Saturday, February 17, 2007

The USA needs to ratify the Kyoto Protocol

The Vegetation of the USA as of 1986.
Things have changed since then.
This image is a mosaic of the United States prepared by using 16 images from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) sensors on the meteorological satellites NOAA-8 and NOAA-9. The images were acquired between May 24, 1984 and May 14, 1986.
On false-color infrared mosaics, vegetation appears in various tones of red instead of green. The "redness" indicates vegetation density, type and whether growing on dry land or in a swamp (a mixture of reddish vegetation and dark blue surface water produces dark tones). Grasslands appear light red, deciduous trees and croplands appear red, and coniferous forests appear dark red or maroon. Desert areas appear white and urban areas (pavement and buildings) appear bluish green. Lakes, rivers and oceans appear in various shades of blue, dark blue for deep water and light blue for shallow or turbid water. Exposed bedrock generally appears as a dark bluish-green or other dark tone.


May 9, 2005

“Earth’s climate is all about relationships, and this study shows that ground cover plays a significant part in determining changes in climate extremes,” said Diffenbaugh, who is an assistant professor of earth and atmospheric sciences in Purdue’s College of Science. “We are accustomed to hearing that greenhouse gases affect climate, but they are not the only factor we should consider. Our climate models also must incorporate the effect of vegetation if they are to capture the full scope of reality.”
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Basically, any candidate that states she/he will reduce the effects the USA has on Climate Change needs to include in their policies a discussion about ratifying the Kyoto Protocol so the business of ensuring future generations environmental safety has a basis of understanding.

Kyoto demands the carbon dioxide limits be reduced to 1990 levels. That is a good benchmark to make permanent in the enforcement of carbon dioxide emission reduction. It also forces the EPA to set standards to meet that goal.

Who enforces it? The Carbon Trading stocks. Who enforces it?


Even the United Nations does not have a mechanism to monitor countries outside of Kyoto. Who are you going trust with monitoring carbon dioxide trading credits in the USA? Bush? Or someone like him?

There is even some problem within the United Nations in effectively monitoring and enforcing progress toward Kyoto's goals. What ramifications should government be levied as a consequence to failure to achieve their reduction limits?

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Industry would be better off taxed. Carbon dioxide can be measured at the smoke stack and taxed with those in government at local levels collecting the taxes due to them and their cities or towns.

Basically

I don't believe carbon trading is an effective way of handling a profound danger to Earth's troposphere. I believe it won't be taken with enough brevity to it's TRUE purpose. Would you trust Ambramoff with Earth?

The next generation of Americans will have to take control of their political choices in that they need to move to a responsible direction in regard to Climate Change due to Human Induced Global Warming. We need to move toward an all electric society produced by benign energy sources.

Why should biofuels be added to Kyoto Protocol? Isn't that double dipping?



Implementing a 5% blend of ethanol in gasoline will generate hundreds of jobs in rural Ontario, create a market for an additional 50 million bushels of corn every year and reduce greenhouse emissions by the equivalent of 200,000 cars. And it all starts on the farm.

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Ethanol is already a 'balance' of carbon (dixoide) credits. The ethanol is produced from plants which is a form of plant (carbon dioxide) recycling.

Additionally.

What form of energy is used in the production of ethanol and what does that mean to Human Induced Global Warming and Climate Change?

If ethanol is produced by a coal fired plant then it no longer is 'carbon dioxide balanced;' now is it?

Now, these folks won't be able to participate on Global Carbon Trading anymore


Farmers Union’s Carbon Credit Program allows ag producers and landowners to earn income by storing carbon in their soil through no-till crop production and longterm grass seeding practices. Farmers Union has earned approval from the Chicago Climate Exchange to aggregate carbon credits. Farmers Union will enroll producer acreages of carbon into blocks of credits that will be traded on the Exchange, much like other agricultural commodities are traded.

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Now that math here is easy. So, let's just keep it simple.

Let's say the farm above is given 100 carbon (dioxide) credits. If they raise pigs or cows or dairy cows their carbon credits should be lower as the livestock emits methane. Methane is a greenhouse gas. It is also responsible for Human Induced Global Warming. Actually, Bush eliminated programs that farmers were using to contain methane because he wanted to study them more.


Bush has also given 'breaks' to anti-environmental lobbyists with the assistance of Gail Norton in the area of coal-bed methane development (click on and check under 'Air Pollution' , number 6, where it states that coal-bed methane contributes large amounts of carbon dioxide to Global Warming.)

Trashing the Environment with a Thousand Cuts (click on)
by Walt Hays
The Bush administration, in catering to industries that put America's health and natural heritage at risk, threatens to do more damage to our environmental protections than any other in U.S. history.

BUT, TO RETURN TO THE MATH.

If the coal fired electric plant below uses 1000 carbon credits. Then it needs to purchase 100 carbon credits from 10 farms with a carbon credit rating of 100. That might seem equitable, but, what has changed?

Nothing.

Absolutely nothing.

The cost to the utility company will be passed onto the consumer and the effects of Carbon Credit Trading will do nothing than serve to increase the wealth of those in the upper crust of the feeding chain.

The Rich get Richer while the Poor get Poorer.

Those trading in Carbon Credits should be limited to citizens of the countries committed to Kyoto. Close the markets and limit the wealth.



Last Update: 4:33 PM ET Feb 15, 2007
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Sen. John Kerry said Thursday he would soon introduce legislation that would prevent 16 planned coal-fired power plants from being built in Texas if they don't include technology that would capture carbon dioxide.


Speaking at a Global Legislators Organization for a Balanced Environment summit hosted by the Senate, Kerry, D-Mass., said the planned coal-fired power plants would be contributing too much of the greenhouse gas emissions thought to cause global warming if the plants were allowed to be built without capturing carbon dioxide.


Kerry's office declined to elaborate on the details of the bill, saying the Senator was still drafting the legislation.


TXU Corp. (TXU) plans to build 11 of the 16 power plants planned for Texas.


Environmental groups have criticized TXU's planned coal plants, saying the plants will emit millions of tons of carbon dioxide each year.


Some investors have also expressed concern over the growing possibility that new federal rules limiting carbon dioxide emissions will burden TXU's plants with new and potentially exorbitant costs.


