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Today's Stories

June 25 / 26, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
The Supreme Court's Jackboot Liberals

Jennifer Van Bergen
America's Parallel Legal Systems

Mark Chmiel / Andrew Wimmer
Let's Open the Gulag: a People's Mission to Gitmo

Kevin Zeese
Counter-Recruitment: How to Keep the Military From Getting their Hands on Your Kids

P. Sainath
Russian Roulette in Vidharbha

John Stauber
How to Bury a Mad Cow

Tom Barry
The Politics & Ideologies of the Anti-Immigrationists

John Walsh
Looking for Peace in All the Wrong Places

Justin E.H. Smith
The Hairless Apes of Kansas vs. the Reality-Based Community: Why Progressives Have a Stake in the War on Evolution

Alan Wallis
The Story of Pinky: the Drug Trade in My Neighborhood

Ben Tripp
Negative Space: an Artful Lesson

 

June 24, 2005

Ray McGovern
The Downing St. Fixation: Fixing to Fix "Fixed"

Jorge Mariscal
"They Only Call Us Americans When They Need Us for War": the Paradox of Mexican Americans in Iraq

Desiree Hellegers
Portland vs. the FBI

Zeynep Toufe
What Do the American People Know and When Did They Know It?

Joshua Frank
Call Him Senator Con Job

David Lindorff
Which Flag Would Jesus Burn?

Michael Neumann
Victory and Recruitment

Website of the Day
Gagging Dr. Dean

 

June 23, 2005

Christopher Brauchli
Thomas Griffith and Rule 49: He Practiced Law Without a License; Now He's a Federal Appeals Court Judge

Clay Conrad
Killing Off the Jury with Tort Reform

Standard Schaefer
A Retort to Military Neo-Liberalism

P. Sainath
Vidharbha: No rains and 116F, But It Does Have "Snow" and Water Parks

Mark Engler
CAFTA
Deserves a Quiet Death

Norman Solomon
Voluntary Amnesia in America

Cockburn / St. Clair
Frank Calzon

Kathy Kelly
Where You Stand Determines What You See

June 22, 2005

Kevin Zeese
The Bush Administration's Psy-Ops on the American Public: an Interview with Col. Sam Gardiner

William S. Lind
Afghanistan: the Other War

Arsalan Iftikhar
Patriots Against the PATRIOT Act

Dan Nagengast
Give Populism a Chance: From France to Kansas

David Krieger
To the Graduates: We Live in an Interdependent World

Kathleen & Bill Christison
Tempest in Santa Fe: Confronting Israeli Myth-making

June 21, 2005

Brian Cloughley
Destroy the Unbelievers!

Mike Whitney
President Disconnect

Dave Lindorff
Who Needs Big Bird, Anyway?

Mark Weisbrot
Bush's Lonely Campaign Against Hugo Chavez

Matthew R. Simmons
The Coming Saudi Oil Crisis

Dave Zirin
The Crass Slipper Fits: Ron Howard's Terrible "Cinderella Man"

Virginia Rodino
The Anti-War Movement and Impeachment

Paul Craig Roberts
A War Waged by Liars and Morons

 

June 20, 2005

Alan Maass
The GM Job Massacre

Tariq Ali
To the Gates of the Gleneagles Hotel!

Mickey Z.
WMDs American-Style: It's 60 Years Since Alamogordo

William Blum
Some Things You Need to Know Before the World Ends

Gary Leupp
Old News Indeed: In 1999, Bush Craved Chance to Attack Iraq

Jason Leopold
Someone Tell Bush Iraq Wasn't Behind 9/11, Before He Starts Another War

Dave Lindorff
Why the Media Should be Schiavo'd

Alan Maass
The GM Job Massacre

Uri Avnery
Condi and Hamas

Website of the Day
Crimes Against Poetry

June 18 / 19, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Is the Jury Dead?

Greg Moses
Race Bias and the Death Penalty, One More Time

Benjamin Shepard
Arrested for Stickering, Biking and Other Misadventures: Creative Direct Action in the Era of the PATRIOT Act

Stan Goff
Stuff to Do to Stop the War: 95 Days to Pre-Nixonize George W. Bush

Lee Sustar
Does Iraq's Main Labor Union Support the Occupation?

