The Only Daily That Comes Out Weekly
Issue #168
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Posted October 3, 2005 Again there was no Disinfotainment Today last week because: a) I'm a lazy good-for-nothing bastard who
doesn't give a damn about his readers.
Answer d)
I was out of town for three days and the best thing about it is that I can now write about it legally. Before this, I could have gone to jail for writing about my son. It's not paranoia when there's actually someone out to get you. After I allowed CBS to make an MOW about us, I had a judge look me in the eye and say "Mr. Dare, you obviously don't love your children, you're just out to exploit them." Then he charged me with contempt of court, eventually clearing me himself of the charges, and ordering me that if I ever WROTE ABOUT MY CHILDREN in any way, shape, or form, he would reinstate the charges. Contempt is too weak a word for my feelings about the court. When it first happened, I couldn't be funny. This happened to Lenny Bruce. All he wanted to talk about was his legal problems and he stopped being funny too. But whatayuh gonna do, ignore your own personal life while writing for a newspaper written, edited, and published by you? The judge can't threaten to take my son Buster away any more because Buster has turned 18, left home, and flown the coop to New York to stay with a friend. He's beyond the jurisdiction of Juvenile Court, set free to the world with a valid ID, and you're damn right I'm going to write about him. I've sent Buster off with one hell of a childhood and I have no doubt the story will continue, yet waving goodbye at LAX and watching him go up the elevator to airport security was a monumental moment in my life and well worth capturing in print. Fuck the judge and the horse he rode in on. I'm not only going to write about it, I'm going to be funny about it. I can love my kids AND exploit them. One doesn't preclude the other. What's he going to do? After all, how's he going to find out? Are you going to tell him? I haven't even said his name. I'm not an idiot. If he finds out, it's because one of you, reading this right now, hired a private detective to find the judge and personally informed him that I was violating a court order. That's not going to happen, is it? Swear? Good. It's the end of a long chapter in my life, the raising of Buster. I dedicated eighteen years to the events of September 25, 2005, the day in which my oldest son left home on his own for the first time. He boarded his jet at LAX at 12:30, bound for Islip, NY, where a friend has offered him a place to stay and a potential yacht ride down the coast to the Bahamas. We hugged, he headed up the escalator to further security before boarding, and my job was done. Eighteen years for that, a supreme moment, the most intense yin/yang of feelings I've ever experienced, with equal amounts of "Oh boy!" and "Oh no!" I miss him but he'll be back. ("Oh boy! Oh no!") He's having more fun that I'm having. ("Oh boy! Oh no!") My job is done. ("Oh boy! Oh no!") Five more years and Max is out of the house too. ("Oh boy! Oh no!") The Story So Far in the Wrong Order I didn't give him the upbringing I had planned. I lived in a spot halfway between Laurel Elementary and Fairfax High. He could walk to both as his education continued. Baby sitters were rare. When he was a baby, Patricia Arquette baby-sat once before she had ever appeared in a movie. Later, I took him with me when I interviewed Demi Moore and he played with Rumer while we talked. That's the upbringing I pictured, a Hollywood baby, tied in from the start to a life of hip parties, art openings, and movie previews. Then fate intervened and we found ourselves in the middle of nowhere, miles from civilization, and I was raising a country boy whose only influence was me and media, with a dose of younger brother and desert, lots of desert, friends with the wildlife, playing with rattlesnakes and scorpions and tarantulas and bunnies, lots of bunnies, dozens of them circling our house every day.
