Fox news documentary: Obama will make Kenya 51st state (satire)

by R J Shulman
Dandelion Salad
featured writer
May 10, 2008

NEW YORK – Fox News will broadcast a documentary called President Obama: Be Afraid, Very Afraid in which they will report among other things that as President, Barack Obama will annex Kenya as a state. “We have absolute proof,” said Bill O’Reilly, “as sure as a black person says pass the M F tea, Obama made a promise to his father Barack Hussein Sr., that if he grew up to be President, he would make their home country, Kenya a state.”

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Bolivia: What does Santa Cruz want? + Autonomy vote

Dandelion Salad

TheRealNews

More at http://therealnews.com/c.ph…
Forrest Hylton: Santa Cruz state leadership and armed street gangs are overtly racist (part two)…

***

Autonomy vote of rich province in Bolivia illegal

More at http://therealnews.com/c.ph…
Autonomy proponents in Santa Cruz claim victory as opposition boycotts referendum…

Added: May 07, 2008

see

Stalled Morales puts faith in referendum

US backs eastern seccession in Bolivia (video)

We Must Democratize Our Economic Institutions by Manila Ryce

Fight for Bolivia’s future lies behind referendum

Talk to Jazeera: Evo Morales (videos)

Obama agrees with McCain on Palestine-Israel, so neither of them are all that Maverick…

Digg It

Dandelion Salad

sent to me by an anonymous peace activist
May 8, 2008

On a day when I read that not only does Obama agree with McCain on Hamas (even though they offered a ceasefire before the Likud and and still await a response from Ehud, et. a.) but he also reiterated his uncritical support for Israel I am at a loss for what to do politically. I obviously cannot stand John McCain as a person or a politician. This election looks like it will be a contest between two media darlings; whereas McCain enjoys a press corps enamored with the maverick image they helped one another create for himself, Obama enjoys a press who (except for Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman) is critical mainly of scandal and rarely of policy.

With so little criticism, John McCain has faired well under the twin storms of Hagee and Parsley that are brewing in the distance. Of course, Ralph Nader has no chance of success, as even he admits (however, he has been wiling to take some initiative toward more critical conversation about Israel-Palestine). And, with Ron Paul, the only GOP candidate with serious support still only getting minimal chance of the nomination, thanks to the winner-take-all primary structure of the Repubs, you’d think Obama is a shoe-in against someone who has such strong ties (77% voting record of support) to a President whose disapproval rating is at a record high.

However, it is not that simple. Obama’s nat’l avg. poll lead is not substantial. Naturally we can take some relief in the knowledge that these things are notoriously unreliable indicators of general election outcomes (esp if one party steals the presidency from the other). Nonetheless, it’s important that the Obama campaign consider some of the factors that might prevent him from critical victories in battleground states if it expects to beat the war-hungry McCain campaign.

Obviously the entire landscape of this quadrennial power struggle between two factions of US and international business interests will look very different in a few months. The GOP will undoubtedly release the most vicious sort of half-truths against Obama (expect to see much more of Rev. Wright) esp. if Karl Rove gets involved outside of punditry. Either way, we must see through the two-party system the framers would have rejected and wanted to prevent.

Even if Obama wins, I hope progressives remember that it will only be a victory because Obama is probably more malleable on issues like Iraq and Iran. Thomas Hayden asks a critical question in his book, Ending the War in Iraq:

Would a President Obama really continue the war if the Baghdad regime was ‘hostile to the interests of the US’? Or would he finess his way to accepting reality? It is an inherent risk of politics: getting caught between populist voter patterns and the contending counsel of unelected national security elites. On the brink of announcing his presidential campaign in early 2007, Senator Obama settled on a proposal popular with both voters and elites, the Baker-Hamilton goal of removing American combat troops by Mach 31, 2008. (p 165)

That victory (a presidential candidate who is both ‘electable’ and, at least, slightly anti-war) came only after mass demonstrations, disasters like Abu Ghraib and the Downing Street memos and the war looked so bad that even Baker decided it was time to change course. So far, Obama isn’t much better than John McCain when it comes to Iran.

