I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Saturday, January 21, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Ischool benefactor's questionable connections

Good article in the Seattle Weekly about the local connections to the
Abramoff corruption scandal:

http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0603/gates-abramoff.html

Lots of familiar names turn up as scoundrels in the story - Tom DeLay,
William H Gates II, Slade Gorton, William H Gates III, Ralph Reed,
George W. Bush, and oh yes, did I mention Bill Gates?

A bit of a PR problem here. Alt-Control-Delete, Bill!


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Thursday, January 19, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Shatner sells kidney stone

Shatner sells kidney stone

William Shatner has sold his kidney stone for £14,000 to an online casino.

The Star Trek actor agreed to sell it to GoldenPalace.com to raise
money for a housing charity, says the BBC.

Shatner, 74, said: "This takes organ donors to a new height, to a new
low, maybe. How much is a piece of me worth?"

Shatner passed the stone last autumn but persuaded doctors to return
it so he could offer it for auction.

GoldenPalace.com originally offered £8,500 but the actor turned it
down, noting that his Star Trek tunics have sold for more than £50,000.

"This is a bold new addition to our fleet," GoldenPalace.com chief
executive officer Richard Rowe said.

The website has a bizarre range of collectables, including a toasted
cheese sandwich said to bear the image of the Virgin Mary.

.....

Golden Palace url: ae

http://www.goldenpalaceevents.com/auctions/shatnerstone01.php

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Wednesday, January 18, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] NOT Celebrities -- POOR couple gets 9-12 YEARS in Prison !!!

The Seahawk charged with girlfriend-choking was released from custody
without posting bail, and won't miss a game.

Billionaire Seahawk owner (and microsoft co-founder) Paul Allen no
doubt feels that justice has been served.

On 1/18/06, kdhaisch@aol.com <kdhaisch@aol.com> wrote:
> Couple Gets Prison in Chili Finger Case
> By KIM CURTIS, AP
>
>
> SAN JOSE, Calif. (Jan. 18) - A couple who planted a severed finger in
> a bowl of Wendy's chili in a scheme to extort money from the fast-food
> chain were sentenced Wednesday to prison terms of at least nine years.
>
> Anna Ayala, 40, who said she bit into the digit, was sentenced to 9 years.
> Her husband, Jaime Plascencia, 44, who obtained the finger from a co-worker
> who lost it in a workplace accident, was sentenced to more than 12 years.
>
> "Greed and avarice overtook this couple," said Superior Court Judge Edward
> Davila, adding that the pair
>
> [ ARE NOT FUCKIN' CELEBRITIES !!!! ]
>
>
> In a tearful plea for leniency, Ayala apologized to the courtroom gallery
> and said the scheme was "a moment of poor judgment."
>
> She said she retched March 22 after biting into the fingertip while dining
> with her family at a Wendy's in San Jose.
>
>
> 01-18-06 1459 EST
>
>
> Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
>
>
>
>
> .
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Tuesday, January 17, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] University of Washington and homeland insecurity

Sorry I couldn't find a more U of W-centric reference for this, the
part we are really interested in is in the 3rd paragraph. Perhaps
they can practice on I-chat, a veritable hotbed of thought crime.

You've got to ask yourself a question: Do I feel secure? Well, do ya, punk?

"A team comprised of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and
the Georgia Institute of Technology has been named a Regional
Visualization and Analytics Center by Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory in Richland, Wash. PNNL leads the Department of Homeland
Security's National Visualization and Analytics Center,
(http://nvac.pnl.gov/) or NVACTM, which is bringing academic expertise
to the nation's efforts to discover information that may warn
officials of a terrorist attack.

UNC Charlotte and Georgia Tech will develop techniques and tools to
assist homeland security analysts, and then combine the tools in an
artificial analytic reasoning system. The system will be able to
analyze enormous multimedia databases, such as the data generated by
the web in the forms of text, imagery, video and webcast.

The UNC Charlotte and Georgia Tech partnership is one of four
university team selections announced today. The others are the
University of Washington, Purdue University and Indiana University's
School of Medicine, and Pennsylvania State University. Stanford
University was named a regional center earlier this year."

Go, you Huskies!


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[CanYoAssDigIt] I heard it, man

http://jeffmilner.com/backmasking.htm

When you turn around a clip of Stairway to Heaven, Robert Plant sings
"Satan!" I believe! I believe!


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Monday, January 16, 2006

Re: [CanYoAssDigIt] Sexiest Person!!!!!

totally excellent! Now you are published, sans picture, unfortunately, at

http://mattlove1.blogspot.com/

You can tell all your firends.

Also, if I make the first cut, and they write back, you can tell them
I can be found at the Jack Straw Foundation. I ain't seen around the U
of W much these days!

thanks a trillion!

