end the war … in Sri Lanka

On Remembrance Day I reflect on the waste and stupidity of war.

And the worst war right now, per capita, is in Sri Lanka. When I was there about 10yrs ago I met no one who had not lost a family member.

Recently I watched a short excerpt on PBS FRONTLINE of a full-length documentary called “My Daughter the Terrorist”.

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The film introduces Dharshika and Puhalchudar, two 24-year-old women who have been living, training and fighting side-by-side for the past seven years. They are part of the Black Tigers, and are prepared to strap Claymore mines to their chests and blow up themselves and anyone within 100 feet of them to benefit their cause.

“When we have no bullets left and can’t do anything, we have our cyanide capsules,” Dharshika said, revealing the small glass cylinder filled with cyanide that both she and Puhalchudar wear around their necks.

Gradually, the film shares some of Dharshika’s past, and her personal reasons for fighting with the Tamil Tigers. She left home and joined the group before she became a teenager. …

In the West we simplify these civil wars as religious conflicts. Tamil Hindu vs ruling Sinhalese Buddhist, in this case.

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But Dharshika is Christian. A girl who wanted to become a nun.

A year after her father was killed (working in a post office) by a Sri Lankan government bomb dropped from the sky on her town, she was recruited by the Tigers.

Make no mistake, the Tigers are as ruthless as anyone, anywhere. Canada was a principle source of funds for them, at least until 2006 when they were named a “terrorist group”. (I don’t know if Canadian dollars supplied to them has decreased since then.)

Considered the most professional guerilla organization in the world and one of the first to employ suicide bombing, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) have engaged the Sri Lankan government in a brutal civil war for the past 25 years. It’s one of the longest-running wars in Southeast Asia in which an estimated 70,000 people have lost their lives.

In an effort to create an independent Tamil state in northeastern Sri Lanka, the Tamil Tigers, as they are also known, have conducted at least 170 suicide-bombing operations since fighting began — by far the most attacks carried out by any guerilla group until the Iraq war in 2003. In recent weeks, government forces have pushed deep into Tamil territory toward the Tigers’ administrative capital of Kilinochchi in an all-out offensive to destroy the organization for good.

30 percent of these suicide missions were carried out by women.

You should be able to watch the PBS edit on FRONTLINE.

But here’s a short snippet if that does not work:

I notice that George Bush didn’t send troops to Sri Lanka. Nations like this need mediators, not profiteering war mongers.

Domain Registry of Canada (DRoC) SCAM

scam-alert.pngThese crooks were sued in 2002.

And yet they are still operating in Canada in 2008.

Unbelievable.

Sometimes called “domain slamming”, they try to get you to move internet addresses (“domains”) over to their expensive hosting service.

If you’ve registered a domain under .COM, .NET, .ORG, .BIZ, or .INFO you will probably eventually receive a postal mailing from the Domain Registry of Canada or the Domain Registry of America …

The earlier versions looked a lot like a renewal invoice, the later ones have some fine print on them that this isn’t really a “renewal invoice”. …

Who is the Domain Registry of Canada or the Domain Registry of America?

More people ready to kill the owners of DRoC. If the law can’t shut them down, perhaps vigilante justice is needed.

the outlaw Kate Zimmerman

… there I was, scruffy, slouching and shame-faced in the back of the police car that was pulled over by the heap of free firewood on our front lawn. I was waiting for the cop to let me out of the back passenger seat, like any old serial killer. …

I never really notice the squalor of my existence until some professional order-keeper or other neatnik enters my environs. My first humiliation of that particular day had come when the cop pulled over our filthy car, brimming, as usual, with old newspapers and empty pop cans, worn socks and battered novels. …

As Johnny Cash once sang, I hung my head

Scofflaws like Kate should be grateful for only a $500 fine for driving without insurance.

