How To Poach Salmon …In Your Dishwasher

Ken AshfordRandom MusingsLeave a Comment

Apparently, it works!

DO NOT ATTEMPT TO COOK A WHOLE FISH!

1 Place fish packets on the top rack.

2 Add dirty dishes and lemon-scented soap. This optional step is not recommended for novices. However, as long as the salmon’s tightly sealed in its aluminum foil packet, it won’t absorb any soapy taste or smell.

3 Set dishwasher to the "normal" cycle. Modern dishwashers have "economy" and "cool dry" settings, which are undesirable since they conserve heat. However, on the other end of the spectrum, the "pots and pans" setting tends to overcook the fish.

4 Run salmon through the entire wash-and-dry cycle — approximately 50 minutes for most models.

5 When cycle’s complete, take salmon out, discard foil, place one fillet on each plate and spoon a generous serving of dill sauce on top.

More Women Prefer…

Ken AshfordWomen's IssuesLeave a Comment

Every Tuesday, the folks over at Mental Floss type a search term into Google, and report the trivia that turns up in the results.  They call it "Tuesday Turnip" (get it?).

Today’s Tuesday Turnip was "More women prefer".  Here’s what the Mental Floss folks discovered from searching that phrase in Google:

Dog_and_woman More Women Prefer Dogs Over Husbands: An online poll released by DogCatRadio.com, shows more women would rather have a pet than a husband.

I’m skeptical of this — consider who conducted the poll.

More Women Prefer Looks Over Money: The more money a woman earns, the more likely she is to prefer good looks to money in her man, a new survey reveals.

Not surprising.

More women prefer clean-shaven men (70% of women prefer a clean shave, 20% prefer a goatee, 7% prefer a full beard, 3% do not care about facial hair).

Yeah, the goatee thing is soooooo 90’s.

More women prefer shopping for their children than for their spouse (71% compared to 67% for women aged 16-55).

I think more woman prefer shopping than, well, anything.

Cable TV’s Oxygen Network recently released a report suggesting that technology advertisers are missing out on a large market share by not marketing to women. The survey found that more and more women prefer technological gadgets to jewelry, clothes and shoes, nearly closing the gap between women and men and their technology needs and uses.

Hmmm.  I suppose that depends on the gadget.

Given the option, more and more women prefer Caesarean section to natural birth.

Well, duuuuh.

Paulnewman_1More women prefer blue eyes (36 percent) to brown or dark eyes (30 percent).

Whatever.

When it comes to having their private parts examined, more women prefer a physician of their own sex. But for treating a broken leg, women don’t seem to give physician sex a second thought, according to a Norwegian study of women aged 36 to 55.

They have women in Norway?

According to a Lifetime Women’s Pulse Poll, three times more women prefer to work for a man, with Bill Gates topping the list of ideal male bosses at 38%. But despite this preference for men, the #1 ideal boss is Oprah Winfrey with 58% of the vote.

This doesn’t surprise me.  I think women have more problems working for women then for men.

Facebook Open To All, Starting Today

Ken AshfordWeb RecommendationsLeave a Comment

Go there.  Here’s why it’s better than myspace:

Facebook is clean; you can’t add stupid music videos or sparkly lights or huge text to your profile. It’s much more professional-looking, and the features are quite useful. MySpace, on the other hand, feels like the internet circa-1997. Sure, the kids love it, but it’s uglier than anything else on the net.

I tried MySpace for about a week and gave it up. All of my friends save one or two are on Facebook anyway. I just don’t see MySpace having a future in three or four years, but Facebook could be an internet staple if they play their cards right.

Another testimonial, talking about Facebook’s decision (effective today) to open up registration to everyone:

Well, as an avid facebook user, I think it’s a good move. I think it will become a good alternative to the other social networking sites on the web. Opening up to the public will just help facebook because it has a lot of the privacy features that MySpace lacks. Plus, I don’t have to worry about having an epileptic seizure everytime I go to someone’s profile as with MySpace, and it just a great way to keep in touch, so why not let everyone in?

Or read this testimonial of why Facebook is better than myspace (ironically, it’s on mySpace)

And yes, Facebook is faster and easier to navigate.

I’m telling you people.  MySpace is the afro and bell bottoms of the Internet.  In 3-4 years, nobody except little kids will be using it.

