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Six years in Guantanamo

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 22:24 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Sami al-Haj walks with pain on his steel crutch; almost six years in the nightmare of Guantanamo have taken their toll on the Al Jazeera journalist and, now in the safety of a hotel in the small Norwegian town of Lillehammer, he is a figure of both dignity and shame. The Americans told him they were sorry when they eventually freed him this year – after the beatings he says he suffered, and the force-feeding, the humiliations and interrogations by British, American and Canadian intelligence officers – and now he hopes one day he’ll be able to walk without his stick.

The TV cameraman, 38, was never charged with any crime, nor was he put on trial; his testimony makes it clear that he was held in three prisons for six-and-a-half years – repeatedly beaten and force-fed – not because he was a suspected “terrorist” but because he refused to become an American spy. From the moment Sami al-Haj arrived at Guantanamo, flown there from the brutal US prison camp at Kandahar, his captors demanded that he work for them. The cruelty visited upon him – constantly interrupted by American admissions of his innocence – seemed designed to turnal-Haj into a US intelligence “asset”.

“We know you are innocent, you are here by mistake,” he says he was told in more than 200 interrogations. “All they wanted was for me to be a spy for them. They said they would give me US citizenship, that my wife and child could live in America, that they would protect me. But I said: ‘I will not do this – first of all because I’m a journalist and this is not my job and because I fear for myself and my family. In war, I can be wounded and I can die or survive. But if I work with you, al-Qa’ida will eliminate me. And if I don’t work with you, you will kill me’.”


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Comments:

  1. Well, I missed the moment when the US started to employ the Gestapo and the Stazi.
    Must have been really subtle move.

Vacation picture

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 20:01 by John Sinteur in category: Great Picture

Click for full size…


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Cartoons

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 19:58 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon


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Interview Sarah Palin

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 19:43 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

Can’t get an interview with Sarah Palin? We’ve got you covered.


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New McCain ad based on the debate

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 11:11 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

Odd. The question at the end makes it look like they think everything Obama says is wrong. Does that mean they think McCain was actually wrong every time Obama said he was right?

I would have expected them to end with something like “Even Barack Obama knows…John McCain is the right man for the job” – did they just fumble?


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Comments:

  1. The fumble was to air the commercial in the first place. Unless you have the brains of a child, the “out of context” manipulation is just too painfully obvious.

Nice work — if you can get fired from it.

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 10:22 by John Sinteur in category: Robber Barons

[Quote:]

That’s just what one Alan H. Fishman might have thought when he woke up Friday morning.

Fishman was the new chief executive officer for Washingon Mutual — WaMu — the nation’s largest savings and loan, which was taken over Thursday night by federal bank regulators and quickly dumped in a fire sale to JPMorgan Chase for the Wal-Mart-like price of $1.9 billion.

But don’t cry for Fishman, who reportedly was sky-high — literally — last night, on a flight from New York to Seattle, when WaMu collapsed. Even though he’s only been on the job for less than three weeks, he’s bailing out with parachute worth close to $20 million, according to an executive compensation analysis conducted for the New York Times by James F. Reda Associates.

That’s right, $20 million for 17 days on the job … and his company failed.


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Hilllary Clinton for President! All the way!

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 10:18 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008


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Comments:

  1. This woman should be the poster child at all voter registration drives. It is disheartening that her vote carries the same weight as mine.

  2. Well, there are idiots everywhere. This lady is clearly drunk. And you can see, that not only guys with the camera are ripping on her, but that her friends have a pretty good idea that she’s making an idiot of herself. But those people are not real danger. The danger is with people who claim that race is not the issue, but once they go behind the curtain in the polling booth, they will mark the white dude, simply because the other one is black. Her argument [although false] that Obama’s middle name Hussain is putting her off because of the conotation to the iraqi dictator is more frank than of most people that have a grudge against voting for him. I believe, that if Obama would be elected president, that would bring change. Not only to the US, but to the Europe and Middle East. And I wish that wholeheartedly as an European.

2008 Definition of Optimist

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 9:15 by John Sinteur in category: Joke

[Quote:]

Optimist: an investment banker who irons five shirts on Sunday evening.


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To people saying McCain won regardless of truth and content because his soundbites were better:

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 9:00 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

MediaCurves: Independents say Obama won 61% – 39%

CBS: Uncommitted voters say Obama won 40% – 22% (with the other 38% saying it was a tie)

FiveThirtyEight is also claiming that Obama won in a CNN poll, a Luntz focus group, and a GQR focus group, but hasn’t provided links yet.

[Quote:]

Specifically, by a 62-32 margin, voters thought that Obama was “more in touch with the needs and problems of people like you”. This is a gap that has no doubt grown because of the financial crisis of recent days. But it also grew because Obama was actually speaking to middle class voters. Per the transcript, McCain never once mentioned the phrase “middle class” (Obama did so three times). And Obama’s eye contact was directly with the camera, i.e. the voters at home. McCain seemed to be speaking literally to the people in the room in Mississippi, but figuratively to the punditry. It is no surprise that a small majority of pundits seemed to have thought that McCain won, even when the polls indicated otherwise; the pundits were his target audience.


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Wal*Mart shutting down DRM server, nuking your music collection

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 8:48 by John Sinteur in category: Intellectual Property

[Quote:]

Hey suckers! Did you buy DRM music from Wal*Mart instead of downloading MP3s for free from the P2P networks? Well, they’re repaying your honesty by taking away your music. Unless you go through a bunch of hoops (that you may never find out about, if you’ve changed email addresses or if you’re not a very technical person), your music will no longer be playable after October 9th.

[..]

Boy, the entertainment industry sure makes a good case for ripping them off, huh? Buy your media and risk having it confiscated by a DRM-server shutdown. Take it for free and keep it forever.


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Oracle’s Ellison nails cloud computing

Posted on September 27th, 2008 at 8:46 by John Sinteur in category: Software

[Quote:]

“The interesting thing about cloud computing is that we’ve redefined cloud computing to include everything that we already do. I can’t think of anything that isn’t cloud computing with all of these announcements. The computer industry is the only industry that is more fashion-driven than women’s fashion. Maybe I’m an idiot, but I have no idea what anyone is talking about. What is it? It’s complete gibberish. It’s insane. When is this idiocy going to stop?

“We’ll make cloud computing announcements. I’m not going to fight this thing. But I don’t understand what we would do differently in the light of cloud.”


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  1. I think he totally misses the point. Cloud computing is not the “what we do” but the “we don’t have the applicaiton on our desktop”.
    So it’s not the what, but the where does the data and the application reside.
    MS Office or OpenOffice versus Zoho or Google Doc.

    But he is right. When people like he goes on and tries to include everything under cloud computing that’s gibberish.