Archive for June, 2009

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BANFF 2009: MENSA IN THE MOUNTAINS
 
Two months till the best Mensa meeting ever. Visit the Banff Regional Gathering (September 11 through 13, 2009) amidst soaring peaks and world heritage sites. Combine world-class scenery, unique fossil fields, the low Canadian dollar and top minds to manufacture a memorable experience. Check out the RG web site at www.mensabanffrg.com for details. Do you like music, the arts, math, science, politics, games? Add your requests to the mix and book early through Patricia (almostp@shaw.ca) or volunteer for this superb RG, the best of the best.
 

       

  

LOSERVILLE, ALBERTA

Should you move to Calgary? Well, there are the superb mountains, cool evenings and sunny skies. And it’s a great place to stroke your greed. Besides, there’s nothing like Calgary Transit to restore one’s faith in the invincible stupidity of the human race. On long weekends, when car-deprived families need public transit most, when the aged need visits and hard working people shop and kids crave something to do, the system often shuts segments down for repair and one can’t get anywhere without substantial delay. As for signage, forget it. But let’s attempt a sample calculation under optimal conditions. We’re going to visit granny at her old folk’s lodge, say, which is a great thing to do. You feel good and so does she. Here’s how your journey shapes up. Your friend hops in her car and it takes her 20 minutes to drive to the lodge. Add five minutes to walk from house to car and the same from car to the lodge. That’s thirty in all. Now travel the same distance by public transit. First, we need ten minutes to walk to a bus stop. Sometimes, you’ll want more, much more, but ten is a good average in summer for most parts of the city. The error, if any, favours Calgary Transit. But you’ll want to arrive before a scheduled bus in case it’s early or your watch is slow. We don’t want to miss a bus after all and wait for the next one. So arrive ten minutes early. Thus far our public transit journey involves 20 minutes. Figure the trip by bus to the Light Rail Transit trains takes at least five minutes. That’s 25 total. And it takes ten minutes to get from your bus to the LRT station, buy your ticket, wait for access to a time-punch machine, and get to the platform. If you have a monthly pass or a transfer from the bus, ten minutes from bus to LRT tracks is still a common experience. We’re now at 35 total. Allow five minutes for the train. You’ll sometimes wait more, especially off-peak, but let’s be optimistic and say five minutes for the train to come. Total so far is 40 minutes. Let the LRT ride be 20 minutes. We’re up to 60 total. Your walk from LRT platform to bus is five minutes plus a ten minute wait for the bus. Twenty minutes between buses, even 30 or more, aren’t unusual. Total time so far is 75 minutes. Oh, add five minutes for the bus ride to the lodge. We’re up to 80 minutes. Plus five minutes from bus stop to the lodge itself. That’s 85 minutes compared to 30 by car. Allow similar times for the other direction, and we face 170 minutes of travel by public transit vs 60 by car. In other words, for a normal week-day journey you need an hour by car and almost three hours by public transit. Enough said? And we haven’t even touched on Calgary’s numerous road closures and traffic delays. What a great place!

EVENTS

General
 
Feel life is passing you by? Activities with fellow Mensans will turn this around. Think coffees, martinis, movies, dinners, quizzes, anything that ravels up the tired sleeve of care. We’re informal, unstructured and intellectually challenging. Mensa Calgary is a community where members interact, network, support each other, and enjoy each other’s company. For further info, contact Patricia at kathleen4057@yahoo.ca ["There's no pleasure on earth that's worth sacrificing for the sake of an extra five years in the geriatric ward of the Sunset Old People's Home.” (John Mortimore)]
 
 
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Mensa Test
 
June 20th is the next testing session at the Calgary Public Library. Give it a try. Contact Vicki at vherd@shaw.ca or (403) 243-6144 for more information. If potential Mensans are affiliated with your company or organization, post a notice wherever seems sensible and let Vicki have your ideas on PR. Talk to your friends or colleagues about Mensa tests.  
 
The testing fee is $90, which covers two tests, receiving feedback on eligibility for Mensa membership, PLUS the first year’s membership if you qualify. You write two tests for an enhanced chance to qualify. Full time students pay only $70.
 
A pictorial test is available if your mother tongue is not English and you do not want your test scores to be disadvantaged by language.
 
You need to score in the top 2% of the population in one of the two tests.
 
Contact Vicki with questions about Mensa or the tests, and let her know if you want to write the tests, so she can plan resources and provide detailed directions to the testing site (usually Room 2, Basement, W R Castell Central Library, 616 Macleod Trail SE, Calgary).
 
 
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MensaGenerationX
 
Viva the under-30s!! Ideas and participation are welcome. Contact Robert Conn at robertanddiana@telus.net
 
 
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CoffeeFests
 
Brighten your life at Mensa Calgary’s coffee fest: Thursday, June 4th at 7:00pm. The place is Kaffa (2138-33rd Ave SW, corner of 33rd Ave & 21st St). Parking on 21st. Cash only, a copy of Harry Potter will be the elephant at the table, RSVP not required, atmosphere great, munchies superb. Diarize this.
 
