Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Turning a new page

It's almost time for taking a long break... sorry my blog readers.  I fly out Thursday to prepare for the Sunday wedding between Skyprincess and myself.

Who knew it would take this long?  I certainly didn't.  I know we had a lot of planning to accomplished, but it just seemed like it took forever to get to this weekend.  I should be extremely nervous , but I'm not.  I'm odd like that.  The big stuff normally never bothers me, or even the little stuff, when I think about it.  Take selling my house.  When the agent called two weeks ago with the "offer" she was excited.  My tone sounded like I was agreeing to an appointment at Jiffy Lube for an oil change.  Monotoned and emotionless.

I'm not saying I'm not excited.  I'm just saying I'm not nervous.  I'm not having second thoughts or thinking of turning rabbit.  I'm just ready to have it over with so we can start our lives.  What I am looking forward to is the honeymoon in China.  So much so I am sure I will be disappointed.  That's one of the reasons I never try to build up too much expectation.  I am always disappointed in the end.

This has been a busy month for us.  Skyprincess's birthday was the 7th, mine is today, and the wedding this Sunday.  I'm not sure what Skyprincess is doing for my birthday, but she took my car this morning.  Some story about the Volvo dealership sending a notice it needs some service.  I think she got tired of seeing it so dirty and had it detailed.  We can't hide anything from each other.  She always knows what I'm up to, and I know the same.  The difference is that I never tell her I know it and act surprised.  Its much more fun that way.  Plus, I like her little surprises. If I let on I know about them, she might not go through with it!  How sad is that??

Since Hippolyte backed out of my wedding party, my side will be one short.  3 on Skyprincess's side and 2 on my side.  Now there is a chance I'll lose another due to the hurricane.  David is flying out on Orlando on Thursday about 8am.  Just when the hurricane should be over Orlando.  If he can't make it, we've talked about moving one of her people over to my party.  That should even things out.

So goodbye for now everyone.  I shall post again in a month!

Mizike, born in a bowl of water

Friday, August 25, 2006

Prouder, stronger, better

I'm not a good citizen.

It's rare if I vote.  I haven't voted in 8 years.  Yes, I missed the last two presidential elections.  There's a story behind why I missed the elections, but that's not what this post is about.

In a way, I'm what is wrong with this nation.  I have complaints, but have no activist convictions to actually do anything to improve things.  As most Americans, I see that my little voice has no effect on public policy.

But you know, deep down I know that is wrong.

When I was in 11th grade, I ran for my high school's FBLA president.  That's Future Business Leaders of America.  It was between myself and this really hateful bitty.  The bitty won.  I found out later she was using a smear campaign and calling up FBLA members.  Why not?  It works in all other elections.

That year I had two close friends running for the same office.  To be honest, I couldn't choose between them.  I left my ballot selection empty and that year the vote was a tie.  My vote would have been the deciding vote.

Now I'm not saying my single vote could have decided the last presidential election, but a few thousand more of me could have made the Gore/Bush election results turn out another way.  When I worked at the TV station, we'd have all night election result shows.  It would amaze me how few votes were being cast for candidates.  Precincts were being won by only a few hundred votes cast total.  Where are all the voters?

Although voting is a right of all citizens, it isn't being exercised.  And our political parties do all they can to ensure only like minded individuals vote.  The last presidential campaign, one political party did all they could to prevent voters from voting.  Some of their tactics included sending out flyers telling voters that due to the massive amount of voters on election day, they will now split up the elections to two days.  If you are a registered Party A voter, you vote on election day.  If you are a Party B voter, you vote the following day.  The mailed flyer looked very official, and many people didn't vote due to this.

Then there was the notice sent out by Political Party A that if you are overdue on your electric bill, you are not legally eligible to vote and any attempts to vote will subject you to possible arrest and fines.

Anyway... my point is that the current system of elective voting isn't working.  There is no incentive to vote.  The population of active voters is declining every election cycle.  How do we break out of this electoral malaise?

One suggestion has been to dangle a carrot in front of the voter.  Arizona has proposed just such a thing.  For every general election, every person who casts a vote is eligible for a $1 million award.  That's right, for merely casting a vote you could win $1 million dollars.

I think this is a brilliant move on Arizona's part.  How many people would love a chance at a free $1 million dollars.  I know a lot of people will protest that paying someone to vote is morally wrong.  A person should vote due to their civic duty.  I say, look at all the money we spend trying to raise voter awareness.  Voter turnout is a serious problem.  We spend millions and millions of dollars begging people to vote.  Why not take a small fraction of that money and use it as a carrot?  You could spend $100 million dollars trying to educate or even beg your citizens to vote and still not have as much an impact as offering $1 million.  It's money well spent.

This whole post started because I overheard two consultants talking.  Sujan, our BW consultant, has been trying to get his greencard for the past 4 years.  Its been stuck in the system that long.  He says the greencard is at the last process, but has been there for over a year.  He hopes it will be issued in September.

Sujan is someone who loves working in the US.  He's told me that everyone wants to work here.  That its the best place in the world to be.  And I sit back and wonder why am I not as excited as he is to be here.  Where is my wide eyed excitement waking up inside the borders of the US every morning?  Is it because familiarity breeds contempt?  Do I need to experience the oppression of other less liberal nations to appreciate America?

Perhaps I don't realize how well I have it.  I take for granted the freedoms that I have, even though I am angry with the current administrations intrusiveness.  Perhaps I really am not a very good citizen.  In this nation made up of extremes, which side is truly a good citizen?  I've always tried to run the middle of the road on most things, though I do tend to lean to the left.  I am not a hippy, pink-o, commie, child killing, granola eating, spotted owl protecting liberal.  A lot of my beliefs border on conservative and even more toward libertarianism.  I just wish the spark of wonderment that Sujan has would wear off.  It would be nice to wake up in this quiet mountain town and enjoy a Morning in America.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

But I'm 4F, honest!

Many people don't know this, but I tried to join the military service in my early twenties.  I was not in a position to continue with my education (finances) and was at a pretty much deadend job.  I looked at my options, and felt joining the military gave me a chance to gain job training I did not have access to at that time.

I guess I was of the mindset that if everything went wrong in life, I could always join the military.  It was my mental fallback when things go really tough.  If all else fails, become a soldier!

What I wanted, more than anything, was to become a pilot.  Not a fighter pilot, but something that would translate into civilian service.  Something that took patience and care.  I wanted to become a pilot for a midair refueling plane!  One of those huge planes used to refuel B52 bombers.

I marched down to the recruitment board to sign up.  They looked over their desk at this pimply fat kid and said, "no thanks.  got to lose that flab first.  you'll never pass the physical."  I was crushed.  The military didn't even want me!

Now I'm too old to join, and I'm at a place in life where joining the military is a bad choice.  First, there is the insane doctrine we have now.  I'd end up on the front line in Iraq or Afganistan.  Second, it's a HUGE cut in pay.  Third, I'm getting married and have no desire to go overseas away from my wife.  And fourth, I'm at a good place in life and the training I would get from the military would be beneficial to my career.

In my twenties, we saw the collapsed of the soviet union and the dominance of US policy take place.  We had a spectacular victory in the Gulf War 1.0, which saw recruitment soar.  Now, with the quagmire of Gulf War 2.1, recruitment is at a dangerous low.  We aren't recruiting enough boys to replace the fodder we are throwing at the insurgants.  And our youth deserve much more than to be the victims of a failed war policy.  Why we went from being viewed by the masses from liberators to occupiers is a crime.  One which we are asking our youth to accept the punishment.

Now we are adopting a policy of "Involuntary Recall".  Servicemen who have honorably completed their tour of duty are now being forced back into service for up to four years.  At the end of that service, they may still not be released.  The military has a policy that if your job cannot be easily replaced during a time of war, then they do not have the obligation of releasing you after you have served your time.  In other words, you are stuck until they decide you can go.  It doesn't matter if you've met your service obligations or not.  This has been called the "backdoor draft".

As we increase the number of deployed troops overseas, the US military is finding it is not meeting its recruitment needs.  This "involuntary recall" will only be another stop-gap measure.  Since the war in Iraq will extend well beyond Bush's term (unless a Democrat gets elected and just pulls all the troops out -- which will make the Middle East explode into chaos), the US will need to supply troops for at least another 5 years.  Yes, we'll be in Iraq for a decade and we'll need more troops.

So how do we get more troops?  Recruitment will continue to ebb, and the stop-gap methods will not meet our recruitment needs.  The only option available to the US is to implement the draft.  More than likely a modified draft, but a draft, none-the-less.

My prediction, expect a draft to go into effect within the next five years if the Executive branch remains Republican.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

I got some swamp land I want to sell ya!

We haven't had much luck selling our house.  Granted, the market is very soft right now and I shouldn't expect buyers to be kicking our door down.  However, I did expect a bit more interest than we are getting.

