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Consider:

"It is better to be drunk with loss and to beat the ground, than to let the deeper things gradually escape."

- I. Compton-Burnett, letter to Francis King (1969)

"Cynical realism – it is the intelligent man’s best excuse for doing nothing in an intolerable situation."

- Aldous Huxley, "Time Must Have a Stop"







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Tuesday, 25 May 2004

Topic: Iraq

International Law and the Geneva Convention: We Take Hostages
This is both logical and necessary. Who would disagree?


Sometimes you have to bend the rules at little, and you can when you're in the right...

So there's this:

U.S. military arrests war's 'bargaining chips'
Rights groups say practice holding people to pressure wanted relatives to surrender violates laws
Mohamad Bazzi, Middle East Correspondent, Newsday, May 25, 2004, 4:57 PM EDT

The gist...
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- U.S. troops wanted Jeanan Moayad's father. When they couldn't find him, they took her husband in his place.

Dhafir Ibrahim has been in U.S. custody for nearly four months. Moayad insists that he is being held as a bargaining chip, and military officials have told her that he will be released when her father surrenders. Her father is a scientist and former Baath party member who fled to Jordan soon after the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime.

"My husband is a hostage," said Moayad, 35, an architect who carries a small portrait of Ibrahim in her purse. "He didn't commit any crime."

In a little-noticed development amid Iraq's prison abuse scandal, the U.S. military is holding dozens of Iraqis as bargaining chips to put pressure on their wanted relatives to surrender, according to human rights groups. These detainees are not accused of any crimes, and experts say their detention violates the Geneva Conventions and other international laws. The practice also risks associating the United States with the tactics of countries that it has long criticized for arbitrary arrests.
Yeah, but we're the good guys. The BAD GUYS take hostages. We do what is necessary to defeat terrorism and evil.

Got it?

Well, some lawyer type folks seem to think this is wrong:
"It's clearly an abuse of the powers of arrest, to arrest one person and say that you're going to hold him until he gives information about somebody else, especially a close relative," said John Quigley, an international law professor at Ohio State University. "Arrests are supposed to be based on suspicion that the person has committed some offense."
Well, this guy.... Ohio State? He probably hangs out at Larry's, that gay bar on High Street.

To be clear, BAD GUYS take hostages and threaten families if they don't give up the goods - the BAD family member. It may look like we do this, but it is for a greater good, after all.

Besides, we don't do it.
U.S. officials deny that there is a systematic practice of detaining relatives to pressure Iraqi fugitives into surrendering. "The coalition does not take hostages," said a senior military official who asked not to be named. "Relatives who might have information about wanted persons are sometimes detained for questioning, and then they are released. There is no policy of holding people as bargaining chips."
Yep. If there is no policy, well, it doesn't happen.

Or does it?
... Iraqi human rights groups say they have documented dozens of cases similar to Moayad's, in which family members who are not accused of any crimes have been detained for weeks or even months and told that they would be released only when a wanted relative surrenders to U.S. forces.

"We have many cases of Americans going to a house looking for someone, and when they can't find him, they take another family member in his place," said Bassem al-Rubaie, director of the Council of Legal Defense Care, a group of Iraqi lawyers that has been campaigning for prisoner rights. "This has been going on since the early days of the American occupation."

In a recent report, the International Committee of the Red Cross quoted military intelligence officers as saying that between "70 and 90 percent" of the nearly 8,000 Iraqis detained by occupation forces had been arrested "by mistake." In some cases, the report found, U.S. troops continued to hold people for several months after they had been cleared of any wrongdoing.

Human rights groups first criticized the United States for detaining the relatives of wanted Iraqis in November, when U.S. forces arrested the wife and daughter of Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, one of Hussein's longtime deputies. After Hussein was captured last year, al-Douri became the most wanted man in Iraq, and Washington put a $10 million bounty on his head.

Al-Douri's wife and daughter are still in U.S. custody, although rights monitors say they have not been charged with any crime. Rights groups say the United States is committing a war crime by detaining al-Douri's relatives without charge. "Taking hostages is a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions -- in other words, a war crime," Human Rights Watch wrote in a January letter to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
But this is war against evil. Doesn't anyone understand that?

