Monday, 18 January 2010

Astronomy pic of the day


The Moon moved to partly block the Sun for a few minutes last week as a partial solar eclipse became momentarily visible across part of planet Earth. In the above single exposure image, meticulous planning enabled careful photographers to capture the partially eclipsed Sun well posed just above the ancient ruins of the Temple of Poseidon in Sounio, Greece. Unexpectedly, clouds covered the top of the Sun, while a flying bird was caught in flight just to the right of the eclipse. At its fullest extent from some locations, the Moon was seen to cover the entire middle of the Sun, leaving the surrounding ring of fire of an annular solar eclipse. The next solar eclipse -- a total eclipse of the Sun -- will occur on 2010 July 11 but be visible only from a thin swath of the southern Pacific Ocean and near the very southern tip of South America
(Thanx Ana!)

DJ Stingray RA Podcast


HA! Bike seat colour FAIL


Suicide bombers, gunmen attack central Kabul

Taliban gunmen, some wearing suicide vests, launched a commando-style assault on Kabul on Monday, attacking banks, a shopping mall and Afghan government ministries.
It was the largest and most brazen attack on the city in nearly a year. Gunfire and loud explosions could be heard across the capital and a huge column of smoke was pouring out of a shopping centre that was at the heart of the attacks.
The Taliban claimed responsibility, saying 20 of their fighters were involved. It came as some members of President Hamid Karzai's new cabinet were being sworn in.
By mid-morning, the main battle was at the Grand Afghan Shopping Centre, a large indoor shopping mall near the justice ministry and presidential palace in the centre of the town that was ablaze, with gunmen holed up inside.
A large explosion could be heard later in another part of the central district of diplomatic and government offices. Private Tolo television said it was a suicide car-bomb outside another shopping mall.
Defence Ministry spokesman Zaher Azimy said of the scene at the Grand Afghan Shopping Centre: "The store is under siege and we are involved in clash with those inside. Some security forces have managed to get inside the store."
NATO forces said at least two armed insurgents were killed.
Mohammad Shah, a shopkeeper in the centre, said: "There was an explosion at the presidential palace gate and then three people who looked like suicide bombers entered the shopping centre and went to the second and third floor.
"There were gunshots from security people, there was black smoke inside the building and the security guys escorted us out," he said. "People carrying RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades) went inside the basement ... the second and third floor are partly burnt down."
ATTACKERS HOLED UP, SOME WITH SUICIDE VESTS
Afghan forces cordoned off parts of central Kabul as the fighting erupted.
"At least ten people who are suicide bombers are in several buildings, including in banks and shopping centres," said Amir Mohammad, a security officer said at the scene.
Another security source said as many as 30 attackers could be involved in clashes and at least three people had been killed.
"Gunmen are besieged in the store," he told Reuters. "We believe suicide bombers are among them."
Zabihullah Mujahid, spokesman for the Taliban, said 20 of the insurgent group's fighters, including suicide bombers, had occupied several government buildings and were fighting Afghan security forces.
A Reuters correspondent inside the vice president's office which is close to government buildings and ministries targeted by attackers, was rushed into a safe room with other officials as the sound of gunfire was in the streets outside.
The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said it was "working closely with our Afghan partners to aggressively contain the situation."
Several small explosions were reported near the Grand Afghan Centre and nearby Serena Hotel.
The hotel, where many foreigners stay, was near the scene but did not appear to have come under direct attack.
"It is a chaotic scene, we do not know what to do and where to go," an official in a building belonging to the ministry of telecommunications near the presidential palace told Reuters.
The attack was the biggest in Kabul since gunmen stormed the justice ministry and other government buildings in February.

Doing Disaster Relief Right


There’s a reason President Obama’s response to catastrophe has been so much better than Bush’s. It helps to believe in the power of government to aid lives.

