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Books I'm Currently Reading
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Books Read for 2007
Books Read for 2006
Books Read for 2005
Books I Read in 2004
  • "Lies and the Lying Liars who tell them" by Al Franken
  • "The Rumsfeld Way: The Leadership Wisdom of a Battle-Hardened Maverick" by Jeffrey A. Krames
  • "Bushwacked" by Molly Ivins
  • "Crimes against Nature: How George W. Bush and his Corporate Pals are Plundering the Country and Hijacking our Democracy" by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
  • "In Denali's Shadow" by Jon Waterman
  • "The Open Space of Democracy" by Terry Tempest Williams
  • "Black Box Voting: Ballot Tampering in the 21st Century" by Bev Harris
  • "The Official Report of the 9-11 Commission"
  • "The Age of Sacred Terror" by Benjamin Nelson
  • "An Hour Before Daylight: Memoirs of a Rural Boyhood" by Jimmy Carter
  • "Desire and Ice: Searching for Perspective atop Denali" by David Brill
  • "The Trouble with Islam" by Irshad Manji
  • "Against all Enemies" by Richard Clarke
  • "Living Poor: A Peace Corps Chronicle" by Moritz Thomsen
  • "A Season on the Mat: Dan Gable and the Pursuit of Perfection" by Nolan Zavoral
  • "Islam Unveiled" by Robert Spencer
  • "Who Killed Daniel Pearl?" by Henri Levy
  • ""So long, see you tomorrow" by William Maxwell
  • "The Iron Road: A Stand for Truth and Democracy in Burma" by James Mawdsley
  • "Crazy Horse" by Larry McMurtry
  • "My Invented Country: a Memoir" by Isabel Allende
  • "National and Joint Force Planning" Air Command and Staff College
  • "The Food Revolution: How Your Diet Can Help Save Your Life and Our World" by John Robbins
  • "Vagabonding" by Rolf Potts
  • "The Price of Honor: Muslim Women Lift the Veil of Silence on the Islamic World" by Jan Goodwin
  • "Modern Mongolia: a Concise History" by Tsedenambyn BatBayer
  • "Me Against my Brother: at war in Somalia, Sudan, and Rwanda" by Scott Peterson
  • Books I Read in 2003

  • "Teach Yourself Korean"
  • "Homelands: Kayaking the Inside Passage" by Byron Ricks
  • "Living History" by Hillary Clinton
  • "Looking for Mr. Kurtz: Living on the brink in Mobutu's Congo" by Michela Wrong
  • "Bucking the Sun" by Ivan Doig
  • "A Problem from Hell: America in the age of Genocide" by Samantha Power
  • "Spirit of the Mountains: Korea's San-Shin" by David Mason
  • "Women of Mongolia" by Martha Avery
  • "No Gun Ri: A Military History" by Robert Bateman
  • "We Wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families: Stories from Rwanda" by Philip Gourevitch
  • "Thin Air" by Greg Child
  • "The Gate" by Francois Bizot
  • "Gobi: Tracking the Desert" by John Man
  • "War at the Top of the World: The Struggle for Afghanistan, Kashmir and Tibet" by Eric Margolis
  • "The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power" by Daniel Yergin
  • "The Koreans" by Michael Breen
  • "See no Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA's War on Terrorism" by Robert Baer
  • "The River's Tale: a Year on the Mekong" by Edward A. Gargan
  • "Reading the Korean Cultural Landscape" by Je-Hun Ryu
  • "Aquariums of Pyongyang: Ten Years in the North Korean Gulag" by Kang Chol Hwan
  • "Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan Ethos" by Robert Kaplan
  • "Burying Mao" by Richard Baum
  • "The New Emperors: Deng and Mao" by Harrison Salisbury
  • "Soul Mountain" by Xingjian Gao
  • Books Read in 2002