The first two weeks were great.  We had a constant stream of potential buyers wanting to see the place.  We made sure it was as spotless as we could.  We do tend to keep a more than average clean house.  I'll be truthful, it's in spite of me living there.  I could live in 3 feet of filth and it wouldn't bother me much.  For a guy, I don't think I'm bad.  I just know I have a higher tolerance for clutter than Skyprincess.

Skyprincess met a realtor in a cafe and we decided to give her a try.  To say we haven't been impressed, would be an understatement.  After three months, lowering the price $5000, offering a buyer's agent bonus; we went a month with noone seeing the house.  We don't know what our agent has been doing, but we don't think it was much.  So I decided to fire her and put the house up for rental property.  The rental market is insane in Memphis and we've been told we could have someone in it very quickly.

Although we've always joked about being slum lords and having huge portfolios of rental property, I wasn't comfortable holding property so far away.  I would need to have a property manager take care of the day-to-day operations and would need to trust the renters to not tear up the place.

Fortunately, I knew someone who did manage property that I trust.  I called our realtor and told her to send me a letter of withdrawal, etc. and to remove our listing.  To which she whined about all the expense she had.  Which to be honest, wasn't much.  It was a newspaper listing and her husband bringing a table to an open house.  Anyway... the next day she called and mysteriously she had a potential buyer.  Where that buyer came from, I haven't a clue.  We went through the weekend with no further information.  She wouldn't return my phone calls.

Monday she said the person was willing to pay full price.  FULL PRICE, not the reduced price.  WTF?  So of course we decided to go for it.  I called my property manager and told her I have a buyer and we won't need to rent.  The buyers were slow getting the offer to us, and it had a few items I wanted to change.  I got the counter back and waited and waited and waited.  Five days go by and I'm thinking it wasn't going to happen.  Then today I get word they were backing out due to the guy losing his job.

To me this all sounds fishy.  Our realtor told me not to worry, she's showing the house again today.  I just don't trust her.  I looked over our offer and have been trying to reach the buyer's agent all day, with no luck.  I just want to find out if this was a real offer or something my agent used to string us along.  If this turns out to be bogus, I'm going to contact the realty board, her realty company, and an attorney for damages.  It takes a lot to push me over the edge, and my agent has me standing on the precipice.

Mizike

Star Gate cancelled

Star Gate SG-1 has been cancelled due to low ratings. It never really got its legs back after Richard Dean Anderson left the show in 2004. Sure, it was neat seeing two characters from Farscape be introduced into the show, but the religious theme was a turnoff. It was a turnoff during the first season or two of Deep Space 9, and continued in SG-1.

I was surprised SG: Atlantis will continue. It feels like the weaker of the two. I guess this will give Caprica a timeslot for next year. Although having two BSG on the same night is a bit much. Same for SG. Though I can't see them being successful any other night. Friday night is pretty much the best placement for the SciFi channel.

Goodbye SG-1! It's been a good 10 year run.

Monday, August 21, 2006

The danger of chicken cutlets

With the change in travel restrictions, I'm getting a little concerned about all the traveling we are about to undertake.  I am not a fan of flying, though I have no problems with flying.  Sounds sorta contradictory doesn't it?  Okay, if I need to fly, I'll fly.  The delays involved in flying or the hassles I need to go through don't rattle me.  For some, they grate their nerves like mad.  I'm that way, I have the patience of Job.

That doesn't mean I enjoy flying.  Who likes being shoved into a cattle car with someone who hogs the arm rest?  Or for someone who hasn't bathed in days and insists on exposing their smelly armpits to you?  That's when I turn up the air vent full blast and keep my nose upturned the entire trip, bathing in the smell of fresh air.

What is bothering me is the restrictions for carry-on luggage.  Checking luggage is going to be a pain.  I'm a traveler who tries to keep everything they need in 1 bag.  There's a good reason for that.  I check-in online and never have to wait in the check-in line.  That saves me 30 minutes to an hour of standing time.  I just need to wait 30 minutes to an hour in the security line.  Why add another hour already?

But now I will need to check my bag if I want to bring any liquids or gels.  No hair products, no water, no shampoo, and so-on and so-forth.  I just wonder when the public will say "no thanks, we just won't accept that restriction".

I was talking to our consultant the other day and he was wondering what the new restrictions were.  He wanted to bring his laptop as a carry-on and wasn't sure it was still allowed.  So we went to the TSA site to see what was allowed and what was prohibited.  Luckily his laptop was approved.  What surprised me was that Gel Shoe Implants are prohibited.  What?  With all the standing in queues, having nice shoe gels would be very appreciated.  Okay, so gel inserts are bad.  Then I find this "Gel-filled bras and similar prosthetics - Gel-filled bras may be worn through security screening and aboard aircraft".

You would think you could put more explosive gel in a bra or the little chicken cutlets than you could ever in a shoe gel.  So I was talking to Skyprincess and asked her what she thought would happen if they found a terrorist smuggling aboard a bomb in their bra.  Would the TSA ban bras and breast prosthetics?  Her answer was that it would never happen.

So what do you think?  Is this one line our government would never cross even if it proves to be as much of a threat as gel shoe implants or Carmex lip balm are?

The Muslim malaise

link to the story is here --> The Muslim malaise

Aug. 20, 2006. 07:03 AM

HAROON SIDDIQUI

He who wrongs a Jew or a Christian will have me as his accuser on the Day of Judgment.

— Prophet Muhammad

Contrary to the popular belief that the West is under siege from Muslim terrorists, it is Muslims who have become the biggest victims of the attacks of September 11, 2001, as inconceivable as that would have seemed in the aftermath of the murder of 2,900 Americans. Since then, between 34,000 and 100,000 Iraqis have been killed by the Americans or the insurgents. Nobody knows how many have been killed in Afghanistan. In the spots hit by terrorists — from London and Madrid to Amman, Istanbul, Riyadh and Jeddah, through Karachi to Bali and Jakarta — more Muslims have been killed and injured than non-Muslims.

None of this is to say that Muslims do not have problems that they must address. They do. But the problems are not quite what many in the West make them out to be.

One of the strangest aspects of the post-9/11 world is that, despite all the talk about Muslim terrorism, there is hardly any exploration of the complex causes of Muslim rage. Muslims are in a state of crisis, but their most daunting problems are not religious. They are geopolitical, economic and social — problems that have caused widespread Muslim despair and, in some cases, militancy, both of which are expressed in the religious terminology that Muslim masses relate to.

Most Muslims live in the developing world, much of it colonized by Western powers as recently as 50 years ago. Not all Muslim shortcomings emanate from colonialism and neo-imperialism, but several do.

As part of the spoils of the First World War, Britain and France helped themselves to much of the Ottoman Empire, including Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and what is now Israel, Jordan and the Palestine Authority. In later years, they and other European colonial powers created artificial states such as Kuwait and Nigeria. Or they divided peoples and nations along sectarian lines, such as bifurcating India in 1947 into Muslim Pakistan and largely Hindu India. In more recent years, the United States has maintained repressive proxy regimes in the Middle East to stifle public anti-Israeli sentiments, keep control of oil and maintain a captive market for armaments.

While the past casts a long shadow over Muslims, it is the present that haunts them. Hundreds of millions live in zones of conflict, precisely in the areas of European and American meddling, past and present — U.S.-occupied Iraq, U.S.-controlled Afghanistan, the Israeli Occupied Territories, and Kashmir, the disputed Muslim state on the border of India and Pakistan in the foothills of the Himalayas. Only the Russian war on Muslim Chechnya is not related to the history of Western machinations, but even that has had the tacit support of the Bush administration. These conflicts, along with the economic sanctions on Iraq, have killed an estimated 1.3 million Muslims in the last 15 years alone. Why are we surprised that Muslims are up in arms?

In addition, nearly 400 million Muslims live under authoritarian despots, many of them Western puppets, whose corruption and incompetence have left their people in economic and social shambles.

It is against this backdrop that one must look at the current malaise of Muslims and their increasing emotional reliance on their faith.

Economic Woes

The total GDP of the 56 members of the Islamic Conference, representing more than a quarter of the world's population, is less than 5 per cent of the world's economy. Their trade represents 7 per cent of global trade, even though more than two-thirds of the world's oil and gas lie under Muslim lands.

The standard of living in Muslim nations is abysmal even in the oil-rich regions, because of unconscionable gaps between the rulers and the ruled. A quarter of impoverished Pakistan's budget goes to the military. Most of the $2 billion a year of American aid given to Egypt as a reward for peace with Israel goes to the Egyptian military.

The most undemocratic Muslim states, which also happen to be the closest allies of the U.S., are the most economically backward.

The Arab nations, with a combined population of 280 million, muster a total GDP less than that of Spain. The rate of illiteracy among Arabs is 43 per cent, worse than that of much poorer nations. Half of Arab women are illiterate, representing two-thirds of the 65 million Arabs who cannot read or write. About 10 million Arab children are not in school. The most-educated Arabs live abroad, their talents untapped, unlike those of the Chinese and Indian diasporas, who have played significant roles in jump-starting the economies of their native lands.

