Categories:
>human rights
>women's rights
>journalism
>law
>miscellany
>national politics
>police misconduct
>poverty
>quotes
>story ideas
>unstrung chronicles
>women's rights
>writing resources

By Date
Nov, 2007
Mar, 2007
Apr, 2005
Sep, 2003
Aug, 2003
Jul, 2003
Jun, 2003
May, 2003
Apr, 2003
Mar, 2003
Feb, 2003
Jan, 2003
Dec, 2002
Nov, 2002
Oct, 2002
Sep, 2002
Aug, 2002
Jul, 2002
Jun, 2002
May, 2002
Apr, 2002
Mar, 2002
Feb, 2002
Sep, 2001


    

The two faces of Bush (2002-02-26)
It didn’t make big headlines, but President Bush declared January 20 National Sanctity of Human Life Day. “We should join together in pursuit of a more compassionate society, rejecting the notion that some lives are less worthy of protection than others,” said Bush.

Admirable sentiments, too bad the real purpose of the day was to express Bush’s disregard for a woman’s right to decide what she does with her body. Two sentences later, Bush’s lofty proclamation reveals it’s true purpose, “We should peacefully commit ourselves to seeking a society that values life -- from its very beginnings to its natural end. Unborn children should be welcomed in life and protected in law. “


Natural end? Remember, Bush presided over the executions of more than 150 people during his two terms of governor of Texas. In fact, according to a Time magazine article, he actually mocked Karla Faye Tucker’s final plea for life.

Four days after his Sanctity of Human Life proclamation, the President remarked, “We are a society with enough compassion and wealth and love to care for both mothers and their children, and to seek the promise and potential of every single life. “ He was thanking anti-abortion activists during their annual march on the capital mall.

Despite his flowery sentiments, one wonders how much Bush values human life -- especially the lives of women and children.

Last December, the Women's International War Crimes Tribunal ruled that Japanese Emperor Showa, his wartime prime minister and eight other generals were guilty of crimes against humanity during and before World War II. Women’s Enews reports that historians believe as many as 200,000 women and girls were forced into “comfort stations” where they were systematically raped--some by as many as 60 soldiers a day. Though war criminals were tried in Germany, the U.S. did nothing to investigate these atrocities in Japan. In January, Bush said he would not support the comfort women's campaign for justice. (Though he did announce Sanctity of Human Life Day that same month.)

When employees of DynCorp, a U.S. contractor providing maintenance support to the U.S. military, spoke out that fellow workers were participating in sex trafficking--buying and selling girls as young as 14 for use as sex slaves-- the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division pursued it, but quickly turned the case over to Bosnian authorities. Though DynCorp fired seven men in relation to the charges, no one has been prosecuted for the crimes. Despite the evidence of sex trafficking and a company effort to cover it up, the U.S. still pays DynCorp for its services in Bosnia.

Christine Dolan, founder of the International Humanitarian Campaign Against the Exploitation of Children, told Insight magazine: "The U.S. says it wants to eradicate trafficking of people, has established an office in the State Department for this purpose, and yet neither State nor the government-contracting authorities have stepped in and done an investigation of this matter."

Your tax dollars at work: The Office of Strategic Influence (2002-02-19)
When the Bush administration faced the tough job of selling the war in Afghanistan to governments overseas, it created the Office of Strategic Influence. The new office promptly shelled out 7,000 for a four-month contract with The Rendon Group. Be assured that your tax dollars aren't going to shabby spinsters. The firm's list of former clients includes:


  • Government of Kuwait
    During the Gulf War, the Kuwaiti government needed to convince other governments that it was worth risking the lives of service men and women to liberate the royal-family-governed country from Iraqi invasion. Rendon was up to the challenge.

    In a speech to Air Force members five years after the war, John Rendon commented on one of his tactics, "Did you ever stop to wonder how the people of Kuwait City after being held hostage for seven long and painful months, were able to get hand held American, and for that matter the flags of other coalition countries? Well you now know the answer. That was one of my jobs then."

  • United States Central Intelligence Agency
    After the Gulf War, The Rendon Group worked with the CIA, spending nearly million in 1991 and 1992 to produce an anti-Hussein campaign with comic books, videos, a traveling photo exhibit, and two clandestine radio stations. Read the full story at Clandestine Radio.com.

  • Government of Haiti: Office of the President
    According to the company's site, "TRG was hired by the Office of the President to design and implement a press strategy during the two week period preceding and during the multinational intervention in the country."

And now the group is working for the U.S. again, selling our war on terrorism.

According to the New York Times the U.S. Army's Psychological Operations Command (PSYOPS) will join Rendon on the OSI roster. While the Times mentions it's illegal for the Pentagon and the Central Intelligence Agency to engage in propaganda activities on our soil, the article doesn't mention that PSYOPS has been accused of operating domestically as recently as the Kosovo war.

Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting did remember, however. A
media advisory on the organization’s site notes reports in European newspapers revealed that officers from the 4th PSYOPS Group had worked in CNN's news division as part of an "internship" program starting in the final days of the Kosovo War.

It's a wag-the-dog world.

