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Hezbollah's Rise, Israel's Fall

Peggy Thomson visits Hezbollah's southern commander. Guerilla warfare Comanche-style: The greatest light cavalry since Ghenghis Khan; How the whites got the Texas that the Bush family moved to. Alexander Cockburn on why Israel lost. What you just missed, but can still get, in our last newsletter: Paul Craig Roberts on the Collapse of America. CounterPunch Online is read by millions of viewers each month! But remember, we are funded solely by the subscribers to the print edition of CounterPunch. Please support this website by buying a subscription to our newsletter, which contains fresh material you won't find anywhere else, or by making a donation towards the cost of this online edition. Remember contributions are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

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Today's Stories

September 2 / 3, 2006

Ralph Nader
The No-Fault White House

September 1, 2006

Uri Avnery
Olmert Agonistes

Paul Craig Roberts
Of Wolves and Men (and Impotent Democrats)

Bill Ayers
Exclusionary Signs of the Times

Kevin Zeese
The Best War Ever

Xochitl Bervera
The Forgotten Children of New Orleans

Norman Solomon
Bush vs. Ahmadinejad: a TV Debate We'll Never See

Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah Denounces Nasrallah Interview as a Fake

Richard Neville
Rupert Murdoch's Victims

Website of the Day
The Uranium Flood

 

August 31, 2006

David MacMichael
Can the Iran Nuke Crisis be Defused?

John Ross
Diary of the Mexican Earthquake

Edward Said
Mahfouz, 9/11 and the Cruelty of Memory

Amira Hass
The Burden of Collaboration

Missy Comley Beattie
Circle in a Spiral: Families at War

Lee Sustar
The Case of Elvira Arellano: Racism, Divided Families and Deportation

Jonathan Cook
Israeli Myths: Deception as a Way of Life

Website of the Day
The Case for Impeachment: CSPAN

 

August 30, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
The Five Morons Revisited

George Salzman
The Revolutionary Surge in Oaxaca

Dave Lindorff
I Am a Curious Yellowcake: the Armitage Confession and the Niger Question

Leigh Davis
Privatizing New Orleans' Schools

Alan Maass
The Crimes Katrina Exposed: an Interview with Larry Bradshaw and Lorrie Slonsky

Mike Whitney
Pop Goes the Bubble!: the Great Housing Crash of '07

Eliza Ernshire
Murder on Rucarb Street

Website of the Day
CNN = iPoop2?


August 29, 2006

Saul Landau
Misreading Cuba, for 47 and a Half Years

Jeffrey Buchanan
Human Rights and the Realities of Returning to New Orleans: Lip Service and Profiteering

Dave Lindorff
War? What War?

James Brooks
The US Peace Movement and Hezbollah

John F. Burnett
Katrina and the Media: "I Know Y'All Want Our Story, But We Need Help"

Walter A. Davis
J'Accuse: the Media and Jonbenet Ramsey

Rich Gibson
Detroit Teachers Strike Again

Amira Hass
The Accidental Immigrant

Paul Craig Roberts
Bush Turns His Terror War on the Homeland

 

August 28, 2006

John Walsh
With Lieberman's Loss, the Lobby Takes a Second Hit

Sibel Edmonds / William Weaver
Hillary Clinton: a Fool's Vessel

Ramzy Kysia
For Israel's Security? A Visit to Houla, Lebanon

Ron Jacobs
An Interview with Nativo Lopez

Gideon Levy
The Reservists' Protest

Missy Beattie
Yes, Virginia, There is a Rumsfeld

Virginia Tilley
Putting Words in Ahmadinejad's Mouth


August 26 / 27, 2006
Weekend Edition

Uri Avnery
America's Rottweiler

Alexander Cockburn
Israel on the Slide

Jordan Green
Profiting from Disaster: Greed Has Stallled Gulf Coast Recovery, But Made Some Very, Very Rich

Azmi Bishara
Israel at a Loss

Ray Close
Why Bush Will Choose War Against Iran: Reflections of a Former CIA Analyst

Gary Leupp
The Lebanon Ceasefire and the Coming Assault on Iran

Ralph Nader
AIDS in Black America

Joe Allen
Free Gary Tyler: Thirty Years of Injustice

Fred Gardner
The Miraculous Resurrection of Dr. John Lee

Dave Lindorff
The Crime of Frag Weapons

David Krieger
Why are There Still Nuclear Weapons?

Stephen Fleischman
Jurassic White House: the Reptilian Brain of George W. Bush

Mary Turck
Elections and Lessons from Mexico

Walter Brasch
Sports Afoul: Canned Hunts

Jim Scharplaz
Oil and the American Farmer

Israel Shamir
The Grapes of Wrath

Alexander Cockburn
About That Nasrallah Interview

Charles Henderson
Scientology: a Typically American Religion?

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Grima, Ford and Mickey Z.

 

August 25, 2006

Elena Everett
The Women of New Orleans After Katrina

Juan Cole
Iran's Nuclear "Threat"

Chris Moore
Religious Motives Behind Iraq War Deception?: Revelations from the Watada Court Martial

James Marc Leas
How Lebanese Civilians Thwarted Israel's War Plans

Salah Obeid
The Price of Ignoring the Elephant

Claudio Albertani
Mexico Piquetero

Tom Barry
Gangster Diplomacy: Elliot Abrams in Jerusalem

Website of the Day
Congress, the Defense Budget and Pork: a Snout to Tail Charcuterie


August 24, 2006

CounterPunch News Service
Penis Pump or Bomb? Bum Rap at O'Hare

Uri Avnery
Stop the Cancer, End the Occupation

Nermeen al-Mufti
"The Strong Do as They Can": an Interview with Noam Chomsky

Norman Solomon
The Mythical End to the Politics of Fear

Megan Wiles
American Responsibility and Palestine

Laura Santina
Busting Loose of the War Engine: a Female Perspective

Mike Whitney
Restarting the 34 Day War

Seth Sandronsky
Millionaires Make a Killing as Killings Continue

Christopher Brauchli
Consider the Uighurs: Freedom in a Cage

 

