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10 March 2007

drowning the polar bears, gagging government scientists who know why the polar bears are drowning

The Independent &
The Independent on Sunday (UK)
Saturday 10 March 2007

Don't mention
the polar bears,
Bush tells US scientists


by Steve Connor, Science Editor

The Bush Administration has been accused once again of gagging US government scientists by getting them to agree not to talk about polar bears, sea ice and climate change during official overseas trips.

A leaked memorandum issued by a regional director of the US Department of the Interior states that officials within the US Fish and Wildlife Service will limit their discussions when travelling in countries bordering the Arctic region because of sensitivities about climate change.

"This traveller understands the administration's position on climate change, polar bears and sea ice and will not be speaking on or responding to these issues," says the memo from the regional director Richard Hannon to his boss, the director of the Fish and Wildlife Service.

It is not the first time that US government officials have been accused to trying to gag scientists on climate change. James Hansen, the director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and a world authority on the climate, complained last year that public relations officials appointed by the Bush Administration had tried to limit his access to the media.

The memorandum from Mr Hannon was criticised by the Natural Resources Defence Council in Washington, which wants the US Department of Interior to list the polar bear as an endangered species because of the projected loss of sea ice in the Arctic over the coming century.

"This memo has got to be put into the wider context of what President Bush has done to stifle debate on global warming over the last six years," said a council spokesman, Eben Burnham-Snyder. "The Bush Administration has a long history of restricting scientific discourse on global warming's impacts and solutions. This continued restriction hampers our experts' ability to do their job effectively and aggressively deal with our global warming challenge."

A leaked e-mail from Mr Hannon to his staff warned that any future overseas trips involving or potentially involving climate change, sea ice or polar bears will require an official statement on who in the delegation will be the official spokesman.

Any requests concerning foreign trips to Arctic countries such as Canada, Norway or Russia should also include "a statement of assurance that these individuals understand the Administration's position on these issues", particularly the topic of polar bears.

Hugh Vickery, a spokesman for the US Department of the Interior, said that the memorandum was "badly worded" and there was no intention of limiting informal discussions. The memo was intended to cover official bilateral talks where there is an agreed agenda and was an attempt to ensure that scientists stick to the areas within their remit, Mr Vickery said.

"It's very important to know what the position of the United States government is on these issues. If two scientists want to talk over a coffee, that's fine. We want them to do that," he said. "But in an official capacity you need to know what your role is. This is not about gagging scientists. We don't want to do that."

Mr Vickery added that polar bears and sea ice were mentioned in the memo because it was addressed to scientists within the Alaska region of the Fish and Wildlife Service.

Arctic sea ice and the polar bear are especially sensitive issues at present because American scientists have pointed out that the world's biggest land carnivore is unlikely to survive if the Arctic sea ice disappears in summer, which it is predicted to do by the end of the century.

The Department of Interior is currently engaged in a consultation over whether to list the species as endangered and a decision is expected by January 2008.

[Bush's term as president ends 20 January 2009.]

- 30 -

© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited


09 March 2007

I love ewe


Yucks Digest, which has a physical Locus at Purdue University in Indiana USA, is the kind and flattering Web Archive which has been preserving my goofy Scientific American letter for more than a decade.

Here's another of its Archival Treasures.

============

Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 13:31:04 -0500
From: Patrick Tufts
Subject: coming to a spool near you: soc.sexuality.zoophilia

From: kayotae@mindvox.phantom.com (Erik M Blackwolf)
Newsgroups: news.announce.newgroups,news.groups,alt.sex.bestiality
Subject: RFD: soc.sexuality.zoophilia moderated
Date: 24 Jan 1994 22:46:08 -0500

===================

REQUEST FOR DISCUSSION; soc.sexuality.zoophilia (Moderated)
Proposed Moderator; Kayotae@Mindvox.Phantom.Com (Erik M. Blackwolf)

===================

This proposal is for the discussion of the creation of the
moderated newsgroup soc.sexuality.zoophilia. soc.sexuality.zoophilia
will compliment the existing newsgroup Alt.sex.bestiality.

Discussion on the creation of soc.sexuality.zoophilia shall be held on news.groups. This message has been cross-posted to
news.groups, news.announce.newgroups, and alt.sex.bestiality. The discussion shall be open for about 30 days. The CFV duration shall be for 21 days.

=============
Rationale
=============

Why a Soc.* group? Because to those who are zoophiles and serious about their identity as such tolerance of our social group is an important issue and a serious issue which is deserving of a respectable place where the topic can be addressed. Alt.sex.bestiality not only is a newsgroup
already inappropriate to those interests because of its' status as an unmoderated Alt.sex.* group but it's being part of the Alt.sex.* heirarchy makes it a difficult place in which to have intelligent discussion on this topic. The group is littered with crossposts, flames and irrelevant posts and lacks integrity as part of the Alt.sex.* heirarchy. In recent discussion on Alt.sex.bestiality a call for a moderated newsgroup has been voiced therefor this proposal has been set forth.

===========
Charter
===========

Soc.Sexuality.Zoophilia topics may include but would not be limited to;

I. Publicity and 'being out' as a zoophile,

II. Legal Issues/History in Zoophilia,

III. Discussion on the public opinion of zoophilia,

IV. Religion and Zoophilia, and

V. Psychological issues and mental health.

HOWL

"Every morning she would rise before me and wake me with a
passionate kiss. Upon opening my eyes I would see her deep blues looking down at me, into me, but since her death I've never felt anything like the burning desire within my heart I used to feel then. As we kissed, her love for me, my love for her would pass between us and there's nothing like that in the world."