So, at the end of the day, for me the decision is, whom would we rather push and protest? McCain will likely choose Cheney as secretary of war and, if you’ve paid much attention to the news over the last few years, you know he does not give a shit about what you think

So, I hope those of you dissatisfied with Paul’s conservatism, Nader’s unelectability and the Bush legacy will get together and push Obama after he gets elected. I think it’s the best for which we can realistically hope. Otherwise I hope you’re smart enough to get the fuck out of the country before McCain asks you to serve in a century-long, unwinnable war.

see

After Hillary, Voting With Conscience and Pride by Joel S. Hirschhorn

Goodman Questions Sen. Obama on Heeding Iraqis’ Call for Full U.S. Withdrawal

McCain’s Pastor Problem: The Video By David Corn

Ralph Nader Announces Candidacy (videos) (updated)

Pastor Hagee Blames Homosexuals For Katrina! AGAIN!

The All-White Elephant in the Room + Hagee compares Roman Church to Hitler

Clips From Hagee’s Sermons – Scary Stuff (video)

Does The Brownshirt Party Have Aces Up Its Sleeve? By Paul Craig Roberts

McCain Sound Bytes the MSM Ignored (videos)

So? … A Note from Michael Moore (+ video)

McCain-John

Obama-Barack

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5,000 Sign Petition Supporting Dialogue with Hamas (action alert)

Dandelion Salad

Carter Center
Press Releases
9 May 2008

Contact:
Robert Naiman, Just Foreign Policy, 217-979-2857
Cecilie Surasky, Jewish Voice for Peace, 510-410-4202

WASHINGTON, D.C

Jewish Voice for Peace and Just Foreign Policy have presented former U.S. President Jimmy Carter with a petition signed by 5,000 of their members supporting his meeting with Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal. The petition is being delivered to the three remaining Democratic and Republican presidential candidates this week.

“In a joint effort, our two organizations have collected signatures to this petition over the last several weeks. … Please accept this as an expression of appreciation for your recent efforts toward creating a lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians and as encouragement for you to continue despite the criticism from many sectors. Peace demands courage,” the groups said in a letter delivered to President Carter on Thursday.

The text of the petition reads: “I support peace between Israelis and Palestinians. Jimmy Carter speaks for me when he says that resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict requires talking to Hamas. 64% of Israelis have said they support talks with Hamas. Please support including talks with Hamas in efforts to achieve peace between Israelis and Palestinians.”

“I am grateful for the efforts of Jewish Voice for Peace, Just Foreign Policy and others working for the cause of peace in the Middle East. Public dialogue and awareness are crucial to achieving the goals of peace with security for Israel and peace with justice for Palestinians,” said President Carter.

The petition was signed by 5,000 individuals from all 50 states. A copy of the petition can be found on-line at: www.justforeignpolicy.org/mideastpetition.pdf.

***

Jewish Voice for Peace is one of the largest Jewish peace organizations in the U.S. with chapters across the country and an advisory board that includes Pulitzer winner Tony Kushner, actor Ed Asner, and poet Adrienne Rich as well as other respected rabbis, artists, scholars and activists. JVP is dedicated to promoting a US foreign policy in the Middle East based on democracy, human rights and respect for international law.

Just Foreign Policy is an independent and non-partisan membership organization founded in 2006. Our Board includes Julian Bond, chairman of the NAACP; former Congressman Tom Andrews; former California State Senator Tom Hayden; Robert L. Borosage, co-director of the Campaign for America’s Future; and Jeff Faux, Founding President of the Economic Policy Institute.

***

Support Jimmy Carter: US Needs to Talk to Hamas

Sign the petition

Former President Jimmy Carter, predictably, is being denounced for meeting with the exiled leader of Hamas in Syria on April 18, 2008.

Carter’s critics are wrong. Talking to Hamas, which won the January 2006 Palestinian legislative elections, is a necessary part of creating peace. As Carter himself said, “There’s no doubt in anyone’s mind that, if Israel is ever going to find peace with justice concerning the relationship with their next-door neighbors, that Hamas will have to be included in the process.”

Please sign our petition — co-sponsored by “A Just Foreign Policy” — to Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain asking them to support former President Carter and support talks with Hamas.

see

Jews Speak out for the Methodist Churches to Divest From Israel

Bush administration moves to exploit Burma cyclone disaster

Dandelion Salad

by Joe Kay
Global Research, May 9, 2008
wsws.org

The Bush administration lost no time in seeking to exploit the devastating tragedy in Burma (Myanmar). It has seized upon the cyclone that struck the country over the weekend, killed at least 20,000 and likely many more, to aggressively push its foreign policy agenda in Asia.

