In These New Times

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Cell phones present a danger to your health

Posted by seumasach on April 24, 2010

My Digital Life

19th April, 2010

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Is colony collapse the price of EMF progress by Barry Trower

Retired military scientist Barrie Trower is in town.

A former member of British Intelligence, Barrie Trower began researching the health effects of micro-wave technology long before cell phones appeared on the scene.

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Colleague disputes case against anthrax suspect

Posted by seumasach on April 23, 2010

New York Times

22nd April, 2010

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ITNT Archive: anthrax attack, Ivins affair

WASHINGTON — A former Army microbiologist who worked for years with Bruce E. Ivins, whom the F.B.I. has blamed for the anthrax letter attacks that killed five people in 2001, told a National Academy of Sciences panel on Thursday that he believed it was impossible that the deadly spores had been produced undetected in Dr. Ivins’s laboratory, as the F.B.I. asserts.

Asked by reporters after his testimony whether he believed that there was any chance that Dr. Ivins, who committed suicide in 2008, had carried out the attacks, the microbiologist, Henry S. Heine, replied, “Absolutely not.” At the Army’s biodefense laboratory in Maryland, where Dr. Ivins and Dr. Heine worked, he said, “among the senior scientists, no one believes it.”

Dr. Heine told the 16-member panel, which is reviewing the F.B.I.’s scientific work on the investigation, that producing the quantity of spores in the letters would have taken at least a year of intensive work using the equipment at the army lab. Such an effort would not have escaped colleagues’ notice, he added later, and lab technicians who worked closely with Dr. Ivins have told him they saw no such work.

He told the panel that biological containment measures where Dr. Ivins worked were inadequate to prevent the spores from floating out of the laboratory into animal cages and offices. “You’d have had dead animals or dead people,” he said.

The public remarks from Dr. Heine, two months after the Justice Department officially closed the case, represent a major public challenge to its conclusion in one of the largest, most politically delicate and scientifically complex cases in F.B.I. history.

The F.B.I. declined to comment on Dr. Heine’s remarks on Thursday. In its written summation of the case in February, the bureau said Dr. Ivins’s lab technicians grew anthrax spores that the technicians incorrectly believed were added to Dr. Ivins’s main supply flask. But the summary said the spores were never added to the flask, suggesting that surplus spores might have been diverted by Dr. Ivins for the letters.

Some scientists and members of Congress protested in February when the Justice Department closed the case, saying it should have waited for the academy panel’s conclusions. The F.B.I. asked the panel last year to review the bureau’s scientific work on the case, though not its conclusion on the perpetrator’s identity.

Members of the panel, whose chairwoman is Alice P. Gast, a chemical engineer and president of Lehigh University, declined to comment on Dr. Heine’s testimony or his remarks to reporters. The panel is expected to complete its report this fall.

Since shortly after Dr. Ivins took a lethal dose of Tylenol in July 2008 and the Justice Department first named him as the anthrax mailer, some former colleagues have rejected the F.B.I.’s conclusion and said they thought he was innocent. They have acknowledged, as Dr. Heine did on Thursday, that they wanted to clear the name of their friend and defend their laboratory, the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases. Dr. Heine said he had been treated as a suspect himself at one point and understood the pressure Dr. Ivins was under.

Asked why he was speaking out now, Dr. Heine noted that Army officials had prohibited comment on the case, silencing him until he left the government laboratory in late February. He now works for Ordway Research Institute in Albany.

Dr. Heine said he did not dispute that there was a genetic link between the spores in the letters and the anthrax in Dr. Ivins’s flask — a link that led the F.B.I. to conclude that Dr. Ivins had grown the spores from a sample taken from the flask. But samples from the flask were widely shared, Dr. Heine said. Accusing Dr. Ivins of the attacks, he said, was like tracing a murder to the clerk at the sporting goods shop who sold the bullets.

“Whoever did this is still running around out there,” Dr. Heine said. “I truly believe that.”