On 1/16/06, Christy Olson <hypocrisyisimpractical@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> To whom it may concern,
> I would like to nominate Mr. Matt Love for sexiest man in Seattle. The
> proof is in the pudding, or the picture...which you guys and gals should be
> looking at now. Just look at him!! All wet, waiting for someone to scrub
> down the sexy, sexy body of his. I'm telling you, it gets me all moist just
> thinking about it! Sheesh! Look at those glasses, sexy AND hip. What a
> combination!! Going on with the 'hip' theme, he's studying at U of W to be a
> MASTER librarian. That's right, MASTER!!! Pure animal sex musk, hip old
> person glasses, and brains. Need you hear more? I think not! No more for
> you! I don't think you could handle it. I wish all of Seattle could bask in
> this man's glory, which is why I'm sending this to you fine people. Please
> help me bring light into the dark, dreary world. Make Matt Love sexiest
> person. You won't be disappointed.
> Sincerely,
> Christy J. Olson
>
>
>
> "Was für ein Glück für die Regierung dass die Menschen nicht denken." –Adolf
> Hitler
>
>
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>
>


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Sexiest Person!!!!!

To whom it may concern,
I would like to nominate Mr. Matt Love for sexiest man in Seattle.  The proof is in the pudding, or the picture...which you guys and gals should be looking at now. Just look at him!! All wet, waiting for someone to scrub down the sexy, sexy body of his.  I'm telling you, it gets me all moist just thinking about it! Sheesh!  Look at those glasses, sexy AND hip.  What a combination!! Going on with the 'hip' theme, he's studying at U of W to be a MASTER librarian. That's right, MASTER!!! Pure animal sex musk, hip old person glasses, and brains. Need you hear more? I think not! No more for you! I don't think you could handle it. I wish all of Seattle could bask in this man's glory, which is why I'm sending this to you fine people. Please help me bring light into the dark, dreary world. Make Matt Love sexiest person. You won't be disappointed.
Sincerely,
Christy J. Olson


"Was für ein Glück für die Regierung dass die Menschen nicht denken." –Adolf Hitler


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Saturday, January 14, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Language Watch

(4) "During the production of "Robin Hood" Disney finally began to
recruit new animators. For more than two decades, the studio had been
relying on a small corps of experimented artists. The Disney staff was
generally acknowledged as the best in the world, and there was little
impetus to search for new talent. (Disney was not the only studio that
failed to recruit young animators; very few artists entered the field
between the mid-1950s and the mid-1970s.)

"experimented artists"?

from www.magicalears.com/films/Interviews/Interview%20with%20Glen%20Keane-May,%201997/Notes%20about%20Glen/


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Friday, January 13, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Matt's excellent cyber adventure - the sequel

public_lisax is currently not in your Messenger List.
Add to your Messenger List (Ctrl+Shift+A) Report as Spam (Alt+Shift+R)

public_lisax: hi... anyone there?
valis2001us: Yeah, I'm here
public_lisax: oh your there hhi...
valis2001us: hi
public_lisax: a/s/l (age sex locatipn)?
valis2001us: old, male, washington state
public_lisax: om 27/f/USA. was lookin at your profile. thought you
might like to chat.
public_lisax: so what have you been up tto valis2001us?
valis2001us: I
valis2001us: oops
public_lisax: cool. i was just hangin out watching tv. i was getting
kinda horny (*bluwhes)
valis2001us: I'm all thumbs
public_lisax: feel like a little cyber fun witz me ? please please...
valis2001us: oh this old routine.
valis2001us: I wanna talk about music
public_lisax: i think ill just take that as a yes... beingas that im
starting to get real horny here.. lol ok?
valis2001us: I am going to be a famous composer someday
public_lisax: alright how bbout i get down on my knees in front of
you and help you out of your pants?
public_lisax: tell me what you want me to do with you while i sslip
out of my panties
valis2001us: Bigger than John Cage
public_lisax: oh yeah babe.. dont stop. while i slide my hand down
between my legs and part my moist lipps
valis2001us: I want you to play the piano with your tits
public_lisax: caress tzem..
valis2001us: and play the trumpet with your butt
public_lisax: oh it feels so good. Im holding your pulsing cock in my
hand, my shiny red fingernails dig gently into your balls, while my
full, soft lips engulf the mass off your meat
valis2001us: I'd like to get a recording of that, and put it up on
Dweebish page at www.myspace.com/dweebishband
valis2001us: it will be sensational. People will love it.
public_lisax: open my website so you can look at me while im sucking
you. use the link in my profile!
public_lisax: what do you think of my pics?
valis2001us: we'll both be famous.
public_lisax: shit the phone. dont stop stroking it. hold on..
valis2001us: let's not talk about your pictures just yet.
public_lisax: i have some pics on myhomepage the link is in my
profile, still working on it ...
valis2001us: I think we should throw some rocks in the piano
valis2001us: and then shove it around the room. it will sound great
public_lisax: sorry, I have to take thiis call, probly take bout five
minutes. If you want, come to my page and lets finish this. I have my
cam on there cyberfungirls dot com look for me on there
valis2001us: I'll hold the microphone over it while you shove it
around the room with your hip...
valis2001us: bump bump bump. I can hear it now
valis2001us: I have some music at www.soundclick.com/mrroboto.
valis2001us: check it out!
valis2001us: what do you think, do you like it?
valis2001us: hello?
valis2001us: hello?
valis2001us: hello?


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[CanYoAssDigIt] Scarlett Johansson

I feel a rant coming on about things I shouldn't even care about.