Total poverty. Not a spare penny. No more allowances, ever. No spare cash for food. Every single meal, breakfast, lunch, and dinner, for years, prepared by me, my life devoted to feeding and cleaning up after the kids. His childhood had a trajectory in common with my life and they both missed the mark, shot out of the sky by multiply twists of fate, landing in the vast uncharted territory between here and there. It wasn't a hurricane or a flood or an earthquake but it might as well have been. We had no control over it. It wasn't the life we led, it was life leading us, a sobering dose of reality with no one to turn to but ourselves. Part of his motivation to stay away is the prospect of coming back to the rat's nest we've called home for the past seven years. Considering the circumstances, we got along amazingly well. We like the same books, the same movies, the same food, and amazingly enough, the same music. Gotta love a son who prefers Elvis Costello and John Prine to rap. One of the odd aspects of the disappearance of someone from your life is that you tend to remember with fondness the things about them that irritated you. I remember how he used to walk around with only one sock on, how he'd take off his shoes in different rooms so we could never find both at the same time. It drove me crazy when it happened, one of the things I tried most to change about him before he went off into the world, but now it's mysteriously one of the things I miss. Did I do a good job? Was it worth it? What manner of human have I set loose in the world? The extent of his success is the traditional measurement I'm supposed to apply to myself, but success, like God, has a wide range of definitions. At this point, his possibilities are infinite. He's been free a week. He could end up a shrimp boat captain if he didn't eat all the shrimp. He's a big boy, so I'm not really worried about him physically. Any gangs of ruffians looking to beat someone up would surely choose someone other than him, except for the cops, who beat him up mercilessly about two and a half years ago when they suspected he was shoplifting. He wasn't. He just wanted them to convince him to do what they said. Why? When he turned 13 something amazing happened. It's like he doubled in size, shooting up a good five inches taller than me, and suddenly he was out of control, literally, I couldn't control him. Up to this point, parental control consisted of physically being able to pick him up and remove him from the room when I said it was time for bed. Couldn't do that any more. After one monumental wrestling match, from 14 onward all I had at my disposal with Buster was coercion. I had to convince him to leave the room, to pick up after himself, and help with the dishes. He got used to having to be convinced, which is how he got into trouble with the cops who didn't say please. At sixteen, I let out the leash a little bit, allowed him take a bus on his own to the other end of town, gave him an all day pass, and the next I heard was from the hospital that he'd been beaten up by police, was on his way to juvenile hall and WHAM, he wasn't mine any more, he was a ward of the state until off probation, two years to get him back before he turned 18 and was nobody's but his own. Thus started an endless parade of probation officers who knew it was a dog of a case and didn't appreciate that they had to travel into the heart of nowhere to see us. At one point, I swear to God, two social workers showed up the dirt road to our house from a government office 40 miles away, one female, and one male, under orders to actually stare at my son's penis while he peed into a bottle. He came out clean. He's not an idiot either. Conditions of probation were exasperating, and the probation officers kept changing. With every new PO we had to start all over from the boiler plate. No, we couldn't come into the office, you have to come see us. Yes, the bus not showing up IS a valid excuse for missing school. The final condition of ending probation was that he graduate high school or get a GED. Jay Levin (editor/publisher of the LA Weekly) paid for Buster's GED, Art Kunkin (editor/publisher of the LA Free Press) drove us to the College of the Desert to pay for it, Paul Krassner (editor/publisher of The Realist) rented us a car for the three days it took to take it, Buster passed which got him off probation so he could legally leave town, and Levin paid for his plane ticket. Which means it took the history of alternative journalism in America to get Buster out of the house. I was prepared for things to be different at the airport since 9/11 but not this different. Wave goodbye to the entire concept of waving goodbye. Immediately after ticketing and baggage check-in, there's a sign saying "Nobody without tickets beyond this point." There's no waiting area. Nowhere to buy anything, not a drink, no bar, no rows of seats to hang out till they call your flight. This was goodbye, right there. I asked if there was any way I could get to the gate to wave goodbye and was told I needed a gate pass. We went back to ticketing and were told no one over eighteen was allowed family members to follow them to the gate. Only kids. If he were two months younger, I could have gotten a gate pass and said goodbye in a proper way, but I guess there is no proper way. I got a hug and he headed up the escalator on his own. There is no angle from which one may see the runways in any way whatsoever. This is good if you're planning to shoot one down but bad if you want to wave goodbye to your son. Max and I went to the top of the parking garage where there was a little wedge of space between terminals. We could see the tails of two Deltas, and way back, we could see them taking off. At precisely 12:30, one Delta plane backed out of the terminal and taxied towards the runway. Ten minutes later, a Delta took off and we knew that was him. Max and I waved at his brother flying off into the sky. Your heart opens when you switch from take take take to give give give, so Buster, for the opening of my heart, I'll be forever grateful. Fly away, son, fly away. Gallery of the Week
The FEMA Hotline "Thank you for calling the FEMA
Hotline.
Sophistimicated Doowackies
of the Week
"I was opening up
my almost brand new Dell 600m laptop, to replace a broken PCMCIA slot riser
on the motherboard. As soon as I got the keyboard off, I noticed a small
cable running from the keyboard connection underneath a piece of metal
protecting the motherboard.
At Literature Map, you type in the name of one of your favorite authors and up come the names of all the other authors you'll probably like. Click on one of them and see the names change again. Go surfing through authors. Write down the name of one of them you've never heard of, go to the library, and check out one of their books. Write a review of it and send it to me. At Pandora, type in the name of a recording artist you like and it will create an entire radio station you can listen to based upon similar music. (broadband only) "Chinese scientists will use satellite
technology to peep on the sexual antics of China's highly endangered giant
pandas, Xinhua news agency said.