Supreme Court Preview

Ken AshfordSupreme CourtLeave a Comment

The first Monday in October is coming, which means it’s time for the Supreme Court to don their robes and do . . . things.

Back in the day, I used to blog more about the Supreme Court, partly because I had to prepare continuing legal education materials as part of my job.  I don’t do that anymore, unless a particular case interests me.  This year’s docket is a little ho-hum, but there are a couple of cases to watch out for:

  • Gonzales v. Carhart: Whether a woman, whose health is endangered by her pregnancy, has a constitutional right to a safe abortion.  This is essentially the same case as Steinberg v Carhart back in 2000, which said that a state law banning partial birth abortions must provide a health exception for the woman.  A defiant conservative Congress basically ignored the Court and wrote the same law — this time it is a federal law.  Under normal circumstances, the Court would try to remain consistent with its prior rulings.  But with the addition of Roberts and Alito, it’s a new court — and this could mark a turning point not only for the "right to choose", but with respect to other protected rights.
  • Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Environmental Agency: Whether the Clean Air Act imposes a mandate on the EPA to issue rules restricting greenhouse gas emmisions.  It’s rare that an environmental case makes it to the Supreme Court.  But this is an important one.  The EPA takes the position that under the Clean Air Act, it cannot regulate greenhouse gas emissions, which means that we don’t have laws to deal with global warming.  Sadly, the EPA is probably right, and I suspect that SCOTUS will find in their favor.  Of course, all Congress has to do is pass a new environmental law, but that’s no going to happen while Republicans are in control.
  • Philip Morris USA v. Williams: To what extent a court may impose punitive damages on a company engaged in "highly reprehensible" acts.  I’m interested in this for purely personal reasons.  Philip Morris got slammed hard in a tobacco litigation with punitive damages.  The question is whether there is a limit to the amount of punitive damages.  if the court goes against the tobacco company, that means I have more less job security.  Nuff said.
  • Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District #1 Meredith v. Jefferson County Bd. of Education: Whether local school boards can use race as a factor in assigning children to schools

The Clinton-Wallace Smackdown, or “What Did Bush Do To Combat Terrorists Pre-9/11”?

Ken AshfordWar on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

I have little to say about the whole controversy, except this: Clinton was right.

Hirsch explains:

Clinton_fox90[W]hen Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace gently asked the former president “why didn’t you do more” to put Al Qaeda “out of business,” he sparked an unexpected blast. Clinton, who had granted Wallace an interview at his signature Global Initiative Forum in New York last week, accused the host of being a conservative hit man. The former president said his anti-bin Laden efforts had far exceeded those of the Bush administration before 9/11. “At least I tried. That’s the difference in me and some, including all of the right-wingers who are attacking me now,” Clinton said, thrusting his face into the mild-mannered Wallace’s. “They ridiculed me for trying. They had eight months to try, they did not try.”

For the record, that is mostly true. Clinton and his national security advisor, Sandy Berger, who is ridiculed in the ABC mini-series for allegedly shrinking from efforts to assassinate bin Laden, regularly discussed the Al Qaeda problem and repeatedly pressed the U.S. military for more options against bin Laden. It was mainly the military, which feared another Desert One debacle, when eight U.S. commandoes died in a botched effort to rescue the American hostages in Tehran, that shrank from taking more aggressive action than cruise missile strikes. “No operation that was ever recommended to the president was ever turned down,” says Jim Steinberg, Berger’s former deputy and now dean of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas in Austin.

And for the record, the Bush administration barely paid attention to bin Laden before 9/11, as documented by the 9/11 Commission and other inquiries. On Jan. 26, 2001—six days after Bush’s inauguration—an FBI report for the first time conclusively tied the USS Cole bombing in Yemen to Al Qaeda. A few weeks later, CIA Director George Tenet raised the stakes, calling bin Laden’s global terror network "the most immediate and serious threat" to U.S. national security. Yet there was no retaliation for the Cole or any other Al Qaeda attack for eight months—the “principals” did not even hold a meeting on how to deal with the terrorist group—despite Tenet’s increasingly urgent warnings about an Al Qaeda attack in the summer of 2001. Even today, the Bush administration is spending more time, resources and energy on supposed state sponsors of terror, like Iraq, than on the terrorists themselves.