First of all, I saw "Lost In Translation" the other night with Anne.
She is probably never going to watch another film on my recommendation
again. It was extremely tedious, and it was more reminiscent of a
student film (with big stars) than anything else.

People were falling all over themselves to rehabilitate Sophia Coppola
after her nepotistic appearance in one of these gangster movies her
father makes that are so dang popular... they went way way too far in
that regard, I just can't believe this film would have gotten much
attention if it had been made by somebody with a different.

One thing I read about the film that I now think is truly bizarre was
praise for Ms. Coppola for courageously casting an unconventional
looking woman for the female lead.

C'mon, does Scarlett Johansson depart from the model of the standard
beauty in any discernible way? She looks a little chunky in her
Golden Globes outfit, but from other pictures it appears she doesn't
the standard Hollywood weight loss thing. I think her attempts to
look really good for the golden globes is sad and misguided - she
looks more than faintly ridiculous in that dress.

She sports a natural look in Lost In Translation, and looks much better.

Luciana is a big Lost In Translation fan, so I was looking forward to
seeing it so we'd have something new to "chat" about (via e-mail) -
now I feel like I don't want to bring up the topic, I was so
disappointed with the film.


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Thursday, January 12, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] In homage to Hugh Thompson

Let us pause for a moment and pay tribute to a true and patriot
American, who stands in start contrast to cowardly phonies Arnold
Schwartzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, Toby Keith, John Wayne, George W
Bush, Ronald Reagan, Richard Nixon, Colin Powell, and sadly, so many,
many more...
January 12, 2006

He Broke Ranks; He Did the Right Thing
Hugh Thompson and My Lai
By CLANCY SIGAL

There is an Ugly American, a Quiet American and then there's Hugh
Thompson, the Army helicopter pilot who, with his two younger crew
mates, was on a mission to draw enemy fire over the Vietnamese village
of My Lai in March, 1968. Hovering over a paddy field, they watched a
platoon of American soldiers led by Lt. William Calley, deliberately
shoot unarmed Vietnamese civilians, mainly women and children,
cowering in muddy ditches. Thompson landed his craft and appealed to
the soldiers, and to Calley, to stop the killings. Calley told
Thompson to mind his own business.

Thompson took off but then one of his crew shouted that the shooting
had begun again. According to his later testimony, Thompson was
uncertain what to do. Americans murdering innocent bystanders was hard
for him to process. But when he saw Vietnamese survivors chased by
soldiers, he landed his chopper between the villagers and troopers,
and ordered his crew to fire at any American soldiers shooting at
civilians. Then he got on the radio and begged U.S. gunships above him
to rescue those villagers he could not cram into his own craft.

On returning to base, Thompson, almost incoherent with rage,
immediately reported the massacre to superiors, who did nothing, until
months later when the My Lai story leaked to the public. The
eyewitness testimony of Thompson and his surviving crew member helped
convict Calley at a court-martial. But when he returned to his
Stateside home in Stone Mountain, Georgia, Thompson received death
threats and insults, while Calley was pardoned by President Nixon.
Indeed, for a time, Thompson himself feared court-martial.
Reluctantly, the massacre was investigated by then-major Colin Powell,
of the Americal Division, who reported relations between U.S. soldiers
and Vietnamese civilians as "excellent"; Powell's whitewash was the
foundation of his meteoric rise through the ranks.

Hugh Thompson died last week, age sixty two. Thirty years after My
Lai, he, and his gunner Lawrence Colburn, had received the Soldiers
Medal, as did the third crew member, Glenn Andreotta, who was killed
in combat. "Don't do the right thing looking for a reward, because it
might not come," Thompson wryly observed at the ceremony.

Something stuck in my head when I learned of Thompson's death. "There
was no thinking about it," he said before his death. "There was
something that had to be done, and it had to be done fast."

Words similar to these are often used by combat heroes to describe
incredible feats of courage under fire. With one possible difference.
According to the record, Thompson did have time to think about it as
he took off from My Lai, hovered and tried to wrap his mind around the
horror below. Then he made a conscious decision to save lives. Some of
the Vietnamese he rescued, children then, are alive today.

Ex-chief warrant officer Thompson is a member of a small, elite corps
of Americans who have broken ranks and refused to run with the herd.
They include Army specialist Joseph Darby, of the 372d Military Police
Company, who reported on his fellow soldiers who were torturing
prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison. His family has received threats to
their personal safety in their Maryland hometown. And Captain Ian
Fishback, the 82d Airborne West Pointer, who served combat tours in
Iraq and Afghanistan, and tried vainly for seventeen months to
persuade superiors that detainee torture was a systematic, and not a
'few bad apples', problem inside the U.S. military. In frustration, he
wrote to Senator McCain, which led directly to McCain's anti-torture
amendment. I wouldn't want to bet on the longevity of Captain
Fishback's military career.

Thompson's death also reminded me of Captain Lawrence Rockwood, of the
10th Mountain Division. Ten years ago, Rockwood was deployed to Haiti
where, against orders, he personally investigated detainee abuse at
the National Penitentiary in the heart of Port au Prince. He was
court-martialed for criticizing the U.S. military's refusal to
intervene, and kicked out of the Army. While still on duty, he kept a
photograph on his desk of a man he greatly admired. It was of Captain
Hugh Thompson.

