Saturday, June 30, 2007

London Car Bomb a "non-incident" to Some [Updated]


With all the attention given to the latest London bomb plot in the media right now, its easy to forget that in Iraq, car bombs are a daily occurrence. And ones that are defused before they go off are hardly a blip on the radar these days. Just two days ago, one VBIED (vehicle borne improvised explosive device) killed 22 people, and earlier this month, another killed 60. And in addition to these more spectacular incidents reported by the major media, every day there are at least 5-10 car bombs either detonated or found in the country that go unnoticed.

Still, I think everyone would agree that regardless of how they are reported, attempted acts of terrorism are not a joke and should be taken seriously.

Well - almost everyone thinks that. Some see a big joke of a conspiracy behind all this...

Larry C. Johnson, a former CIA and State Department employee, the CEO of Berg Associates, and a self-styled expert on terrorism, has made a career out of trivializing terror fears as much as possible. Now, he thinks the bomb plot was a "crock of crap", a non-incident hyped up by the media, encouraged by the US and UK governments. In his rush attempt to downplay this incident as much as possible, this "expert" actually confuses "gas" (meaning propane gas) with "gasoline". Somehow, no one told him that the British instead use the word "petrol" when referring to car fuel.

This display of ignorance also appeared on the Daily Kos (as a recommended Diary) and Democratic Underground. What's sad is that there are a lot of commenters that agree with him, including, of course, the standard conspiracy theory that the "CIA did it".

He also says he hopes the culprits are caught before they "hurt themselves". No mention that many other people were in the line of fire. Some of us are not terribly concerned for the safety of terrorists out to kill innocent people.

Incidentally, this is the same guy that once wrote this for the New York Times:
Judging from news reports and the portrayal of villains in our popular entertainment, Americans are bedeviled by fantasies about terrorism. They seem to believe that terrorism is the greatest threat to the United States and that it is becoming more widespread and lethal. They are likely to think that the United States is the most popular target of terrorists. And they almost certainly have the impression that extremist Islamic groups cause most terrorism.
The date? It was July, 2001. Just two months before the attacks of 9/11.

But even people ignorant of the current issues are entitled to their uninformed opinions. What's scary is that this man claims that he still advises the US government on terrorism, writes for various publications, has appeared on news programs, and has testified in front of congress.

Unlike armchair warriors like Mr. Johnson, I have directly seen the aftermath of VBIEDs firsthand on two occasions. One of which went off just down the street from me exactly one year ago to this very day. It targeted Iraqi troops at a checkpoint, but fortunately, didn't kill anyone but the driver. It also wasn't very large; in other words, a "crock of crap" by Mr. Johnson's standards. But if it didn't go off prematurely it would have killed a lot of people. Image is to the right, I made it small here on purpose. If you click on it, you will see more detail, but I caution that it is very graphic, body parts and all.

Update 06/30/2007 08:58:00 PM: A burning jeep has crashed into Glasgow airport with two "asian" suspects were arrested. Most likely, this was another car bomb that malfunctioned, originally timed to go off simultaneously with the bombs in London.

Mr. Johnson appeared last night on Keith Olbermann's show calling these "non bombs" and claiming there would be no danger from shrapnel. I can't believe this man is on television. What did he think the nails are for? I do agree with him when he says media coverage is skewed; a bomb in London gets far more coverage than one in Iraq. But he also contradicts himself here, claiming that the London bombs were a non-event, but then also claiming this put to lie the theory that we are fighting terrorists in Iraq so we don't have to fight them over here. So which is it? Was this terrorism or not?

Also, for the most complete coverage of this event, The Counterterrorism Blog has a wealth of material on this incident.



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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Americans: Your Tax Dollars at Work Toward Sex Change Operations

Michelle Kosilek (who legally changed his first name from "Robert" in 1993) is currently serving a life sentence in Massachusetts for killing his wife back in 1990. As you may have guessed from the name change, he would also like to have a sex change, which is now known by the more PC term: "sex reassignment surgery". He and some sympathetic doctors are claiming that he needs it to cure his depression and are demanding that it be provided by the state. Naturally, the Massachusetts Department of Corrections refused. So Mr. Kosilek filed a lawsuit. More than one, actually. Right now a judge is deliberating over his third request.

So the judge hasn't ruled and Kosilek hasn't gotten his sex change yet. So why does the headline say that tax dollars were supporting this?

Here's why - the charges for 10 medical expert witnesses alone in this farce so far have totalled $58,000, and that doesn't count court costs, attorney fees, Department of Correction fees, and of course, all the wasted time over this nonsense. Oh, and by the way - this is Kosilek's second lawsuit and third time in court over this issue.

The chance of the judge ruling favorably to Mr. Kosilek is very slim, and even if he did, the chances of it surviving an inevitable appeal are slimmer yet. Still, why on Earth did it even come this far? As one commenter On Newsday put it:

This 'case' shouldn't have gotten beyond the guard at the jail laughing when the prisoner asked. It should never have become anything more than an inside joke at the prison.
Incidentally, that Newsday article reads more than just a little friendly to the plaintiff. They point out that the money spent so far on fighting this action is far more than it would cost to give him the sex change (about $20,000), without adding in the fact that the real worry here is setting a precedent that will oblige the State to provide all kinds of elective procedures in the future. What's next, Nose jobs? Breast implants? Viagra? Hair transplants for the balding? As of right now, 10 inmates in Massachusetts are receiving hormone therapy, and two have already requested to get the surgery as well.

Some people seem to think all of the above:
But advocates say in some cases -- such as that of Kosilek, who has twice attempted suicide -- sex-change surgery is as much a medical necessity as treatment for diabetes or high blood pressure.
"The duty belongs to the prison to figure out how to fulfill its constitutional obligations to both provide adequate medical care and provide a fundamental security for all inmates," said Cole Thaler, an attorney with Lambda Legal, a gay- and transgender-rights group.
So the prison can be forced to do an inmate's bidding over suicide threats? And has anyone considered the possibility of Mr. Kosilek paying for this operation himself?

Overlawyered.com (with some great comments) pointed out Newsday's little disclaimer at the end of the article:
This version CORRECTS `himself' to `herself.'
Not only is this PC pandering at its worst, it is also incorrect, since Mr. Kosilek has not yet had the surgery and is still legally a man.

And there are other issues to here besides money. Sex change operations aren't just done overnight. They require numerous psychiatric visits, hormone therapy, and doctors visits, all of which drain time and resources escorting this man to his appointments or providing medication which should instead be reserved for people who are really sick. Add to this the security problems during the procedure of having a man/woman in either a man's prison or woman's prison.