The proposed plants will use conventional coal-burning processes that can't be adapted to reduce carbon dioxide gases.


The company said, however, that it has set a goal of reducing the carbon dioxide output of these plants by 2020 to levels equal to an efficient natural gas-fired power plant. That target will require the development of new technologies that aren't now on the market to reduce the output of a conventional coal-burning plant.


-Contact: 201-938-5400
This is the
effort of the USA? Texas is going to glut the troposphere with carbon dioxide while this is occurring in Canada? Oh, really? Am I proud of my country yet?


Feb 15, 2007 02:09 PM Canadian Press
Ontario's greenhouse gas emissions are below 1990 levels and almost a third lower since the Liberals took office in 2003, Energy Minister Dwight Duncan said today but the Opposition disputed those figures and claimed the government has done little to reduce emissions.


Duncan said the province has engineered a 32 per cent drop in power generation from coal-fired plants over the past three years and is the only North American jurisdiction committed to closing such plants.


While the Conservatives claimed the decrease in emissions is simply a result of more nuclear power coming online and not due to any government strategy, Duncan said the Liberals are getting the job done.


"The coal numbers are going down, period, even though demand is going up," Duncan said in an interview.


"Wind, biomass, solar – and yes, nuclear – all of them are going up ... because we're getting out of coal. When we came to office, coal accounted for 25 per cent of our energy mix. Today, it's 16 per cent. That's a reduction of a third, and we're going to keep going in that direction."


But Conservative Leader John Tory said it was disingenuous for the Liberals to take credit for lowering emissions when they simply benefited from more available nuclear energy and didn't work to make the coal plants cleaner.


"It takes a lot of gall for the McGuinty government to take credit for reduced emissions when they've done absolutely nothing proactive on their own to bring about a reduction on emissions," Tory said in an interview.


"It's good news of a sort, but when I think of how much could have been done in terms of cleaning up some of the emissions from those (coal) plants, and actually making some real progress as opposed to posturing behind a promise they've broken so many times you can't keep track, I think it's scandalous."


Premier Dalton McGuinty originally promised to close the coal plants entirely by 2007, but later changed the date to 2009 and then again to 2014, Tory noted.


Duncan admitted the reduced power generation from coal plants won't speed up the government's plan to close the facilities, but insisted progress is being made.


"We think the target dates as laid out by the (Ontario Power Authority) are realistic ones: 2011 for closure, probably to 2014 to keep some of them open as insurance," Duncan said.
"But the point here is that even though we aren't able to close them right away, we're making steady and measurable and dramatic progress in terms of emission reduction."


The government says emissions of sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxide last year were at their lowest levels since 1983, when Ontario began collecting data.


Since 2003, the government says, carbon dioxide emissions are down 29 per cent, sulphur dioxide has been reduced 44 per cent, and nitrogen oxide emissions have declined 46 per cent.
In December, Environment Canada released figures indicating coal-fired power stations were among Canada's biggest polluters in 2005.


The agency said Canada's single largest polluter was the Nanticoke power station owned by Ontario Power Generation, where emissions rose 20 per cent in 2005 over 2004 levels to 17.6 million tonnes.


Nanticoke is one of the largest coal-fired electricity producers in North America.


OPG spokesman John Earl has said Nanticoke's emissions appeared more substantial because it is a massive 4,000-megawatt plant made up of eight regular-sized power-generating units joined together.


Duncan said he intends to cut back on the need for nuclear power and wants to harness more wind energy.


"Nuclear as a percentage of our overall supply is going to go down under our plan from 50 to 41 per cent," Duncan said.

"We're going to maximize wind power, we're going to work with our communities, with First Nations, to ensure everybody shares in the benefit and everybody understands the benefits."
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CCX - The Chicago Climate Exchange


Basically what the Bush White House has been 'up to' is dumping the responsibility for Carbon Dioxide Emissions on China in projects allowed under Kyoto Protocol called Clean Development Mechanisms (click on).


Literally, Bush is dumping the responsiblity of reducing carbon dioxide on China. However, this is not what it seems.

The interest by the USA is not about containing carbon dioxide, it's about profits.


By KEITH BRADSHER
Published: December 21, 2006

Foreign businesses have embraced an obscure United Nations-backed program as a favored approach to limiting global warming. But the early efforts have revealed some hidden problems.
Under the program, businesses in wealthier nations of Europe and in Japan help pay to reduce pollution in poorer ones as a way of staying within government limits for emitting climate-changing gases like carbon dioxide, as part of the Kyoto Protocol.


Among their targets is a large rusting chemical factory here in southeastern China. Its emissions of just one waste gas contribute as much to global warming each year as the emissions from a million American cars, each driven 12,000 miles.


Cleaning up this factory will require an incinerator that costs $5 million -- far less than the cost of cleaning up so many cars, or other sources of pollution in Europe and Japan.


Yet the foreign companies will pay roughly $500 million for the incinerator -- 100 times what it cost. The high price is set in a European-based market in carbon dioxide emissions. Because the waste gas has a far more powerful effect on global warming than carbon dioxide emissions, the foreign businesses must pay a premium far beyond the cost of the actual cleanup.


The huge profits from that will be divided by the chemical factory's owners, a Chinese government energy fund, and the consultants and bankers who put together the deal from a mansion in the wealthy Mayfair district of London.


Arrangements like this still make sense to the foreign companies financing them because they are a lot less expensive, despite the large profit for others, than cleaning up their own operations.


Such efforts are being watched in the United States as an alternative more politically attractive than imposing taxes on fossil fuels like coal and oil that emit global-warming gases when burned.
But critics of the fast-growing program, through which European and Japanese companies are paying roughly $3 billion for credits this year, complain that it mostly enriches a few bankers, consultants and factory owners.


With so much money flowing to a few particularly lucrative cleanup deals, the danger is that they will distract attention from the broader effort to curb global warming gases, and that the lure of quick profit will encourage short-term fixes at the expense of fundamental, long-run solutions, including developing renewable energy sources like solar power.


As word of deals like this has spread, everyone involved in the nascent business is searching for other such potential jackpots in developing countries.