Some of my friends get so angry at the Bush White House, and so
despairing, that they slip into a mindset where Americans - the great
'Them' out there - are lumped into a solid bloc of malign ignoramuses.
They forget that this country is also made up of people like Hugh
Thompson, Joe Darby, Ian Fishback and Lawrence Rockwood - outside and
inside the military.

Clancy Sigal's Zone of The Interior, is finally being published in the
UK, by Pomona at £9.99. Sigal can be reached at clancy@jsasoc.com.


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Friday, January 06, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: * Reminder: Matt Love has invited you to join Friendster

Hey, dude, you['re breaking my heart.  My mouth is made with only the cleanest ingredients available, and contaminated with no bovine products whatsoever!

When was the last time you heard somebody use the word "whatsoever?" 

The other day I called somebody a "feller" and a friend said he hadn't heard that one since 1894.  It's not quite "zounds!" but still.

So remember, I'm just an old fashioned guy with no beef out looking for some clean fun. 

Is that so wrong?  Why am I so misunderstood? I've had this bar of soap since I was a little child.

On 1/6/06, 1zozo zozo < zz_1zz@yahoo.com> wrote:
cow please don,t show us how dirty your mouth is

Matt Love <matt.mattlove1@gmail.com> wrote:

Friendster
Matt

Not so long ago,
you were invited to join
Matt Love's network of friends.


If you haven't seen Friendster lately, you should really take a look. You can reconnect with old friends, meet new friends, customize your profile with audio/video, keep track of birthdays, and so much more!


JOIN Matt'S NETWORK LEARN MORE

Friendster Groups Friendster Groups
> Get involved
Friendster Horoscopes Daily Horoscopes
> Check friends' moods
Friendster Blogs Blogs and Photos
> Share your genius
Already a member of Friendster? Click here to prevent future reminders of this invitation
Prefer not to receive invitations from Friendster members? Block future invitations
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Thursday, January 05, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] The Bush Presidency: A return to traditional values

The traditional values of the Reagan years. An adoring press
(displaying not a trace of "liberal bias") adores and excuses a chief
executive that hardly seems to to be there, while thugs and pirates
wrapped in flags loot the country

February 7, 1999
Remembering The 1980s:
The Press Slept While Reagan Rambled

by Jeff Cohen

The national press corps, inflamed by President Clinton's personal
failings, has howled like a wolfpack at the White House for over a
year now.

Things were a bit different during the Reagan era.

In her new book "Reporting Live," former CBS White House correspondent
Lesley Stahl writes that she and other reporters suspected that Reagan
was "sinking into senility" years before he left office. She writes
that White House aides "covered up his condition"-- and journalists
chose not to pursue it.

Stahl describes a particularly unsettling encounter with Reagan in the
summer of 1986: her "final meeting" with the President, typically a
chance to ask a few parting questions for a "going-away story." But
White House Press Secretary Larry Speakes made her promise not to ask
anything.

Although she'd covered Reagan for years, the glazed-eyed and fogged-up
President "didn't seem to know who I was," writes Stahl. For several
moments as she talked to him in the Oval Office, a vacant Reagan
barely seemed to realize anyone else was in the room. Meanwhile,
Speakes was literally shouting instructions to the President,
reminding him to give Stahl White House souvenirs.

Panicking at the thought of having to report on that night's news that
"the president of the United States is a doddering space cadet," Stahl
was relieved that Reagan soon reemerged into alertness, recognized her
and chatted coherently with her husband, a screenwriter. "I had come
that close to reporting that Reagan was senile."

Stahl wasn't the only reporter to hold back. Nor were her bosses at
CBS the only ones to pressure journalists to soften their coverage of
Reagan, both of his policies and his person.

But that was back then. Beginning 13 months ago, the President's
personal sexual predilections became the country's top news story; 13
years ago, a matter as important to the public as the President's
mental competence was deemed off-limits.

The national press corps spent years either ignoring the issue or
euphemizing it as "inattentiveness" or "the age issue" or his lax
"management style."

Some Americans may not remember the era when Teflon news coverage was
afforded to a president who fell asleep at White House meetings and
didn't recognize members of his Cabinet. Untethered by cue cards or
teleprompter, he could ramble off into dark fogs of gibberish.

Today's media are quick to note that Clinton now avoids news
conferences in fear of having to answer questions about l'affaire
Monica. Reagan broke records for the fewest news conferences. And for
obvious reasons. In October 1987, in his first press conference in
seven months, here's how President Reagan answered a question about
whether taxes should be increased:

"The problem is the deficit is -- or should I say -- wait a minute,
the spending, I should say, of gross national product, forgive me --
the spending is roughly 23 to 24 per cent. So that it is in -- it what
is increasing while the revenues are staying proportionately the same
and what would be the proper amount they should, that we should be
taking from the private sector."

That answer was no less coherent than his repeatedly befuddled
responses ("The poverty rate has begun to decline, but it is still
going up.") -- and his rousing "I'm all confused now" summation at the
1984 debate with Walter Mondale in Louisville.