On Tuesday, Bush held a special ceremony at the White House to sign a bill giving Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi a Congressional Gold Medal. He used the occasion to place deliberately provocative conditions on any disbursement of aid to the ravaged country, beyond an initial token sum.

“The United States has made an initial aid contribution, but we want to do a lot more,” Bush declared. “We’re prepared to move US Navy assets to help find those who’ve lost their lives, to help find the missing, to help stabilize the situation. But in order to do so, the military junta must allow our disaster assessment teams into the country.”

So far, the US embassy has authorized the release of a paltry $250,000—less than half the cost of a single Tomahawk cruse missile of the type used by the US Navy to kill a Somali rebel last week. Later Tuesday, the administration pledged an additional $3 million to be allocated by a USAID disaster response team.

The very fact that the US is making aid to Burma conditional upon the satisfaction of certain demands is itself an outrage. Bush did not say why it was necessary for the US to carry out its own assessment in order to release more aid, nor did he elaborate on what was meant by promises that the US military would help “stabilize the situation.” US Navy ships are standing by off the coast of Thailand to intervene.

These pledges are certainly not intended as selfless humanitarian gestures. The Bush administration has been seeking to undermine the Burmese military regime for years and seized on protests last year by Buddhist monks to slap economic sanctions on the country and its rulers. There is no doubt that the United States would be happy to exploit the current tragedy to get a military foothold in the country.

The World Socialist Web Site holds no brief for the Burmese military junta, a brutal regime that has exercised dictatorial control over a largely impoverished country. However, US and European machinations, including the promotion of Suu Kyi, have nothing to do with concern for the democratic rights or economic well-being of the population. As always, the humanitarian pretensions of the US government are carefully calibrated to coincide with the interests of the American ruling class.

In the case of Burma, the US is interested in countering the influence of China, which has closer ties with the military regime and sees the country as a critical point of access into the Indian Ocean. As far as the Bush administration is concerned, the population of the country is only a bargaining chip in the pursuit of geo-strategic objectives.

US energy giants, including the Chevron oil corporation, also have interests in Burma. While the Bush administration has placed economic sanctions on the country, these have not affected Chevron’s multibillion-dollar investments through its subsidiary Unocal. Human rights groups have accused Chevron of complicity in abuses in Burma intended to protect its pipeline routes.

The statements by the Bush administration must also be seen in the context of its treatment of populations around the world, including in the United States itself. On Monday, US First Lady Laura Bush was the first from the White House to respond to the cyclone, using the opportunity to chastise the government for failing to warn the population and adequately prepare for the consequences.

“Although they were aware of the threat,” she said, “Burma’s state-run media failed to issue a timely warning to citizens in the storm’s path. The response to the cyclone is just the most recent example of the junta’s failure to meet its people’s basic needs.”

The hypocrisy and cynicism of this statement are so glaring that one wonders if it is not intentionally provocative. This August 29 will mark the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, the massive storm that struck Louisiana and Mississippi, killing at least 1,800 people. The hurricane destroyed and flooded New Orleans, a major American city.

The US and local governments had been aware for decades of the potential for a deadly flood in New Orleans, but there was no evacuation plan in place, and no plan to meet the needs of those trapped or displaced. Tens of thousands remained trapped for days in the Louisiana Superdome. Many thousands who lost their homes were placed in temporary FEMA trailers, and in 2007 it was revealed that these trailers contained extremely high levels of formaldehyde, a toxic chemical.

The devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina was largely preventable, but due to gross governmental indifference and negligence, the levee systems of New Orleans were denied necessary investments and allowed to decay—only one of many examples of the American government’s “failure to meet its people’s basic needs.”

The CRG grants permission to cross-post original Global Research articles on community internet sites as long as the text & title are not modified. The source and the author’s copyright must be displayed. For publication of Global Research articles in print or other forms including commercial internet sites, contact: crgeditor@yahoo.com

www.globalresearch.ca contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available to our readers under the provisions of “fair use” in an effort to advance a better understanding of political, economic and social issues. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material for purposes other than “fair use” you must request permission from the copyright owner.

For media inquiries: crgeditor@yahoo.com
© Copyright Joe Kay, wsws.org, 2008
The url address of this article is: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8938

see

Why the propaganda campaign for international intervention in Burma?

Cyclone-hit Myanmar town struggles to rebuild (video)

Organizations to Donate for Aid Relief for Myanmar

Why the propaganda campaign for international intervention in Burma?