Massachusetts is not the only place that has struggled over this issue. Last year, Wisconsin's legislature tried to ban such surgeries and hormone therapies from their prisons, only to be sued by the ACLU. Several years ago, San Francisco decided to grant free sex-changes to city employees, and was not sued, since that city is rather on the fringe of American life.

But if you think this is ridiculous, just remember it could be worse. Take the UK for example. The NHS (National Health Service) in Britain has provided these operations for free (well not exactly free, but through public funds) since 1998, apparently even to jailed persons. Incredibly, even after paying for one such sex change on a 57 year old man, they also agreed to pay thousands of pounds worth of tattoo removal for him/her, because the tattoos were "unladylike" (never mind the fact that tattoos are very popular with women - that is, real women - all across Europe). This is not only nuts but terribly unfair, because, if the commenters are to be believed, the NHS will not fund tattoo removal for ordinary persons. And it gets even worse: in 2002, the UK was also forced by the European Court of Human Rights to allow transgendered persons to change their birth certificates. The reason is many need these certificates to get married in countries where same-sex marriages are illegal. But the problem is, this completely defies common sense. The sex you were born with is a medical fact, and you can't change the past with the stroke of a pen.

As a side note, believe it or not, these surgeries are legal in Iran, although not on the government's dime. At least one man-turned-woman had second thoughts after being forced to comply with Iran's restrictions on women.

One more thing. I hate to break it to many of these "experts" but sex-reassignment surgery does not actually turn a man into a woman, or visa versa. All it can do is make a person superficially appear as another gender, and changes their legal status on paper. But this is an illusion only. It does not change DNA or hormones (which must be supplied for life) and it does not allow a person to ever have children as a member of the new gender.



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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

BBC Employing Hamas Members?


I found this story, courtesy of Little Green Footballs. It's bad enough the the BBC is, by their own admissions, wildly biased against Israel. But apparently they have employed a member of Hamas, a group recognized by the UK as a terrorist organization. Since the BBC is an agency of the British government, is this legal? Judeoscope says:
Hamas is listed as a terrorist organization by the British government, meaning lending material support to it is a criminal felony in Britain.
As usual, I decided to do a little digging. Unfortunately, there's not far to dig.

Apparently, the man is has inside connections in the area and the BBC sent him in to negotiate for the release of Alan Johnston, a BBC reporter who has been held hostage in Gaza by the "Army of Islam" since 12 March. The BBC officially denies that the man is a member of Hamas. OK. Then who is he? And just what is his expertise and connections to Hamas? He must have some or you wouldn't have sent him in the first place.

Finally, Hamas firmly controls the Gaza strip. So how could they have "little influence over his [Johnston's] captors"?

Here is another interesting observation, which shows the BBC's ambivalence about Palestinian terrorism. Look at this whitewash job they do on kidnapping, just a few days after Johnston was abducted, to make the whole thing seem an almost jovial affair:
[The Gaza militants] want proper jobs in this poverty-stricken place, and usually they want to be allowed to join the security services. It is ironic really. Gaza is the only place in the world where your kidnapper's one demand is that he should be allowed to become a policeman.

And the kidnap craze has thrown up moments of black humour.

The gunmen are not always crack division militants, more Keystone Kidnappers. While an Italian journalist was being led off to a hideout he had to climb a fence. And when one of his abductors started the climb he absentmindedly handed the Italian his gun. Surely it is the first thing they teach you at kidnapper's school, never give the hostage your machinegun.

And the whole business of kidnapping goes very much against the local social grain. Palestinians are extremely hospitable people, and one of the dangers of being abducted here must be that you could get fed to death.

Contrast the above with this much more sobering report of Johnston's situation just two days ago. It took a pretty shocking image in order for the grim reality of his situation to finally kick in:
video was released in which Mr Johnston wore what he said was an explosives belt.

In the tape, the reporter said his captors had promised to detonate it if force was used to try to free him.

Incidentally, I have my quarrels with the BBC but not with Alan Johnston. My prayers go out to him and his family. As a journalist, he is a non-combatant and his abduction is particularly senseless. There is an online petition for his release. If you are interested in adding your signature, click on the image below:

Alan Johnston banner




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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

"World awaits Paris Hilton's return"


This is not a joke. The title above is an actual headline from Yahoo! News on Monday.

If this news is somehow really important to you, then go ahead here and view 166 photos on the momentous historical event of her release.

Incidentally, someone is even trying to sell an empty can of dog food from her trash on ebay. I just couldn't make this stuff up.

International Headlines followed in suit. From Germany's "Stern" front page: "Paris entschwebt dem Knast"

Incidentally, here's Google's roll up today: "Paris Hilton", 60,200,000 web references, "George W. Bush", only 59,400,000.

And yes, once again, I know I'm adding to the hype. But at this juncture ignoring her is like being careful not to litter in the middle of a trash dump.



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Monday, June 25, 2007

Australia's Radical Plan to Crack Down on Aborigine Child Abuse


If you live outside of Australia, you are probably not familiar with this news. But in a controversial plan, the government has come very near to declaring martial law over aborigine communities. Earlier this month, a government report (full copy here) revealed:
another, previously hidden, price tag on what it termed the "river of grog" [alcoholism] pouring into Aboriginal communities -- rampant child sexual abuse caused by a breakdown in traditional society.

The report's shocking description of juvenile prostitution and children as young as five contracting venereal disease prompted Prime Minister John Howard to launch the most radical overhaul of Aboriginal policy in a generation.

Branding the plight of Aboriginal children as a national emergency, Howard announced the federal government was seizing control of Aboriginal communities across Australia's vast Northern Territory for the next five years.

He said police, with logistical backing from the military, would enforce a six-month alcohol ban in Aboriginal settlements.

Hardcore pornography will also be prohibited under the clampdown, while all Aboriginal children in the Northern Territory will receive compulsory health checks and welfare will only be paid if parents meet strict conditions.

"The reality is that the old approach hasn't worked," Howard said, "that's why we're acting."

Since I am not intimately familiar with the issues here, I simply could not say if this is the right strategy or not. However, I do agree with PM Howard that something different needs to be done. The statistics are grim:
Alcohol causes the death of an Aborigine every 38 hours. Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, who together make up about 2.5% of Australia's population, live on average 17 years less than their fellow citizens. The average life expectancy for Aboriginal men is 59, compared with 77 for non-indigenous males
Of course, in spite of this, not everyone is happy with the plan, and it has run into strong opposition. And predictably, the traditional tactic of shutting down constructive debate has reared its ugly head: Calling it "racist". (Crying "racism"... that old comfort zone that just never goes out of style...)

