Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Legal Challenge to Cell-phone Contract Termination Fees

There are several business practices of the cell phone carriers that I view as anti-competitive and very anti-consumer which should receive the attention of the federal regulators. One is the practice of selling cell phones which are locked and will not operate on other carrier networks. This means consumers who wish to move their service to another carrier must purchase a new phone to operate in the new carriers network. The second is the practice of charging large early termination penalties – even when the termination is the result of poor service or customer service.

The attached article by Deborah Nathan describes a recently filed class action lawsuit filed against T-Mobile on the early termination fees.

My source: http://news.technology.findlaw.com/andrews/bt/tel/20071023/20071023_greene.html Class-Action Suit Challenges T-Mobile's Early-Termination Fees

By DEBORAH NATHAN, ESQ., Andrews Publications Staff Writer

A consumer class action by customers of T-Mobile USA alleges that the cell phone provider's practice of charging excessive termination fees is deceptive and unconscionable.

According to the complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, T-Mobile encourages customers to sign up for long-term service plans through incentives and promotions.

T-Mobile's contracts include a non-negotiated provision that charges an early-termination fee to customers who cancel their contracts during the term of the contract, even when the cancellation is due to poor service.

The poor service, which the complaint asserts is totally within T-Mobile's control, includes gaps in coverage, poor sound quality, dropped calls, and the unreliability of features such as text messaging and voice mail.

The termination fee is a fixed amount, the plaintiffs say, regardless of whether service is canceled toward the beginning, middle or end of the contract term.

As a result, the fee can exceed the remaining monthly service charges and amounts to an illegal penalty, the complaint alleges.

The suit says T-Mobile has also breached its contract with customers by failing to provide a reasonable level of service.

Charging an early-termination fee to customers who cancel contracts because of their dissatisfaction with the quality of service is unfair and deceptive, the plaintiffs allege.

In addition to certification as a class action, the plaintiffs are seeking treble damages.

To comment, ask questions or contribute articles, contact West.Andrews.Editor@Thomson.com.

Greene et al. v. T-Mobile USA Inc. et al., No. 07-1563, complaint filed (W.D. Wash., Seattle Div. Oct. 3, 2007).

Telecommunications Industry Litigation Reporter

Volume 11, Issue 12

10/23/2007

Swiftboat 2008

An Anti-Hillary video clip on You-tube and Google Video is receiving more than the usual critical acclaim from Hollywood elites. The attached Jim Kuhnhenn article talks about a 13 minute video clip in which certain Hollywood moguls bite the hand that feeds them by telling the story of a Hollywood fund raiser for Hillary Clinton’s Senate campaign given by Peter Paul and Stan Lee.

The video clip mentioned may be viewed at Google Video: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7007109937779036019 Interestingly, the link to the actual clip is not provided in the Kuhnhenn article.

Can this be the beginning of Swiftboat 2008, a reference to the private campaign in which former Viet Nam classmates of Senator Kerry mounted an incredibly successful negative campaign against Kerry in his run for the White House in 2004 ? Probably not, as we are still a year away from the general election. Although the video campaign could impact Hillary’s primary election campaign, I expect that the timing of the release is more related to seeking publicity and sympathy for the film makers’ lawsuit against the Clintons, part of which still survives and is proceeding in California State courts.

However Campaign financing irregularities will continue to raise questions about the morality and legality of the Clinton fund raising machine as we proceed through the campaign. Stories appear concerning the large number of dish washers who have given multi-thousand dollar contributions to Clinton despite their low economic status. Certainly a unique lobbying technique to raise the political visibility of their profession – yeah right. The L. A Times is also running articles describing their inability to locate an surprising number of listed major contributors to Ms Clinton.

While the Peter Paul/Stan Lee video may not have sufficient staying power to impact the general election – the continued allegations of massive and widespread election fundraising violations and criminal activity by the Clinton campaign will be a major campaign issue and may rise to the level of criminal charges against the Clintons.

My source: http://news.technology.findlaw.com/ap/o/51/10-30-2007/4bc9002b6f3f1a37.html

Anti-Clinton video finding a niche on the Internet

JIM KUHNHENN Associated Press Writer

(AP) - WASHINGTON-A stinging 13-minute video by a bitter foe of presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton and her husband, Bill, the former president, is finding a wide Internet audience.

The clip, a preview of a longer film by one-time Clinton donor Peter Paul, has scored more than 1.4 million hits on Google Video and about 350,000 on YouTube during the past week. Its popularity has driven it to the top spot on Google Video over the past two weeks, and it is the most-viewed political YouTube video in Britain.

Paul is a Hollywood entrepreneur, former partner of Spider-Man creator Stan Lee and convicted felon, who has sued the Clintons over a celebrity-packed fundraiser he helped organize for her 2000 Senate race. A California appeals court ruled this month that Sen. Clinton should be dismissed from the suit.

But Paul has devoted a Web site to the case and has been on tour in recent days showing his film, "Hillary Uncensored," at college campuses. On Tuesday, he is scheduled to screen it at the Metropolitan Club in New York City.

Paul contends the Clintons misled him into organizing the Hollywood event and that her role in the fundraiser broke federal campaign finance laws.

The Clintons have long argued that Paul's criminal record discredits him and in court pleadings have denied Paul's claims against them.

"Peter Paul is a professional liar who has four separate criminal convictions, two for fraud. His video repackages a series of 7-year-old false claims about Senator Clinton that have already been rejected by the California state courts, the Justice Department, the Federal Election Commission and the Senate Ethics Committee," the Clinton campaign said in a statement.

Paul's anti-Clinton effort is getting help from two technical producers who set up the Web site for Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, an intensive broadcasting project during the 2004 presidential campaign that went after Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry by raising questions about his decorated military service in swift boats, small boats that plied the Mekong River during the Vietnam War. The campaign was partly blamed for Kerry's loss to President George W. Bush and was so successful that the verb "swiftboating" has entered American English for similar propaganda campaigns against political candidates.

The producers, Robert Hahn and Scott Swett, operate http://www.HillCAP.org, the Web site that Paul set up in 2005 to feature court documents, videos and news articles related to his lawsuit. The video trailer "Hillary Uncensored," and the schedule for the movie are prominently displayed on the site.

Among those featured in the video speaking in support of Paul is David Schippers, who served as chief investigative counsel for the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee during President Clinton's 1998 impeachment hearings. Clinton was acquitted.

In his lawsuit and in the film, Paul says he spent $1.9 million (€1.3 million) for the August 2000 Hollywood fundraiser that featured stars including Brad Pitt, Diana Ross, Cher and others. Paul maintains he organized the event because President Clinton falsely agreed to help him in a new venture with cartoonist Lee after leaving the presidency in January 2001.

Campaign reports filed with the Federal Election Commission estimated the cost of the event at about $500,000 (€347,450). An ensuing criminal trial of Clinton's former national finance director, David Rosen, on charges that he lied to the FEC about the fundraiser, resulted in acquittal. At the time, Rosen's lawyer said Paul concealed the cost of the event from Rosen, a claim Paul denies.

The film also includes a tape recording recently obtained by Paul of Sen. Clinton thanking him in advance for staging the event, which he says is proof that she illegally coordinated the fundraiser with him. The appellate court ruling that dismissed her from the case concluded the call did not amount to new evidence.

The complexities of the case are all fodder for the video clip and the movie, spiced with clips of Hollywood performers.