And after all, it not much different than what happens in Ohio.
The senior U.S. military official declined to discuss the detention of al-Douri's relatives, saying it is a "special case with very unusual circumstances." In the past, U.S. officials had likened the detentions to those of a material witness who is held for questioning.
Why don't they just trust us on this?

All these human rights monitors say there is no basis under international law for holding family members as material witnesses. Hell, what do they know?

Yes, detaining the relatives of a fugitive is a form of "moral coercion" forbidden under the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949. Big deal. The convention, which guarantees the rights of civilians under military occupation, also prohibits punishing someone for an offense that he has not personally committed.

But everything changed after 9/11 - as Steve Cambone, a key Bush appointee has said - you don't want to know - the glove came off, as he said.

Yeah, yeah - in the 1970s and '80s we did criticized the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries for making arbitrary arrests and for using relatives to exert pressure on fugitives and political prisoners. But they were the BAD GUYS, damn it! And yes, in our latest report on human rights conditions around the world, our State Department singled out several countries - including Uzbekistan, Pakistan and Syria - for using such tactics to pressure people to surrender or to force confessions. But they are the BAD guys. We're not. This is a special circumstance, isn't it?

You can click on the link for details of this particular arrest.

The question of war crimes is raised here. But how can the GOOD GUYS commit war crimes?

_____

Footnote:

The relevant statutes - from a fellow who says he's a 43-year-old lawyer in private practice in Chicago. Maybe he is. Maybe he isn't.

Here's his analysis:

... holding innocent civilians hostage in order to induce their relatives to surrender is a plain violation of Articles 31, 33, and 34 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, signed at Geneva, August 12, 1949:
Art. 31. No physical or moral coercion shall be exercised against protected persons, in particular to obtain information from them or from third parties.

Art. 33. No protected person may be punished for an offence he or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.

. . . .

Reprisals against protected persons and their property are prohibited.

Art. 34. The taking of hostages is prohibited.
A "protected person" under the Fourth Geneva Convention is broadly defined as follows:
Art. 4. Persons protected by the Convention are those who, at a given moment and in any manner whatsoever, find themselves, in case of a conflict or occupation, in the hands of a Party to the conflict or Occupying Power of which they are not nationals.
Article 146 of the Fourth Geneva Convention requires each "High Contracting Party," including the United States, to enact legislation to punish those who commit grave breaches of the Convention. Article 147 defines "grave breaches" as including "unlawful confinement" and "taking of hostages":
Art. 146. The High Contracting Parties undertake to enact any legislation necessary to provide effective penal sanctions for persons committing, or ordering to be committed, any of the grave breaches of the present Convention defined in the following Article.

Each High Contracting Party shall be under the obligation to search for persons alleged to have committed, or to have ordered to be committed, such grave breaches, and shall bring such persons, regardless of their nationality, before its own courts. . . . .

Art. 147. Grave breaches to which the preceding Article relates shall be those involving any of the following acts, if committed against persons or property protected by the present Convention: . . . unlawful confinement of a protected person, . . . taking of hostages . . . .
The United States, in the War Crimes Act of 1996, codified at Title 18, section 1441 of the United States Code, implements sections 146 and 147's requirement to provide criminal penalties for grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention, such as the taking of hostages:
Section 2441. War crimes

(a) Offense. - Whoever, whether inside or outside the United States, commits a war crime, in any of the circumstances described in subsection (b), shall be fined under this title or imprisoned for life or any term of years, or both, and if death results to the victim, shall also be subject to the penalty of death.
(b) Circumstances. - The circumstances referred to in subsection (a) are that the person committing such war crime or the victim of such war crime is a member of the Armed Forces of the United States or a national of the United States (as defined in section 101 of the Immigration and Nationality Act).
(c) Definition. - As used in this section the term ''war crime'' means any conduct -
defined as a grave breach in any of the international conventions signed at Geneva 12 August 1949 . . . .
Bottom line: every member of the United States armed forces, and every United States national, responsible for holding an Iraqi hostage in order to induce his or her relative to surrender is guilty of a grave breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention, and of 28 U.S.C. section 1441. Every such person (particularly those in positions of authority) should be prosecuted as a war criminal.