As for more modest deals, like small wind farms, ''if you don't have a humongous margin, it's not worth it,'' said Pedro Moura Costa, chief operating officer of EcoSecurities, an emissions-trading company in Oxford, England.


The financing of the chemical factory's incinerator here and other deals like it are now drawing unfavorable attention. Canada's environment minister, Rona Ambrose, announced in October that her government would withdraw from the trading program.


''There is a lot of evidence now about the lack of accountability around these kinds of projects,'' she said.


Another concern is that the program can have unintended results. The waste gas to be incinerated here is emitted during the production of a refrigerant that will soon be banned in the United States and other industrial nations because it depletes the ozone layer that protects the earth from ultraviolet rays.


Handsome payments to clean up the waste gas have helped chemical companies to expand existing factories that make the old refrigerant and even build new factories, said Michael Wara, a carbon-trading lawyer at Holland & Knight in San Francisco.


Moreover, air-conditioners using this Freon-like refrigerant are much less efficient users of electricity than newer models. The expansion of large middle classes in India and China has led to soaring sales of cheap, inefficient air-conditioners, along with the building of coal-fired plants to power them, further contributing to global warming and the depletion of the ozone layer.


The program is at the forefront of efforts to address the most intractable problem in climate change: how to limit soaring emissions from the largest developing countries. Sometime in 2009, China's total emissions of carbon dioxide, the most important global warming gas, are expected to surpass those from the United States, according to the International Energy Agency.


While the challenge of addressing global warming is daunting, so are the consequences of inaction. Scientists warn that rising concentrations of carbon dioxide and other global warming gases could result in more severe storms, wide crop failures, the spread of tropical diseases and rising sea levels endangering some coastal cities.


Programs like the one the United Nations supports are increasingly common in Europe. In general, they allow companies to buy rights on the market to exceed their limits on global warming gases from other companies prepared to reduce emissions elsewhere at a lower cost. Many economists consider emissions-trading systems, which are driving participants to the cheapest cleanups with the biggest impact, as the most efficient way to address pollution.


But a study commissioned by the world organization has found that the profits are enormous in destroying trifluoromethane, or HFC-23, a very potent greenhouse gas that is produced at the factory here and several dozen other plants in developing countries. The study calculated that industrial nations could pay $800 million a year to buy credits, even though the cost of building and operating incinerators will be only $31 million a year.

The situation has set in motion a diplomatic struggle pitting China, the biggest beneficiary from payments, against advanced industrial nations, particularly in Europe. At a global climate conference in Nairobi, Kenya, in November, European delegates suggested that in the case of Freon factories now under construction in developing countries, any payments for the incineration of the waste gas should go only into an international fund to help factories retool for the production of more modern refrigerants that do not deplete the ozone layer.

But the Chinese government blocked the initiative, insisting that money for Chinese factories go into the government's own clean energy fund. Negotiators ended up setting up a group to study the issue.

Even as hundreds of millions of dollars from the program are devoted to the refrigerant industry, countries in sub-Saharan Africa, which were originally envisioned as big beneficiaries of emissions trading, are receiving almost nothing. Just four nations -- China, India, Brazil and South Korea -- are collecting four-fifths of the payments under the program, with China alone collecting almost half.

Two-thirds of the payments are going to projects to eliminate HFC-23.

Those payments also illustrate conflicting goals under Kyoto and the Montreal Protocol, a 1987 agreement that requires the phasing out of ozone-depleting substances. The problem is that the trading program backed by the United Nations, known as the Clean Development Mechanism, is helping support an industry that another international organization is trying to phase out.
And while ozone depletion is a separate problem from global warming, some gases, like HFC-23, make both worse. The separate secretariats under the protocols have little legal authority to resolve this quandary.

''It's tricky in that we don't have a mechanism other than the Security Council, and who cares there about HFC's?'' said Janos Pasztor, the acting coordinator of the organization that oversees the program.

In the end, officials say, there should be more projects aimed at providing renewable energy and sustainable economic development for the world's poorest people.

''If people only do HFC-23 projects, then they miss the whole idea,'' Mr. Pasztor said.
Richard Rosenzweig, chief operating officer of Natsource, a company in Washington arranging emissions deals between poor and rich countries, said it was not fair to look only at incineration costs and compare them with the size of payments from industrial nations. The administrative costs of the program are high, he said, and at least disposal of the waste gas is taking place.
If the world tried to reduce emissions through an outright ban or regulation alone, as many environmentalists recommend, it might not happen at all, he said. The United Nations-favored program may have flaws, he added, but ''it's a pilot phase -- this is a 100-year problem.''

Environmental groups say that governments in developing countries should either require factories to incinerate the waste gas as a cost of doing business, or receive aid from wealthier countries to cover the relatively modest cost of incinerators.

''Couldn't we pay for the cost, or even twice the cost, of abatement and spend the rest of the money in better ways?'' Mr. Wara asked.

DuPont produces HFC-23 as part of its output of Teflon, but has routinely burned the colorless, odorless waste gas without compensation for many years, even though it is not required by law to do so, a DuPont spokeswoman said.

The secretariat of the Clean Development Mechanism estimates that a ton of HFC-23 in the atmosphere has the same effect as 11,700 tons of carbon dioxide. James Cameron, the vice chairman of Climate Change Capital, which organized the chemical factory deal here, said there were considerable costs and risks in setting up plans that required elaborate certification by consultants, acceptance by developing-country governments and approval by a United Nations secretariat.

For small projects involving less than $250,000 worth of credits, fees for deal makers, consultants and lawyers can far exceed the cost of installing equipment to clean up emissions.
Even the Chinese government, the main seller of carbon credits and a defender of the program, is expressing some misgivings.

''We do not encourage more HFC projects,'' a statement by Lu Xuedu, deputy director of the Office of Global Environment Affairs at the Ministry of Science and Technology, said. ''We would prefer to have more energy efficiency and renewable-energy projects that could help alleviate poverty in the countryside.''

But for now, the projects involving industrial gases like HFC-23 are where most of the action is.
''You can do those quickly,'' Mr. Rosenzweig of Natsource said, ''and it's worth the investment.''