Even medical examinations, which I would think would be the least objectionable parts of the plan, are denounced the same way:
The Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance - Northern Territory said compulsory medical checks on indigenous children were racist and were causing anguish to parents. The Australian Medical Association said there were "nowhere near enough doctors" in the Northern Territory to conduct medical checks for an estimated 23,000 children.
"Causing anguish to parents". Incredible. How about anguish to children? Would you prefer the program to be voluntary, knowing that any parent who is sexually abusing a child would be very unlikely to volunteer their examination? The number of available doctors could certainly be a problem. But look here:
Gregory Phillips, one of Australia's first Aboriginal medical anthropologists, does not support compulsory health checks for children under 16.

Mr Phillips says “unless they do that in non-Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory as well, then it is racially discriminatory”.

“What that does is that every kid in that community, whether they've been abused or not, will take the message that there is something wrong with them and that it is their aboriginality itself that is the problem”.
But non-aborigines are 98% of Australia's population. If you may not have enough doctors to check the 2% of children that are aborigine, how on earth are you going to check them all? Shouldn't you put your limited resources where they will do the most good? Would it really be better that none at all are checked?

The rest of the more rational criticism leveled at Howard essentially boils down to these arguments:

1) Howard is just posturing himself before the upcoming elections

2) This government interference is just too heavy handed

3) The government doesn't understand aborigine society well enough to solve these problems

All of these certainly could be very valid criticisms. But what galls me is that in all this criticism, I have yet to see anyone offer a viable alternate plan other than very nebulous calls for "empowerment". Here is one particular suggestion that is spectacular in both it's vagueness and uselessness:
We need to think from the heart and link hands as a nation over the coming years to recover the strength, dignity and courage that defined Aboriginal society for so long, until us white fellas came stomping across the country, trampling people's lives and seeding the current crisis across Aboriginal society today.
The official report itself provides 97 recommendations for solving the problem. They start on page 21, or they are also summarized here, for anyone who doesn't want to download the file. Some of them would probably be effective, such as those dealing with agency information sharing and health care reporting, and others would take a long time to implement, such recruiting more aborigines into law enforcement and social work. In the meantime, what do you do? Unfortunately, many suffer from the same polite wishfulness and vagueness noted above. For example:
40 a. develop a comprehensive long-term strategy to build a strong and equitable core service platform in Aboriginal communities, to address the underlying risk factors for child sexual abuse and to develop functional communities in which children are safe

46 d. the establishment of multi-purpose family centres or hubs in remote communities and regional centres to provide an integrated holistic approach to working with families

75. That the government actively encourage, support and resource the development of community-based and community-owned Aboriginal family violence intervention and treatment programs and any other programs that meet the needs of children and are designed to respond to the particular conditions and cultural dynamics of each community and commit to ongoing resourcing of such programs
You get the idea.

Personally, I am instinctively against any broadening of government power and interference in private family life. But my own concerns for the safety of children override these concerns in nearly every case. If you make a false accusation against an adult, you can always apologize and provide some sort of compensation later. But you simply cannot turn back the clock with a child who has been sexually abused.

UPDATE 06/26/2007: Fixed several problem links.



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Sunday, June 24, 2007

36 Deaths this Weekend that You Probably Heard Nothing About


At least 12 illegal immigrants died while trying to cross the Arizona desert, while 24 Africans drown at sea in an attempt to reach Malta. Their environments could not have been more different; essentially 12 people died from lack of water while 24 died from too much of it; but their situations that drove them to risk their lives in this way were exactly the same.

The media makes a quick announcement, and then goes on to more pressing news, such as the "Paris Hilton to give Larry King post-jail interview" headline on Yahoo! News yesterday. Of course, it's not like people are demanding to hear about migrant deaths. Most either don't care, or believe the subject is too depressing to talk about. But this ugly business, which is an almost daily occurrence, must be openly discussed, particularly if we are going go try to tackle immigration legislation one more time. Do you think the immigration bill that is being revived in the US Senate will prevent deaths like these? Not in any form of the bill I've seen so far. And that is why I oppose it.

In any case, who is at fault for deaths like these? There are some people, who will always blame the United States. But can't we honestly say that the blame lies in several places at once?

1) The migrants themselves - unless someone forced them to take the journey, which is rarely the case; normally they pay human smugglers thousands of dollars for the privilege. Of course, one could argue that desperate poverty forced them into it, which is certainly understandable. But it still remains that if you are going to attempt to cross the Arizona desert without adequate water or transportation, then the summertime is not an advisable time to do it! And I cannot put that blame on anyone but the migrants themselves.

2) The nations they are fleeing; often this is due to war, oppression, or simple poverty, but sometimes, as in the case of Mexico, you have a nation actively encouraging its citizens to make the dangerous journey to the United States.

3) You also have the recipient nation; the theory of blame here is similar to the bizarre concept of "attractive nuisance" in the United States, where landowners can be held responsible if a trespasser drowns in their swimming pool, a burglar falls through a skylight, or a vandal electrocutes himself on top of a train, etc.

Well, so the theory goes, we lure them here with our jobs. Well, if that is true, do luxury car manufacturers "lure" people into carjackings?

Of course, many of the nation's policies contribute to the problem. To quote the BBC story on the Malta migrants:
The Italian authorities have recently extended the reception centre for illegal immigrants on the island, but it is already overflowing with people.

As quickly as the police process the immigrants and fly them out or put them on a ferry to the mainland, more arrive.
Here's a radical idea: how about not transporting them to the mainland? Once there, they are essentially lost on the European Union forever, and most head north towards Germany or England.

Talk of amnesty, both in the US and Europe, also greatly contributes to the problem.

4) Finally, why does no one want to cast blame toward the special interest groups that stand to benefit from such immigration? Obvious candidates are race/religion based groups, such as La Raza, or The Muslim Council of Britain. But you can include political parties, such as the socialists in Europe, or the Democratic party in the US, that expect any new immigrants to cast their votes mainly for them. Add to this the strong business interests that love the cheap labor (mainly Republicans in the US), call anyone who opposes you a racist, and you have quite a powerful combination of allies, which, while a minority, when working in concert can still easily thwart the majority view that wants to clamp down on such immigration.