August 23, 2006

Dr. Trudy Bond
Calling Dr. Mengele: APA Whitewashes Torture By Shrinks

Ramzy Baroud
The Real Terrorism Plot

Ron Jacobs
The Liberal Warmongers are at It Again

Heather Gray
Palestinian Sense of Place: You Can't Bomb It Away

Amira Hass
The Occupier Defines Justice

Mavis Anderson
Castro's Health and US Meddling

Ingmar Lee
The Great Game Goes On: India's Occupation of Ladakh

Francis Boyle
Statement on Behalf of Lt. Watada

John Ross
Mexico Approaches the Combustion Point


August 22, 2006

Gilad Atzmon
Israel Must Win

Jack Heyman
The Iron Heel Revisited: Cops as Provocateurs on the Docks

Eamon McCann
Bereft Belfast Mother Charges Security Firms with Wanton Murder in Iraq

Sharon Smith
Bush's Failing War on Terror: When in Doubt, Go Racist

Edward S. Herman
Faith-Based Analysis

Ramzi Kysia
My Journey to South Lebanon

Bill Quigley
Trying to Make It Home: New Orleans One Year After Katrina

August 21, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Caught in a Net of Delusion

Paul Craig Roberts
Artificial Recovery; Real Job Losses

Kathy Kelly
Israel's "Proportionate Response": Measured Amid the Wreckage

Mike Roselle
Irony Runs Through It: Making a Ruckus

Lenni Brenner
Mayor Bloomberg: the Flying Faker

Maher Osseiran
Osama's Confession; Osama's Reprieve

 

August 19 / 20, 2006
Weekend Edition

Uri Avnery
The 155th Victim

Eliza Ernshire
Terror and Freedom on the West Bank

Virginia Tilley
Inside 1701: What the UN Ceasefire Resolution Actually Says

Kathy Kelly
Funerals at Qana: a Journey to Southern Lebanon

Marc Levy
You are What You Dream: "Before you talk of heroes you must feel, taste, touch, smell the horror."

Stephen Bradberry /
Jeffrey Buchanan
Hopes and Homes: Subject to Seizure on the Katrina's Anniversary

Barbara Rose Johnston
Banking on Violence: Guatemalan Genocide and US Security

William Blum
Perpetual Fear: Saved Again, Praise the Lord!

Stephen Fleischman
Self-Fulfilling Prophecies: Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon

Ralph Nader
The Legacy of John Kenneth Galbraith

Dave Lindorff
Busted, Again: Bush is Two Times a Criminal

Fred Gardner
When Cannabis Failed to Sell

David Krieger
Nuclear Insecurity

Dan La Botz
The Minutemen: Mad at the Wrong Guys

Poets' Basement
Davies / Engel

 

August 18, 2006

Brian M. Downing
American Generals and Iraq: Time to Call for a Rapid Withdrawal

John Blair
Divine Strike in the Bible Belt: Will They Bomb Bedford?

Alan Hart
The Lebanon War, a Post Mortem

Craig Murray
Hitting a Nerve: the Hair Gel Terror Hype

Chris Dols
Confronting Madison's NaziFest

Emily Kirksey
The Cuban Mirage: Self-Deception in Miami and Washington

Joaquín Bustelo
Forging a New Strategy for Immigrant Rights: Report from Chicago

William S. Lind
Beaten: Why the IDF Lost in Lebanon

Podcast of the Day
The F-22 PodCast

Website of the Day
Burn a Brick for Jesus

 

August 17, 2006

CounterPunch News Service
"Goodbye to the Unipolar World": an Interview with Hasan Nasrallah

Barucha Peller
This Pain Has No Ceasefire

Ramzy Baroud
Lebanon: a Critical Battlefield for the New Middle East

Rothem Shtarkman
Gen. Dan Halutz: Inside Trader

Craig Murray
The UK Terror Plot: What's Really Going On?

Samar Assad
Gaza: One Year After Disengagement

Mike Ferner
Lt. Watada's Challenge

Arnold Kohen
A Second Rebirth for East Timor?

Kevin Zeese
Does the Invasion of Lebanon Foretell a Regional War?

Missy Comley Beattie
Open Wounds

Uri Avnery
From Mania to Depression

Video of the Day
Neil Young: After the Garden

Website of the Day
Art for Peace

 

August 16, 2006

Merav Yudilovitch
Apocalypse Near: an Interview with Noam Chomsky on Lebanon

Robert Fisk
Behind the Lies of Bush and Blair: It Falls to Assad to Tell the Truth

Mark Williams
The Missiles of August: The Lebanon War and the Democratization of Missile Technology

John Ross
End Game Engulfs Mexico

Christopher Brauchli
The Poor Are Such a Nuisance

John Walsh
AIPAC Congratulates Itself for Slaughter in Lebanon

Ron Jacobs
Gee, Your Hair Smells Terror-ific!: Shampoo, Fear and Elections

Rachard Itani
It Ain't Over: What Did and Didn't Happen in Lebanon

Felice Pace
Forest Fires in the Klamath Mountains: The Real Threat is Not What You Expected

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Lieberman the Enabler

Frank, Sharma and Peterson
Venezuela's Revolution of Hope: "In Two Years, Everything Has Changed!"

Jonathan Cook
Real Photo Fakers; Real War Crimes

Website of the Day
You Too Can Paint Like Jackson Pollock!

 

August 15, 2006

Andrew Ford Lyons
Why Hezbollywood Was Born: Digitally Erasing a Massacre

Binoy Kampmark
Terrorism and the Art of Flying

Robert Fisk
Israel Wasn't Hoping for This

Ralph Nader
Bush to Israel: Take Your Time Destroying Lebanon

Todd Chretien
The US Antiwar Movement: Weak, Passive, Distracted

Chris Floyd
It's Bigger Than the Neo-Cons

Mark Engler
WTO: Best Left for Dead?

George Galloway
"You Don't Give a Damn:" the SkyNews Debate

Laray Polk
What's More Obscene: War or Sex?