-- Epitaph of a Dog
Kayotae@Mindvox.Phantom.com


Mom, Dad, this is my fiance. The nice thing is that she's also my best friend. Isn't that right, Lassie?

Meet Baaahbara.

I can now see why the group is moderated. :-) --spaf]

Bob the Gentleman Scientist's first Letter to the Editor in Scientific American!

"The Death of Proof" was a Scientific American article not by a mathematician, but by one of SciAm's staff writers. The article discussed how popular and significant demonstrations of mathematical phenomena that used fancy computer-generated animations were becoming. (The Grateful Dead was using them as their live performance light show.) He predicted that these spiffy math cartoons would soon completely extinct old-fashioned and tedious mathematical proofs.

I'd been trying for years to get Scientific American to print one of my highly scientific scholarly perfectly spelled hi-class uptown serious Letters to the Editor.

So here's the one they finally printed.

===================

Scientific American
(magazine USA, founded 1845)
January 1994

Hey, man, thanks a lot for "The Death of Proof." What my buddies down the hall liked best was what you said about how us students don't relate to proofs. We don't. They're real hard, and I don't think we should have to do them, not when you can get the same stuff from those neat color videos. The Grateful Dead likes them too!

If you guys keep writing neat stories like this about how math is getting easier and so much cooler, maybe us guys will take some more math courses and maybe even become real mathematicians, 'cause it looks like a real neat job now and not boring like I always thought because of all those numbers and equations and stuff.

Beavis and Butt-head say hi.

Bob Merkin
Northampton, Mass.

vleeptron hopes it wiggles for you



If the top image doesn't wiggle,
click the
REFRESH button.

Top: Animation of Pythagoras' proof that

for any right triangle, the sum of the squares
of the 2 short sides equals
the square of the long side.

When Pythagoras proved this
around 550 BC, he sacrificed a herd
of perfect white oxen to Apollo.

From the website of Robert L. Foote, Professor of Mathematics & Computer Science, Wabash College, a liberal arts college for men in Crawfordsville, Indiana USA. I don't know why it's men only, but I live 4 blocks from the fancy-schmancy all-women Smith College.

Professor Foote makes a specialty/hobby of one of the world's niftiest gizmos, the polar planimeter, and tells you all you could ever hope to know about how the polar planimeter works. (I am convinced it works on Magickal Principles.)

But here's Larry Leinweber's Java Applet polar planimeter that you can play with for hours. Try everything in all the drop-down menus. I mean you can't break it or break your computer no matter what forbidden or impossible thing you try to make it do. (You can break a real polar planimeter, though. But please don't.)

Any schmuck can figure out the Area of a square or a rectangle or a perfect circle or a triangle or a rhombus or a quadrilateral or a regular dodecagon. (See Fig. 1.)

But if you have a map or a satellite image of the USA state of Maine, how do you figure out the surface area of the really squiggly and irregular-shaped Sebago Lake?

Well, you just reach for your Polar Planimeter, that's how. You put the tracer arm anywhere on the shoreline, and then trace the entire shoreline until you come back to where you started, and Holy Shit!!! There's the fucking Area of Sebago Lake on little number wheels (like your car's odometer)!!! No batteries! No software! No math even! You just trace the outline of any irregularly (or regularly) shaped Area, and wham! There's your Area in hectares or square kilometers or acres or whatever the hell you use for surface area.

Goddam it, I just want one. How much do they cost?

Larry Leinweber has this site, Larry's Cerebral Snack Bar / Games and Puzzles to Feed your Head, and it has lots of screwy things.

Larry's giving away his Java Polar Planimeter for free, I think. Anybody who makes a virtual Polar Planimeter and gives it away for free is a Spiritually Advanced Sort of Person. He makes Earth a Better Planet.

08 March 2007

Arianespace Launch Update! The UK MoD says: We don't need no steeenkin NASA!

Arianespace's upcoming rocket launch
into orbital space takes place
in
Kourou, French Guiana.
(Artistic rendering by Agence Vleeptron-Presse.)


THE LAUNCH READINESS REVIEW (RAL) took place in Kourou on Thursday, March 8, 2007 and authorized count-down operations for the SKYNET 5A & INSAT 4B launch. For its first launch of the year Arianespace will boost two payloads into orbit: the Skynet 5A military communications satellite for the British Ministry of Defence, and the Insat 4B civil communications satellite for ISRO, the Indian Space Research Organization. This launch reflects the strategic role played by Ariane, which guarantees independent access to space for European governments. It also shows that Arianespace continues to set the launch service standard for all telecom operators worldwide, whether military or civil. It will be launched from the Ariane launch complex N° 3 (ELA3), in Kourou, French Guiana.


THE ARIANE 5 "ECA" LAUNCHER LIFT-OFF for this Flight is scheduled during the night of March 10 to 11, 2007 as soon as possible within the following launch window:

GMT: Between 10:25pm and 10:58pm on March 10, 2007.
PARIS: Between 11:25pm and 11:58pm on March 10, 2007.
BANGALORE: Between 03:55am and 04:28am on March 11, 2007.
WASHINGTON: Between 05:25pm and 05:58pm on March 10, 2007.
KOUROU: Between 07:25pm and 07:58pm on March 10, 2007.

Follow the launch live on the internet: http://www.videocorner.tv/index.php?langue=en
(Starting 20 minutes before lift-off).

Video streaming will be available in RealMedia and WindowsMedia formats.

==========================

La Revue d’Aptitude au Lancement (RAL) s’est deroulee le jeudi 8 mars ? Kourou et a autoris? les operations de chronologie pour le Vol Ariane 5 ECA – SKYNET 5A et INSAT 4B. Pour son 1er lancement de l’ann?e, Arianespace mettra en orbite deux charges utiles: le satellite de telecommunications militaires SKYNET 5A pour le Ministere britannique de la Defense et le satellite de telecommunications civiles INSAT 4B pour l’agence spatiale indienne, l’ISRO. Le lancement sera effectu? depuis l'Ensemble de Lancement Ariane n° 3 (ELA 3) a Kourou en Guyane franaaise.