Some of us want to save lives, and we are branded racists for it. And from a fellow Catholic, no less.


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Friday, June 22, 2007

American Journalists Under Scrutiny [Updated]


Since I was just on the subject of BBC bias, here's a similar and downright amazing article from MSNBC about journalists in the United States. One reporter named Bill Dedman digs into the donor history of 144 colleagues, and finds that between 2004-2007, about 88% of them donated to Democrats or their political causes, while only 12% of them to Republicans or conservative causes. He makes an attempt to contact each one to question them about it, and some of their responses are downright hilarious. For example:
(D) New York Daily News, Matthew Roberts, photographer, $404 to John Kerry in March 2004.

Update: Roberts called to say, "It doesn't sound like this is going to be a positive story. This sort of story could not possibly be positive for me, so I'm not going to respond. Good luck. Goodbye."
I agree this is a problem, and that most of the US mainstream media is biased toward leftist ideology. However, Republicans are not being deliberately "shut out" of the process. The actual reason why this happens is entirely different than what most conservatives believe.

This isn't the first time this has been observed. For decades, studies of journalists who vote in US elections overwhelmingly support Democratic candidates (go here for a very good breakdown).

In the US, Fox News is the exception. It leans slightly to the political right, and is at the top of the ratings as well. Why is that? The answer is very simple. As the only conservative television news network, they have something different to offer viewers. ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN are all essentially competing for the same audience.

So why doesn't someone start up a "neutral" network without any political biases? I would consider this sheer heaven, but it's already been tried, and just does not work. Humans are imperfect, and their prejudices show up in everything they do. Such a network would still slightly drift one way or the other eventually, and in time the public will label it either left or right wing, and they would probably be right. Keep in mind that Fox News actually only very slightly leans to the right, while the other networks lean to the left rather slightly as well (anyone who thinks Fox News is a radical right-wing site can go to Michael Savage's web site for comparison, and anyone who thinks CNN is communist can to go check out the Indymedia and tell me what you find).

Even a web site like "Factcheck.org" that bends over backwards to be as fair as possible and not to favor one political party over another, still can't help certain biases on specific issues. For example, I noticed on any issue relating to civil tort reform, they side heavily with trial lawyers over doctors, businesses, or insurance companies. Here's a recent example where they take issue with an ad over lawsuit abuse. They take the ad to task accusing it of not separating abusive from non-abusive suits. But the problem is, the only way you can prove a lawsuit was abusive is in court, in which case the lawsuit would have been thrown out (in other words, it wouldn't count as a suit). They also make a blatant error here as well. They claim:
"the same [Tillinghast] study estimates the cost of all lawsuits at the lowest level in 10 years."
But the study didn't say that. It said the growth of tort costs was at it lowest level. The actual costs are still quite higher than previous years. If you don't believe me you can check this yourself on p.12 of the study.

In any case, I'm digressing. The point is, no matter how hard they try, no network can be totally free from bias. The best they can do is have open and regular discussion of the issue, and get rid of the few journalists who refuse to even make an attempt at impartiality.

But what is the reason for liberal domination of the press? Is it because they can't stand other points of view? Are they engaged in a conspiracy to silence conservatives? No.

To conservatives, I say: this is YOUR fault. How many of you chose to study journalism? Or even writing? When you complain about the preponderance of leftists in the University and in Hollywood, you similarly need to ask yourselves - how many of you decided to pursue a career in education, particularly in the social sciences? How many of you decided to get into acting, modeling, directing or scriptwriting?

In my experience, most of you went into more stable, less esoteric careers instead. Many into business or business related fields, but also plenty of computer science, engineering, law, medicine, or the military. Of course, there is nothing wrong with any of those professions, but the fact remains that for the dearth of conservative journalists you have no one to blame but yourselves. And yes, I know, I didn't become a journalist - I joined the military instead. Well, first, I am not a conservative in the sense most people see it, but in any case, I hope I'm partially tipping the balance with this weblog. I also hope to take up teaching after I retire. We'll see.

I remember many years ago, my boyhood hometown newspaper, the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch, bemoaned a disturbing study that said the military was overwhelmingly conservative in outlook. The irony is that the same newspaper is overwhelmingly leftist in outlook, and didn't see any problem with that at all.

Incidentally, if you are curious about exactly where you are on the political spectrum, here is one tool to help you do it, the "Political Compass". It puts me almost squarely in the middle, so maybe that means that I am almost free from bias. I can only hope.

Update 06/26/2007 01:36:00PM: Courtesy of Gateway Pundit:
[Documentary] Producer Martyn Burke said this during the airing of the special on the liberal agenda at PBS:

The first thing they (PBS) told me- "Fire your partners... Because they are conservatives."



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Thursday, June 21, 2007

BBC News Biased? Why You Should Care

BBC News is the news arm of the British Broadcasting Company, the most established and watched television channel in Britain. They also maintain radio stations and a very extensive news site on the internet, which I often use as a reference for this weblog. Unlike news organizations in America, the BBC was established by the British government and is funded by their taxpayers through a license fee.

Like every other news outlet, they are frequently accused of bias in their reporting. Unlike other news outlets, however, every so often they conduct regular charter reviews to determine bias, and the results are very interesting (see below). This is because their charter states the service must be: "free from both political and commercial influence and answers only to its viewers and listeners". Of course, if you are an American or some other nationality besides British, you might be thinking "why should I care?". But no matter where you live, chances are that bias at the BBC profoundly affects you life. Even if you don't realize it.

First, I'll explain why. Simply put, more people worldwide get their news from the BBC than any other single news organization, often trusting it more than the local state-controlled media. Worldwide, many people's views on terrorism, Islam, and the United States are a direct result of BBC reporting.

They are active on television, radio, and internet through BBC News 24, BBC Parliament, BBC World, BBCi, Ceefax, and BBC News Online. They also create content for PDAs, cell phones, and downloadable podcasts. On shortwave radio, they broadcast in 150 capital cities worldwide, in 33 different languages, with a weekly audience of about 163 million listeners, including a great many across the Middle East. On the day of the London bombings, their web site hit a peak of over one billion web site hits... once again, that's billion, not million, and might be a world record. They list a comprehensive view of their readership here.