 
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DinnerNight
 
It’s pot luck time, gang. Good times, sweet vibes, great food. The PL in December was a roaring success. So… Friday, June 26th @ 6:30 pm at Patricia’s. RSVP now at kathleen4057@yahoo.ca
 
 
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BookClub
 
The June meeting will be held Friday, July 3, 2009 @ 7:00 PM hosted by Chevy Johnston (ok, ok, July isn’t June, but this is as close to June as Chevy’s schedule allows). The July meeting will take place later in – you guessed it – July.
 
The July 3 book choices are:
Filthy Lucre: Economics For People Who Hate Capitalism by Joseph Heath – Chevy comments "this book describes the economic fallacies of the right and left wings. It is very well reasoned and caused me to question my fundamental political beliefs." http://www.harpercollins.ca/books/9781554683956/Filthy_Lucre/index.aspx
 
4 Hour Work Week: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferris – Chevy comments "this book was very inspirational and caused me to make several changes in my life plan. Much of it is about how Tim Ferriss lucked into becoming rich but there are excellent lessons to take away." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_4-Hour_Workweek   http://www.coachingacademyblog.com/?p=545
 
And you can also discuss any book of your choice. New members welcome. No holds barred. No RSVP required. For the address/time of the book club meeting, contact Patricia at almostp@shaw.ca.
 
 
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SecondTuesdays(of the Month)
 
Join us for Second Tuesday @ 7:30 PM on Tuesday June 9th, at the home of Vicki Herd (2469 Sorrel Mews SW/Garrison Woods near the Marda Loop Safeway). Contact Patricia at (403) 212-1461 if you have any questions. Second Tuesday is an open house social evening held the ST of each month, providing an opportunity to mellow out with your peers, fume at the idiocies of the universe, and generally find a sympathetic or intelligent ear.
 
 
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OtherUpComings
 
Mensa Hike: Our first HIKE of the year will be held Saturday, June 13th, hosted by Jia Chen. Jia has chosen Powderface in Kananaskis. Look it up at: http://albertawow.com/hikes/powderface/powder_face_hike.htm Contact Patricia at almostp@shaw.ca with questions or to take part.

 

Flames Night: Robert Conn will host "Passport Night" (aka "Flames Game Night") on Friday June 19th at Bottlescrew Bills (southeast corner of 1 St and 10 Av SW) starting at 6:00 pm. BB has an event called "Around the World in 80 Beers" so come on out and have a good time. RSVP by June 18th in case Robert needs to reserve a table (robertanddiana@telus.net).

PUZZLES

 
1) Using only the following numbers and signs, create an equation: 2,3,5,7,11,12,-,x,x,/,(),(),=
 
2) What are four words, each containing nine letters, that begin with “c” and have “ten” in their exact centre?
 
 
The answers to May’s puzzles were supplied in the May issue.
 
Here are the answers to this month’s puzzles:
 
Answers
1) ((7 x 11) – 5) / 12 = 2 x 3

2) contented, contender, contended, centenary

FEATURE1 Just An Old-Fashioned Guy

French police are hunting a “gentleman robber” who pulled off a spectacular daylight robbery, stealing more than €6 million (£5.2 million) worth of jewels from one of the most exclusive stores in central Paris.
 
In the latest of a series of high-value European jewel thefts, the man, in his 50s and wearing an elegant suit and fedora hat, pulled out a gun in the Chopard boutique in the Place Vendôme. He quietly ordered the three staff to hand over the contents of the display window.

         

“A man on his own, well dressed, who could have been a potential client, came into the jewellers, his faced unmasked, at one o’clock,” said an investigator. The staff and customers did as they were told and the man left and disappeared into the pedestrian square, which was full of strollers enjoying the holiday weekend sun. The Vendôme is also home to the Justice Ministry, the Ritz hotel and an array of other jewellers. In two minutes the man took 15 high-priced items.

 
Chopard makes watches and jewels for the stars and has branches in most of the world’s capitals. Last year it provided the Palme d’Or trophy for the Cannes film festival.
 
Staff in adjoining boutiques saw and heard nothing unusual during the braquage éclair — lightning hold-up — that had the hallmarks of other recent daring robberies in Paris and other European capitals. Insurance companies reported a 70 per cent rise in robbery claims from Paris jewellers in January and February.
 
Suspicion has fallen on the Pink Panthers, the name given to a diffuse international gang with origins in the Balkans. French police describe the group’s crimes as lightning-fast hold-ups: daring, but planned down to smallest detail.
 
In December thieves staged a €74 million jewel theft at the Harry Winston boutique in the Avenue Montaigne, near the Place Vendôme, off the Champs-Elysees. Four robbers, two disguised as women, calmly emptied the store as staff and customers lay on the floor.
 
The Harry Winston raid came a year after the same store was attacked by robbers who forced staff to empty its safes, taking at least €10 million worth of jewels.
 
The Pink Panthers have accumulated loot worth up to €200 million in an estimated 120 attacks on stores in around 20 countries since their first robbery in Mayfair in London in 2003.
 
Two weeks ago Paris police arrested two Serbians, alleged to be Panthers, and charged them with carrying out armed raids on stores in Monaco, Switzerland and Germany.
 
Last Thursday a former soldier from Montenegro, also said to be a Panther, was sentenced to 15 years in jail for a 2005 jewel robbery in the Riviera resort of Saint-Tropez. The court in Draguignan also fined Dusko Martinovic €130,000 for the raid, which he carried out in 90 seconds with two accomplices who have not been caught. The trio escaped into the Mediterranean aboard a speed boat before the police reached the boutique that they had emptied.
 