  • "The Bridge at No Gun Ri" by Charles Hanley, Sang Hun Choe, Martha Mendoza
  • "Kim Il Sung: The North Korean Leader" by Dai-Sook Suh
  • "Black Tea and Yak Butter: a Journey into Forbidden China" by Wade Blackenbury
  • "My Dark Places" by James Ellroy
  • "Metaplanetary" by Tony Daniel
  • "Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment" by Richard Bernstein
  • "Catfish and Mandala: A Two-Wheeled Voyage through the Landscape and Memory of Vietnam" by Andrew Pham
  • "Deadly Feasts: Tracking The Secrets Of A Terrifying New Plague" by Richard Rhodes
  • "Koreas's Place in the Sun" by Bruce Cummings
  • "On Writing" by Stephen King
  • "Over the Edge: The True Story of Four American Climbers' Kidnap and Escape in the Mountains of Central Asia" by Greg Child
  • "The Two Koreas: A Contemporary History" by Dan Oberdorfer
  • "What Went Wrong: The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East" Bernard Lewis
  • "A Newer World: Kit Carson John C Fremont And The Claiming Of The American West" by David Roberts
  • "The Map that Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology " by Simon Winchester
  • "By any means Necessary: America's Secret Air War in the Cold War" William E. Burrows
  • "Hotel Honolulu" by Paul Theroux
  • "Eastward to Tartary: Travels in the Balkans, the Middle East, and the Caucasus" by David Kaplan
  • "Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War " by Mark Bowden
  • Books Read in 2001

  • "The War Against America: Saddam Hussein and the World Trade Center Attacks: A Study in Revenge" by Laura Mylroie
  • "The Abacus and the Sword: The Japanese Penetration of Korea, 1895-1910" by Peter Duus
  • "Holy War, Inc.: Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden " by Peter I. Bergen
  • "Bin Laden: The Man Who Declared War on America" by Yossef Bodansky
  • "Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia" by Ahmed Rashid
  • "John Adams" by David McCullough
  • "The Cold 6,000" by James Ellroy
  • "American Tabloid" by James Ellroy
  • "Compass Points: How I Lived" by Edward Hoagland
  • "The Girl who loved Tom Gordon" by Stephen King
  • "Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal" by Eric Schlosser
  • "The Loop" by Nicholas Evans
  • "The Shipping News" by Annie Proulx
  • "Return to Mars" by Ben Bova
  • "A Case of Rape" by Chester B. Himes
  • "Darwin's Radio" by Greg Bear
  • "My Secret History" by Paul Theroux
  • Books Read in 2000

  • "King Leopold's Ghost" by Adam Hochschild
  • "North to the Night: A Spiritual Odyssey in the Arctic " by Alvah Simon
  • "Love thy Neighbor: A Story of War" by Peter Maas
  • "Flash 4"
  • "Mawson's Will: The Greatest Polar Survival Story Ever Written" by Edmund Sir Hillary
  • "The Age of Spiritual Machines" by Ray Kurzweil
  • "Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies" by Jared Diamond
  • "Parachutes and Kisses" by Erica Jong
  • "The Hours" by Michael Cunningham
  • "Passage to Juneau : A Sea and Its Meanings" by Jonathan Raban
  • "Poisonwood Bible" by Barbara Kingsolver
  • "Trespassing" by John Hanson Mitchell
  • "Sacred Land, Sacred View"
  • "Snow Crash" by Neil Stephenson
  • "Plainsong" by Kent Haruf
  • "On the Rez" by Ian Frazier
  • "River Horse" by William Least Heat-Moon
  • "Why They Kill" by Richard Rhodes
  • "Fire on the Mountain" by John McLean
  • "Travel in a Stone Canoe" by Harvey Arden and Steve Wall
  • "Sir Vidia's Shadow" by Paul Theroux
  • "Moments of Doubt" by David Roberts
  • "The Lost Explorer" by David Roberts and Conrad Anker
  • "Last Days" by John Roskelly
  • "History of the English" by Paul Johnson
  • "The Life of Thomas More" by Peter Akyroyd
  • "The Songlines" by Bruce Chatwin
  • "In a Dark Wood" by Alston Chase
  • "Eiger Dreams" by John Krakauer
  • "Basin and Range" by John McPhee
  • "Geronimo" by Alexander B. Adams
  • "Operation Shylock" by Philip Roth
  • "In Suspect Terrain" by John McPhee
  • "Loon Magic"
  • "Centennial" by James Michener
  • "The Spanish Armada"
  • "Rising from the Plains" by John McPhee
  • "Assembling California" by John McPhee
  • "The First Immortal" by John Halperin
  • "The Eternal Frontier: an Ecological History of North America and its Peoples" by Tim Flannery
  • Books Read in 1999