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Clean sweep at the CIA

Posted by seumasach on April 20, 2010

Voltairenet
19th April, 2010
The departure of the CIA number 2 man should throw light on the inner functioning of the U.S. intelligence agency. Stephen Kappes, who had already left in 2004, epitomized the most despicable methods employed by the Agency but couldn’t produce any convincting results to justify them. Nevertheless, it is unlikely that the CIA’s “old wiseman” will throw in the towel so readily. Whatever transpires, the internal enmities should in the long run benefit Michael Morell, already well positioned to become the next CIA Director. In sum, though the indiscriminate post-September 11 methods may stand to be sanctioned, the men behind 9/11 can now look forward to seizing full control of the Agency.
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No Obama Administration plan in sight for closing Guantánamo

Posted by seumasach on April 20, 2010

Voltairenet

16th April, 2010

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder’s testimony at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on 14 April 2010 turned sour.

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‘US nuke threats no less than terrorism’

Posted by seumasach on April 17, 2010

PressTV

17th April, 2010

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast says the threat of Washington’s nuclear weapons is ‘not much different’ from that of terrorism.

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An accident of history

Posted by seumasach on April 17, 2010

Neil Ascherson

Guardian

17th April, 2010

A human being cannot be beheaded twice. But a nation can. Twice in less than a century, Poland‘s elite – political, military, ministerial – came to a terrible death in the woods around Smolensk. Ordinary Poles with history in their bones can’t be blamed for fearing, last weekend, that the beheading axe was swung by the same hands.

But it was an accident. The fact that President Lech Kaczynski and his retinue had flown to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, only a few miles away, was one of those malign coincidences that haunt Polish history. And it happened at a moment when Russia and Poland were trying, with some success, to put their long and dreadful past behind them. The spontaneous, great-hearted grief of ordinary Russian people in the days after the air crash amazed and then moved the Poles.

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L’administration Obama n’a plus de projet de fermeture de Guantánamo

Posted by seumasach on April 16, 2010

Voltairenet

16th April, 2010

L’audition de l’Attorney General des Etats-Unis, Eric Holder, par la Commission sénatoriale de la Justice a tourné au vinaigre, le 14 avril 2010.

Interrogé sur la fermeture, toujours promise et maintes fois différée, de la prison de Guantánamo, M. Holder a été incapable non seulement de donner une date, mais d’indiquer ses intentions. Quinze mois après sa nomination, le secrétaire à la Justice n’a toujours aucune idée des détenus qui doivent être libérés et de ceux qui doivent être jugés par des tribunaux civils.

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Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s letter to Ban Ki-moon

Posted by seumasach on April 16, 2010

Voltairenet

13th April, 2010

Mr. Secretary General,

I have the pleasure to offer to Your Excellency my best wishes on the occasion of Nowruz and the beginning of the New Solar Year, 1389. I also wish to seize the moment to praise the efforts initiated by Your Excellency and members of the United Nations General Assembly for the international registration of Nowruz, a cultural event that glorifies humanitarian shared values and principles. I hope this initiative will lay a solid foundation for the spread of Nowruz culture that stands for peace, amity, dynamism, constructive cooperation and sustainable security across the world.

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Clinton Calls Acting Leader of Kyrgyzstan

Posted by seumasach on April 11, 2010

“Earlier in the day on Saturday, the United States Embassy issued a statement that stopped short of endorsing the new government.”

New York Times

11th April, 2010

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan — The United States made its first high-level contact with the interim government of Kyrgyzstan on Saturday, getting assurances that the new leadership would live up to previous agreements and allow American use of an airport that plays an important role in supplying the war effort in Afghanistan.

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Iran set to downgrade UK ties

Posted by seumasach on April 10, 2010

Our government’s policy of making enemies can only render more difficult any strategy to overcome our economic weakness and compromise our attempts to finance our massive debt.

PressTV

10th April, 2010

In line with a recently-proposed bid by the Iranian Parliament (Majlis), the Tehran government moves to reduce diplomatic relations with London.

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In Kyrgyzstan chaos, Russia burnishes its image

Posted by seumasach on April 10, 2010

Philip P.Pan

Washington Post

10th April, 2010

BISHKEK, KYRGYZSTAN — In a remarkable role reversal, Russiahas positioned itself as a supporter of democratic reform and the protests that toppled this nation’s autocratic president, while the United States is increasingly viewed here as a cynical bully, backing a corrupt, abusive leader who refuses to resign.

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