"Her abuse of her power as reflected in my case should make everybody pause about entrusting her with the reins of government," Paul said in an interview.

Paul is awaiting sentencing on his 2005 guilty plea to charges of stock fraud involving Stan Lee Media, the company Paul had wanted Clinton to join. In the 1970s, he was convicted of cocaine possession and of attempting to defraud the Cuban government.

Swett, who is running Paul's HillCAP Web site, said the video has helped drive more traffic to the Web site, but the activity is far less frequent than it was on the site he operated for Swift Boat Veterans in 2004.

"Then it was in the final months before the election, and we're a year out at this point," he said. "There's a lot of complexity to the Peter Paul lawsuit. You have to read through some of the documents to get a handle on it. That was less the case with the charges that the Swift Boat Veterans and POWs were making against John Kerry."

Friday, October 26, 2007

Bring our history up to Date

It is interesting to listen to the conservatives discussing the current crop of candidates with such dismay (including me). As many of the pundits search for Ronald Reagan, and as many of the candidates call “that’s me”, it is worth noting that our selective memories may not be fair to Reagan or to the current wannabees. Charles Krauthammer in his current article reminds us that we have several candidates who may be qualified to wear the Reagan mantle well but that the objective is to win the election.

My source: http://www.townhall.com/columnists/CharlesKrauthammer/2007/10/26/taking_reagan_out_of_the_race

Taking Reagan Out of the Race By Charles Krauthammer Friday, October 26, 2007

WASHINGTON -- Major grumbling among conservatives about the Republican field. So many candidates, so many flaws. Rudy Giuliani, abortion apostate. Mitt Romney, flip-flopper. John McCain, Mr. Amnesty. Fred Thompson, lazy boy. Where is the paragon? Where is Ronald Reagan?

Well, what about Reagan? This president, renowned for his naps, granted amnesty to 3 million illegal immigrants in the 1986 Simpson-Mazzoli bill. As governor of California, he signed the most liberal abortion legalization bill in America, then flip-flopped and became an abortion opponent. What did he do about it as president? Gave us Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy, the two swing votes that upheld and enshrined Roe v. Wade for the last quarter-century.

The point is not to denigrate Reagan but to bring a little realism to the gauzy idol worship that fuels today's discontent. And to argue that in 2007 we have, by any reasonable historical standard, a fine Republican field: One of the great big-city mayors of the last century; a former governor of extraordinary executive talent; a war hero, highly principled and deeply schooled in national security; and a former senator with impeccable conservative credentials.

So why all the angst? If you'd like to share just a bit of my serenity, have a look at last Sunday's Republican debate in Orlando. It was a feisty affair, the candidates lustily bashing each other's ideological deficiencies -- Mike Huckabee called it a "demolition derby" -- and yet strangely enough, the entire field did well.

McCain won the night by acclamation with a brilliant attack on Hillary that not so subtly highlighted his own unique qualification for the presidency. Citing his record on controlling spending, he ridiculed Hillary's proposed $1 million earmark for a Woodstock museum. He didn't make it to Woodstock, McCain explained. He was "tied up at the time."

How do you beat that? McCain's message is plain: Sure, I'm old, worn and broke. But we're at war. Who has more experience in, fewer illusions about, and greater understanding of war -- and an unyielding commitment to win the one we are fighting right now?

Giuliani was his usual energetic, tough-guy self. He fended off attacks on his social liberalism with a few good volleys of his own -- at Thompson, for example, for being a tort-loving accessory to the trial lawyers -- and by making the fair point that he delivers a conservatism of results. His message? I drove the varmints out of New York City -- with their pornography, their crime and their hookers (well, a fair number, at least). Turn me loose on the world.

Romney's debate performance was as steady and solid and stolid as ever, becoming particularly enthusiastic when talking about the things he's done -- build a business, rescue the Winter Olympics, govern the most liberal state in the Union. He got especially animated talking about his Massachusetts health care reform, achieved by working with an overwhelmingly Democratic Legislature. His message? I'm a doer, a problem solver, a uniter.

Yet when Romney simultaneously insists that he represents the purest of the pure -- "the Republican wing of the Republican Party" -- he presents the paradox of a technocrat running as an ideologue. Figuring that running as a sane Ross Perot doesn't quite enrapture the Republican primary electorate, he is trying also to be the authentic Reagan conservative, filling the ideological slot George Allen forfeited when he lost his Senate race last year. It's an odd fit that all of Romney's smoothness and intelligence has yet to convincingly achieve.

As for Thompson, he is a paradox, too. He's been around forever -- since Watergate -- and yet is mostly a blank slate. Can anybody remember anything of significance he achieved in his eight years in the Senate? Nonetheless, he helped himself in Orlando, showing that while he can be appealingly amiable and affable -- a Reaganesque quality that should not be underestimated when people decide who they want in their living rooms for the next four years -- he can be tough, as demonstrated by his opening salvo at Giuliani's social liberalism.

Yes, I know. I've left out Huckabee, whom some of my colleagues are aggressively trying to promote to the first tier. I refuse to go along. Huckabee is funny, well-spoken and gave a preacher's stemwinder that wowed the religious right gathering in Washington last Saturday. But whatever foreign policy he has is naive and unconvincing. In wartime, that is a disqualification for commander in chief.

So no more gnashing of teeth. Republicans have 4 1/2 good presidential candidates. All five would make fine Cabinet members: Romney at Treasury, Thompson at Justice, McCain at Defense, Giuliani at Homeland Security, Huckabee at Interior. All the team needs now is to pick a captain who can beat Hillary.

Harry Potter and the Residual Income Stream (part 2)

I have been somewhat frustrated by the gratuitous announcement by J K Rowling, author of the now complete Harry Potter series, of personal backstory information about one of the main characters in the series.

I have commented that the books are finished – this information was not in the books. This information does not add anything to the stories, nor does it explain anything in the narrative that needed explaining. I have read a number of commentators who have all concurred that there was no proper purpose to be served by the author’s comments and her motivation has been discussed in detail – words like manipulation and agenda get used a lot.

I have found a commentator who gets it (that is, he agrees with me) that should be shared with you. He is on target intellectually and emotionally and closes the loop better than I have managed to do on this topic.

My source: http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/ent/stories/DN-rowlingcolumn_1024gl.State.Edition1.2292bdc.html

Harry Potter and the author who wouldn't shut up

BOOKS: Now that J.K.'s outed Dumbledore, will she leave nothing to the imagination?

08:09 AM CDT on Wednesday, October 24, 2007

By JEFFREY WEISS / The Dallas Morning News

With the greatest of respect, I'd like to say something to Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling:

Shut up. Please.

Stop talking about what Ron will do for a living, whom Neville will marry, what kinds of creatures Hagrid will raise.

If you didn't put it in the books, please don't tell us now.

I guess I don't want you to stop explaining completely. I'd love to know more about what inspired some of the plot details in the books. If you want to dish about how you decided on those particular inscriptions for the headstones, how you came up with the names for the characters, or how you cleverly planned the religious underpinnings of the broad arc of the story – I am all ears.

But telling us that Dumbledore is gay, as you did last week? Why would you do that?

As a fan, I can understand both the authorial impulse and the public interest. As a reader, it's making me nuts.