Trailer of the Week The people who brought you The Shining Remix have taken West Side Story and turned it into a horror film. Last week's question...
How come only three of you answered
last week's question? Wasn't it a good question? What do you want from
me?
That was three questions? Which one was
the stupid one?
- Jimmy McConnell Because the question you asked
had so many possible answers that people were overwhelmed. It's like walking
into a Baskin-Robbins ice cream shop and being mesmerized by the 31 flavors;
how do you rationally select just one? The recorded superstitions of god-followers
worldwide are staggering in their contradictions, so its too tough to chose
just one. By choosing one, I would hate to leave the impression that there
were no others....That having been said, I've snapped out of it and I have
a question to submit:
Well, lately the questions have
become more like meta-questions. Like the current one. Maybe they need
to be a bit more mundane. Still offbeat, but easier to answer.
more brevity
Sorry I would love to have answered
that question its one of your best yet; I must have just scrolled past
it in the last issue.
IS INTELLIGENT DESIGN JUST A THEORY? IF GOD IS SO
FUCKING SMART WHY DOES EVIL STILL EXIST? WHICH INTERPRETATION OF THE BIBLE
IS TRUE? THE CATHOLIC, THE BAPTIST, THE LUTHERAN, ETCETERA? WILL JEWS ROT
IN HELL UNLESS THEY ARE BAPTIZED IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER THE SON AND
THE HOLY GHOST. CHRIST DON'T GET ME STARTED.
Dear Michael Dare:
For some reason (known only to
God and Benny Hill) I didn't read that question so therefore unable to
answer it.
worry.wav
--"Quite honestly, I wouldn't worry myself about that."
Well, the fact is that most of your fanmail was produced
by internet question-answering mills operated out of the Big Easy. After
Hurricane Katrina, they all had to get the hell outa' Dodge (well actually,
New Orleans). Us other three guys, we work over here at an internet sweatshop
in Houston.
Because no matter how ingenious
the questions posed to fundamentalist Christian leaders are, the answers
are always the same. God came to me in a dream and instructed me to tell
you to(send money/hate gays/send money/vote republican/send money/oppose
abortions/send money/oppress women, today's youth, minorities, liberals,
or anyone who doesn't intend to vote republican and for big business economies
of which they're included/send more money)
Wait a minute---I'm the one that writes and tells
you the name of your favorite New Orleans Restaurant AND the name of that
banana desert you are going on and on about and now you're mad because
I didn't answer the stupid Question of the Week? Where does it say I have
to answer two questions?
If DeLay was indicted,
does that mean his indictment was delayed? And if his indictment was delayed,
how come he's already got it?
Send your answers
here.
Jokes Going Around Cheney is giving his daily staff
meeting. He concludes by saying: "Yesterday, 3 Brazilian soldiers were
killed."
There's very simple answer to how we came to have an oil shortage here in our country. Nobody bothered to check the oil. We just didn't know we were getting low. The reason for that is purely geographical. Our OIL is located in Alaska, California, Coastal Florida, Coastal Louisiana, Kansas, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Texas but our DIPSTICKS are located in Washington DC. Satan Doesn't Want You to Know Soy contains phytates that block
absorption of proteins and minerals, such as calcium. The phytates in soy
are deactivated when soy is fermented. When soy sauce, tempeh, and miso
are made by the traditional Japanese method (which calls for fermentation),
the phytates are neutralized, allowing the proper absorption of nutrients.
So DO consume Japanese produced soy products (like soy sauce and tofu),
but don't
consume American produced soy products (like soy milk) that aren't properly
fermented.
"Regardless of the result of the Iraqi people's
vote on the constitution on 15 October, the reality is that it is a failed
document, reflective of a failed process. A rejection would, in fact, represent
a liberating moment for the decision-makers in Washington and London, enabling
them to chart a new course free from the past."
"It's working out very well for them."
"A doctor can bury his mistakes, but an architect
can only advise his clients to plant vines."
"Treat a man as he is; he will remain as he
is. Treat a man as he can and should be; and he will become as he can and
should be."
"To be or not to be, the question that is."
"If you haven't found something strange during
the day, it hasn't been much of a day."
"If something strange during the day you have
not found, much of a day it hasn't been."
"Skip their spin. Here's the fundamental truth:
President Bush, who is generally an irresponsible teenager in mindset and
intelligence, does not give a damn how he or his party are doing. Like
a senior in high school with a C-average, Bush knows he is a lame duck.