The world record for a jewellery theft remains the $100 million (£62 million) robbery of diamonds in Antwerp, Belgium, in 2003.
 
(Charles Bremner, Times Online, 31 May 2009)

N&Q1 Other People Matter

A helicopter was taking hands offshore for their hitch, but had engine problems and crashed into the ocean. A toolpusher, a driller and a roughneck all managed to swim to a deserted island.
 
After several days of no rescue, they were walking along the beach and the toolpusher found a half-buried bottle in the sand. He picked it up, and when he brushed it off, a Genie came out of the bottle!
 
The Genie said, "I grant you all ONE wish apiece!"
 
Well, the toolpusher quickly said, "I wish I was in Las Vegas with a million dollars in front of me and a blonde on each arm!"
 
POOF! He was gone!
 
The driller quietly said, "This has made me cherish family values. I wish I was at home, sitting at the table with all my family gathered around, enjoying a fine home-cooked meal!"
 
POOF! He was gone!
 
The Genie turned to the roughneck and said, "Well, what is YOUR wish?".
 
The roughneck, seemingly perplexed, contemplated for several minutes and then remarked, "Gee, I never made a decision on my own!  I wish the toolpusher and driller were here!"
 
[with thanks to Jim Szpajcher]

ForYourContemplation1 The Demons of War

Folks -
 
I’m currently reading Patrick J. Buchanan’s powerful "Churchill, Hitler and the Unnecessary War", which is subtitled: "How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World".
 
His Preface is especially powerful, and thought provoking. It starts with:
 
All about us we can see clearly now that the West is passing away.
 
In a single century, all the great houses of continental Europe fell. All the empires that ruled the world have vanished. Not one European nation, save Muslim Albania, has a birthrate that will enable it to survive through the century. As a share of the world’s population, peoples of European ancestry have been shrinking for three generations. The character of every Western nation is being irremediably altered as each undergoes an unresisted invasion from the Third World. We are slowly disappearing from the Earth.
 

          

What happened to us? What happened to our world?

When the twentieth century opened, the West was everywhere supreme. For four hundred years, explorers, missionaries, conquerors, and colonizers departed Europe for the four corners of the Earth to erect Empires that were to bring the blessings and benefits of Western civilization to all mankind. These empires were the creations of a self-confident race of men.
 
Whatever became of these men?
 
There were World Wars I & II, two phases of a Thirty Years’ War future historians will call the Great Civil War of the West.
 
The questions this book addresses are huge but simple: Were these two world wars, the mortal wounds we inflicted upon ourselves, necessary wars? Or were they wars of choice? And if they were wars of choice, who plunged us into these hideous and suicidal world wars that advanced the death of our civilization? Who are the statesmen responsible for the death of the West?
 
Buchanan’s premise is one that an increasing number of historians have studied: That World Wars I & II were not necessary – irresponsible, fratricidal battles which killed tens of millions of European peoples – but fatal to Western Civilization.
 
Human psychology is a fascinating study, when trying to comprehend how peoples can follow, lemming-like, the siren song of leaders seeking to rally their populations against one another.
 
Nicholson Baker’s "Human Smoke: The beginnings of World War II, the end of Civilization", also published in 2008, shows how politicians herd their peoples to the abyss; the darkest of human behavior; into lust of mass killing; all of which is justified on the highest moral grounds.  
 
Who among those peoples of the former British Empire has not heard that the soldiers, in our nations’ uniforms during these wars, "fought for our freedom", when there is precious little evidence that our freedoms were at risk? Such is the power of myth, that this message is continually spread to school children every Remembrance Day and Memorial Day.
 
In America, Canada, Australia and Britain, the Latin phrases of Horace, signifying the duty of young men to die for one’s country are rarely heard in school corridors today, but the sentiments are presented in modern terms, which are as powerful and seductive.
 
Young men have always been attracted to the concept of battle, like moths to a flame, in the hope of winning recognition for valor; to prove their worthiness for membership in their tribe. Ironically, the young men these days are joined by young women, too. What soldiers throughout history have failed to understand is that nations rarely fight for survival, but for the interests of the rich and powerful.
 
When some event or condition impairs the ability of soldiers to function, they are discarded like so much garbage after a political rally.
 
When wars are short, the damage to the youth of any society is limited. When wars drag on, the cumulative effect becomes a significant factor in that nation’s ability to function in a healthy, productive manner.
 
We are witnessing such a phenomenon develop in the United States. Given the added stress of economic crisis, diminishing production of fossil fuels, and an aging population, it becomes clear that a major tipping point is approaching.
 
It bears careful study. How that nation copes will have an impact on the resulting global power structure. We, on the sidelines, may do little but observe and ponder; it is important for us to do so, whatever else we accomplish.
 
For your contemplation.
 
Jim Szpajcher
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/19/opinion/19herbert.html?_r=1&th&emc=th
 
 
May 19, 2009
War’s Psychic Toll, by Bob Herbert
 
I couldn’t have been less surprised to read last week that an American G.I. had been charged with gunning down five of his fellow service members in Iraq. The fact that this occurred at a mental health counseling center in the war zone just served to add an extra layer of poignancy and a chilling ironic element to the fundamental tragedy.
 