Le decollage du lanceur Ariane 5 ECA est pr?vu le plus t?t possible dans la fen?tre de lancement suivante:

GMT : Entre 22h25 et 22h58, le 10 mars 2007.
PARIS : Entre 23h25 et 23h58, le 10 mars 2007.
BANGALORE : Entre 03h55 et 04h28, le 11 mars 2007.
WASHINGTON : Entre 17h25 et 17h58, le 10 mars 2007.
KOUROU : Entre 19h25 et 19h58, le 10 mars 2007.

Suivez le lancement en direct sur Internet : http://www.videocorner.tv/index.php?langue=fr
(Diffusion ? partir de H-20 mn).

Des flux aux formats RealMedia et WindowsMedia seront disponibles.

Rage Against the Machine rises from the dead, will rock again in spring & summer




As everybody knows, the Vietnam War was finally ended by Folk and Rock Music.

If loud naughty music can indeed stop wars, these are the boys who are gonna try to stop this sucky Iraq War.

{ [ ( o ) ] }

The Los Angeles Times (California USA)
Saturday 24 February 2007


Rage Against the Machine
adds more dates


The reformed band will Rock the Bells with Wu-Tang Clan on a summer tour.

by Geoff Boucher, Times Staff Writer

It turns out Rage Against the Machine will play more than one show after all -- the seminal L.A. band will join the Wu-Tang Clan for three shows under the banner of Rock the Bells, the acclaimed hip-hop festival that kicks off in New York on July 28 and hits Southern California on Aug. 11.

That local show will be at the National Orange Show Events Center in San Bernardino while the third show, on Aug. 18, will be in San Francisco. The sites of the New York and San Francisco shows as well as ticket sales information will be announced by organizers on Monday.

Rage is already the closing-night headliner of the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 29 in Indio, a festival that sold out 80 days in advance due to the pent-up fan demand for the Los Angeles band. Rage played their last show in 2000.

That Coachella show was announced as a "one-and-done" affair but the quick sellout and the harsh-priced ticket scalping already underway are among the factors in the added shows, according to sources close to the band. There's also the historical punch of performing with Wu-Tang Clan, one of the most ambitious and influential hip-hop outfits ever.

"Rage will do four shows and just four in 2007," said Chang Weisberg, the founder of Guerilla Union and organizer of Rock the Bells. "Coachella is first, that's the granddaddy. And now these three with the Wu-Tang Clan represent a very, very special thing."

The New York hip-hop collective has already announced the planned summer release of "8 Diagrams," the Clan's first album since "Iron Flag" in 2001. The album will feature new contributions from eight of the nine members from its classic line-up: RZA, Ghostface Killah, Method Man, Raekwon, GZA, Inspectah Deck, U-God and Masta Killa. The ninth member, the late ODB, who died in 2005, will appear in the form of previously recorded material.

RZA said in a released statement in November that the contemporary doldrums of hip-hop demand a return by the flamboyant and potent Clan: "People want something that gives them an adrenaline rush. We're here to supply that fix. How could hip-hop be dead if Wu-Tang is forever? We're here to revive the spirit and the economics and bring in a wave of energy that has lately dissipated."

More details on the shows, including an on-sale date, will come Monday via the "Kevin & Bean" morning show on KROQ-FM (106.7), the powerhouse rock station in Los Angeles.

Fans have been hopeful that Rage will tour but, according to Weisberg, these three new dates and the Coachella appearance are the extent of the current comeback. Rage helped launch Coachella in 1999 when the band co-headlined the inaugural edition of the huge festival.

Rage guitarist Tom Morello has said that the reunion is driven in part by politics and a desire by him and his compatriots to rally young people against President Bush, the war in Iraq and the Republican Party.

When Rage split, frontman Zack de la Rocha went solo while Morello, drummer Brad Wilk and bassist Tim Commerford went on as Audioslave, adding singer Chris Cornell and releasing three albums. That band's future came into question with the recent Rage reunion stirrings and likely ended altogether with the Feb. 15 announcement by Cornell that he is moving on due to "irresolvable personality conflicts and musical differences."

Morello, meanwhile, is also launching a new solo career as the Nightwatchman, the stage name he uses for his aggressive and largely acoustic protest music. His album, "One Man Revolution," is due in stores April 24 and he will tour in the spring.

If Rage as a whole also tours soon it would add to a summer of major reunions hitting the road; the members of the Police and Genesis have set aside their famous quarrels and are gearing up for road runs, while the notoriously fractious Eagles are finishing their first studio album since 1979 and are expected to tour as well.

- 30 -

Copyright Los Angeles Times

07 March 2007

Vive la France! A launch for the British Ministry of Defence (MoD) and for India!


- A launch for the British MoD and for India -

For its first launch of the year Arianespace will boost two payloads into orbit: the Skynet 5A military communications satellite for the British Ministry of Defence through Astrium subsidiary Paradigm, and the Insat 4B civil communications satellite for ISRO, the Indian Space Research Organization.

Launch window:

GMT: Between 10:25pm and 10:58pm on March 10, 2007.
PARIS: Between 11:25pm and 11:58pm on March 10, 2007.
BANGALORE: Between 03:55am and 04:28am on March 11, 2007.
WASHINGTON: Between 05:25pm and 05:58pm on March 10, 2007.
KOUROU: Between 07:25pm and 07:58pm on March 10, 2007.