He sees any problems for his administration as 'a pain in the ass' and
a problem for his golf game. He wants to be left alone. He has no sense
of or concern for his 'legacy' and is busy preparing himself to take his
Daddy's place on the Board of Directors of the Pro-Arab Carlyle Group upon
his retirement. That's all that need be said, thinks Bush. Let the politicians
be damned - bring on the Jack Daniel's!"
"It's working out very well for them."
"Working out very well for them it is."
"Does Zarqawi have an infinite
supply of lieutenants/deputies/aides/associates/second-in-commands/etc.,
or do we just arbitrarily declare that every 100th insurgent we capture
or kill is 'a top aide' to Zarqawi? Discuss amongst yourselves.
"Hundreds of thousands
of Americans around the country protested the Iraq War on the weekend of
September 24-25, with the largest demonstration bringing between 100,000
and 300,000 to Washington, D.C. on Saturday.
"This is inarguably a failure of leadership
from the top of the federal government. Remember when Bill Clinton went
out with Monica Lewinsky? That was inarguably a failure of judgment at
the top. Democrats had to come out and risk losing credibility if they
did not condemn Bill Clinton for his behavior. I believe Republicans are
in the same position right now. And I will say this: Hurricane Katrina
is George Bush's Monica Lewinsky. The only difference is that tens of thousands
of people weren't stranded in Monica Lewinsky's vagina."
"That was the worst place in the universe.
Ninety-eight per cent of the people around the world are good. In that
place, 98 per cent of the people were bad. Everyone brought their drugs,
they brought guns, they brought knives. Soldiers were shot. It was like
a refugee camp within a prison. It was full on. It was the worst thing
I have seen in my life. I have never been so frightened."
"Nearly 11 million households
in the United States lack vehicles, according to the Census Bureau--which
means that approximately 28 million people have difficulty evacuating their
area in the event of an emergency. These people might take comfort in the
vague reassurances of official disaster plans, such as the single sentence
addressing the problem in New Orleans' Emergency Preparedness Guide: 'Local
transportation will be mobilized to assist persons who lack transportation.'
But they shouldn't.
"It's working out very well for them."
"One
of the images, shot by photographer Dave Martin for The Associated
Press, shows a young black man wading through chest-deep waters after 'looting'
a grocery store, according to the caption. In the
other...a white man and a similarly light-skinned woman also waded
through chest-deep water after 'finding' goods that included bread and
soda in a local grocery store, according to the caption. Apparently,...it's
not looting if you're white."
"The rumors are true this
time. I was arrested in front of the White House today. It was my first
time ever being arrested. "We proceeded from Lafayette
Park to the Guard House at the White House. I, my sister, and other Gold
Star Families for Peace members and some Military Families requested to
meet with the President again. We again wanted to know: What is the Noble
Cause? Our request was, to our immense shock and surprise, denied. They
wouldn't even deliver any letters or pictures of our killed loved ones
to the White House.
"Under a government which imprisons any unjustly,
the true place for a just man is in prison."
"Due to the revenues from
its North Sea oil fields, Norway, which had adopted a Scandinavian welfare
state model before the resource was exploited, has been able to bring its
system of social organization to the highest level of development yet achieved
in the world. For the past four years, the United Nations has ranked the
country as the best place in the world to live...
"Today, the rights of all
peace activists go on trial. Representing us are four
Catholic antiwar activists who have already stood trial for their stand
against the invasion of Iraq. Now, more than two years later, cleared of
the original charge of criminal mischief, they are being charged with conspiracy
and will be tried again.
Our apologies, dear friends, for the fracture of good order. As our nation prepares to escalate the war on the people of Iraq by sending hundreds of thousands of U.S. soldiers to invade, we pour our blood on the walls of this military recruiting center. We mark this recruiting office with our own blood to remind ourselves and others of the cost in human life of our government's warmaking. "The following
month the four were tried for criminal mischief. Nine of the 12 jurors
voted to acquit them, and after 20 hours of deliberation, the judge declared
a mistrial. At such declaration, the crowded courtroom gave the four a
standing ovation. The district attorney said that he would not prosecute
them again, expecting that another jury would yield the same verdict.
"A year later, however, the
U.S. government decided to retry the four peace activists, this time on
the more serious charges of conspiracy. Technically, they are charged with
conspiracy to impede "by force, intimidation, and threat" an officer of
the United States, and three lesser charges. The trial begins Monday Sept.
19, and if the four are convicted, the penalty could be up to six years
in prison and $250,000 in fines."
