Do You Have Bad Taste in Music?
Monday, August 30, 2004
Tuesday, August 24, 2004
I just finished the latest manifesto on ChangeThis, How to Defeat Terrorism. I agree with all the points of the author, but find it hard to wrap my head around one key point: public trust in the authorities. Benjamin Kuipers states that if the public has trust in its police and government that they will turn in terrorists. In a Saddam lead Iraq, or in similar oppressed nations with dictators, how much trust does the public have?
One of his simple strategies for defeating terrorism is ”avoid getting killed by them; make clear that overwhelming power is available, but avoid using it;”
This method worked during the Cold War. We essentially sat back, made our military force clear and demonstrated to the world that a free and open society was something they too wanted. After 50 or so years, the Berlin wall came down and communism began to crumble in Europe and Asia. Of course the U.S.S.R. were not terrorists, but terrorists are not nations.
Is the answer to sit back, restrained, for the next 50 years? Hope and pray that time, patience and diplomacy will solve these issues? I don’t know. I know what we are doing now isn’t going to solve anything. As Mr. Kuipers states, it becomes an endless cycle and plays right into the hands of terrorists.
The real goal is to provoke massive retaliation. The tiny group of terrorists who actually committed the act may escape entirely, may take casualties, or may even be entirely destroyed, but the larger terrorist movement feeds on the retaliation. The important thing (from the terrorists’ perspective) is for the massive retaliation to harm many people in the general population, even among their own supporters.
The point is to incite the authorities to act in a way that erodes the people’s trust in them. The people lose trust, the terrorists are seen as freedom-fighters, and they gain support, cover, strength, and freedom of action.
Monday, August 23, 2004
With all the debate over John Kerry’s medals in Vietnam, someone finally tracked down the medals George W. has received.
Monday, August 16, 2004
Seth Godin started a new project, ChangeThis. One of the first manifestos is titled, Kill Your Children. To sum it up the author discusses how sugar-rich beverages cause our children to become obese. Although beverages do contribute, it is far from the only contributor. High Fructose Corn Syrup is the true culprit. It not only lives in just about every drink out there, it is in just about everything you eat. It is in frozen foods to prevent freezer burn. It is in bread to keep it brown and soft. It is in ketchup. It is in your ?healthy yogurt?. Read the labels and you cannot get away from it.
In our hurry up society and busy lives it is hard to avoid these foods because they are quick and easy. There are some alternative choices out there, they do however cost a little more. In the end the best advice I have ever heard was to go by a cookbook from the 50?s and use the ingredients they list.
P.S. Beware of Partially Hydrogenated Oils, trans fatty acids.
Tuesday, August 03, 2004
From the White House West website:
After spending over $75 million on fraudulent attacks, Karl Rove is back to selling the true Texas cowboy. Throughout August, Bush campaign commericals will feature President Bush at his ranch in Crawford, Texas.
Join ACT and our friend Will Ferrell for a behind-the-scenes look at ?White House West.? We promise it?s the best commerical you?ll see this election.
Help stop the Republican?s fraud by joining ACT today and signing our petition to the FCC.