Follow the launch live on the internet: http://www.videocorner.tv/index.php?langue=en
(Starting 20 minutes before lift-off).

Live video streaming will be available in RealMedia and WindowsMedia formats.

- Un lancement pour la defense britannique et pour l’Inde -

Pour son 1er lancement de l’annee, Arianespace mettra en orbite deux charges utiles: le satellite de telecommunications militaires SKYNET 5A pour Astrium et sa filiale Paradigm pour le compte du Ministere britannique de la D?fense et le satellite de t?l?communications civiles INSAT 4B pour l’agence spatiale indienne, l’ISRO.

Fenetre de lancement :

GMT : Entre 22h25 et 22h58, le 10 mars 2007.
PARIS : Entre 23h25 et 23h58, le 10 mars 2007.
BANGALORE : Entre 03h55 et 04h28, le 11 mars 2007.
WASHINGTON : Entre 17h25 et 17h58, le 10 mars 2007.
KOUROU : Entre 19h25 et 19h58, le 10 mars 2007.

Suivez le lancement en direct sur Internet : http://www.videocorner.tv/index.php?langue=fr
(Diffusion ? partir de H-20 mn).

Des flux video en directs aux formats RealMedia et WindowsMedia seront disponibles.

can it be true? Glenn Gould's 1955 Goldberg Variations sound better than ever??? / Old Bob is confused and disoriented

I'm an old man and I don't trust any music I can't touch or see.

midi? Surely you mean them rad phat bitchin awesome iPod .mp3s, right? Or have midis crawled out of their limited but clever music-box crudeness and become something technically sophisticated -- technically worthy of GG's '55 Goldbergs? If so, please help an old man stay In The Cool Loop, andsupply details, urls on youtube and Napster.

My life superglued to my spot on the Calendar straddles the revolution from analog to digital format music. (My turntable is still hooked up to my living room stereo, but is thick with dust, and none of my beloved vinyl has made the trip up from the basement in more than a decade.) Without subscribing to Audiophile, I've nonetheless tried to keep up with Tek Gossip, and the persistent buzz is that mp3s are inherently of lowerfidelity than CD format music.

This isn't a problem for most Youth Music -- my audio engineer pals back in the 70s were fond of saying: "Close enough for Rock n Roll!" Children's musical tastes are often indistinguishable from the desire to suffer permanent hearing loss, and in fact spokesmen for Tinnitus Prevention include Pete Townshend of The Who and Lars Ulrich of Metallica. (cf. http://www.hearnet.com/index.shtml )

But mp3s for classical music? Is this whippersnapper format truly up to the bandwidth and dynamic range challenges?

iPods win the prize for portability, transportability, convenience and storage density, but the buzz I hear is that mp3s will always be doomed to provide a crappier sound than CDs -- and thus can never rise to the GouldStandard of audio excellence.

Yes? No? Can a midi or an mp3 possibly do justice to Gould's piano recordings?

Please make me hip, so I can start to d/l Gould from my wi-fi laptop in the Nursing Home. (Over the Muzak, me and my peers are listening to Jimi Hendrix' "Crosstown Traffic" right now, and this weekend Grace Slick is bringing her Jefferson Airplane retro show to the Rec Hall!)

Toothless Bob, fresh from his ghastly 60th birthday party

News, Weather, Mozart, Sports, Extragalactic Travel, sausages, opera,
PIRATES!!! & Really Big Integers friom Planet Vleeptron:

http://VleeptronZ.blogspot.com

Remarkable Older Stuph: http://vleeptron.blogspot.com

=====================

} [Original Message]
} To:
f_minor@email.rutgers.edu
} Date: 3/7/2007 5:40:08 AM
} Subject: Re: [F_minor] Zenph 55 G'bergs released!
}
} Great news thanks!


} I've read the Zenph webpages but wasn't able to find any info if the hi-res midifiles will be marketized as well ... anyone knows anything about it?

} Thanks,
} Stefy
}
} ----- Original Message -----
} To:
f_minor@email.rutgers.edu
} Sent: Wednesday, March 07, 2007 5:43 AM
} Subject: [F_minor] Zenph 55 G'bergs released!
}
} I can't wait to hear what everyone has to say about this recording.

} What an interesting project!
}
} -Mary Jo,
} listowner, f_minor

SONY BMG MASTERWORKS
AND ZENPH(r) STUDIOS
RELEASE GLENN GOULD'S
BACH GOLDBERG VARIATIONS (1955)

SONY BMG Masterworks and Zenph Studios announce the release of a
breakthrough in the history of recorded music. Zenph's re-performance of pianist Glenn Gould's renowned 1955 rendition of the Bach Goldberg Variations lets listeners hear this celebrated work like never before and provides for a sonic rediscovery of an iconic recording.

The Goldberg Variations by Gould is one of the jewels of the Masterworks catalogue, continuously in print for over half a century.

Zenph's new technique lets the performance be heard for the first time in state-of-the-art sound on a new SONY BMG Masterworks hybrid multichannel SACD/CD disc, which includes versions tailored forsurround sound and headphone listening.

Zenph's innovative re-performance process takes audio recordings and turns them into nuanced live performances that precisely replicate the original recording but offer vastly improved sound quality. Listeners are now able to go back to the moment of creation and experience Gould's playing as if they were in the room when the originalrecording was made.

Re-performances replicate the original musician's touch, timing and sound – including glitches in the original performance. "We've preserved every single note, including the mistakes," said John Q.

Walker, president of Zenph Studios. "The improvements are all related to the sound quality. This is something that needs to be heard to befully appreciated."