At a disjointed 30-minute news conference in June 1986, the President
served up consistently muddled answers (aides had to immediately
"clarify" several of their boss' claims), but no reporter present was
willing to ask publicly what was wrong. None were willing to say that
the President had no clothes. A top White House official privately
marveled to the Los Angeles Times about "how easy the press was on
him" and said that reporters treat Reagan "almost reverentially."

This view of a timid, almost reverential press corps was shared by
others in Reagan's PR team-- notwithstanding their often disingenuous
complaints at the time about liberal bias. In "On Bended Knee: The
Press and the Reagan Presidency," author Mark Hertsgaard quotes former
Reagan Communications director David Gergen as saying, "A lot of the
Teflon came from the press. They didn't want to go after him that
toughly."

Today, such loopy public performances by a President might prompt
nightly "White House in Crisis" specials on national television. Back
then, establishment news outlets were in the habit of burying
embarrassing personal facts about Reagan in stories adorned by
misleadingly cheery headlines.

During Reagan's 1988 Moscow summit with Gorbachev, the New York Times
noted that the President had fallen asleep at a meeting with Soviet
dignitaries. The Times subtitled the article: "REAGAN IMPRESSES SOVIET
ELITE." Two days later, another summit-related article in the New York
Times attributed this quote about Reagan to Britain's Margaret
Thatcher: "Poor dear, there's nothing between his ears." The article's
headline: "THATCHER SALUTE TO REAGAN YEARS."

Around the same time Lesley Stahl had her 1986 meeting with a weak and
disoriented President to whom she was forbidden to pose questions,
Time magazine was painting a picture of a totally different President.
Coinciding with the Fourth of July hoopla, Time's cover projected a
beaming Reagan halloed by multicolored fireworks. Titled "Yankee
Doodle Magic," the story offered thousands of idolatrous words about
"one of the strongest leaders of the 20th century" and about "Reagan's
reassertion of presidential leadership" and how "he has restored the
authority of the American presidency."

"If Reagan is afflicted by senility," the magazine scoffed, "some of
the world's leaders might try a case of it."

Time's portrait of the American President bore distinct similarities
to the ones painted of Communist Party leaders by the Beijing press
corps. (Too bad for Time-- as the Iran-contra scandal erupted weeks
later-- that its "strong leader" was said to be out of the loop of his
own foreign policy.)

Compare Time's Teflon treatment of Reagan in 1986 with the magazine's
cover story on Bill Clinton last week. Here's the lead sentence: "Like
a weasel, Bill Clinton emerges from a drainpipe shinier than when he
went in."

The truth about relations between the press and presidency is that
while some things have changed, much remains the same. What's changed
is the willingness of mainstream journalists to unveil, even revile,
the person of the President. With Reagan, relevant questions about his
mental competence weren't even raised-- and a President being asleep
at the wheel should be as newsworthy as a President sleeping around.

Establishment journalists today resemble attack dogs on Clinton's
personal defects, his sex and lies, but they seem unable or unwilling
(or too bored) to act as tough watchdogs on Clinton's
often-conservative public policies, especially economic and foreign.
Time magazine will call Clinton a "weasel" over Monicagate, but not
over his policies on social security or NAFTA or Iraq.

In this regard, nothing much has changed. For when it came to
watchdogging Reagan's economic and foreign policies, mainstream media
were as disconnected and dozy as the President was.
Jeff Cohen is the founder of FAIR, and a panelist on the Fox News
Channel's "News Watch," the media criticism program on the Fox News
Channel (Saturday 7pm ET, Sunday 11am ET). A version of this column
appeared in the Baltimore Sun.

[FAIR Home] | [More on Clinton coverage] | [More columns by Jeff Cohen]


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Wednesday, January 04, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Language Watch

"Dissecrate?"

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jakob Sandberg <snasboun@hotmail.com>
Date: Dec 29, 2005 12:42 AM
Subject: [Jandek] jandek on corwood
To: jandek@mylist.net

I saw the Jandek on corwood documentary recently, and i have to say
that I really didn´t like it. All my respect to the filmmakers and
there efforts for this film, but it all feels like a jandek
commercial. They talk for an eternity about the tuning of his guitar,
they describe and dissecrate his music, so that everyone can
understand. They try to explain, but why? Somethings are interesting,
like the talk about blank spaces, and the telephone interview, but
most of the time it´s just a explanation of his music. And that
something that shouldn´t be done, I belive.

Jakob Sandberg
Sweden
_______________________________________________
jandek mailing list
jandek@mylist.net
http://mylist.net/listinfo/jandek


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Sunday, January 01, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] a joyful tghought for the new year!

Rich people in this country not only don't pay their share of taxes,
they are tightwads when it comes to charity. That is why they are
rich - because they are miserly bastards!

From a news source not to be trusted:

The tsunami and charity: I read a good piece analysis of the actual
numbers on charitable donations by Rachard Itani who began by citing
figures compiled by The London Observer, showing that Norwegians
donated the most per head of population ($13.20) followed by the
Swedes ($12.04), the Dutch ($9.16) the Australians ($5.23) and so on,
down to the Americans with a donation of $1.08 per head, and the
Euro-swollen French, whose per head donation amounted to 80 U.S.
cents. The Observer table put Saudi Arabs in the middle of the pack,
at number 6 with a donation of $4 per head, but still outranking
Canadians, Austrians, Brits, Greeks, Americans and French in their
generosity.

