after guiding the U.S. to a fourth-place finish in the 1995 Copa América). But the first year of a four-year cycle leading to the 2010 World Cup should be more about developing young players and less about results on the field. Since Bradley will have to win from the start to keep his job, developing younger players will be a more difficult proposition. That's exactly why Bruce Arena wanted (and got) four-year guaranteed contracts.

The Decline and Fall of American Conservatism

Here are some hard facts. Government spending has increased faster under George Bush and his Republican Congress than it did under Bill Clinton, and more people work for the federal government today than at any time since the end of the Cold War...

Increased spending inevitably means increased taxes. Thus, despite President Bush’s much vaunted tax cuts, Americans actually pay more in taxes today than they did during Bill Clinton’s last year in office. The 2006 annual report from Americans for Tax Reform, titled “Cost of Government Day,” sums up rather nicely the intrusive role played by Republican government in the lives of ordinary Americans. The report says that Americans had to work 86.5 days just to pay their federal taxes, as compared to 78.5 days in 2000 under Bill Clinton. In other words, the average American has worked 10.2 percent more for the federal government under George Bush than under Bill Clinton. When state and local taxes (controlled in the majority of places by Republicans) are added to federal taxes, Americans worked for the government eight hours a day, five days a week, from January 1 until July 12, meaning they worked full-time for the government for more than half the year. As Tom Feeney, a congressional Republican put it: “I remember growing up and reading in some school textbooks that if more than half your paycheck went to the government, then you were living in a socialist society.”7 Just so, Mr. Feeney.

New Orleans to Raze Public Housing


Public housing officials decided Thursday to proceed with the demolition of more than 4,500 government apartments here, brushing aside an outcry from residents displaced by Hurricane Katrina who said the move was intended to reduce the ability of poor black people to repopulate the city.

TOP-LEVEL INSIDERS SELLING THEIR STOCK

America's corporate chiefs are unloading their own stocks at one of the boldest paces in 20 years...

Analysts say a take-the-money-and-run flight from their own companies signals a growing lack of confidence in the economy's future course, as well as fears of a possible global meltdown if the Iraq crisis escalates across borders.

It's also a good time to take profits, with the Dow Jones industrial average up nearly 15 percent this year, the S&P 500 ahead 13 percent, and the Nasdaq 11 percent higher.

Wall Street investors are displaying fresh worries that the Federal Reserve might pull the trigger too quickly on hiking rates again, possibly plunging the U.S. into a recession as the Fed did in 2000.

Trial for Rummy?


As he said goodbye to his position at the Pentagon, outgoing Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld may soon have a new one: defendant. While the chances are still slim, the ACLU is pursuing torture allegations against Rumsfeld, and the judge has not been quick to dismiss them. Very interesting!

Forget Scrooge, watch out for those elves!


Talk about low. Cops down in Orlando, Florida aren't too concerned about appearances as they generate some revenue for the Sunshine State. Ho, ho, ho!

Radical New Tire design by Michelin

Very cool!

These tires are airless and are scheduled to be out on the market very soon.

This is what great R&D will do and just think of the impact on existing technology:
a.. no more air valves
a.. no more air compressors at gas stations
a.. no more repair kits ...

Klinsmann withdraws candidacy as U.S. coach

Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!

After months of speculation culminating in an intense final round of back-and-forth negotiations and erroneous reports, Juergen Klinsmann has withdrawn his name from consideration to become the next U.S. men's national team coach.

hattip to dunord as usual with the scoop.

Yeah, this guy is going to straighten out Iraq....


A bipartisan panel of very smart people unanimously agreed that the US must talk to Iran if we have any hope of avoiding hell-on-earth in the Middle East after what we've done to Iraq. Bush's reply: he will only talk to Iran if they suspend their nuclear enrichment program because he believes that Iran is developing nucelar weapons. All intelligence, however, has told us that Iran is not developing weapons. How can Bush expect anyone in the world, even anyone in the USA, to believe him, after the blatant lies he told us on weapons of mass destruction several years ago in order to justify the invasion of Iraq (which got us into this ridiculous mess in the first place)? Bush is a liar, and we need a democracy in this country, not an oligarchy.