Another awfully good British author, the late Douglas Adams of the successful Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy series, confronted a comparable question a few years back. One of his fans asked about the kind of computer one of his characters used. He replied, in part:

"The book is a work of fiction. It's a sequence of words arranged to unfold a story in a reader's mind. There is no such actual, real person as Arthur Dent. He has no existence outside the sequence of words designed to create an idea of this imaginary person in people's minds. There is no objective real world I am describing, or which I can enter, and pick up his computer, look at it and tell you what model it is, or turn it over and read off its serial number for you. It doesn't exist."

I'd disagree with that a bit. It does exist – in the minds of any reader who wants it to exist. And that's what you're interfering with.

The physicist Erwin Schrödinger long ago came up with a wonderful thought experiment. He imagined a cat that existed across possibilities – somehow simultaneously alive and dead until somebody checked to see which was true.

What seems weird (but true) in physics is just the way it has always been with a good story. What exactly did Huck Finn's raft look like? Did Captain Ahab's father whip him every St. Swithin's Day? Did Bilbo Baggins use product on his hair back in the Shire?

As a reader, I get to decide, because the author left those details untold in the books. Which is one reason that a book is almost always better than the movie based on it. More explicit backstory is not always better. Compare the brilliant book (and cartoon) of How the Grinch Stole Christmas with the awful live-action movie. The Grinch had an unhappy childhood? Who cares?

Based on what you decided to put in the books, I can imagine that Dumbledore once had a girlfriend or that he was so emotionally crushed by guilt that he sealed himself off from romance or that he was one of those rare men for whom romance never really came up – or that he was gay.

I can consider any of those possibilities as I read – or I can mull over all of them at the same time. Talk about magic.

Is Dumbledore gay? He is for you, apparently. But unless you said it in the actual books, must he be so for me? Your saying so now makes it harder for me to imagine anything different. Do you really want to limit your fictional world that way?

Jo – can I call you Jo? Like all of your myriad fans, I've spent so much time exploring the children of your mind over this past decade that I feel we are friends.

You lived with Harry, his friends and his foes for so many years. You birthed them, shaped them, honed the fine details of their existence. And you thought long and hard about exactly which of those details were so important to the story that you would include them in the books.

For all of those years, until those books were published, the characters and settings were yours to command and control. But then you let them go.

And speaking for all of your happy readers I need to tell you: Now they are ours.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Mike Huckabee in the first Tier

It has been interesting to watch former Arkansas Governor, Mike Huckabee, in the various presidential beauty contests designed to pass for journalism in the current election cycle.

Huckabee, a Baptist minister, is well spoken, pro-life, anti-gay, believes in God (a good thing in a minister), and believes in the Fair Tax plan. Despite problems with fund raising, Huckabee has worked hard to get his message out to the early primary state voters and is beginning to attract serious attention on the Republican side.

Jonathan Alter, writing for Newsweek, presents an intriguing profile of Huckabee. I have excerpted his remarks from a larger article. You may see the complete article at http://www.newsweek.com/id/57616/page/1.

My source: http://www.newsweek.com/id/57616/page/1 BETWEEN THE LINES Jonathan Alter The GOP's Best Bet? Hope and a common touch: reasons to like Mike Huckabee Oct 22, 2007 Updated: 12:25 p.m. ET Oct 22, 2007

[excerpts – see complete article at http://www.newsweek.com/id/57616/page/1]

The GOP is in a deep hole and keeps digging. Even after Mike Huckabee won big among attendees at last week's "Values Voters Convention," many evangelicals have been telling the former Arkansas governor—and onetime Baptist minister—that they like him but won't back him because he can't beat Hillary Clinton. They have it exactly backward. He may be the only Republican candidate with a decent chance to beat the Democrats next November.

Huckabee? Yes, Huckabee.

Huckabee comes across more hopeful than Giuliani, more believable than Romney, more intelligent than Thompson and fresher than McCain. He would hold the base and capture moderates drawn to his down-home style. His greatest asset is that he alone among the Republicans "speaks American." He connects to his audience with stories and metaphors and a geniality that can't be faked. "I'm conservative but I'm not angry about it," he likes to say, and it's true; his gentle mocking of the intraparty warfare that broke out during the Fox debate—likening it to a "demolition derby"—confirms the point. This was Reagan's secret, and it worked for Huckabee in Arkansas, where he won the votes of independents and Democrats.

The rap on Huckabee is that while he can speak fluently on global affairs, he has no foreign-policy chops. But that might be an advantage in November. Because he lacks Washington experience, Huckabee is the GOP candidate least tied to Iraq, which will remain an albatross for any Republican. And unless you believe 9/11 "changed everything" for American voters (if so, how do you explain 2006?), this election may revert to the norm, which means an emphasis on pocketbook issues. In the Detroit debate on the economy earlier this month, only Huckabee spoke with any passion about the millions of voters left out of the economic expansion. It's trendy now for Republicans to talk about their fiscal principles, but belt-tightening and fealty to Wall Street have never won a presidential election.

Voters in general elections are less ideological than in primaries and more intrigued by a compelling personal narrative. Huckabee's story hits closer to home than any other. After chest pains and a diagnosis of diabetes, he lost more than 100 pounds with diet and exercise. He tells the story with wit and grace (as well as the one about his wife's cancer diagnosis many years ago) and would kill on Oprah. When Huckabee talks about broader health-care issues he does more than brag about Arkansas's success under his leadership. He speaks in a folksy and comprehensible way that would match up well against Hillary's facts and figures or Obama's abstractions. The same holds true on education; his support for large-scale federal support of art and music programs to improve creativity (and thus competitiveness in the global economy) would resonate with millions of voters.

Even on faith and politics, Mike is easy to like. From afar he seemed extreme because he raised his hand in a debate when the candidates were asked en masse if they believed in evolution. But when Bill Maher pressed him to justify that view on his HBO show, Huckabee responded with a nuanced and presentable discussion of the origins of the universe that seemed to pacify even the atheist host. (I found this as well when we discussed the subject some months ago.) He has surely said some wacky right-wing things that could be used against him, but no more than any of the others in the Republican field. (He said in the debate that "most" of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were clergymen; only a couple were.)

The stridency of today's GOP has blinded the party to the context of this election, which is Bush fatigue. No wonder all the Democrats are using some variation of the line "The era of cowboy diplomacy is over." It is. And the least cowboyish and bombastic Republican will have the best chance a year from now to win the White House. That's Mike Huckabee.

Monday, October 22, 2007

One little smile

As many of us are glued to our computers for news of our friends in Southern California, I am relieved to hear that Jeff and family are OK and back home (for now). John has not yet been able to return to his home and Martin and his family are apparently OK.

With 250,000 reported evacualtion in San Diego County – who knows how many more Active Rain members are displaced tonight.

As we who are not in harm’s way await news from the trouble spots, we keep all in our thoughts and send our best wishes to those who are inconvenienced or at risk with their families.

All I can do in a constructive way is to pass on one little smile to those who need it tonight. Clip is one of the classic Carol Burnett Show sketches – with Tim Conway as a dentist and Harvey Kormann as a patient – who cannot keep a straight face in this one – as Tim is trying to provide an Novacaine shot to Harvy before dental work.

Enjoy – and be safe.

Newbies join Blogosphere

An Associated Press article today talks about two cabinet secretaries beginning their own blogs.

Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff are using blog technology to place their policies before the public. Both accept comments from the public (moderated and subject to some restrictions).

Do not expect unlimited true confessions here, but as a forum to defend policy, respond to news media criticsm and create a bit more of a link with the public – I am for it.