A disproportionate percentage of the world's youth are Muslim. Half of Saudi Arabia's and a third of Iran's populations are younger than 20. There are few jobs for them. "Young and unemployed" is a phenomenon common to many Muslim nations.

A majority of the world's 12 million to 15 million refugees are Muslims, fleeing poverty and oppression. Europe's 20 million Muslims suffer high unemployment and poverty, especially in Germany and France. It was inevitable that many Muslims would find comfort in Islam.

Islamic Resurgence

Fundamentalism has been on the rise, and not just in Islam. There has been a parallel rise in Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism, with its inevitable political fallout — in the Israeli settler movement in the Occupied Territories, the politicization of the American conservative right (culminating in the election and re-election of George W. Bush), the rise to power of the Hindu nationalists in India, the Sikh separatist movement in the Punjab in India, and the aggressive nationalism of the Sinhalese in Sri Lanka.

That many Muslims have become "fundamentalist" does not mean that they are all fanatic and militant. Nor is the Muslim condition fully explained by the use of petro-dollars. First, Arab financial support for Islamic institutions around the world is still no match for the resources available for Christian global missionary or Zionist political work. Second, and more to the point, the rise of Islam is not confined to areas of Arab financial influence; it is a worldwide phenomenon.

Mosques are full. The use of the hijab (headscarf ) is on the rise. Madrassahs (religious schools) are packed. Zakat (Islamic charity) is at record levels, especially where governments have failed to provide essential services. In Egypt, much of the health care, emergency care and education are provided by the Muslim Brotherhood, in the Occupied Territories by Hamas, in Pakistan and elsewhere by groups that may be far less political but are no less Islamic.

With state institutions riddled with corruption and nepotism, some of the most talented Muslims, both rich and poor, have abandoned the official arena and retreated into the non-governmental domain of Islamic civil society.

The empty public sphere has been filled with firebrands — ill-tutored and ill-informed clergy or populist politicians who rally the masses with calls for jihad (struggle) for sundry causes. The greater the injustices in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Israeli Occupied Territories, Chechnya or elsewhere, the greater the public support for those calling for jihad. Jihad has also proven to be good business for many a mullah (Muslim priest) who has become rich or influential, or both, preaching it. Meanwhile, unelected governments lack the legitimacy and confidence to challenge the militant clerics, and fluctuate between ruthlessly repressing them and trying to out-Islamize them.

To divert domestic anger abroad, many governments also allow and sometimes encourage the radicals to rant at the U.S. and rave at Israel, or just at Jews. Sometimes even the elected leaders join in, as has Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmedinijad, denying the Holocaust and calling for Israel to be "wiped off the map."

In reality, most Muslim states are powerless to address the international crises that their publics want addressed. They have neither the military nor the economic and political clout to matter much to the U.S., the only power that counts these days. Or, as in the case of Egypt, Jordan, and the oil-rich Arab oligarchies, they are themselves dependent on Washington for their own survival.


`Muslims have developed a complex. They think they won't

be heard if they don't shout. Every statement

is like a war'

Sharifa Zuriah

Founder, Sisters in Islam


Feeling abandoned, the Muslim masses find comfort in religion. The Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation was a secular struggle before it became "Islamic." The same was true of the Lebanese resistance to the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon, and also of the Chechen resistance to Russian repression.

Similarly, domestic critics of authoritarian regimes have found a hospitable home in the mosque. Islam being their last zone of comfort, most Muslims react strongly — sometimes irrationally and violently — when their faith or their Prophet is mocked or criticized, as the world witnessed during the Danish cartoon crisis. They react the way the angry disenfranchised do — hurling themselves into the streets, shouting themselves hoarse and destroying property, without much concern for the consequences, and engendering even more hostility in the West toward Muslims and Islam. But, as the American civil rights leader Martin Luther King famously said, riots are the voice of the voiceless.

Muslims have developed a "siege mentality, which is what the screaming, dogmatic and atavistic clerics" appeal to, says Chandra Muzaffar, Malaysian Muslim human rights activist. As he was telling me this in Kuala Lumpur in 2005, Sharifa Zuriah, a founder of Sisters in Islam, an advocacy group for Malaysian Muslim women, intervened: "Muslims have developed a complex. They think they won't be heard if they don't shout. Every statement is like a war."

Then there is real war, the war of terrorism.

Terrorism's Fallout

"That a majority of Al Qaeda are Muslims is not to say that a majority of Muslims are Al Qaeda, or subscribe to its tenets," Stephen Schulhofer, professor of law at New York University, told me in 2003. But it is also true that most terrorists these days are Muslims. That may only be a function of the times we live in — yesterday's terrorists came from other religions and tomorrow's may hail from some other. Still, terrorism has forced a debate among Muslims, who are divided into two camps. One side says that Muslims should no more have to apologize for their extremists than Christians, Jews or Hindus or anybody else, and that doing so only confirms the collective guilt being placed on Muslims. The other side believes that as long as some Muslims are blowing up civilians in suicide bombings, slitting the throats of hostages and committing other grisly acts, it is the duty of all Muslims to speak out and challenge the murderers' warped theology.

The latter view has prevailed. Terrorism — suicide bombings in particular— has been widely condemned. Just because an overwhelming majority of Muslims condemn Osama bin Laden and other extremists, however, does not mean that they feel any less for Muslims in Iraq or Palestine. Or that the internal debate that he has forced on Muslims is new. Throughout their 1,400-year history, Muslims have argued and quarrelled over various interpretations of the Qur'an and religious traditions.

But it is a sign of the times that the most extreme interpretation of the Qur'an appeals to Muslim masses these days, and that far too many clerics are attacking Christians and Jews and delivering fire-and-brimstone sermons full of the imagery of war and martyrdom. This is contrary to the message of the Qur'an — Do not argue with the followers of earlier revelation other than in the most kindly manner (29:46) — and the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad: "Do not consider me better than Moses," and, "I am closest of all people to Jesus, son of Mary."

For all the emphasis that today's clerics put on the Prophet's war record, he spent a total of less than a week in actual battle in the 23 years of his prophethood. He advised his followers to "be moderate in religious matters, for excess caused the destruction of earlier communities." A moderate himself, he smiled often, spoke softly and delivered brief sermons. "The Prophet disliked ranting and raving," wrote Imam Bukhari, the ninth-century Islamic scholar of the Prophet's sayings. Ayesha, the Prophet's wife, reported that "he spoke so few words that you could count them." His most famous speech, during the Haj pilgrimage in AD 632, which laid down an entire covenant, was less than 2,800 words.

Muhammad was respectful of Christians and Jews. Hearing the news that the king of Ethiopia had died, he told his followers, "A righteous man has died today; so stand up and pray for your brother." When a Christian delegation came to Medina, he invited them to conduct their service in the mosque, saying, "This is a place consecrated to God." When Saffiyah, one of his wives, complained that she was taunted for her Jewish origins, he told her, "Say unto them, `my father is Aaron, and my uncle is Moses.'"

Yet angry Muslims, not unlike African Americans not too long ago, pay little heed to voices of moderation. This is partly a reflection of the fact that there is no central religious authority in Islam. Only the minority Shiites have a religious hierarchy of ayatollahs, who instruct followers on religious and sometimes political matters. The majority Sunnis do not have the equivalent of the Pope or the Archbishop of Canterbury. A central tenet of their faith is that there is no intermediary between the believer and God. This makes for great democracy — everyone is free to issue a fatwa (religious ruling) and everyone else is free to ignore it. But the "fatwa chaos" does create confusion — among non-Muslims, who are spooked by the red-hot rhetoric, and also among Muslims, who are left wondering about the "right answers" to some of the most pressing issues of the day.

Muslim Apologetics

There are two kinds of Muslim apologetics. The first is denial: there's little or nothing wrong with Muslims, when there clearly is. The second, seen among some Muslims in the West, takes the form of self-flagellation, of apologizing for their faith or distancing themselves from it. To wit:

"Yes, the problem is Islam, and we must fix it." (Why is Islam any more of a problem than any other faith? And how are they going to fix it?)

"I am a Muslim but I am not a fundamentalist Muslim." (Do Christians say, "I am Christian but not an evangelical Christian?")

"I am a Muslim but ashamed to call myself one." (Do all Hindus have to apologize for those few who, in 1992, went on a mosque-ravaging rampage in India?)

Some of these sentiments may be genuinely held. More likely, they reflect the immigrant pathology of catering to majority mores, a new twist on the past practice of immigrants to North America anglicizing their names.

Such defensiveness aside, Muslims do suffer from deeper problems. Many are preoccupied with the minutiae of rituals (Should one wash the bare feet before prayers or do so symbolically over the socks?) at the expense of the centrality of the faith, which is fostering peace, justice and compassion, not just for Muslims but for everyone. Many Muslims are too judgmental of each other, whereas a central tenet of their faith is that it is up to God to judge — Your Lord knows best who goes astray (53:30) (also, 6:117, 16:125, 17:94, 28:56, 68:7).