Zenph captures the musical nuances of the original piano recording's every note, with details about the pedal actions, volume and articulations – all with millisecond timings. The digital data is transcribed into high-resolution MIDI files and played back on a state-of-the-art Yamaha Disklavier Pro™ concert grand piano. The process allows for the production of new recordings that transcend thelimitations of the original recording process.

SONY BMG assembled its top producers and engineers for the Gould project, including Steven Epstein, five-time Grammy(r) Award winner for "Producer of the Year," and Richard King, senior recording engineer for Sony Music Studios in New York and a three-time Grammy(r)winner.

Hailed worldwide, Zenph's work was named one of the Best Ideas of 2006 by The New York Times Magazine. "The re-creations are uncanny," wrote Paul D. Lehrman in Insider Audio magazine. "The timings and variations in the keystrokes are so subtle, it's easy to imagine the pianist is in the room, his fingers pushing the keys down."

Last year, at a live re-performance of the Goldberg Variations held at the Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto, members of the Glenn Gould Foundation stood and applauded after the last note faded

04 March 2007

Euclid alone has looked on Beauty bare

Vleeptron hopes it wiggles for you.

Euclid alone has looked on Beauty bare

by Edna St. Vincent Millay

Euclid alone has looked on Beauty bare.
Let all who prate of Beauty hold their peace,
And lay them prone upon the earth and cease
To ponder on themselves, the while they stare
At nothing, intricately drawn nowhere
In shapes of shifting lineage; let geese
Gabble and hiss, but heroes seek release
From dusty bondage into luminous air.
O blinding hour, O holy, terrible day,
When first the shaft into his vision shone
Of light anatomized! Euclid alone
Has looked on Beauty bare. Fortunate they
Who, though once only and then but far away,
Have heard her massive sandal set on stone.

03 March 2007

Blutgeld V.2, for the Anti-Kriegs-Museum / Anti-War Museum / the fireworks each midnight over Tivoli


Click, of course. Then make posters and t-shirts.

When in Berlin, visit The Anti-Kriegs-Museum, The Anti-War Museum. I think of it, just knowing it's there, that someone thought it absolutely necessary to have such a Museum, for the education of the people of Planet Earth, it is a Very Fine and Needed Thing.

Perhaps if I beg and whine and debase myself, some kind Soul associated with the Museum will print out a copy of this pathetic refrigerator art and stick it on a wall somewhere with a pushpin. Vleeptron Dude's Greeting Card to the Anti-Kriegs-Museum.

Stop the War.

Stop Both Wars.

Stop All Three Wars.

Stop All Wars.

Vleeptron has been promising you Really Big Integers for a long time.

Vleeptron delivers, as always.

In both Euros and US Dollars, the order of magnitude of these Really Big Integers is Hundreds of Billions.

I love Really Big Integers, so you cannot imagine how very sorry I am that someone has used these Really Big Integers for This.

~ ~ ~

This one is better, I think. I understand the electronics and the logic of the 7-Segment Light Emitting Diode (LED), but I never paid much attention to the intimate details of its æsthetic design.

You seen seven red hexagons, you seen 'em all.

Well, anyway, Bob is still no Artist, but this task has surely elevated me from Refrigerator Artist to Draughtsman Apprentice.

Thank you, Mr. Showaker, my Metal Shop teacher at Woodrow Wilson High School. You introduced me to the Pleasures of Draughting. I had no idea what you were trying to teach me or why it might ever be important to me, but as I grow older, the dim lightbulb sputters in my head, a neuron fires.

The World That Human Beings Build:

No drafting, no bridge.

No railroad.

No skyscraper. No elevators.

No electricity and no phones on the skyscraper.

No boats. No ships to carry boats. No submarines.

No toilets or faucet water in the skyscraper or the submarine.

No Apollo to the Moon. No FM radio ("No static at all").

No new wooden stairway to my basement.

Mr. Showaker was right. I was a Swine, and he spent decades casting his Pearls to me and my like.

First, before it becomes Real and Solid, the World must be drafted. Blueprints. CAD.

No drafting, no fission or fusion weapons.

Sloppy slipshod drafting, no Cluster Bombs to fall from the Sky and keep killing children (attracted to their bright happy metallic colors) for decades after the Peace Treaty is signed and everyone sips a glass of Champagne in the Grand Hall.

No drafting, no Roller Coaster at Tivoli, which I rode because I can't read Danish and I thought it was the Fun House. Snookdi Pupsi does not mean Fun House. I hate Roller Coasters.

Stop whatever you're doing and plan a trip in the Spring, for Opening Day of Tivoli. Or first telephone to make sure that Harlequin and Pierot and Pierette and Columbine, the Commedia del Arte, will be performing for Free, and Every Hour. These beautiful, talented, funny, happy young people must be university drama students, as I once was. They probably come from nine countries and each one begs Tivoli for the chance to spend the season being paid little to perform this sublime cycle of ancient theater, as remarkable as Noh theater or Balinese puppet theater. The costumes alone made me weep, for the first time in my life to be just meters away from them in their explosive patterns and colors, wrapping living, breathing, actresses and actors.

Tivoli is the world's oldest Amusement Park. It's across the street from the railroad station in Kobenhavn/Copenhagen. You can't miss it. If you're as stupid and clueless as I was, and never even heard of Tivoli, every night as the park closes, Tivoli fills the sky above Copenhagen/Kobenhavn with a startling and magnificent fireworks display.

I noticed it reflected in the windows of the Baroque government office building across from my hotel room. Darkness had hidden the office building and the narrow street, put it into a deep and boring sleep.

Then suddenly Tivoli announced that it would soon close for the night. And me in my underwear and socks unpacking my backpack startled, electrified into sudden Happiness and Thrill at midnight. I didn't even have to be facing in the right direction.

