Roman’s Website

Fiction, Essays & Other Creative Work, and also political commentary (Truth is treason in the empire of lies.)

Archive for November, 2007

The Global War on Political Dissent

Posted in Dictatorship, News & Commentary on November 30th, 2007

Great slogans leading us to fascism. Senate Bill 1959, the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act, criminalizes very loosely defined behaviors.

“. . . the use, planned use, OR threatened use of force OR violence by a group OR individual to promote the group OR individual’s political, religious, OR social beliefs . . .” How about non-violent force? Chanting at a non-violent peace protest? Blogging? Why does the bill pay particular attention to Universities? Why does it fail to qualify the term “radical ideas?” All our most cherished beliefs were once radical. Welcome to the U.S.S.A.

Read full Text of Bill.

Point-by-Point discussion.

“All the war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred, comes invariably from people who are not fighting.”
George Orwell

The North American Union

Posted in Dictatorship, Ron Paul, News & Commentary on November 29th, 2007

Read all about it.

Hear Ron Paul field the conspiracy accusation during the November 28th debate.

10 Steps to Fascism

Posted in Dictatorship, News & Commentary on November 29th, 2007

Naomi Wolf’s essay: Fascist America, In 10 Easy Steps

1. Invoke a terrifying internal and external enemy
2. Create a gulag
3. Develop a thug caste
4. Set up an internal surveillance system
5. Harass citizens’ groups
6. Engage in arbitrary detention and release
7. Target key individuals
8. Control the press
9. Dissent equals treason
10. Suspend the rule of law

Watch her lecture.

The CNN/YouTube astroturf debates

Posted in Big Media, News & Commentary on November 28th, 2007

(Wikipedia: Astroturfing is a neologism for formal public relations campaigns in politics and advertising that seek to create the impression of being spontaneous, grassroots behavior.)

I believe in the debates. It’s always better for voters to hear the candidates first-hand. It’d be better still if voters got to choose the questions asked. Unfortunately, big media is determined to control it:

Great Video

“The faux populism of the YouTube format is an Orwellian leap even for CNN.”

Bush Sets Disapproval Record

Posted in News & Commentary on November 20th, 2007

I’m surprised only half the country strongly disapproves.

Press Favoring Hillary among Dems

Posted in Big Media, Iran, News & Commentary on November 20th, 2007


Planted audience, planted questions, questioners are supporters, former staffers conduct post-debate analysis. This was even reported in The New York Times and Daily Kos.

Public vs Pundits. Vast difference between public perception and media interpretation of Obama-Hillary answers on whether they’d speak to Iran’s leader.

See Also: Military industrial complex dumps Republicans, backs Hillary.

from the Global War on Terrorism

Posted in Iraq, News & Commentary on November 16th, 2007

How can you have a war against a tactic? How come whenever the president unilaterally declares war on something (terrorism, drugs, cancer) the problem gets worse?

Congress getting serious? The House on Wednesday passed, 218-203, a $50 billion bill that would pay for the wars but require that troops start to leave Iraq in 30 days. It sets a goal of ending combat by December 2008, as well as interrogations standards that would make waterboarding illegal.

The U.S. military’s operating manual for the Guantanamo prison camp has been posted on the Internet.

Veterans for peace arrested protesting their exclusion from parade.

Turkish helicopters strike inside Iraq.

Rep. Shea-Porter calls for Cheney impeachment.

Kucinich introduces articles of impeachment: Article I, Article II, Article III

Acting assistant attorney general Daniel Levin tries waterboarding before concluding it’s torture. Gets fired. Senate confirms attorney general Mukaseyl who “does not know” if waterboarding is torture. Olbermann’s commentary.

In October, 46,000 Iraqis returned home. Baghdad safer.

More than $15 million in bribes exposed in Army contracting investigations.

US diplomats refusing to serve in Iraq.

Rumsfeld flees France fearing war criminal arrest.

Sunni insurgents form alliance.