Welcome to the 21st century.

Mr. Leavitt’s link: http://secretarysblog.hhs.gov/my_weblog/

Mr Chertoff’s link: http://www.dhs.gov/journal/leadership

My source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071021/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/cabinet_bloggers_1;_ylt=AmCTf6hUlfWWzlVDJ2Mf7hoE1vAI Two Cabinet secretaries start blogs By EILEEN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer Sun Oct 21, 1:32 PM ET

WASHINGTON - It was late on Aug. 22 when Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt wrapped up 1,250 words on his experiences in Mozambique. There was more he wanted to write about online, but he had to be up early.

"I think I'll post and go to bed," he wrote on his Web log.

Leavitt and Michael Chertoff at Homeland Security are the first two members of President Bush's Cabinet who are blogging. They are among the more than 61 million Internet blogs, according to blogpulse.com, a site that tracks blogs.

The State Department has begun a blog, too, although Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is not a contributor so far.

Chertoff and Leavitt discuss issues facing their departments and occasionally sound off on criticism of their policies.

Two of Chertoff's 11 entries challenge New York Times editorials. Most recently, he said the newspaper's editorial staff "hyperventilates" about the department's effort to arrest gangs and get illegal aliens off the street.

And on Sept. 14, Chertoff said an editorial about the department's disaster response plan was "a perfect storm of misrepresentation and misunderstanding."

Leavitt has written about the children's health care program and defend Bush's veto of a spending increase that the Democratic-controlled Congress passed. Last week, the House failed to override the veto. "The drama around vetoes and overrides are just the way Washington conducts a conversation and debate," he wrote.

In one entry, he compared personal health care with buying the right golf clubs; in the analogy, the clubs are the medication and the golf game is the medical ailment.

Leavitt started his blog in August, having enjoyed reading a pandemic flu blog that his department began this year.

"I've decided to wade in a little deeper into blogdom by writing one for the next month or so," Leavitt wrote in his first entry. "I'm going to see how I feel after that time period. I may continue; I may not."

Leavitt says he writes every blog entry himself, often late at night in hotel rooms when he is traveling. He is concerned that his entries are too long; on Aug. 20, he wrote 2,444 words about his trip to an orphanage in South Africa.

Chertoff began blogging in September so he could "open a dialogue with the American people about our nation's security." Chertoff comes up with an idea for a blog entry, then someone in the department writes it, and Chertoff heavily edits it, said Jeff Ostermayer, a department spokesman who oversees the blog.

One of the benefits of blogs is the opportunity for people to interact with government officials, said Michael X. Delli Carpini, dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania.

But when public officials are blogging, "you're seldom going to get a different point of view or an inside story," he said.

Public officials usually are promoting policies and not offering honest reflections of what is going on, Delli Carpini said. The key to a successful blog is to make sure the information in the blog is honest, accurate and serving a public purpose. "The very same technology that can make things more democratic can also be used for manipulation and propaganda," he said.

The public can comment on Chertoff's and Leavitt's blogs, but both departments established ground rules that include a ban on personal attacks and vulgar language.

A Sept. 15 comment to one of Chertoff's blogs about a New York Times editorial said, "Mr. Secretary, the DHS is doing a fine job, whether the New York Times thinks so, or not. There is just no pleasing some."

Another comment said, "This is a serious question. How do you have time to blog? Don't you have a 24-hour-a-day job with very important things to do?"

Leavitt said his blogging experience has so far been positive. The blog has picked up almost 100 links, he pointed out. "I have no idea if that's any good," he wrote. "Maybe some of you more experienced bloggers can give me some perspective."

A few Changes 10/22/07

Regular readers (both of you) will notice a change in the look of the page as of today. I hope the cosmetic changes will improve the readability of the articles. I can’t promise editorial changes, so readability from a content standpoint may or may not improve.

I am also opening the articles to in line comments for the first time. When this project began, the posting of articles here was a substitute for my sending my views and opinions to friends via email distribution lists. All recipients knew me and were able to return their comments to me via email reply. As the project has evolved, some readers from Active Rain (my real estate related blog) and others who merely took a wrong turn on the freeway and ended up on my pages may not have had an easy mechanism to return their comments to me or to share their views with other readers.

So to encourage participation, provide for contrary opinions or just venting, and to challenge the concept of domestic tranquility, comments are now open. If I have selected the right settings, comments are moderated by me to keep us on point, so will have a delay in appearance in the lists. Anonymous comments probably are not useful, so please include your name and town at the end of your comments.

I thank you for your support.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

News from the Twilight Zone

In the early hours of the morning today I have concrete evidence that I have entered the Twilight Zone and the world has gone mad around me.

First is the article stating that J K Rowling, author of the now complete Harry Potter series, has announced to a packed house of kids and fans at Carnegie Hall that Dumbledore, the all-powerful wizard/mentor character was gay.

I do not care one way of another, but this is right up there on the list of all time items of useless information. The books are complete. This does not add anything to the series, does not change anything that has been written and isn’t necessary to understand any part of the narrative. So why does JKR add this bit of information to the lexicon of Harry Potter at this time. The controversy still swirls around the books that the stories, filled with references to witchcraft, are an anathema to certain people on religious grounds. I do not look forward to the response to this little tidbit of news. Why take this occasion (last stop on her US reading tour) to leave this bit of untidyness on the stage. I don’t know – I have not got a clue.

I am not repeating the article here, but those with curiosity may read the news at E Online on Yahoo. < click here >

The second unsettling bit of news in my world this morning is John Dvorak’s discussion that he believes that Microsoft may be coming to an end as the software powerhouse of the last quarter century and may be moving to a new life as a holding company in the mold of Berkshire Hathaway or KKR (Kohlberg, Kravis Roberts & Co) . Bill Gates is already well on his way to morphing himself into Warren Buffet – whom he knows and respects.

John Dvorak is a respected journalist/commentator and a long time observer of the personal computer industry. I do not take his view lightly. Writing for Market Watch, he says that this is not breaking news to be announced soon, but his speculation about a trend he believes he sees in the recent actions of Microsoft. TIme will tell.

John’s article may be read at Market Watch. < click here >

As for me – I am going back to sleep. Maybe this will all turn out to have been a dream.

Friday, October 19, 2007

The threat of Terrorism

The media would have us believe that the American Public is opposed to the War in Iraq - and that President Bush is now irrelevent as a lame duck President. Well, the media has preached the party line to bring us to this point. But the threat to our society is real still and the price that will be paid by this generation or the next will prove the President’s priorities in foreign policy to have been correct and his emphasis on protecting our population to have been the right course of action.

Newt Gingrich has left the Presidential race – but he still is the one Republican speaker who can deliver a cogent and articulate speech about the past, the future and the political realities of both. We need to be listening to him. And I will not be satisfied until the current candidates for President start to sound more like Gingrich. Maybe then we will listen.

My Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-eqxWIHKZg

The Threat posed by the Ottoman Empire

In my recent rant about the Nobel prize for global hot air, I wedged a comment expressing hope that at least the love-fest for Al Gore might distract the Congress from meddling in the affairs of the Pre-World War I Ottoman Empire. One of my regular readers (a rare breed indeed) complained of a case of whiplash caused by my lack of transition into a topic which was not on his radar.

So with the able assistance of Charles Krauthammer writing for the Washington Post, let’s look at why the Speaker of the House wants to wander into world history at this particular time and place – when her actions offend a current ally in the War in Iraq whose assistance is vital to resupply lines for troops in combat in the theater of operations.