- Leigh Saavedra: Today, the Antiwar Movement Goes on Trial - "Our actions were lawful, however, we were
repeatedly denied the chance to explain why. We were not allowed to mention
Article VI, paragraph four of the Constitution, which says that the treaties
of the United States are the supreme law of the land. We were not allowed
to explain our actions in the context of the Nuremberg Principles, which
declare that citizens can be held responsible for crimes of their government.
Nor could we explain how this war was a violation of the UN Charter. The
jury made a wise choice with what they had. It's unfortunate, however,
that they were denied the full truth."
"In a major show of force,
British soldiers used tanks to break down the walls of the central jail
in this southern city late Monday and freed two Britons, allegedly undercover
commandos, who had been arrested on charges of shooting two Iraqi policemen.
"About 150 Iraqi prisoners also fled as British commandos stormed inside
and rescued their comrades, said Aquil Jabbar, an Iraqi television cameraman
who lives across the street from the jail. Earlier Monday, demonstrators
hurled stones and Molotov cocktails at British tanks, and at least four
people were killed.
"Never miss the Saturday
paper. Because it's the skimpiest and least-circulated edition of the week,
it's the venue of choice for lowballing the stories the government can't
completely cover up. September 24's New York Times, for example, contained
the bombshell revelation that the U.S. government continues to torture
innocent men, women and children in Iraq.
"A plague? A plague to end all plagues, agent
Mulder. A silent weapon for a quiet war. A systematic release of an indiscriminate
organism, for which the men who will bring it on still have no cure. They've
been working on this for fifty years! While the rest of us have been fighting
'gooks and commies' these men have been secretly negotiating a planned
Armageddon.... It'll happen on a Holiday when people are away from their
homes. The president will declare a state of emergency and all government,
all federal agencies will come under the power of FEMA... the secret government."
"The only good bureaucrat is one with a pistol
at his head. Put it in his hand and it's good-bye to the Bill of Rights."
"We're completely surrounded. That simplifies
the problem."
"Internet users hoping to protect
their privacy by using anti-virus software,
Web
anonymizers, false identities and disabled cookies on their computer's
Web browser have something new to worry about a patent filed by the National
Security Agency (NSA) for technology that will identify the physical
location of any Web surfer.
"Mankind, it seems, makes a poorer performance
of government than of almost any human activity. In this sphere, wisdom,
which may be defended as the exercise of judgment acting on experience,
common sense and available information, is less operative and more frustrated
than it should be. Why do holders of high office so often act contrary
to the way reason points and enlightened self-interest suggests? Why does
intelligent mental process seem so often not to function?"
"An extraordinary appeal
to Americans from the Bush administration for money to help pay for the
reconstruction of Iraq has raised only $600, The Observer has learnt. Yet
since the appeal was launched earlier this month, donations to rebuild
New Orleans have attracted hundreds of millions of dollars. The public's
reluctance to contribute much more than the cost of two iPods to the administration's
attempt to offer citizens 'a further stake in building a free and prosperous
Iraq' has been seized on by critics as evidence of growing ambivalence
over that country.
"According to reports now, Iraqi officials
have embezzled over one billion dollars. One billion dollars! So apparently
they really do have a U.S.-style democracy."
"Now that all but the most
partisan and stubborn defenders of President Bush agree that he screwed
up his response to Katrina, and nearly as many agree that he screwed up
the occupation of Iraq, it probably seems unnecessary to continue beating
up the administration over those failures of the past.
"Maybe, just maybe, the
public is beginning to see through the toxic fog of fantasy, propaganda,
and deliberate misrepresentation that has been such a hallmark of the George
W. Bush Administration, which is in danger of being judged by history as
one of the worst of all time.
"Others are engaging even in an eco-type of
terrorism whereby they can alter the climate, set off earthquakes, volcanoes
remotely through the use of electromagnetic waves. So there are plenty
of ingenious minds out there that are at work finding ways in which they
can wreak terror upon other nations. It's real, and that's the reason why
we have to intensify our efforts, and that's why this is so important."
"President Bush, a recovering alcoholic,has
'fallen off the wagon' again according to First Lady Laura Bush in comments
made on Disney owned KABC Radio in Los Angeles this morning. Apparently,
a series of major problems that have fallen on the shoulders of the president
recently have caused the 'Commander in Chief' to pick up the whiskey once
more. The fact that Bush Jr's popularity is at the lowest, according to
political polls, does not help the president to maintain his sobriety.
This in combination with the recent Katrina fiasco, being hounded by grieving
mother Cindy Sheehan who's son was needlessly killed in Iraq and the impending
Hurricane Rita about to hit his home state of Texas is just too much for
George Bush to take. The rising rate of US troop casualties in Iraq at
the hands of determined insurgents is not helping much either."