Now, having read the above, certainly you would agree that it would be a good thing if they made an attempt at objective reporting. But after years of complaints, they still haven't. I realize bias is often in the eye of the beholder, but when the corporation itself even admits it, then, most likely, there is a problem:

THE BBC is institutionally biased, an official report will conclude this week. The year-long investigation, commissioned by the BBC, has found the corporation particularly partial in its treatment of single-issue politics such as climate change, poverty, race and religion.
...
“There is a tendency to ‘group think’ with too many staff inhabiting a shared space and comfort zone,” says the report.

It goes on to highlight a “Roneo mentality” where staff ape each other’s common liberal values.
And later:
The document, jointly commissioned by BBC managers and the board of governors, now replaced by the BBC Trust, includes details of a staff impartiality seminar at which senior figures criticised the corporation for being antiAmerican and pandering to Islam.

Criticisms highlighted from the seminar include: A senior BBC reporter attacking the corporation for giving “no moral weight” to America. Executives admitting they would broadcast images of a Bible being thrown away – but not the Koran for fear of offending Muslims. The BBC deliberately championing multiculturalism and ethnic minorities, while betraying an anticountryside bias.
(Tip from Deansmay)

Of course, this isn't the first time they have been accused of this. A charter review in 2004 was particularly damning over their Middle East coverage, particularly conflicts in Israel:
"We detected considerable inaccuracy and detected a trend of antipathy towards Israel....

Our findings are that, over the period of 38 months the BBC has devoted a significantly disproportionate amount of space to the Israeli/Palestinian problem, to the almost total exclusion of a number of other issues where major humanitarian and political problems exist. On one analysis we calculate that Israel gets 80 times as much attention as other comparable humanitarian and political stories.

Where the Middle East has featured the documentaries have been overwhelming negative in their depiction of Israel, with a considerable amount of time and space being given to programme makers with views known to be antithetical to Israel. Of 16 documentaries, two were categorised as unknown, because we could not obtain a transcript. Of the remaining 14, 1 was biased in favour of Israel, 1 balanced and 12 biased against Israel. For the reasons set out below we suspect that the 2 unknowns are likely to be negative towards Israel.

Given the huge influence of the BBC we consider that this trend of partiality and imbalance over such an extended period amounts to a campaign to vilify Israel...

We do not accuse the BBC of deliberately deciding to vilify Israel in this way. We do not know whether the campaign is deliberate. However the fact that it has occurred and that the imbalance has been allowed to continue unchecked for so long does point to systemic weaknesses in BBC editorial and management control.

In this respect, at least, we consider that our findings are entirely consistent with the findings of systemic failure within the BBC which were highlighted by the Hutton report published earlier this year."
The Hutton Report referred to above was published in 2004. It was the result of the Hutton Inquiry, which investigated a scandal involving BBC reporting. BBC News reported that a source in the government claimed that Tony Blair deliberately falsified a public document in order to back up his case of going to war in Iraq. But this "information" was completely fabricated, and instead of apologizing, BBC leadership dug in their heels and stood by the report. The Hutton inquiry found that the BBC reporter had deliberately lied and in the end, public backlash from the scandal caused the reporter and the two top BBC executives to resign. It's actually a rather long story, and if you want to dive into it, you can start here and here.

Later in 2005, in another move that may have been bias or simply political correctness run amok (or both), in the wake of the London Subway bombings BBC execs decided to avoid the "terrorist" label because:
"the word 'terrorist' itself can be a barrier rather than aid to understanding".
...
Within hours of the explosions, a memo was sent to senior editors on the main BBC news programmes from Helen Boaden, head of news. While she was aware "we are dancing on the head of a pin", the BBC was very worried about offending its World Service audience, she said.

BBC output was not to describe the killers of more than 50 in London as "terrorists" although - nonsensically - they could refer to the bombings as "terror attacks". And while the guidelines generously concede that non-BBC should be allowed to use the "t" word, BBC online was not even content with that and excised it from its report of Tony Blair's statement to the Commons.
Former employees have also sounded off about the BBC's inner culture. Gerard Baker, who worked there for six years wrote:
If anti-Americanism is on the rise in the world, the BBC can take a fair share of the credit; much of its U.S. coverage depicts a cartoonish image of a nation of obese, Bible-wielding halfwits, blissfully dedicated to shooting or suing each other.

Its suppositions are recognizable as those of self-appointed liberal elites everywhere: American power is bad; European multilateralism is good; organized religion is a weird vestige of unenlightened barbarism; atheism is rational man's highest intellectual achievement; Israel (especially Ariel Sharon) is evil; Palestinians (especially Yasser Arafat) are innocent victims; business is essentially corrupt, or at best simply boring; poverty is the result of government failure; economic success is the product of exploitation or crookedness. And so on.
Robin Aiken, who worked at the BBC as a reporter and an executive for 25 years, wrote a book about the subject: "Can we trust the BBC?". He gives one anecdote in which Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher narrowly missed an attack by an IRA bomb. He overheard a reporter remark: "Pity they missed the Bitch". He also said:
"Dislike of Republicans [in the USA] is close to being a BBC article of faith...I remember being in the Washington office during the Lewinsky affair and saying that I rather sympathised with the Republicans. I think it would have gone down better if I’d confessed to being a paedophile.”"
If you really want to dive into this issue, there is actually an entire blog devoted to it. Biased-BBC runs regular critiques of their reporting. Sometimes their accusations could be explained away, but sometimes not. For example, here are a couple of examples on their main page today: a mere rumor that Israel instigated the the hijacking that led to Operation Entebbe in 1976, is given very serious weight; and a story about an "honor killing" (the murder of Muslim women to save the family "honor") that never mentions religion in any form at all. In a more recent example, I referred to a similar glaring omission in one of their reports about the JFK plotters here.

One my wonder then, why I refer to the BBC so often if it is biased? Well there are three reasons for this: 1) BBC News has more international coverage and runs their site in more languages than any other web site I have found anywhere; 2) I am aware of their biases and keep them in mind when reading it - I also cross check stories elsewhere; and 3) they don't pander to celebrities nearly as much as other news outlets do.

Finally, just indulge me one more example. The below passage is from the 2004 charter review I linked to above. The program described below was one of several that upset Israeli officials so much that they refused to cooperate or give interviews to the BBC until they appointed a special panel to monitor their Middle East coverage. You can read it and decide for yourself.
Programme BBC2
Title Behind the Fence
Date 25.05.2003
Classification Negative towards Israel

Behind the Fence deals with the issue of Israel’s construction of a security fence as a preventative measure against Palestinian terrorism. The primary focus of the documentary is a young Palestinian mother whose life has been disrupted by the fence’s construction. She tells viewers that “all the countries have opened their borders. Berlin, for instance, destroyed its wall so I wonder why they are building this fence. I don’t know why the whole world is silent, why they let the Israelis build this fence between themselves and Palestine when in the rest of the world the borders are opening up.” There is scant mention of the extended campaign of terrorism which has motivated the building of the fence. The building of a similar security barrier to keep Muslim terrorists out of India, or the similar barrier in Cyprus are not mentioned at all since they would immediately demonstrate the glaring inaccuracy in the above quotation.