My source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/10/pelosis_armenian_gambit.html This House's Moral Cleanliness By Charles Krauthammer Friday, October 19, 2007

WASHINGTON -- There are three relevant questions concerning the Armenian genocide.

(a) Did it happen?

(b) Should the U.S. House of Representatives be expressing itself on this now?

(c) Was House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's determination to bring this to a vote, knowing that it risked provoking Turkey into withdrawing crucial assistance to American soldiers in Iraq, a conscious (columnist Thomas Sowell) or unconscious (blogger Mickey Kaus) attempt to sabotage the U.S. war effort?

The answers are:

(a) Yes, unequivocally.

(b) No, unequivocally.

(c) God only knows.

That between 1 million and 1.5 million Armenians were brutally and systematically massacred starting in 1915 in a deliberate genocidal campaign is a matter of simple historical record. If you really want to deepen and broaden awareness of that historical record, you should support the establishment of the Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial in Washington, D.C. But to pass a declarative resolution in the House of Representatives in the middle of a war in which we are inordinately dependent on Turkey is the height of irresponsibility.

The atrocities happened 90 years ago. Not a single living Turk under the age of 102 is in any way culpable. Even Mesrob Mutafyan, patriarch of the Armenian community in Turkey, has stated that his community is opposed to the resolution, correctly calling it the result of domestic American politics.

Turkey is already massing troops near the Iraq border, threatening a campaign against Kurdish rebels that could destabilize the one stable front in Iraq. The same House of Representatives that has been complaining loudly about the lack of armored vehicles for our troops is blithely jeopardizing relations with the country through which 95 percent of the new heavily armored vehicles are now transiting on the way to saving American lives in Iraq.

And for what? To feel morally clean?

How does this work? Pelosi says: "Genocide still exists, and we saw it in Rwanda; we see it now in Darfur." Precisely. And what exactly is she doing about Darfur? Nothing. Pronouncing yourself on a genocide committed 90 years ago by an empire that no longer exists is Pelosi's demonstration of seriousness about existing, ongoing genocide?

Indeed, the Democratic Party she's leading in the House has been trying for months to force a precipitous withdrawal from Iraq that could very well lead to genocidal civil war. This prospect has apparently not deterred her in the least.

"Friends don't let friends commit crimes against humanity," explained Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee that passed the Armenian genocide resolution. This must rank among the most stupid statements ever uttered by a member of Congress, admittedly a very high bar.

Does Smith know anything about the history of the Armenian genocide? Of the role played by Henry Morgenthau? As U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, Morgenthau tried desperately to intervene on behalf of the Armenians. It was his consular officials deep within Turkey who (together with missionaries) brought out news of the genocide. And it was Morgenthau who helped tell the world about it in his writings. Near East Relief, the U.S. charity strongly backed by President Wilson and the Congress, raised and distributed an astonishing $117 million in food, clothing and other vital assistance that, wrote historian Howard Sachar, "quite literally kept an entire nation alive."

So much for the U.S. letting friends commit crimes against humanity. And at the time, the Ottomans were not friends. They were an enemy power in World War I, allied with Germany. Now the Turks are indeed friends, giving us indispensable logistical help in our war against today's premier perpetrators of crimes against humanity -- al-Qaeda in Iraq and Afghanistan. Friends don't gratuitously antagonize friends who are helping fight the world's foremost war criminals.

So why has Pelosi been so committed to bringing this resolution to the floor? (At least until a revolt within her party and the prospect of defeat caused her to waver.) Because she is deeply unserious about foreign policy. This little stunt gets added to the ledger: first, her visit to Syria, which did nothing but give legitimacy to Bashar al-Assad, who continues to be engaged in the systematic murder of pro-Western Lebanese members of parliament; then, her letter to Costa Rica's ambassador, just nine days before a national referendum, aiding and abetting opponents of a very important free-trade agreement with the United States.

Is the Armenian resolution her way of unconsciously sabotaging the U.S. war effort, after she had failed to stop it by more direct means? I leave that question to psychiatry. Instead, I fall back on Krauthammer's razor (with apologies to Occam): In explaining any puzzling Washington phenomenon, always choose stupidity over conspiracy, incompetence over cunning. Anything else gives them too much credit.

Monday, October 15, 2007

The News Media selectively Reports

It is a poorly kept secret that the news media has a political agenda of their own. Blog articles present an interesting picture of the dishonesty of the reporting of General Ricardo Sanchez' recent comments to the Military Reporters and Editors Association.

It was reported prominently that General Sanchez blasted the Bush administration for their handling of the war. What was not reported is the fact that the primary object of General Sanchez’ criticism was the news media itself.

While General Sanchez indicates that there is plenty of blame to go around, the indictment of individual reporters and the media itself as well as criticisms of the Democrats for playing partisan politics with the war are ignored in the mainstream media coverage of the speech. And yes, the General was critical of the administration – but you don’t need me to tell you that. You have already read it in every paper and seen it on every media outlet. But where is the rest of the story? Where is the truth in the reporting of what the General had to say? The media claims that the public does not support the President on the war - maybe if the media would tell the truth, the public could make a more informed choice.

Ed Morrissey, offers his comments in the attached article – quoting extensively from the General’s actual comments. Judge for yourself.

My source: http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/archives/014731.php October 13, 2007 Sanchez' Message

It seems that half of the message retired General Richard Sanchez intended to deliver missed the cut at most newsrooms, and with most bloggers. Typical among the reports of his blistering oration is the front-page treatment given by the Washington Post's Josh White, the entire first half of Snachez' speech -- found in its entirety here -- gets reduced to a single paragraph at the end of the story. Why? Well, it turns out that Sanchez considered his first target the media itself, which he blames for a large part of the problems he sees in Iraq (via Power Line, [hyperlink omitted] reformatted by me to normal case):

“Almost invariably, my perception is that the sensationalistic value of these assessments is what provided the edge that you seek for self agrandizement [sic] or to advance your individual quest for getting on the front page with your stories! As I understand it, your measure of worth is how many front page stories you have written and unfortunately some of you will compromise your integrity and display questionable ethics as you seek to keep America informed. This is much like the intelligence analysts whose effectiveness was measured by the number of intelligence reports he produced. For some, it seems that as long as you get a front page story there is little or no regard for the "collateral damage" you will cause. Personal reputations have no value and you report with total impunity and are rarely held accountable for unethical conduct.

“Given the near instantaneous ability to report actions on the ground, the responsibility to accurately and truthfully report takes on an unprecedented importance. The speculative and often uninformed initial reporting that characterizes our media appears to be rapidly becoming the standard of the industry. An Arab proverb states - "four things come not back: the spoken word, the spent arrow, the past, the neglected opportunity." Once reported, your assessments become conventional wisdom and nearly impossible to change. Other major challenges are your willingness to be manipulated by "high level officials" who leak stories and by lawyers who use hyperbole to strengthen their arguments. Your unwillingness to accurately and prominently correct your mistakes and your agenda driven biases contribute to this corrosive environment.