Jude Wanniski
The Tipping Point: Getting Out of Iraq

Diana Barahona
Librarians as Spooks: the Scheme to Infiltrate Cuba Via Libraries

Brian Concannon, Jr.
Justice Dodge in Haiti, Again: Impunity and the Raboteau Massacre

Fred Gardner
How Many Wins Can We Take?

Mike Whitney
Gen. Tommy Friedman's Plan to "Win" the War in Iraq: Reinstate the Draft

Ahmad Faruqui
Star Wars or Earth Wars?

Manuel García, Jr.
De-Eichmannizing America

Roger Howard
Leave Iranian Politics to Iranians

Ron Jacobs
Eros and the Grateful Dead

Ben Tripp
Situation Desperate: Why Am I Not Pleased?

Poets' Basement
Louise, Albert and Engel

Website of the Weekend
Christ's Entry into Washington

 

June 17, 2005

Ricardo Alarcón
Who Helped Posada Enter the US?

Clay Conrad
Medical Marijuana: Is Jury Nullification the Next Step?

Marc Estrin
Open-Ended Closure: the Death Penalty and the Culture of Victimhood

Colin Brown
Firebombing Fallujah: Pentagon Lied About Use of Napalm in Iraq

Christopher Brauchli
Pennies for Africa: Bush's Phony Money

Joshua Frank
Blue State Warriors: How Democrats Derailed the Peace Movement

Norman Solomon
The Killing Street Memo

Mary Rizzo
Who's Afraid of Gilad Atzmon?

Bond / Brutus / Setshedi
How Bono and Trojan Horse NGOs Sabotage the Struggle Against Neoliberalism

 

June 16, 2005

John Walsh
The Iraq War Polls: Dems' Stance Even Less Popular Than Bush's

Dave Lindorff
Work 'Till You Die: the Bush Retirement Plan

Adrian Lomax
Torture in U.S. Prisons: Common, Lethal, Unreported

Tom Crumpacker
The CIA, Posada and the Bombing of Cubana Flight 455

Jeffrey Kolakowski
The Kinsley Paradigm: Downsizing the Downing St. Memo

Julene Bair
Turning Off the Ogallala Spigot: Toward a New Way to Farm on the Great Plains

Michael Dickinson
As We Forgive Our Debtors: the Madness of Money

Francois Houtart / Isabel Parra, et al.
Against Terrorism; In Defense of Humanity: an Appeal

Tom Barry
Meet Bolton's Replacement: Robert "First Strike" Joseph

 

June 15, 2005

Stan Goff
An Open Letter to US Troops on Loyalty

Daniel Wolff
The Palace at 4 A.M.

Tim Wise
Discover the Nutwork: David Horowitz and the Politics of Ad Hominem Distortion

Ricardo Alarcón
The New CIA Revelations About Posada

Joshua Frank
House Republicans vs. Bush: "This is Not a Conservative War"

John Hilary
Bloodsuckers' Summit: Why the Left Should Rendezvous at the G8

Norman Solomon
Iran's Reformers: a Threat to Theocrats and Neocons

Alexander Cockburn / Jeffrey St. Clair
Juries and Lynch Mobs

Website of the Day
What It Feels Like to be Tasered (Turn Up the Volume)

 

June 14, 2005

Paul Craig Roberts
Enabling Evil: Bush's Willing Executioners

Forrest Hylton
Stalemate in Bolivia

Richard Gott
The Crisis in Bolivia

Fred Gardner
The Raich Decision: All Power to the Feds

Steve Breyman
Doing the Right Thing is Also Politically Expedient

Dave Zirin
Sacred Hoops: Basketball in the Barrio

Robert Kent
Outsourcing Torture and the Stop-Loss Program

Paul Craig Roberts
Enabling Evil: Bush's Willing Executioners

 

June 13, 2005

Gary Leupp
Another Damning Document

Dave Lindorff
The Inca and Us

John Stauber
Mad Cow USA: the Cover-Up Begins to Unravel

Fred Gardner
Supreme Indignity: Medical Pot Doctors Respond to Justice Stevens

Evelyn J. Pringle
TeenScreen: the Lawsuits Begin

Norman Solomon
Letter From Tehran

Winslow T. Wheeler
Neo-Con Unfurls the Big Picture

 

June 10 / 12, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Thomas Friedman's Imaginary World

Sharon Smith
Torturers and Liars: Masters of Deception

Brian Cloughley
"Support Our Torturers!"