Trish Schuh
Operation Change of Location?: Where Were the IDF Soldiers Captured?

Website of the Day
Jesus Never Existed


August 14, 2006

Uri Avnery
What the Hell Happened to the Israeli Army?

Karim Makdisi
The Flaws in the UN Resolution

Kathy Kelly
Approaching a Ceasefire

Robert Fisk
The Truce That Won't Last

Norman Solomon
Who's Afraid of Hillary Clinton? MoveOn, for One

Sunsara Taylor
Ned Lamont and the Antiwar Movement: False Hopes, Bad Terms and Ticking Clocks

Robert Jensen
Outside the Frame: The Limits of George Lakoff's Politics

Mike Whitney
The Litani Gambit: Ceasefire or Trojan Horse?

P. Sainath
An Indian Farmer About to Commit Suicide Writes a Note of Clarification

Goretti Horgan
The Raytheon Nine: Irish Antiwar Protesters Face "Terrorism" Charges

Christopher Reed
London Fog: Doubts Hang Over Terror Plot

 

August 12 / 13, 2006
Weekend Edition

Jean Bricmont
The De-Zionization of the American Mind

Norman Finkelstein
Should Alan Dershowitz Target Himself for Assassination?

Robert Fisk
How the London Terror Scare Looks from Beirut

Adrian Grima
Forget the 50 Civilians: Watching Lebanon from Malta

Barucha Peller
Letter from Lebanon: the Proximity of Death

Omar Barghouti
The UN, Lebanon and Palestine

Adam Engel
Tearing Down the Master's House: an Interview with Derrick Jensen

Conn Hallinan
How the Irish Could Save the Middle East

John Stauber
Meet the GOP's Latest Smear Machine: Vets for Freedom

Rev. William Alberts
Bush's Primetime Lies Still Go Unchallenged by the Press

Fred Gardner
Hollywood Does Cannabis: "Weeds," the First Season

Lucinda Marshall
Penis Politics: Does Dick Cheney Want Us All to Fly Nude?

Ron Jacobs
Kill the Precedent: an Interview with Rapper Nate Mezmer

CounterPunch News Service
Kerala Throws Out Coke and Pepsi

Poets' Basement
Katz, Davies and Orloski


August 11, 2006

Col. Dan Smith
Crimes Against Peace: Beyond Nuremberg

John Ross
Class War in Mexico City's Gridlock

Michael Donnelly
Sore Loserman, Redux

William S. Lind
Collapse of the Flanks

Linda Milazzo
Chertoff's New Math: Hair Gel Plot Might Have "Killed 100s of Thousands"

Rep. Cynthia McKinney
Something is Happening Around the World

Azmi Bishara
When the Skies Rain Death

Henri Picciotto
Jewish Dissidents Must Challenge Israel

CounterPunch News Wire
The Warrior Lawyer: Tom Crumpacker, 1934-2006

Dave Lindorff
War Crimes in Lebanon

Jonathan Cook
From High Wycombe to Nazrareth: How I Found Myself with the Islamic Fascists

 


August 10, 2006

Uri Avnery
The Buck Stops Where?

Dave Marsh
Who Are Mr and Mrs Lamont?

Gabriel Kolko
Reflections on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Arthur Versluis
How Neocons' Nazi Hero Schmitt Spawned Bush's Totalitarian Lunge

Jennifer Loewenstein
Awakening the Resistance


August 9, 2006

Linda Schade
Incumbents Beware: Peace Voters Mean Business

Jackie Mason
Defends Mel Gibson; Ridicules Abe Foxman

Jonathan Cook
Hypocrisy and the Clamor Against Hizbullah

Gilad Atzmon
Operation Security Roof

Charles Hirschkind
Doing the Lebanese a Favor

Tom Barry
Right-wingers Ramp Up War on Migrants

Cockburn & St. Clair
The Sweetness of Lieberman's Defeat

 

August 8, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
Requiem for Baghdad

Paul Larudee
The Lebanese Nakba and Israeli Ambitions

Joan Roelofs
The Malleable US Constitution: a Deterrent to Democracy?

Dimi Reider
An Interview with IDF Refusenik Sgt. Zohar Milchgrub

John A. Murphy
The Democrats: a Party on the Run ... from Its Own Members!

Eliot Katz
The View from the Big Woods: In Which a NYC Antiwar Poet Takes a Summer Vacation in Canada's Boreal Forest

Tim Llewellyn
Into the Valley of Death

Website of the Day
Galloway Speaks!

 

August 7, 2006

Uri Avnery
The Junkies of War

Karim Makdisi
The Draft UN Resolutions: the View from Beirut

Nadia Hijab
What Israel and the US Wanted May Not Be At All What They Get

Sharon Smith
Birth Pangs and Dead Babies

Magan Wiles
Encounter at an Israeli Checkpoint

George Beres
A New Kind of Bigotry: Lebanon War Exposes Strange Religious Bedfellows

Rachard Itani
Nice Try, Mr. Bolton

Norman Solomon
Some Nukes Are A-Okay with the US Media

Stan Cox
Presidential Doping Scandal Erupts!

Mickey Z.
Go Ahead, Please Stare at Her Chest

Jonathan Cook
The Deadly US-Israeli Shell Game at the UN

Website of the Day
Sam Husseini Interrogates Newt Gingrich on Lebanon

 

August 5 / 6, 2006

Virginia Tilley
Boycott Now!: the Case for Boycotting Israel

Uri Avnery
The Black Flag

Patrick Cockburn
Yes, It is a Crusade!: Blair's Mad Speech on Iraq

Sgt. Martin Smith
Military Training and Atrocities: Bad Apples from a Rotten Tree

Gary Leupp
America's Heroes on Trial

Neve Gordon
The New McCarthyism: Academic Freedom After 9/11

Ralph Nader
Hey Joe!: the Ghosts of Lieberman's Past

Peter Bouckaert
For Israel, Innocent Civilians Are Fair Game

Peter Montague
Nukes Rising: Bush Oversees a Global Nuclear Expansion

David Krieger
Global Hiroshima: the Stakes Have Been Raised

Michael Donnelly
"Sir! No Sir!": the Story of the GI Anti-War Movement

Fred Gardner
Dr. Denney Sues the DEA

Catherine Norris
Seeking Justice Abroad: Spanish Courts Issue Arrest Warrants for the Butchers of Guatemala