The psychic toll of this foolish and apparently endless war has been profound since day one. And the nation’s willful denial of that toll has been just as profound.
 
According to authorities, John Russell, a 44-year-old Army sergeant who had been recognized as deeply troubled and was on his third tour in Iraq, went into the counseling center on the afternoon of May 11 and opened fire – killing an Army officer, a Navy officer and three enlisted soldiers. The three enlistees were 19, 20 and 25 years old.
 
This is what happens in wars. Wars are about killing, and once the killing is unleashed it takes many, many forms. Which is why it’s so sick to fight unnecessary wars, and so immoral to send other people’s children off to wars – psychic as well as physical – from which one’s own children are carefully protected.
 
The fallout from the psychic stress of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has been vast, but there was no reason for its destructive effects to have surprised anyone. There was plenty of evidence that this would be an enormous problem. Speaking of Iraq back in 2004, Dr. Stephen C. Joseph, who had been an assistant secretary of defense during the Clinton administration, said, "I have a very strong sense that the mental health consequences are going to be the medical story of this war."
 
I remember writing a column about Jeffrey Lucey, a 23-year-old Marine who was deeply depressed and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, or P.T.S.D., when he returned from Iraq after serving in the earliest months of the war. He described gruesome events that he had encountered and was harshly critical of himself. He drank to excess, had nightmares, withdrew from friends and wrecked the family car.
 
On the afternoon of June 22, 2004, he wrote a note that said, "It’s 4:35 p.m. and I am near completing my death." He then hanged himself with a garden hose in the basement of his parents’ home.
 
Because we have chosen not to share the sacrifices of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the terrible burden of these conflicts is being shouldered by an obscenely small portion of the population. Since this warrior class is so small, the same troops have to be sent into the war zones for tour after harrowing tour.
 
As the tours mount up, so do the mental health problems. Combat is crazy-making to start with. Multiple tours are recipes for complete meltdowns.
 
As the RAND Corporation reported in a study released last year:
 
"Not only is a higher proportion of the armed forces being deployed, but deployments have been longer, redeployment to combat has been common, and breaks between deployments have been infrequent."
 
Recent attempts by the military to deal with some of the most egregious aspects of its deployment policies have amounted to much too little, much too late. The RAND study found that approximately 300,000 men and women who had served in Iraq and Afghanistan were already suffering from P.T.S.D. or major depression. That’s nearly one in every five returning veterans.
 
The mass-produced tragedies of war go far beyond combat deaths. Behind the abstract wall of RAND’s statistics is the immense real-life suffering of very real people. The toll includes the victims of violence and drunkenness and broken homes and suicides. Most of the stories never make their way into print. The public that professes such admiration and support for our fighting men and women are not interested.
 
Other studies have paralleled RAND’s in spotlighting the psychic toll of these wars. A CBS News survey found that veterans aged 20 to 24 were two to four times as likely to commit suicide as nonveterans the same age. A Time magazine cover story last year disclosed that "for the first time in history, a sizable and growing number of U.S. combat troops are taking daily doses of antidepressants to calm nerves strained by repeated and lengthy tours in Iraq and Afghanistan."
 
We’re brutally and cold-bloodedly sacrificing the psychological well-being of these men and women, which should be a scandal. If these wars are so important to our national security, we should all be engaging in some form of serious sacrifice, and many more of us should be serving.
 

But the country soothes its conscience and tamps down its guilt with the cowardly invocation: "Oh, they’re volunteers. They knew what they were getting into."

ForYourContemplation2 The Political Blank-Cheque

Folks -
 
Howard Zinn is a historian whose work needs to be more widely discussed.
http://howardzinn.org/default/
 
Here is how he sees the relationship between the citizens of the United States and the President.
 
For your contemplation.
 
Jim Szpajcher
 
 
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22639.htm
Changing Obama’s Mindset, by Howard Zinn
 
May 17, 2009 "The Progressive" — We [Americans] are citizens, and Obama is a politician. You might not like that word. But the fact is he’s a politician. He’s other things, too-he’s a very sensitive and intelligent and thoughtful and promising person. But he’s a politician.
 
If you’re a citizen, you have to know the difference between them and you-the difference between what they have to do and what you have to do. And there are things they don’t have to do, if you make it clear to them they don’t have to do it.

             

From the beginning, I liked Obama. But the first time it suddenly struck me that he was a politician was early on, when Joe Lieberman was running for the Democratic nomination for his Senate seat in 2006.

Lieberman-who, as you know, was and is a war lover-was running for the Democratic nomination, and his opponent was a man named Ned Lamont, who was the peace candidate. And Obama went to Connecticut to support Lieberman against Lamont.
 
It took me aback. I say that to indicate that, yes, Obama was and is a politician. So we must not be swept away into an unthinking and unquestioning acceptance of what Obama does.
 
Our job is not to give him a blank check or simply be cheerleaders. It was good that we were cheerleaders while he was running for office, but it’s not good to be cheerleaders now. Because we want the country to go beyond where it has been in the past. We want to make a clean break from what it has been in the past.
 