Chris Kromm
Home Cookin': Pentagon's Base Relignment Plan Would Increase South's Share

Heather Gray
A Day in Mississippi: Some Things Have Changed; Some Remain the Same

Kevin Zeese
What the Left Must Learn from 2004: an Interview with Josh Frank

Mickey Z.
The Pentagon Papers, 34 Years Later

Gary Leupp
A Review of Sison's "At Home in the World"

Eli Stephens
The Asshole in El Paso: Why Posada Carriles Matters

Nick Dearden
A Scottish Band in the Occupied Territories

Oscar Olivera
Recovering Bolivia's Oil and Gas

Robert Fisk
Screening "Kingdom of Heaven" in Beirut

Michael Dickinson
Oh My God!: Gunning for Blasphemers

Poets' Basement
Engel, Albert, Louise, Ford

Website of the Weekend
Gravity's Rainbow, Illustrated

 

 


Weekend Edition
June 25 / 26, 2005

CounterPunch Diary

The Supreme Court's Jackboot Liberals

By ALEXANDER COCKBURN

So much for the right to die in your own home, smoking a joint to take your mind off the pain. Thanks to the liberals on the U.S. Supreme Court, the feds haul you to prison from from your death bed for smoking medical marijuana and any local authority raze your house and give the land to Walmart for a parking lot.

On June 6, by a vote of 6-3, the Court ruled that Federal authorities may prosecute sick people who smoke pot on doctors' orders. The court’s apex liberal, Stevens, wrote the majority decision. The conservative Sandra Day O’Connor who wrote the dissent, saying that the court was overreaching to endorse "making it a federal crime to grow small amounts of marijuana in one's own home for one's own medicinal use”.

Ranged with Stevens in the majority were Ginsburg and Breyer, along with Kennedy (regarded as more conservative than this first trio), plus the supposed libertarian, Souter and Scalia, the most conceited judge in America. Of course Scalia had to file his own opinion proffering a "more nuanced" analysis, to the general effect that Congress had the right to pass “necessary and proper laws”.

Then, on June 23, the Court’s liberals, plus Souter and Kennedy decreed that between private property rights on the one side, and big-time developers with the city council in their pockets on the other, the latter wins every time.

The issue was one of eminent domain. Stevens wrote the majority opinion, declaring blandly that promoting economic development [translation, a Walmart in every neighborhood] is a traditional and long-accepted function of government," and that if the underpinning of a public authority wielding the bludgeon of eminent domain is “public purpose”, then "Clearly, there is no basis for exempting economic development from our traditionally broad understanding of public purpose."

“Traditionally broad” just about sums it up. In the case of General Motors, as George Corsetti recalled on this site a while ago the “public purpose” invoked by GM’s gofer, Mayor Coleman Young of Detroit, was to destroy a Polish community to turn the land over to GM for a new plant.

Stevens said that state legislatures and courts were best at "discerning local public needs". *(After you’re done with this Diary, you can find Corsetti’s comments on the decision, here on our site this weekend.) And, once again, O’Connor wrote the dissent, a fine one, in which she stated that "The government now has license to transfer property from those with fewer resources to those with more” and “Who among us can say she already makes the most productive or attractive use of her property?"

O’Connor added: "The specter of condemnation hangs over all property. Nothing is to prevent the state from replacing any Motel 6 with a Ritz-Carlton, any home with a shopping mall, or any farm with a factory."

Thomas also wrote an excellent dissent which I’m sure had Jane Jacobs nodding approval. He called the decision "far-reaching and dangerous," and noting correctly that those displaced by urban renewal and "slum clearance" over the years have tended to be lower-income members of minority groups. "The court has erased the Public Use Clause from our Constitution".