Some Muslims have taken to a culture of conspiracy theories. Hence the notion that Princess Diana did not die in an accident but was killed because the British royal family did not want her to marry Dodi Al Fayed, a Muslim. Or the canard that Jews working at the World Trade Center had advance notice of 9/11.

There is too much of a literalist reading of the Qur'an (a trait, ironically, also adopted by anti-Islamists in the West). There is too little ijtehad (religious innovation) as called for by Islam to keep believers in tune with their times. Theological rigidity and narrow-mindedness have led, among other things, to Sunni hostility toward the minority Shiites, as seen in the sectarian killings in Pakistan.

Muslims complain about the West's double standards, yet they have their own. While they often criticize the United States and Europe for mistreating Muslims, they rarely speak up against the persecution of non-Muslims by Muslims. They also show a high tolerance for Muslims killing fellow Muslims. The Sudanese genocide of the non-Arab Muslims of Darfur drew mostly silence. The killing of Shiites by the Sunnis in Iraq was shrugged off as part of the anti-U.S. resistance. The overt and subtle racism of the oil-rich Arab states toward the millions of their guest workers goes unmourned.

Muslims do not have much to be proud of in the contemporary world. So they take comfort in their burgeoning numbers. At the turn of the millennium in 2000, there were many learned papers projecting the rise in Muslim population. But if Muslims have not achieved much at 1.3 billion, they are not likely to at 1.5 billion, either.

To escape the present, many Muslims hark back to their glorious past: how Islam was a reform movement; how Muslims led the world in knowledge, in astronomy, chemistry, mathematics, medicine, natural sciences, philosophy and physics; and how the Islamic empires were successful primarily because, with some egregious exceptions, they nurtured the local cultures and respected the religions of their non-Muslim majority populations. This is why Egypt and Syria remained non-Muslim under Muslim rule for 300 years and 600 years, respectively, and India always remained majority Hindu.

As true as all that history is, it is not very helpful today unless Muslims learn something from it — to value human life; accept each other's religious differences; respect other faiths; return to their historic culture of academic excellence, scientific inquiry and economic self-reliance; and learn to live with differences of opinion and the periodic rancorous debates that mark democracies.

It may be unfair to berate ordinary Muslims, given that too many are struggling to survive, that nearly half live under authoritarian regimes where they can speak up only on pain of being incarcerated, tortured or killed, and that they are helpless spectators to the sufferings of fellow Muslims in an unjust world order. Yet Muslims have no choice but to confront their challenges, for Allah never changes a people's state unless they change what's in themselves (13:11).

Friday, August 18, 2006

Caprica!

I love Science Fiction. Good Science Fiction. Unfortunately, it’s plagued by too much crap.

Skyprincess doesn’t care for it, so we end up watching TV in separate rooms. There are times she’ll watch a show just because I enjoy watching it and wants to spend the evening cuddling with me. Then there are times she’ll want to watch her shows, and I gratefully appreciate the out she gives in allowing me to escape to another room. I am not a Desperate Housewives watcher. I probably would be if I started watching it from the beginning, but I didn’t and I don’t have them desire to catch up on 2 seasons.

Then add to it my preference for bad Reality Shows. Not the more popular ones like Big Brother, The Great Race, Rock Star, So You Think You Can Dance, or Surviver. But the really bad ones like Celebrity Fit Club, American Idol, America’s Got Talent, Surreal Life, Flavour of Love, and lately Stan Lee’s Superhero one. Skyprincess hates anytime there is a new Reality TV show because she knows I’m going to be hooked. And its usually the ones on the cable channels, not the prime time network shows. She kidded me about watching my gay men fashion oriented reality show Project Runway on Wednesday. I love that show! I’m such a goober at times.

While doing my daily internet surf, which usually ends up with something really interesting. Some of which garner a blog post, I found that my favorite SciFi show is spinning off a prequel. Battle Star Galatica will be spinning off a prequel named Caprica. Here is a blurb on the new show.

Caprica, the new series set fifty years before the events depicted in the new Galactica series, will tell the story of the Twelve Colonies. Though the colonies are at peace, new high-technology will make it possible to merge artificial intelligence with robotics that ultimately shape the first living machines – the Cylons. Ultimately, the Cylons revolt and war with the colonists. The series will focus on two major families: the Adamas and the Graystones, and will feature corporate drama, high tech action and sexual politics.


I hope it turns out as well as the new take on BSG. I’ve had high hopes on sequels/spinoffs before. Crusades didn’t turn out that well. But then they didn’t really have time to build the storyline. I’m not crazy about Star Gate Atlantis. I’m giving it a try, though. I just hope this turns out good.



Thursday, August 17, 2006

I don't wanna go, and you can't make me!

I'm someone who has a neutral facial expression. Maybe it was too many years watching Star Trek and wishing I was Spock. Who knows. Sometimes it gets me in trouble since people think I'm angry, which is not true. I just have a relaxed facial expression which isn't all smiley. I guess because I'm not constantly smiling, it looks like I'm grumpy. I'm not, trust me.

Now this is going to cause me trouble flying. Flying now is such a bother, who wouldn't be a bit grumpy? Now being grumpy is a crime. Well... not a crime, but it makes you suspect enough to make them think you are going to bomb the plane.

So next time you are having a bad day (which is pretty much any time you fly), don't throw a temper tantrum or act all pissy. Not only will it not improve your lot in life, but it will make you a terrorist suspect.

Mizike


Wednesday, August 16, 2006

10 Ways to Make Your Digital Photos Last Forever

article taken from here. 

 

Photographs taken with film fade with age, and even negatives yellow and become brittle. Digital photos, on the other hand, retain the same brilliant color and clarity every time you pull them up on the computer screen—until your hard disk crashes and you instantly lose every photo you’ve ever taken.

Yes, digital photography has its share of disasters, and that leads some people to distrust it, or even to claim that film lasts longer than digital. But the good news is that your digital pictures can last forever if you take good care of them. Here are 10 rules to follow to make sure you don’t lose pictures to a digital catastrophe:

1. Use a quality memory card.

Start with the “film” your pictures are stored on: the memory card. While the cheap memory cards offer a huge capacity for a small price, it’s best to pay a bit more and get a quality card. A card from a good manufacturer will have less risk of data corruption or other failures. Sandisk, Lexar, and Kingston are good choices.

  • Tip: Buy two smaller cards instead of one larger one: for example, two 1GB cards instead of one 2GB card. This will often save you money, and you’ll also have a hedge against data loss—one corrupt card will only affect half of your photos.
2. Get those photos off that memory card.

You might have a huge memory card in your camera that can store thousands of photos, but you should still consider the memory card temporary storage—a memory card can fail, or can be lost or stolen with the camera. Whenever you finish taking a batch of pictures or return from a trip, use a card reader or USB cable to transfer the pictures to the computer.

3. Don’t delete photos in the camera.

Your camera probably has a convenient “Delete” or “Trash” button. I suggest you never use it. There are three reasons for this:

  • You avoid accidentally deleting the wrong picture, or accidentally using the “delete all” option.
  • I find it helpful to keep all of my photos, since even the “mistakes” could turn out to be the only photo of something important, or a “happy accident” that is good in its own way.
  • Can you really determine which photos are good or bad by looking at your camera’s tiny screen? It’s much better to transfer them all to the computer, then decide what to keep.
4. Don’t delete photos at all.

For that matter, why delete photos at all? I keep every photo I take with my digital cameras: the great shots, the out-of-focus shots, the mistakes, the duplicates, everything. Even the bad ones are useful years later for documenting my vacations and remembering what I saw, for seeing how my photographic technique has improved, or for seeing whether a camera is working as well as it used to. This also ensures that I never delete the wrong photo. If there’s a gap in the numbering on my original photo files, I know something’s missing.

If you don’t have room for all of your photos on your hard drive, remember that hard drives are cheap. You can also archive the old ones to CD or DVD media. (don't think a CD or DVD will last forever.  they have only a couple year lifespan - Mizike)

5. Keep a Backup. Or two.

Did I mention that hard drives are cheap? I recommend keeping two copies of all of your original photos at all times. I have a daily backup script that copies the new files to an external drive. Be sure to use a separate drive or another computer as your backup, to avoid losing photos in a drive crash.

If you want to guarantee you won’t lose photos, you should also have an off-site backup—use an online backup service, upload them to a server, or just drop off a few DVD-ROMs at a friend’s house. That way your photos are protected even if you have a house fire or other disaster.   (for imporant photos such as Wedding pictures, I'd recommend putting copies on a thumb drive and putting them in your bank's safe deposit box - Mizike)

6. Use generic photo formats.

Most cameras store images in the standard JPEG format, which should be easily readable for many years. However, higher-end cameras usually have a RAW format option. While raw images are great for post-processing and often beat JPEG in quality, keep in mind that all raw formats are proprietary, and you may have trouble opening these files 10 years from now. It’s best to save a standard JPEG or TIFF version of each photo, even if you use RAW. Some cameras can save a JPEG file along with the RAW file, giving you the best of both worlds.