“All of these challenges combined create a media environment that does a tremendous disservice to America. Over the course of this war tactically insignificant events have become strategic defeats for America because of the tremendous power and impact of the media and by extension you the journalist. In many cases the media has unjustly destroyed the individual reputations and careers of those involved. We realize that because of the near real time reporting environment that you face it is difficult to report accurately. In my business one of our fundamental truths is that "the first report is always wrong." Unfortunately, in your business "the first report" gives Americans who rely on the snippets of CNN, if you will, their "truths" and perspectives on an issue. As a corollary to this deadline driven need to publish "initial impressions or observations" versus objective facts there is an additional challenge for us who are the subject of your reporting. When you assume that you are correct and on the moral high ground on a story because we have not respond to questions you provided is the ultimate arrogance and distortion of ethics. One of your highly repected fellow journalists once told me that there are some amongst you who "feed from a pig's trough." if that is who I am dealing with then I will never respond otherwise we will both get dirty and the pig will love it. This does not mean that your story is accurate.”

Given that, it seems highly ironic that the journalists covering the story attempted to cover up the acidic, biting, and mostly accurate criticisms of their own performance in this war while giving front-page treatment to Sanchez' criticisms of the political structure at the same time. If Sanchez has such credibility and standing to bring this kind of criticism to bear on Washington, why didn't the Post and other news agencies give the same level of exposure to his media criticisms as well? He basically accuses them of cynically selling out the soldiers to defeat American efforts to win the war, and made sure that those accusations came first before his assessment of the political failures, but you'd never know that from the Post.

The Post then goes on to obfuscate a key part of the second half of Sanchez' speech. While he criticizes the Bush administration in sharp terms, Sanchez blames the Democrats in equal measure. He calls out partisans on all sides for exploiting the war for their own political benefit rather than the good of the nation, and blames the lack of range for strategic options on the corrosive debate that has hamstrung the range of choices.

And most importantly, none of the press has managed to pick up on this key sequence in Sanchez' broadside at the American political establishment:

“America has no choice but to continue our efforts in Iraq. A precipitous withdrawal will unquestionably lead to chaos that would endanger the stability of the greater Middle East. If this occurs it would have significant adverse effects on the international community. Coalition and American force presence will be required at some level for the foreseeable future. Given the lack of a grand strategy we must move rapidly to minimize that force presence and allow the Iraqis maximum ability to exercise their sovereignty in achieving a solution.”

Iraq is still a vital national interest to the United States. We have a responsibility to get it right, and our political establishment needs to unite to find the grand strategy that serves that purpose rather than their own selfish desires. In fact, Sanchez made clear that the media has to do the same as well. Unfortunately, the media doesn't have the guts to report that honestly.

Posted by Ed Morrissey on October 13, 2007 8:12 AM

Iraq - It's the Oil

I always enjoy hearing theories which may be somewhat inconsistent with my own. And I have no shortages of friends and colleagues who delight in bringing these theories to my attention.

The attached article by Jim Holt uses the time worn follow the money analysis with interesting results on the subject of the Iraq war. His approach does seem to tie up a few loose ends. My readers can decide for themselves.

While I would not like to admit that oil is the primary motivation for US policy, I am attracted to the scenario that portrays our leaders as competent and forward thinking rather than some of the media charicatures that are presented day after day.

Where is Darth Vader when we need him.

My source: http://www.lrb.co.uk/v29/n20/holt01_.html

It’s the Oil

Jim Holt

Iraq is ‘unwinnable’, a ‘quagmire’, a ‘fiasco’: so goes the received opinion. But there is good reason to think that, from the Bush-Cheney perspective, it is none of these things. Indeed, the US may be ‘stuck’ precisely where Bush et al want it to be, which is why there is no ‘exit strategy’.

Iraq has 115 billion barrels of known oil reserves. That is more than five times the total in the United States. And, because of its long isolation, it is the least explored of the world’s oil-rich nations. A mere two thousand wells have been drilled across the entire country; in Texas alone there are a million. It has been estimated, by the Council on Foreign Relations, that Iraq may have a further 220 billion barrels of undiscovered oil; another study puts the figure at 300 billion. If these estimates are anywhere close to the mark, US forces are now sitting on one quarter of the world’s oil resources. The value of Iraqi oil, largely light crude with low production costs, would be of the order of $30 trillion at today’s prices. For purposes of comparison, the projected total cost of the US invasion/occupation is around $1 trillion.

Who will get Iraq’s oil? One of the Bush administration’s ‘benchmarks’ for the Iraqi government is the passage of a law to distribute oil revenues. The draft law that the US has written for the Iraqi congress would cede nearly all the oil to Western companies. The Iraq National Oil Company would retain control of 17 of Iraq’s 80 existing oilfields, leaving the rest – including all yet to be discovered oil – under foreign corporate control for 30 years. ‘The foreign companies would not have to invest their earnings in the Iraqi economy,’ the analyst Antonia Juhasz wrote in the New York Times in March, after the draft law was leaked. ‘They could even ride out Iraq’s current “instability” by signing contracts now, while the Iraqi government is at its weakest, and then wait at least two years before even setting foot in the country.’ As negotiations over the oil law stalled in September, the provincial government in Kurdistan simply signed a separate deal with the Dallas-based Hunt Oil Company, headed by a close political ally of President Bush.

How will the US maintain hegemony over Iraqi oil? By establishing permanent military bases in Iraq. Five self-sufficient ‘super-bases’ are in various stages of completion. All are well away from the urban areas where most casualties have occurred. There has been precious little reporting on these bases in the American press, whose dwindling corps of correspondents in Iraq cannot move around freely because of the dangerous conditions. (It takes a brave reporter to leave the Green Zone without a military escort.) In February last year, the Washington Post reporter Thomas Ricks described one such facility, the Balad Air Base, forty miles north of Baghdad. A piece of (well-fortified) American suburbia in the middle of the Iraqi desert, Balad has fast-food joints, a miniature golf course, a football field, a cinema and distinct neighbourhoods – among them, ‘KBR-land’, named after the Halliburton subsidiary that has done most of the construction work at the base. Although few of the 20,000 American troops stationed there have ever had any contact with an Iraqi, the runway at the base is one of the world’s busiest. ‘We are behind only Heathrow right now,’ an air force commander told Ricks.

The Defense Department was initially coy about these bases. In 2003, Donald Rumsfeld said: ‘I have never, that I can recall, heard the subject of a permanent base in Iraq discussed in any meeting.’ But this summer the Bush administration began to talk openly about stationing American troops in Iraq for years, even decades, to come. Several visitors to the White House have told the New York Times that the president himself has become fond of referring to the ‘Korea model’. When the House of Representatives voted to bar funding for ‘permanent bases’ in Iraq, the new term of choice became ‘enduring bases’, as if three or four decades wasn’t effectively an eternity.

But will the US be able to maintain an indefinite military presence in Iraq? It will plausibly claim a rationale to stay there for as long as civil conflict simmers, or until every groupuscule that conveniently brands itself as ‘al-Qaida’ is exterminated. The civil war may gradually lose intensity as Shias, Sunnis and Kurds withdraw into separate enclaves, reducing the surface area for sectarian friction, and as warlords consolidate local authority. De facto partition will be the result. But this partition can never become de jure. (An independent Kurdistan in the north might upset Turkey, an independent Shia region in the east might become a satellite of Iran, and an independent Sunni region in the west might harbour al-Qaida.) Presiding over this Balkanised Iraq will be a weak federal government in Baghdad, propped up and overseen by the Pentagon-scale US embassy that has just been constructed – a green zone within the Green Zone. As for the number of US troops permanently stationed in Iraq, the defence secretary, Robert Gates, told Congress at the end of September that ‘in his head’ he saw the long-term force as consisting of five combat brigades, a quarter of the current number, which, with support personnel, would mean 35,000 troops at the very minimum, probably accompanied by an equal number of mercenary contractors. (He may have been erring on the side of modesty, since the five super-bases can accommodate between ten and twenty thousand troops each.) These forces will occasionally leave their bases to tamp down civil skirmishes, at a declining cost in casualties. As a senior Bush administration official told the New York Times in June, the long-term bases ‘are all places we could fly in and out of without putting Americans on every street corner’. But their main day-to-day function will be to protect the oil infrastructure.