Israel is depicted as an expansionist aggressor –“In another war in 1967 Israel seized land from Egypt, Jordan and Syria” with no attempt made to explain the circumstances in which the war occurred or the attempts Israel made to return the land in return for peace – which it did in relation to Egypt. In an Israel in which all Jews live in fear of the next terrorist attack in a campaign which has touched almost everyone in the country, a bizarre picture of domestic harmony between Arabs and Jews is painted: “We are one family. For me there is no difference between an Arab and a Jew. All that matters is that we live together. We don’t need a fence or anything else to come between us”. Unless it is suggested that this is the dominant view amongst Arabs and Jews in Israel and the territories, it’s inclusion almost uncontradicted creates a less than balanced assessment.

In an effort to personalise the effect of the fence details of the birth of a Palestinian baby in an Israeli hospital are supplied. This forms the springboard for a piece of vitriolic anti-Israel invective with which the film is peppered: “Now she's born to witness the bombing and Sharon's tanks and his F-16s and F-15s. She's born to see what Sharon is doing, Sharon the great democrat.”

[Conclusion:]We do not feel that this film made any serious effort to address its subject matter in a balanced way. It was at times inaccurate, at times provided a distorted history, at times was simply absurd and throughout was on a mission to vilify Israel.





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Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Border Fights Heat Up - Literally



Another one of those very important stories that aren't getting much play in the media. This is the shape of things to come; I guarantee you that it will get much worse before it gets better:
U.S. Border Patrol agents seeking to secure the nation's border in some of the country's most pristine national forests are being targeted by illegal aliens, who are using intentionally set fires to burn agents out of observation posts and patrol routes.

The wildfires have destroyed valuable natural and cultural resources in the National Forest System and pose an ongoing threat to visitors, residents and responding firefighters, according to federal law-enforcement authorities and others.
...
Wildfires are being set by alien and drug smugglers, authorities said, to create a diversion in an attempt to gain undetected access across the border. The fires correspond to a dramatic rise in assaults against Border Patrol agents — up more than 100 percent over last year.

On "Free Republic", one reader had a comment:
Just starting the forest fires Americans won't start.
An recent increase in apprehensions and drug interdictions along the border, combined with other rumors of strengthening the border patrol and building a border fence has led to illegal immigrants and smugglers employing increasingly desperate and dangerous tactics. These stem both from smuggler's and drug runner's fears of losing their livelihoods, along with desperation of increased numbers of people willing to cross the border to the north.

This trend is not confined to the US/Mexican border. At sea, the US Coast Guard has has to deal with increasingly hostile migrants, in several cases attacked outright or even attacking members of their own group.

Other nations have experienced exactly the same kind of desperate tactics after making some progress at cracking down on illegal immigration and bogus asylum applications. In 2000, Britain's wake-up call came when a plane from Afghanistan was hijacked and allowed to land there. It turned out the only reason for the hijack was so that those on board could claim asylum on the island. Well, saying "wake-up call" may have been premature here... the British courts have granted all the hijackers permission to stay in the UK, in a ruling last year that understandably, greatly displeased the Prime Minister.

Italy's own wake-up call came in 2002, in a dramatic case that shocked the country, when a rusting boat with almost 1000 Kurdish migrants was intercepted at sea, and the migrants threatened to throw some of their children overboard unless they were allowed to land in Italy. When faced with what is essentially hostage taking, what can you do but let them land? Hopefully, some of those who made the threats were prosecuted for it, but I greatly doubt it.

Spain has seen smugglers at sea take longer, more dangerous routes as it steps up patrols, with a corresponding rise in deaths. Meanwhile, the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla in Morocco frequently come under siege by individuals employing reckless tactics to storm the fence.

In Australia, in 2001, Prime Minister Howard incorrectly claimed (some say deliberately lied) that migrants aboard one ship, or a "SIEV" (suspected illegal entry vehicle) also threatened to throw their children overboard if it was not allowed to land. This was during an election campaign and caused a political firestorm. But some disturbing facts seemed to be forgotten in all the political fighting. An Australian Senate inquiry concluded that:
passengers aboard other SIEVs had threatened children, sabotaged their own vessels, committed self-harm, and, in the case of SIEV-7 on 22 October, a child had been thrown overboard and rescued by another asylum seeker.
So what to do about all this? Well, if you favor securing the border (as do I), you have to deal with harsh the reality that these people are not simply going away anytime soon, and not in the future either, judging by the rate of population increase in the Third World. Currently, the fertility rate for Europe as a whole is 1.5. That means the average European woman has 1.5 children in her entire lifetime. The fertility rate for the United States is 2.0. The fertility rate for Africa as a whole is 5.4... more than five children born to every woman on average. And it gets worse; the rate for war torn nations like Somalia and Afghanistan respectively are an incredible 6.68 and 6.64! At the current rate, the African continent will double its population in 30 years - Europe will take over 300 to do this. When you look at the numbers, and how grave the situation is right now, imagine how much worse it will be in the time of our children's generation if nothing is done.

Whether in the US, Europe, or other developed nations, if you want to secure your border, you have to be prepared to fight for it, because a fight is exactly what you are going to have. Fortunately, there are still alternatives to open conflict.

Other options: Amnesty just invites more illegal immigration, and deporting people after they have already arrived is costly, inefficient, and politically ugly. The only way to deal with it in the long run, and avoid a never-ending border battle, is to improve the economies of Third World nations (yes I know, that's easier said than done - that subject will fill volumes), ban "asylum shopping" and force people to declare asylum in the first safe nation they came to, repeal or reinterpret the 14th Amendment in the US (which is currently interpreted to grant citizenship to children born of illegal aliens), and most crucially, find every possible way to encourage Third World nations to reduce their birthrates, before their populations are reduced by war instead.

Drastic? You bet. But so is the problem. No matter how generous they are, the reality is that the Western World simply cannot absorb all the world's immigrants. A good illustration of exactly why not can be viewed here.

