Sunday, November 28, 2010

cyber attack of wikileaks continues

Cyber attack on wikileaks — continues

 
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So far, only a few foreign links work, the Czeck for one.  German definitetly down, experts agree.
Publication in the newspapers noted below.  These tweets are from Wikileaks.
wikileaks
El Pais, Le Monde, Speigel, Guardian & NYT will publish many US embassy cables tonight, even if WikiLeaks goes down about 1 hour ago via web
WikiLeaks wikileaks
We are currently under a mass distributed denial of service attack. about 1 hour ago via web
wikileaks
El Pais, Le Monde, Speigel, Guardian & NYT will publish many US embassy cables tonight, even if WikiLeaks goes down about 1 hour ago via web
WikiLeaks wikileaks
We are currently under a mass distributed denial of service attack. about 1 hour ago via web

Wikileaks -- Extra


I'm not all that sure about this, but it seems that all governments have joined us in a cyber attacks on the Wikileaks node.

That is why the documents have not yet been released.

Yet.


Friday, November 26, 2010

A solution to Palestine and a few other things



This has been quite a fascinating few days.  Up until a couple of days ago, the most visited posting on this site was on the Big Uneasy, an alert to Harry Shearer's film.  You can download his podcasts from KCRW or a few other places.

At least I could look at the WORDPRESS stats analysis and see how many people visited any particular day, attracted by a particular post. 

Well, that was all shot to hell the last few days.  First, the TSA bumper stickers drew five times that previous response.  Then the TSA calendar drew five times THAT.  Now, I posted them because they made a good topical point and because they were funny, genuinely funny.  However, I wonder how many juveniles went to see the TSA CALENDER hoping to see some T&A.

At any rate, this has to stop, you hear me?  See, the stats are presented in a bargraph format and, of course, it adjusts to accomodate the highest number of posts on a particular day, as is customary.  The problem is that, as I look at the graph, it looks as if nobody was EVER interested in ANYTHING I posted over the past year or so. 

So, I'm posting something more serious, meaningful, and worthy of consideration and thoughtful discussion.  That will certainly take care of the emerging popularity of the blog.

Another problem with WORDPRESS is that the print seems so small and I can find no way to enlarge it.  Sorry.

So --  Jeff Halper posted the following on his ZNET page (and I would encourage you to check that page out if you are interested in getting some accurate information on anything).  It is strange that what Arafat once threatened and that freaked out Israeli and U.S. administrations so much is actually what may provide a solution to all of the misery there.

It would certainly be a better solution to promising billions of dollars to Israel, along with massive weapons, so they MIGHT POSSIBLY SUSPEND ILLEGAL CONSTRUCTION FOR THREE MONTHS in occupied territory.  The Israeli government right now is busy passing laws that will make getting a peaceful settlement as unlikely as Obama getting the START treaty approved by Congress. 


Palestine 2011

Struggling as I have for the past decades to grasp the dynamics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and find ways to get out of this interminable and absolutely superfluous conflict, I have been two-thirds successful. After many years of activism and analysis, I think I have put my finger on the first third of the equation: What is the problem? My answer, which has withstood the test of time and today is so evident that it elicits the response…“duh”…is that all Israeli governments are unwaveringly determined to maintain complete control of Palestine/Israel from the Mediterranean to the Jordan River, frustrating any just and workable solution based on Palestinian claims to self-determination. There will be no negotiated settlement, period.

The second part of the equation – how can the conflict be resolved? – is also easily answerable. I don’t mean entering into the one state/two state conundrum and deciding which option best. Under certain circumstances both could work, and I can think of at least 3-4 other viable options as well, including my favorite, a Middle Eastern economic confederation. The Palestinian think tank Passia published a collection of twelve proposed solutions a few years ago. What I mean is, it is not difficult to identify the essential elements of any solution. They are, in brief,

·         A just, workable and lasting peace must be inclusive of the two peoples living in Palestine/Israel;

·         Any solution must provide for a national expression of each people, not merely a democratic formula based on one person-one vote;

·         It must provide economic viability to all the parties;

·         No solution will work that is not based on human rights, international law and UN resolutions.

·         The refugee issue, based on the right of return, must be addressed squarely.

·         A workable peace must be regional in scope; it cannot be confined merely to Israel/Palestine; and

·         A just peace must address the security concerns of all the parties and countries in the region.

These seven elements, I would submit, must configure any just solution. If they are all included, a settlement of the conflict could take many different forms. If, however, even one is missing, no solution will work, no matter how good it looks on paper.