Imraan Siddiqi
The Smokescreens of War: Moral Superiority, 9/11 and Islamic-Fascism

Missy Comley Beattie
One Year After the Death of Chase Comley

Ira Kay
Where is Geography? Getting Beyond the Place Name Game

Dave Lindorff
Let's Build a Wall

Pratyush Chandra
Nuclear Fascism in India

Ron Jacobs
Keeping It Radical

St. Clair / Donnelly
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Katz and Davies

Website of the Day
Defend Bear Butte

Video of the Weekend
Rainbows Bust Pig Blockade

 

August 4, 2006

Ralph Nader
Joe Lieberman and the Secret Chamber

Brian Cloughley
Osama Has Won

Eliza Ernshire
No Lights in Gaza: "We Have a Death Warrant for Your Home"

Roger Assaf
Letter from Lebanon: Adjusting the Heroic Commando Raid Story

George Bisharat
When I Last Saw Lebanon

Remi Kanazi
Out to Lunch: The US Media's "Special Relationship"

Laura Carlsen
Mexico's Critical Moment: The Boardrooms vs. the Street

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The Fig (Leaflet) of Warning

Derrick O'Keefe
Ripe Fruit and Rotten Imperial Ambitions: US Reaction to Castro's Illness

Mickey Z.
Some Context on Castro and Cuba

Col. Dan Smith
The New Gonzales Standard for Torture: No Standards, No Accountability

Website of the Day
Israel's TV War


August 3, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Civilian Casualties and the War of Media Deception

Uri Avnery
Knife in the Dark

Saree Makdisi
Time to Call It Quits: Israel's Raid on Baalbeck's Hospital

Robert Fisk
The Family That Stays Together Dies Together

Farrah Hassen
Bush's Nutty Syria Policy: a Report from Damascus

Nicola Nasser
The De-Arabization of the Arab League

Ron Jacobs
The Hollow Body: When Exactly Did the UN Lose Its Street Cred?

Mitchel Cohen
Mexico Rising

Seth Sandronsky
Migrant Labor and Uncle Sam

Bruce K. Gagnon
Convert the Military Industrial Complex

Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah's Top Ally in Israel


August 2, 2006

John Ross
Mexican Civil Resistance in Five Acts

Chip Mitchell
Kudos to Hitchens!

Saul Landau
Want Peace in the Middle East? End the Occupation

Naseer Aruri
The UN at the Dustbin of History: Does It Have the Capacity to Intervene?

Winslow T. Wheeler
Congress and the Pentagon: Co-Abusers of the War Budget

Matthias Gebauer
News on a Platter: the Middle East PR War

Joshua Frank
How the Kyoto Protocol Was (Al) Gored

Bill Quigley
Hiroshima, Nagasaki and North Dakota

Manuel Yang
A View of Gaza and Lebanon from the Interior

Shamai Leibowitz
Whitewashing Atrocities: the Tortured Language of War

David Himmelstein
Pulling the Plug on Israel

Lara Marlowe
The Total Destruction of Srifa

Website of the Day
As a Nuke Plant Falls

 

August 1, 2006

Michael Neumann
What is to be Said?: War on the Blathersphere

Robert Fisk
Into the Meat Grinder: NATO and Lebanon

Omar Barghouti
The Massacre at Qana: Were Racism and Fundamentalism Factors?

Marc Levy
Whatever You Did in the War will Always be With You

Diana Barahona / Jeb Sprague
Reporters Without Borders and Washington's Coups

Claud Cockburn
Scenes from the Spanish Civil War

Ross Eisenbrey
When is a Raise Not a Raise? House Bill Actually Cuts Wages for Some Workers by $5.50 an Hour!

Dave Lindorff
Making the World Safe ... for Dictatorship

John Chuckman
Canada's Harper Blames the UN Dead

Francis Boyle
Prosecuting Israel: a War Crimes Tribunal May be the Only Deterrent to a Global War

Phil Doe
Bleak House Revisited: My Vacation in Water Court

Stephen Soldz
Psychologists, Guantanamo and Torture

Website of the Day
An Unfair War

 

July 31, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Birth Pangs or Death Throes?

Uri Avnery
Syria in the Gunsight

Robert Fisk
Atrocity in Qana: Israel Kills 34 Kids

Amina Mire
The Struggle for Somalia: Warlords, Islamists, US Global Militarism and Women

Marjorie Cohn
Bush's Enemy Du Jour

Sibel Edmonds / William Weaver
All That's Given Up in the Name of Security

John Ross
Report from a Red Alert: Zapatistas at Critical Crossroads

Stanley Rogouski
Why Howard Dean Denounced Our Puppet in Iraq

Gideon Levy
Days of Darkness: the Cruel, Collective Punishment of Lebanon

Ron Jacobs
No One Is Illegal

James Ridgeway / Alicia Ng
Witch Hunting Russell Tice: 3 Films

Brian Tokar
The Visionary Life of Murray Bookchin

Alexander Cockburn
The Triumph of Crackpot Realism

July 29 / 30, 2006
Weekend Edition

Michael Neuman
Humanitarian Intervention: The White Man's Burden

Vijay Prashad
Cry Havoc: Anyone Who Opposes Israel is Labeled a Terrorist

Ramzi Kysia
Lebanon's Children: Voices from an Invasion

Werther
The Manchurian Clergyman: Rev. John Hagee's War

Robert Fisk
Bush and Blair: "Keep It Up!"

Patrick Cockburn
Repeating the 1982 Fiasco

Ralph Nader
Big Oil's Biggest Score: Who Says Crime Doesn't Pay?