  • Tip: If you are serious about your photography and insist on using RAW format, keep a backup copy of the software you use to process the files. You might need to install it on an antique PC 10 years from now to access an old photo.
7. Don’t edit original photos.

If you use a photo, you’ll often resize, crop, or otherwise process it. This is fine, but the first thing you should do when editing a photo is save it to a new file. Keep the original, unprocessed, full-resolution file along with your edited version. This will make it easier to use the photo for a different purpose later, and it also avoids the costly mistake of overwriting a photo with a messed-up version. Back up the edited version too.

  • Tip: Unless you’re very careful and use special software, overwriting a photo will erase the EXIF data that the camera stored with the photo. This is your record of the date and time the picture was taken and the camera settings used.
8. Don’t trust someone else with your photos.

Online photo sharing sites like Flickr are great for sharing photos, but avoid the temptation to use them for storing photos. Don’t trust an online service with the only copy of your photos, or even the backup copy.

Online services might go out of business, and they don’t guarantee that your data will be safe—especially if you forget to pay the bill. They also almost always process the photo (resizing, etc.) when you upload it. Use these services to share pictures, but don’t expect them to last forever there.

9. Test and maintain your backup files.

A backup copy is no good if it doesn’t work, or if you lose access to it. Here are a few tips for making sure your backups will back you up:

  • Take a look at your backup files regularly, and make sure you can load a few photos.
  • If you back up to a hard disk, check the disk for errors regularly.
  • If you back up to CD-R or DVD-R, use quality backup media.
  • Test CD or DVD backups every month or two.
  • Once every year or two, copy CD or DVD backups to brand new discs. Media has a lifespan potentially as low as 5 years.
  • If you get a new computer, be sure to move the photos from your old computer, and make sure you still have two copies.
  • If CD or DVD formats are going away in favor of some kind of new Super Blue-HD discs, copy your files to the new media as soon as it’s practical.
10. Label, organize, and sort your photos.

If you follow the above rules for 20 years, you’ll end up with thousands of great photos—and now you have a different problem. Finding a few pictures of “that one time we went to Yellowstone” could be virtually impossible when you have thousands of photos stored in a disorganized mess of folders.

At the very least, do what I do: store each batch of photos in a separate folder with a descriptive name beginning with the date. Here are some examples:

  • 2006-05-10 Yellowstone Park
  • 2006-08-22 Testing new Camera
  • 2006-09-01 Elvis sighting at Caesar’s Palace
  • 2006-12-26 Opening Christmas presents

I avoid renaming the photo files, since I consider them my “negatives” and want a complete record of the pictures I’ve taken. Instead, I store them in folders like the above, then group those into larger folders for each year. This makes it easy to find particular photos, and the pictures are in convenient groups for archiving to DVD-ROMs every few months.

You may even want to move the best photos (or the ones you’ve chosen to print) into a separate folder within each folder, especially if you’re like me and you have more “misses” than “hits”.

If you want to go one step further, you can catalog your photos with a program like ACDSee, which lets you store a title, description, keywords, and rating for every photo. That would make it even easier to find what you’re looking for, if you can find the time to label and rate each picture.

-------------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Yummm... fishy

It's late, I wanted to watch PeeWee's Playhouse and I got snacky. It happens alot with me.

So I look through the cabnets trying to find something that isn't too heavy and high in calories. I don't want to eat a plate of lasagna, or fix a sandwich. I wanted something filling, yet light. This is the best I could come up with. And it's neither light or low on calories.

I really need to get something more healthy in here to snack on.

Here is my drink choice. I ran out of Diet Dr. Pepper.




I found the following cream cheese and what was left of our bagles.




Yummy latenight snack, eh?

You give me fever! Fever in the morning, Fever when it's late at night!

I've always been part of a large family. Six kids total. One girl (the eldest) and five boys. I’m use to a house full of noise. I didn’t say energy. We were all a lethargic bunch of fat kids. Inside, I still feel like the lethargic fat kid who doesn’t want to go outside.

I’m hoping to break that. Right now I’m trying to finish up the last courses I need for my degree. I just need to finish 2 papers and spend 1 hour for a final, and I’m done. At last! I’ll be done.

When it’s all over, I want to bring my Cannondale bike to the shop and get it in working condition. One of the shifters never worked just right, and the chain is pretty much frozen. Then I also let my brother ride it, and he lost one of the end caps on my handlebars, and it’s a safety hazard.

Cycling seems to be very big up here. It’s very nice weather here right now and I don’t think I’d mind riding. I have packed on about 15 pounds the past 6 months and need to take them off before winter sets in. I’m trying to convince myself I’m just preparing myself for winter hibernation, and I’ll just sleep and let my body burn off the fat like bears do. Haha! Like that’s going to happen. I’ll probably be sitting around the TV eating munchies all night.

The people up here have such contrasting attitudes on health. They are a very outdoorsy people. Hiking, biking, water sports, hunting, etc. They are for the most part, very active. Maybe that’s because there’s not much more to do up here. On the other hand, you’d think this place was a tobacco growing state. Smoking is huge around here. I guess with all this fresh dairy air, it’s not as bad as living with L.A. smog.

Skyprincess has been away since Sunday, and the house is far too quiet. Moving to a new place is always a tough thing to do for me. It takes quite some time for me to feel at home somewhere. It’s like when you stay with someone for a weekend. You aren’t comfortable there and you tend to walk from room to room looking for a place that you can sit. Well… maybe that’s just me.

I got the wandering fever Monday when I returned from work. I found myself moving from room to room, like I had lost something. It wasn’t until late in the evening I realized what I was doing and stopped.

Luckily I’ve had these papers to concentrate on, or else it would have gotten very bad. I guess I could have played WoW, but I never find any of my friends online any more and just log. Which doesn’t help much since then they can never find me online. (sigh)

I’m really getting concerned about this paper. I’m still prepping to write it, trying to sketch out what I want to talk about. It’s due Wednesday evening. Not much time.

Mizike

Monday, August 14, 2006

It's so dark in here!

Seems we've finally found the elusive dark matter that the majority of the universe it made of. There will be a news conference on August 21st to discuss. Should be interesting.

Devil of the Desert Against the Son of Hercules

The quality of the video isn't all that great, but it's still free stuff. Here's an interesting site that has videos that are no longer copyrighted. It has some interesting selections.

Metropolis (1926). Fritz Lang's masterpiece that everyone should watch.
Battle of Midway... I can't tell you how many times I've seen that on TV
The Brain that Wouldn't Die... I know they aren't talking about anyone in the current administration
Charlie Chaplin Festival
The Fall of the House of Usher
Hercules vs. the Moon Men... he left the Devil of the Desert up to his son to defeat
Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe ... and I thought he was the saviour of the universe
Joan the Woman (1917)... Many film historians have credited Geraldine Farrar's portayal of Jeanne d'Arc as the best performance in film history. I disagree. It takes a real talent to fill out these short shorts.
Reefer Madness (1936)... a nice propaganda film
Nosferatu (1922)... fangs to meet you!
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959)... thanks to this movie, the movie "The Crow" would have never been finished
Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964)... they've been bad little children! Off to the sweat shop for all you little green martians!

Friday, August 11, 2006

Genderflexing, and hating it

So I'm taking notes for my Final in Organizational Behavior and I come across the following list on "Communication Differences between Women and Men". I'm not disagreeing with the text book, but I find the list very disturbing. I find the role reversed in almost all catagories for Skyprincess and myself, and I'm not feeling all that masculine right now.

The next section talks about Judith Tingley's suggestion that women and men should learn to genderflex. Genderflex entails the temporary use of communication behaviors typical of the other gender in order to increase the potential for influence. Perhaps almost exclusively hanging with chicks most of my life has broken my Genderflex switch in the wrong direction?

Communication Differences between Women and Men
 Men are less likely to ask for information or directions in a public situation that would reveal their lack of knowledge
 In decision making, women are more likely to downplay their certainty; men are more likely to downplay their doubts
 Women tend to apologize even when they have done nothing wrong, men tend to avoid apologies as signs of weakness or concession
 Women tend to accept blame as a way of smoothing awkward situations, men tend to ignore blame and place it elsewhere
 Women tend to temper criticism with positive buffers. Men tend to give criticism directly
 Women tend to insert unnecessary and unwarranted thank-you’s in conversations. Men may avoid thanks altogether as sign of weakness
 Women tend to ask “What do you think?” to build concensus. Men often perceive that question to be a sign of incompetence and lack of confidence
 Women tend to give directions in indirect ways, a technique that may be perceived as confusing, less confident, or manipulative by men
 Men tend to usurp [take] ideas stated by women and claim them as their own. Women tend to allow this process to take place without protest
 Women use softer voice volume to encourage persuasion and approval. Men use louder voice volume to attract attention and maintain control

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Ring pix

Quick post before Blogger goes down for maintenance.

Here's the cake pix I promised earlier




The wedding band finally came in today. It took months and months, but I'm happy.