Here’s something you’re not supposed to say: Barack Obama has responded to the earthquake in Haiti much better than George W. Bush responded to Hurricane Katrina or the Indian Ocean tsunami. Here’s something you’re really not supposed to say: He’s responded better because he’s a liberal. Liberals see responding to humanitarian disasters, including overseas, as a more fundamental responsibility of government than conservatives do. Don’t take my word for it—listen to the nation’s most influential conservative commentators themselves.
The fact that Obama has responded better is obvious—pundits and politicians just aren’t supposed to say so for fear of politicizing a tragedy. Within half an hour of learning of the Haitian earthquake, the White House released a statement. The president cleared his public schedule the following day, and received five briefings in 26 hours. The secretaries of State and Defense both cut short trips to Asia, and Obama and Hillary Clinton each named one of their closest aides (Dennis McDonough at the National Security Council, Cheryl Mills at State) to coordinate disaster relief. Hillary personally visited the island, and Vice President Joe Biden met Haitian-Americans in Miami. Within a day of the earthquake, a U.S. aircraft carrier was en route and Obama had announced $100 million in aid.
Compare that to the Bush administration’s response to Hurricane Katrina. Twelve hours before Katrina reached the U.S., Homeland Security Director Michael Chertoff flew to Atlanta to attend a conference on bird flu, even though he and the president had already been warned that a major hurricane could breach New Orleans’ levees. On Tuesday morning, August 30, a day after the hurricane hit, Bush flew to California to commemorate America’s World War II victory over Japan; then returned to Crawford, Texas, to continue his vacation. On Wednesday, he flew over the devastated Gulf Coast, but didn’t set foot there till Friday. Even Louisiana Republican Senator David Vitter gave the administration’s response an F.
Similarly, it took a vacationing Bush three days to make a public statement about the Indian Ocean tsunami that killed a quarter of a million people. His administration’s initial aid pledge was $15 million, which led the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs to call the response of America and other Western countries “stingy.” Stung by the criticism, Bush later increased U.S. aid, and oversaw a substantial humanitarian effort by the American military. But as with Katrina, his initial response was passive, if not downright negligent...
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Glenn Underground - 12 O' Clock Pumpkin

 

(Underground Resistance) Galaxy 2 Galaxy - Hi Tech Jazz (Live Version) - B1 (The Original)

 

US doctors beg their government to admit critically injured children from Haiti


American doctors are begging their Government to accept critically injured Haitian children after one baby girl was airlifted to hospital in Florida.
Meanwhile, in an exercise dubbed Operation Pierre Pan, the Catholic Church in Miami is drawing up plans to rescue thousands of Haitian orphans, mirroring the Operation Pedro Pan airlift of 1960 in which 14,000 Cuban children were taken to the city.
US immigration officials had been refusing to allow children into the country until next weekend. However, as Hillary Clinton, the Secretary of State, arrived to assure Haitians that America stood ready to help “in any way we can”, doctors managed to persuade the US authorities to allow in Jean, a four-month-old Haitian girl for treatment. The orphaned child has cut through immigration rules used to bar entry to the US for Haitians even in extreme circumstances.
The charity Medishare had been considering defying US immigration by putting Jean physically in the giant hands of Alonzo Mourning, a basketball star, who has given millions to the charity and spent three days last week clearing rubbish in its tented clinic in Port-au-Prince. “We wanted to have him on the plane and carry the kid through Customs,” Arthur Fournier, a founder of Medishare, said. In the event US officials relented.

However, by Saturday night only 23 Haitians had been admitted to US hospitals.
Jean, as she was named by medics, was pulled from the wreckage of her home on Saturday. She was barely alive after spending 85 hours without water. Her parents are thought to have died in the rubble of their home.
Taken to a tented clinic on the city’s main UN compound, Jean was resuscitated and then flown to Fort Lauderdale. She was recovering yesterday at Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami.
“We can’t evacuate any Haitian patients to the US,” John McDonald, from the University of Miami Medical School, said. “Our country treats the Haitians like s***. The people land, they get sent back. When Cubans land, they open restaurants.”
Another doctor at the tented clinic said that she was so desperate at being forced to discharge children still in grave danger of dying from infection that she wanted to “scream and scratch people”. For want of bed space “we are sending wounded children back on to the streets of Port-au-Prince with no plan even for how they will be fed,” said Jennifer Furn, from Harvard Medical School.
Dr Furn’s task was complicated by instructions from the UN to vacate the tents by 8am yesterday. “The UN say they need these tents as a staging post for regular personnel,” Dr Furn said. “It’s breaking my heart. How can I send children with wounds and head bandages out into the streets?”
A spokesman for Minustah, the permanent UN operation in Haiti, insisted that alternative premises were being found, but there was no sign of them hours before the deadline.
In Miami, church representatives are lobbying the US Department of Homeland Security to allow Haitian children left homeless or without parents to be given shelter in the US. The archdiocese has been deluged with offers of help from families, including Cubans who came to Miami as youngsters during Pedro Pan — the Spanish name for Peter Pan — 50 years ago.
“We, the former Pedro Pan children, have a solemn duty to help these children benefit from our unique experience, so that one day they have the tools to return to their homeland and help rebuild it,” said Carmen Valdivia, 60, who was sent to Miami by her parents at 12 to save her from communist indoctrination.
The plan, which is still at a preliminary stage, is being spearheaded by Deacon Richard Turcotte, the chief executive officer of the archdiocese’s community aid wing, Catholic Charities. “It could be a tremendous opportunity to stabilise these children and help heal them from this terrible, terrible disaster,” Mr Turcotte said.
Pedro Pan was the largest recorded exodus of unaccompanied children in the western hemisphere. It remained a secret for three decades.
Back in Port-au-Prince, Mr Mourning sat exhausted, inured to the screaming of a boy whose broken leg had been reset without painkillers. “The US is an hour and a half from here,” he said. “The children here have devastating injuries and we can only patch them up. It makes no sense. We can help everybody here if we get our priorities straight.”
In this clinic, as in others, the suffering, the stoicism and the heroism of the doctors are remarkable. It is hard to apportion blame when hundreds are working bravely; it is hard also to avoid the suspicion that bureaucracies within the UN and the US are, at times, behaving as if this earthquake never happened.
Meanwhile, Sanjay Gupta, CNN’s chief medical correspondent, has spoken of the “thin line between medicine and media” after he was left in charge of 20 critically injured patients when a UN team of Belgian doctors left because of security fears. Critics accused CNN of exploiting the situation and blurring reporting after Dr Gupta, 40, a neurosurgeon who turned down an invitation last year to become US Surgeon-General, was shown tending to a 15-day-old baby. He wrote on Twitter: “Yes, I am a reporter, but a doctor first.”