The Energy Challenge

Articles in this series are examining the ways in which the world is, and is not, moving toward a more energy-efficient, environmentally benign future. Previous articles are at nytimes.com/energychallenge.
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Carbon trading is playing a large role in decreasing the effects of Kyoto Protocol

This is not a long and difficult task tonight. It's pretty straight forward to understand the 'sales pitch' we have all been handed to reduce the threat of Climate Change due to Human Induced Global Warming.

The Kyoto Protocol is currently the treaty to address Climate Change caused by Human Induced Global Warming. During the proceedings of Kyoto the USA wanted more flexibility in negotiating the emissions it was responsible for and so entered into 'amendments' to the protocol. Those amendments have proven to negate mostly the demands of countries to reduce the yield of carbon dioxide in the troposphere.

The Carbon Offset programs of Kyoto did not entice the biggest CO2 polluter, namely the USA to be a signatory of the Climate Change agreement. The option is being abused by government and business in the USA. If a country is not a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol, it should be eliminated in trading in Carbon Credits AT ALL.

There is a great deal of folly in Carbon Trading and the average person 'get's it.'


I'm afraid this carbon offsetting doesn't wash with me. Yes, I see how you can balance carbon emissions against carbon uptake by trees, but it takes tens of years for trees to grow and offset all this carbon. And these trees, like humans and other animals are susceptible to the negative effects of acid rain and other pollution caused by burning fossil fuel. The trees don't offset that.
It's a neat idea to pay for the planting of trees and to raise cash to invest in renewable energy, but does it give people the incentive to cut down on their energy usage? I don't think so. It seems as much a white-wash as hybrid SUVs.

And what trees are these companies planting - and more importantly, where?

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/03/survey_of_carbo.php


The candidates that advocate carbon credits without first LIMITING the amount of carbon the USA can produce by signing Kyoto is playing any electorate for fools. If the USA is to be allowed to trade in carbon credits is needs to FIRST sign Kyoto and then set LIMITATIONS the amount of carbon any industry in the USA can produce.
It's Saturday Night
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The Wall Street Shuffle by 10cc

Do the Wall Street shuffle
Hear the money rustle
Watch the greenbacks tumble
Feel the Sterling crumble

You need a yen to make a mark
If you wanna make money
You need the luck to make a buck
If you wanna be Getty, Rothschild
You've gotta be cool on Wall Street

You've gotta be cool on Wall Street
When your index is low
Dow Jones ain't got time for the bums
They wind up on skid row with holes in their pockets
They plead with you, buddy can you spare the dime
But you ain't got the time
Doin' the....
Doin' the....

Oh, Howard Hughes
Did your money make you better?
Are you waiting for the hour
When you can screw me?
`Cos you're big enough

To do the Wall Street Shuffle
Let your money hustle
Bet you'd sell your mother
You can buy another
Doin' the....
Doin' the....

You buy and sell
You wheel and deal
But you're living on instinct
You get a tip
You follow it
And you make a big killing
On Wall Street

The weather forecast for Havre, Montana (click on)

Indicates wide swings in temperature between day and night. Sorta makes sense the chances of severe weather is possible.
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I hope I am wrong, but, from where I sit there is a chance of tornadoes in Montana

Then they wonder why windshields crack on planes?
While officials are still puzzling over why the windshields cracked on about a dozen airplanes at DIA on Friday, one theory has been offered.

At least three airlines reported cracked windshields during high winds at Denver International Airport, some in the air, some on the ground.

Airport officials say there was no evidence of flying debris that could have caused the cracks.
But Saturday morning, Frontier Airlines spokesman Joe Hodas says there is a theory that there may have been a power surge while airplanes were connected to auxiliary power lines at the gates.

Hodas says airplane windshields are heated electrically.

A surge could have done something to weaken them.

Hodas says the theory is considered unlikely, but it's the best anyone can figure at this time.
Airport spokesman Steve Snyder says engineers checked the electrical connections and found no problems, and besides, he says, one airline that reported cracks never hooked up to the power grid.
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Morning Papers - It's Origins

The Rooster

Michael Moore Today

http://www.michaelmoore.com/

House rebukes the president on Iraq
WASHINGTON (
CNN) -- Seventeen Republicans joined Democrats on Friday in passing a two-sentence resolution denouncing President Bush's plan to boost troop levels in Iraq.
The resolution passed easily, 246-182.
Democratic leaders on Saturday will attempt to bring the same measure to the floor in the Senate.
Democrats hailed the victory, while outside the chamber, Republican congressional leadership blasted the resolution, calling it the first step toward de-funding the war.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, said the passage of the non-binding resolution "should send a very clear and firm message to the president of the United States: that the American people spoke in November, that they wanted a new direction in Iraq. This resolution today sets the stage for that new direction," she said.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9216



FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 99
(Republicans in roman; Democrats in italic; Independents underlined)
H CON RES 63 YEA-AND-NAY 16-Feb-2007 3:22 PM
QUESTION: On Agreeing to the Resolution
BILL TITLE: Disapproving of the decision of the President announced on January 10, 2007, to deploy more than 20,000 additional United States combat troops to Iraq

http://clerk.house.gov/cgi-bin/vote.asp?year=2007&rollnumber=99



Senate preparing for weekend showdown on Iraq
WASHINGTON (
CNN) -- Setting up a new showdown over Iraq, Senate Democratic leaders are planning a key test vote Saturday on a resolution opposing President Bush's plan to send additional troops into combat.
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, said a Saturday session will take up a nonbinding measure now before the House of Representatives.
The Saturday vote will be a procedural vote on whether the Senate should move on to a final vote on a resolution that expresses opposition to Bush's plan to send an additional 21,500 combat troops to Iraq.
Senate Republicans succeeded last week in blocking a vote on a similar resolution. Reid urged Senate Republicans to drop their procedural moves.
"We demand an up-or-down vote on the resolution that the House is debating as we speak," Reid said. "The resolution says we support the troops and oppose the escalation of the presence in Iraq. We're determined to give our troops and the American people the debate they deserve."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9217



070215 - Iraq War Resolution Debate - Day 3 - Tim Ryan 1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhi5XSdqjAQ