Rachard Itani
Professor of Propaganda: the Lies of Alan Dershowitz

Eduardo Galeano
One Country Bombed Two Countries

Gary Leupp
Cowboys Still in the Saddle: Neocon Plans in the MIddle East

Eve Poretsky
The Biggest Stick in the Middle East

John Chuckman
Delusional Expectations: How Israel Could Destroy Itself

Fred Gardner
San Diego v. Prop 215

Juan Santos
Apocalypse No!: an Indigenist Perspective

Punyapriya Dasgupta
Israel's Foes as Beasts and Insects

Liaquat Ali Khan
The War Crime Machine: Defeating the IDF

Israel Shamir
Friends, True and False

William A. Cook
The Power of Evil

Stanley Heller
Bill Clinton Comes to Lieberman's Rescue

Dave Lindorff
Bush's War Crimes Dodge

Moshe Adler
Kelo, a Year Later: Property Sezied By Eminent Domain Must Remain Public

Susie Day
Comrade Bush: Back in the USSA

Pat Williams
The Right's Pre-Election Sleight of Hand

Anthony Papa
Collateral Damage from the War on Drugs

John V. Whitbeck
Imperial Overreach: Suez 1956 to Lebanon 2006

Jackie Corr
Last Rites for Evel Knievel

Myles Palmer
Old Soul: James Hunter's "People Gonna Talk"

Tom D'Antoni
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Orloski, Louise, Davies, Engel and Meyers

Website of the Weekend
Electronic Lebanon

 

July 28, 2006

Jonathan Cook
The Lies Israel Tells Itself

Uri Avnery
Who is Winning? Questions and Answers About the War in Lebanon:

Renee Bowyer
When Condi Came to Ramallah

Robert Fisk
Smoke Signals from Bint Jbeil

Patrick Cockburn
Baghdad's Death Squads, Official and Otherwise

Ramzy Baroud
The War in Lebanon: More Than Meets the Eye

Don Fitz
Half-Hour Hurricanes: Where Were the Warnings About St. Louis's Ultra Storm?

Elaine Cassel
The Second Andrea Yates Verdict: Why the Jury Did the Right Thing

David Price
Much Ado About Landis: What Kind of Tour de France Was It?

Mike Whitney
Bull's Eye: Israel's Targeted Assassination of UN Peacekeepers

Mickey Z.
Power (Outage) to the People: Why Queens Went Dark

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The Power of Arrogance in a World Without Deterrence

Charles Glass
Operation "Save Israel's High Command"

Website of the Day
Military Intelligence and You!

 

July 27, 2006

Tanya Reinhart
Israel's New Middle East

Saul Landau
Castro at 80: History Absolved Him, Now What?

Ramzi Kysia
Watching Lebanon Burn: Notes From a Free Fire Zone

Tom Barry
John Bolton: Israel's Man at the UN

Joseph Grosso
Israel and Iraq: Hillary's White House Ticket

Sharon Smith
Lebanon and the Future of the Antiwar Movement

Gale Courey Toensing
9/11 Nablus: First, Destroy the Archives

Christopher Reed
Hirohito's Ghost: Japan's New Militarists

Werther
Hoosier Hooey: Is Terre Haute the Peshawar of the Midwest?

Yusuf Mansur
Can the Crime Justify the Act?

Richard Harth
Squeezing the Last Drops from Palestine

Website of the Day
Who's Arming Israel?


July 26, 2006

Norman Solomon
Applauding While Lebanon Burns: Richard Cohen's Blood Lust

Barbara Olshanksy
Gitmo: Justice Denied is Murder, and a War Crime

David Nally
The Detention of Ghazi Walid Falah: Israel Arrests Geography Professor from University of Akron

Jonathan Cook
Five Myths That Sanction Israel's War Crimes

Patrick Cockburn
Beware Iraqi Leaders Bearing Good News

William Blum
They Simply Can't Stop Lying, Can They?

Joshua Frank
Israel's Invasion Pretext Under Fire

Gabriel Kolko
Bankers Fear World Economic Breakdown

Daniel Cassidy
How the Irish Invented Dudes

Michael Dickinson
Arrested in Istanbul: "Sorry, We Thought You Were Israeli!"

Robert Fisk
Beirut as Munich

Uri Avnery
Is Beirut Burning?

Website of the Day
Free Ghazi Walid Falah

 

July 25, 2006

Harry Browne
Acquittal!: Activists Found Not Guilty in Irish Ploughshares Case

Marjorie Cohn
Willful Blindness: Bush Greenlights War Crimes

Robert Bryce
Israel and the Irony of UN Resolutions

Sharat G. Lin
Chronology of the Latest Chrisis in the Middle East

George Bisharat
Most Lebanese Now Know Who Their Real Tormentor Is

CounterPunch News Desk
Class War in the Blathersphere

Zena El-Khalil
"Tell Them That I'm Not Leaving. We Love Lebanon"

Larry Lack
The Bottled Water Madness

Mike Mejia
The Secret Behind "State Secrets"

Ashraf Isma'il
Why Israel Is Losing

Website of the Day
Peace on Trial

 

July 24, 2006

Mark Levy
The Whys and Wherefores of PTSD

Robert Fisk
Israelis Bomb Fleeing Villagers

Maher Osseiran
Beirut, 1982

Paul Craig Roberts
Israel's Criminal Accomplice

Patrick Cockburn
More Than 100 Iraqis Being Killed Each Day

Website of the Day
sirnosir.com

 

July 22-23, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Indiscriminate Onslaughts

Paul Craig Roberts
The Shame of Being an American

Gilad Atzmon
Israel's New Math

Robert Fisk
Elegy for Beirut

Ralph Nader
Here's How to Halt This Horror

Fred Gardner
The Double Standard on Depression

Christopher Reed
The Right's Use of Sexpot Schoolgirls

Dr. Susan Block
Bush's Fecal World

Najla Said
Do People Know How Much We Hurt?

Uri Avnery
"Stop that Shit"

July 21, 2006

George Galloway
John Cornford and the Fight for the Spanish Republic

P. Sainath
Indian Prime Minister Faces the Dead Farmer Problem

Aseem Shrivastava
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Weekend Edtion
September 2 / 3, 2006

A Premature Burial

The Remaking of Cataract Canyon

By JEFFREY ST. CLAIR

Day One.