I had a teacher at Columbia University named Richard Hofstadter, who wrote a book called The American Political Tradition, and in it, he examined presidents from the Founding Fathers down through Franklin Roosevelt. There were liberals and conservatives, Republicans and Democrats. And there were differences between them. But he found that the so-called liberals were not as liberal as people thought-and that the difference between the liberals and the conservatives, and between Republicans and Democrats, was not a polar difference. There was a common thread that ran through all American history, and all of the presidents-Republican, Democrat, liberal, conservative-followed this thread.
 
The thread consisted of two elements: one, nationalism; and two, capitalism. And Obama is not yet free of that powerful double heritage.
 
We can see it in the policies that have been enunciated so far, even though he’s been in office only a short time.
 
Some people might say, "Well, what do you expect?"
 
And the answer is that we expect a lot.
 
People say, "What, are you a dreamer?"
 
And the answer is, yes, we’re dreamers. We want it all. We want a peaceful world. We want an egalitarian world. We don’t want war. We don’t want capitalism. We want a decent society.
 
We better hold on to that dream-because if we don’t, we’ll sink closer and closer to this reality that we have, and that we don’t want.
 
Be wary when you hear about the glories of the market system. The market system is what we’ve had. Let the market decide, they say. The government mustn’t give people free health care; let the market decide.
 
Which is what the market has been doing-and that’s why we have forty-eight million people without health care. The market has decided that. Leave things to the market, and there are two million people homeless. Leave things to the market, and there are millions and millions of people who can’t pay their rent. Leave things to the market, and there are thirty-five million people who go hungry.
 
You can’t leave it to the market. If you’re facing an economic crisis like we’re facing now, you can’t do what was done in the past. You can’t pour money into the upper levels of the country-and into the banks and corporations-and hope that it somehow trickles down.
 
What was one of the first things that happened when the Bush Administration saw that the economy was in trouble? A $700 billion bailout, and who did we give the $700 billion to? To the financial institutions that caused this crisis.
 
This was when the Presidential campaign was still going on, and it pained me to see Obama standing there, endorsing this huge bailout to the corporations.
 
What Obama should have been saying was: Hey, wait a while. The banks aren’t poverty stricken. The CEOs aren’t poverty stricken. But there are people who are out of work. There are people who can’t pay their mortgages. Let’s take $700 billion and give it directly to the people who need it. Let’s take $1 trillion, let’s take $2 trillion.
 
Let’s take this money and give it directly to the people who need it. Give it to the people who have to pay their mortgages. Nobody should be evicted. Nobody should be left with their belongings out on the street.
 
Obama wants to spend perhaps a trillion more on the banks. Like Bush, he’s not giving it directly to homeowners. Unlike the Republicans, Obama also wants to spend $800 billion for his economic stimulus plan. Which is good-the idea of a stimulus is good. But if you look closely at the plan, too much of it goes through the market, through corporations.
 
It gives tax breaks to businesses, hoping that they’ll hire people. No-if people need jobs, you don’t give money to the corporations, hoping that maybe jobs will be created. You give people work immediately.
 
A lot of people don’t know the history of the New Deal of the 1930s. The New Deal didn’t go far enough, but it had some very good ideas. And the reason the New Deal came to these good ideas was because there was huge agitation in this country, and Roosevelt had to react. So what did he do? He took billions of dollars and said the government was going to hire people. You’re out of work? The government has a job for you.
 
As a result of this, lots of very wonderful work was done all over the country. Several million young people were put into the Civilian Conservation Corps. They went around the country, building bridges and roads and playgrounds, and doing remarkable things.
 
The government created a federal arts program. It wasn’t going to wait for the markets to decide that. The government set up a program and hired thousands of unemployed artists: playwrights, actors, musicians, painters, sculptors, writers. What was the result? The result was the production of 200,000 pieces of art. Today, around the country, there are thousands of murals painted by people in the WPA program. Plays were put on all over the country at very cheap prices, so that people who had never seen a play in their lives were able to afford to go.
 
And that’s just a glimmer of what could be done. The government has to represent the people’s needs. The government can’t give the job of representing the people’s needs to corporations and the banks, because they don’t care about the people’s needs. They only care about profit.
 
In the course of his campaign, Obama said something that struck me as very wise-and when people say something very wise, you have to remember it, because they may not hold to it. You may have to remind them of that wise thing they said.
 
Obama was talking about the war in Iraq, and he said, "It’s not just that we have to get out of Iraq." He said "get out of Iraq," and we mustn’t forget it. We must keep reminding him: Out of Iraq, out of Iraq, out of Iraq-not next year, not two years from now, but out of Iraq now.
 
But listen to the second part, too. His whole sentence was: "It’s not enough to get out of Iraq; we have to get out of the mindset that led us into Iraq." What is the mindset that got us into Iraq?
 
It’s the mindset that says force will do the trick. Violence, war, bombers-that they will bring democracy and liberty to the people.
 
It’s the mindset that says America has some God-given right to invade other countries for their own benefit. We will bring civilization to the Mexicans in 1846. We will bring freedom to the Cubans in 1898. We will bring democracy to the Filipinos in 1900. You know how successful we’ve been at bringing democracy all over the world.
 