60 Minutes: Tragedy in Haiti


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UR



It has been two decades since the most political group in the history of techno set out to change the course of electronic music: Underground Resistance. Time to pay tribute to the heralds of a sonic revolution.


In late 1989, on November 2 to be precise, two individuals from Detroit, Michigan, decided it was time for a change: 'Mad' Mike Banks, formerly a bass player for Parliament and producer for a dance music crew called Members of House, and Jeff 'The Wizard' Mills, at the time a DJ on local radio station WJLB, formed a collective henceforth known as the Underground Resistance. Inspired by radical factions of the civil rights movements, such as the Black Panthers, and political hip-hop groups like Public Enemy, UR desired to take social activism to a musical genre previously deemed incapable of conveying political messages: techno.

Where the genre's founding fathers had set their sights on an imagined future, UR opened their eyes to the dystopia of present day Detroit: Abandoned neighbourhoods, urban desolation, still prevailing racism, and cultural hegemony firmly in the hands of a privileged few.


Fuel for the Fire

While UR's initial collaborations with Members Of The House singer Yolanda Reynolds ('Your Time Is Up' and 'Living For The Nite') still clung to the blueprint of piano vocal house, Banks and Mills soon stepped up the intensity. The pair was joined by Robert 'Noise' Hood, who had previously featured as a rapper on the rare UR production 'Dance To The Beat', as a third member, and together the henceforth face- and nameless group entered their most productive phase.
In little over two years Banks, Hood and Mills recorded over a dozen 12"s in various permutations of the line-up, growing harder and more radical in both sound and image with each new release. The 'Sonic' and 'Waveform' EPs were followed by 'Riot' and 'Fuel For The Fire', and 'Punisher's permutation of the eponymous comic book hero's logo became the most iconic and eagerly reproduced symbol for UR's political cause against oppression, discrimination and cultural commercialisation.

Message to the Majors


1992 was to be a year of change: At the height of UR's success Jeff Mills and Robert Hood decided to leave the group to pursue solo careers. Reasons for the split have never been publicised, but it can be assumed that differences in creative vision were a factor. Hood and Mills both moved to New York to explore more minimalistic concepts of techno on their their newly founded M-Plant and Axis labels. Remaining member Mike Banks on the other hand continued the project by incorporating more of his funk and electro roots into UR's sound aesthetic. 'Final Frontier' and the unambiguous 'Message To The Majors' were the first ever UR records to employ broken beats while sounding as vigorous as ever.
After Hood and Mills' demise Mike Banks further opened up UR as a platform to feature and promote like-minded local artists. Veteran producer James Pennington (a.k.a. Suburban Knight) joined the ranks of the Resistance as did new artists like Scan-7, Gerald Mitchell and, perhaps most notably, Drexciya, a group long shrouded in mystery, whose brilliant experimental electro productions paved the way for a worldwide resurgence of the genre.