UCSB Students Strike in Protest of Iraq War
Nearly 1,000 students shut down Highway 217 in two-hour standoff with police
By Matt Cota /
KSBY-6
UCSB students go on strike to protest the war in Iraq. Nearly a thousand refused to work, shop or go to class. And late this afternoon, the protesters shut down a major South Coast highway.
It started as a student strike -- the simple act of not going to class to protest the war in Iraq. But after an hour of speeches at an Isla Vista rally, the crowd grew restless.
The students -- nearly a thousand strong -- marched through campus and began walking on Highway 217, which is the main thoroughfare to the UCSB campus and to the Santa Barbara Airport. It was immediately shut down by the Highway Patrol. More than two dozen law enforcement officers, some dressed in riot gear, met the students on the highway.
Two arrests were made. Both were protesters who tried to make it through the police barrier to the other side.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9200



Students Rally for D.C. House Vote
By Connie Parham /
The Hoya
WASHINGTON, DC -- Georgetown students and faculty joined hundreds of Washington, D.C. residents and public officials on Capitol Hill yesterday to demonstrate their support for full District voting rights in Congress.
Accompanied by Scott Fleming, assistant to the university president for federal relations, five members of the GU College Democrats listened to speeches from noted public officials including Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.), and D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty.
The event, Congress Day 2007, was organized by the activist group DC Vote to build support for a bill introduced by Norton at the beginning of the year that would give the District a voting member of the House. The District currently sends one non-voting member to the House.
Norton opened the ceremony by thanking the 500 people present for “coming to get the vote that has been due … for two centuries.”

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9213



Sarah Lawrence students protest Iraq War
By Ernie Garcia /
Journal News
YONKERS, NY - The fourth anniversary of worldwide protests against the U.S. invasion of Iraq prompted debate about the war at Sarah Lawrence College yesterday.
Students gathered for an evening assembly on the war and others watched an Iraq documentary as part of an effort to raise awareness of the anti-war movement. Teachers also included Iraq in their lessons this week, all part of an effort to mark protests in New York and around the world Feb. 15, 2003, prior to the invasion.
"What we're really trying to do is upgrade the level of activism," said student organizer Sarah Li Norum-Gross, 20, who is in favor of a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.
The events at Sarah Lawrence were part of a nationwide campaign to commemorate resistance to the Iraq invasion organized by the political action group The World Can't Wait! Drive Out the Bush Regime!

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9211



Students Across Bay Area Protest Over Iraq War

By Mike Sugerman /
CBS 5
BERKELEY Anti-war demonstrations were held Thursday at college campuses across the country, including here in the Bay Area. The students were marking the fourth anniversary of the first campus demonstrations against "Operation Iraqi Freedom."
The protests at UC-Berkeley and San Francisco and Sonoma state universities drew hundreds of students.
"The war for me is just a very clear sign of oppression," said Hassan Owanati, a student at Berkeley.
Polls show two-thirds of Americans are against the war in Iraq. But with only about 200 people turning out at Cal's protest, organizers were disappointed.
"This frustrates a lot of us," said student and protestor Snehal Shingavi. "Both who are looking at the rally and hoping more people would have come out, but also trying to figure out how we're going to organize."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9203



Students protest fighting but honor fallen: 'They’re our age'
By Sharon Stello /
Davis Enterprise
DAVIS, CA -- Every day this week, Max Mikalonis has spent his lunch hour standing at a podium on campus and reading aloud the names of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq.
The UC Davis sophomore started Monday and will read the last of the 3,132 names Tuesday. He read some of those names during an anti-war protest Thursday.
“You’ve heard the number. These are the people. They’re our age,” Mikalonis said.
July 3, 2005: Jeremy A. Brown, 26; Ryan J. Montgomery, 22.
July 5, 2005: Scottie L. Bright, 36; Lyle J. Cambridge, 23; Christopher W. Dickison, 26; Anthony M. Mazzarella, 22.
The protest — a peace rally and memorial for fallen soldiers — was one of many organized Thursday by college students from San Francisco to New York.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9214



Students ‘die-in’ to end the war
Participants in event held by UCLA’s pending SDS branch lay dead to protest U.S. role in Iraq
By Mai Hong /
Daily Bruin
LOS ANGELES, CA -- The UCLA branch of Students for a Democratic Society held a demonstration in front of Kerckhoff Hall on Thursday afternoon to protest the war in Iraq.
More than two dozen participants were asked to spontaneously drop dead around noon and lay down with signs that said “U.S. Out Of Iraq” taped to their chests.
The event was also planned to coincide with other student anti-war protests being held at college campuses throughout the nation, including UC Berkeley and Columbia University. Not all protests were die-ins, though, said Eric Gardner, a member of the UCLA branch of SDS.
Babken DerGrigorian, cofounder of UCLA’s pending chapter of SDS, said the group is against the war because they believe it is morally wrong.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9212



Six arrested in anti-war protest
News & Observer
CHAPEL HILL, NC - Chapel Hill police arrested six anti-war protesters this afternoon at the local office of U.S. Rep. David Price.
Six of the protesters, who want Price to vote to cut off funding for the war in Iraq, staged a sit-in inside the office at 88 Vilcom Circle, refusing to leave until they spoke to the congressman by phone.
After refusing requests to leave, they were carried out of the office by Chapel Hill police officers. Each was charged with one count of trespassing.
Five of those arrested were UNC-Chapel Hill students. They were: Sara Schiffman Joseph, 22, of 230 Green St.; Alisan Fathalizadeh, 21, of123 Schultz St.; Laura Michelle Bickford, 18, of 555 Paul Harding Drive, Apt. 126; Tamara Luree Tal, 26, of 105 Fidelity St, Apt. A-50 in Carrboro and Benjamin Nathaniel Carroll, 18, of 3212 Brennan Drive in Raleigh.
An N.C. State student, Dante Strobino, 25, of 1101 Hillsborough St., Apt. G-3 in Raleigh, was also among those arrested.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9215



Must have demonstration

http://www.heraldsun.com/orange/10-820613.cfm



Vandy Students Protest War
News Channel 5
NASHVILLE, TN -- Dozens of students at Vanderbilt University gathered Thursday for a peaceful protest against the war.
Vanderbilt is one of more than a dozen universities across the country to hold rallies on campus today.
Thursday was the four years anniversary of a world-wide protest of the president's war plans that drew millions.
A small group of students at Vanderbilt showed their support for the war and our soldiers.
During a speech Thursday morning, President Bush talked about sending more soldiers overseas.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9204


More demonstration

http://www.wbbm780.com/play_window.php?audioType=Episode&audioId=364974



IT MIGHT HELP IF GEORGIE WROTE BACK TO MIKE !