Posted by Alan at 21:52 PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
Updated: Wednesday, 26 May 2004 09:09 PDT home


Topic: Iraq

A whole Lott of love here...

Kevin Drum at the Washington Monthly follows rationalizations (everyone need a hobby). Here's his take on the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.
A few weeks ago I half-jokingly noted that mainstream conservative reaction to Abu Ghraib had shifted over time.

Phase 1: horrible, just horrible.

Phase 2: yes, it's bad, but keep in mind that it's not as bad as Saddam.

Phase 3: give it a rest, OK?

And then I guessed that there might still be a Phase 4 to come:

Maybe torturers as heroes, thanks to testimony from someone or other that one of the scraps of information they extracted saved a convoy somewhere? Hey, war is hell.
Well, he thinks the mainstream conservative right has reached this Phase 4.

His evidence? He points to what the Republican chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, and that would be Trent Lott, had to say today to Channel 16 in Jackson, Mississippi.

He thinks this is disgusting.

What set Kevin off?
"Frankly, to save some American troops' lives or a unit that could be in danger, I think you should get really rough with them," Lott said. "Some of those people should probably not be in prisons in the first place."

When asked about the photo showing a prisoner being threatened with a dog, Lott was unmoved. "Nothing wrong with holding a dog up there unless it ate him," Lott said. "(They just) scared him with the dog."

Lott was reminded that at least one prisoner had died at the hands of his captors after a beating. "This is not Sunday school," he said. "This is interrogation. This is rough stuff."
But you see the logic.

Well the Taguba report says sixty percent of those held in that prison were clearly picked up by mistake - just folks who looked funny, or didn't, but might be useful, or not. The Red Cross (ICRC) pegs the number of the hapless and useless being held there at up to ninety percent. But if one of them, by some chance, may perhaps know something that might be useful - that kind of justifies the majority tortured. And some of them die. This is war. The argument falls under the general heading of "you can't make an omelet without cracking a few eggs." And that is true, when making breakfast.

So, the short form?

Wimps unwilling to torture even these randomly detained and probably useless bystanders, for the greater good, endanger us all.

Now we will see who joins Lott in this line of reasoning.

Posted by Alan at 18:57 PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
Updated: Tuesday, 25 May 2004 19:05 PDT home

Monday, 24 May 2004

Topic: Bush

The Speech - Jumping the Shark

A few hours ago my houseguest for the weekend left to return to San Diego. My sister doesn't visit that often, actually no one does, and this was a welcome diversion. But I've been out of the loop for more than a day.

The big news today was the president's speech - if you skip the announcement from a senior defense official that the Pentagon is considering replacing Army Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez as the top military officer in Iraq (the Washington Post and Los Angeles Times report he just might have been at that prison and may have watched the prisoner abuse now so famous from all the photographs) - if you skip the news that a federal judge today threw out the Government's material witness action against Oregon lawyer Brandon Mayfield, who was arrested on a material witness warrant in connection with the Spain train bombings (oops - the FBI says they kind of misidentified his fingerprint and he's a fine fellow, even if he is a Muslim) - if you skip the new polls showing Bush dropping like a rock in the opinion of many, many Americans) - and if you skip the news about Bush falling off his mountain bike over the weekend and getting all scraped up. So much news. So little time.

Actually, that last item, the bicycle accident, is most curious. Bush choked on that pretzel a few years ago and got a big scrape on his forehead when he passed out on the White House floor. Oops. Then there are those pictures of him falling off that Segway motorized scoter-thing last year (he forgot to turn it on and tumbled right over the front). Oops. Now this.

Out here in Hollywood we have this term called "jumping the shark." This term identifies the moment, the turning point, when a television series has run out of any useful plot devices and just throws in crap - and everything is crap from then on out to when the series dies from the inevitable low ratings. As in... as in the episode of "Happy Days" when the waterskiing Fonz jumps over a shark. When you have you leather-clad fifties motorcycle rebel, the King of Cool, waterskiing over a shark? You've lost it.