Condition Red

It was one of this new generation of artists who in 1999 suddenly found himself in the middle of UR's biggest success and at the same time biggest controversy. Together with Mad Mike and Gerald Mitchell, 'DJ Rolando' Rocha had recorded the track 'Jaguar'. Its ingenious chord progressions made the track a world-wide club hit, quickly crossing over from underground dance floors to stylish Ibiza discos.
Clever managers at Sony/BMG Germany took note, and, when UR unsurprisingly declined to license the track, decided to have it covered by studio musicians note by note. While to be considered legal by German law, the cover version outraged the group's fans and supporters as a symbol for the commercial exploitation UR have been opposing for so long. Amidst those protests, Sony/BMG eventually withdrew the release from the market and issued a letter of apology to UR - a small victory for the underground.





Transition

When UR's original headquarters had to make way for the new Red Wings Hockey Stadium at the beginning of the new millennium, the UR collective moved into a new building at 3000 E. Grand Blvd., along with related distribution company Submerge. UR once again entered a new phase with the '3000' building, designed and intended as communal hub for techno culture.
New artists once again joined the resistance's ranks, such as legendary Amsterdam techno producer Orlando Voorn, who lived in Detroit between 2003 and 2007, and numerous other artists, such as Santiago 'S2' Salazar and the anonymous Aquanauts. Mad Mike further returned to his live music roots, assembling an all-star band around his Galaxy 2 Galaxy project, which he has been taking on tour to much acclaim.
Besides the most recent UR album, 'Electronic Warfare 2.0', which includes the programmatic hit 'Kill My Radio Station', two compilations give an insight into the activities of Detroit's greatest producer collective over the past decade: 'Interstellar Fugitives' and its follow-up 'Interstellar Fugitives - Destruction of Order'. Besides these two exhaustive compilations, new UR releases might have become fewer and further between, but as long as they reach us via obscure channels from time to time, we can be certain that somewhere in Detroit the resistance is busy at work, plotting war on the programmers, and electrifying the city with sci-fi thoughts and hi-tech dreams.




Naomi Klein Issues Haiti Disaster Capitalism Alert: Stop Them Before They Shock Again

    But as I write about in The Shock Doctrine, crises are often used now as the pretext for pushing through policies that you cannot push through under times of stability. Countries in periods of extreme crisis are desperate for any kind of aid, any kind of money, and are not in a position to negotiate fairly the terms of that exchange. And I just want to pause for a second and read you something, which is pretty extraordinary. I just put this up on my website. The headline is “Haiti: Stop Them Before They Shock Again.” This went up a few hours ago, three hours ago, I believe, on the Heritage Foundation website. “Amidst the Suffering, Crisis in Haiti Offers Opportunities to the U.S. In addition to providing immediate humanitarian assistance, the U.S. response to the tragic earthquake in Haiti earthquake offers opportunities to re-shape Haiti’s long-dysfunctional government and economy as well as to improve the image of the United States in the region.” And then goes on. Now, I don’t know whether things are improving or not, because it took the Heritage Foundation thirteen days before they issued thirty-two free market solutions for Hurricane Katrina. We put that document up on our website, as well. It was close down the housing projects, turn the Gulf Coast into a tax-free free enterprise zone, get rid of the labor laws that forces contractors to pay a living wage. Yeah, so it took them thirteen days before they did that in the case of Katrina. In the case of Haiti, they didn’t even wait twenty-four hours. Now, why I say I don’t know whether it’s improving or not is that two hours ago they took this down. So somebody told them that it wasn’t couth. And then they put up something that was much more delicate. Fortunately, the investigative reporters at Democracy Now! managed to find that earlier document in a Google cache. But what you’ll find now is a much gentler “Things to Remember While Helping Haiti.” And buried down there, it says, “Long-term reforms for Haitian democracy and its economy are also badly overdue.” But the point is, we need to make sure that the aid that goes to Haiti is, one, grants, not loans. This is absolutely crucial. This is an already heavily indebted country. This is a disaster that, as Amy said, on the one hand is nature, is, you know, an earthquake; on the other hand is the creation, is worsened by the poverty that our governments have been so complicit in deepening. Crises—natural disasters are so much worse in countries like Haiti, because you have soil erosion because the poverty means people are building in very, very precarious ways, so houses just slide down because they are built in places where they shouldn’t be built. All of this is interconnected. But we have to be absolutely clear that this tragedy, which is part natural, part unnatural, must, under no circumstances, be used to, one, further indebt Haiti, and, two, to push through unpopular corporatist policies in the interests of our corporations. And this is not a conspiracy theory. They have done it again and again. Video @'Democracy Now'

Italy cancels Haiti's debt

The Italian government will cancel the debt of 40 million owed to Italy announced Foreign Minister Franco Frattini in Rome today.
"We are ready from now to cancel Haiti's debt to Italy," Frattini said on his arrival at Rome's Ciampino airport after returning from a mission in Africa.
The cancellation, he said, may represent a "first step for the beginning of reconstruction" of the Caribbean island devastated by the earthquake that has claimed tens of thousands dead.
Italy has already announced a shipment of five million euros to aid necessities.
Now for other countries to follow...?