Liberals love eminent domain, as much as conservatives love the death penalty, and like many liberal passions it destroys far more lives than the gas chamber or the lethal needle.

The case on which the Court ruled was known as Kelo v. City of New London. In the decorous prose of Linda Greenhouse in the New York Times, it concerned “a large-scale plan to replace a faded residential neighborhood with office space for research and development, a conference hotel, new residences and a pedestrian "riverwalk" along the Thames River. The project, to be leased and built by private developers, is designed to derive maximum benefit for the city from a $350 million research center built nearby by Pfizer Inc., the big pharmaceutical company.”

I assume every CounterPuncher can figure out what this really means. God help all “faded residential neighborhoods”. Well, if the poor folks work really hard maybe they’ll be able to go live in the Grand Hyatt or Towne Plaza raised on the rubble of their homes.
That GM plant in Detroit? The city said it would clear 465 acres of land in the center of Detroit, 1,500 homes, 144 businesses, 16 churches, a school and a hospital. Some 3,500 were forced out--and turn it over to GM which would build a new Cadillac factory that would employ 6,500 workers.

As Corsetti wrote,

“Ultimately, all 465 acres of Poletown was cleared and GM built the plant. The auto plant opening was delayed a year and employed less than half the promised 6,500 workers. By one account more jobs were lost from the destruction of Poletown than were created by the factory. The city also believed that the new plant would attract other, feeder plants, nearby. They never materialized, and with tax abatements and other incentives, it was a fiscal disaster for the city.”

 

The Downing Street Memos and the History of Smoking Guns

Now remember, my friends, the Downing Street memos are NOT smoking guns. It’s true they show with unparalleled clarity just how the co-conspirators of the Iraq war were talking among themselves, but all the same , they are NOT smoking guns. Why not? Simple. Let me give you my Maxim of the Day: History is one big smoking gun and the function of the official press is to say this isn’t so.

As long as I’ve lived in America I’ve enjoyed the comic ritual known as the “hunt for the smoking gun,” a process by which our official press tries to inoculate itself and its readers from political and economic realities.

The big smoking-gun question back in 1973 and 1974 concerned Richard Nixon. Back and forth the ponderous debate raged in editorial columns and news stories: was this or that disclosure a “smoking gun”?

Fairly early on in the game, it was clear to about 95 percent of the population that Nixon was a liar, a crook and guilty as charged. But the committee rooms on Capitol Hill and Sunday talk shows were still filled with people holding up guns with smoke pouring from the barrel telling each other solemnly that No, the appearance of smoke and stench of recently detonated cordite notwithstanding, this was not yet the absolute, definitive, smoking gun.

So it became clear that the great smoking-gun hunt was really about timing, about gauging the correct temperature of the political waters.

Then suddenly, in the late summer of 1974, that impalpable entity known as elite sentiment sensed that the scandal was becoming subversive of public order, that it was time to throw Nixon overboard and move on. A “new” tape—though scores of others had already made Nixon’s guilt plain—was swiftly identified as “the smoking gun” and presto! Nixon was on the next plane to California.

In the mid-70s post-Watergate euphoria, smoking guns were in fashion. In the Church intelligence committee hearings they actually held up a gun to demonstrate the profuse, well-documented efforts of the CIA to assassinate Fidel Castro.

In other hearing rooms witnesses testified that multinational corporations offered bribes to win business.

Appropriately enough, it was a newspaper publisher who stepped forward in the late fall of 1974 to announce that the smoking gun show was now officially closed.

At the annual meeting of the Magazine Publishers’ Association Katharine Graham, boss of the Washington Post Company, sternly cautioned her fellow czars of the communication industry, (many of them bribed to endorse Nixon in 1972 by his gift of the monopoly license to print money known as Joint Operating Agreements).

“The press these days,” Mrs. Graham declared, “should... be rather careful about its role. We may have acquired some tendencies about over-involvement that we had better overcome. We had better not yield to the temptation to go on refighting the next war [sic] and see conspiracy and cover-up where they do not exist.”