That leaves the third and most intractable part of the equation: how do we get there? Employing the linear analysis we have used over the years, you can’t. In those terms we are at a dead-end of a dead “process.” Israel will never end its Occupation voluntarily; the best it may agree to is apartheid, but the permanent warehousing of the Palestinians is more what it has in mind. Given the massive “facts on the ground” Israel has imposed on the Occupied Territories, the international community will not exert enough pressure on Israel to realize even a two-state solution (which leaves Israel on 78% of historic Palestine, with no right of refugee return); given the veto power over any political process enjoyed by the American Congress, locked into an unshakable bi-partisan “pro-Israel” position, the international community cannot exert that required pressure. And the Palestinians, fragmented and with weak leadership, have no clout. Indeed, they’re not even in the game. In terms of any sort of rational, linear, government-led “peace process,” we have arrived at the end of the road.
                                                     
And yet I’m optimistic that 2011 will witness a game-changing “break” that will create a new set of circumstances in which a just peace is possible. That jolt which smashes the present dead-end paradigm must come from outside the present “process.” It can take one of two forms. The first possible game-changer is already being discussed: a unilateral declaration by the Palestinian Authority of a state based on the 1949 armistice lines (the 1967 “Green Line”), which then applies for membership in the UN. This, I believe, would force the hand of the international community. Most of the countries of the world would recognize a Palestinian state – including not a few in Europe – placing the US, Britain, Germany and other reluctant powers in a difficult if not impossible situation, including isolation and even irrelevancy. Indeed, a Palestinians declaration of independence within those boundaries would be a unilateral act but rather one done in agreement with the member states of the UN, who have accepted the 1949/1967 borders as the basis of a solution. It conforms as well to the Road Map initiative led by the US itself.

Such a scenario, while still possible given the deadlock in negotiations, is unlikely, if only because the leadership of the Palestinian Authority lacks the courage to undertake such a bold initiative. A second one seems more likely: in 2011, the Palestinian Authority will either resign or collapse, throwing the Occupation back on the lap of Israel. Given the deadlock in negotiations, I can’t see the PA lasting even until August, when (sort-of) Prime Minister Salem Fayyad expects the international community to give the Palestinians a state. Even if the 90-day settlement freeze eventually comes into effect, Netanyahu will not negotiate borders during that period, the only issue worth discussing. Either fed up to the point of resigning – Abbas may be weak and pliable, but he is not a collaborator – or having lost so much credibility with its own people that it simply collapses, the fall of the PA would end definitively the present “process.”

The end or fall of the PA would create an intolerable and unsustainable situation. Israel would be forced to retake by force all the Occupied Territories, and unable to allow Hamas to step into the vacuum, would have to do so violently, perhaps even invading Gaza again and assuming permanent control. Having to support four million impoverished Palestinians with no economic infrastructure whatsoever would be an impossible burden (and hopefully the “donor community” would not enable the re-occupation by stepping in to prevent a “humanitarian crisis,” as it does today). Such a move on the part of Israel would also inflame the Muslim world and generate massive protests worldwide, again forcing the hand of the international community. Looked at in this way, the Palestinians have one source of enormous clout: they are the gatekeepers. Until they – the Palestinian people as a whole, not the PA – say the conflict is over, it’s not over. Israel and its erstwhile allies have the ability to make life almost unbearable for the Palestinians, but they cannot impose apartheid or warehousing. We, the millions supporting the Palestinian struggle the world over, will not let it go until the Palestinians signal that they have arrived at a settlement that they can live with. Until then, the conflict will remain open and globally disruptive. 

If any of these scenarios comes about and new possibilities of peace arise out of the violence and chaos that will ensue, the real question is: where will we be, the people who support a just, inclusive, workable and sustainable peace? Here in Israel/Palestine, unfortunately, there is no discussion over what may happen in the next year. Not only do we of the Palestinian and Israeli peace movements fail to give adequate direction and leadership to our civil society allies abroad, we tend to pursue “politics as normal” disconnected from the political processes around us, more reactive than pro-active. Despite its crucial importance to the Palestinian struggle, for instance, the BDS campaign moves along and accumulates strength, but is not accompanied by focused, timely campaigns intended to seize a political moment. When the Gaza flotilla was attacked and Israel was reeling from international condemnation, Palestinian and Israeli activists from all over the world – including Palestine/Israel – should have kicked into action. Sympathetic parliamentarians (and members of Congress) the world over should have been induced to introduce bills saying that if the Occupation does not end in a year their governments will end all military aid to Israel and preferential treatment. They might not have carried the day, but imagine the public debate they would have generated at that point of time. Instead the political moment fizzled.

We are at the cusp of another such moment today, and we still have time – though not much time – to organize. Activist and civil society groups abroad should ask their Palestinian and Israeli counterparts for their evaluation of the political moment and suggestions on what to do should the Palestinian Authority collapse together with the “peace process.” Though should be given over how to transform the BDS campaign and the infrastructure of resistance it is creating from a blunt instrument into one capable of more focused resistance – of mobilizing churches, trade unions and universities, for example, and by priming sympathetic politicians to act when the moment arrives? In the absence of an ANC-type organization to direct us, we have a much more difficult job of communicating and of coordinating our actions. But we are in touch with one another. The political moment looming just weeks or months ahead demands our attention.

Life in the Occupied Territories is about to get even more difficult, I believe, but perhaps we are finally approaching the breaking point. If that is the case, we must be there for the Palestinians on all the fronts: to protect them, to play our role in pushing the Occupation into unsustainability, to resist re-occupation, to act as watchdogs over political “processes” that threaten to impose apartheid in the guise of a two-state solution and, ultimately, to ensure that a just and lasting peace emerges. As weak and failed attempts by governments head for collapse, we must pick up the slack. 2011 is upon us.