This is the ‘mess’ that Bush-Cheney is going to hand on to the next administration. What if that administration is a Democratic one? Will it dismantle the bases and withdraw US forces entirely? That seems unlikely, considering the many beneficiaries of the continued occupation of Iraq and the exploitation of its oil resources. The three principal Democratic candidates – Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards – have already hedged their bets, refusing to promise that, if elected, they would remove American forces from Iraq before 2013, the end of their first term.

Among the winners: oil-services companies like Halliburton; the oil companies themselves (the profits will be unimaginable, and even Democrats can be bought); US voters, who will be guaranteed price stability at the gas pump (which sometimes seems to be all they care about); Europe and Japan, which will both benefit from Western control of such a large part of the world’s oil reserves, and whose leaders will therefore wink at the permanent occupation; and, oddly enough, Osama bin Laden, who will never again have to worry about US troops profaning the holy places of Mecca and Medina, since the stability of the House of Saud will no longer be paramount among American concerns. Among the losers is Russia, which will no longer be able to lord its own energy resources over Europe. Another big loser is Opec, and especially Saudi Arabia, whose power to keep oil prices high by enforcing production quotas will be seriously compromised.

Then there is the case of Iran, which is more complicated. In the short term, Iran has done quite well out of the Iraq war. Iraq’s ruling Shia coalition is now dominated by a faction friendly to Tehran, and the US has willy-nilly armed and trained the most pro-Iranian elements in the Iraqi military. As for Iran’s nuclear programme, neither air strikes nor negotiations seem likely to derail it at the moment. But the Iranian regime is precarious. Unpopular mullahs hold onto power by financing internal security services and buying off elites with oil money, which accounts for 70 per cent of government revenues. If the price of oil were suddenly to drop to, say, $40 a barrel (from a current price just north of $80), the repressive regime in Tehran would lose its steady income. And that is an outcome the US could easily achieve by opening the Iraqi oil spigot for as long as necessary (perhaps taking down Venezuela’s oil-cocky Hugo Chávez into the bargain).

And think of the United States vis-à-vis China. As a consequence of our trade deficit, around a trillion dollars’ worth of US denominated debt (including $400 billion in US Treasury bonds) is held by China. This gives Beijing enormous leverage over Washington: by offloading big chunks of US debt, China could bring the American economy to its knees. China’s own economy is, according to official figures, expanding at something like 10 per cent a year. Even if the actual figure is closer to 4 or 5 per cent, as some believe, China’s increasing heft poses a threat to US interests. (One fact: China is acquiring new submarines five times faster than the US.) And the main constraint on China’s growth is its access to energy – which, with the US in control of the biggest share of world oil, would largely be at Washington’s sufferance. Thus is the Chinese threat neutralised.

Many people are still perplexed by exactly what moved Bush-Cheney to invade and occupy Iraq. In the 27 September issue of the New York Review of Books, Thomas Powers, one of the most astute watchers of the intelligence world, admitted to a degree of bafflement. ‘What’s particularly odd,’ he wrote, ‘is that there seems to be no sophisticated, professional, insiders’ version of the thinking that drove events.’ Alan Greenspan, in his just published memoir, is clearer on the matter. ‘I am saddened,’ he writes, ‘that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil.’

Was the strategy of invading Iraq to take control of its oil resources actually hammered out by Cheney’s 2001 energy task force? One can’t know for sure, since the deliberations of that task force, made up largely of oil and energy company executives, have been kept secret by the administration on the grounds of ‘executive privilege’. One can’t say for certain that oil supplied the prime motive. But the hypothesis is quite powerful when it comes to explaining what has actually happened in Iraq. The occupation may seem horribly botched on the face of it, but the Bush administration’s cavalier attitude towards ‘nation-building’ has all but ensured that Iraq will end up as an American protectorate for the next few decades – a necessary condition for the extraction of its oil wealth. If the US had managed to create a strong, democratic government in an Iraq effectively secured by its own army and police force, and had then departed, what would have stopped that government from taking control of its own oil, like every other regime in the Middle East? On the assumption that the Bush-Cheney strategy is oil-centred, the tactics – dissolving the army, de-Baathification, a final ‘surge’ that has hastened internal migration – could scarcely have been more effective. The costs – a few billion dollars a month plus a few dozen American fatalities (a figure which will probably diminish, and which is in any case comparable to the number of US motorcyclists killed because of repealed helmet laws) – are negligible compared to $30 trillion in oil wealth, assured American geopolitical supremacy and cheap gas for voters. In terms of realpolitik, the invasion of Iraq is not a fiasco; it is a resounding success.

Still, there is reason to be sceptical of the picture I have drawn: it implies that a secret and highly ambitious plan turned out just the way its devisers foresaw, and that almost never happens.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

The Emperor has No Clothes

As we learn in the famous fairy tale, sometimes the simple truths are the hardest to come by. Of all of the world leaders, apparently only one has had the integrity to ask a simple question about the action of the Nobel Peace Prize committee. The President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Klaus, says that the relationship between Al Gores activities and world peace is unclear and indistinct. Indeed.

Climate remains a complex study of the world-wide collection of weather related phenomona, while weather is a localized series of events. While there can be unusual or even dangerous weather events somewhere on the planet at any time, the overall climate does not appear to be changing outside of established norms based upon our studies over centuries. Dire predictions of sudden climate change appear to be based upon computer models which may be flawed rather than actual observation. I fear the combination of bad science and bad politics more than I fear the possibility of global warming.

But if it can deter or distract the US Congress from offending a US ally (Turkey) by passing resolutions calling the deaths of Armenians in 1915 genocide at the hands of the Turks – maybe it is not all bad.

Save me from politicians – I will take my chances with the weather.

My source: http://www.townhall.com/columnists/AustinHill/2007/10/14/al_gore_leading_us_to_peace_really?page=full&comments=true Al Gore: Leading Us to Peace? Really? By Austin Hill Sunday, October 14, 2007 Thank God somebody was willing to ask.

“Ask what?” you might be wondering. I’m getting to the question of what it is, exactly, that Al Gore did to enhance “peace” such that he has now won a Nobel Peace Prize.

While the White House officially expressed “happiness” last week over Gore’s award, and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi used the occasion to reassure us that Mr. Gore has sounded a “clarion call” that has “awakened the world” to the “very real threat” of global warming, the question of what has Gore done for “peace” remains.

Of course, we should acknowledge that Gore served the United States as its Vice President during “peace-time.” So did Dan Quayle, and George H. W. Bush, and Walter Mondale, and the service of each of these former V.P.’s no doubt contributed to the overall objective of “peace” throughout the world.

But Quayle, Bush and Mondale never got a Nobel Peace Prize. And Gore’s prize has now been bestowed six years after leaving his position as Vice President. So what exactly has Gore done to warrant this otherwise high honor?