UPDATE: (Fixed Links)

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Monday, June 18, 2007

What the Media is Not Telling You About the CIA Trial in Italy


An Italian judge has temporarily suspended the trial of 26 CIA agents in Italy while awaiting a ruling over whether the prosecution violated Italian secrecy laws while gathering evidence. Apparently, the prosecutors may be fulfilling their role a little too zealously.

If you are unfamiliar with the case, here is a quick summary: the CIA agents and 6 Italians are on trial in Italy, accused of kidnapping an Imam, Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, in Milan and flying him to his home country of Egypt, where he was allegedly tortured. He claims he was beaten, given electric shocks, and threatened with rape while held in Egypt. With impeccable timing, the trial began just as George Bush arrived in Italy earlier this month for a visit in conjunction with the G8 summit. The accused agents all left Italy a long time ago, and are being tried in absentia. In other words, the trial is going on without them being there. Italy has not announced if it will seek their extradition, but it is a rather moot point, since the US has already announced it would not be granted. The trial has set off a press frenzy in Italy, where the call it the "Imam Rapito", or the "kidnapped Imam" affair.

The kidnapping was an example of the policy of "extraordinary rendition", which means bypassing the normal extradition process and secretly transporting a suspect to another nation in order to face trial or questioning. The Bush administration has come under heavy criticism for this policy, particularly when the suspects are delivered to nations which are likely to torture.

News of the trial was wildly celebrated by a collection of left-wing and anti-American groups, who see the trial as a proxy for putting Bush and Cheney on trial, which has so far been a frustrated goal.

I have a question. When are these same prosecutors, or for that matter the rest of the world's media, going to focus on Egypt's actions (e.g. the torture) in this matter? Or is turning the channel away from US bashing for a minute a little too much to ask? At least Italy has the excuse that the "crime" happened on Italian soil; what is everyone else's excuse? While researching this article I poured over hundreds of accounts and opinions, and while most criticized the US or Italy, I could find very few that criticized Egypt and none that did it above criticism of the United States. Not a single one. If someone can prove otherwise, please let me know. I'm all ears.

Of course, the irony here is that if the USA is a torturer, a rogue state, and the world's biggest terrorist, as Andrew Sullivan, Noam Chomsky, Cindy Sheehan, Hugo Chavez, and many others claim, then taking prisoners anywhere else but the US would be an improvement, wouldn't it? But I'm not going to hold my breath waiting for anyone to answer that...

In any case, there are some facts about this case and the actors involved that the media is distorting and/or isn't telling you.

First of all, in spite of how many people commonly misunderstand the news of this trial, no one is alleging that the United States tortured anyone here. What is on trial is the legality of the renditions or "kidnappings".

To help keep a historical perspective, it should be noted that this was exactly the same process the Mossad used to remove the Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann from Argentina and bring him to face trial in Israel in 1960. The French also conducted an extraordinary rendition in 1994 to capture the terrorist "Carlos the Jackal" in Sudan and deliver him to face justice in France.

Nevertheless, Dick Marty, a special prosecutor investigating the CIA's "secret prisons" in Europe, has called Nasr's case a "perfect example of extraordinary rendition" and strongly criticized US policy (heaven forbid he might actually utter a word about Egyptian torture). But Mr. Marty has particular trouble proving his many allegations against the US; you can read more about that here.

And if what Dana Priest claimed in the Washington Post is true, that the Italian authorities knew of the operation and consented to it, then the trial shouldn't be going on at all; the CIA agents are essentially legally immune from prosecution. Arresting anyone is only illegal if the host nation does not grant permission. In fact, it would be difficult for the prosecution to argue otherwise, since they also put six Italian officials on trial, and one other Italian, a policeman, has already made a plea bargain. But the prosecuting attorneys may be spared from having to explain such inconsistencies; since the Americans are not even going to show up at the trial, it is doubtful the defense will expend much effort in defending them.

Incidentally, in absentia is a dubious way to put someone on trial anyway, especially when you can't be certain of their real identities (this is the CIA, after all). Furthermore, I'm no expert on Italian law, but it should be noted that France, Italy's partner both in the EU, and the European Court of Human Rights, considered trials in absentia such a violation of human rights that they allowed the convicted murderer Ira Einhorn, the "unicorn killer" to freely walk their streets for more than 20 years, refusing to extradite him to the United States because he wasn't present at his trial. And in that case, the State of Pennsylvania had a very good reason for conducting it in his absence; Einhorn had agreed to appear but skipped bail just prior to the start of the trial. In 2001, he was finally extradited to the USA, after the State of Pennsylvania passed a special law covering his case, and prosecutors agreed to retry him. (Personally, during the many years that France shielded him I think Einhorn should have been kidnapped and taken to the US to face justice, but since his entire defense consisted of CIA accusations and conspiracy theories, this would have just fed further into world paranoia.)


Finally, exactly who is Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr?

I saved the best for last. Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr is a member of the "Al-Gama'a Al-Islamiyya" an Islamic extremist group that seeks to overthrow the Egyptian government. It is listed as a terrorist organization by both the United States and the European Union. It claimed responsibility for the 1997 Luxor Massacre in which terrorists attacked the tourists at Egypt's most visited archeological site, the ruins of the temple in Southern Luxor, and killed 58 people, most of them Swiss citizens. Since tourism is vital for Egypt's economy, it's likely they targeted tourists in order to destabilize the country. In this context, it is clear why the Egyptian government is interested in wiping out the movement, aside from their simple penchant for murder. Incidentally, its likely the Luxor operation was financed by Osama Bin Laden. It should also be noted that one of the leaders of the group is Omar Abdel-Rahman, the "blind sheik" who masterminded the 1993 World Trade Center bombing in the US.

Now, skip ahead to February 2003. Nasr was on his way to mosque prayers in Milan when he was captured. He was living in Italy after fleeing Egyptian justice and applying for asylum. Why wasn't he in jail? The irony is, at least in jail, it is unlikely he could have been kidnapped by the CIA. The asylum claim pushes the irony further here too - since the asylum system was originally set up for people who needed to flee from terrorists and their sympathizers like Nasr...
Two years after Nasr was taken to Egypt, Italian authorities did belatedly decide to charge him with terrorism related offenses.

Nasr spent four years total in an Egyptian prison and is now free there. In fact, just two days ago, in a great act of chutzpah, his attorney announced that Nasr is seeking damages in court from the Italian state for his "kidnap" (once again, I am mystified over why he hasn't at least attempted to file damage claims against Egypt, the nation that allegedly tortured him). Nasr's attorney landed in Rome to file the claim; he says that his client wishes to return to Italy to testify, even if it means his arrest on the terrorism warrant, but that he can't make it because Egypt refuses to release his passport.