Think of Bush tumbling head over heels from his bicycle and landing face first in the dirt on his Texas ranch. Iconic, isn't it?

Anyway, the speech.... It was dull.

The basics from Reuters:

Bush Tries to Allay Mounting Doubts Over Iraq
Adam Entous, Monday May 24, 2004 09:41 PM ET
CARLISLE, Pa. (Reuters) - President Bush tried to convince Americans on Monday he has a workable plan for Iraq as the United States and Britain asked the United Nations for a resolution endorsing the handover of power to an interim Iraqi government.

In a half-hour televised speech at the U.S. Army War College here, Bush sought to persuade Americans that he can turn around the deteriorating situation in Iraq, with just five weeks to go before the United States plans to hand over power to a caretaker Iraqi government on June 30.
He offered no major change of course in Iraq and no timetable for a U.S. troop withdrawal, but spoke of progress being made while predicting violence could get worse in the short run.

"As the Iraqi people move closer to governing themselves, the terrorists are likely to become more active and more brutal. There are difficult days ahead and the way forward may sometimes appear chaotic," said Bush, whose job approval rating has fallen to the lowest level of his presidency, suggesting he faces the possibility of defeat in the Nov. 2 election. ...
You get the idea. Bush plans one of these speeches each week through the end of June.

Oh, joy.

Reaction?

Jeff Alworth's view...

The Bush Army War Speech
I wondered if this might not be a surprising speech. It was. Some of the content was surprising, and some of the context was, too. The surprising content can be summed up in two words (and will be, in story after story, over the next five weeks): full sovereignty.

"On June 30, full sovereignty will be transferred to a government of Iraqi citizens.

"At that time, the Coalition Provisional Authority, led by Ambassador Paul Bremer, will cease to exist and will not be replaced.

Iraqis will govern their own affairs
."

I suspect we'll be hearing more about what this actually means, but the White House hasn't left itself much room: it's getting the hell out.

The context of the speech was also fascinating (to me, at least). Bush gave a familiar speech, replete with descriptions of a reality to which few others have access (the transcript's not available yet, so I can't quote text). It was his somber mode, punctuated occasionally by his strange blinking, wherein his delivery was that of a daddy trying to explain death to his four-year-old.

But then, with about 20% of the speech left, he switched gears. He shifted to Preacher George, messianic George, absolutely certain of his goodness. It was actually quite moving, in a sort of twisted way. He contrasted the horrors of wahabism (using "Taliban" as shorthand) with the purity of American democracy. Where before the words tangled his tongue with their foreigness, now he seemed to be speaking from the heart. It seemed clear that this is a guy who is, at the end of the day, pleased with how things have gone. There was a bad guy there who oppressed his people; we took him out and offered up our perfected ways like a toe-headed boy offering up a golden ring. All is well. God bless America.

To watch the speech, it was hard not to take away the message that this is pretty much how Bush saw it playing out. There wasn't confusion or lack of planning. This is a guy, remember, who exists only in the black-and-white mode. So Iraq is either a success or a failure. Today Bush declared it a success. If the lesson of Iraq seems more nuanced to the majority of Americans, that's their failure. They elected a guy of moral clarity. Now they see what that means.
Yeah, Jeff is bitter.

His idea?
... What Iraq needs is a global time-out. Call it a ten-year plan wherein a provisional federal government is set up to conduct a series of reforms. These reforms are standardized (sorta like the IMF's, but designed to benefit the country, not bloodsucker first-world nations), so they follow an established course. Along the way, democratic government is slowly introduced, from the local level on up. In the final stage, a constitution is drafted by local leaders and elections are held.

Stability isn't cheap or easy. The notion that we'd storm in, slaughter a few baddies, build some election booths and be on our merry way was patent stupidity. We're fortunate that the Bushies had a free hand to execute their stupidity--nothing could have more clearly proven the point than they have. Now the grown-ups need to put aside the overheated rhetoric of the neocons, roll up their sleeves, and do the hard work.
Whatever.