It must be nice to work at Tivoli, it must be nice to hit old Punch with a bladder every hour and listen to the squeals of delight from all the children and from Bob.

It's common to be hit by a taxi or spattered with mud or have a tree fall on you or buy a bad sandwich and be sick for two days.

But how often does the universe explode in your face just to say

Hi!
Welcome, Weary Traveller,
to Kobenhavn!

If you really go, try to get a room in the hotel attached to the Train Station. Go out the station's main exit, go down the sidewalk on your left, and just walk into the lobby. Disco may be dead -- God let it be so! -- but Art Deco and 1928 are Alive and Well and Having a Wild Fucking Party at this strange and delightful little hotel that 9999 out of 10000 newcomers just walk past, as if it weren't there, as if an entire hotel were invisible, on their way to the Hilton or the Radisson or the Ramada.

02 March 2007

old SP5 Bob, and the Blogosphere, Share Their Feelings with Congressman Bill Young (R-FL) over the Walter Reed Rats & Roaches Festival





















U.S. Representative C.W. Bill Young

(Republican, Florida)
photo: Associated Press


BREAKING NEWS FLASH BULLETIN THIS JUST IN

from Agence Vleeptron-Presse


U.S. Secretary of the Army Francis Harvey just submitted his resignation to Defense Secretary Robert Gates. In a Pentagon news conference, Gates announced he had accepted the resignation.

Gates did NOT add: "It is with a sense of personal regret ..."


I CAN'T BELIEVE Harvey made the new command appointment to Walter Reed without first asking his boss Gates if it sat right with him. It sat Very Wrong with Gates, who is in desperate Damage Control Mode to contain one of the most damaging and politically infuriating scandals ever to leak pus from George W. Bush's White House.

Harvey's pick for temporary commander of Walter Reed had been 3-star Army Surgeon General Kevin C. Kiley. But before moving up to become Army Surgeon General, Kiley had been the previous commander of Walter Reed -- on whose watch the cockroaches and the rats began sharing outpatient slum barracks with Iraq/Afghanistan soldiers, and Walter Reed hadn't done anything to reverse the collapse of the outpatient soldier programs.

The Army's standard apology is that the Iraq and Afghanistan wars swamped Walter Reed with a surprisingly large number of soldiers who needed intensive medical care and rehabilitation, and Walter Reed just hadn't been prepared for the war's ferocious generation of wounded soldiers.

Like, preparing an Army hospital for the prompt medical consequences of a big, violent war was an all-new surprise Doh Thing for the administrators of the military medicine machine. Walter Reed Hospital opened in 1909, and has been treating combat casualties through World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the First Iraq War, Somalia, Grenada, Haiti, the Balkans, and now Afghanistan and the Second Iraq War.

Gates has also yanked Kiley's new appointment, and has instead appointed Maj. (2-star) Gen. Eric R. Schoomaker to command Walter Reed. Schoomaker is the brother of Gen. Peter J. Schoomaker, the retiring Army chief of staff.

In both the BBC TV and NBC Nightly News coverage, the question was pointedly asked: Did Harvey jump, or was he pushed? Both correspondents placed big bets on Pushed.
======================

----- Original Message -----

From: Robert Merkin
To: Bill.Young@mail.house.gov
Sent: 3/2/2007 3:47:02 PM
Subject: RESEND WITH STREET ADDRESS [was:] Your shameful role in Walter Reed's shame


U.S. Rep. C.W. Bill Young
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington DC

Congressman Young:

As a Vietnam-era Army veteran, I thank God every day -- this is no exaggeration -- that I have never had to depend on the Tender Mercies of Army or VA/DVA medicine.

I was born, grew up and was drafted in Washington DC. For my whole life in DC, I was taught to believe that Walter Reed was one of the greatest hospitals in the world, and the care Walter Reed provided to President Eisenhower and Saudi Arabian royalty was the same top-quality care it routinely provided to every wounded or sick American soldier.

Now I thank God I never had to depend on your Congressional scrutiny of Walter Reed.

You were obligated to make yourself into a loud, angry, incessant Congressional busybody whenever you suspected our soldiers were getting anything less than the best from military medicine.

But you tired of bothering the Army and the DoD about what you saw at Walter Reed. You didn't want to make a nuisance of yourself with the brass, and you didn't want to alienate your buddies in the Republican White House. You were polite, courteous, professional, a Team Player -- and our soldiers sleep in urine and have to have their rooms cockroach-bombed at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

DoD just wanted you to go away and stop annoying them.

And you did.

Now I'd like you to go away. Soldiers and Marines are returning from two wars and need and deserve America's best medical care. We're going to need a very different member of Congress to make sure they get it.

Sincerely,

Robert Merkin
[Northampton Massachusetts]

SP5 U.S. Army 1969-1971
Army Commendation Medal, Good Conduct, National Defense Service Medal

=======================

The St. Petersburg Times (Florida USA)
Friday 2 March 2007


Young faces fury
in vets' scandal

After a newspaper report, the frequent
visitor to wounded soldiers
is assailed online for inaction.

by Bill Adair

WASHINGTON -- Rep. C.W. Bill Young and his wife, Beverly, have spent hundreds of hours helping wounded soldiers and Marines. They've provided money and gifts and even changed a law so that wounded soldiers would not have to pay for their hospital meals.

But on a day when an Army general in charge of Walter Reed Army Medical Center lost his job because of outrage over shoddy conditions, the Youngs were brought into the growing controversy. In the blogosphere and in the online journal Slate, people asked whether the Indian Shores Republican had done enough.

The questions were prompted by a Washington Post story Thursday that said Young stopped visiting the wounded in 2004 at Walter Reed because he was frustrated with the response to his complaints about poor medical care.