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flickr

50 shots equal murder – Sean Bell shooting

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The Sean Bell shooting incident took place in the New York City borough of Queens on November 25, 2006 in which an African-American man was shot and killed and two others wounded by plainclothes New York Police Department detectives (two of whom were themselves African-American) in a hail of 50 bullets. The incident sparked fierce criticism of the police from the public …. Three of the five detectives involved in the shooting went to trial on charges ranging from manslaughter to reckless endangerment, but were found not guilty.

This looks bad.

I’m not saying the officers are guilty of murder.

But it looks very, very bad. I don’t blame people for being angry. Firing 50 shots at an unarmed man …

The night of the shooting, Bell was at his bachelor party …

… Fearing a shooting may occur, the detective followed the men to their car while alerting his backup team, prompting the team to confront Bell and his companions before they could leave the scene. The undercover officer ordered Bell to raise his hands after getting in his car. Instead, Bell accelerated the car and hit an unmarked police minivan. A toxicology report reportedly showed that he was legally intoxicated at the time of the shooting. …

Wikipedia

photo – Sean Bell, his former fiancee Nicole Paultre Bell, and their daughter.

Bill Zimmerman obituary

My thoughts are with Bill’s widow Sheila and everyone in the family.

ZIMMERMAN, William (Bill) Martin. — Born 1930 in Winnipeg, died in Vancouver March 29th, 2008.

A graduate of Kelvin High School and the University of Manitoba (MSW/56), Bill was an athlete, an actor (MTC; U of M) and a social worker in Winnipeg and Ottawa.

As a probation officer at Winnipeg’s Juvenile Court, Bill found delinquent youth were the invariable result of families lacking access to services he thought communities should provide. When he moved to Ottawa with his own family, he joined the city’s Social Planning Council to help address those needs.

He soon discovered that stronger financial support was required by Ottawa-Hull United Way agencies. As director of the United Way for 13 years, he believed strongly that its funds should be determined by the communities’ needs rather than by donors’ choice.

Privately, as a jazz fan and a sports enthusiast, he was expert in the arcana of both. In his retirement in Sechelt, B.C., Bill found a fellow sports buff in Gilbert Joe, an elder with the Sechelt Indian Band, whose memory he chose to honour by assembling a unique collection of photos of aboriginal athletes, now a permanent exhibition at the town’s Kinnikinnick Elementary School.

Bill’s positive personality, which found humour even in dialysis units and hospital wards, sustained him to the end.

Bill is survived by his wife Sheila, and their children Kate, John and Frances, sons-in-law Ron Shewchuk and Peter Findlay, and four grandchildren, Zoe and Jake Shewchuk, Audrey and Georgia Findlay, as well as his sister Betty Zimmerman.

Among those who will miss him are his sisters-in-law, Elspeth Nickerson, Catherine Montrose, Ann Young, Hellie Wilson and Florence Brownridge.

A memorial for Bill is planned for this July. Condolences to the family may be sent to billzimm2008 @ gmail.com.

death by a thousand paper cuts

Title is a precious homage to master Headline writer Tom Mangan.

Tom survived yet another round of job cuts at one of America’s most important newspapers, the San Jose Mercury News in California.

By now he must be Publisher. How many people could they have left on staff?

Tom’s insight into the future of newspapers:

Here’s what I think will happen: everybody who bought newspapers in the last three or four years will go bankrupt because they bought the top of a market held aloft by the phony housing boom, and some clever operative like Warren Buffett will come in and buy them up at pennies on the dollar.

Most of us will be forced to get real jobs, like school teachers or dogcatchers.

I knew the first time I clicked on a link in my circa-1995 Netscape browser that print newspapers were toast. Thirteen years later, it’s finally playing out. It had to. …

What’s up at the Mercury News these days

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Infinite Monkeys

Dave Adlard likes newspapers. Cannot forsee a day when he can’t get a newspaper delivered to his cabin in North Idaho.

I’d like to think he is right.

But I’ve met a few inside the biz who do not think papers can survive in their current awkward, nostalgic form.

school shootings and suicide bombings

After the latest tragic murders of innocents at Northern Illinois University in the USA, it strikes me there is some similarity with a suicide bombing.