First is her engagement ring. The picture is a bit blurry. Couldn't get it to focus.






Next is the wedding band. Pretty, isn't it?


Amendments Sought in War Crimes Act

Original story here:

Amendments Sought in War Crimes Act

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration has drafted amendments to the War Crimes Act that would retroactively protect policymakers from possible criminal charges for authorizing humiliating and degrading treatment of detainees, according to lawyers who have seen the proposal.

The White House, without elaboration, said in a statement that the bill "will apply to any conduct by any U.S. personnel, whether committed before or after the law is enacted."

Two attorneys said the draft was in the revision stage but the administration seemed intent on pushing forward its major points in Congress after Labor Day. The two attorneys spoke on condition of anonymity because their sources did not authorize them to release the information.

The move is the administration's latest effort to deal with treatment of those taken into custody in the war on terrorism.

At issue are interrogations carried out by the CIA, and the degree to which harsh tactics such as water-boarding were authorized by administration officials. A separate law, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, applies to the military.

The Washington Post first reported on the War Crimes Act amendments Wednesday.

One section of the draft would outlaw torture and inhuman or cruel treatment, but it does not contain prohibitions from Article 3 of the Geneva Convention against "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment." A copy of the section of the draft was obtained by the Associated Press.

"I think what this bill can do is in effect immunize past crimes. That's why it's so dangerous," said a third attorney, Eugene Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military Justice.

Fidell said the initiative was "not just protection of political appointees but also CIA personnel who led interrogations."

Interrogation practices "follow from policies that were formed at the highest levels of the administration," said a fourth attorney, Scott Horton. "The administration is trying to insulate policymakers under the War Crimes Act."

Is George Bush Guilty of War Crimes...and Who Cares?

Original story at here:

Is George Bush Guilty of War Crimes...and Who Cares?



Whenever someone publicly suggests that President Bush and other members of his administration might have committed war crimes, he or she is accused of being a wild, over-the-top extremist. But there is one group of people that has always taken the war crimes charges seriously--the members of the Bush administration themselves. They have good reason for doing so, because they have exposed hundreds of Americans to possible prosecution for violating U.S. law.

From the very beginning of the war against terrorism, George W. Bush and his administration knew that the tactics and techniques they planned to use were illegal according to U.S. law. Rather than reject these tactics and techniques, they prepared a series of convoluted legal rationales that they hoped would protect them from prosecution. In recent weeks, in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez and others have been formulating defenses against possible prosecutions for war crimes and are pressuring Republican members of Congress to pass new laws to protect them.

As long as George Bush is president and controls the Department of Justice, there will no prosecutions for war crimes, but after Bush is gone, anything could happen and hundreds of Americans could be charged with war crimes.

The War Crimes Act of 1996, promoted by Republicans and passed by both houses of Congress without a dissenting vote, made it a federal crime to commit a "grave breach" of the Geneva Conventions, meaning the deliberate "killing, torture or inhuman treatment" of detainees. It includes "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment." Violations of the War Crimes Act that result in the death of a detainee carry the death penalty and they do not have a statute of limitations. Although it was initiated to prosecute foreigners who mistreat American prisoners, Congress, in an admirable display of bipartisan support for human rights, applied the law as well to American treatment of foreign prisoners of war, reasoning that we should hold ourselves to the same standards we hold others.

In a memo to President Bush dated January 25, 2002, then White House counsel Alberto Gonzales suggested that Bush find a way to avoid the rules of the Geneva Conventions as they relate to prisoners of war because that "substantially reduces the likelihood of prosecution under the War Crimes Act." A week later, Attorney General John Ashcroft sent a memo to the president also stressing that opting out of the Geneva treaty "would provide the highest assurance that no court would subsequently entertain charges that American military officers, intelligence officials, or law enforcement officials violated Geneva Convention rules relating to field conduct, detention conduct or interrogation of detainees." Ashcroft reminded Bush, "The War Crimes Act of 1996 makes violation of parts of the Geneva Convention a crime in the United States."

So the Bush administration announced the creation of a new category of captured prisoners. Instead of being "prisoners of war," suspected al-Qaeda members or sympathizers would be "illegal enemy combatants." Since this designation was not mentioned in the Geneva Conventions, the Bush administration argued that such detainees were not protected by its provisions. As for the soldiers fighting for the Taliban government of Afghanistan, they were also "enemy combatants" rather than "prisoners of war" because Afghanistan was a "failed state" and the Taliban soldiers did not belong to an army, but a "militia."

U.S. Army Regulation 190-8 provides persons captured on a battlefield the right to a military hearing at which they can demonstrate that they are entitled to be held as prisoners of war or to prove that they are innocent civilians picked up by mistake. After the 1991 Gulf War, for example, almost 1,200 captured Iraqis were given such military hearings and hundreds of them were released as innocent civilians. The first President Bush saw this as normal procedure; his son, George W. Bush, did not. After the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, he declared that no one picked up on a battlefield was entitled to Prisoner of War status, and he refused to allow the U.S. military to hold a single status hearing. Instead, after holding the captured soldiers and others in camps in Afghanistan, he shipped most of them to Guantánamo.

Unfortunately, these prisoners fell into a mishmash of different categories. Some of them really were al-Qaeda members and terrorists-in-training. Others were Taliban soldiers, many of whom considered themselves to be fighting for a national army. In addition, the Taliban operated a forced labor system in which villagers were periodically expected to work for the Taliban for about twenty days at a time. Those Afghanis who had the misfortune to be doing their forced labor at the time of the U.S.-led invasion were considered enemy combatants. Because the United States offered a substantial reward for the capture of members of al-Qaeda or the Taliban, entrepreneurial bounty hunters snatched random locals, collected their rewards, and disappeared. Finally, there were innocent civilians who were just picked up by mistake. Unlike his father, George W. Bush did not give any of these people a chance to present evidence of their innocence.

The fact that these prisoners were sent to Guantánamo rather than to a military prison in the United States was another example of the Bush administration's attempt to avoid prosecution under the War Crimes Act. Administration officials declared that because Guantánamo was in Cuba and was not part of the United States, anything that was done there was not subject to U.S. laws.

President Bush and his administration also faced the problem that Sections 2340-2340A of the US Code, Title 18, outlawed torture. So, to be on the safe side, the Bush administration redefined the word "torture." In an August 2, 2002, memo signed by Jay Bybee, the head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, the department lawyers proposed sidestepping the law by narrowing the designation of an act of torture as one that caused suffering "equivalent to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death." Even then it did not qualify as torture if the torturer was seeking information from the victim. An action only counted as torture if the torture was gratuitous.

On February 7, 2002, President Bush signed an order denying Geneva Conventions protection to detainees in the War on Terrorism. From that point on, the word went out to members of the U.S. military, to agents of the CIA and other government agencies, and to private contractors involved in interrogations and detentions that they could use techniques and punishments which were illegal according to U.S. law. For example, it was now acceptable to cover a prisoner's face with cellophane or cloth and pour water on him so that he thought he was suffocating to death. According to the Bush administration, this form of mock execution, known as waterboarding, which was considered illegal during the Vietnam War, was no longer classified as torture.

At every level, from the highest officers and civilian officials to low-ranking enlisted personnel, Americans passed on the order to engage in practices that broke U.S. law. In Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the Supreme Court ruled that detainees in the War on Terrorism really are covered by the Geneva Conventions and, by extension, by the U.S. War Crimes Act. Now dozens, if not hundreds, of U.S. soldiers, CIA agents and private contractors are confronting the fact that they violated the War Crimes Act at Guantánamo, in Afghanistan, in Iraq and at "black sites" around the world. Considering that the Pentagon admits that at least 35 detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan have been murdered by their guards, many of these Americans could face the death penalty.

Undoubtedly, all of those Americans who committed torture and other war crimes will offer the defense that they didn't know that what they were doing was illegal because they received their orders from officers, who received them from generals, who received them from Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who received them from the commander-in-chief, George W. Bush.

As more and more cases of war crimes come to light, there will be a tendency to forgive the soldiers and others who violated the War Crimes Act because they were just following orders, and to give them light punishments or no punishments at all. The higher-ups, like President Bush, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, Major General Geoffrey Miller and Lt. General Ricardo Sanchez, will probably not even be charged because they are too powerful. If this occurs it will send a message to future generations that all laws relating to human rights in the United States are irrelevant if the president says it is alright to ignore them.

For Americans to allow one president to get away with ordering war crimes is shameful enough; to allow a second president to do so would be tragic.

We'll leave the light on for you

I was doing my normal web browsing and came across a story of someone who stopped for the night at a Motel 6. They had asked for a non-smoking room and were not happy to discover a ash tray when they got to their room.





They immediately called the front desk to complain and ask for another room. The desk clerk, in a calm voice, told them to turn the ash tray over. Now it's a "non-smoking" room.



Another boring post

Work has been fantastic! I have learned so much this past week. I don’t think I would have made as much progress if I had taken the Atlanta job. Although the city had far more to offer than this little midwest town. I’m not complaining. The people here are great. Very honest and caring. No agendas, no BS. Just good people.