"asap is AP's new multimedia
service featuring original content designed to appeal to under-35-year-old
readers, a coveted but elusive audience, and to connect with them on their
terms. "asap builds on what makes AP great: the highest
standards of journalism, global reach, creativity and staff dedication.
Grounded in these values, this new product is provocative, smart, relevant
and immediate.
"Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter
delivered a shocker at an American University panel in Washington Monday:
RAW STORY has learned he told the crowd he was certain Al Gore won the
2000 presidential election. There is 'no doubt in my mind that Gore won
the election,' the erstwhile President declared, saying the 2000 election
process 'failed abysmally.'
"Thousands of civilians have fled
the Iraqi town of al-Qaim near the Syrian border following the start of
a fresh US military offensive against insurgents in nearby villages, local
government officials said on Sunday.
"It's working out very well for them."
"George W. Bush will go
down in history as the president who fiddled while America lost its superpower
status.
"Depressed and demoralized
White House staffers say working at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is life in
a hellhole as they try to deal with a sullen, moody President whose temper
tantrums drive staffers crying from the room and bring the business of
running the country to a halt.
"Most Americans like to
believe they live in the best country in the world. They don't. According
to the United Nations Human Development Report for 2005, Norway is number
one. Why? It's a welfare state.
"A famous gay penguin at
New York's Central Park Zoo has re-ignited the culture wars over homosexuality
by going straight. Silo, a chinstrap penguin, had been in a six-year relationship
with another 18-year-old male called Roy. The pair even raised a chick
together when their keepers gave them a donated egg, after they tried unsuccessfully
to hatch a rock...
"No comment."
"On Sept. 1, as tens of
thousands of desperate Louisianans packed the New Orleans Superdome and
convention center, the Federal Emergency Management Agency pleaded with
the U.S. Military Sealift Command: The government needed 10,000 berths
on full-service cruise ships, FEMA said, and it needed the deal done by
noon the next day.
"The Iraqi war crimes tribunal's
first case against Saddam, which opens Oct. 19, charges him with the 1982
massacre of at least 143 men and boys from the village of Dujail. This
was meant to be a test case of manageable scope and strong evidence.
"French and American intelligence
agents have arrested Barbara Olson, the wife of a former Bush administration
official, a few days ago on the Polish-Austrian border, according to agents
close to and with knowledge of the incident.
"Hello Tom, there appears to be a serious problem
geographically with your story about Barbara Olsen's arrest at the Polish-Austrian
border, . . . B-E-C-A-U-S-E . . . Poland and Austria have NO common / no
joining border. Between the nations of Poland and Austria there is the
Czech Republic and further East is Slovakia in between."
"I'm dead, which is very similar to being on
the Polish-Austrian border."
"Imagine if, in advance
of Hurricane Katrina, thousands of trucks had been waiting with water and
ice and medicine and other supplies. Imagine if 4,000 National Guardsmen
and an equal number of emergency aid workers from around the country had
been moved into place, and five million meals had been ready to serve.
Imagine if scores of mobile satellite-communications stations had been
prepared to move in instantly, ensuring that rescuers could talk to one
another. Imagine if all this had been managed by a federal-and-state task
force that not only directed the government response but also helped coordinate
the Red Cross, the Salvation Army, and other outside groups.
"I have lived in Israel all of my life, for
18 years. Throughout these years I have been witnessing endless suffering
around me, I have been seeing revenge leading to revenge and more revenge.
Nothing has helped me understand the explanations and excuses that I have
heard as to why the violence perpetrated by the Israeli side is to be preferred
over that coming from the Palestinian side. The use of violence, killings,
and intended harm and humiliation cannot be justified, I believe, and I
cannot understand why it is presented as necessary. I cannot see any advantage
in the intimidation of an entire population - all I can see is suffering
heaped upon even more suffering - revenge causing revenge causing more
revenge... I am therefore letting you know that I shall not serve in the
Israeli army."
"I do know that it's true that if you wanted
to reduce crime ... if that were your sole purpose, you could abort every
black baby in this country, and your crime rate would go down."
"Since 9-11, he has steadfastly refused to
discuss the evidence of government complicity and prior knowledge. Furthermore,
he claims that the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), Bilderberg Committee,
and Trilateral Commission are 'nothing organizations.' When critiquing
poverty, he never mentions the Federal Reserve and their role in manipulating
the cycle of debt. Similarly, he claims the CIA was never a rogue organization
and is an innocent scapegoat; that JFK was killed by the lone assassin
Lee Harvey Oswald; that the obvious vote fraud in 2004 did not occur..."