Rat out thy neighbor


Still, McKinney then threatened to suspend the student — identified in the lawsuit only by his initials — unless he joined McKinney’s “Narc Program” and went undercover to find real drug users at the school, according to the suit.

CONCACAF just got punked by FIFA

Now, FIFA has the CONCACAF 4th place side playing the CONMEBOL 5th place side and the Oceania champion playing the Asian fifth place side. FIFA has also said that they are considering having the Oceania champion play in the later stages of the Asian qualifying, instead of a playoff. FIFA did not change the number of nations that make the Finals.

surrender monkeys

You can always count on the NY Post for shock value!

New York Times: Supreme Court 'declining in relevance'

The number of cases the court decided with signed opinions last term, 69, was the lowest since 1953 and fewer than half the number the court was deciding as recently as the mid-1980s. And aside from the school integration and global warming cases the court heard last week, along with the terrorism-related cases of the last few years, relatively few of the cases the court is deciding nowadays speak to the core of the country's concerns.

Dawg and tranzport i am sure have some thoughts on this, eh?

BUSH ADMINSTRATION IMPLICATED IN NARCO DEATH SQUAD COVER UP

The Bush gov't, a coverup?

A group calling itself the National Security Whistleblowers Coalition has filed a Freedom of Information lawsuit against the Department of Justice which seeks to expose information implicating government officials behind the death squads involved on both sides of the border in more than 50 murders related to DEA, Homeland Security and Mexican police covert operations.

Marijuana's Active Ingredient Kills Leukemia Cells

While leukemia treatment is largely successful, some patients cannot be treated with conventional therapy; 25 percent of children fail treatment, leaving them with a poor-prognosis outcome. Scientists have previously reported that Δ9-THC has anti-cancer properties, so its use as an anti-leukemia drug may be promising, however, the psychoactive side effects, as well as its current legal status, complicate its use in cancer chemotherapy. Researchers are now trying to identify the molecular pathways targeted by Δ9-THC in order to develop new drugs that combat the same disease-pathway without the unwanted side effects.

In a study published in the February 2005 issue of Blood, Dr. Wai Man Liu and colleagues at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in London reported that Δ9-THC induced cell death in a panel of leukemia cells, including two AML cell lines. Surprisingly, Dr. Lui's group found that neither CB1 or CB2—the two receptors thought to mediate Δ9-THC effects—were involved in the leukemia cell death. Activation of the CB1 receptor in the brain produces the psychoactive effects associated with marijuana use. The CB2 receptor is usually found in cells of the immune system and may regulate immune function. Moreover, the anti-leukemia properties of Δ9-THC did not involve the p53 protein, which is often involved in cancer cell death; thus Δ9-THC did not appear to function through known pathways.

Iraq News Manipulated

The bipartisan Iraq Study Group has reported that military and intelligence officials have manipulated the news coming out of Iraq to paint a picture more suitable to the Bush administration. The level of violence which has been described as "satanic" by other high placed government officials upon return from Iraq, has consistently been underreported. Hmmm...is that why the Pentagon set up their own News Correction Unit at the end of October??

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6100906.stm

Does water STILL flow on Mars?


Scientists in the USA decided to retake images of the gullies to search for any sign of recent activity.

Two of those originally photographed in 1999 and 2001 then photographed again in 2004 and 2005 showed changes consistent with water having flowed down the side of the crater. The discovery was made by scientists at the San Diego-based Malin Space Systems which operated a camera aboard the spacecraft.

Writing in the journal Science, the researchers led by Michael Malin said the properties and settings of the deposits in the gullies are consistent with water flow.

Say Hello to the Goodbye Weapon

The crowd is getting ugly. Soldiers roll up in a Hummer. Suddenly, the whole right half of your body is screaming in agony. You feel like you've been dipped in molten lava. You almost faint from shock and pain, but instead you stumble backwards -- and then start running. To your surprise, everyone else is running too. In a few seconds, the street is completely empty.

You've just been hit with a new nonlethal weapon that has been certified for use in Iraq -- even though critics argue there may be unforeseen effects.

According to documents obtained for Wired News under federal sunshine laws, the Air Force's Active Denial System, or ADS, has been certified safe after lengthy tests by military scientists in the lab and in war games...


i'm sure those volunteers were real happy to not get paid. blisters? shoot, count me in!