Itani took the Observer's numbers a stage further, by comparing
donations as a percentage of each country's per-capita income, the
average amount of money each head of population is theoretically
supposed to earn. This measure of generosity, Itani wrote, "showed
private Saudi individuals as the most generous amongst the people of
the 12 countries mentioned in the Observer article, followed in
descending order by the Swedes, Dutch, Norwegians, Australians,
Germans, Canadians, Greeks, Austrians, Brits, French, and in 12th and
final place, Americans." In fact the Saudis were 1,617% more generous
than 12th place Americans.

And since The Observer's numbers compared private, not official
donations, the generosity of Saudi individuals cannot be dismissed
away as resulting from their "oil wealth. Indeed, Saudi per-capita
income, at $8,530, pales in comparison with American per capita income
at $37,610. "Interestingly," Itani went on, " the pattern of poorer
people giving a larger percentage of their income to charity than
richer people is mirrored in domestic US private charitable donation
patterns: it's a well documented fact that poorer Americans donate a
larger percentage of their income to charity than the richer amongst
them do."


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Tuesday, December 27, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] NSA Spied on UN Diplomats During Push for Invasion of Iraq

Daniel Ellsberg thought this story was potentially more important than
the pentagon papers, but the only thing I heard about it on NPR was
some government apologist in the media or academia or think tank
(selected from their revolving cast of right or center-right experts)
assuring us that it was alright because the UN expects to be spied on.
Probably on one of those lame middle of the say shows like "To The
Point."

Did I miss something? Nothing this morning - there was some
latebreaking news about craft shops and a lengthy profile of a
character actor who had written three cook books (and food must be
very important to NPR listeners, because they devote so much broadcast
time to it), and the usual biased reporting on revolutionary movements
and pirate radio (NPR has always been on the side of corporate media
like Clear Channel in opposition to community and citizen-based media
- where the "public" in "National Public Radio" is escapes me) - but
nothing about this story.

December 27, 2005

Where Was the New York Times When It Mattered?
NSA Spied on UN Diplomats During Push for Invasion of Iraq
By NORMAN SOLOMON

Despite all the news accounts and punditry since the New York Times
published its Dec. 16 bombshell about the National Security Agency's
domestic spying, the media coverage has made virtually no mention of
the fact that the Bush administration used the NSA to spy on U.N.
diplomats in New York before the invasion of Iraq.

That spying had nothing to do with protecting the United States from a
terrorist attack. The entire purpose of the NSA surveillance was to
help the White House gain leverage, by whatever means possible, for a
resolution in the U.N. Security Council to green light an invasion.
When that surveillance was exposed nearly three years ago, the
mainstream U.S. media winked at Bush's illegal use of the NSA for his
Iraq invasion agenda.

Back then, after news of the NSA's targeted spying at the United
Nations broke in the British press, major U.S. media outlets gave it
only perfunctory coverage -- or, in the case of the New York Times, no
coverage at all. Now, while the NSA is in the news spotlight with
plenty of retrospective facts, the NSA's spying at the U.N. goes
unmentioned: buried in an Orwellian memory hole.

A rare exception was a paragraph in a Dec. 20 piece by Patrick Radden
Keefe in the online magazine Slate -- which pointedly noted that "the
eavesdropping took place in Manhattan and violated the General
Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations, the
Headquarters Agreement for the United Nations, and the Vienna
Convention on Diplomatic Relations, all of which the United States has
signed."

But after dodging the story of the NSA's spying at the U.N. when it
mattered most -- before the invasion of Iraq -- the New York Times and
other major news organizations are hardly apt to examine it now.
That's all the more reason for other media outlets to step into the
breach.

In early March 2003, journalists at the London-based Observer reported
that the NSA was secretly participating in the U.S. government's
high-pressure campaign for the U.N. Security Council to approve a
pro-war resolution. A few days after the Observer revealed the text of
an NSA memo about U.S. spying on Security Council delegations, I asked
Daniel Ellsberg to assess the importance of the story. "This leak," he
replied, "is more timely and potentially more important than the
Pentagon Papers." The key word was "timely."

Publication of the top-secret Pentagon Papers in 1971, made possible
by Ellsberg's heroic decision to leak those documents, came after the
Vietnam War had been underway for many years. But with an invasion of
Iraq still in the future, the leak about NSA spying on U.N. diplomats
in New York could erode the Bush administration's already slim chances
of getting a war resolution through the Security Council. (Ultimately,
no such resolution passed before the invasion.) And media scrutiny in
the United States could have shed light on how Washington's war push
was based on subterfuge and manipulation.

"As part of its battle to win votes in favor of war against Iraq," the
Observer had reported on March 2, 2003, the U.S. government developed
an "aggressive surveillance operation, which involves interception of
the home and office telephones and the e-mails of U.N. delegates." The
smoking gun was "a memorandum written by a top official at the
National Security Agency -- the U.S. body which intercepts
communications around the world -- and circulated to both senior
agents in his organization and to a friendly foreign intelligence
agency." The friendly agency was Britain's Government Communications
Headquarters.

