Archive for May, 2004

The Original Invisible Library

Saturday, May 15th, 2004

BBC:

Archaeologists have found what they believe to be the site of the Library of Alexandria, often described as the world’s first major seat of learning.

A Polish-Egyptian team has excavated parts of the Bruchion region of the Mediterranean city and discovered what look like lecture halls or auditoria.

Two thousand years ago, the library housed works by the greatest thinkers and writers of the ancient world.

link via Neil Gaiman

Also, check out The New Library of Alexandria

Cicada Blogging Friday

Friday, May 14th, 2004


So, I’m housesitting for a professor for the weekend and when I arrived this morning, this little monster greeted me at the door. There’s also a strange, eerie twittering sound in the air, just audible beneath the rustle of the trees, as if a million tiny little UFOs are landing…

I don’t know how I’ll sleep tonight.

A Hand Reaching Out in the Dark

Wednesday, May 12th, 2004

Looking upwards I surveyed the ceiling of my prison. It was some thirty or forty feet overhead, and constructed much as the side walls. In one of its panels a very singular figure riveted my whole attention. It was the painted figure of Time as he is commonly represented, save that, in lieu of a scythe, he held what, at a casual glance, I supposed to be the pictured image of a huge pendulum, such as we see on antique clocks. There was something, however, in the appearance of this machine which caused me to regard it more attentively. While I gazed directly upward at it, (for its position was immediately over my own,) I fancied that I saw it in motion. In an instant afterwards the fancy was confirmed. Its sweep was brief, and of course slow. I watched it for some minutes, somewhat in fear, but more in wonder.

[edit]

It might have been half an hour, perhaps even an hour, (for I could take but imperfect note of time,) before I again cast my eyes upward. What I then saw confounded and amazed me. The sweep of the pendulum had increased in extent by nearly a yard. As a natural consequence, its velocity was also much greater. But what mainly disturbed me was the idea that it had perceptibly descended. I now observed with what horror it is needless to say that its nether extremity was formed of a crescent of glittering steel, about a foot in length from horn to horn; the horns upward, and the under edge evidently as keen as that of a razor. Like a razor also, it seemed massy and heavy, tapering from the edge into a solid and broad structure above. It was appended to a weighty rod of brass, and the whole hissed as it swung through the air.

I could no longer doubt the doom prepared for me by monkish ingenuity in torture. My cognizance of the pit had become known to the inquisitorial agents the pit, whose horrors had been destined for so bold a recusant as myself the pit, typical of hell, and regarded by rumor as the Ultima Thule of all their punishments.

-Edgar Allen Poe, The Pit and the Pendulum

***

In Afghanistan, the CIA’s secret U.S. interrogation center in Kabul is known as “The Pit,” named for its despairing conditions. In Iraq, the most important prisoners are kept in a huge hangar near the runway at Baghdad International Airport, say U.S. government officials, counterterrorism experts and others. In Qatar, U.S. forces have been ferrying some Iraqi prisoners to a remote jail on the gigantic U.S. air base in the desert.

The Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where a unit of U.S. soldiers abused prisoners, is just the largest and suddenly most notorious in a worldwide constellation of detention centers many of them secret and all off-limits to public scrutiny that the U.S. military and CIA have operated in the name of counterterrorism or counterinsurgency operations since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

These prisons and jails are sometimes as small as shipping containers and as large as the sprawling Guantanamo Bay complex in Cuba. They are part of an elaborate CIA and military infrastructure whose purpose is to hold suspected terrorists or insurgents for interrogation and safekeeping while avoiding U.S. or international court systems, where proceedings and evidence against the accused would be aired in public. Some are even held by foreign governments at the informal request of the United States.

“The number of people who have been detained in the Arab world for the sake of America is much more than in Guantanamo Bay. Really, thousands,” said Najeeb Nuaimi, a former justice minister of Qatar who is representing the families of dozens of prisoners.