Jesse Taylor's view...

Bush's Speech
Summary version: "Everything I said before, updated with this month's new names and events. As always, we must stay steadfast in the war on terror, only not the real one, but instead the one I'm sure will exist if we just bomb enough shit."

He's not giving a vision, he's giving the "vision thing".
Not nice.

Groom Lake's view -

Sounds like "Vietnamization" to me
Vietnamization is the best way I can frame the "five step program" to rid Iraq from terrorism. Puppet government. More work for the corrupt contractors. Reconstituted military under the thumb of US advisers. Once again, a yeoman's effort to further imbed the linkage between Iraq and global terrorism in the minds of the American people. The way it sounds reading Shrubby's lips, Iraq is a seething hotbed of international terrorism. But what do Kompassionate Kristian Konservatives know about wars of national liberation?
Yeah, those three words spell out KKK.

Damned lefties!

On the right?

For that you drop over to "The Corner" - the National Review Online blog -
BUSH'S PROPER FOCUS [Tim Graham]

I liked the speech. As the media focuses relentlessly on American failings, seeing Bush live hopefully reminds Americans that we have high hopes and idealistic visions, and an enemy that murders without mercy and terrorizes without conscience. Now is the not the time for hand-wringing and skittishness. Now is the time for confidence and condemnation of the evil Baathist and terrorist remnants who bomb the United Nations, who bomb the Red Cross, who assassinate the courageous rising leaders of a new Iraq. Bush is properly focused on their crimes. Too many Americans are not.

IT'S A START [Cliff May]
But only a start. Too often in the past, this administration hasn't understood the importance of repeating a message, elaborating on a message, working a message until it burns its way into the public's mind and imagination.

Yes, it was reassuring to see the President appearing confident, articulating a plan, going into detail about who, what, when and where. But now he -- and those who claim they work for him -- need to drive the ideas he only sketched out tonight.

Also, and perhaps because the President needed to seem in command of the facts, the speech came off as rather wonkish. Hawkish national security conservatives don't need to be sold yet again on the necessity of this war. But those who will never understand such strategic arguments need to hear the human rights case for this difficult and costly project.

Maybe Kofi Annan and Michael Moore think the Ba'athists in Fallujah and that butcher Zarqawi are the equivalent of the Minutemen and the French Resistance, but most Americans understand in their guts that it would be a disaster were we to abandon Iraq to such barbarians.

Commenting on the speech tonight, Joe Lieberman said: "If we don't lose our will, someday we'll look back on what we've done in Iraq with pride." That's more the tone I'd hope to hear from the President in the days ahead. Bush and his speechwriters need to think Churchill and Kennedy (John, not Ted) if the President is to successfully rouse the nation to fight and win this difficult war against these ruthless, fantatical and determined enemies.
Ah well.

There will be a flood of editorials tomorrow, commentary from all over.

I'm just reminded of "The Fonz" and the shark.

___

Well, the "newspaper of record" - and that would be The New York Times (Oh my, they had a bad week what with publicly admitting they got duped by Chalabi and his Gucci gang documenting threats where there were none!) - gave us this on the 25th in their lead editorial -
It's regrettable that this president is never going to admit any shortcomings, much less failure. That's an aspect of Mr. Bush's character that we have to live with. But we cannot live without a serious plan for doing more than just getting through the June 30 transition and then muddling along until the November elections in the United States. The president still has a number of speeches left to deliver before June 30. We hope he will use them to come up with a more specific plan, to stop listing the things we already knew needed to be done and to explain to us how he intends to do them. An acknowledgment of past mistakes would be nice.
Oh, I suppose it would.

Ain't gonna happen.