Who said what when? (2002-02-18)
Letters recently released by the Texas state archives in response to Freedom of Information requests reveal a friendly correspondence between Kenneth Lay and then-Governor George Bush. The letters run from informal birthday greetings (Bush writes, "55 years old. Wow! That is really old. Thank goodness you have such a young, beautiful wife.") to recommendations from Lay on pending Texas tort reform legislation and moves to open Texas' wholesale power market to competition. Read all the letters at The Smoking Gun.

The White House won't reveal id Bush was equally friendly with Lay after taking the presidential oath of office (fresh from Enron-financed inaugural festivities). Reporters are sniffing for corruption and finding only politics as usual. Over several briefings, reporters grilled White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer on communication between Enron and the Bush administration -- specifically asking if the White House was looking into who spoke to Enron and when they did.

In a January briefing, Fleischer answered, "But the communication, in and of itself, there is nothing wrong with it. It would not surprise me at all if there have been conversations with people at Enron throughout the government. It wouldn't surprise me if former Clinton administration officials talked to the White House. It wouldn't surprise me if people at Enron.(sic) The point is, no one but no one has made any allegation or suggestion of wrongdoing. And by asking the White House, are you chronicling something, you're suggesting that there should be something to chronicle, because there might be wrongdoing. "

Later in the briefing, a reporter piped up with "Is the President concerned that his buddies at Enron are going to jail?"

Fleischer replied, "The President thinks that it is vital for the Department of Justice to pursue this wherever it goes, to whoever it goes and to do whatever it takes to investigate any criminal wrongdoing."

So long Kenny-boy.

Arthur Anderson seeks editor (2002-02-15)
The tarnished consulting giant is looking for an editor for their Professional Standards publications. You'll have your work cut out for you. Responsibilities include "identification and correction of inconsistencies and problems" -- along with a keen eye for detail.

The want ad claims Anderson's vision is "to be the partner for success in the new economy," and adds, "The firm helps clients find new ways to create, manage and measure value in the rapidly changing global economy." I think they are well on their way to that goal. Interested editors can see the full ad here.

Still out in the cold (2002-02-14)
A survey by the U.S. Conference of Mayors released in December 2001 found:

  • Requests for emergency shelter in 27 cities increased an average of 13 percent over last year.
  • Requests for shelter from families with children increased in 75 percent of the cities surveyed.
  • Eight cities identified domestic violence as a primary cause of homelessness: Burlington, Denver, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland, San Antonio, and St. Louis.
Read the full report.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, each year about 1 percent of the U.S. population, some 2 to 3 million people, will experience homelessness. Over one-third of them are women.

And you thought Enron was bad… (2002-02-13)
The U.S. Department of Interior can’t account for billions of dollars lost from the Indian Trust Fund. The fund handles million a year in royalties collected from mining, timber and grazing interests on 45 million acres of Indian land held in trust by the department. Attorneys for Indian landowners claim the U.S. government’s mismanagement (or downright fraud) adds up to more than billion owed to 300,000 Indian account holders.

Former Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbit’s failure to produce documents related to the fund resulted in ,000 in contempt of court fines. Far from inspiring the Senatorial vitriol spewed at Enron, the Interior Department got a get-out-of-jail free card in the form of court fines paid from taxpayer pockets.

Current Secretary of the Interior Gail Norton told the judge, “We have tried to use appropriate standards and aspire to a high level of accounting responsibility…I'm not sure if in every instance we have met that standard.'' Sound familiar? Read the AP story.

See D.C. run: What Bush and the Dems promise poor kids (2002-02-12)
I could have sent my daughter to law school at UW for the price I paid for her child care tuition in Seattle--and this was the going rate. Child care expenses range anywhere from ,000 to ,000 a year per child. Women on cash assistance face similar costs but have a lot less cash. Yet they have to work or attend job training to continue receiving assistance--so they need child care.

When people in power mention funding for early childhood education, I sure as hell pay attention. So, when Bush slipped in, "We need to prepare our children to read and succeed in school with improved Head Start and early childhood development programs," during his State of the Union Address, I checked it out.

Bush's 2003 budget proposal includes a plan to move Head Start to the Department of Education and to implement a literacy program in existing preschools and Head Start programs. However, his budget doesn't increase federal funds for child care in 2003 even though the states are facing depleted tax revenues and greater demand for cash assistance and will need more federal money if they are keep their child care programs going.

Back in December, Rep. George Miller (D-CA) introduced the Child Development and Family Employment Act of 2002 (H.R. 3524). The bill proposes .5 billion in funds over five years to increase the availability and affordability of quality child care.

The Child Care Development Block Grant and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families legislation are up for federal reauthorization this year. Child advocates are gearing up to ensure that kids don't get lost in the budget shuffle.

Lowdown on Enron (2002-02-11)
"I keep reminding myself of the scene in 'The Godfather' movie where Tom Hogan, who is the attorney for the godfather has a meeting with the godfather, and the godfather tells him, 'Just remember, you can always steal more with a briefcase than with a gun.'" - Opening remarks of Rep. Peter Deutsch (D-FL) during the House Subcommittee hearings on the Enron collapse.

With revelations of past Enron donations and elections in November, the committee members are frothing at the mouth. Read the full transcript at truthout.com

Copyright © 2002-2003 Shauna Curphey. All rights reserved.
Weblog Resume Writing Home