Jeff Halper is the Director of The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD). He can be reached at <jeff@icahd.org>.


The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions is based in Jerusalem and has chapters in the United Kingdom and the United States.

Please visit our websites:

www.icahd.org
www.icahduk.org
www.icahdusa.org

From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives
URL: http://www.zcommunications.org/palestine-2011-by-jeff-halper

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

THE MOST ABSURD THING I HEARD THIS YEAR

THE ABSURD TIMES
SPECIAL AWARD
This has to be the most absurd quote I have heard this year.  I can not imagine hearing anything more absurd this year.  It comes to us from Alan Derschowitz, Law Professor at Harvard, who described Norm Finklestein as "Only Jewish on his parents' side."

Now I realize that many out there will say "What he meant was ...," but that would only be another absurd statement.  He is, as I mentioned, a Professor of Law at Harvard and ought to be able to say what he means.  

Miss TSA Calendar

But before I relay that, I need to post the most absurd quote of the year (see above).

Subject: FW: 2010 "Miss TSA" Calendar




  



 








Tuesday, November 23, 2010

New TSA Bumper Stickers

PostIf somehow you think you have the copyright, let me know and I will remove it.  Don't be an ass.

The TSA BUMPER STICKERS

In Uncategorized on November 23, 2010 by czardonic Edit
 
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One of you sent me this.  I then found it online.  It seems to be public domain.  If it is yours and you want it removed, let me know — don’t be an anal erotic ass about it like some.

New TSA Bumper Stickers [We Handle More Packages Than the USPS]

November 19, 2010
An email containing new TSA bumper stickers is making its way around Capitol Hill.
h/t SV

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Written by nolongerfamous · Filed Under Front Page, News

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Honest Charlie Revealed



I promised a few of you that I would explain why I used the nickname "Honest Charlie," and I am going to now,

BUT FIRST....


A few words about this planet and those who inhabit it:



From www.whatnowtoons.com, Keith Tucker sums up one idiocy well,

But I would like to continue.

I actually have not been on an airplane for over a decade.  Frankly, the idea of standing in line, walking past a great deal of idiocy, and not saying something that might be interpreted as a pun, is a formidable challenge to me.   I also remember one of the last times, in the 90s, when everything was x-rayed and searched, only to wind up at my destination, opening my briefcase, and seeing a 9-inch blade fall out, one I had confiscated years ago.   You have no idea what sort of temptation I find that.

Our "protectors", of course, are always searching for the previous danger, thus making clear to a potential terrorist what sort of tactics to explore the next time.  Remember that very strange, mentally retarded looking fellow, who attempted to burn the heel of his show with a kitchen match?  He is why hundreds of thousands of Americans are required to take off their shoes at the airport.  What terrorist with an IQ over 70 is going to contemplate repeating that fiasco and, if you find one, where is he going?

Now the choice is to pose for porno frontal nudity photos or be felt up. 

Is it time for a "Don't ask don't tell" policy for TSA employees?

"Ok, now I'm going to grab one nut in my hand both from the front to the back."
"Never mind, I'll pose for the smut shot."

Recently, an olive complexioned man was accosted after leaving the bathroom on an airplane.  They said he had to take his shoes off.  He said "But I'm wearing flip-flops!"  They landed the plane and had him arrested.

The senate will not pass the tax cut bill for anyone making up to a quarter of a million dollars.  Republicans insist that it has to go up to the first two-million.  Oh, yes, the median earnings of a Senator seems to be about 1.5 million. 

No extension of the unemployment benefits.  Can't be encouraging laziness, you know, or as the British call it the "work-shy".  Are those sick people really just "health shy?"

Oh, yes, Honest Charlie.  Well, I work in the mental health area and sometimes have to discharge a patient before they are well or, to put it another way, when their insurance will not pay anymore.  Some of them, especially females, borderline, become very clingy and high maintenance.  So, I don't use my real name.  Tired of being stalked.

So, once traveling along I-70, just escaping the Kingdom of Calloway (Calloway County), traveling West, I saw a used furniture store called "Honest Charlie's".  He eventually went out of business.  Some of my friends called me Charlie, so it fit.

But I did not use it until after I saw an old W.C. Fields movie.  He was tending bar, when someone gave him the straight line "How did you get the name "Honest John?"

Well, he answered in that wonderful inflection and voice something like this: "I was tending bar not so long ago in Upper Sandusky.  Every night, this gentleman would come in, come up to the bar, order a drink, and take this glass eye out and lay it on the bar.  When he finished his drink, he would pick up that glass eye and put it back in its socket.  One night, he forgets to pick up his glass eye and I put it in my pocket.  The next night he comes in and I says to him 'Here, here's your glass eye,' and ever since that night, I've been known as Honest John."

I liked that, and hence the handle.

So now you know the rest of the story.