A couple of years ago, Daniel Wolff and I began a casual email banter about floating one of the West's mighty rivers. We thought we might canoe the Missouri, rewinding Lewis and Clark's route, from Ft. Benton, Montana to the badlands of the Missouri Breaks. The summer passed and the Missouri rolled on without carrying us on its back.

The following year there was manly talk again, this time centering on Oregon's John Day River, which is born in the Elkhorn Mountains and cuts its way in a lazy arc through basalt canyons to the Columbia River. By most standards, the John Day is not a big river, but it now stands, with the Salmon and the Yampa, as one of the longest free-flowing streams in the American West. The dam builders have marred nearly everything else. But book tours and wars came in the way. So, another day for the John Day.

Still, desert rivers haunted my daydreams. One in particular: the one that begins in on the south slopes of the Wind River Range in Wyoming and once emptied into the Gulf of California in Mexico, though not a drop of river water reaches that far today. That river is, of course, the Green-Colorado, the great river of the desert southwest.

Word had come from Moab that Lake Powell, that noxious sewage lagoon in the heart of Glen Canyon, was drying up and the river was regaining its flow, carving through canyons of sediment to reveal sections of Glen and Cataract Canyons that hadn't been seen since the floodgates closed at Glen Canyon Dam in 1963. I proposed to Wolff that a summer float down the river through Cataract Canyon, the most challenging stretch of whitewater on the river, might give us the rare glimpse of a river being reborn-a victory of nature over technology.

Wolff said, "Why not?"

Why not, indeed.

Well, for starters, neither of us had the slightest experience with the kind of extreme rapids that would confront us in the throat of Cataract Canyon, especially in the harrowing triplet of cascades known as the Big Drops. And neither did our three companions in this flight from daily realities: Wolff's wife, the filmmaker and choreographer, Marta Renzi; their 16-year-old son, Lorenzo, a devotee of Edward Abbey and a stunningly gifted bass guitarist, coming soon to an arena near you; and my wife, Kimberly Willson, a librarian.

Lorenzo and Marta boast on their resume of several descents of the mighty Hoosick River in inner tubes. When she was 18, Kimberly paddled her surfboard from the south point of Ocean City across the channel to Assateague Island in the hope of hearing the roar of wild ponies. And that's about it.

I have a few rivers in my past: the Little Beaver and Churchill in Canada; Michigan's Pine and Manistee; the French Broad in North Carolina; West Virginia's New and Gauley rivers; the Deschutes and Rogue in Oregon. But those descents were years, decades ago. Since 9/11 I haven't strayed away from my computer for more than three consecutive days. The Mac has extracted a terrible price from my body: hunched back, indiscrete waves of fat, tenderized hands and feet and pixel-eroded eyes. A ruin.

These days Wolff gets out on the water much more often than I do. And even though he's a poet, and by all precedents of literary history should be confined to a consumptive sanitarium in the Poconos, Wolff's in better shape, too. He takes daily breaks from scribbling sonnets, or writing books about the legendary Sam Cooke or Springsteen's Ashbury Park or the Negro Baseball League, and escapes in his beautiful wooden sloop to sail up and down the Hudson, keeping an eye on the remorseless development biting into the Palisades and the grim cooling towers of Indian Point, America's most dangerous nuclear plant, a few miles upstream from the Renzi-Wolffs' mossy manse in Nyack.

Obviously, we needed help.

So I called up my old friend John Weisheit, one of the most acclaimed guides on the Colorado River. But there was a problem. After 25 years of guiding rafts down the Green and Colorado Rivers, from Dinosaur National Monument and Desolation Canyon through Labyrinth and Cataract to the Grand Canyon itself, Weisheit had become so disgusted by the state of the river ecosystem and the three big dams that were destroying it that he hung up his oars and became a full-time environmental activist.

Weisheit and Owen Lammers, a battle-hardened veteran of global fights against hydrodams from China's Three Gorges to the demented Animas-LaPlata scheme in Colorado, founded Living Rivers in Moab back in 2000. This two-person operation has done more for the preservation of rivers in American West in the past five years than Sierra Club with all its millions had accomplished in a decade. In his spare time, Weisheit and two of his colleagues, Robert Webb and Jane Belnap, wrote the book on Cataract Canyon. It's a meticulously detailed and passionate work, a model of environmental history writing that belongs on the same handy shelf with Donald Worster's Rivers of Empire and Mark Reisner's Cadillac Desert.

Weisheit is also the Colorado Riverkeeper. It's his job to keep an eye on the environmental changes in those canyons. It turns out he was looking for an excuse to get back on the river and check out the latest revelations from the ongoing retreat of Lake Powell.

"Let's do it," Weisheit said. "Just one minor thing. Let's go Powell's route, down the Green River, rowing all the way. No motors."

The Powell in question was Maj. John Wesley Powell, the one-armed Civil War veteran who commanded two pioneering expeditions down the Green and Colorado Rivers in 1869 and 1871/2.

So we packed our bags (strike that: BAG, they only permit you one) and converged on Moab.

* * *

By the time we get the old International Harvester bus loaded with several thousand pounds of our gear outside the Tag-a-Long offices in Moab, the temperature has topped 90 degrees. It is 8 am.

Weisheit has already been working for hours, rigging the rafts. And, typically, it didn't take him long to provoke a confrontation with the owner of the company. Weisheit was wearing a Drain It! T-shirt, featuring an image of an giant sledgehammer smashing a hole in Glen Canyon Dam. The owner of Tag-a-Along and Weisheit's former boss was not amused. Outfitters don't want to offend anyone, even when their own livelihood is at stake. It's one of the big reasons Weisheit retired from guiding.

More and more the outfitters are becoming apolitical and corporate, unwilling to defend the true source of their livelihood. The indigenous and family operations that sprang up in Moab during the 1960s are beginning to fade away and with it a personal connection to the canyons and the river. They are replaced by multi-national companies, such as Aramark that also manage Park Service visitor centers and peddle inedible food to schools and prisons.