"In the eyes of empire builders, men are not
men but instruments."
"CORRECTION: We erroneously reported that President
Bush had appointed a timber company lobbyist to head the National Forest
Service, a partner in a law firm most well known for union-busting as Assistant
Secretary of Labor, a mining industry lobbyist who believes public lands
are unconstitutional to be in charge of public lands, a utility lobbyist
who represented the nation's worst polluters as head of the Clean Air Division
at the EPA, a lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute onto the Council
on Environmental Quality and a veteran to head the Women's Health Section
of the FDA. In fact, the woman he named to head the Women's Health Section
of the FDA is not a veteran. She is a veterinarian. We regret any confusion
this may have caused."
"Less than a month after
Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and parts of Mississippi, and
only a few days after Hurricane Rita hit Texas and Louisiana, the Bush
administration is using these disasters as a pretext to expand the domestic
role of the military, attack social programs, and further enrich a tiny
layer of the population.
"It's working out very well for them."
"The latest example of the
Republican Party's seeming insatiable desire to eviscerate constitutional
liberties is the announcement by President Bush that he seeks to federalize
domestic emergencies. According to The Washington Times, 'President Bush
yesterday [September 26, 2005] sought to federalize hurricane-relief efforts,
removing governors from the decision-making process...'"'
"It's working out very well for them."
"At approximately 1pm on
Sept 30, Sgt. Richard H. Wheeler and State Trooper Vasquez delivered a
notice to Charles T. Peterson at the doorstep of his home in Springfield,
MA. Charles was the student who was sprayed in the face with mace by Officer
Scott Landry at the protest against military recruiters at Holyoke Community
College
on September 29.
"An archaeologist is the best husband any woman
can have because the older she gets, the more he is interested in her."
"Last Friday I sent out
a story titled: 'Breaking News... 9-11 crash victim Barbara Olson arrested
in Europe...'
"Lost faith in you I have."
"Complete vaporization of fuel
is far from perfect in today's cars and trucks. A certain amount of residual
fuel in most engines remains liquid in the hot chamber. In order to be
fully combusted, the fuel must be fully vaporized.
"More than a year after
his controversial report calling into question President Bush's National
Guard service - a story based on forged documents - former CBS news anchor
Dan Rather is standing by the broadcast.
"On Monday, two British
soldiers were arrested and detained by Iraqi police in Basra. Within a
matter of hours, the British military responded with overwhelming force,
despite subsequent denials by the Ministry of Defence, which insisted that
the two men had been retrieved solely through 'negotiations.'
"Since when do you have to agree with people
to defend them from injustice?"
"Polite conservationists leave no mark save
the scars upon the Earth that could have been prevented had they stood
their ground."
"Every act of conscious learning requires the
willingness to suffer an injury to one's self-esteem."
"It used to be that an heiress who inherited
$600 million would pay the same effective 39.6% top rate on her $20 million
a year in dividends that a surgeon would pay on his $300,000 in 'earned
income.' But in recent years the Republican leadership has cut her top
tax rate from 39.6% to 15%, while cutting the surgeon's top bracket from
39.6% to 35%."
"If we were suddenly informed that a terrible
flood was coming in ten minutes, some of us would sit down and pray, some
of us would sit down and cry, and some of us would feel we have nine minutes
to learn how to live under water."
"The most merciful thing in the world, I think,
is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents."
"The danger is not that a particular class
is unfit to govern. Every class is unfit to govern."
"The only reward of virtue is virtue."
"I like long walks, especially when they are
taken by people who annoy me."
"By amending our mistakes, we get wisdom. By
defending our faults, we betray an unsound mind."
"It's a recession when your neighbor loses
his job; it's a depression when you lose yours."
"Strive constantly to serve the welfare of
the world; by devotion to selfless work one attains the supreme goal of
life. Do your work with the welfare of others always in mind."
"Do not condemn the judgment of another because
it differs from your own. You may both be wrong."
"It is said that power corrupts, but actually
it's more true that power attracts the corruptible. The sane are usually
attracted by other things than power."
"If you return kindness for injuries received
and forget both, Those who harmed you will be punished by their own shame."
"Whenever I dwell for any length of time on
my own shortcomings, they gradually begin to seem mild, harmless, rather
engaging little things, not at all like the staring defects in other people's
characters."
"Don't you wish there were a knob on the TV
to turn up the intelligence? There's one marked 'Brightness,' but it doesn't
work."