Dandelion Salad

By Peter Symonds
http://www.wsws.org
10 May 2008

The catastrophe wrought by Cyclone Nargis on the Burmese people has provoked an extraordinary campaign by the US and allied powers, and in the international media, demanding that the military junta open its borders to aid and aid officials as well as to American military aircraft, troops and warships. Once again an attempt is being made to stampede public opinion with heartrending images of desperate survivors and devastated towns, accompanied by an incessant drumbeat condemning the Burmese regime for its inadequate aid efforts, its insularity, and its failure to accept international, especially American, aid.

One should immediately pause and recall the outcome of similar “humanitarian” exercises. In 1999, the plight of Kosovan refugees was exploited by the US and its allies to wage war against Serbia and transform the province into a NATO protectorate largely “cleansed” of its Serbian minority. In the same year, Australia, with the backing of the US, used the violence of Indonesian-backed militias to justify a military intervention into East Timor to install a regime sympathetic to Canberra’s economic and strategic interests. After nearly a decade the local populations in both countries continue to live in appalling conditions, with none of their fundamental needs having been met.

…continued

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

Cyclone-hit Myanmar town struggles to rebuild (video)

Organizations to Donate for Aid Relief for Myanmar

Hizbollah rules west Beirut in Iran’s proxy war with US by Robert Fisk

Dandelion Salad

by Robert Fisk
http://www.independent.co.uk
Saturday, 10 May 2008

Another American humiliation. The Shia gunmen who drove past my apartment in west Beirut yesterday afternoon were hooting their horns, making V-signs, leaning out of the windows of SUVs with their rifles in the air, proving to the Muslims of the capital that the elected government of Lebanon has lost.

And it has. The national army still patrols the streets, but solely to prevent sectarian killings or massacres. Far from dismantling the pro-Iranian Hizbollah’s secret telecommunications system – and disarming the Hizbollah itself – the cabinet of Fouad Siniora sits in the old Turkish serail in Beirut, denouncing violence with the same authority as the Iraqi government in Baghdad’s green zone.

The Lebanese army watches the Hizbollah road-blocks. And does nothing. As a Tehran versus Washington conflict, Iran has won, at least for now. Walid Jumblatt, the Druze leader and MP and a pro-American supporter of Mr Siniora’s government, is isolated in his home in west Beirut, but has not been harmed. The same applies to Saad Hariri, one of the most prominent government MPs and the son of the murdered former prime minister Rafik Hariri. He remains in his west Beirut palace in Koreitem, guarded by police and soldiers but unable to move without Hizbollah’s approval. The symbolism is everything.

…continued

h/t: Cem Ertür

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

Civil war in Lebanon? + Lebanon Descends Into Chaos By Robert Fisk + Nasrallah address Lebanon

Bill Moyers Journal: California Nurses Association

Dandelion Salad

Bill Moyers Journal
PBS
May 9, 2008

In this weeks BILL MOYERS JOURNAL, Rose Ann Demaro, the Executive Director of the California Nurses Association, argued that calling America’s approach to health care a “system” is innaccurate.If you look at health care in America, there is no health care “system.” There’s a health care industry thats major objective is profit-making — which means not providing the patient all of the care that they need, discharging patients early, patients without insurance being treated differently than wealthy people, frankly. And that is the health care “system” in America. Those who can afford it get to live and those who can’t suffer needlessly.

…continued

Video link

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

The Sorry State of Health Care in America by Ralph Nader

Desperate For Health Care

How to Get Universal Health Care by Joel S. Hirschhorn

The McCain Health Plan: Millions Lose Coverage, Health Costs Worsen, & Insurance & Drug Industries Win

US Relief Organization Takes Expedition to the USA (video) + What have we become as a nation?

No End to Media Myths About Healthcare Policy

Health Care

Bill Moyers Journal: Philippe Sands

Dandelion Salad

Bill Moyers Journal
PBS
May 9, 2008

In his new book, TORTURE TEAM: RUMSFELD’S MEMO AND THE BETRAYAL OF AMERICAN VALUES, Philippe Sands draws on official documents and interviews with key players to explain how the U.S. Military went from interrogations strictly regulated by the U.S. ARMY FIELD MANUAL 34-52 to enhanced interrogations that included sleep deprivation, nudity, stress positions, and water boarding.

As Sands explains in an interview with Scott Horton in THE NEW REPUBLIC:

When the administration released the December 2002 and other memos, it told a story that essentially said this: The new interrogation techniques came from the bottom up and had nothing to do with policy decisions driven from the top. I wanted to explore the truth of that account, by trying to talk to as many of the people involved in the decision as I could.