The profiles of the river guides, once an outlaw culture of hippies and desert anarchists, are changing, too. More and more the guides are college students from LA or the east coast game for summer kicks and big tips. They guide for a couple of years, then become lawyers and equity analysts. The intimate connection to the river and the forces, political and natural, that shape it is being lost. "The Colorado has been Wal-Marted," Weisheit sneers.

We drive north across the redrock, past Arches National Park, then turn west across cow-trampled BLM lands with expansive views of the glowing Book Cliffs to the north and the blue buckle of the Henry Mountains to the south, the last range to be explored by whites in the lower 48 states. All around us, blonde domes of Navajo sandstone breach up off the surface of the earth like the rumps of humpback whales.

When we finally reach the rim of Labyrinth Canyon, the temperature has spiked to 100 degrees, on its way to 110 by late afternoon. From the red lip of the canyon, the road plunges downward 1,500 feet in a torturous swirl of extreme switchbacks that cling to the shear cliffs of Wingate sandstone, laid down by the great sand dunes of the Jurassic period. The descent makes the crazy road on the island of Capri seem as leisurely as a drive down I-5.

We make our first snap decision: get off the damn bus! Much better to face the dust and the heat, now radiating off the vertical walls of sandstone, and walk to the bottom, leaving the groaning bus, loaded with rafts and gear, to its own uncertain fate. We smell the brakes sizzling all the way down.

At the fifth switchback, our cowardly decision is confirmed as we encounter the crumpled maroon hulk of a station wagon that had plunged off the road and smashed headlong into unforgiving boulders like Thelma and Louise, whose final ride into the blue negative spaces of the canyon was filmed nearby.

We watch from above as our bus attempts to negotiate the most perilous curve on this dangerous road. It takes Bob our driver a good five minutes to coax the rig the few hundred feet necessary to traverse the hairpin. That was a triumph worthy of a Formula One driver compared to the fate of an oil rig that inched its way down the canyon a few days earlier. It took the giant drilling rig two and a half days to make that one curve. I can't help thinking the wrong vehicle crashed.

The oil companies have never given up on extracting the last drop of crude from the shallow pools of crude lurking beneath Canyonlands. They can't drill directly into the National Park, so they take advantage of the BLM and State of Utah's open door policy and set their rigs on those lands and aim their drilling bores at an angle to pierce into the park from all sides. Slant drilling is one term for it. Backdoor larceny is a better one. Abetted by the government.

Halfway down the canyon, we spook a pair of desert bighorn sheep, ewe and lamb. The mother cuts down the canyon toward a copse of cottonwood trees, while the young lamb streaks straight up the nearly vertical face of the cliffs, as if gliding on air. You can see why the Anasazi and their contemporaries the Fremont carved more images of bighorns onto the rocks of the Colorado Plateau than any other animal. Both peoples also adorned their sandals with the dew claws of desert bighorns, no doubt as a kind of talisman for their own miraculous climbing feats to their secret granaries, cliff dwellings, watch towers and astral observatories perched hundreds of feet above the canyon floor.

Finally we arrive at Mineral Bottom, our launch site. What mineral is that, you ask? Why uranium, of course. The ore that keeps on paying.

Back in the 1950s, little Moab was deemed the Uranium Capital of the World, thanks to H-Bomb Harry Truman. The bonanza created a handful of millionaires, like Charlie Steen, thousands of chronically sick miners and many dead Indians, mainly Navajo, whose plight in the irradiated deserts of the Southwest is achingly portrayed in If You Poison Us by Peter H. Eichstaedt and Murrae Haynes.

In the late 1950s, Disney did its part as a uranium booster. A special episode of the Mickey Mouse Club featured the Mouseketeers floating down the goosenecks of the San Juan River in search of uranium. Atoms for peace, naturally. This hour-long adventure rivals Dr. Strangelove for black comedy from that decade of group paranoia and imperial fantasias.

Still the absurd episode offers some luscious footage of the San Juan before it was inundated beneath the waters of Lake Powell, which even now is soaking up the radioactive waste of the hundreds of uranium mines and tailings piles beneath its jewel-like waters.

As a memento of that iridescent era, the town of Moab enjoys a large uranium dump, courtesy of the Atlas Corporation, on its outskirts, flush on the bank of the Grand River. On windy days-four or five afternoons on a good week-the air in Moab is peppered with uranium dust and its lethal sidekick Radon.

After decades of zen-like contemplation, the Department of Energy has recently decided to solve Moab's little problem by excavating the contaminated soil, trucking it 30 miles up Highway and burying it near the base of the Book Cliffs outside the old cowboy town of Thompson. In the true West, this is known as spreading the wealth.

* * *

With the river so tantalizingly close, it is hard to remain patient. But readiness is all. There is still much work to do, most of it by Weisheit and our swamper Brian McManus, an 18-year old psychology student at the University of Florida, who is one of Tag-a-Long's rising stars. They've sent Brian with us to crib some of Weisheit's unparalleled knowledge of the river, the canyon's hidden campsites, its geology, and natural and human history. Like the rest of us, Brian's mind seems fixated on the rapids of Cataract Canyon, especially the Big Drops, which he has never rowed. But those are distant challenges, days away.

We unload the bus and begin pumping air into two inflatable kayaks, known affectionately as "duckies." I soon espy Marta Renzi caressing the bow of the bright yellow single kayak, for which she has already developed an unnatural attraction.

The rigging and loading of the two large rafts takes nearly two hours, as a week's worth of gear and supplies is carefully piecemealed and clipped into the holds of the raft: eight 10-gallon canteens of water, each weighing 50 to 60 pounds; a dozen or so large metal ammo cans jammed with food and supplies; two tables; seven folding chairs; a portable toilet; sleeping bags, pads and tents; coolers stuffed with blocks of ice; a keg of sunscreen; allegedly waterproof bags for clothes, cameras, toenail polish; a stove and propane tanks; field glasses and field guides (ie, Donald Baars' The Geology of Canyonlands, Sibley's Western Birds, Weisheit's Cataract Canyon and, natch, The Monkeywrench Gang); Lorenzo's guitar; first aid kits and antivenom; and the obligatory rocket launcher. If I they'd permitted me to bring a suitcase, I could have scooped up some of the sand from Mineral Bottom and boarded the raft with my own dirty bomb. No ticket to Niger required.