  • "In Search of the Old Ones: Exploring the Anasazi World of the Southwest" by David Roberts
  • "Once They Moved Like The Wind : Cochise, Geronimo, And The Apache Wars" by David Roberts
  • "The Ends of the Earth : From Togo to Turkmenistan, from Iran to Cambodia, a Journey to the Frontiers of Anarchy" by Robert Kaplan
  • "Desert Solitaire" by Edward Abbey
  • "Down the River" by Edward Abbey
  • "Abbey's Road" by Edward Abbey
  • "The Colorado Plateau"
  • "An Empire Wilderness : Travels into America's Future" by Robert Kaplan
  • "Lonesome Dove" by Larry McMurtry
  • "Streets of Laredo" by Larry McMurtry
  • "Widow for one Year" by John Irving
  • "The Ghost Writer" by Philip Roth
  • "Cold Oceans: Adventure in a Kayak, Rowboat , And Dogsled" by Jon Turk
  • "Zuckerman Unbound" by Philip Roth
  • "The Ninemile Wolves" by Rick Bass
  • "The Tracker" by Tom Brown, Jr.
  • "Cowboys and Cave Dwellers: Basketmaker Archaeology in Utah's Grand Gulch " by Fred Blackburn
  • "Dead Man Walking" by Larry McMurtry
  • "Killing Mister Watson" by Peter Matthiessen
  • "Gerald's Game" by Stephen King
  • "Lost Man's River" by Peter Matthiessen
  • "The New Wolves" by Rick Bass
  • "Winter: Notes from Montana" by Rick Bass
  • "Desert Notes" by Barry Lopez
  • "Homage to Catalonia" by George Orwell
  • "Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation"
  • "Bone by Bone"by Peter Matthiessen
  • "Black Lamb, Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia (1941)" by Rebecca West
  • "The Serbs : History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia" by Tim Judah
  • "Turkey in Europe" by Charles Elliot
  • "The Croat Question" by Jill Irvine
  • "War Crimes: Brutality, Genocide, Terror, and the Struggle for Justice" by Aryeh Neier
  • "To End a War" by Richard Holbrooke
  • "Seasons in Hell: Slaughter and Betrayal in Bosnia" by Ed Vulianny
  • "Burn this House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia" by Jasminka Udowicki and James Ridgeway
  • "Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water" by Mark Reisner
  • "Martin Dressler" by Steven Millhauser
  • "End game: The Betrayal and Fall of Srebrenica, Europe's Worst Massacre Since World War II" by David Rohde
  • "Forging War: The media in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina" by Mark Thompson
  • "One for the Road" by Tony Horwitz"
  • "Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey" by V. S. Naipaul
  • Books Read in 1998 and before (coming as I find time to type them in)
  • Wednesday, November 28, 2007

    Mike Gravel: Power to the People -- Give Peace a Chance

    Monday, November 26, 2007

    Colorado Springs Culture Cast producer Craig Richardson interviews Peggy Shivers, founder of the Shivers Fund at the Pikes Peak Library District. She had done a lot for our community. This is what is possible from leaders and philanthropists who truly care about their community.

    Sunday, November 25, 2007

    The Oil Drum: Worst Case Scenario

    Is Waterboarding Torture? Graphic Protest of Mukasey

    Pakistan's Gun Market

    Saturday, November 24, 2007

    Who owns Dennis? The American people!

    Frederic Chaubin, who was born in Cambodia of a French father and Spanish mother, is chief editor of the French magazine Citizen K, and also a photographer who has been attracted by strange architecture in the former Soviet Union. The photos he takes in countries like Lithuania, Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and Georgia, reveal an extraordinary, almost sci-fi world. Today, PingMag takes you to the world of Soviet style architecture with Frederic Chaubin himself.

    I found this site from Collective Perception



    Top of High Drive: Dan V., John G., me, and Rick H. about midway through a four-hour run this morning.

    In chilly 10 degree temps, we started at Memorial Park, Manitou Springs at 7 A.M.; wound our way up Crystal Park Road to the Intemann Trail, joined the Red Rock Loop to High Drive, ran to the top of High Drive, picked up the Buckhorn Trail, and looped back on the Jones Park Trail--about 24 miles.
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    Friday, November 23, 2007

    Ski the 14ers

    Chris Davenport skis all 54 of Colorado's 14,000 foot peaks in one winter.

    Wednesday, November 21, 2007

    John Fogerty: I Can't Take It No More

    Revolving Door: jazz performance: Art Pepper

    Tuesday, November 20, 2007

    Some info for you

    Monday, November 19, 2007

    I'm watching Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos on Charlie Rose as he talks about the new Amazon Kindle book reader device they released today. I'm wondering about the "paper-like" display that has been tauted for years now. Have they achieved it? I'm ready. I will be the first to storm the gates. Way ahead of the I-Phoners. I am a reader. Make it readable on a screen and I am in like Flynn.