NASA telescope sees black hole gulping remote star

For the past two years, scientists have monitored the dramatic events as the star, residing in a galaxy in the Bootes constellation, was ripped apart by the black hole.

Report: Israel, Iran Holding Debt Talks


So Iran and Israel and can sit down and discuss things but we can't sit down with Iran or North Korea. Such BS.

Israel and Iran had a close relationship in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, when Iran was ruled by the pro-Western Shah. Israeli companies were given large construction contracts in Iran, the countries cooperated on security and weapons development, and, according to the report, a joint Israeli-Iranian company, Trans Asiatic Oil Ltd., supplied Iranian oil to Israel.

Privacy advocates push for investigation, oversight of Bush wiretapping

"Civil liberties watchdogs on Tuesday urged a federal advisory committee to aggressively investigate the Bush administration's program of wiretapping without warrants, arguing that oversight is only effective when the truth prevails and not deference to those in power," writes Andrew Noyes. An ACLU lobbyist told Noyes that "the group's first order of business should be to review how the National Security Agency and other federal agencies target innocent citizens or other lawful residents with anti-terrorism efforts."

Survivors Dispute NYPD Account of Queens Shooting

"No,'' he said in a soft voice. "No fourth man.''...

The officers "never'' identified themselves, Guzman said, speaking from his bed at Mary Immaculate Hospital in a separate interview published Tuesday by the New York Daily News.

50 Shots

Link to a rapid response rap from Papoose

Hattip to the Brooklyn Vegan:

http://www.brooklynvegan.com/archives/2006/12/50_shots_papoos.html

The voice belonged to Papoose, a rapper from Brooklyn whose new song, “50 Shots,” is a furious — and surprisingly detailed — response to the shooting of Mr. Bell. In the last few days, the song has been circulating online. And DJ Kay Slay, who has become a mentor to Papoose, began his midnight radio show by playing it......Certainly he wasted no time in responding to the events of Saturday morning, when five police officers fired 50 shots at a car, killing Mr. Bell, who was to be married later that day, and wounding two others, Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield. [NY Times]

Nas weighs in...
"The one who reloaded should go before the judge and plead guilty," the rapper said in a statement released to MTV News referring to the detective who took 31 of the shots and reloaded his weapon during the incident. "If he was a man, he would be brave enough to face the charges as a man. ... This brutality bullsh-- is played out with that slave sh--. It has to end now. The cops need to be charged the way gangsters are charged."[MTV]

Tom Waits on the Daily Show



Waits just released a monster 3 CD set!

Overpopulation Concerns Force U.S. To Reopen South Dakota


"Though no human being has stepped foot on that desolate soil for the better part of a century, we believe it is the best option for addressing the overcrowding we see in the country's habitable states," Kempthorne said.

Government blacks out whole response to ethics watchdog's FOIA request

A response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request by the group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) yielded 100 pages of almost entirely redacted or blacked out material, RAW STORY has learned.

He's the Worst Ever!


Bush has taken this disdain for law even further. He has sought to strip people accused of crimes of rights that date as far back as the Magna Carta in Anglo-American jurisprudence: trial by impartial jury, access to lawyers and knowledge of evidence against them. In dozens of statements when signing legislation, he has asserted the right to ignore the parts of laws with which he disagrees. His administration has adopted policies regarding the treatment of prisoners of war that have disgraced the nation and alienated virtually the entire world. Usually, during wartime, the Supreme Court has refrained from passing judgment on presidential actions related to national defense. The court's unprecedented rebukes of Bush's policies on detainees indicate how far the administration has strayed from the rule of law.

Global Warming thwarts European World Cup

It's tough to ski without snow, as folks in the International Ski Federation are finding out, but are driving habits to blame? At least some would say yes.

Commenting on the effect global warming could have on his sport, 2006 Olympic champion Ted Ligety stated "It's important for people to minimize energy use. There is no need to drive an SUV that gets 14 miles per gallon." But how else will commuters compensate for their deficient libidos and need for status??? Ahh, Ligety must be a sports-car fan!