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007
Dear Mr. President: Send Even MORE Troops (and you go, too!) ...from Michael Moore
Dear Mr. President,
Thanks for your address to the nation. It's good to know you still want to talk to us after how we behaved in November.
Listen, can I be frank? Sending in 20,000 more troops just ain't gonna do the job. That will only bring the troop level back up to what it was last year. And we were losing the war last year! We've already had over a million troops serve some time in Iraq since 2003. Another few thousand is simply not enough to find those weapons of mass destruction! Er, I mean... bringing those responsible for 9/11 to justice! Um, scratch that. Try this -- BRING DEMOCRACY TO THE MIDDLE EAST! YES!!!
You've got to show some courage, dude! You've got to win this one! C'mon, you got Saddam! You hung 'im high! I loved watching the video of that -- just like the old wild west! The bad guy wore black! The hangmen were as crazy as the hangee! Lynch mobs rule!!!
Look, I have to admit I feel very sorry for the predicament you're in. As Ricky Bobby said, "If you're not first, you're last." And you being humiliated in front of the whole world does NONE of us Americans any good.
Sir, listen to me. You have to send in MILLIONS of troops to Iraq, not thousands! The only way to lick this thing now is to flood Iraq with millions of us! I know that you're out of combat-ready soldiers -- so you have to look elsewhere! The only way you are going to beat a nation of 27 million -- Iraq -- is to send in at least 28 million! Here's how it would work:
The first 27 million Americans go in and kill one Iraqi each. That will quickly take care of any insurgency. The other one million of us will stay and rebuild the country. Simple.
Now, I know you're saying, where will I find 28 million Americans to go to Iraq? Here are some suggestions:
1. More than 62,000,000 Americans voted for you in the last election (the one that took place a year and half into a war we already knew we were losing). I am confident that at least a third of them would want to put their body where their vote was and sign up to volunteer. I know many of these people and, while we may disagree politically, I know that they don't believe someone else should have to go and fight their fight for them -- while they hide here in America.
2. Start a "Kill an Iraqi" Meet-Up group in cities across the country. I know this idea is so early-21st century, but I once went to a Lou Dobbs Meet-Up and, I swear, some of the best ideas happen after the third mojito. I'm sure you'll get another five million or so enlistees from this effort.
3. Send over all members of the mainstream media. After all, they were your collaborators in bringing us this war -- and many of them are already trained from having been "embedded!" If that doesn't bring the total to 28 million, then draft all viewers of the FOX News channel.
Mr. Bush, do not give up! Now is not the time to pull your punch! Don't be a weenie by sending in a few over-tired troops. Get your people behind you and YOU lead them in like a true commander in chief! Leave no conservative behind! Full speed ahead!
We promise to write. Go get 'em W!
Yours,
Michael Moore
mmflint@aol.com
www.michaelmoore.com

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php?id=204



Auditors: Billions of U.S. tax dollars wasted in Iraq
WASHINGTON (
AP) -- About $10 billion has been squandered by the U.S. government on Iraq reconstruction aid because of contractor overcharges and unsupported expenses, and federal investigators warned Thursday that significantly more taxpayer money is at risk.
The three top auditors overseeing work in Iraq told a House committee their review of $57 billion in Iraq contracts found that Defense and State department officials condoned or allowed repeated work delays, bloated expenses and payments for shoddy work or work never done.
More than one in six dollars charged by U.S. contractors were questionable or unsupported, nearly triple the amount of waste the Government Accountability Office estimated last fall.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9218



Ex-aide says Rice misled U.S. Congress on Iran
WASHINGTON (
Reuters) - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice misled the U.S. Congress when she said last week that she had not seen a 2003 Iranian proposal for talks with the United States, a former senior government official said on Wednesday.
Flynt Leverett, who worked on the National Security Council when it was headed by Rice, likened the proposal to the 1972 U.S. opening to China. He said he was confident it was seen by Rice and then-Secretary of State Colin Powell but "the administration rejected the overture."
Speaking at a conference on Capitol Hill, Leverett said "this was a serious proposal, a serious effort" by Iran to lay out a comprehensive agenda for U.S.-Iranian rapprochement.
"The Bush administration up to and including Secretary Rice is misleading Congress and the American public about the Iran proposal," he said.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9206



'Delusional' Iraq plans envisaged only 5,000 troops by now, group says
WASHINGTON (
AP) -- Some of the planning by Gen. Tommy Franks and other top military officials before the 2003 invasion of Iraq envisioned that as few as 5,000 U.S. troops would remain in Iraq by December 2006, according to documents obtained by a private research organization.
Slides obtained by the National Security Archive under the Freedom of Information Act contain a PowerPoint presentation of what planners projected to be a stable, pro-American and democratic Iraq after the ouster of Saddam Hussein.
"Completely unrealistic assumptions about a post-Saddam Iraq permeate these war plans," said National Security Archive Executive Director Thomas Blanton in a statement posted on the organization's Web site along with copies of some charts used in the PowerPoint presentation.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9207



Future of Lafayette crosses unclear -- even to organizers
By Katherine Tam /
Contra Costa Times
The crosses that once formed a small cluster on a Lafayette hillside have multiplied into a mini-forest. Rows upon rows blanket the hill from top to bottom, and more are on the way.
A red neon sign stating the number of U.S. forces killed in Iraq went up, then came down. Names of soldiers began appearing on crosses, but organizers are shelving the idea of putting names on all of them.
The three-month-old display continues to grow and evolve, but even organizers aren't sure how it will change -- or even what it will ultimately become.
"It is hard to say," said Jeff Heaton, chief organizer, adding, "The memorial will continue to evolve and change in ways we do not presently imagine."
The site has drawn unprecedented attention to this suburb. It has become a gathering spot for war opponents, with last month's candlelight vigil attracting at least 300 people. Heaton said he wouldn't be surprised if the site becomes a backdrop for political hopefuls on the campaign trail.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9202