…continued

Video link

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

On Torture and “Administration Interrogation Rules” by Prof Marjorie Cohn

Philippe Sands on the White House Role in Sanctioning Torture

Philippe Sands: Beyond the Torture Debate (video)

John Yoo-4th Amendment-Torture

Unrelated Moyers’ posts:

Bill Moyers Journal: Body of War: Donahue & Spiro (videos)

Bill Moyers Journal: Rick Karr on Government Secrecy (Sibel Edmonds) + Viewer Mail

Bill Moyers Journal: Jeremy Scahill on Blackwater (video; Iraq)

9/11 Contradictions: Mohamed Atta’s Mitsubishi & His Luggage

Dandelion Salad

by Prof. David Ray Griffin
Global Research, May 9, 2008
The Canadian

At the core of the official story about 9/11 is the claim that the four airliners that crashed that day had been taken over by a band of al-Qaeda hijackers led by Mohamed Atta. No proof was ever provided for this claim. But various kinds of evidence have been offered, the most important of which was reportedly found in Atta’s luggage after the attacks. The materials in this luggage were said to confirm the suspicion that the planes had been hijacked by Atta and fellow Muslims. As Joel Achenbach wrote in a Washington Post story on September 16, 2001:

Atta is thought to have piloted American Airlines Flight 11, the first to slam into the World Trade Center. A letter written by Atta, left in his luggage at Boston’s Logan Airport, said he planned to kill himself so he could go to heaven as a martyr. It also contained a Saudi passport, an international driver’s license, instructional videos for flying Boeing airliners and an Islamic prayer schedule. (“’You Never Imagine’ A Hijacker Next Door.”)

This discovery was clearly very helpful in making the case against Atta and al-Qaeda.

But why was Atta’s luggage there to be discovered? Achenbach said: “Officials believe that Atta and [Abdul] Alomari rented a car in Boston, drove to Portland, Maine, and took a room Monday night at the Comfort Inn . . . . They then flew on a short flight Tuesday morning from Portland to Boston, changing to Flight 11.”

But why did Atta’s luggage not make it on to Flight 11? A 9/11 staff statement suggested that it was a tight connection, saying: “The Portland detour almost prevented Atta and Omari from making Flight 11 out of Boston. In fact, the luggage they checked in Portland failed to make it onto the plane” (Staff Statement No. 16, June 16, 2004). When The 9/11 Commission Report appeared the following month, however, this suggestion was missing. Indeed, the Commission, after saying that “Atta and Omari arrived in Boston at 6:45,” added that “American Airlines Flight 11 [was] scheduled to depart at 7:45” (9/11 Commission Report [henceforth 9/11CR], 1-2).

If there was almost an hour for the luggage to be transferred, why was it left behind? We might suppose that the ground crew was careless. American Airlines reported, however, that “Atta was the only passenger among the 81 aboard American Flight 11 whose luggage didn’t make the flight” (Paul Sperry, WorldNetDaily.com, September 11, 2002).

There was, moreover, even a bigger mystery: Why did Atta, if he was already in Boston on September 10, take the trip to Portland and stay overnight, thereby necessitating the early morning commuter flight? If the commuter flight had been delayed by an hour, Atta and al-Omari would have missed the connection. There would have been only three hijackers to take control of Flight 11. Atta, moreover, was reportedly the designated pilot for this flight and also the ringleader of the whole operation, which, after years of planning, he might have had to call off.

Why he would have made such a risky trip has never been explained. A year after the attacks, FBI Director Robert Mueller, testifying to the Congressional Joint Inquiry into 9/11, said:

[T]he day before the attacks, Mohamed Atta . . . picked up Abdul Aziz . . . and drove to Portland, Maine. They checked into the Comfort Inn in South Portland. . . . [T]heir reason for going there, to date, remains unclear. (“Statement for the Record,” Joint Intelligence Committee Inquiry, Sept. 26, 2002)

Two years later, the 9/11 Commission wrote: “No physical, documentary, or analytical evidence provides a convincing explanation of why Atta and Omari drove to Portland, Maine, from Boston on the morning of September 10, only to return to Logan on Flight 5930 on the morning of September 11” (9/11CR 451n1).