Jingle Jingle...it's Dingell

The incoming chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) is planning to hold the Bush adminstration accountable on how it has dodged...er, I mean complied with federal environmental laws while promoting its energy policies. Dingell will be joined in the House and Senate by other democrats trying to find a basis behind the rollback of more than 350 environmental laws since Bush took office. Dingell has previously stated that the Big Oil subsidies and Dick Cheney's shadowy energy task force would be in his crosshairs. Commenting on the environmental oversight during the past six years, Dingell stated "It's been nothing more than Kabuki theater." Domo Arigato John Dingell!

Fed court to hear 'landmark torture case' against Rumsfeld

Don't Ask … Don't E-mail

Everyone knew Mark Foley was gay. Everyone. And everyone who had a stake in his success—party, press, parents, staff, supporters, and pages—conspired for their own purposes to keep the closet half closed.

Archaeologists discover stone snake carved in cave in Botswana

The cave in the Tsodilo hills has a rock with a marked resemblance to a python's head, The Times of London reported. The rock has manmade marks on it and a hiding place behind it that could have been used by a shaman appearing to speak for the python.

Sheila Coulson of the University of Oslo said the indentations on the rock in daylight look like scales. In the light of a fire, the snake appears to move.

Padilla in Chains

Bush the worst ever?


Just the simple fact that there is a debate over Chimpy being the worst is enough. Like being slightly better than Nixon is somehow good...

Mmmm...tasty!

New Yorkers might have a harder time finding their iguana and armadillo meat (not to mention cow's lungs...yummy!) after a crackdown by food safety.

Kofi Annan says Iraqis better under Sadaam

Kofi Annan said today that the life of average Iraqis was better under Sadaam Hussein and that the ongoing fighting is "much worse" than Lebanon's own civil war years ago. Annan also stated that international community should help to rebuild the country and expressed doubts that Iraq could rebuild on their own. The U.N. estimates that more than 100 Iraqis die each day now from secretarian violence.

Iraq already dividing

Despite the attempts by President Bush and the newly created national Iraqi government, Iraq is already beginning to experience divisions that would ultimately create a land with three separate ruling states. The Baker group's plan will need to address the fact that Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish areas are already defining themselves through violence, and their unification will be a difficult task. Joe Biden has suggested dividing Iraq for a while now. Is it time for the United States to stop swimming upstream and go with the flow?

Mysteries of computer from 65BC are solved

Cool!

Remarkably, scans showed the device uses a differential gear, which was previously believed to have been invented in the 16th century. The level of miniaturisation and complexity of its parts is comparable to that of 18th century clocks.

Some researchers believe the machine, known as the Antikythera Mechanism, may have been among other treasure looted from Rhodes that was en route to Rome for a celebration staged by Julius Caesar.

Talk-radio spoof exposes prejudices

A pervasive fear and lack of understanding of Muslims and their faith came out during this radio spoof. The radio host suggested that Muslims should be forced to be identified with a crescent-shape tattoo or a distinctive arm band, and the resulting reactions to this idea speak for themselves.

Ex-CIA Worker Pleads Guilty To Burglary

Search warrants list 1,074 pairs of women's undergarments that he stole. Many were stuffed in shopping bags and a filing cabinet at his home in Falls Church.

Dalmas did not explain his actions during his guilty plea in Fairfax County Circuit Court, and neither his attorney nor prosecutors mentioned the panties during the hearing.

"I don't profess to be that knowledgeable about ladies' undergarments," Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Ian M. Rodway said after the court hearing. "They ran the gamut from frilly things to mundane things."

Refuge of Last Resort

Refuge of Last Resort - The only Hi Definition Katrina documentary filmed, edited and experienced by the filmmaker.

Riding into history--Russell Baze


SAN MATEO, Calif. – This one was for the grizzled railbirds who remember when Seabiscuit used to pack them in 30,000 strong. This one was for the small-time owners and breeders who still live paycheck to paycheck. This one was for Bay Meadows and other race tracks across the country fighting for survival.

This one was for the record books.

Far from the glitz of Churchill Downs and the glamour of Santa Anita, at a one-mile track without pretense or luxury boxes, Russell Baze tied the record for victories by a jockey with this 9,530th win on Thursday. He still needs one victory to pass Laffit Pincay, and it's likely to come Friday when Baze has seven mounts. But the celebration started early for a 48-year-old jockey whose grandmother rode horses when she was pregnant and whose family made a living riding and training horses at small tracks across the northwest.