    Running the Numbers
    An American Self-Portrait

    This new series looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on.

    Excellent Amazon review of Lou DuBose's: Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency

    Robert D. Steele

    This book is vastly more detailed, and covers more high crimes and misdemeanors, than either State of Denial, which misunderstands Bush as being in charge, or Crossing the Rubicon, which focuses primarily on Cheney's role in first permitting 9-11, and then working assiduously to cover up his malicious malfeasance. See also Ron Susskind's book, "One Percent Doctrine," which crucifies Cheney, Rumseld, and Rice.

    I take this book so seriously that I urge everyone to get the "Do It Yourself Impeachment" kit. He should be required to immediately resign or be impeached. He should not be allowed to serve another month in office.

    For the sake of brevity, here is a list of impeachable offenses documented by this book:

    1) Secret meetings in violation of the law to include exclusion of government experts
    2) Refusal to honor demand from Congress for a list of participants
    3) Lies to the public about Iraq, while holding maps of oil fields and already having in mind a US-only domination of those oilfields (he first focused on Iraqi oil while serving Secretary of Defense Brown)
    4) Over-ruling of the Environmental Protection Agency on very important matters including its concern over Halliburton's reliance on hydraulic fracturing that uses chemicals that contaminate aquifers--Cheney personally ensured that the EPA's wording was replaced with Halliburton's wording.
    5) Consistent and pervasive usurpation of Congressional authorities and consistent and maliciously deliberate avoidance of appropriate disclosure.
    6) Fostered attacks on Sy Hersh, and considered authorizing a break-in on his home.
    7) From the 1970's, see also Ron Susskind's One-Percent Doctrine, subverted the authority of the Vice President, Nelson Rockefeller, and teams with Justice Scalia (then an assistant attorney general) to increase executive privileges and push back reforms.
    8) As a Congressman personally blew off Russian offer in 1983 for arms cuts, and subverted the authority of the President and the Secretary of State then serving.
    9) As an extremist Republican, supported Ollie North and the White House in violating the Congressional prohibitions on aid to the Contras, and obstructed justice thereafter.
    10) Page 78 has a lovely discussion of how Cheney and North were "in the zone" in deceiving the public and Congress during the televised hearings.
    11) Adopted as his own the lunatic report by Khalizad (who is a very lazy scholar, see my review of his rotten RAND book on revolution) and Libby, on how the US as a superpower should be able to do ANYTHING.
    12) Attempted to undermine due process and keep tactical nuclear weapons in the Army inventory.
    13) Subverted the authority of the Secretary of State (Colin Powell) by allowing his daughter to overrule Ambassadors and meet privately with various heads of state.
    13) Lied repeatedly to the public about his continuing financial equities with Halliburton, and was so involved in giving Halliburton up to 16 billion in no bid contracts.
    14) Shut both foreign competitors and more cost-effective indigenous contracting solutions, severely harming the national security of the United States by fostering an environment of unproductive looting by Halliburton, Bechtel, and others.
    15) Ignored his dual mandates on terrorism and intelligence. The book suggests that Bush was not briefed on Al Qaeda for the first eight months he was in office (the Vice President's priorities were energy and missile defense).
    16) Personally impeded negotiations with North Korea after they proved amenable to diplomatic engagement.
    17) Personally rejected Iranian overtures for negotiation conveyed by the Swiss in 2003
    18) Personally reinforced Rumsfeld on use of torture, by-passing the President's more measured restrictions.
    19) Conspired with Speaker Hastert to subordinate the House of Representatives, using a special office of his own (first time in history) so that Representatives could be brought to him rather than his calling on them.
    20) Manipulated the President into numerous "signing statements" inconsistent with the will of Congress that ignored legislation then in force.
    21) "Bureaucratically emasculated" the President (page 177--if the President has a friend that reads this review, PLEASE get the book and the review to the President--he really may have no idea his balls have been cut off)
    22) Contemptuous and manipulative of the CIA, refusing to accept their best professional judgments based not only all source intelligence, but on a extraordinary effort by Charlie Allen in running line crossers into Iraq to document beyond a shadow of a doubt that there were no weapons of mass destruction there.
    23) Lied repeatedly, over and over, to the public, to Congress, to the President, to foreign leaders, even after the lies were exposed he continued to repeat them.

    The book does not discuss the 9-11 situation and emerging findings that place the Vice President at the center of our deliberately inept response.