The Observer explained: "The leaked memorandum makes clear that the
target of the heightened surveillance efforts are the delegations from
Angola, Cameroon, Chile, Mexico, Guinea and Pakistan at the U.N.
headquarters in New York -- the so-called Middle Six' delegations
whose votes are being fought over by the pro-war party, led by the
U.S. and Britain, and the party arguing for more time for U.N.
inspections, led by France, China and Russia."

The NSA memo, dated Jan. 31, 2003, outlined the wide scope of the
surveillance activities, seeking any information useful to push a war
resolution through the Security Council -- "the whole gamut of
information that could give U.S. policymakers an edge in obtaining
results favorable to U.S. goals or to head off surprises."

Noting that the Bush administration "finds itself isolated" in its
zeal for war on Iraq, the Times of London called the leak of the memo
an "embarrassing disclosure." And, in early March 2003, the
embarrassment was nearly worldwide. From Russia to France to Chile to
Japan to Australia, the story was big mainstream news. But not in the
United States.

Several days after the "embarrassing disclosure," not a word about it
had appeared in the New York Times, the USA's supposed paper of
record. "Well, it's not that we haven't been interested," Times deputy
foreign editor Alison Smale told me on the evening of March 5, nearly
96 hours after the Observer broke the story. But "we could get no
confirmation or comment" on the memo from U.S. officials. Smale added:
"We would normally expect to do our own intelligence reporting."
Whatever the rationale, the New York Times opted not to cover the
story at all.

Except for a high-quality Baltimore Sun article that appeared on March
4, the coverage in major U.S. media outlets downplayed the
significance of the Observer's revelations. The Washington Post
printed a 514-word article on a back page with the headline "Spying
Report No Shock to U.N." Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times published a
longer piece that didn't only depict U.S. surveillance at the United
Nations as old hat; the LA Times story also reported "some experts
suspected that it [the NSA memo] could be a forgery" -- and "several
former top intelligence officials said they were skeptical of the
memo's authenticity."

But within days, any doubt about the NSA memo's "authenticity" was
gone. The British press reported that the U.K. government had arrested
an unnamed female employee at a British intelligence agency in
connection with the leak. By then, however, the spotty coverage of the
top-secret NSA memo in the mainstream U.S. press had disappeared.

As it turned out, the Observer's expose -- headlined "Revealed: U.S.
Dirty Tricks to Win Vote on Iraq War" -- came 18 days before the
invasion of Iraq began.

From the day that the Observer first reported on NSA spying at the
United Nations until the moment 51 weeks later when British
prosecutors dropped charges against whistleblower Katharine Gun, major
U.S. news outlets provided very little coverage of the story. The
media avoidance continued well past the day in mid-November 2003 when
Gun's name became public as the British press reported that she had
been formally charged with violating the draconian Official Secrets
Act.

Facing the possibility of a prison sentence, Katharine Gun said that
disclosure of the NSA memo was "necessary to prevent an illegal war in
which thousands of Iraqi civilians and British soldiers would be
killed or maimed." She said: "I have only ever followed my
conscience."

In contrast to the courage of the lone woman who leaked the NSA memo
-- and in contrast to the journalistic vigor of the Observer team that
exposed it -- the most powerful U.S. news outlets gave the revelation
the media equivalent of a yawn. Top officials of the Bush
administration, no doubt relieved at the lack of U.S. media concern
about the NSA's illicit spying, must have been very encouraged.

Norman Solomon is the author of War Made Easy: How Presidents and
Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death, from which this article has been
adapted.

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Monday, December 26, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Fwd: Mothers Against Noise (MAN)

I fear visitors to this website are being pranked, and this is an
Onion article tricked up as a campaign, but whether it's serious or a
joke, I urge you to check this out!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Kim Flint <kflint@loopers-delight.com>
Date: Dec 26, 2005 5:47 PM
Subject: against noise
To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com

Apparently some of you are bringing on the apocalypse, or the downfall of
civilization, or something like that:

http://www.mothersagainstnoise.org/

My suggestion: Do whatever you can to get on her list. Great PR!

kim

______________________________________________________________________
Kim Flint | Looper's Delight
kflint@loopers-delight.com | http://www.loopers-delight.com

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Saturday, December 24, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Movie reviews

I'm trying to play nice here, but it's probably beyond my abilities...

I saw part of Mr. Deeds Goes To Town. I was disappointed I didn't
catch the whole thing, but what I saw impressed the hell out of me.
Capra's message about human dignity and interdependence is really
needed today.

I while back I saw Adam Sandler's parody, "Mr. Deeds." He did a very
effective job of blunting the message of the original. I wonder if it
was funded through the "Wag The Dog" group. It didn't piss me off so
much at the time, I didn't realize how powerful the original was.

Interesting to note that the chief reviewer in the IMDB.com said that
Sandler's film was a remake of a depression-era "propaganda" film.

We have fallen so far that a message of being responsible to your
neighbor, being a good participant in civic affairs is propaganda, but
a film that says "everybody is venal, you are a useless idiot, greed
is good, etc" is just good clean fun.

The movie viewers were divided on the Sandler film: "it sucks!" "It
rules - you suck!" "you stupid - Sandler rules! Me smash!" Really
depressing. No sense at all of what has been lost over time.