There doesn’t seem to be any easy, substantive answer to this question. And while many of us in the media have been overindulging in speculation for the past few days about “the prize” being enough to instigate that long-awaited Gore For President 2008 campaign, there is at least one politician who has dared to question Gore’s selection for the Nobel Peace Prize in the first place.

He is a “President” himself, the President of a new and growing democracy in Eastern Europe - - but you’ve probably never heard of him.

Vaclav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic, dared to release a statement last week claiming that he was "somewhat surprised" that former US vice president Al Gore received the Nobel Peace Prize. In this written statement he claimed that "the relationship between his activities and world peace is unclear and indistinct," and that "it rather seems that Gore's doubting of basic cornerstones of the current civilization does not contribute to peace."

Thank you, Mr. President!

While U.S. Mayors, Governors, Congressional members and foreign heads of state continue fawning over Gore as he narrates a motion picture, produces rock concerts, preaches his eco-centric gospel of green, and insists that “the scientific community” agrees with everything he says, there is at least one head of state who has the audacity to suggest that Gore might be misunderstanding some things.

And what might be the misunderstandings? What are those “basic cornerstones of the current civilization” that Gore seems to be doubting?

President Klaus made this very clear earlier this Summer, while writing in the Financial Times Journal. In his June essay, Mr. Klaus called into question the hysteria that is the “global warming movement,“ by making the outrageous observation that weather patterns change over time. He also mentioned that during the past century the average global temperature increased only .6 percent. In an additional shocking claim, Klaus stated that, among adults living on planet earth today, “all of us have noticed that even during our life times temperature changes occur (in both directions).”

So German Chancellor Angela Merkel and (former) British Prime Minister Tony Blair and “authorities” at the United Nations and other big and important people around the world obsess about so-called “global warming” and seek to, quite literally, “change the weather.“ All the while, President Klaus has repeatedly been so bold and brash as to remind us that “change” is a natural facet of the weather, and that the global temperature hasn’t increased very much in the past one hundred years.

Most important about President Klaus‘ comments is the fact that he identifies the global warming hysteria for what it truly is: yet another attempt to control human behavior and constrain human liberty. These are threats to civilization with which Mr. Klaus is well acquainted, given that he has lived most of his life under communist dictatorships.

In his Financial Times Journal editorial, President Klaus concluded by saying “I feel obliged to say that I see the biggest threat to freedom, democracy, the market economy and prosperity now in ambitious environmentalism, not in communism. This ideology wants to replace the free and spontaneous evolution of mankind by a sort of central (now global) planning.”

By every indication it would seem that Al Gore, officials at the United Nations, and the decision markers with the Nobel Prize believe that a “central, global” economic planning is the very force that can lead humankind closer to prosperity, and peace.

Unfortunately, none of these people would seem to have learned the lessons of history, as President Klaus apparently has.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Co-Winners different in substance and in Style

Well, it is as close as the New York Time will come to actually disagreeing with Al Gore. Their article discusses the differences in the message as portrayed by the Nobel co-winners. It is refreshing to have the NYT recognize the difference between the science and the publicity on the subject of climate change. And I will quote the article just for that recognition.

But I also like the Newt Gingrich quote (speaking at the Georgia Federation of Republican Women yesterday), "It's perfectly appropriate for Gore to win the Nobel Prize because it only goes to very left-wing people who are critical of America" .

My source: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/13/science/13climate.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin 2 Winners, and 2 Approaches to Spreading the Word on Climate By ANDREW C. REVKIN Published: October 13, 2007 The dual winners of the Nobel Peace Prize may be united in concern about global warming, but they differ starkly in style and, at times, in scientific substance.

One winner, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, speaks in the measured voice of peer-reviewed research and government negotiations. In four reports since 1990, the panel, led by Rajendra K. Pachauri, has always focused on the most noncontroversial findings. In 2001, it concluded, “There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities.”

The other winner, former Vice President Al Gore, delivers brimstone-laden warnings of an unfolding “planetary emergency.” Mr. Gore has not shied from emphasizing the most emotionally potent though less certain consequences of warming like its link to hurricane intensity and rising sea levels.

Like many of the panel members interviewed, Gary Yohe, an economist at Wesleyan and a lead author of some of the climate panel’s chapters in 2001 and this year, said he was thrilled that the prize elevated the issue. But Mr. Yohe said the focus on Mr. Gore as a personality and politician might distract from researchers’ strong consensus on the risks posed by unfettered emissions of heat-trapping gases. “If the spectacular nature of his presentations and the personalities involved become the story instead of the science,” Mr. Yohe said, “then it becomes counterproductive.”

He and other panel members were queasy about some of Mr. Gore’s points that exceeded the panel’s assessments. In “An Inconvenient Truth,” the documentary on Mr. Gore’s climate work, a fast-motion flood spills into ground zero, implying seas could rise many feet in the near term from melting Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. In the panel’s latest study, losing the Greenland sheet was projected to take 1,000 years or more.

Some scientists, historians and policy experts said both messages, with all the imperfections attending each, seemed necessary to put attention on a looming planet-scale problem.

The Nobel “is honoring the science and the publicity, and they’re necessarily different,” said Spencer A. Weart, a science historian at the American Institute of Physics and the author of “The Discovery of Global Warming,” a book charting 100 years of climate research.

Dr. Weart added that both were essential because the science alone, laden with complexity and unavoidable uncertainty, would never jog average citizens or most elected officials.

“The I.P.C.C. was set up to be the lowest common denominator, to weed out anything anyone could disagree with,” he said. “It was deliberately created, largely under the influence of the Reagan administration, because governments didn’t want a bunch of self-appointed scientists from academies and so on out there.

“Even the Saudi government has to agree,” he said. “That means that when the I.P.C.C. says you’re in trouble, you’re really in trouble.”

If the profile of the issue had not been raised with “An Inconvenient Truth,” the panel’s reports this year would not have had nearly as much impact, experts said.

Among those crediting Mr. Gore for elevating the issue — if differing from him sharply on solutions — is former Speaker Newt Gingrich. Mr. Gingrich is a co-author of a new book, “A Contract With the Earth,” that accepts the notion that human-caused warming poses serious risks and urges the United States to, among other efforts, aggressively develop nonpolluting energy technologies.

“In a way, Vice President Gore, by raising the intensity of the issue, by talking about it, raised the challenge for those of us who think there’s an alternative to say, ‘O.K., right emotions, wrong answer,’” Mr. Gingrich said in an interview this week. “But then we have an obligation to provide an answer.”

He said he preferred incentives to step up energy research over Mr. Gore’s preference for mandatory national and global limits on gases.

An expert who was a panel author was more doubtful of the prize-worthy caliber of Mr. Gore and the panel’s work.

“The bottom line is that energy demand (and CO2 emissions) continue to rise,” John R. Christy, a climate expert at the University of Huntsville, Ala., wrote in an e-mail message.

Michael Oppenheimer, an atmospheric scientist at Princeton who has worked on the climate assessments, said the award correctly recognized the “long slog” to accepting that people are pushing on the planet’s thermostat.

“The award reminds us that expert advice can influence people and policy, that sometimes governments do listen to reason and that the idea that reason can guide human action is very much alive, if not yet fully realized,” Dr. Oppenheimer said.

It is time, he added, to break the deadlock over lowering emissions. “Public attention,” he said, “is now engaged at the highest level it will probably ever be.”