'Money Trumps Peace...Sometimes' ...by Cindy Sheehan
It is always painful to watch George stumble his way through press conferences. He can't get through a sentence without at least two-three "uhs," his eye lids flutter up and down in what my daughter, Carly, calls the "liar's blink" and just because it is painful that a human like that is ostensibly the leader of the free world. There is always a plethora of things that he says, does, or screws up on to write about but this time what caught my attention happened during the Q & A. George was asked if he thought the economic sanctions on Iran would work because so many European nations trade with that country.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=828

This is the IQ of the White House Press Secretary? No, this is manipulation. Let Tony Snow be reassured that A LOT went "W"rong in Iraq. To begin let's begin with the beginning. Weapons of Mass Destruction, Mr. Snow?????

Tony Snow: 'I'm Not Sure Anything Went Wrong' In Iraq
By E&P Staff /
Editor & Publisher
NEW YORK Surely, at this stage, the White House would be willing to admit that conditions in Iraq following the 2003 invasion haven't gone exactly according to plan? White House Press Secretary Tony Snow was asked about this today at the daily briefing, following the release of military documents from 2002 that revealed that the U.S. expected that by now a token American force of 5,000 would be able to keep things under control in Iraq -- and the occupation would require only a two or three month "stabilization" period.
"What went wrong?" the reporter reasonably asked.
Snow replied: "I'm not sure anything went wrong."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=9210



'The American People Realize This War Has Been a Failure' ... Statement by Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN)
Debate on Iraq War Resolution to Stop the Escalation
U.S. House of Representatives
Rep. Steve Cohen: Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker, you like I am a freshman in this body and today we will begin the debate on one of the most important topics that this Congress has debated and that is America's involvement in the Middle East and Iraq and eventually in Afghanistan in dealing with the whole terrorist situation.
I have been in this House, Mr. Speaker, and listened to the Republicans and listened to the Democrats and the Democrats, of which I am a member, have talked about protecting the troops and opposing the President's surge, which is really an escalation, and the Republicans have come in here today and said that we need to in essence stay the course, we need to put in more troops and we're doing wrong by opposing the President's escalation or surge.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=827


Treehugger.com

Wanted: Inspired, Pragmatic videos to help get us out of this mess. All
entries must be received by February 28, 2007.

http://www.truths.treehugger.com/


UFPJ Calls for Local Actions on 4th Anniversary of the War in Iraq
March 19th will mark the 4th anniversary of the U.S. military assault on Iraq and the beginning of what has turned into one of this nation's longest military engagements. Four years of war and occupation; four years of death and destruction; four years of a war that never should have happened.
United for Peace and Justice is calling for a massive outpouring of opposition to the war in locally based, decentralized actions throughout the U.S. from Saturday, March 17th, through Monday, March 19th.

http://www.unitedforpeace.org/



Be It Resolved: You Can Impeach the President
Official State Impeachment Text
Impeachment Text for Cities & Towns
Impeachment Text for County Democratic Committees
Impeachment Text for State Assemblies and/or Legislatures
Jefferson's Manual, Section LIII, 603
You Can Impeach the President

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=622



The Occupation Project

Voices for Creative Nonviolence is organizing the Occupation Project, a campaign of sustained nonviolent civil disobedience aimed at ending the U.S. war in and occupation of Iraq. The campaign will begin the first week of February 2007 with occupations at the offices of Representatives and Senators who refuse to pledge to vote against additional war funding.

http://www.vcnv.org/project/the-occupation-project



A walk to end the wars
By Chris Dabovich /
San Pedro Valley News-Sun
Fed up with war in Iraq and in Afghanistan, a former United Methodist pastor and Vietnam-era veteran is doing something about it. He is walking the walk, cross-country, trying to rally public support to help end the conflicts.
Armed with a petition and a burning desire to finish what he's started, Bill McDannell began "The walk to end the wars," on Nov. 4 in Lakeside, Calif., near San Diego, en route to Washington, D.C. He stayed in Willcox Thursday and Friday nights as he took Friday off to rest and update his web site.
"It's time to end the wars," said McDannell, 57. "I felt I needed to do something and I'm just doing what I figure I have to do." McDannell, father of five and grandfather of four, said he served in the military from 1968 to 1972. He got the idea for the walk while working as a chauffer for a limousine company in San Diego.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=8924


January 30: I've come to the conclusion that El Paso weather forecasts are directly linked to the local traffic light system - they change with approximately the same frequency. As of a couple of days ago the weather was forecast to be sunny and in the high fifties for at least the next week and a half. But some time after that the forecast was changed to cold and nasty for today. So Anne and I stuck our heads out of the door this morning, determined that the cold and nasty was probably going to be accurate, and I opted for a day off. That was fine, since I recently noticed that my one and only white shirt was developing a few little holes and I wanted to stop by a local thrift shop to get a replacement. Sure enough, no sooner had we got into the car than the rain started coming down and it grew colder and more miserable through the day. Now they're saying it might be that way until at least Friday, after which it's supposed to get sunny and into the mid sixties. Hah. Oh well, I did get a nice new shirt that only has as many holes as it's supposed to have.

http://www.wtetw.com/page6.html
continued ...
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America's Best Future lies in the hands of people like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi



A Divided House Denounces Plan for More Troops (click on title)

Although the news media would like to diminish the importance of the vote regarding Iraq, a vote of 246 - 182 is NOT a sharply divided vote.

I'll comment on this further but I'll let the Republicans make complete fools out of themselves in the Senate as well before I do.

To begin with the 'new' security plan is on the heels of more than three days of debate regarding Iraq in the House of Representatives.

There are couple of reservations regarding the 'quiet' before the potential storm in Baghdad.

To begin, it ain't the whole country. The most volatile area in Iraq and has been the entire time is An Albar. This is the news from there today.:

I don’t agree with the civilian death numbers of this accounting. There is estimated by more than one reliable source to be AT LEAST nearly a quarter of a million Iraqi citizens, including the elderly, men, women and children, dead since the invasion and most are above what would be 'normal' mortality for Iraq otherwise.