By 1975 smoking guns were a thing of the past. The coup de grace was PBS’s McNeil/Lehrer Report which started in October 1975, dedicated to the proposition that there are two sides to every question, and reality is not an exciting affair of smoking guns, crooked businessmen and lying politicians but a dull continuum in which all involved are struggling disinterestedly for the public weal.
In this new, prudent post-Watergate era, which has stretched through to the present day, there were no smoking guns. It wasn’t long before those documented attempts to assassinate Castro became “alleged attempts” or, the final fate of many a smoking gun, “an old story”.

CIA involvement in opium smuggling in South East Asia? There were smoking guns aplenty. In a 1987 interview for a Frontline documentary Tony Po gave an on-camera interview confirming that in his capacity as a CIA officer he had given the mercenary general Vang Pao an airplane with which to transport heroin because Vang Pao’s use of the CIA airfleet was proving embarrassing. “We painted it nice and fancy,” Po reminisced jovially.

These days, the CIA’s complicity in shuttling heroin that came home to America in body bags from Vietnam has retreated to the decorous status of being an “allegation” and, simultaneously, “an old story”.

Iran/contra, cocaine-for-arms shuttles supervised by the CIA? More smoking guns in every filing cabinet, and all over Oliver North’s diary. Ten years later Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News fished out further smoking guns and was rewarded by having his career destroyed by the Washington Post, New York Times and Los Angeles Times. When the hubbub died down the CIA’s Inspector General admitted in his reports that yes, there were smoking guns, but the press only read the CIA’s press releases, which strenuously maintained the opposite.

It was in the Reagan era that the smoking-gun lobby got decisively routed. Month after month the official press would write respectfully about Reagan’s press conferences as though the President was a competent captain of the national ship instead of a fogged-up fantasist.

The coup de grace came in Clinton time, when the hunt for smoking guns became either incomprehensible (Jeff Gerth’s stories on Whitewater) or tacky (Clinton’s physical interactions with Monica Lewinsky). Special Prosecutor Ken Starr cried out that Yes, he had the smoking gun. The people looked at the stained dress he proudly flourished, and said, If that’s a smoking gun, we’re not interested.

There are enough smoking guns in the Iraq saga to stock a whole new national museum. It’s what makes the current muttering in the official press about the Downing Street memos so comical, with all the huff and puff about the “blogosphere” and how yes, this is an old story, and an “uncorroborated” one, (like all those stories from detainees about desecration of the Koran).

What’s striking to me is how querulous and old-fashioned those “old story” put-downs about the Downing Street memos by Purdom and others in the New York Times, or Howard Kurtz and Dana Milbank in the Washington Post sound, rather like very old uncles wagging their fingers at naughty little children and admonishing them to stay quiet until all the facts are in.

But the facts are in and the naughty children have the public megaphones. The rules of the game are changing. So what happens when fewer and fewer people take the official press seriously, or even read it?

More about Sex and Perversion in Japan

Here’s Ron Ri of Kyoto, energetically disagreeing with Robert McKinney’s description of some sexual mores in Japan, which I ran in last weekend’s Diary.

To Alexander Cockburn,
I take issue with several points made by Robert McKinney in his letters discussing pedophilia and sex in Japan (quoted at length in CounterPunch Diary for June 18/19 , 2005).

In response to your question "... are you implying that these bath and futon-sharing adults abuse the kids they're with?" Mr. McKinney gives a misleading reply which (to what aim I'm not sure) stresses the physical dimensions of the Japanese "ofuro”.

The custom of parents and children bathing together is centuries old and considered a means of familial bonding; sons and daughters, until around age seven or eight, will often share the ofuro with the parent of the opposite sex. The practice has never carried with it even a trace of sexual connotation, and is no more likely to lead to abuse than, say, a drive in the country.

As part of the same bonding process (some would say spoiling process) and because of limitations on space, children (particularly the only child) have traditionally been allowed to share a futon with parents until a roughly similar age. I can only see this practice as providing a slight deterrent to sexual abuse since a second parent is present. Compare this spatial arrangement with the layout of the "traditional" American home where, when a father enters a daughter's room, is alone with her in a private, enclosed area.