Rice, by the way, is lying here when she says:

"What we did in the [first] eight months [of the Bush Administration] was at least as aggressive as what the Clinton administration did in the preceding years"

No, dear.  On August 6, 2001, Bush received this Presidential Daily Briefing [PDF format].  The memo specifically warns:

  • a large attack was planned
  • the attack would be on United States soil
  • target cities of attacks included New York City and Washington, D.C.
  • the World Trade Center bombing was explicitly mentioned
  • hijacked plane missions were anticipated
  • people living in, or traveling to, the United States were involved
  • recent surveillance of federal buildings in New York by al Qaeda

Something was in the wind, and the President was warned.  What did you do, Condi?  Nothing.  And why?  Let’s see what you told Congress:

"It did not warn of attacks inside the United States. It was historical information based on old reporting. There was no new threat information. And it did not, in fact, warn of any coming attacks inside the United States."

No new threat information?  A "historical" document?  It talks about "recent" surveillance of building in New York as well as "anticipated" hijackings of planes.

Now, Condi — obviously you might not have been able to know precisely when and where the 9/11 events would take place.  But you did nothing in response to this memo — you didn’t even have a meeting (whereas Clinton held a meeting on Al Qaeda every week of his presidency, whether or not there was new information or not).

So to say that the Bush Administraion was "just as aggressive" as Clinton is a flat-out, bald-faced lie.

UPDATE:  Wow.  This TIME story from 2002 is worth a re-read.  The title alone, which refers to the Clinton Administration, says it all — "They Had A Plan":

Berger attended only one of the briefings–the session that dealt with the threat posed to the U.S. by international terrorism, and especially by al-Qaeda. "I’m coming to this briefing," he says he told Rice, "to underscore how important I think this subject is." Later, alone in his office with Rice, Berger says he told her, "I believe that the Bush Administration will spend more time on terrorism generally, and on al-Qaeda specifically, than any other subject."

The terrorism briefing was delivered by Richard Clarke, a career bureaucrat who had served in the first Bush Administration and risen during the Clinton years to become the White House’s point man on terrorism. As chair of the interagency Counter-Terrorism Security Group (CSG), Clarke was known as a bit of an obsessive–just the sort of person you want in a job of that kind. Since the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen on Oct. 12, 2000–an attack that left 17 Americans dead–he had been working on an aggressive plan to take the fight to al-Qaeda. The result was a strategy paper that he had presented to Berger and the other national security "principals" on Dec. 20. But Berger and the principals decided to shelve the plan and let the next Administration take it up. With less than a month left in office, they did not think it appropriate to launch a major initiative against Osama bin Laden. "We would be handing [the Bush Administration] a war when they took office on Jan. 20," says a former senior Clinton aide. "That wasn’t going to happen." Now it was up to Rice’s team to consider what Clarke had put together.

Berger had left the room by the time Clarke, using a Powerpoint presentation, outlined his thinking to Rice. A senior Bush Administration official denies being handed a formal plan to take the offensive against al-Qaeda, and says Clarke’s materials merely dealt with whether the new Administration should take "a more active approach" to the terrorist group. (Rice declined to comment, but through a spokeswoman said she recalled no briefing at which Berger was present.) Other senior officials from both the Clinton and Bush administrations, however, say that Clarke had a set of proposals to "roll back" al-Qaeda. In fact, the heading on Slide 14 of the Powerpoint presentation reads, "Response to al Qaeda: Roll back." Clarke’s proposals called for the "breakup" of al-Qaeda cells and the arrest of their personnel. The financial support for its terrorist activities would be systematically attacked, its assets frozen, its funding from fake charities stopped. Nations where al-Qaeda was causing trouble–Uzbekistan, the Philippines, Yemen–would be given aid to fight the terrorists. Most important, Clarke wanted to see a dramatic increase in covert action in Afghanistan to "eliminate the sanctuary" where al-Qaeda had its terrorist training camps and bin Laden was being protected by the radical Islamic Taliban regime. The Taliban had come to power in 1996, bringing a sort of order to a nation that had been riven by bloody feuds between ethnic warlords since the Soviets had pulled out. Clarke supported a substantial increase in American support for the Northern Alliance, the last remaining resistance to the Taliban. That way, terrorists graduating from the training camps would have been forced to stay in Afghanistan, fighting (and dying) for the Taliban on the front lines. At the same time, the U.S. military would start planning for air strikes on the camps and for the introduction of special-operations forces into Afghanistan. The plan was estimated to cost "several hundreds of millions of dollars." In the words of a senior Bush Administration official, the proposals amounted to "everything we’ve done since 9/11."