Someone angry and/or “deranged”, striking out.

Families mourning the loss of those not guilty of anything.

I listened to live coverage on right wing talk radio in the USA as I drove through Texas in a rent-a-car. Though the shooter was carrying at least 4 weapons, the response of the far right talk show hosts is that Colleges should let students carry concealed weapons. As a deterrent, you understand.

Right.

Like there wouldn’t be a “shoot-out on Campus” every single day if that was allowed.

Unfortunately the President of the University did a very bad job of the first press conference. He made it sound like a football victory over Virginia Tech where 33 were killed last year.

Sad. Sad. Sad.

War on Pot: $42 Billion Annual USA Boondoggle

This is likely somewhat hyperbolic.

Still, the USA is nuttier than any other civilized country when it comes to soft drugs.

war-on-drugs.jpgWhat would you buy if you had an extra $42 billion to spend every year? What might our government buy if it suddenly had that much money dropped onto its lap every year?

For one thing, it might pay for the entire $7 billion annual increase in the State Children’s Health Insurance Program that President Bush is threatening to veto because of its cost — and there’d still be $35 billion left over.

Or perhaps you’d hire 880,000 schoolteachers at the average U.S. teacher salary of $47,602 per year.

Or give every one of our current teachers a 30 percent raise (at a cost of $15 billion, according to the American Federation of Teachers) and use what’s left to take a $27 billion whack out of the federal deficit.

Or use all $42 billion for a massive tax cut that would put an extra $140 in the pockets of every person in the country — $560 for a family of four.

The mind reels at the ways such a massive sum of money could be put to use.

Why $42 billion? Because that’s what our current marijuana laws cost American taxpayers each year, according to a new study by researcher Jon Gettman, Ph.D. — $10.7 billion in direct law enforcement costs, and $31.1 billion in lost tax revenues. And that may be an underestimate, at least on the law enforcement side, since Gettman made his calculations before the FBI released its latest arrest statistics in late September. The new FBI stats show an all-time record 829,627 marijuana arrests in 2006, 43,000 more than in 2005.

AlterNet: DrugReporter: The War on Pot: America’s $42 Billion Annual Boondoggle

If spending money fighting a “War on Drugs” is a good idea, why is it not working?

Reefer Madness (Restored Edition)

Reefer Madness – the movie

things I care about MORE than global warming

• nuclear war
• civil wars worldwide
• potential pandemics
• child hunger
• overweight and obesity
• increasing gap between richest and poorest

I would spend time and money NOT on solving global warming, but rather:

• education of girls and women
• population control in those parts of the world that need it
• making available safe water to those who need it
• youth work experiences in the developing countries
• anti-smoking measures (those proven to work)
• protecting wilderness
• promoting “voluntary simplicity” and “reduced consumption”
• improving migration of workers to parts of the world that need workers

My main motivation in writing this post is:

“the hypocrisy of western concerns over future global warming disasters, while ignoring the extreme misery and suffering being endured right now in developing countries.”

This guy agrees: Priorities – Can you worry about global warming while your children are dying? » Celsias

Global warming may or may not exist. May or may not have been caused by industrialization. May or may not be changed by future technology.

Don’t talk to me about it until these greater, more urgent global needs are getting more attention.

I’m especially ticked off with those making MONEY by being global warming alarmists.

Those are just a few of the issues more important than global warming to me. Leave a comment if you want to add to the list. Or refute me with hard, reputable scientific evidence that I am wrong. (Don’t mention Dr. Suzuki, please.)

O Canada! The Canadian DMCA version

Cory Doctorow is angry.

… a new version of the Canadian national anthem, in honour of the terrible proposal for a Canadian version of the US DMCA, a copyright law that has led to 20,000 lawsuits against music fans, terrible damage to innovation and free speech, all without paying artists or preventing infringement.

O Canada! The Canadian DMCA version of the national anthem – Boing Boing

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