Daniel Politi, a Slate columnist, wrote that he "wonders why Rep. Young didn't tell his colleagues in Congress about these frustrations. If he did, why didn't they do anything?" Many people posted similar comments on the Buzz, a St. Petersburg Times political blog.

In an interview with the St. Petersburg Times, the congressman and his wife said the Post gave an incomplete account of their activities at Walter Reed. They said the Post, which uncovered moldy, rat-infested rooms in outpatient dormitories, made it appear that the Youngs were aware of those problems. But Young said that his complaints were focused on inpatient care and that he notified Army officials about them.

He said he was frustrated that some of those problems were not fixed, but "I have never suggested that Walter Reed is in crisis."

The congressman said that "Walter Reed, in general, provides good medical care."

Passionate defense

Beverly Young posted a passionate defense of their activities on the Buzz.

"I have given most of my time and all of my energy to making a better life for the wounded returning home," she wrote. "We have never once turned our backs on a soldier in need."

Young's sons, Rob, 30, and Patrick, 19, chimed in with their own postings.

"Wow, what gives any of you the right to bash my father or my mother? What have any of you done for the veterans?" Patrick wrote.

Rob took the unusual position that his parents were "almost pathological" about the wounded and spent too much time helping them.

"I am sick of the way my parents spend all of their free time going from vets hospital to military hospital and back again, helping and personally financing wounded veterans to the exclusion of everything else," Rob wrote.

Beverly Young verified the authenticity of the comments and said Rob has been unhappy that she and the congressman have missed many family events because of their hospital visits.

Beverly Young said that during their visits to Walter Reed a soldier with a head injury repeatedly fell out of his bed. One soldier's surgery had to be delayed because of broken equipment.

The Youngs said that they complained to Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, who headed the hospital and is now the Army's surgeon general, and that they were not satisfied with his response. They said they complained to other Army officials.

Rep. Young, who at the time was chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, said he did not hold hearings or complain in a press release.

"I don't do my business through the press," he said.

But Young said he was "offended" recently when Kiley blamed his subordinates for the Walter Reed problems.

"He was the boss and had been told about many of these problems by Beverly and by me," said Young, who is now the senior Republican on the Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense. "I think he should be held accountable."

Another firing?

Beverly Young went a step farther.

Kiley "should be fired because of his lack of commitment to his troops," she said.

Kiley did not return a telephone call Thursday, but Army spokesman Paul Boyce said, "We have an ongoing action plan that we're looking at and we're addressing concerns as they come to our attention. We continue to take corrective action as items come to our attention that need to be fixed."

Thursday morning, the Army announced that Maj. Gen. George Weightman, commanding general of the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command and Walter Reed Army Medical Center, had been fired because "the senior Army leadership had lost trust and confidence in the commander's leadership abilities" to fix the problems at Walter Reed.

Kiley, who as [Army] surgeon general oversees all medical care, will temporarily serve as the Walter Reed commander.

- 30 -

Washington Bureau Chief Bill Adair can be reached at adair@sptimes.com or 202 463-0575.

=============

comments beneath whitenoiseinsanity blog post
gen-kiley-of-walter-reed-also-needs-a-pink-slip/


17 Responses to “Gen. Kiley of Walter Reed also needs a pink slip”

1. Christopher Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:25 pm

No human being (except Bush or Cheney) should have to lay in their own body waste. This is an incredible comment on how far this country has sunk since the 2000 stolen election.

2. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:42 pm

It’s an abomination to the illegal occupation that they’ve told the young people of our nation to serve. If I’m not mistaken, Bush has said to them “to do something higher than yourself” (or something to that effect). Asshole! And this is how they’re treated when they do? Disgusting. As a mother, I would be outraged if that was my son laying in his own urine!!! You wouldn’t be able to tear my hands from Kiley’s neck…

3. smoke Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:45 pm

[ * ]

from A-blog

4. mirth Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:46 pm

Hi Christopher!

Bush & Cheney = human being…does not compute.

Kay, I’ll bet there are a bunch of Mothers wanting to do just that.

5. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:48 pm

Woohoo Mirth! It’s the mothers of this nation who get shit done. :-)

6. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:49 pm

Thanks Smoke. I just put the link in the main post as an update. I loooooove Louise Slaughter! She’s another great democrat. :-)

7. smoke Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:51 pm

i’m fond of mothers 8)

8. smoke Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:57 pm

[ * ]

9. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:58 pm

Awesome Smoke! Waxman is the man too!

I’m having trouble uploading pictures Smoke for some reason! I’m working on it though. :-)

10. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 2:59 pm

I’m fond of Smokesters. :lol:

11. VleeptronDude Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 3:00 pm

from today’s NY Times article:
=========
A Pentagon official said that, in addition to General Weightman, a captain, two noncommissioned officers, and an enlisted soldier involved in outpatient treatment were being reassigned. He said he could not provide further information because of Defense Department confidentiality rules.
==========

Thanks for feeling outraged at this. I’m an Army vet, and Thank God never had to accept the Tender Mercies of Army or VA medicine.

In government circles, particularly Congress for the last 10 or 15 years, US military veterans are regarded as and referred to as Entitlement Bums leeching our tax dollars. Cutting veteran medical care from the federal budget is a very politically popular chop with both parties.

But Korea, Vietnam, the Balkans, Somalia, Grenada, Iraq and maybe next month Iran … when we rattle our sabre and strike up the Patriotic Military Band to send these young men and women to some violent, deadly pesthole, we call them Our Heroes, and Nothing’s too good for them!

When they come back with PTSD, Agent Orange, or an amputated limb, nothing’s about what the American people think they should get for the rest of their lives.