The most interesting commentary was probably this:

Magical History Tour
Bush can't learn from the past if he can't see it.
William Saletan - Posted Monday, May 24, 2004, at 11:57 PM PT at SLATE.COM

The premise?
In press conferences, TV ads, and interviews this year, President Bush has manifested a series of psychopathologies: an abstract notion of reality, confidence unhinged from facts and circumstances, and a conception of credibility that requires no correspondence to the external world. Tonight, as he vowed to stay the course in Iraq, Bush demonstrated another mental defect: incomprehension of his role in history as a fallible human agent. Absent such comprehension, Bush can't fix his mistakes in Iraq because he can't see how--or even that--he screwed up.
And then Saletan goes on and explains it all. You might want to click on the link and read the whole thing.

If not, know that the argument revolves around the idea that Bush simply cannot see his own part in any of this:
Bush's ignorance of his part in the tragedy infects everything he says. "The swift removal of Saddam Hussein's regime last spring had an unintended effect," he observed tonight. "Instead of being killed or captured on the battlefield, some of Saddam's elite guards shed their uniforms and melted into the civilian population. [They] have reorganized, rearmed and adopted sophisticated terrorist tactics."

Note the passive construction. The mistake isn't that Bush failed to prepare for guerrilla tactics commonly adopted against occupiers. It isn't even a mistake; it's an "unintended effect." The cause of that effect is Saddam's "swift removal," not Bush or anyone in his administration who engineered the removal.

Is Bush embarrassed that a year of occupation has failed to substantiate his claims about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and links to global terrorism? No. He hasn't even noticed. "I sent American troops to Iraq to defend our security," he repeated tonight, adding, "Iraq is now the central front in the war on terror ... This will be a decisive blow to terrorism at the heart of its power and a victory for the security of America and the civilized world." Never mind the emerging evidence that North Korea, not Iraq, was engaged in the kind of WMD proliferation that Bush attributed to Saddam. In his speech, Bush simply repeated that Iraq was the headquarters of terrorists who "seek weapons of mass destruction."
You get the idea - and the argument is extended to how we deal with North Korea, with the United Nations, with questions of appropriate troop levels, with whether any Iraqi police or military force will be ready to replace our guys and so forth. "Things are fine, and problems aren't my fault."

And then there is the matter of to whom we turn sovereignty over come late June. That's a tad unclear, as is who will have authority to do what, militarily. Oh well. Saletan suggests that, well, when you deceive yourself about the past, it's easy to deceive yourself about the future.

Yep.

The upshot?
Bush, being Bush, thinks abstractions and good intentions will conquer such unpleasant facts. To Bush, they aren't even facts; they're illusions. The reality is the great narrative of the war on terror, whose infallible course is set by a higher power. "The way forward may sometimes appear chaotic; yet our coalition is strong, and our efforts are focused and unrelenting, and no power of the enemy will stop Iraq's progress," Bush insisted tonight. Close your eyes, and you can almost see it.
Clap and Tinkerbell will live.

But Tinkerbell was discussed earlier - see May 2, 2004 - It is all a matter of having the right attitude... for that.

Better yet, one could look at this in terms of philosophy - and think a bit about epistemology and pragmatism.

Really.

Here's a letter to MSNBC this week of note:
From: Eric Rauchway
Hometown: Davis, CA

Amid the many portents of doom frolicking through the headlines you might have missed this particular True Sign of the Apocalypse: the French -- the French -- are trying to explain Pragmatism to us. Jacques Chirac told the president yesterday that "le transfert de souverainet? doit ?tre r?el, et per?u comme tel," which (unless I misheard my radio) NPR translated as "the transfer of sovereignty [to Iraq on June 30] must not only be real but must be seen to be real." To which I confess my initial reaction was, "snarky Gaul."

But a moment's reflection forced me to realize this lesson in basic philosophy is exactly what someone needs to explain about this U.S. administration. Its members habitually claim privileged knowledge of the essential nature of things, knowledge that is independent of (when not actually contrary to) empirical evidence. I.e., in the administration's epistemology one may incontrovertibly be a superb Secretary of Defense without doing a good job as Secretary of Defense; one may truly be the sort of people who would never torture Iraqis while in fact torturing Iraqis.

Considering this epistemology, Chirac had evidently imagined that the president might plan to declare that a real transfer of sovereignty would take place on June 30th, even though the available evidence of our senses -- let us suppose, the evidence of an Iraqi constitution or lack of one, of a continuing American presence in Iraqi civil and military affairs -- might suggest to the ordinary mind, the mind privy only to empirical data, that no such transfer had occurred.