I do not make these points to refute the accurate claim that incest, and the sexual abuse of children within the home, are serious social problems in Japan, too, and have not been researched nor discussed as extensively as in the U.S.

The "Moe" and "Rorita" (from "Lolita") phenomena, while understandably disturbing to many outside as well as in Japan, are complex and should not be confused with so-called "kiddie porn" in the West. This Japanese sub-world is characterized by an almost inexhaustible supply of magazines, comics, video games and animation films catering to the sexual fantasies of introverted men. The common thread running through each media form is the depiction of 11-14 year-old girls as pure, unthreatening, doey-eyed and, in many cases, abuseable.

However, many of the photo magazines depict school girls with all (or most) of their uniforms on, the climactic shots being close-ups of regulation plain white panties under regulation pleated, navy-blue skirts. Numerous comics, on the other hand, do depict deranged, futuristic rape fantasy, with the stock adorable princess violently penetrated by multi-limbed robots. And yet, earlier this month, we learned of a new café in software-center Akihabara where customers can share a coffee with an 18-20 year-old woman dressed up to look like a 13-ish French-maid doll.

Continuing, we have Mr. McKinney's statement that "Japanese are very shy about talking about sex-related topics. Women never talk about sex with men, it is not acceptable."

This assertion, while not without some foundation, is far too sweeping: "Sex-talk" between celebrity members of the opposite sex is found on television; the Japanese version of Cosmo contains 10-point passion advice similar to its American counterpart's; and mixed groups of company colleagues can be heard each night at the local pub engaging in rowdy, if often childish, sex chatter.

Finally, and most bizarrely, we have McKinney's claim that "Most high school kids do not date. You can't get a driver's license in Japan until you are 18." If one is talking about cruising, or getting it on in the back seat at Inspiration Point, or, more traditionally, the sweaty palms "meet-the-parents" drive to pick up a date at her home, all this is true. But Japanese high school students spend a great deal of time together after school: hanging out, playing video games, shopping for music and clothes. And with a "love hotel" usually within walking distance, it's little wonder that the average age for initial sexual experience has, over the past thirty years, dropped to levels similar to those of the advanced nations of the West.

Sincerely,
Ron Ri, Kyoto, Japan

More on Those Google Ads

A few CounterPunchers have written in, saying they find them offensive. I answer that CounterPunch needs money and that’s why we run the ads, in the hopes that people will look at them. Thus far, the revenue would scarcely keep Jasper and Boomer in dogfood. Certainly not the quality chow I give Jasper here in Petrolia, and I’ve no doubt that up there in Oregon City Boomer exacts nothing but the best from Jeffrey.

On Jun 22, 2005, at 8:14 PM, Laura Hayes wrote:

Dear Counterpunch,
It is really disheartening to click on the top two "Google ads" that appeared at the bottom of Dave Lindorff's June 21st article on NPR/PBS funding, to discover sites that present the Isreal-Palestinian conflict in terms of "parity" and "balance" (procon.org and enisen.com). That is, information is presented in a way as to give the impression that the two sides have claims that are somehow of equivalent weight and merit. To me, this is code for legitimizing Isreal's occupation of the West Bank and continued land-grabbing. Why would Counterpunch want to direct its readers to such sites, providing increased traffic? It appears the Counterpunch does not control the links that are offered. I think these Google ads are a terrible idea, and unworthy of Counterpunch's support. If there is supposed to be some mutual benefit between Counterpunch, Google, and the click-through sites, I think that Counterpunch is on the losing end.

What a disappointment.
Laura Hayes

June 22, 2005 10:14:07 PM PDT

Laura, to give you the site you like, we need money. Getting you to click on Google ads is one way of getting it. Donations, from people like you, are another. But you shouldn't get too upset. You are among the very, very heroic few of our readers who even bother to look at these ads. I wish there were more.

Best Alex C.

Footnote: The item on smoking guns first appeared in the print edition of The Nation that went to press last week.