Obama has not gotten out of this militaristic missionary mindset. He talks about sending tens of thousands of more troops to Afghanistan.
 
Obama is a very smart guy, and surely he must know some of the history. You don’t have to know a lot to know the history of Afghanistan has been decades and decades and decades and decades of Western powers trying to impose their will on Afghanistan by force: the English, the Russians, and now the Americans. What has been the result? The result has been a ruined country.
 
This is the mindset that sends 21,000 more troops to Afghanistan, and that says, as Obama has, that we’ve got to have a bigger military. My heart sank when Obama said that. Why do we need a bigger military? We have an enormous military budget. Has Obama talked about cutting the military budget in half or some fraction? No.
 
We have military bases in more than a hundred countries. We have fourteen military bases on Okinawa alone. Who wants us there? The governments. They get benefits. But the people don’t really want us there. There have been huge demonstrations in Italy against the establishment of a U.S. military base. There have been big demonstrations in South Korea and on Okinawa.
 
One of the first acts of the Obama Administration was to send Predator missiles to bomb Pakistan. People died. The claim is, "Oh, we’re very precise with our weapons. We have the latest equipment. We can target anywhere and hit just what we want."
 
This is the mindset of technological infatuation. Yes, they can actually decide that they’re going to bomb this one house. But there’s one problem: They don’t know who’s in the house. They can hit one car with a rocket from a great distance. Do they know who’s in the car? No.
 
And later-after the bodies have been taken out of the car, after the bodies have been taken out of the house-they tell you, "Well, there were three suspected terrorists in that house, and yes, there’s seven other people killed, including two children, but we got the suspected terrorists." But notice that the word is "suspected." The truth is they don’t know who the terrorists are.
 
So, yes, we have to get out of the mindset that got us into Iraq, but we’ve got to identify that mindset. And Obama has to be pulled by the people who elected him, by the people who are enthusiastic about him, to renounce that mindset. We’re the ones who have to tell him, "No, you’re on the wrong course with this militaristic idea of using force to accomplish things in the world. We won’t accomplish anything that way, and we’ll remain a hated country in the world."
 
Obama has talked about a vision for this country. You have to have a vision, and now I want to tell Obama what his vision should be.
 
The vision should be of a nation that becomes liked all over the world. I won’t even say loved-it’ll take a while to build up to that. A nation that is not feared, not disliked, not hated, as too often we are, but a nation that is looked upon as peaceful, because we’ve withdrawn our military bases from all these countries. We don’t need to spend the hundreds of billions of dollars on the military budget. Take all the money allocated to military bases and the military budget, and-this is part of the emancipation-you can use that money to give everybody free health care, to guarantee jobs to everybody who doesn’t have a job, guaranteed payment of rent to everybody who can’t pay their rent, build child care centers.
 
Let’s use the money to help other people around the world, not to send bombers over there. When disasters take place, they need helicopters to transport people out of the floods and out of devastated areas. They need helicopters to save people’s lives, and the helicopters are over in the Middle East, bombing and strafing people.
 
What’s required is a total turn­around. We want a country that uses its resources, its wealth, and its power to help people, not to hurt them. That’s what we need. This is a vision we have to keep alive. We shouldn’t be easily satisfied and say, "Oh well, give him a break. Obama deserves respect."
 
But you don’t respect somebody when you give them a blank check. You respect somebody when you treat them as an equal to you, and as somebody you can talk to and somebody who will listen to you.
 
Not only is Obama a politician. Worse, he’s surrounded by politicians. And some of them he picked himself. He picked Hillary Clinton, he picked Lawrence Summers, he picked people who show no sign of breaking from the past.
 
We are citizens. We must not put ourselves in the position of looking at the world from their eyes and say, "Well, we have to compromise, we have to do this for political reasons." No, we have to speak our minds.
 
This is the position that the abolitionists were in before the Civil War, and people said, "Well, you have to look at it from Lincoln’s point of view." Lincoln didn’t believe that his first priority was abolishing slavery. But the anti-slavery movement did, and the abolitionists said, "We’re not going to put ourselves in Lincoln’s position. We are going to express our own position, and we are going to express it so powerfully that Lincoln will have to listen to us."
 
And the anti-slavery movement grew large enough and powerful enough that Lincoln had to listen. That’s how we got the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth and Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
 
That’s been the story of this country. Where progress has been made, wherever any kind of injustice has been overturned, it’s been because people acted as citizens, and not as politicians. They didn’t just moan. They worked, they acted, they organized, they rioted if necessary to bring their situation to the attention of people in power. And that’s what we have to do today.
 
Thanks to Alex Read and Matt Korn for transcribing Zinn’s talk on February 2 at the Busboys and Poets restaurant in Washington, D.C., from which this is adapted.
 

© 2009 The Progressive

ForYourContemplation3 Tasers

Folks -
 
This would be funny, if it were a skit on television.
 
For your contemplation.
 
Jim Szpajcher
 
—– Original Message —–
Sent: Saturday, May 16, 2009 10:13 PM
Subject: Police short changed by the almighty deity? Or do they check their brains at the curb when they put on their uniform.
 