And that’s the point. The proposals Clarke developed in the winter of 2000-01 were not given another hearing by top decision makers until late April, and then spent another four months making their laborious way through the bureaucracy before they were readied for approval by President Bush. It is quite true that nobody predicted Sept. 11–that nobody guessed in advance how and when the attacks would come. But other things are true too. By last summer, many of those in the know–the spooks, the buttoned-down bureaucrats, the law-enforcement professionals in a dozen countries–were almost frantic with worry that a major terrorist attack against American interests was imminent. It wasn’t averted because 2001 saw a systematic collapse in the ability of Washington’s national-security apparatus to handle the terrorist threat.

MORE OF THE SAME FROM THINK PROGRESS:

In her interview with the New York Post, Condoleezza Rice claims that the Clinton Administration did not develop a strategy to fight al Qaeda:

The secretary of state also sharply disputed Clinton’s claim that he “left a comprehensive anti-terror strategy” for the incoming Bush team during the presidential transition in 2001.

We were not left a comprehensive strategy to fight al Qaeda,” Rice responded during the hourlong session.

Here’s what the 9/11 Commission Report has to say about it:

As the Clinton administration drew to a close, Clarke and his staff developed a policy paper of their own [which] incorporated the CIA’s new ideas from the Blue Sky memo, and posed several near-term policy options. Clarke and his staff proposed a goal to “roll back” al Qaeda over a period of three to five years …[including] covert aid to the Northern Alliance, covert aid to Uzbekistan, and renewed Predator flights in March 2001. A sentence called for military action to destroy al Qaeda command-and control targets and infrastructure and Taliban military and command assets. The paper also expressed concern about the presence of al Qaeda operatives in the United States.” [p. 197]

Clarke, who also worked for the Bush administration, wrote Condoleezza Rice a memo as soon as the Bush administration took office, stating, “[W]e urgently need…a Principals level review of the al Qida network.” His request was denied.

YET EVEN MORE:

The Guardian from 2002:

[Bush’s Attorney General John Ashcroft] also sent a memorandum to his heads of departments, stating his seven priorities. Counter-terrorism was not on the list. He turned down an FBI request for hundreds more agents to be assigned to tracking terrorist threats.

***

According to yesterday’s edition of Newsweek, he had a showdown on counter-terrorism with the outgoing FBI director, Louis Freeh, in the spring of last year in Quantico, Virginia, at an annual meeting of special agents.

People at the meeting said the two disagreed fundamentally on their priorities.

Mr Ashcroft’s agenda comprised "basically violent crime and drugs" and when Mr Freeh began to talk about his concern about the terrorist threat facing the country, "Ashcroft didn’t want to hear about it".

Thanks, But Can You See How That Doesn’t Help?

Ken AshfordGodstuff, IraqLeave a Comment

New York Times, 9/25/06:

Col. Tom James, who commands the division’s Second Brigade, acknowledged that his unit’s equipment levels had fallen so low that it now had no tanks or other armored vehicles to use in training and that his soldiers were rated as largely untrained in attack and defense.

The enormous strains on equipment and personnel, because of longer-than-expected deployments, have left active Army units with little combat power in reserve.

Agapepress, 9/25/06

It’s strong as stainless steel and sturdy as a Samsonite suitcase. Well, maybe not exactly. But it is a waterproof, tear-resistant Bible

Bardin & Marsee’s camouflage-covered Gospel of John will be almost weightless — 1.4 ounces — and folded to be highly portable. The company, hardly more than a year old, is seeking churches and individuals to be a part of spreading the Gospel through Light of the World 2006

"This is certainly a great idea," said American Family Association president Tim Wildmon. "What better gift could we send our troops? For a believer it can be encouragement and strength; for an unbeliever, it may be the very thing that leads him to Christ."

Bush Busted In A Huge Lie

Ken AshfordIraq, War on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

Glenn Greenwald says "this report alone ought to dictate the outcome of the election."

