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WhiteHouse.org

The White House - officious site of President George W Bush

If you're looking for the online home of the White House (real world address - 1600 Pennsylvania Ave, Washington D.C., USA) and you type in whitehouse.gov then you'll get to the right place - however if you type whitehouse.org then you'll end up at the anti-White House. Well, a very amusing satirical site which wants George W Bush out of the presidency anyway.

It looks very similar to the real site, except its the Officious site rather than the Official site, right down to regular news reports like the real White House. There are various sections of the Bush administration to investigate - Department of Faith, The First Lady, Patriotic Initiatives, The Iraq Crusade, Homeland Security and Fraternal Affairs - and links to other patriotic sites such as Abstinence for Boys, Abstinence for Girls, Draft Registration, Government Jobs, Super Spy-O-Matic and VP Cheney's Gun Club.

Our favourite area is White House Information which includes White House History, Western White House, ¡En Español!, For Kids Only! and Patriotic Posters like the ones below:

cheney-fuck

walter-reed

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Titles such as Ancient Maya: The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilization fill faculty bookshelves. It has also provided fodder for literature and films, most recently Mel Gibson's Apocalypto. There is a grim, irresistible appeal to this tale of central American oblivion. Recent events have injected a jarring note into Mayan studies: a sense of anxiety, even foreboding. Serious people are asking a question that at first sounds ridiculous. What if the fate of the Maya is to be our fate? What if climate change and the global financial crisis are harbingers of a system that is destined to warp, buckle and collapse?

No one is suggesting that vines will start crawling up the concrete canyons of Wall Street, or that howler monkeys will chase pin-striped bankers through Manhattan. Mayan kings who screwed up were ritually tortured and sacrificed with the aid of stingray spines to pierce the penis; an emphatic application of moral hazard. In our era, the only thing slashed is a bonus. There are, however, striking parallels between the Maya fall and our era's convulsions. "We think we are different," says Jared Diamond, the American evolutionary biologist. "In fact . . . all of those powerful societies of the past thought that they too were unique, right up to the moment of their collapse."

Complex and organised it may have been but Mayan society resembled a frog who stays in slowly boiling water. The environmental trouble built up over centuries and was partly concealed by short-term fluctuations in rainfall patterns and harvest yields. But when the tipping point came, events moved quickly. "Their success was built on very thin ice. Kings were supposed to keep order and avoid chaos through rituals and sacrifice," says David Webster, author of The Fall of the Ancient Maya. "When manifestly they couldn't do it people lost confidence and the whole system of kingship fell apart."

Which brings us to modern parallels. Webster, watching the season's first snowflakes through the window of his office at Pennsylvania State University, has been waiting for the question. Pinned to his wall is an old clipping about the fall of Enron Corporation in 2001. "That was the first tremor," he muses. "You know, human beings are always surprised when things collapse just when they seem most successful. We look around and we think we're fat, we're clever, we're comfortable and we don't think we're on the edge of something nasty. Hubris? No: ignorance."

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The international community is very close to resume diplomatic relations with Cuba. It will be interesting to see how it plays out. http://machete.gummyprint.com/cubas-reforms-solidarity-in-latin-america-and-declining-us-influence/ - Jonathan

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