Kids Visiting Prisons Get Stun-Gunned, by Jessica Gresko
http://news.aol.com/article/florida-prison-shock/485960?icid=main|netscape|dl1|link4|http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.com%2Farticle%2Fflorida-prison-shock%2F485960
 
MIAMI (May 16) – Demonstrations at three Florida prisons where more than 40 children were shocked with stun guns have led to the dismissal of three employees and the resignation of two others, the Department of Corrections said Friday. The incidents took place on April 23, national "Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day." As part of demonstrations at two prisons, children held hands in a circle, and one was shocked with the stun gun, passing the shock around the circle. At another prison, children were shocked individually.
 
Other Taser incidents:
 
The police chief of a small Central Texas town was arrested April 6 after he allegedly used a Taser on his wife. Oly Ivy, 30, was charged with aggravated assault. The Oakwood City Council voted to fire him immediately. Ivy’s attorney said his client "is taking these allegations very seriously."
 
A cell phone video released in January shows actors Josh Brolin and Jeffrey Wright being arrested after they refused to leave a bar. Wright was repeatedly hit by a Taser. "What are you doing? Why are you still shocking him?" someone yells in the recording. The incident occurred in July 2008. The prosecutor later agreed to drop all charges.
 
Sheriff’s deputies Tasered Gladwyn Taft Russ III while trying to arrest the man at his father’s funeral. The incident occurred Nov. 15 in Wilmington, N.C., as Russ, who was a pallbearer, was helping to load his father’s casket into a hearse. The sheriff later apologized.
 
A pastor filed suit in July against a Toledo, Ohio, hospital after being hit by a Taser and beaten by security guards at the facility. Much of last year’s incident outside St. Vincent Mercy Hospital was recorded on video.
 
Campus police wielded Tasers against University of Florida student Andrew Meyer as they tried to remove him from a forum featuring Sen. John Kerry. Meyer cried out, "Don’t Tase me, bro!" but was shocked anyway. After video of the Sept. 17, 2007, incident was posted on the Internet, the university opened an investigation that found the campus police officers were justified.
 
A Warren, Ohio, police officer repeatedly jolted Heidi Gill with a Taser during a traffic stop on Sept. 2, 2007. Dashboard video from his cruiser captured Patrolman Richard Kovach hitting Gill with the stun gun while she was handcuffed. She was knocked unconscious. All charges against Gill were dropped. Kovach was later fired from the police force.
 
Police were summoned to the airport in Vancouver, British Columbia, in
October 2007 after Robert Dziekanski became upset. A series of mix-ups had left the Polish immigrant stranded there for hours. Although witnesses — including a man who recorded the confrontation on video — said they warned police that Dziekanski didn’t understand English, officers hit him with a Taser at least twice. Dziekanski died. (Sources: AP, CBS, CBC, TMZ)
 
Also see the story “Letter a Scathing Indictment of RCMP” by Gary Mason, Globe and Mail, May 15, 2009 http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090515.wmason0515/BNStory/National/home
 
It started out as an apology for the role Canada’s national police force played in the death of her son, Robert. But in its writing, police psychologist Mike Webster’s open letter to Zofia Cisowski became a scathing indictment of the force’s leadership.
 

"So how could this happen?" Mr. Webster writes in his letter to Ms. Cisowski. “The short answer is an inept, insular and archaic group of RCMP executives has let the Force fall out of step with 21st Century policing." [from an Open Letter to Zofia Cisowski] http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090515.wmasonletter0515/BNStory/National

ForYourContemplation4 Bombing Your Home

Folks -
 
The United States is using terror tactics with its drone attacks, thus arousing the Pakistani population in fear and anger. The proof is as David Kilcullen and Andrew Exum explain:
 
Imagine, for example, that burglars move into a neighborhood. If the police were to start blowing up people’s houses from the air, would this convince homeowners to rise up against the burglars? Wouldn’t it be more likely to turn the whole population against the police?
 
For your contemplation.
 
Jim Szpajcher
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/17/opinion/17exum.html?_r=1&th=&emc=th&pagewanted=all
 
May 17, 2009
Death From Above, Outrage Down Below, by David Kilcullen and Andrew McDonald Exum
In recent days, the Pentagon has made two major changes in its strategy to defeat the Taliban, Al Qaeda and their affiliates in Afghanistan and Pakistan. First came the announcement that Lt. Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal would take over as the top United States commander in Afghanistan. Next, Pentagon officials said that the United States was giving Pakistan more information on its drone attacks on terrorist targets, while news reports indicated that Pakistani officers would have significant future control over drone routes, targets and decisions to fire weapons (though the military has denied that).
 
While we agree with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates that "fresh eyes were needed" to review our military strategy in the region, we feel that expanding or even just continuing the drone war is a mistake. In fact, it would be in our best interests, and those of the Pakistani people, to declare a moratorium on drone strikes into Pakistan.
 
After the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in December 2007, and following much internal debate, President George W. Bush authorized a broad expansion of drone strikes against a wide array of targets within Pakistan: Qaeda operatives, Pakistan-based members of the Afghan Taliban insurgency and – in some cases – other militants bent on destabilizing Pakistan.
 
The use of drones in military operations has steadily grown – we know from public documents that from last September to this March alone, C.I.A. operatives launched more than three dozen strikes.
 