And so (one suspects while gritting his teeth) Chirac undertook to explain to the president and, over the president's head, to the people manning the media filter, that an event that is called the transfer of sovereignty that lacks evident consequences of a transfer of sovereignty is, however sadly, not a transfer of sovereignty. Or, as William James put it, "There can BE no difference anywhere that doesn't MAKE a difference elsewhere -- no difference in abstract truth that doesn't express itself in a difference in concrete fact and in conduct consequent upon that fact, imposed on somebody, somehow, somewhere and somewhen."

President Chirac must have hated descending to Philosophy 101 for the benefit of the president and the press corps. It must be especially galling to realize that almost nobody noticed.
Damned French. Like THEY invented logic?

Well, we don't let facts get in our way. The speech Bush gave shows that.

Posted by Alan at 20:54 PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
Updated: Thursday, 27 May 2004 21:43 PDT home

Sunday, 23 May 2004

Topic: Photos

Comments relocated?

Well, sort of....

The new issue of the parent publication to this web log, the virtual magazine Just Above Sunset was posted today. Click here or on the link in the left column.

Volume 2, Number 20 is the First Anniversary Edition of this online endeavor. You will find items there that have not appeared here, vastly expanded versions of items that first appeared here (with comments from our two correspondents in France, the News Guy in Atlanta and Phillip Raines), and of course, Bob Patterson's weekly column. This week's photography section has some odd signage here in Hollywood, and the usual pretty flowers and sunsets.

What you'll find there?

Current Events

Legitimacy: We are the good guys - and no one seems to understand that...

Popular Elections: Vox Populii, Vox Dei and all that stuff...

Trapped: Notes on the War Scandals

Military Views: What the former commanders are saying these days... (new!)

Sidebars: Minor Press Notes... but startling ones. (two of three new!)

Religion: Today In Religion - Texas Theology

Features

WLJ Weekly: Does Zipf's law apply to Schr?dinger's cat? (Bob Patterson's NEW weekly column)

Film Notes: Fahrenheit 9/11 Wins Palme D'Or Award at Cannes (and our readers in France have their say...) (new!)

Odds and Ends: Happy Endings in La-La Land! (It really does pay to watch the news!)

Photography: Nice and surreal - Hollywood mornings

Quotes: Useful Pithy Observations... (Bob provides some good ones this week.)

______________

Regular entries on this site resume tomorrow.

Check this out...


Posted by Alan at 18:26 PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
Updated: Sunday, 23 May 2004 18:31 PDT home

Saturday, 22 May 2004

Topic: The Economy

What's up with this?

I don't know why, but I just find this a little unnerving...

Insiders Are Selling Like It's 1999
Eric Dash and David Leonhardt, The New York Times, May 23, 2004
Across corporate America, executives have been selling company stock as if it were 1999. Even amid this resurgence of insider selling, however, a few dozen executives - including those at Zimmer - stood out for having unloaded supersized portions of their personal stakes in their company's future. At Wendy's International, Qualcomm, Occidental Petroleum, Boston Scientific and Comverse Technology, one or more executives sold at least half their holdings, according to a SundayBusiness analysis of hundreds of big companies.
Perhaps these guys know something the rest of us will know later, as in too late? Rats vis a vis sinking ships?

No. Couldn't be.

The Times says its something else.
The magnitude of insider selling, many governance experts say, suggests that even after more than two years of scrutiny, corporate America has yet to figure out how to link pay and performance. No matter what happens to profits or stock prices over the next year, some executives have already locked in multimillion-dollar paydays. Even if their corporate strategies fail in coming years, they could still retire with bank accounts fit for a king.
Huh? Reread the sentence several times. What does it mean? I guess they're just being careful. That's it.

But, "... `We have been tracking insider sales since 1971, and in the last few months they have never been higher,' said David Coleman, editor of Vickers Weekly Insider Report."

Curious.

Posted by Alan at 21:48 PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
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