(Of course, in these days of government paranoia you have to be careful even allowing these quite natural fantasies to slip into your consciousness, never mind idly voice them aloud. Consider the case of my old friend Jim Bensman, a longtime enviro from southern Illinois-yes, there are quite a few of "them" down there in the sticks-who recently testified at a public hearing that if the Army Corps of Engineers really wanted to facilitate fish migration on the Mississippi River it might consider blasting down some of the archaic fish-killing dams on the river. At light-speed this entirely rationale observation was transmitted from the Corps of Engineers to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, who immediately launched a probe into the life and thoughts of Bensman-never mind the fact that Bensman was only quoting from the Corps' own Environmental Impact Study, which put forth the idea of dam removal by dynamite as a legimate means of saving the lives of fish. When thoughts are crimes, you know your government is on the run. A few months ago, the Reverand Pat Robertson predicted that the Almighty God would unleash from the heavens a torrent of dam-busting rains to drown the town of Dover, Pennsylvania for the inequity of teaching evolution in its schools. There's no word on whether the FBI opened an probe of the Supreme Deity and his bloodthirsty prophet.)

All of that and I forgot the Tanqueray! Dave Brower never left home for a river trip without a bottle or two of his favorite gin, but booze was impossible to buy in Utah on a Sunday afternoon. Just as well. Alcohol exacerbates dehydration and under these scorching skies we're in for a daily dose of desiccation.

At the first bend in the river, we flush a great blue heron hunting crawfish along a sandbar. The giant bird uncorks it angular body and flies awkwardly downstream, always downstream. I'd like to write that the herons escorted us down the river. But that wouldn't be true. The herons seemed agitated by our presence, barking angrily at us as they made their ungainly lift offs from beaches and the branches of cottonwoods. Compared to scream of the jetboats, we are a fairly unobtrusive gang of interlopers, floating silently down the river, leaving no wake behind us. Still the herons scold us, as if we should know better.

As we laze down a corridor of crumbly Kayenta sandstone, Kimberly perches on the edge of the raft, shielded from the sun by a rainbow-colored umbrella, like a figure in a Seurat painting. She is reading Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Zafon's labyrinthine novel of secret libraries, coded texts, forbidden romances and revolution during the fascist takeover of Spain. The book has startling resonances to America under Bush.

No time to brood on those matters. Look at those swallows overhead! They could teach the superstars of Cirque du Soleil a thing or two.

Ed Abbey longed to be reincarnated as a turkey vulture. If I earn a right of return, I hope to come back as a cliff swallow, the most graceful and acrobatic of birds. Through Labyrinth and Stillwater Canyons, the darting, purple-winged birds with the cinnamon rump are a constant, though diminished, presence, feeding on mosquitoes and mayflies. Their dome-like nests, their with perfectly round entry holes, are affixed in vast colonies to the faces of White Rim and Cedar Mesa sandstone. The adobe-like structures bear an eerie resemblance to the ancient granaries we will float by over the next week. I suspect the Anasazi learned much about architecture syle from Petrochelidon pyrrhonota.

While we encounter hundreds of cliff swallows as we drift down the Green, we see few, if any, white-throated swifts, once a common resident of the canyonlands. Apparently, the swift is in rapid decline, owing to the ever-diminishing populations of insects and from an invasion of its nesting sites in the cracks of high cliffs by rock climbers, especially near Moab, where curtains of lycra-clab climbers festoon the red walls of Wingate sandstone.

Late in the afternoon, we make camp on a sand island fringed with tamarisk, wavy clumps of slough grass and sand willow, just inside the unmarked boundary of Canyonlands, the real Jurassic Park.

First things first.

Before the tents are erected, we must deploy the small metal box known affectionately as "the Groover." Like some desert reliquary, the Groover has its own tent. Instructions are given for it's use. The shiny receptacle is for shit only. Urine gets heavy, Weisheit advises, so piss in the river. It can take it. Some among us are skeptical and hold out as long as they can. But, eventually, all must make the pilgrimage. One river, under a Groover.

Marta wanders off in search of a tent site. She soon comes scampering back to our riverside kitchen, where Weisheit is hunched over a tray of charcoal, grilling coho salmon seasoned with the pungent smell of dill snatched from his wife Susette's herb garden. Marta seems transformed, her body surrounded by a strange, hovering aura. An aura that buzzes. Then she whispers the fatal alarum we had all feared: "Mosquitoes!"

Believe it or not-and it does seem a stretch of logic under this evening's bombardment-the population of mosquitoes along the Green River has been in steady decline since 1964 when the floodgates closed on Flaming Gorge Dam, reducing the annual flows of the Green by 20 percent.

Mosquitoes need still water to breed, little ponds for sex pads and birthing rooms. But the yearly floods on the Green aren't as big or nearly as frequent as they used to be. There are fewer marshy places in the bottomlands and they dry up faster. Fewer mosquitoes means fewer swallows, swifts and bats. Our little island has a small trench of stagnant water on the backside, near our tents, and tonight the orgy is on. But not like the good old days.

We varnish ourselves in non-toxic insect repellant, which, being non-toxic, proves to be no deterrent against the microscopic vampires. We slide into sweaters and long pants, gloves, bandanas and sarongs. All to no avail. The mosquitoes penetrate every defensive shield mustered against them. We retreat to our tents, fleeing just as Weisheit is ready to serve us heaping mounds of strawberry shortcake topped with whipped cream. The horror, the horror.

Bottom line on day one: Nature bites back.

To be continued

Jeffrey St. Clair is the author of Been Brown So Long It Looked Like Green to Me: the Politics of Nature and Grand Theft Pentagon: Tales of Corruption and Profiteering from the War on Terror. He can be reached at: sitka@comcast.net.



 

 

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