    Two gems apart from the impeachable offenses:

    1) The search for a Vice President was a complete fraud, he was picked from day one, and made a fool of every serious candidate, while also personally leaking to destroy Keating just to ensure the only real rival would not be considered at the last minute.

    2) The discussion of Joe Lieberman's refusal to confront Cheney with all that was known to be wrong with him was explained at the time as "taking the high moral road." I am not so sure. I speculate that Lieberman is actually a neo-con and has been playing the Democrats for fools while minding the interests of his Wall Street masters.

    On page 147 the authors discuss how Cheney accused Clinton and Gore of "extend[ing] our military commitments while depleting our military power." Lovely. And now?

    The authors conclude that Dick Cheney is "nakedly amoral." I agree.

    One final scary note: in the many doomsday drills that Cheney participated in across his career and inclusive of his Vice Presidency, they always failed to reconstitute Congress.

    Dick Cheney has done more damage and is a greater threat to our Republic and others, than Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein combined.

    Saturday, November 17, 2007

    Marlene Dietrich : Sag Mir Wo Die Blumen Sind

    A Pete Seeger classic auf Deutsch

    Pete Seeger-Waist Deep In The Big Muddy

    Pete Seeger on the Smothers Brothers 40 years ago. He keeps singing and stays on message his life long.

    Friday, November 16, 2007

    A HuffPost Project: Posterizing the GOP

    Another Huffpost from my brother Doug: Drought and the Power of Prayer

    Diane Feinstein and Chuck Schumer: Wonder Twins?

    Wednesday, November 14, 2007

    The Inexorable Wheels of Justice

    Bush/Cheney/Gonzales are going to jail

    Beware of Ron Paul

    Supporters of Ron Paul should avoid drinking the kool-aid given to them at his functions. A cursory look at some of his 2007 legislative proposals destroy the myths his campaign has been promulgating.

    H.R.300: To limit the jurisdiction of the Federal courts, and for other purposes.

    This an attempt to decrease The Federal Courts' Constitutional Powers by simple legislation, outside of the Amendment Process. Worse it does not even pretend to be an equal application, because it would restrict the Courts' oversight only in controversies relating to: the free exercise or establishment of religion; any claim based upon the right of privacy, including any such claim related to any issue of sexual practices, orientation, or reproduction; and any claim based upon equal protection of the laws to the extent such claim is based upon the right to marry without regard to sex or sexual orientation.

    Paul doesn't want to destroy the whole 14th Amendment with unconstitutional legislation. His real agenda is for the 14th to carry force to give American citizenship to foetuses at the very moment of their conception.

    H.R.2597: To provide that human life shall be deemed to exist from conception.
    H.R.1094: To provide that human life shall be deemed to exist from conception.

    There is no wink and nod to State's Rights here, nor is there any chance for a less intrusive government. Every woman who has a miscarriage could immediately find herself the target of a homicide investigation. These proposals arrogantly disregard potential maternal life-threatening possibilities that come with pregnancy. As an example of this: Ectopic Pregnancy is now estimated to occur in 2% of all pregnancies in the U.S. The fetus will not survive gestation, and by not terminating the pregnancy, the mother risks future infertility, and severe complications, a few of which could result in her death.

    Big bad Paul endangers pregnant womens' health to push his religious ideology upon America with the biggest single entitlement to American citizenship ever legislated.

    H.J.RES.46: Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States to deny United States citizenship to individuals born in the United States to parents who are neither United States citizens nor persons who owe permanent allegiance to the United States.

    This cannot be defended as original intent. One of the Declaration of Independence's listed causes for America's claim of a natuiral right to sever their British citizenry was that King George had:

    "...endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws of Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migration hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands."

    This should be exposed for its ugly reality. It is a bill of attainder that works a corruption of blood upon humans born within the Sovereign Territory of the United States of America. It is Unamerican to force children to be punished for the crimes of their parents. It also makes a mockery of any who claim there can be a positive comparison made between Thomas Jefferson and Ron Paul.