Skyprincess should be home tonight. She will be flying out one week a month to Dallas for work. Traveling to catch a flight in Green Bay isn’t a problem now in the summer. When winter hits, it may become one. We just aren’t prepared for the snow. I have no history of driving in snow and I hope I can muddle my way through it without crashing my car.

My online courses are wrapping up very soon. One final is due this Sunday and the other on Tuesday. I also have a case study to have done by Tuesday and another on the 25th. Time will be tight. I still need to go through all the chapters and make major notes. They tend to be very picky in their questions. Although the exam is open book, you only have an hour to take it. Impossible to scour the book if you don’t know the answer. You’ll never finish in time.

Well… time for work. I’ll post more soon.

Mizike

Monday, August 07, 2006

Let them eat cake

Seems I have a bit of time this morning. My team lead isn’t in yet, which means no assignments. He was out all last week for SAP BW training, which worked out well. I spent the majority of last week in new employee orientation. Time to get to know the company I’m working for.

The network is down, which means no internet access. Amazing how disconnected I feel without the internet. I remember 15 years ago when all I had was local bulletin boards to dial in to on my trusty 600 baud modem. They were just regular people like me who opened their computer up with files you could download or message boards to comment to. I remember having a list of all the computers in the Baton Rouge area that had dial in numbers. Some were secret that only a select few knew. It was like some underground club meeting on bulletin boards sharing their knowledge. Amazingly, one of the groups is still around. Cajun Clickers still meets to this day!

I didn’t get any of my work items done this weekend. I had intended to finish emptying all the boxes, which I almost got done. I still have all my books to go through and the junk drawer box. Plus put up the curtains in the bedroom. Skyprincess needs a very dark room to sleep in. She can’t handle the early morning light. Me, I can sleep anywhere.

Last night was a busy one for me. We had spent most of the day shopping and finally got to the grocery store around 5:30pm. We were walking down the aisles when we past the cake section. She looked at me and said, “don’t forget my birthday is tomorrow”. I commented, “I didn’t forget, I gave you your present already.”

She didn’t look too happy. She just looked at me and said “just remember and do the right thing”. What!?? What was that suppose to mean? Did she expect another present? Did she want cake? So I asked, do you want me to get you a cake also? She said, “you are the boy, you are suppose to know what to do”. Grrrrr…. I hate that. Now they have an expectation and unless you meet it you fail. And she started to get frustrated when I asked her what her expectations were? Dinner and flowers? A cake? A card? She obviously has a very particular idea on what should be done on her birthday.

So now I need to make plans for tonight I didn’t expect to make. We hit the cake aisle and I had to spend forever coaxing what kind of cake she likes. To say she’s picky is an understatement. She can make a Foodie cringe. And she reminded me of our cake tasting trip to LA where she went through 2 dozen cakes finding one she liked. Crappy Kroger brand cakes wouldn’t work. Finally she said to get the Strawberry cake and the cream cheese icing. Which she said get the large double size can, since she likes lots of icing.

Cake mix in hand, I set about baking a cake last night. I wanted to put it in 2 8in rounds, but only had 1 8in round. I asked her my one baking related question which she told me you can’t let the batter sit waiting for the pan to become available. So I couldn’t use the same pan and bake them separately. That means I had to use the large 10in round. (Or was it the 9in round? I think it was 10in. It was the bigger one).

I got it baked and cut the top to make it more flat. Then placed it on the cake stand and noticed it was a bit short. It’s now after 9pm on a Sunday and I need to find a store open to buy another cake box. It takes me 45 mins to find a store open and I rush home and bake another cake. I spend the next 2 hours baking the cake and waiting for it to cool enough to put icing on. I didn’t get finished until well after midnight. But the cake looks nice. I took picture and will post them.

The cake is done, and I picked up a card. What else? I guess I’ll get flowers and take her to the Iollo’s restaurant that’s close. Then give her the shoes again.

I don’t understand why you girls just won’t come out and tell us what you want. Why do you give us the “if you love me you’ll know what to do” statements. Grrrrr…..

Mizike

Friday, August 04, 2006

USB security, at last!

I love this idea. Perfect for all those guys who are carrying around naughty pictures of their wives or girlfriends they don't want to lose.


Thank you for being a friend

This post brought to you by the folks at "Golden Girls" who want to remind you that they want to "Thank you for being a friend"

As some of you may know, I use to play online games. Let’s say, I spent way too much time playing.

The first 3d graphical online game I tried playing with Ultima Online. I had played a couple of the Ultima titles on my desktop and enjoyed them. I had thought the online game would be much the same. I was wrong. It wasn’t fun to play at all. Too many “griefers” either ganking me or pickpocketing me. So I dropped the game after a month.

I then picked up Everquest. It was much nicer since you had the option of playing a non-PvP server. No ganking, although you still ran into griefers. Their main tactic is kill stealing or training (aka Monster Player Killing ).

While playing Everquest, I met Kris and her family. They were a clan of folks playing. We got bored with Everquest and moved onto World of Warcraft when it went live.

We played the PvE server for a while and I left for a bit. Kris’s family moved to a PvP server and I rerolled as a priest. I don’t want to get into a long story, but Kris met Celia and we added her to our playing group.

It was a lot of fun and we got to know each other. Then outside pressures happened and I had to stop playing for a year (changed jobs, etc).

The group sorta broke up after that. Kris went back to school, Kris and Daniel seperated (thought they are giving it another try), and Vinny started a new job and moved out on his own. But we tried to keep up.

Celia is a very interesting young lady. She grew up LDS, which to me is a bit of a mystery. Growing up in southern Arkansas, you don’t see many of them around. I can say the same for Catholics, although when we moved to south Louisiana that changed. Catholics were a huge portion of the population (or as Skyprincess jokes with me “Cat-licks” -- don’t worry.. Skyprincess is Catholic. She’s making fun of my mom. That’s another story).

Celia was fun to hang around and it was nice hearing her stories. I come from a large family, which is in no ways very close. Her background is where family is number 1 above everything else. Its refreshing and I wish my family was like that. But we tend to do everything we can to not be around each other.

I knew my time in Memphis was drawing short, and Celia and hubby had moved to the Dallas area. We decided we had an open weekend and drove to Dallas to have dinner with them. It would probably be the last opportunity we’d have for a long time.

We met up in this jazz type restaurant, which was nice. The food was good, and they had a live band. Someone didn’t do a sound check before hand and it was far too loud for conversations. I talk softly and no one could hear me. Was very frustrating for me to have to pass all my conversations thru Skyprincess since she has a voice you can hear 5 miles away. I’m not saying she’s loud, just she can project her voice when she needs to. I can’t.

I had wanted to give them a house warming present and had a tough time picking the right one. We went back and forth on what to give them. This is too impersonal. That is too expensive, they would feel terrible accepting it. They might not need that one. Oh, that’s cute but do you think it matches their kitchen? And I wanted to find something that would be in their kitchen in 10 years. So we settled on a nice knife set and a pepper mill we both love. The pepper mill has a dial on the side you can set the coarseness of the grind. Is that not the coolest thing evar?

Skyprincess and I loved them both and wished we didn’t have to move so far away. Maybe they’ll come visit sometime when they need to get away from the hot Texas heat. We have a spare room and an open door policy (hint hint). There is a ski hill here that all the locals and regional peeps come use during the winter. And ice fishing! Oh, don’t forget! All the cheese you can eat!

The night went way too fast. The food, conversation, and company was great. We’ll have to get back to Dallas sometime next year and do it again.

Mizike

Dolls turn you gay

OMG!

I was reading the wiki article on My Buddy and found this note.

Due to parental concerns that gay and bisexual boys would be able to experiment with their desires by undressing their dolls, the dolls released by Playskool in the 90s were made with unremovable clothing sewn directly onto the doll's body. The new Kid Sister was also released with clothes sewn onto the body, despite complaints that it made it hard to dress it in different outfits.


Is that just wild or what?



Mizike

Whereever he goes, I go!

Like I said, time to catch up what’s been up.

About a month ago, I had a break in my traveling. For a change, I didn’t need to go out of town for whatever reason. There was a time I was on the road every weekend and never saw home.

Skyprincess had to go to Cabo for the weekend for her friend’s wedding. We had initially planned for both of us to go, but I couldn’t due to my work schedule. So I had a weekend to myself, which was rare. This was the first weekend we had not seen each other since we started dating.

Untypical for me, I went to bed early. Early for me is anytime before 1am. This time, it was 7pm. I knew it was a mistake, I knew I’d be up at 2am if that happened. But it was Saturday, so I wasn’t worried. I would just take a mid Sunday afternoon nap. I love naps :D

I got up and started roaming the house. I was heading to the kitchen when I noticed Andrew (our cat) laying in the floor in the guest bathroom. This was odd, he usually doesn’t hang around that bathroom. If anything, he likes sleeping in the room over the garage.