Lawsuit stirs up guacamole labeling controversy

If consumers read the fine print, they would discover that Kraft Dips Guacamole contains less than 2% avocado. But few of them do. California avocado growers, who account for 95% of the nation's avocado crop, said they didn't know that store-bought guacamole contained little of their produce.

Will Ferrel on George Bush on Global Warming

Very very funny!

Chip-Hop

7M in U.S. jails, on probation or parole


WASHINGTON (AP) -- A record 7 million people - or one in every 32 American adults - were behind bars, on probation or on parole by the end of last year, according to the Justice Department. Of those, 2.2 million were in prison or jail, an increase of 2.7 percent over the previous year, according to a report released Wednesday

Lie by Lie: The Mother Jones Iraq War Timeline (8/1/90 - 6/21/03)

thanks pete!

Kansas Outlaws Practice Of Evolution


"No species is exempt," said Marcus Holloway, a state police spokesman. "Whether you're a human being or a fruit fly—if we detect one homologous chromosome trying to cross over during the process of meiosis, you will be punished to the full extent of the law."

Although the full impact of the new law will likely not be felt for approximately 10 million years, most Kansans say they are relieved that the ban went into effect this week, claiming that evolution may have gone too far already.

The New Middle East

another story from dre...


Just over two centuries since Napoleon's arrival in Egypt heralded the advent of the modern Middle East - some 80 years after the demise of the Ottoman Empire, 50 years after the end of colonialism, and less than 20 years after the end of the Cold War - the American era in the Middle East, the fourth in the region's modern history, has ended. Visions of a new, Europe-like region - peaceful, prosperous, democratic - will not be realized. Much more likely is the emergence of a new Middle East that will cause great harm to itself, the United States, and the world.

All the eras have been defined by the interplay of contending forces, both internal and external to the region. What has varied is the balance between these influences. The Middle East's next era promises to be one in which outside actors have a relatively modest impact and local forces enjoy the upper hand - and in which the local actors gaining power are radicals committed to changing the status quo. Shaping the new Middle East from the outside will be exceedingly difficult, but it - along with managing a dynamic Asia - will be the primary challenge of U.S. foreign policy for decades to come.

All-Day Permanent Red: Alex Cox and the Long March of American Militarism

didnt read the whole article but it looks very interesting. thanks to dre for the story...


This is the kind of cognitive dissonance evoked by a new screenplay from renowned director Alex Cox: "Our War Against Canada." The British-born Cox - long resident in the United States - is planning a three-part, 90-minute documentary on the all-too-true story of serious American plans to wage war against Canada, Mexico and Great Britain in the years before World War II. These detailed schemes are filled with "echoes from the future," in Pasternak's apt phrase: eerie prefigurements and deep-rooted patterns that have been played out - in reality, not just on paper - over and over down through the decades, and now confront us once again, most starkly and horribly, in Iraq.

The CIA found no conclusive evidence of a secret Iranian nuclear-weapon program

Depleted Uranium Situation Worsens

Today, US, British, and now Israeli military personnel are using illegal uranium munitions—America and the United Kingdom's own "dirty bombs"—while US Army, US Department of Energy, US Department of Defense (DOD), and UK Ministry of Defence officials deny that there are any adverse health or environmental effects as a consequence of the manufacture, testing, or use of uranium munitions, so that they may avoid liability for the willful and illegal dispersal of a radioactive toxic material—depleted uranium (DU).

Ronaldinho bicycle kick goal against Villareal

Hattip to brucio at dunord for the link.

GPS Surveillance Creeps into Daily Life


Nov. 14 – For $5.99 per month, you can turn a cell phone into a surveillance device and track when your target leaves home, where he or she travels and at what speed. You can even detect how much battery power is left on the phone. Marketed as "virtual eyes" on your kids or employees, the service also allows you to construct a virtual "fence" so that you can receive electronic alerts if the phone’s carrier crosses into forbidden areas.

U.S. Embassy Asks Bush Twins to Leave Country

Send 'em to a Boca match and let them fend for themselves...

NYC police shoot 3 after bachelor party, killing groom

Police sprayed 50 rounds at the car, hitting the vehicle 21 times, and hit nearby homes and a train station, though no residents were injured. Kelly said it was too early to say whether the shooting was justified. A grand jury was investigating.