We have, therefore, two mysteries. Why would Atta have risked the trip to Portland? And why did his luggage fail to get loaded onto Flight 11? My book, 9/11 Contradictions, is about contradictions, not mysteries. Clues to these mysteries, however, can be found by exploring a full-fledged contradiction: the fact that the Atta-to-Portland story contradicts stories that appeared in the press in the first days after 9/11.

The Original Story: Boston and the Bukharis

According to the official account, as we have seen, Atta drove to Portland in a blue Nissan Altima, then flew on the morning of September 11 from Portland to the Boston airport, where the incriminating materials were found in his luggage later that day. In the first few days after 9/11, however, the story was very different.

On September 12, a CNN report distinguished between Atta and the men who flew from Portland to Boston.

Law enforcement sources say that two of the suspected hijackers . . . are brothers that lived [in Vero Beach, Florida]. . . . One of them is Adnan Bukhari. We have a photograph of him. . . . Also living in Vero Beach, Bukhari’s brother, Ameer. . . . Law enforcement sources . . . tell CNN that the Bukhari brothers were believed to have been on one of the two flights out of Boston . . . . Also we can report to you that a car impounded in Portland, Maine, according to law enforcement authorities, was rented at Boston Logan Airport and driven to Portland, Maine. Now the Maine state police confirm that two of the suspected hijackers were on a U.S. Air flight out of [the Portland airport.]. . . The FBI is also looking at two more suspected hijackers . . . , Mohammad Atta and Marwan Yusef Alshehhi.” (“America Under Attack: How Could It Happen?” Although the reporter, Susan Candiotti, said “Logan Airport,” the information she received had to have referred to the Portland airport, from which the U.S. Airways flight originated, and about which the Maine state police would have had information.)

Another CNN report that same day stated that the incriminating materials were found in a car at the Boston airport and, while discussing the Nissan found at the Portland airport, did not connect it to Atta:

Law enforcement officials confirmed that a car was seized at Boston’s Logan International Airport and that suspicious materials were found. The Boston Herald said there were Arabic language flight training manuals in the car. . . . Meanwhile, in Portland, Maine, police said that two individuals who traveled by plane from that city to Boston were under investigation. . . . Maine authorities said a car—a rented silver Nissan Altima with Massachusetts plates—was seized from the Portland airport Tuesday evening. (“US Says It Has Identified Hijackers”)

On the next day, September 13, CNN named the Bukharis as the renters of the Nissan and said that the car found at Boston, now identified as a Mitsubishi, was rented by Atta:

“Two of the men were brothers, . . . Adnan Bukhari and Ameer Abbas Bukhari. . . . The two rented a car, a silver-blue Nissan Altima, from an Alamo car rental at Boston’s Logan Airport and drove to an airport in Portland, Maine, where they got on US Airways Flight 5930 at 6 AM Tuesday headed back to Boston. . . . A Mitsubishi sedan impounded at Logan Airport was rented by [Mohamed] Atta, sources said. The car contained materials, including flight manuals, written in Arabic that law enforcement sources called “helpful” to the investigation.” (“Two Brothers among Hijackers”)

Another CNN report that same day said that law enforcement authorities were led to the Bukhari brothers by documents connected to the Nissan (“Hijack Suspect Detained, Cooperating with FBI”).

A Problem Emerges

However, that same day (September 13), CNN issued a correction (“Feds Think They’ve Identified Some Hijackers”), pointing out that neither of the Bukharis had died on 9/11: Ameer had died the year before and Adnan was still alive. CNN apologized for the “misinformation,” which had been “[b]ased on information from multiple law enforcement sources.”

However, this discovery did not immediately lead to a complete change of story. For example, the next day (September 14), CNN said: “A Mitsubishi sedan [Atta] rented was found at Boston’s Logan Airport. Arabic language materials were found in the car” (Mike Fish, “Fla. Flight Schools May Have Trained Hijackers”).

The Emergence of the Final Story

That same day, however, the story began to change more drastically. An Associated Press report, referring to “two suspects in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center,” said:

One of the two suspects who boarded a flight in Portland was Mohamed Atta, 33. . . . The 2001 Nissan Altima used by the men came from the same Boston rental location as another car used by additional suspects that contained incriminating materials when it was seized at Boston’s Logan Airport.

Once in Maine, the suspects spent the night at the Comfort Inn in South Portland before boarding the plane the next morning. (“Portland Police Eye Local Ties”)

Suddenly, the Nissan Altima had been driven to Portland by Atta and his companion, who had then flown back to Boston the next morning. But the transition to what would become the accepted narrative was not yet complete. The incriminating materials were still found in a rental car left at Logan—although this car was now said to have been rented by unnamed “additional suspects,” not by Atta.