The largely hidden array includes three systems that only rarely overlap: the Pentagon-run network of prisons, jails and holding facilities in Iraq, Afghanistan, Guantanamo and elsewhere; small and secret CIA-run facilities where top al Qaeda and other figures are kept; and interrogation rooms of foreign intelligence services some with documented records of torture to which the U.S. government delivers or “renders” mid- or low-level terrorism suspects for questioning.

All told, more than 9,000 people are held by U.S. authorities overseas, according to Pentagon figures and estimates by intelligence experts, the vast majority under military control. The detainees have no conventional legal rights: no access to a lawyer; no chance for an impartial hearing; and, at least in the case of prisoners held in cellblock 1A at Abu Ghraib, no apparent guarantee of humane treatment accorded prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions or civilians in U.S. jails.

Although some of those held by the military in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo have had visits by the International Committee of the Red Cross, some of the CIA’s detainees have, in effect, disappeared, according to interviews with former and current national security officials and to the Army’s report of abuses at Abu Ghraib.

The CIA’s “ghost detainees,” as they were called by members of the 800th MP Brigade, were routinely held by the soldier-guards at Abu Ghraib “without accounting for them, knowing their identities, or even the reason for their detention,” the report says. These phantom captives were “moved around within the facility to hide them” from Red Cross teams, a tactic that was “deceptive, contrary to Army doctrine, and in violation of international law.”

-WaPo

At the end of The Pit and the Pendulum, the Prisoner (whose name we never learn) is freed (by the French Army, no less, who have broken into the Inquisition’s fortress in Toledo). There is a florish of trumpets, a cacophony of voices and an arm reaching out from the darkness to catch the Prisoner at the last moment before he falls into the Pit.

I hope, for all our sake, that there is an arm reaching out of the darkness to catch us, soon.

Glory and War

Wednesday, May 12th, 2004

The Guardian has an interesting article in which Noam Chomsky, Jonathan Schell, Howard Zinn and William Polk offer their suggestions on how the US can get out of Iraq. They all boil down to handing control over the UN.

Now, I’ve noticed there seems to be a huge amount of distrust among Americans in regards to the UN. I’m not sure exactly why this is. Some of the arguments I’ve heard are that they drag their feet on most issues, requiring reams of bureaucratic red tape to be unwound before they do anything. Usually i hear this argument from the Gung Ho types who follow the old John Wayne style of International politics: shoot first, ask questions later.

The fact is, the UN has to make sure they do things in the right order for the expressed purpose of maintaining transparency. Anyone at any time can look at the UN and see what they are doing. if they didn’t do things this way, we’d have an international organization that was secretive, lacks oversight and is prone to manipulation by people of little conscience who desire to exert their power and privilege over others. Sound familiar? Like we need another BushCo. White House, only this one with the sort of global mandate and right to pee on poor people George, Dick and Rummy can only dream about.

On the other end of the spectrum, we have the UN paranoids who think black helicopters and blue berets are going to take away our guns and chewing tabacco, and force the Anti-Christ, red horns and all, to be president of the world. This confabulation of Millennialism and ignorance is distressing (because of it�s so prevalence) but mostly just yokels letting their brains go as slack as their jaws.

So, yeah, I agree with Chomsky, Schell, Zinn and Polk: the only way to get out of this mess in a way that won�t incite an Iraqi civil war and just might salvage our reputation with our former allies is to let the UN steward iraq. But since that�s capitulating to the One World Government Beurocracy, which upsets all those Nascar Dads, who might, unfortunately vote to keep their favorite Bubba in office 9just to spite us terrorist loving liberals) it�s unlikely to happen any time soon. So, get used to more beatings, beheadings and body bags. That�s what this war is all about, now: sadism for the sake of national honor.

I Don’t Think This Quiz Means What You Think It Means

Tuesday, May 11th, 2004

Vizzini

Which Princess Bride Character are You?
this quiz was made by mysti

Dispatches from Iraq, Part 5

Tuesday, May 11th, 2004

The weather is getting hotter out here. Pretty soon, it will be downright oppressive. I can’t imagine what it must have been like last summer for the majority of the population in this city without power.