"It is undesirable to believe a proposition
when there is no ground whatsoever for supposing it is true."
"Are you going to come quietly, or do I have
to use earplugs?"
"Critics are usually kinder to cheaper movies
than to those they perceive to be big Hollywood releases. They cut you
a lot more slack if you spend less money, which makes no sense."
"Education is the ability to listen to almost
anything without losing your temper or your self-confidence."
"Panhandling contrarians beg to differ."
"China
has stepped up its war against the internet and the dissemination of uncensored
information - or as the totalitarian free trade government of the worlds
most populous nation (or most populated slavery gulag) describes it, internet
news sites must be directed toward serving the people and socialism and
insist on correct guidance of public opinion for maintaining national and
public interests, in other words serving the interests of a tyrannical
clique of former communists (now practicing a mix of bastardized Marxism
and global-corporatist capitalism) and severely punishing those who would
criticize the monolithic Chinese state, a nightmarish behemoth that would
inspire George Orwell, if he was alive, to rewrite considerable chunks
of his seminal novel, 1984. China has a dedicated band of cyber police
who patrol the Internet with the aim of regulating content. Postings that
criticize the government or address sensitive topics are quickly removed,
and no doubt Chinese posters of such criticism are hauled off to torture
dungeons and ultimately reduced
to cosmetics for narcissistic western women desperately in search of
collagen."
"There are no passengers on Spaceship Earth.
We are all crew."
"It's working out very well for them."
Everything Else The objective of Find the Brownie is to list important government jobs occupied by a person with no apparent qualifications other than strong personal, political, or business ties to a member of the administration. Check it out and find what government job you're just as qualified for as the person Bush nominated. At Googleearthzoo, some people with a LOT of time on their hands have found dozens of hidden animals in Google's satellite photographs. Either Donald Rumsfeld admitted that a missile hit one of the world trade center buildings or whoever transcribed this interview has got some explaining to do. Before buying anything electronic, check out Don't Buy Junk. Magnum In Motion blends powerful Magnum photography with audio commentary, text and graphics to create an immersive, engaging multimedia experience. Photographer commentary guides the viewer through the photo essay, while text and graphics provide additional information and enrich the viewing experience. Snopes has gotten on the case of unsubstantiated rumors about Katrina, so before you repeat any of them, as I have, be sure to read this, this, this, and this. Just in case Blockbuster or NetFlix doesn't have it, go here and buy Les Blank's Always For Pleasure, but only if you want to see "an intense insider's portrait of New Orleans' street celebrations and unique cultural gumbo: Second-line parades, Mardi Gras, Jazz Fest. Features live music from Professor Longhair, the Wild Tchoupitoulas, the Neville Brothers and more. This glorious, soul-satisfying film is among Blank's special masterworks." Or just go to Aurgasm and listen to LOTS of free MP3s of New Orleans music. Surely you've got something better to do than see every single SNL Jeopardy sketch. I actually got a paying gig so next week's
issue might be late too. So sue me.
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#167, was much better than this one,
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#169.
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Contact George W. Bush
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Freemasons
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Skull and Bones
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Carlyle Group
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Illuminati
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact
Satan - satan@whitehouse.gov
Contact both houses of
Congress - president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Supreme Court
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Dick Cheney -
vice.president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Halliburton -
vice.president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Bechtel -
vice.president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Saddam Hussein
- tightywhities@whitehouse.gov
Contact Osama bin Laden
-
deepthroat@whitehouse.gov
Contact Jeb Bush - jeb.bush@myflorida.com
Contact Fidel Castro
- jeb.bush@myflorida.com
Contact Kim Jong Il -
eng-info@kcna.co.jp
Contact Jacques Chirac
- france-presse@un.int
Contact the new Pope
- accreditamenti@pressva.va
Contact the old Pope
- thirdlevel@hellfireanddamnation.com
Contact God - president@whitehouse.gov
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You need a Disinfotainment
Today mug.

Boo hoo
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- Lynette Sheffield -
Acknowledgment
dIsInFoTaInMeNt ToDaY consists of information from dozens of sources, cut up, thrown in the air, and recycled randomly. It is sent all over the place, so I apologize if you're seeing the same thing twice. If you see a joke, graphic, or news item that came from or through you, thanks, send more, and please accept the fact that much of dIsInFoTaInMeNt ToDaY is unacknowledgeable, and if I sought permission from everyone whose bastardized material showed up here, I'd never get anything else done. Please note that I don't even put my own name on it. If you're still pissed off, hey, it's fair use.
Thanks,
Mike Easerindacar
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