I also saw part of "Sleepless In Seattle" which I had seen in its
entirety before. It was a better film than I thought.

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Friday, December 23, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Matt makes a new friend on Yahoo IM...

sillywabit198 is currently not in your Messenger List.
Add to your Messenger List (Ctrl+Shift+A) Report as Spam (Alt+Shift+R)

sillywabit198: hi.... anyone there?
sillywabit198: well anyway, guess aour not there?
valis2001us: I'm here
sillywabit198: hold on a sec. be right back
valis2001us: ok
sillywabit198: ok im bacck. sorry bout that. still there?
valis2001us: sure am
sillywabit198: oh yoour there hi...
valis2001us: hi! hows it going?
sillywabit198: a/s/l (age sex location)?
valis2001us: what time is it there?
sillywabit198: im 27/f/USA. eas lookin at your profile. thought you
might like to chat.
sillywabit198: so what have you been up to valis2001us?
valis2001us: well you know my age sex and location then if you've
looked at my profile. If i was lying, I'd say I was 23, not 49!
sillywabit198: cool. i was just hangin out watching tv. i was getting
kinda horny (*blushes)
valis2001us: My name's matt, I thought that was in my profile
valis2001us: tv doesn't make me horny, it makes me want to throw up!
sillywabit198: feel like a litttle cyber fun with me ? please please...
sillywabit198: i think ill just take that as a yes... being as that im
starting to get real horny here.. lol ok?
valis2001us: I have never had "cyberfun" before, I'm sure I'm not very
good at it.
sillywabit198: alrigght how bout i get down on my knees in front of
you and help you out of your pants?
valis2001us: Have you ever seen "The Man With One Brown Shoe" (remade
in the US as the man with one red shoe)? The woman is trying to
seduce him, but he wanted to play her his avant garde compositions on
the violin. It was a very funny scene. I could do that with you, I'm
very keen to talk about my music.
valis2001us: The stuff I've been writing lately is very chromatic.
It's still tonal in the sense that it's rooted in a particular key,
but I use 12 tones all over the place on it.
valis2001us: I don't play violin like the guy in the movie, I come
from a rock background. Guitar and bass.
valis2001us: I'm currently playing bass in a band called Dweebish
(www.myspace.com/dweebishband) that I'm very excited about. Really
top flight musicians, I feel lucky to play with them.
valis2001us: I've been writing songs with a guy named Chris in
England, you can here some christmas songs we did at
www.soundclick.com/sonsofsarookh
valis2001us: but I harbor the secret desire to be an avant garde
composer of the first rank. I really don't have a site for this stuff
yet... but some early experiments are up at
www.soundclick.com/mrroboto.
valis2001us: hello?
valis2001us: hello?
valis2001us: hello?

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Thursday, December 22, 2005

[CanYoAssDigIt] Fwd: [Fwd: Censure and Special Committee to Investigate the President]

John Conyers has done some great things - then and now.

After Rosa Parks now much praised actions in the Montgomery Bus Boycott, she was a pariah. She and her husband could not find work, and she was threatened and harrassed.  She moved to Michigan where John Conyers employed her for the rest of her working life.

When nobody else would look at election irregularities in 2004, Conyers looked into it. Since he got no cooperation or support, his results were inconclusive, but strongly indicate that Bush had stolen two elections.

Now he is doing yet another great thing. Let's put aside our political differences long enough to do the right thing together.

Life could be a dream, impeach impeach!


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Censure and Special Committee to Investigate the President
Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2005 15:34:02 -0800
From: Congressman John Conyers <john.conyers@johnconyers.com>
Reply-To: 1999990633.181199.108@conyersforcongress.com
To: joesibley@comcast.net


If you are having trouble viewing this E-newsletter, click here.

December 21, 2005

Demand Censure and Accountability for Misconduct by Bush and Cheney in Iraq War


Dear Friend:

Today I released a staff Report entitled, "The Constitution in Crisis: The Downing Street Minutes and Deception, Manipulation, Torture, Retribution and Coverups in the Iraq War." 

In response to the Report – which finds substantial evidence of federal legal violations by numerous members of the Bush Administration --

I have introduced a resolution creating a Select Committee with subpoena authority to investigate the misconduct of the Bush Administration with regard to the Iraq war and report on possible impeachable offenses; as well as Resolutions proposing both President Bush and Vice-President Cheney should be censured by Congress based on the uncontroverted evidence of their abuse of power. 

To read the Report, sign up as a citizen cosponsor of these efforts, or make a contribution and obtain a signed copy of a book version of the report to be published in the coming months, please go to the Iraq Report Action Center on my web site.

Iraq Report Action Center

In addition to highlighting the devastating arrogance, hubris, and wrongheadedness of the Bush Administration, the Report also highlights the danger of one party rule in Washington and inability of the Republican Congress to operate as any sort of check or balance on the Administration.  It is important that we as a nation say "never again" to going to war under false pretenses, and covering up official wrongdoing.  Thank you for helping me look at these problems, and please pass on this email to friends and colleagues who may be interested in this issue as well.

Forward to a Friend

Thank you for your help and your continued stand for a better democracy.

Sincerely,

John Conyers, Jr.



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