If you haven’t heard the news, a leaked internal government report — a government report from the Bush Administration — says "No".

A classified intelligence report concludes that the Iraq war has worsened the terrorist threat to the United States, U.S. officials told CNN Sunday.

Some intelligence officials have said as much in the past, but the newly revealed document is the first formal report on global trends in terrorism by the National Intelligence Estimate, which is put out by the National Intelligence Council.

Now, this isn’t some minor memo from some little rinky-dink intelligence office.  The National Intelligence Estimate is the consensus judgment of the entire US intelligence community, with input from all the different agencies, from CIA and DIA to INR and FBI and all the others. In other words, this is the collaborative judgment of the people actually fighting the War on Terror.

The report is six weeks old, and while it has no doubt been read by Bush, he has been out there saying the OPPOSITE thing.  Here’s what he said on August 21:

You know, I’ve heard this theory about everything was just fine until we arrived, and kind of “we’re going to stir up the hornet’s nest” theory. It just doesn’t hold water, as far as I’m concerned. The terrorists attacked us and killed 3,000 of our citizens before we started the freedom agenda in the Middle East.

He said that, knowing that his entire intelligence community — 16 separate spy services from the FBI to the CIA to other acronyms — all said just the opposite!

Josh Marshall puts this in perspective:

For the last six weeks and, in fact, the last six months, the White House and the president have been engaged in a coordinated campaign to convince the public that despite the setbacks and mistakes, the war in Iraq is a critical component of fighting the War on Terror. Making that argument is their plan for the next six weeks until the election. All the while, they’ve been sitting on a report that says that’s flat wrong, a lie and that precisely the opposite is the case.

That’s a cover-up in every meaningful sense of the word, a calculated effort to hide information from and deceive the public.

Back to Glenn Greenwald:

So, a recap of the Iraq war: there were never any WMDs. The proliferation of government death squads and militias in Iraq means that, compared to the Saddam era, human rights have worsened and torture has increased to record levels. Iranian influence has massively increased, as a result of a Shiite fundamentalist government loyal to Tehran replacing the former anti-Iranian regime. We’ve squandered hundreds of billions of dollars and thousands of lives. And we have — according to the consensus of our own intelligence community — directly worsened the terrorist problem with our invasion, and continue to worsen it with our ongoing occupation.

How can anyone claim with a straight face that this war was a good idea?

RELATED:  Definitely a bad weekend for Bush.  Not only the NIE report, but his comment on CNN that that history will show that the 2,700 dead U.S. soldiers in Iraq will be viewed as "just a comma"

Oy.

Generals Against The War

Ken AshfordIraqLeave a Comment

Can’t let this pass unnoticed:

Retired military officers on Monday bluntly accused Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld of bungling the war in Iraq, saying U.S. troops were sent to fight without the best equipment and that critical facts were hidden from the public.

"I believe that Secretary Rumsfeld and others in the administration did not tell the American people the truth for fear of losing support for the war in Iraq," retired Maj. Gen. John R. S. Batiste said in remarks prepared for a hearing by the Senate Democratic Policy Committee.

A second witness, retired Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton, assessed Rumsfeld as "incompetent strategically, operationally and tactically …."

"Mr. Rumsfeld and his immediate team must be replaced or we will see two more years of extraordinarily bad decision-making," he added in testimony prepared for the hearing, held six weeks before the November 7 midterm elections, in which the war is a central issue.

The conflict, now in its fourth year, has claimed the lives of more than 2,600 American troops and cost more than $300 billion.

Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-North Dakota, the committee chairman, told reporters last week that he hoped the hearing would shed light on the planning and conduct of the war. He said majority Republicans had failed to conduct hearings on the issue, adding, "if they won’t … we will."

Since he spoke, a government-produced National Intelligence Estimate became public that concluded the war has helped create a new generation of Islamic radicalism and that the overall terrorist threat has grown since the attacks of September 11, 2001.

Batiste, who commanded the Army’s 1st Infantry Division in Iraq, also blamed Congress for failing to ask "the tough questions."

He said Rumsfeld at one point threatened to fire the next person who mentioned the need for a postwar plan in Iraq.

Batiste said if full consideration had been given to the requirements for war, it’s likely the U.S. would have kept its focus on Afghanistan, "not fueled Islamic fundamentalism across the globe, and not created more enemies than there were insurgents."