    "My opinion on the right of Expatriation has been, so long ago as the year 1776, consigned to record in the act of the Virginia code, drawn by myself, recognizing the right expressly, and prescribing the mode of exercising it. The evidence of this natural right, like that of our right to life, liberty, the use of our faculties, the pursuit of happiness, is not left to the feeble and sophistical investigations of reason, but is impressed on the sense of every man. We do not claim these under the charters of kings or legislators, but under the King of kings. If he has made it a law in the nature of man to pursue his own happiness, he has left him free in the choice of place as well as mode; and we may safely call on the whole body of English jurists to produce the map on which Nature has traced, for each individual, the geographical line which she forbids him to cross in pursuit of happiness. It certainly does not exist in his mind. Where, then, is it? I believe, too, I might safely affirm, that there is not another nation, civilized or savage, which has ever denied this natural right. I doubt if there is another which refuses its exercise. I know it is allowed in some of the most respectable countries of continental Europe, nor have I ever heard of one in which it was not. How it is among our savage neighbors, who have no law but that of Nature, we all know."

    The Writings of Thomas Jefferson; Definitive Edition, Albert Ellery Bergh, Editor
    Copyright, 1905, By The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association; Volume XV; pp 124,125

    Tuesday, November 13, 2007

    Step It Up Colorado Springs

    From a couple weekends ago. My report has a few new comments and additions: http://events.stepitup2007.org/november/reports/2361

    Christopher Hitchens on the death of Jerry Falwell-CNN 360

    Monday, November 12, 2007

    Kucinich weekly campaign update 11-12-07

    My house is the brown one in the center. The house to the left is the last home on Ruxton Avenue and is a straw bale house.
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    Senator Mike Gravel as Rocky

    The Iraq War: Legal or Illegal?

    24-minute video of "The Pinky Show". Effective and edifying.

    Sunday, November 11, 2007

    BLACKWATER : THE SHADOW WAR

    Be Careful What You Say

    Senator Mike Gravel as Rocky

    Mike Gravel Talks Debate Censorship

    Transform Space into Place.

    Excellent Diary on DailyKos: Kucinich's new Playbook for Speaking to the Media

    Saturday, November 10, 2007

    Norman Mailer, icon of the times, is dead. The Nation has a good piece on his life: Norman Mailer Brawled with Bush to the bitter end

    Friday, November 09, 2007

    KUCINICH: Takes House Floor, Moves for Cheney Impeachment

    Thursday, November 08, 2007

    DENNIS KUCINICH ON MSNBC TUCKER NOV 06, 2007

    Tuesday, November 06, 2007

    Afterdowningstreet has best update on Kucinich attempt to bring Cheney impeachment to vote. Kucinich is the MAN!!!

    War Crime Commission for Bush and co. : American Empire Project

    My brother Doug posts on Huffpo on why our health care system sucks compared to say... Denmark...

    DFA pulse poll of 100,000 + shows Kucinich in wide lead for Democratic nomination... Why is that so at odds with the conventional wisdom?

    Dennis Kucinich's Articles of Impeachment against Vice Prez Cheney and updates on House floor vote

    DailyKos: Gore Slams Bush Regime

    Denver's October 27, 2007 Iraq Antiwar Rally.

    Crude Realities

    Matthew Simmons says $300/barrel oil coming soon.

    Keith Olbermann: On Waterboarding and Torture

    Olbermann Special Comment (video)

    The Oil Drum: Six Steps to "Getting" the Global Environmental Crisis

    Growth is Madness!

    Center for Constitutional Rights: Beyond Guantanamo, Rescue the Constitution

    Monday, November 05, 2007

    Naomi Wolf Interview

    I just started Naomi Wolf's "The End of America". MUST READ for all patriots. The hour is getting late. Germany and Italy were both democracies before their societies were shut down. The exact same steps to close an open society are being taken in America RIGHT NOW.

    Sunday, November 04, 2007

    Houses with a view

    More ice in Bear Creek...
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    Mischief cools off in icy Bear Creek.
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    View to Colorado Springs from the Tenney Crags--destination of my run-hike this morning.
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    StepitUp 2007

    Under bluebird Colorado skies and temperature in the 70's, 150 people gathered for a relaxing afternoon on the grounds of the historic Rockledge Ranch on the Garden of the Gods.

    Here is my report on the Colorado Springs action for StepitUp07 for awareness and action on Global Warming.

    Saturday, November 03, 2007

    IMPEACH DICK CHENEY

    Dennis Kucinich is going to bring his Impeach Cheney resolution 133 to a vote next week.

    Friday, November 02, 2007

    Harper's "The Torture Litmus Test" for Mukasey

    Thursday, November 01, 2007

    1 Cubic Mile of Oil (CMO) -- how to grasp the scale of what we will lose when oil production diminishes as it must, sooner or later

    TomGram: Michael Schwartz: Iraq Policy floating on a sea of oil

    Considerations on the state of the world's oil supply

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