It seems the most significant event people have been wondering about lately is last Friday’s car bomb. Don’t worry, I’m safe and sound. However, I will say that for a few minutes I was pretty stunned. I was having trouble getting out of bed on that morning when Bam! the entire ground shook accompanied by the sound of an explosion. I’ve never seen so many people wake up at the same time. (Remember, I’m leaving in a large tent with at least thirty other people.) We all looked at each other stupidly - not knowing exactly what to do. Was it a mortar, a grenade, a missile? Should we put on our gas masks? A couple minutes later a loudspeaker voice told us to take cover. As I was leaving my tent to get to a more hardened shelter, I saw thick black smoke in the distance. Of course, the most immediate source for news was the internet. The rest of the day went on as usual as if nothing ever happened. Now, people are not even talking about it. I wonder what kind of press the attack stirred up back home. This week, it seems like a distant memory.

I have traversed at least half of the Green Zone by now. Today, I even made it to the “Assassin’s Gate” where back in January, an even deadlier car bomb exploded. For the most part, the Green Zone is like one giant park complex. There are few large buildings with a great deal of open space in between. Some buildings are completely intact while others are reduced partly to rubble. The most imposing of such structures is the Ba’ath Party Headquarters which sits as a shell of itself home to nothing but wild cats. Sometimes, one can spot the occasional bat flying about.

Read the rest

The College Fast Track

Tuesday, May 11th, 2004

Seatle PI:

WASHINGTON — At least 28 senior-level federal employees in eight agencies have bogus college degrees, including three managers at the office that oversees nuclear weapons safety, congressional investigators have found.

The problem is likely even bigger, mainly because the government has no uniform way to check whether employees’ alma maters are “diploma mills” that require little, if any, academic work, the General Accounting Office reported.

[edit]

Among those with bogus degrees in the GAO review were three workers with emergency operations roles and security clearances at the National Nuclear Security Administration, part of the Department of Energy.

One of those workers paid $5,000 for a master’s degree from LaSalle University, an unaccredited school, the report said. He attended no classes, took no tests and told the GAO his degree was “a joke.”

Other senior government employees with bogus degrees worked for the departments of Education, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Transportation and Veterans Affairs, as well as the Small Business Administration and the Office of Personnel Management.

[edit]

Three unaccredited schools - Pacific Western University, California Coast University and Kennedy-Western University - provided data showing that 463 of their students were federal employees. Most of those listed were in the Department of Defense. The report did not name employees.

And we wonder why the Government doesn’t seem to value education. I guess value is the wrong word; they value it very much, enough to pay up to $5000 for a degree. And here I am, like a sucker, spending two years actually earning a masters degree!

Undermining Democracy, One Cat Picture At a Time

Tuesday, May 11th, 2004

Blogs are undemocratic?

“New Yorker writer George Packer argues that by blurring the line between journalism and pure rant, blogs may not be the best thing for democracy.”

Someone explain to me how a truly free press, in which the citizens can have their say, is somehow undemocratic? Just because I’m not making money (the horror! Are you some kinda socialist?) or sucking the president’s dick doesn’t mean I’m undermining democracy.

It seems the traditional media types are a little scared of us regular folks, since people like Atrios, Kos and Hesiod are doing journalists jobs while the “real” journalists are sipping martinis and reading whatever the White House Hands them. I tell you what, Mr. Packer, if you started doing your fucking job then maybe we bloggers wouldn’t have to pick up the slack, defending democracy from the War profiteers and Oligarchs wagging their cash under your nose.

Insert Moderately Pithy Title Here

Monday, May 10th, 2004


I’m wiped out from finals. I had intended on blogging tonight but it just ain’t happening. Instead, we’ll have more pictures of Lucy. I should be back to blogging tomorrow, though. In the meantime, go sign the petition to fire Rumsfeld.

Feline Exploitation Curiosa Friday

Friday, May 7th, 2004

Finals have got my by the brain banana, hence the light posting of late. But I just finished my big project last night, so hopefully, by this time next week, I’ll be blogging at 100%. Until then, we have Lucy, goin’ fishin’.