US waves white flag in disastrous 'war on drugs'

After 40 years of defeat and failure, America's "war on drugs" is being buried in the same fashion as it was born – amid bloodshed, confusion, corruption and scandal. US agents are being pulled from South America; Washington is putting its narcotics policy under review, and a newly confident region is no longer prepared to swallow its fatal Prohibition error. Indeed, after the expenditure of billions of dollars and the violent deaths of tens of thousands of people, a suitable epitaph for America's longest "war" may well be the plan, in Bolivia, for every family to be given the right to grow coca in its own backyard.
The "war", declared unilaterally throughout the world by Richard Nixon in 1969, is expiring as its strategists start discarding plans that have proved futile over four decades: they are preparing to withdraw their agents from narcotics battlefields from Colombia to Afghanistan and beginning to coach them in the art of trumpeting victory and melting away into anonymous defeat. Not surprisingly, the new strategy is being gingerly aired in the media of the US establishment, from The Wall Street Journal to the Miami Herald.
Prospects in the new decade are thus opening up for vast amounts of useless government expenditure being reassigned to the treatment of addicts instead of their capture and imprisonment. And, no less important, the ever-expanding balloon of corruption that the "war" has brought to heads of government, armies and police forces wherever it has been waged may slowly start to deflate.
Prepare to shed a tear over the loss of revenue that eventual decriminalisation of narcotics could bring to the traffickers, large and small, and to the contractors who have been making good money building and running the new prisons that help to bankrupt governments – in the US in particular, where drug offenders – principally small retailers and seldom the rich and important wholesalers – have helped to push the prison population to 1,600,000; their imprisonment is already straining federal and state budgets. In Mississippi, where drug offenders once had to serve 85 per cent of their sentences, they are now being required to serve less than a quarter. California has been ordered to release 40,000 inmates because its prisons are hugely overcrowded.
At the same time, some in the US are confused and fear that the new commission proposed by Congressman Eliot Engel, a man with a record of hostility to the Cuban and Venezuelan governments, may prove to be a broken reed. As he brought in his bill he added timidly: "Let me be absolutely clear that this bill has not been introduced to support the legalisation of illegal drugs. That is not something that I would like to see."
Part of the reason for the slow US retreat from the "war" is that the strategy of fighting it in foreign lands and not at home has proved valueless. Along the already sensitive frontier with Mexico the effect of US attempts to enforce a hard line by blasting drug dealers away has been bloody. Anxious to keep in check the flood of illegal immigrants into territory that once belonged to Mexico, Washington is building a wall and fence comparable to that which once cut through Berlin and that which is today causing havoc between Israelis and Palestinians.
In the areas of Mexico closest to the US frontier the toll of deaths in drug-related violence exceeded 7,000 people in 2009 (1,000 of them dying in January and February). This takes the death toll over three years to above 16,000, figures far in excess of US fatalities in Afghanistan. The bloodshed has continued despite – or perhaps because of – the intense US pressure on President Felipe Calderon to station a large part of the Mexican army in the region. It is deploying 49,000 men on its own soil in the campaign against drugs, a larger force than the 46,000 Britain sent to take part in the initial invasion of Iraq in 2003. But still the blood flows.
As in Colombia, where a multibillion-dollar US subsidy maintains that country's armed forces, there are well-founded suspicions that military operations are often rendered futile because the miserably paid local commanders and individual soldiers are easily bought off by drug dealers.
The quiet expiry of the "war" has dawned slowly on a world focused on the US's more palpable conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq. Last month, the US House of Representatives gave unanimous approval to a bill creating an independent commission to reconsider domestic and international drug policies and suggest better ones. Congressman Engel, a Democrat from the Bronx and the sponsor of the bill, declared: "Billions upon billions of US taxpayer dollars have been spent over the years to combat the drug trade in Latin America and the Caribbean. In spite of our efforts, the positive results are few and far between."
As far back as last May, Gil Kerlikowske, the former police chief of Seattle who was named head of the US Office of National Drug Control Policy and thus boss of the campaign, announced he would not be using the term "war on drugs" any more. A few weeks earlier, former Latin American presidents of the centre and right – Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil, Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico and Cesar Gaviria of Colombia – had told the new US President that the "war" had failed and appealed for greater emphasis on cutting drug consumption and the decriminalisation of cannabis.
For the lives and sanity of millions, the seeing of the light is decidedly late. The conditions of the 1920s, when the US Congress outlawed alcohol and allowed Al Capone and his kin to make massive fortunes, have been re-created up and down Latin America.
Mexico's President has not been afraid to point out to Washington that official corruption is at the root of drug trafficking in the US just as it is in Mexico. "I say we should investigate on both sides. I'm cleaning my house and I hope that on the other side as well the house is being cleaned," he said pointedly last April before President Obama came visiting.
Furthermore, President Calderon says that lax gun control laws in the US caused an influx of firearms into Mexico. He has declared that 90 per cent of the 30,000 weapons that government forces seized from drug dealers in Mexico came from north of the border. For their part, the Latin Americans, under a new generation of more self-confident leaders, are tired of being hectored about their failings by the US, the world's principal source of cannabis whose agents continue the drug dealing they indulged in during the Iran-Contra affair of the Reagan years.
Evidence points to aircraft – familiarly known as "torture taxis" – used by the CIA to move captives seized in its kidnapping or "extraordinary rendition" operations through Gatwick and other airports in the EU being simultaneously used for drug distribution in the Western hemisphere. A Gulfstream II jet aircraft N9875A identified by the British Government and the European Parliament as being involved in this traffic crashed in Mexico in September 2008 while en route from Colombia to the US with a load of more than three tons of cocaine.
In 2004, another torture taxi crashed in a field in Nicaragua with a ton of cocaine aboard. It had been identified by Britain and the European Parliament's temporary committee on the alleged use of European countries by the CIA for the transport and illegal detention of prisoners as a frequent visitor in 2004 and 2005 to British, Cypriot, Czech, German, Greek, Hungarian, Spanish and other European cities with its cargo of captives for secret imprisonment and torture in Iraq, Jordan and Azerbaijan.
Given the circumstances, it is unremarkable that US strictures are being politely ignored. President Evo Morales of Bolivia – criticised by the US for defending Bolivians' practice of chewing coca leaves to assuage hunger and altitude sickness – wants to allow every Bolivian family around the city of Cochabamba to cultivate coca bushes for their own use. He also wants to export coca leaves to his country's neighbours. Mr Morales's authority, recently reinforced by winning a second presidential term in fair elections and by a strengthening of Bolivia's economy, has no need to worry about US criticism.
Venezuela and Bolivia have expelled US narcotics officers from their territory. At the end of last month, President Rafael Correa of Ecuador ended Washington's lease of a large air base on the Pacific from where US aircraft were engaged in the struggle against the region's increasingly powerful left.
This year should be the year that common sense vanquishes the mailed fist in an unwinnable war against an invisible enemy.