12 former Army captains & Iraq veterans write Washington Post editorial saying it’s time to get out. (See earlier NYTimes editorial by six paratroopers)

14 permanent bases getting built in Iraq.

Low-income Home Energy Assistance Program out of money. Poor out in the cold. More money requested for war. Jack Cafferty’s commentary.

US plans to send $60 billion dollars in arms to the gulf in the next decade: Israel $30 billion, Egypt $13 Billion, Saudi Arabia up to $20 Billion. (second part of this video)

Pulitzer Prize winning journalist faces terror charges. This is one of many contradictions soldiers must face when their leaders invade a country under false pretenses. You can’t imprison everybody.

Letter to the Editor

Posted in Ron Paul, News & Commentary, My Work, Non-Fiction on November 16th, 2007
When I saw this hit piece published in my alma mater’s daily, I couldn’t let it stand unchallenged. My rebuttal was published today.

On Health Care - two perspectives

Posted in Ron Paul, News & Commentary on November 15th, 2007

I thought Michael Moore’s Sicko made a very compelling case for socialized medicine, though it contradicted what I thought I knew about Britain’s health care system.

So, I was very interested to hear the free market perspective on health care from Ron Paul.

Everybody agrees the current system isn’t working. Here’s an LA Times article, which echoes what Sicko demonstrated: Health insurers receive bonuses for dropping sick policyholders.

Net Neutrality

Posted in Big Media, News & Commentary on November 15th, 2007

When do the Christian Coalition and MoveOn agree? When it comes to restoring Net Neutrality.

This post was motivated by another fantastic Bill Moyers show. Here’s what I learned:

- Cable and Phone companies control our access to the internet. It’s a duopoly.

- In 2002, the FCC ruled that net neutrality laws don’t apply to cable-based service.

- In Aug 2005, the FCC replaced net neutrality RULES with PRINCIPLES. Telephone company executives gained the right to charge for access based on content.

- In June 2007, the House refused to reinstate Net Neutrality.

- Cable/Phone companies want customers to pay for faster access. This sucks, because small users can be forced into slower connections. Legally, they can already decide which websites get fast access. They can censor, as Western Union did when they had a telegraph monopoly, or as the railroad barons did in the shipping industry.

- In 2006-2007, phone companies received tax breaks and price deregulations in exchange for building us a fiber optic network (over 100x faster than copper wire). They took the money and never built it.

- The phone companies didn’t get off their ass until Lafayette Louisiana sold bonds and began building their own network - for price and pride. Cable and Phone companies lobbied like crazy and mired them in lawsuits.

- Cable/Phone companies spend $40 million / year lobbying state capitols, and over $75 million / year on Washington. Some states have passed laws FORBIDDING municipalities from building their own fiber optic networks. Cable/Phone preserve their duopoly with great anti-regulation slogans. (See disinformation technique #4)

- Clinton’s Telecommunications act of 1996 is what allowed massive media conglomeration.

- The National Association of Broadcaster is a corporate lackey that convinced Congress to cut back on supporting local, low-power radio, and lobbied the FCC to get rid of it entirely.

author Eric Klinenberg: “I think what Congress and the FCC understand all too well at this point is that the more open and public and democratic a hearing this issue gets, the less support there is for media consolidation. And so the danger is that Congress and the FCC will rush legislation through before anyone has a chance to really participate. I look for the FCC to be rushing to get legislation passed without a democratic process. I’m very concerned about that. It happened in 2003. There’s every sign that it’s about to happen again. . . . In 2003, the FCC said it would do these kinds of hearings. They started. They then aborted the hearings once it became clear that the message, no more consolidation, was not what the then chairman Michael Powell wanted to hear. And then the commission ignored the public input altogether when it came time to crafting legislation. They got reprimanded by the courts. The order got remanded. It’s now back in play. And the question now is whether these kinds of hearings are democracy for show or whether they’re democracy for real. . . . sadly it looks like the FCC has been working in the interest of the small number of companies its charged with regulating.”

(See Show/Read Transcript)

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