US dollar 'will keep falling'

The US dollar has reached a 'tipping point' as foreign exchange markets wake up to the threat that the Federal Reserve will have to slash interest rates in the new year to stave off recession, analysts say. After a sharp sell-off on Friday took the greenback to 18-month lows against the euro, and pushed the pound to $1.93, economists warned that there was worse to come for the US currency.

El Salvador-style 'death squads' to be deployed by US against Iraq militants

THE Pentagon is considering forming hit squads of Kurdish and Shia fighters to target leaders of the Iraqi insurgency in a strategic shift borrowed from the American struggle against left-wing guerrillas in Central America 20 years ago.
Under the so-called “El Salvador option”, Iraqi and American forces would be sent to kill or kidnap insurgency leaders, even in Syria, where some are thought to shelter.

'In Saddam's time I never saw a friend killed in front of my eyes. I never saw neighbours driven out of their homes just for their sect.

Don't Mess With Texas!

FORT WORTH, Texas -- Police say personal hygiene led to a bloody brawl outside a Texas tavern.

Iraq conflict passes WWII


THEY were America's days of infamy, 60 years apart - Pearl Harbour and September 11. The first led the US into World War II, a conflict it endured for 1348 days; the second was followed by a war that from tomorrow will have lasted even longer.

America's involvement in Iraq will reach that milestone at a time when the clamour for withdrawal has never been louder, and the possibility of achieving it has never seemed so difficult. The decisive end of World War II in 1945 delivers no lessons that could be applied to a very different war in a very different era.

Tomb of Jesus--Did he die on the cross?


I love this stuff...

Details below and more here: http://www.tombofjesus.com/home.htm

A Research Documentary on Jesus Surviving crucifixion and migrating to Kashmir with sub-titles in Urdu.

Founder of Ahmadiyah movement in Islam (Hadhrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani "A.S") said 100 years earlier that Allah (God) has told him that Jesus had died a natural death. Thus he did not ascended bodily to heavens as believed both by Muslims and Christians.

Crucifixion takes a week to kill a healthy man, unless the legs are broken (which was not the case with Jesus according to the Bible). Yet the Bible says Jesus was only on the cross for a few hours before being declared dead. As reported in the Bible, Pontius Pilate (who we can assume knew a great deal about crucifixion) expressed great surprise that Jesus expired so quickly, but was restrained from further investigation by his wife.

Numerous ancient sources repeat the story of Jesus and his followers faking his quick death to get him off the cross while still alive. Even the new testament contains the recipe for "Wounds of Christ Ointment" (Aloe and Myrrh) suggesting that the post-crucifixing Jesus was not an ascended spirit, but a badly wounded man trying to get the heck out of Dodge.

This is your captain speaking . . . I'm just raising the cash to get us home

Heroic effort by the pilot!

Two U.S. men charged with broadcasting Hezbollah TV

According to the new charges, between September 2005 and August 2006, the two men used the television company they own, Brooklyn-based HDTV Ltd., to negotiate with representatives of the al-Manar network to air the channel, according to the indictment.

Jury finds Net pharmacy kingpin guilty


Jurors convicted online pharmacy kingpin Christopher Smith on nine charges, including conspiracy to unlawfully sell drugs and launder money. One of the counts includes a minimum 20-year prison sentence.

The Burnsville entrepreneur, who trolled for customers by setting loose a flood of spam e-mail, amassed a fortune selling prescription drugs via Xpress Pharmacy Direct.

The 26-year-old once owned a million-dollar house in Prior Lake, drove a Lamborghini, kept a mistress and handed out painkillers to his call-center operators.

The Snooping Goes Beyond Phone Calls

The Justice Dept. alone, which includes the FBI, spent $19 million in fiscal 2005 to obtain commercially gathered names, addresses, phone numbers, and other data, according to the GAO. The Justice Dept. obeys the Privacy Act and "protects information that might personally identify an individual," a spokesman says. Despite the GAO's findings, a Homeland Security spokesman denies that his agency purchases consumer records from private companies. The State Dept. didn't respond to requests for comment.

Did Churchill know of the impending Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor but did nothing so as to draw the United States into the war?