Hammes said in his prepared remarks that not providing the best equipment was a "serious moral failure on the part of our leadership."

Heckuva job, Rummie.

What Happens To Your Email After You Die

Ken AshfordScience & TechnologyLeave a Comment

It turns out, it’s actually kind of a problem:

Talcott, 69, a friend of beatnik Neil Cassidy, apparently took his password to the grave.

It’s a vexing, and increasingly common problem for families mourning the loss of loved ones. As more and more people move their lives, address books, calendars, financial information, online, they are taking a risk that some information formerly filed away in folders and desks might never be recovered. That is, unless they share their passwords, which poses security threats.

"He did not keep a hard copy address book. I think everything was online," said Talcott’s daughter, Julie Talcott-Fuller. "There were people he knew that I haven’t been able to contact. It’s been very hard."

"Yahoo (his e-mail provider) said it wouldn’t give out the information due to privacy laws, but my dad is dead so I don’t understand that," she said.

In another situation, Yahoo only gave out email passwords only when forced by a court order.  Google and America Online are a little more understanding:

Google will provide access to a deceased Gmail user’s account if the person seeking it provides a copy of the death certificate and a copy of a document giving the person power of attorney over the e-mail account, said a Google spokeswoman.

America Online follows the same policy, according to spokesman Andrew Weinstein.

Of course, the best thing to do is to avoid this problem in the first place:

The dilemma can be avoided by putting passwords to e-mail, photo, music and other online accounts in an estate planning document, attorneys say. E-mail providers don’t typically offer access to accounts of deceased unless without relevant documentation.

A will?  I’m supposed to have a will?

Get Over Yourself, Bill

Ken AshfordRight Wing Punditry/IdiocyLeave a Comment

158322601xBill O’Reilly boasts to Barbara Walters, saying he is on al Qaeda’s "death list".  He knows this because the FBI told him.

The FBI responds:

"I’m not aware of any FBI agents warning anyone at Fox News of their presence on any list….For that matter, I’m not aware of any Al Qaeda hit list targeting journalists. Agents from the D.C. field office, FBI headquarters, and a hostage negotiator went to Fox’s offices in New York last month to advise them specifically on the Gaza kidnapping [of Fox employees Steve Centanni and Olaf Wiig]. But they only talked to management, they didn’t talk to any individual journalists."

It’s almost sad to ssee him lie to exaggerate his own importance.

Getting Emergency Contraception

Ken AshfordHealth Care, Sex/Morality/Family Values, Women's IssuesLeave a Comment

Everyone has been linking to this harrowing account of what it’s like to get emergency contraception (EC) in rural Ohio, so I will too.

This woman’s doctor told her to call the ER.  She did.  Then a parade of nurses hemmed and hawed over the phone, until finally a fourth nurse told her what was going on:

"Well see," he begins, his voice dropping a little, "the problem is that you have to meet the doctor’s criteria before he’ll dispense it to you."

"Criteria?" I question.

"Well," the nurse sounds decidedly nervous as though what he really wanted to do was hang up the phone completely, "Yes, his criteria. I mean…ummm…well, are you ok? Is there any, ummm….trauma?" he asks me.

My face changes expression and I hurry to explain, "No, no" I said, "No. I haven’t been raped. This was consensual sex."

"Oh…" he trails off.

I wait expectantly.

"Well, ummm….*clears throat*…So you haven’t been raped?" he asks again.

"No. I have not been raped. The condom broke". I state, becoming very frustrated at this point and wondering what the hell is going on.

"Ok, well ummm….Are you married?" he mumbles the words so low I can barely hear them.

Suddenly I get this image of the poor nurse standing at the hospital reading from a cue card that was given to him by a doctor.

"No." I state plainly. "I am not married. I’ve been in a relationship for several years and I have three children, I don’t want a fourth." I respond tersely.

"Oh, I see." He says and then he hurries on, "Well, see. *I* understand. I want you to know that I understand what you’re saying. But see, the problem is that we have 4 doctors here right now but only one of them ever writes EC prescriptions. But see, the thing is that he’ll interview you and see if you meet his criteria. Now, I called the pharmacy but I also talked to him and well….*clears throat*….you can come down and try to get it. You know, if you meet his criteria he’ll give you a prescription, I mean, there’s really no harm in trying." the nurse trails off, his voice falters as I realize what I’m being told.