The complete transition was made on September 16, in the aforementioned Washington Post article by Joel Achenbach, which had the incriminating evidence found in Atta’s luggage.

This new story was soon fleshed out with various details, including physical evidence that Atta and al-Omari had been in Portland the night before the attacks. One article said:

The FBI released a detailed chronology Thursday [October 4] showing that two of the suspected hijackers in the Sept. 11 attack on the World Trade Center spent their final hours in Greater Portland. . . . After checking in at the motel, Atta and Alomari were seen . . . [b]etween 8 and 9 PM . . . at Pizza Hut; at 8:31 PM, they were videotaped by a KeyBank automatic teller machine, and videotaped again at 8:41 PM at a Fast Green ATM next to Pizzeria Uno. . . . At . . . 9:22 PM, Atta was caught on videotape in the Wal-Mart in Scarborough. (“The Night Before Terror,” Portland Press Herald, October 5, 2001)

The Mysteries and the Contradiction

This new story solved a problem created by the discovery that the Bukharis had not died on 9/11—how to explain why a rental car left at the Portland airport could have led authorities to two of the hijackers. This solution, however, created the mystery of why Atta would have taken this trip plus the problem of explaining the well-reported fact that incriminating materials had been found at Logan Airport. This latter problem was solved by saying that they were found in Atta’s luggage, which did not make it onto Flight 11. But this solution created, in turn, the mystery as to why Atta’s luggage failed to make the flight. The main problem facing the new story, however, is simply the fact that it is a new story, which radically contradicts what the authorities had said the first few days.

The 9/11 Commission dealt with this contradiction by simply ignoring it. It did not mention the early reports that the Nissan left at the Portland airport had documents leading the FBI to Adnan and Ameer Bukhari, that the Bukharis had taken the early morning flight from Portland to Boston, that the FBI was led to Atta (along with Marwan al-Shehhi) by information found in a Mitsubishi left at Boston’s Logan Airport, or that this Mitsubishi was where the treasure trove of information was found. It instead simply told the new story as if it had been the story all along.

Congress and the press need to ask why this contradiction exists and why the 9/11 Commission ignored it. This essay is an abbreviated version of Chapter 16 of Dr. Griffin’s 9/11 Contradictions: An Open Letter to Congress and the Press (Northampton: Olive Branch, March, 2008).

The CRG grants permission to cross-post original Global Research articles on community internet sites as long as the text & title are not modified. The source and the author’s copyright must be displayed. For publication of Global Research articles in print or other forms including commercial internet sites, contact: crgeditor@yahoo.com

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© Copyright David Ray Griffin, The Canadian, 2008
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see

David Ray Griffin on the Global Research News Hour

9/11 Contradictions: When Did Cheney Enter the Underground Bunker?

Much Ado About Nothing by Guadamour

GUADAMOUR

by Guadamour
Dandelion Salad
featured writer

Guadamour’s blog post
May 10, 2008

There is an incredible amount of ink being spilt over the nominations for the US presidential race.

Just yesterday I read an article about Obama which detailed what I suspected all along. It explained how Obama was taken under the wing of a very influential Democratic Illinois Senate leader. Up until that time Obama had been a do-nothing member of the Illinois Senate. With this leaders backing it showed how it was made to look like Obama introduced an incredible number of bills and managed to get the bills passed.

The Senate leader realized that Obama has charismatic appeal and had bigger things in mind for Obama. The leader backed Obama for the US Senate and Obama was duly elected.

The Senate leader was not to be forgotten. One of the first things Obama managed to do as a Senator was to get a pork barrel earmark directed towards this Senate leaders district in Illinois. This is politics as usual, yet Obama runs on a platform of change.

Obama is an impressive public speaker, a very bright man and charismatic, but he does not represent change.

This same article explains how Obama’s famed huge list of donors are the same deep pocket backers of most all political campaigns.

If Obama is politics as usual, then it is patently obvious that the same is true of Clinton and McCain.

The article makes a good argument for voting for Ralph Nader. I comment back, writing that Cynthia McKinney would be a better choice. And I believe she is.

However, I thought about it some more. If change is really wanted, who is president is not really that relevant. The longest lasting impact of a president is who he or she appoints to the Supreme Court. Since that is the case, Bush has done long lasting damage to the country by his overly conservative knee-jerk political appoints.