I just said my normal “hey andrew” and continued into the kitchen. He didn’t follow, which was odd. Andrew follows me around like a lost puppy. Its really funny. But he didn’t come into the kitchen. I looked down the hall and he was in the same spot. So I went in and started talking to him, and he didn’t move. Just sat with this glazed look in his eyes. I picked him up and tried to get him to stand. He wobbled back and forth and just sat back down.

Okay, that’s not right. I tried it again, thinking he was asleep and he did the same thing. Now I’m getting concerned. The last thing I need is for one of Skyprincess’s cats to die on my watch. Besides, he’s my buddy. I go around singing the “My Buddy” song all the time!



I look at the clock and it’s 2am on a Sunday. I rush to find the phone book, and can’t find it. I then go upstairs and start calling Vet offices. Of course all are closed, but one gives a number to a pet emergency clinic. I call and they give me terrible directions.

It takes me 30 minutes to get to where they said they are. I spend the next 15 panic filled minutes driving back and forth trying to find this place. Finally I find it. They had turned off their outside lights and the address they gave me, and was in the phone book, were wrong.

After waiting forever for the vet to come out, he checks Andrew’s vitals and they are bad. They then give me the diagnoses and tell me he had a very severe urinary tract infection that will require immediate treatment. They give me a treatment schedule and demand 50% up front. The 50% being $600.

So I hand over my credit card, and they take Andrew to the back with instructions to pick him up 7am on Monday morning and bring the rest of the payment.

I arrive on Monday and pack Andrew up for the regular Vet’s office. He had a bacterial infection that caused crystals to form in his urinary tract. They had to roto-rooter his pee-pee to clear the blockage. Plus place him on heavy antibiotics to treat the infection. If I would have waiting a couple more hours, he wouldn’t have made it.

If I did not go to sleep earlier the night before and wasn’t up at 2am, he wouldn’t have made it to the morning. Luckily he also didn’t decide to find a dark corner to crawl into. I would not have found him until it was too late.

Mizike

Clogs aren't for just the Danish

Monday is Skyprincess's birthday, and I've had a hard time finding her something.

I hate thinking up ideas for presents. I suck at it. I always want to buy something they will like, and is a bit unusual. Something that they never would expect me to buy, and that I get it right.

The getting it right part is the difficult thing. And for some reason I've been lucky with Skyprincess. She's very picky about what she likes. And although we do tend to like the same things, there are vast differences in tastes here.

For example, this past weekend we flew to L.A. for the final wedding planners meeting. It was also her friend's Curt's 36th birthday. They had decided for Curt to host a "White Trash" party. Dress in your trailer park best and come enjoy "White Trash" food.

Oh! I made the invitation for the party. Here's the image on one side of the postcard.



They spent a long time thinking up the menu for the party. Beenie Weenies, small cans of pork and beans, cheeze wiz on crackers, fried spam sandwiches, peanut butter and jelly, boones farm coolers, milwaukee’s best beer, big bowl of blue jello with fruit, tuna casserole, pigs in a blanket, and other stuff I don’t remember.

All food I could eat everyday. Skyprincess turns her nose up to some of my downhome foods. Its not like I eat hog maws or anything like that (my friend in high school loved those things). But I have been known to order a fried bologna plate when we go out.

And our taste in decoration is different. Although she loves most of my furniture, she has vetoed others. She has said no to me buying more tribal type art. I love masks, though I do tend to refrain from buying them. I think good quality mask prices are way too pricey for me. But that doesn’t mean I don’t like it.

But she’s told me there are 2 things I should not even try buying for her. That is any clothing and shoes. After asking her opinions while shopping, I’ve had to personally expand that list to jewelry, purses, hats, and sunglasses. Basically, anything she wears is off-limits when it comes to buying a present. It just means I’ll fail.

So I started thinking of what to buy her.

At first I thought about buying her just officer furniture. She needs to set up an office, but that’s not very romantic.

Maybe something like this?



But then I thought about this bicycle we saw in L.A. this past weekend. It was very cute, but I’ve been unable to find it’s exact match. Here is one that looks a little like it, although the one we saw was much nicer.




But I couldn’t find the exact one I wanted and I didn’t want to wait for shipping. So yesterday I found someone wearing these really cute shoes. I asked where they got them and went at lunch and picked them up.

These are close to the ones I got, although the picture doesn’t show how cute they really are. They are clogs by a company called Dansko. And I lucked out and she loves them! I picked up the Professional ones in Cordovan Cabrio brown. On their website they have red patent leather, which is also very cool.

All forks and no spoons

Time to get caught up.

I’ve been absent for a while. Couple reasons. First, I just found I didn’t have the time to write anything worthy of posting. My day job was very hectic and I couldn’t find a spare hour to devote to posting. Then I was busy with online classes at night. Plus I was job hunting and getting discouraged by my disappointments. I just hated posting that I missed another opportunity. Then when I started working from home, I would much rather spend time with Skyprincess than posting.

Okay, there you go! But I have a bit of time today to post. So I’ll try to get caught up.

First, as I posted earlier, I have a new job. It required moving to Wisconsin, which so far isn’t a problem. Its nice and warm this month, but we are expecting it to get really cold this winter. The movers finished delivering our stuff on Tuesday and we spent our first official night in our place last night. We still have much to do. There are a lot of boxes still to unpack and I need to rebuild my computer desk. They made me take it apart prior to the move. It’s a cheap pressed board kind that just wouldn’t make the move. I’ve had it well over 10 years and love it. I doubt I could find another just like it.

I also need to put my TV together. Especially since tonight is SciFi Friday. I missed last week’s episodes and don’t want to get too far behind. Most of last night I spent digging through boxes looking for our lease papers. I have no clue where they are and Skyprincess will need to get a copy today. We moved in on the 1st and the landlords came by yesterday for the rent check. I thought we had already paid the 1st months rent and can’t understand why they expected another on move-in day. So we need to check the lease. It’s a $1000 I wasn’t expecting to pay this soon. Plus I’m disappointed in the carpet. It’s heavily stained, but they are going to replace it. Just means we’ll need to move furniture around when they do. They came by and showed Skyprincess carpet samples, and she picked a nice one. Sorta berberish looking. Should be nice when they finish.

We loved the new place when we saw it but I can tell there are little things that will start to bother me.

First, there is not as much pantry space as I had in my house. I’m a packrat and I buy stuff when I think I may need it. So my pantry was full of food products I would probably never use. Anything from 14 cans of stewed tomatoes to a bottle of fish sauce to several bags of toated puffed rice (for breakfast) to a can of hagus. Yes, I had hagus in my pantry. Don’t ask….

Skyprincess had neatly loaded the pantry, which you just can’t do with my stuff. With my stuff you don’t waste any space. You have to cram cans in every little nook and cranny.

I get home Tuesday, and she tells me I need to donate this box of food to the goodwill. She hasn’t even opened it! It has all sorta of food. All my jars are there. From speghetti sauce, and sliced jalepeno peppers, and cans of coconute milk… to a huge jar of Texas Pete! You don’t throw good stuff away! I saved the box and will need to find a place for it this weekend.

Which takes us to my dishes. She threw almost all of them away! I was not happy at all. Marriage is suppose to be the coming together of 2 people to make a home. That means combining what I have with hers, or that’s what I thought. And I will admit, my pots and pans were not the greatest. Many were hand-me-downs, and I did tend to use metal utinsels when cooking with my none-stick. Which gentlemen, is a very bad idea! Don’t use metal anything when cooking with none-stick. It ruins it.

We had a gift certificate to Bed Bath & Beyond and decided to buy a new set of Calphalon cookware. Some of mine needed replacing, so I really didn’t have an issue with this. But throw away everything?



Okay, I did have duplicates. I had 2 large colanders and 1 that was a pasta colander. And I had some cheap stainless dishes that we didn’t need again. I never used them, to be honest. Food always stuck when I cooked with them. And there was a 4 qt stock pot I used to cook pasta we threw away. It was almost paper thin after over a decades worth of use. But worse of all, she threw away all my silverware and my bowls!!!!

I’m a bowl and fork person. I eat almost everything in a bowl. And I eat almost everything with a fork. I must have had 40 forks in the drawer and I could run out before I ran the dishwasher. 4 bowls and 4 forks isn’t enough. We don’t have enough dishes for our use right now. I mean, I don’t want to run the dishwasher just for a couple bowls and forks. I wait until I have a load of dishes. Now I don’t! It’s so frustrating! I want my bowls and forks back!

And I think we are missing things from our move. I had a blue duffle bag I had loaded a bunch of stuff in, and I can’t find it. We still have boxes to unload, so I’m hoping the movers packed it away. But I think I packed it after then were through packing, so I’m doubtful we have it now. I’m not even sure what was in it. But we think it had Skyprincess’s birth control patches, and I think it also had my electric toothbrush. Plus I think it had all our mail, including my coupon book for my car payment. Which will not be good if that’s the case. The car note is due.

Okay, that’s enough for this post. I’ll start working on other ones so I don’t have just a huge long post.

Mizike