The appeal of drone attacks for policy makers is clear. For one thing, their effects are measurable. Military commanders and intelligence officials point out that drone attacks have disrupted terrorist networks in Pakistan, killing key leaders and hampering operations. Drone attacks create a sense of insecurity among militants and constrain their interactions with suspected informers. And, because they kill remotely, drone strikes avoid American casualties.
 
But on balance, the costs outweigh these benefits for three reasons.
 
First, the drone war has created a siege mentality among Pakistani civilians. This is similar to what happened in Somalia in 2005 and 2006, when similar strikes were employed against the forces of the Union of Islamic Courts. While the strikes did kill individual militants who were the targets, public anger over the American show of force solidified the power of extremists. The Islamists’ popularity rose and the group became more extreme, leading eventually to a messy Ethiopian military intervention, the rise of a new regional insurgency and an increase in offshore piracy.
 
While violent extremists may be unpopular, for a frightened population they seem less ominous than a faceless enemy that wages war from afar and often kills more civilians than militants.
 
Press reports suggest that over the last three years drone strikes have killed about 14 terrorist leaders. But, according to Pakistani sources, they have also killed some 700 civilians. This is 50 civilians for every militant killed, a hit rate of 2 percent – hardly "precision." American officials vehemently dispute these figures, and it is likely that more militants and fewer civilians have been killed than is reported by the press in Pakistan. Nevertheless, every one of these dead noncombatants represents an alienated family, a new desire for revenge, and more recruits for a militant movement that has grown exponentially even as drone strikes have increased.
 
Second, public outrage at the strikes is hardly limited to the region in which they take place – areas of northwestern Pakistan where ethnic Pashtuns predominate. Rather, the strikes are now exciting visceral opposition across a broad spectrum of Pakistani opinion in Punjab and Sindh, the nation’s two most populous provinces. Covered extensively by the news media, drone attacks are popularly believed to have caused even more civilian casualties than is actually the case. The persistence of these attacks on Pakistani territory offends people’s deepest sensibilities, alienates them from their government, and contributes to Pakistan’s instability.
 
Third, the use of drones displays every characteristic of a tactic – or, more accurately, a piece of technology – substituting for a strategy. These attacks are now being carried out without a concerted information campaign directed at the Pakistani public or a real effort to understand the tribal dynamics of the local population, efforts that might make such attacks more effective.
 
To be sure, simply ending the drone strikes is no more a strategy than continuing them. Stabilizing Pakistan will require a focus on securing areas, principally in Punjab and Sindh, that are still under government control, while building up police and civil authorities and refocusing aid on economic development, security and governance. Suspending drone strikes won’t fix Pakistan’s problems – but continuing them makes these problems much harder to address.
 
Governments typically make several mistakes when attempting to separate violent extremists from populations in which they hide. First, they often overestimate the degree to which a population harboring an armed actor can influence that actor’s behavior. People don’t tolerate extremists in their midst because they like them, but rather because the extremists intimidate them. Breaking the power of extremists means removing their power to intimidate – something that strikes cannot do.
 
Imagine, for example, that burglars move into a neighborhood. If the police were to start blowing up people’s houses from the air, would this convince homeowners to rise up against the burglars? Wouldn’t it be more likely to turn the whole population against the police? And if their neighbors wanted to turn the burglars in, how would they do that, exactly? Yet this is the same basic logic underlying the drone war.
 
The drone strategy is similar to French aerial bombardment in rural Algeria in the 1950s, and to the "air control" methods employed by the British in what are now the Pakistani tribal areas in the 1920s. The historical resonance of the British effort encourages people in the tribal areas to see the drone attacks as a continuation of colonial-era policies.
 
The drone campaign is in fact part of a larger strategic error – our insistence on personalizing this conflict with Al Qaeda and the Taliban. Devoting time and resources toward killing or capturing "high-value" targets – not to mention the bounties placed on their heads – distracts us from larger problems, while turning figures like Baitullah Mehsud, leader of the Pakistani Taliban umbrella group, into Robin Hoods. Our experience in Iraq suggests that the capture or killing of high-value targets – Saddam Hussein or Abu Musab al-Zarqawi – has only a slight and fleeting effect on levels of violence. Killing Mr. Zarqawi bought only 18 days of quiet before Al Qaeda returned to operations under new leadership.
 
This is not to suggest that killing terrorists is a bad thing – on the contrary. But it’s not the only thing that matters, and over-emphasizing it wastes resources. The operation that killed Mr. Zarqawi, for example, was not a one-day event. Thousands of hours of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance were devoted to the elimination of one man, when units on the ground could have used this time to protect the people from the insurgency that was tearing Iraq apart.
 
Having Osama bin Laden in one’s sights is one thing. Devoting precious resources to his capture or death, rather than focusing on protecting the Afghan and Pakistani populations, is another. The goal should be to isolate extremists from the communities in which they live. The best way to do this is to adopt policies that build local partnerships. Al Qaeda and its Taliban allies must be defeated by indigenous forces – not from the United States, and not even from Punjab, but from the parts of Pakistan in which they now hide. Drone strikes make this harder, not easier.
 

David Kilcullen, the author of "The Accidental Guerrilla," was a counterinsurgency adviser to Gen. David Petraeus from 2006 to 2008. Andrew Exum, a fellow at the Center for a New American Security, was an Army officer in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2002 to 2004.