First Daughter Barbara Robbed in Argentina

First Daughter Barbara Bush had her purse and cell phone stolen as she had dinner in a restaurant in Buenos Aires, Argentina, even though she was being guarded by a detail of Secret Service agents, according to law enforcement reports made available to ABC News.

It was not the only mishap on the two-week trip to Argentina by Barbara and her twin sister Jenna.

A Secret Service agent on the advance detail got into an "altercation" with someone after a night out and was badly beaten, according to the law enforcement reports. The Secret Service said today the incident was an attempted mugging that occurred while the agent was on his own time. The agent is doing fine.

I can't recall if this is an interesting story...

Senior Democrat renews call for military draft

Rangel, who opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq, also said he did not think the United States would have invaded Iraq if the children of members of Congress were sent to fight. He has said the U.S. fighting force is comprised disproportionately of people from low-income families and minorities.

Tow-in surfing coming to an end in NorCal?

Americans' approval of President Bush's handling of Iraq has dropped to the lowest level ever

Times Up: NYC Spends 1.3 Million Policing Critical Mass


New York, NY (November 15, 2006)- - Since September 2004, the Bloomberg administration and the Manhattan District Attorney’s office have spent at least $1,320,000 harassing law-abiding cyclists on Critical Mass bike rides. The costs analysis covering the period from 9/2004 through 8/2006 was prepared by Economist Charles Komanoff and Time’s Up! to inform New York taxpayers of the monies spent by the City and State to suppress the monthly rides. New parade permit rules announced by the NYPD will add further to the expenditure of tax dollars on police actions against Critical Mass as well as other gatherings of 10 or more cyclists, motorists or pedestrians.

Neanderthal DNA nearly identical to humans

They estimate that modern humans and Neanderthals split from a common ancestor at least 370,000 years ago, and possibly 500,000 years ago, although we share 99.95% of our DNA.

"We see no evidence of mixing 40,000, 30,000 years ago in Europe. We don't exclude it, but see no evidence,"Edward Rubin of the US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute in Walnut Creek, California, who led one study, told reporters....

Neanderthals and modern humans are both descended from Homo erectus, which left Africa and spread around the world about 1.5 million years ago.

Neanderthals lived in Europe and the Middle East until about 30,000 years ago. Cro-Magnon people, the ancestors of modern humans, started a second wave of migration out of Africa about 10,000 years earlier.

Voodoo practitioner tries to jinx Bush


BOGOR, Indonesia - A renowned black magic practitioner performed a voodoo ritual Thursday to jinx President George W. Bush and his entourage while he was on a brief visit to Indonesia.

Ki Gendeng Pamungkas slit the throat of a goat, a small snake and stabbed a black crow in the chest, stirred their blood with spice and broccoli before drank the "potion" and smeared some on his face.

"I don't hate Americans, but I don't like Bush," said Pamungkas, who believed the ritual would succeed as, "the devil is with me today."

The Educational System Was Designed to Keep Us Uneducated and Docile


THINK!

In 1888, the Senate Committee on Education was getting jittery about the localized, non-standardized, non-mandatory form of education that was actually teaching children to read at advanced levels, to comprehend history, and, egads, to think for themselves. The committee's report stated, "We believe that education is one of the principal causes of discontent of late years manifesting itself among the laboring classes."

By the turn of the century, America's new educrats were pushing a new form of schooling with a new mission (and it wasn't to teach). The famous philosopher and educator John Dewey wrote in 1897:

Every teacher should realize he is a social servant set apart for the maintenance of the proper social order and the securing of the right social growth.

CIA Acknowledges 2 Interrogation Memos


After years of denials, the CIA has formally acknowledged the existence of two classified documents governing aggressive interrogation and detention policies for terrorism suspects, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

But CIA lawyers say the documents -- memos from President Bush and the Justice Department -- are still so sensitive that no portion can be released to the public.

The disclosures by the CIA general counsel's office came in a letter Friday to attorneys for the ACLU. The group had filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in New York two years ago under the Freedom of Information Act, seeking records related to U.S. interrogation and detention policies.

President Authorized Abu Ghraib Torture, FBI Email Says

Among a new batch of documents rights groups have forced the gov't to release, a Bureau communication refers to a presidential Executive Order endorsing some forms of torture witnessed at Iraq prison.