FACTBOX-Military and civilian deaths in Iraq
Feb 17 (Reuters) - Insurgents killed a U.S. marine in Iraq's western Anbar province on Friday, the U.S. military said on Saturday.
Following are the latest figures for military deaths in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003:
U.S.-LED COALITION FORCES:

United States 3,133

Britain 132

Other nations 124

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L1726446.htm


The deaths of USA Military has occurred all this week. And where there is USA deaths there are civilian deaths which occur in ratio of at least 75 Iraqi civilian deaths to one American death.

U.S. deaths in Iraq

As of Thursday, at least 3,133 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The latest identifications reported by the military:

Army Pfc. Nickolas Tanton, 24, San Antonio; died Tuesday in Kirkuk from noncombat-related injuries; assigned to the 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

Marine Lance Cpl. Daniel Morris, 19, Crimora, Va.; died Wednesday in Anbar province; assigned to 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.

Army Sgt. First Class Allen Mosteiro, 42, Fort Worth, Texas; died Wednesday in Baghdad of wounds suffered from small-arms fire during combat operations Tuesday in Taji; assigned to the 1st Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas.

http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1171629132155380.xml&coll=2

The fact of the matter might be that the quiet that is being coined as 'The Security Plan of Baghdad' just might be in response to the fact the American people through their vote in putting Democrats in office this year in majority in the House has proven a new FAITH in the Iraqi people.
Up to now the people of Iraq have known a loud mouth, talking Texan that has done nothing but threatened to kill all those that opposed him. That was never taken well. By the pure admission by Bush during the 2006 elections, it was stated by minimally Tony Snow that the people of Iraq watch the elections in the USA to decide on violence. (I personally don't believe that. I believe there is a rebellion against the USA presence because Bush has not only crippled the country of Iraq, but has tied up the oil reserves that are the assets of Iraq to ownership of the USA and have oppressed the freely elected Unity Government to insure the oil in Iraq reaches the USA for a long time, hence imposing American will rather than Iraqi will.) But, if Bush is willing to say that the Iraqi people watch the elections as a form as strategy against the government then they must be watching what the current majority in the House is doing to remove the 'threat' of a greater war from that country.

What has occurred in the House this week might very well be a clear demonstration of the willingness of Americans to leave Iraq to Iraqis, including the currently developing provinces within the federalized nation called Iraq.

I'll go as so far to say that if the House and Senate remove all the oppressing 'deals' bartered by Bush with Iraq from any influence the rebellion would stop completely. In other words, leaving Iraq means leaving Iraq and not just partially. Turning over the Iraqi government entirely to the Iraqi people including their national assets WITHOUT designs on them would be the gift of freedom they might be looking for.

Baghdad is an large percentage of the Iraqi people, the current capital of the Unity Government. There is no doubt the people of Baghdad are deciding about how they feel about the presence of the USA when connected to media. It might be the first place we see a more peaceful Iraq in areas of previous violence due to the 'reduction' of influence of American forces is Baghdad.

Now, to put this into other perspective that seems more realistic. Let's say the new 'Security Initiative' is allowed to be in the streets of Baghdad with sudden obedience, realizing the borders of Iraq are closed. I don't know that Iraqi borders could ever be closed, but, for the sake of argument we'll say Mr. Maliki really does have the cooperation of all the surrounding countries and there is not only a decision of Iraq to close it's borders but also cooperation with neighboring nations. The truth might be that 'testing of the waters' is more prudent to the rebels than any other strategy right now.

To put it plainly, the Iraqi rebels, no matter the Sunni or Shi'ite are gathering intelligence about this initiative. Now, mind you this isn't completely new. There have been show of strength before in Baghdad with the same result for a day or so.

It is common, for Islamic fighters to 'lay low' or 'move aside' or as in Fallujah completely leave an area while the American forces 'do their thing.' Then when they have decided about what the next strategy is they move back into the so called conquered area with more force and will power than previously noted. They find solutions through applied intelligence gathering to strategies that work against the West's forces. That might very well be what is occurring in Baghdad while the war still continues in An Albar and other areas of Iraq.

Now, people will also point to the movement of the Cleric al Sadr and his support team out of the area as the reason for the quiet. I don't really buy that. The Cleric has mostly moved away from the 'street fighting' while moving toward a more political position to insure the Shi'ites and their 'interests' in the Unity Government are included and respected. So, to say that the Cleric is no longer giving orders to the street fighters and hence no more trouble is a very big stretch. He has not been doing that for some time and in my opinion he never left his role as spiritual leader to be a military commander. I don't think he would ever do that either. So, the Bush assessment of Cleric al Sadr is completely bizarre. Additionally, there is nothing preventing the rebels from being anything but rebels. So to assume there is someone pulling their strings as puppets is completely bizarre and an attempt to scapegoat a simple understanding of a complex issue.



It is common, for Islamic fighters to 'lay low' or 'move aside' or as in Fallujah completely leave an area while the American forces 'do their thing.' Then when they have decided about what the next strategy is they move back into the so called conquered area with more force and will power than previously noted. They find solutions through applied intelligence gathering to strategies that work against the West's forces. That might very well be what is occurring in Baghdad while the war still continues in An Albar and other areas of Iraq.

Now, people will also point to the movement of the Cleric al Sadr and his support team out of the area as the reason for the quiet. I don't really buy that. The Cleric has mostly moved away from the 'street fighting' while moving toward a more political position to insure the Shi'ites and their 'interests' in the Unity Government are included and respected. So, to say that the Cleric is no longer giving orders to the street fighters and hence no more trouble is a very big stretch. He has not been doing that for some time and in my opinion he never left his role as spiritual leader to be a military commander. I don't think he would ever do that either. So, the assessment of Cleric al Sadr is completely bizarre. Additionally, there is nothing preventing the rebels from being anything but rebels. So to assume there is someone pulling their strings as puppets is completely bizarre and an attempt to scapegoat a simple understanding of a complex issue.


We may finally be on the right track. At least it would seem that way for many reasons including the fact that if Iraqis have to defend themselves, they will.

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