Haley Barbour: Koran Burning
Keep your goals to yourself
Christine O'Donnell's Views On Sex And Porn Take Social Conservatism To The Extreme
Sid Meier's Civilisation V
Alwar Balasubramaniam: Art of Substance and Absence
Vanessa de Mata/Ben Harper: Boa Sorte/Good Luck
Contrasting Intelligence on Iraq and Iran
Middle East expert Emanuele Ottolenghi outlines what he sees as differences in intelligence on Iran's nuclear program with pre-war intelligence on Iraqi WMDs.

Following the release of the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran's nuclear program, Emanuele Ottolenghi, director of the Transatlantic Institute, addresses the American Jewish Committee concerning the misinterpretation of the NIE and how the European Union can pressure Iran to suspend their uranium enrichment without resorting to military action.

Dr. Emanuele Ottolenghi has recently taken up the post of Executive Director at the Transatlantic Institute in Brussels. He holds a degree in Political Science from University of Bologna, Italy, and a Ph.D. in political theory from The Hebrew University in Jerusalem. His research focuses on Israeli domestic politics, specifically coalition and party politics, and elections, post-Zionism, the Arab-Israeli conflict (mainly the Oslo era), Europe's new anti-Semitism and European attitudes to the Middle East. He is currently finishing a book on Israel's electoral reforms in the 1990s.

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Bush Will Be Impeached If He Attacks Iran - From Senator Joe Biden
11 dec  |  I don't think we went to war [in Iraq] because of oil, but the only thing I can fit together with Cheney and his gang is that they're smarter than they're acting. They went to war in the hope they would be able to do two things. One, have a government that sat on a whole bunch of oil that still exists in the world that would be indebted to us. Two, have permanent military bases in Iraq to dominate that part of the world to be able to control oil. Not to steal it for American oil companies, but to be able to control the pricing, control the access of it, a very Machiavellian view. There's nothing idealistic about Cheney.

I don't know what President Bush thinks, but I think he's bought hook, line and sinker the Cheney rationale that the only way for us to be able to be dominant in the 21st century is to use our overwhelming power in the face of the moral disapprobation of the rest of the world, threaten the rest of the world, and that's how we avoid war in the future...

[As for Iran] the president has no constitutional authority to take this nation to war against a country of 70 million people, unless we're attacked or unless there is proof that we are about to be attacked. And if he does, I would move to impeach him... I don't say it lightly. I say it because they should understand that what they were threatening, what they were saying... what we were about to do would be the most disastrous thing that could be done at this moment in our history. . . read more

John McCain Singing Bomb Iran
29 feb  |  Republican presidential hopeful John McCain is a big supporter of the Iraq war and once tried to make 'Bomb Iran' sound like Beach Boys lyrics. Hear the Senator sing of war in a dangerous and irresponsible manner. . . read more
Conquering Iraq Iranian Style
29 may  |  An article from leading Arab media source Arshaq Al-Awsat on how Iran is using both concealed and blatant methods to assert control in a fracturing Iraq. . . read more
Noam Chomsky on U.S. Policy Towards Iran
20 nov  |  Noam Chomsky, activist, intellectual and Professor of Linguistics at MIT, gives some historical context to the current confrontation between the USA and Iran and talks about how the Bush administration's assumptions about Iran may be wrong. . . read more
Iraqi Genocide - From Paul Craig Roberts
24 oct  |  American troops in Iraq have killed more civilians than insurgents. The U.S. has fallen for every bit of disinformation fed to it by al Qaeda personnel posing as "informants" and by Sunnis setting up Shi'ites and Shi'ites setting up Sunnis. As a result, American bombs and missiles have blown up weddings, funerals, kids playing soccer, and people shopping in bazaars and sleeping in their homes.

Not to be outdone, Bush's private Waffen SS known as Blackwater Security has taken to gunning Iraqi civilians down in the streets. How do Blackwater killers escape the "unlawful combatant" designation? One can only marvel at the insouciance of the U.S. Congress to the current Iraqi Genocide while condemning Turkey for one that happened 90 years ago. Every member of the Bush Regime is busily at work denouncing Iran for causing instability in the Middle East.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has invaded two countries, throwing them into total chaos, while beating the drums for war with Iran and conspiring with Israel to invade Lebanon and to attack Syria.  . . read more

America Building Case Against Iran
18 sep  |  An interview with Phyllis Bennis, senior analyst at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington D.C., about the Bush administration's seemingly unstoppable path to war with Iran. "Iran remains the sole potential independent regional power with the capacity to challenge U.S. domination in the region. So it's not a surprise that U.S.-Iran tension has existed for a long time and is rising." . . read more
Noam Chomsky on U.S. Democrats and Iran
26 nov  |  Respected intellectual Noam Chomsky talks about the Democratic presidential race in the United States and whether they have a different answer on the issue of Iran. . . read more
White House vs CIA
18 dec  |  The fallout continues from the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) report, which stated Iran does not have a nuclear weapons program. Aijaz Ahmad, political commentator for the Indian news magazine, Frontline, discusses the split between Bush's administration and the intelligence community. . . read more
blogs   100words
 
By Sean Maguire

In comparison to other passages from Joseph Heller's Catch-22 it isn't often quoted, but it should be.

The haunting and beautifully simple piece reads:

'Man was matter, that was Snowden's secret. Drop him out a window and he'll fall. Set fire to him and he'll burn. Bury him and he'll rot, like other kinds of garbage. The spirit gone, man is garbage. That was Snowden's secret. Ripeness was all'.

The passage takes place after the protagonist Yossarian watches young Snowden die in the back of his plane. The event is repeatedly told throughout the novel always teasing at this great revelation that Yossarian had experienced- the revelation that 'man was matter'.

Not special, not a product of a breath of divinity but matter like everything else. 

After being in a potentially fatal car accident last week this line has been constantly coming back to me. I remember waking up just after the accident in a hospital with a doctor telling me I was having a cat-scan to check if I had brain damage.

Man was matter, and the centre of man (the mind) was also matter. We might generally conceive of the mind as somehow separate to the body- a floating you that is intangible and neverending, but in one fell swoop it can be brought back to what it really is: a fragile and spongy bit of tissue that can be destroyed in the stupidest and swiftest of seconds.