Bye...
As a non driver let us hope that someone less arrogant will actually listen to our complaints about the system and don't get me started on Myki!!!

How Ayn Rand Became an American Icon by Johann Hari


Ayn Rand is one of America's great mysteries. She was an amphetamine-addicted author of sub-Dan Brown potboilers, who in her spare time wrote lavish torrents of praise for serial killers and the Bernie Madoff-style embezzlers of her day. She opposed democracy on the grounds that "the masses"—her readers—were "lice" and "parasites" who scarcely deserved to live. Yet she remains one of the most popular writers in the United States, still selling 800,000 books a year from beyond the grave. She regularly tops any list of books that Americans say have most influenced them. Since the great crash of 2008, her writing has had another Benzedrine rush, as Rush Limbaugh hails her as a prophetess. With her assertions that government is "evil" and selfishness is "the only virtue," she is the patron saint of the tea-partiers and the death panel doomsters. So how did this little Russian bomb of pure immorality in a black wig become an American icon?
Two new biographies of Rand—Goddess of the Market by Jennifer Burns and Ayn Rand and the World She Made by Anne Heller—try to puzzle out this question, showing how her arguments found an echo in the darkest corners of American political life.* But the books work best, for me, on a level I didn't expect. They are thrilling psychological portraits of a horribly damaged woman who deserves the one thing she spent her life raging against: compassion.
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