A Visit to the Duff Brewery!

The Next Invasion...

THE ACE OF SPADES!!!



The Greenbank under-10s B team have the internationally renowned band's name on their shirts along with the band's motif - a skull named Snaggletooth.

The North Hykeham team also run out to the band's famous Ace of Spades track.

Team manager Gary Weight said the deal came about as he used to know lead singer Lemmy.

Ten Spammers Create 80 Percent Of Spam


SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM

Lawsuit filed in Germany against Rumsfeld for war crimes

Berlin- Eleven former prisoners of the US armed forces on Tuesday filed a lawsuit in Germany calling for outgoing US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and other American officials to be investigated for war crimes. Backed by human rights groups, the 11 ex-prisoners say they were tortured at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison and the US prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba on the orders of Rumsfeld and other top members of US President George W Bush's government.

Probably the largest digital image ever--8.6 Billion Pixels

US: Immigrants may be held indefinitely

WASHINGTON - Immigrants arrested in the United States may be held indefinitely on suspicion of terrorism and may not challenge their imprisonment in civilian courts, the Bush administration said Monday, opening a new legal front in the fight over the rights of detainees.

Photos of Rovers v. Rovers on 11/05/06


Match report for the game here:

http://www.barnstonworth.com/2006/11/rover-v-rover-part-i-11506.html

Jay DeMerit interview - Part One

Interview with Jay DeMerit, American player for Watford in the Premiership. The future of US soccer...

The world's most dangerous road

Nope, not in Costa Rica...

Ice-melt isolates remote communities in Canada

If You Could See How Praying Mantises Hear

Cool. Click on the photo of the mantis to see some more cool shots.

Journalism legend Ed Bradley dies

Always liked Bradley.

Burger King sued over marijuana in police officers' burgers


ALBUQUERQUE: Two police officers have sued Burger King Corp., alleging personal injury, negligence, battery and violation of fair practices after they were served hamburgers that had been sprinkled with marijuana.

"It gives a whole new meaning to the word 'Whopper,'" plaintiffs attorney Sam Bregman said Monday. "The idea that these hoodlums would put marijuana into a hamburger and therefore attempt to impair law enforcement officers trying to do their jobs is outrageous."

Peace mom Sheehan arrested in Washington

WASHINGTON - Activist Cindy Sheehan was arrested Wednesday as she led about 50 protesters to a White House gate Wednesday to deliver anti-war petitions she said were signed by 80,000 Americans.

The Berkeley, Calif., woman, whose son was killed in Iraq more than two years ago, was arrested along with three other women on the sidewalk outside the White House gate, said Lt. Scott Fear, a U.S. Park Police spokesman. They were charged with interfering with a government function after they blocked the gate and ignored orders to move, he said.

Naked Man Arrested for Concealed Weapon


The man was lying on a tree stump, masturbating beside a nature path, near a Bay Area Rapid Transit station Thursday, police said.

Cell Transplants Restore Vision in Mice

Now this is really freaking cool! Check out Saturn!



From WRH:

"Taken by Cassini, this is a photo of Saturn directly in line with the sun. What is amazing is how much scatter from the rings illuminates the night side of the planet. What a view that must be in the night sky from near the surface!
Meanwhile, that itty bitty dot at ten-o-clock on the rings is Earth."

Make sure you go to the link to see it at maximum size.

Simultaneous Explosions in Mexico City



The bust of former Mexican President Plutarco Elias Calles lays among the debris after a bomb exploded in the national headquarters of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in Mexico City, Mexico, early Monday, Nov. 5, 2006. Three simultaneous explosions late Sunday targeted the offices of one of Mexico's main political parties, the headquarters of the country's electoral tribunal and a bank. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Prosecutors reject 87% of FBI's terror cases

WASHINGTON -- The Justice Department increasingly has refused to prosecute FBI cases targeting suspected terrorists over the past five years, according to researchers.

The government says the findings are inaccurate and ''intellectually dishonest.''

Republican "fake phone call" scandal spreads - now in Philly too

MOFOS!

Military Times editorial: Rumsfeld Must Go


Guess that photo explains how they knew Saddam had WMD's. Cuz we sold the shit to them.