Heck, there's an easy solution - just call the CIA to extraordinarily rendite him again...

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Saturday, June 16, 2007

Illegal Immigrants vs. Mamaroneck, New York



Guess who won.

For a time, Mamaroneck, a small town not far from New York City, USA, had numerous complaints of illegal immigrants at a makeshift day-laborer hiring site fighting, littering, and drunkenly urinating in public. According to the mayor, the site was straining the city's resources. They eventually shut it down, which forced the day-laborers onto the streets. At that time, police stepped up patrols in the area and apparently questioned some of the loiterer's immigration status. Bad move.

So late last year six of the laborers decided to sue the city, charging violation of First Amendment rights and racial discrimination. They dropped the First Amendment complaint after their attorneys advised them it might force them to disclose their immigration status. That left only the racism complaint, which very often is the only recourse left for people when legitimate arguments fail. But lucky for them, they got the right judge. Justice Colleen McMahon, a Federal judge in the Southern District of New York, found for the laborer's discrimination complaint and ordered the city to ignore the law from now on. Literally.

In the end, they reached a compromise. The city recently agreed to pay the plaintiffs $550,000 of the taxpayer's money and ordered police to stop questioning anyone loitering around. For their part, the illegal immigrants agreed to keep hanging around looking for work without a work visa... OK, I lied. It wasn't a compromise at all. It was a complete sellout to illegal aliens allowing them to continue breaking the law, and now the police aren't even allowed to do anything about it.

Oh wait - believe it or not, it gets even worse. Remember that $550K? It didn't go to the day-laborers. It went to their attorneys for court expenses (negotiations on the settlement lasted several months.). It's a typical day in America; illegal immigrants can continue to ignore the law, lawyers get their handsome fee, and the taxpayers ends up footing the bill for the whole thing.

And lest I forget, another day labor hiring site is opening in the town as well.

There are so many problems in various news articles about the case that I don't know where to start. Let me highlight a few:

From the AP:
The workers "have sought from the village nothing more than to be left alone and be allowed to seek work," said their lawyer, Alan Levine. "It is sad that it took a lengthy and costly lawsuit to establish such a fundamental right in Mamaroneck."
This is an outright lie. What fundamental right? It is illegal for foreign nationals to work in the US without the proper visa. And this guy is supposed to be an attorney?

From Lower Hudson Online:
Attorneys for the laborers called the agreement a major victory for the immigrant population.
Illegal immigrant population. Legal immigrants are not really affected, except that now they can hire cheap labor with impunity like everyone else.
"One of the things that have always made day laborers terribly fearful were inquiries about their immigration status,"
I wonder why that would be...
Laborers - who were identified only as John Doe - claimed that one police officer had stared at them with his hand on his gun
"Stared at them" - Oh the horror...
Others, including local Hispanic advocates, said police harassed and issued tickets to contractors who hired day laborers.
Isn't it illegal to hire them in the first place?
Mamaroneck village's attorney, Lino Sciaretta, would not comment before the meeting on the specifics of the settlement, saying only that "it was the work of several months of back and forth" between the village and the laborers' lawyers.
Yes, heaven forbid anyone might publicly disclose an agreement that uses half a million dollars of that public's money...
The trustees also voted on a bond resolution for the $550,000 to pay the laborers' lawyers.
Hell, why not throw away another few hundred thousand dollars of public funds? It isn't their own money that the trustees are spending here.

Incidentally, I know most people are immune to reports of the government wasting huge sums of money, but keep in mind that this is a small town of around 20,000 people. Half a mil is actually a pretty huge bill for them to pay.

The town administrator's email is: townadministrator@townofmamaroneck.org, and the email for the town board is: townsupervisor@townofmamaroneck.org
Go ahead and let them know how you feel.

Is there any hope here? Well, yesterday some bright light appeared on the horizon:
The U.S. House of Representatives this morning voted to withhold federal emergency services funding for "sanctuary cities" that protect illegal immigrants.
"Sanctuary cities" are places like Mamaroneck, where local authorities don't ask about immigration status and don't share information with federal authorities.

This was an amendment to the Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill, sponsored by Tom Tancredo, a Republican (long shot) candidate for president. What's amazing is not just that it passed (he has submitted similar bills for the last few years and they always failed), but that the vote was not close - it was overwhelmingly in favor, with some 50 Democrats supporting it. With that amount of momentum, it has a good chance to get through the Senate and the White House. I would be interested to know how the city of Mamaroneck will react; they might have to make a hard choice between listening to Judge McMahon or future emergency funds for the town...

Now, some might wonder why I'm being so harsh with a bunch of guys who are just trying to find work for a living. My real anger is actually directed at Judge McMahon, and others like her, who prevent law enforcement officers from actually enforcing the law, and seem to think that tenuous claims of racism somehow give others a free pass to circumvent immigration laws; I am also outraged at various special interest groups like the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (which filed this suit) who are quick to cry racism everywhere else but ignore the fact that their whole existence is set up to promote interests for their own racial group, and end up lining their pockets with taxpayer's money.

Additionally, what happened to the Constitution's equal protection clause? Why should Mexican citizens near the border be apprehended by authorities and deported back to Mexico, while other foreign nationals with exactly the same "undocumented" status openly walk around in places like Mamaroneck, NY, and even file lawsuits? Heck I'm not even mentioning the poor saps who actually try to use the system legally. The point is, the system is not being applied equally across the board. Apply the law equally to all, or to none at all. Is that so much to ask?

Further reading:
Good article and comments on this subject at Corruption Chronicles.

David Niedrauer at the Culture and Media Institute gives a quick rundown of this and other similar cases, and raises a great question:
Is cracking down on illegal immigration, or simply requiring illegal immigrants to obey the law, ever constitutional? Federal judges around the nation are beginning to raise doubts
The NYT, predictably, greatly sympathizes with the day-laborers. But they have one interesting quote from a resident:
“I’d like to know who is going to check if these workers are illegal,” Donna Dickerson, 39, a mother of two who lives within steps of the [new hiring] site...“Rest assured that we’ll be taking photographs, taking down license plates and forwarding them to the authorities.”
Good luck, but I sense another lawsuit in the works...


Story on the photo above: This was a protest in March 2006 near Montebello High School in Los Angeles,