….I was told by every urgent care I called and every emergency room that I was shit out of luck. I was asked my age. My marital status. How many children I had. If I had been raped and when I became uncomfortable with the questions I was told, "Well Ma’am, try to understand that you will be interviewed and the doctor has ‘criteria’ that you need to meet before he will prescribe it for you."

Hopefully, when Plan B is available OTC at your pharmacy without a prescription, we won’t hear stories like this.

Assuming, that is, that the pharmacies are willing to sell it….

Marty Lederman: “U.S. to be First Nation to Authorize Violations of Geneva”

Ken AshfordWar on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

Professor Lederman looks at the new detainee bill and speaks his mind:

[I]t only takes 30 seconds or so to see that the Senators have capitualted entirely, that the U.S. will hereafter violate the Geneva Conventions by engaging in Cold Cell, Long Time Standing, etc., and that there will be very little pretense about it. In addition to the elimination of habeas rights in section 6, the bill would delegate to the President the authority to interpret "the meaning and application of the Geneva Conventions" "for the United States," except that the bill itself would define certain "grave breaches" of Common Article 3 to be war crimes. Some Senators apparently are taking comfort in the fact that the Administration’s interpretation would have to be made, and defended, publicly. That’s a small consolation, I suppose; but I’m confident the creative folks in my former shop at OLC — you know, those who concluded that waterboarding is not torture — will come up with something. After all, the Administration is already on record as saying that the CIA "program" can continue under this bill, so the die apparently is cast. And the courts would be precluded from reviewing it.

Others are weighing in too:

Washington Post –"The Abuse Can Continue":

"In effect, the agreement means that U.S. violations of international human rights law can continue as long as Mr. Bush is president, with Congress’s tacit assent. If they do, America’s standing in the world will continue to suffer, as will the fight against terrorism. . . .

"Mr. Bush will go down in history for his embrace of tortue and bear responsibility for the enormous damage he has caused."

New York Times – "A Bad Bargain":

"[The bill] allows the president to declare any foreigner, anywhere, an ‘illegal enemy combatant’ using a dangerously broad definition, and detain him without any trial. It not only fails to deal with the fact that many of the Guantanamo detainees are not terrorists and will never be charged, but it also chokes off any judicial review.

"The Democrats have largely stood silent and allowed the trio of Republicans to do the lifting. It’s time for them to either try to fix this bill or delay it until after the election. The American people expect their leaders to clean up this mess without endangering U.S. troops, eviscerating American standards of justice, or further harming the nation’s severely damaged reputation."

So now we’re officially sanctioning torture in violation of the Geneva Convention.  Well, well.  Wasn’t too long ago I heard this:

No one can argue that the Iraqi people would be better off with the thugs and murderers back in the palaces. Who would prefer that Saddam’s torture chambers still be open?

George W. Bush
Speech Marking First Anniversary of Iraq Invasion
March 19, 2004

Of course that was then… this is now:

Torture in Iraq is reportedly worse now than it was under deposed president Saddam Hussein, the United Nations’ chief anti-torture expert said Thursday.

Manfred Nowak described a situation where militias, insurgent groups, government forces and others disregard rules on the humane treatment of prisoners.

"What most people tell you is that the situation as far as torture is concerned now in Iraq is totally out of hand," said Nowak, the global body’s special investigator on torture. "The situation is so bad many people say it is worse than it has been in the times of Saddam Hussein."

Associated Press
Torture reaches new depths in Iraq
September 21, 2006

Tristero asks:

So tell me, my fellow Americans:

How does it feel knowing that your government will pass laws permitting the violation of the Geneva Conventions against torture?

How does it feel knowing the taxes you pay from money you earned are going towards the salary of legally sanctioned torturers?

How does it feel knowing that the only political party with an organization large enough to stand in opposition to the American fascists in charge of this country’s legislature and executive were actually boasting that they were not going to get involved in one of the most important moral debates of our time?

And how does it feel to have George W. Bush, that paragon of moral probity, mental stability, and well-informed intelligence, granted the legal right to determine what is and isn’t torture?

I’ll tell you how I feel. I am outraged and ashamed.

Me, too.