The President doesn’t always get his way with his Supreme Court appoints. The Senate many times has rejected Supreme Court nominations. That assumes there is a Senate that is willing and able to stand up to the President.

That brings us to the real point here. George W. Bush has been the most effective President in the history of the United States of America. That doesn’t mean he is the best president or that has used the power that Congress has seen fit to concede to him for good. It simply means that he has gotten his way with Congress and defied Congress more than in other president in history.

If an effective Congress had been sitting when Bush illegally (and Congress could have easily taken steps to prove this) assumed the Presidency, Bush would not have had the opportunity to usurp powers.

Congress could have and should have stopped the President, and long ago should have impeached and convicted the President.

However, this Congress has long lacked a backbone.

I can only come up with three members of the House of Representative (Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, Dr. Ron Paul of Texas and Robert Wexler of Florida) who are men of integrity and cannot be bought and stand up for the rights of Congress and the people who elected them.

As far as the Senate goes, I can only come up with two names, Patrick Leahy of Vermont and Fiengold of Wisconsin. These men stand up for what Congress is suppose to stand up for.

These five men are less that one percent of the Congress.

If the people of this country want to see change, irregardless of who is elected president, they need to unite behind candidates of the US House of Representatives and the US Senate who will vote as their constituents want, not as corporate lobbyists want, and not as their political party wants. These men and women will vote their conscience, but they can only so vote if the electorate gets behind them and puts them in office, and lets them know that they will only remain in office as long as they remain true to themselves and their constituents.

That is not currently the case. If change is going to happen, it is going to take place in the Congress and not in the executive branch.

I urge everyone to get involved in the US Representative race in their district and if there is a Senate seat up for election in their state. Forget about the presidential race. As long as the two-party system controls politics, no one who votes for a presidential candidate is going to win. The political parties and the candidates are aware of this, and they don’t want it to change.

The only way they can be made to change the system is through the Congressional races.

see

After Hillary, Voting With Conscience and Pride by Joel S. Hirschhorn

Stalled Morales puts faith in referendum

Dandelion Salad

Rory Carroll Latin America correspondent
The Guardian
Saturday May 10 2008

Bolivia’s president, Evo Morales, is to attempt to revive his faltering efforts to transform South America’s poorest country by gambling his presidency in a recall vote.

Morales agreed on Thursday to hold a nationwide recall referendum within three months, in a risky attempt to break the political deadlock over reforms designed to favour Bolivia’s impoverished indigenous population.

“If we politicians can’t agree, it’s best that the population decide our destiny,” he said in a nationally televised address.

The measure will also require the vice-president and Bolivia’s nine state governors to face the voters, a crucial test for the government and the opposition in a polarised country.

…continued

h/t: Blink

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

US backs eastern seccession in Bolivia (video)

Russia and Georgia on the brink of armed conflict over Abkhazia

Dandelion Salad

By Vladimir Volkov
http://www.wsws.org
10 May 2008

Tensions between Russia and Georgia have intensified to the brink of open armed conflict.

Both sides accuse each other of escalating tensions and armed preparations, threatening to plunge the region into a new round of bloody conflicts. Since the late 1980s and early 1990s, conflicts in the Caucasus have taken the lives of tens of thousands of people.

The center of the confrontation at present is Abkhazia, a small territory in the northwestern part of Georgia bordering Russia and located along the shore of the Black Sea. The majority of the population in Abkhazia carries Russian passports.

The Abkhazian side claims that 1,500 Georgian troops have been sent into the Kodori Valley on the border of the republic and 2,000 into the Zugdidi region. According to Russia, practically every day there are deliveries of military supplies to Georgia, particularly from Turkey.

…continued

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

US backs eastern seccession in Bolivia (video)

Dandelion Salad

TheRealNews

More at http://therealnews.com/c.php?c=080501YT

Minority landholders vote for independence
Bolivia’s landowning eastern elite voted on Sunday for autonomy from President Evo Morales’ central government. According to author Forrest Hylton the US government has spent up to $125 million dollars supporting the secession movement, a movement which has been disregarded by a large percentage of the Bolivian population as well as governments from Bolivia’s neighboring countries.

see

We Must Democratize Our Economic Institutions by Manila Ryce

Fight for Bolivia’s future lies behind referendum

Talk to Jazeera: Evo Morales (videos)