This war’s Agent Orange medical neglect will be troop exposure to the metal that’s replaced lead in ordnance: DU or Depleted Uranium. Our Heroes will be developing cancer clusters in the decades to come, and the military and VA health systems will erect a Wall Of Denial throughout those decades.

Thanks for caring! Sick and wounded and chronically psychiatrically affected veterans are a built-in consequence of Going To War, and it’s about time American voters matured, put down their G.I. Joe Action Figures, and looked beyond the screaming warhawks on Fox, to consider carefully the post-war lifetimes of vets and their families, and how American treats them.

My blog take on this:

http://vleeptronz.blogspot.com/2007/03/2-star-medico-yutz-tossed-from-command.html

Oh yeah, just saw your impeachment line below this Comment window. Please explain to me one more time why Pelosi said “Impeachment is not on the table.” I’m a dummy, I don’t get it.

12. smoke Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 3:03 pm

my friend is gonna pick me up and haul my gimpy ass to the local volunteer fire department fish fry

will check back in later 8)

13. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 3:14 pm

Okay Smoke. LOL Have fun! Sounds like a good time. ;-)

14. clif Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 3:25 pm

A for compensation and treatement of the wounded vets FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES, no pentagon budget planner wants that large a fiscal responsibility hanging on their budget for 30-40 years, so they create a bureaucracy that makes the soldier just accept what ever they offer to get out of “medical hold”

(Which is their term for it.)

I know I spent almost a year in medical hold after Desert Storm. All the while the bureaucrats kept telling me just sign your disability and the VA will take care of you, what they never told me was even though my initial claim was submitted in 1992, the VA did not settle it until 1999, and I had the help of the Disabled american Veterans and understood exactly how regulations and the US government Title 10 (which is the controlling Law for the Pentagon) and Title 38(Which is the controlling Law of the VA).

Which meant I could read and argue with their interpretation of the governing Federal regulations they were supposed to be following. In the end the VA had, violated 9 separate areas of Title 38, and I have NO idea of how many sections the Military violated, because I knew that fighting the Military was futile.

However the army tried to tell me that part of my disability pre-existed my deployment, even though I had had a commissioning Physical and deployment physical before My deployment which did NOT show any such disability, and after my Time in the Gulf War I had definitely had those medical problems.

I can’t imaging what these young enlisted personnel go through given the fact they were never trained in dealing with government regulations and how to interpret then like I was, and the fact most of The wounded did not have the years of experience’s understanding no decision is final until the highest ranking authority had ruled on it, the local bureaucrat is just the first link in that chain of denial not the final authority.

That is why the military does not make it easy, cause if it was easy AND FAIR, the military would have to take some of the money they pay big greedy defense contractors and pay the deserving soldiers and Marines what is rightfully theirs. It is easier to create an obfuscated process which wears the individual soldier down and toss the buck to the VA which is a separate executive agency and has it’s own arcane rules of denials and obfucation.
15. kayinmaine Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 3:48 pm

Thanks so much for sharing your story with us Clif! This is why we love you. You’re a soldier who has served, who was injured, and who deserves all the respect in the world.

You’re right about money going to the defense contractors rather than our soldiers. I’m so sick of it!!!

16. VleeptronDude Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 5:05 pm

Yo Cliff, thanks for an extraordinarily nasty, creepy, miserable tale of caring for our combat soldiers and vets. I hope I have some tranquilizers in the medicine chest.

During the Cold War, the USA and Soviet Union had a fundamental dispute about how much each nation spent on Defense/War. The Soviet Union included Veteran Care in their Defense Buget, the USA did not. So the USA could point (but not accurately) to the USSR’s alarmingly greater spending on war.

Well, the Commies were spending billions extra on war’s inevitable consequence: thousands of lifetimes of medical care and veterans assistance.

Saint Bob of Toyota (that’s me) has been volunteering at local homeless shelters for 15 years. All homeless are welcome from all backgrounds and for all reasons.

But most nights for the “hot and the cot”, it might just as well be an Old Vets Reunion, from one Korea guy to tons of Vietnam guys to Desert Storm.

I’m terrified to meet the first Iraq/Afghanistan homeless vets — but I know they’re coming, like I know the Sun’s coming up tomorrow morning.

Homeless shelters seem to have a huge attraction for young and aging military veterans. Ditto alcoholism, addiction, divorce, suicide, jail and prison, untreated psychiatric conditions.

America needs to grow up. If America wants or if America truly needs a war, that’s the moment to start planning and building and budgeting for the war’s wounded and for the war’s veterans.

Jeez — Standard Official American Patriotism always seems to have these big holes and blind spots. They got the flag-waving and they got the parades down. They do the Shock and Awe pretty well, and it makes thrilling images and noises on CNN.

It’s the lives of those who fight the wars they never seem to get.

SP5 Bob
USA 1969-1971

PS. The luckiest thing in my life has been never having to depend on the Tender Mercies of Army or VA/DVA medicine. Trying to do a little community college on the GI bill was crazy Kafka VA bureaucracy torment enough.

Check out http://vleeptronz.blogspot.com/
gonna write and post more about this nasty Walter Reed scoundrel’s business.

17. mirth Says:
March 2nd, 2007 at 5:37 pm

Whew!
Thanks to both Clif and Vleeptronz for these comments!

2-star medico yutz tossed from command of Walter Reed Army Medical Center




















Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman


photo by William D. Moss
Agence France-Presse - Getty Images

Walter Reed Army Medical Center, a straight shot up 16th Street from the White House, is -- or was for the better part of a century -- the crown jewel and the pride of Army medicine.

Following Washington Post revelations of crappy, unsanitary, neglectful and demeaning treatment of wounded soldiers after their return from combat in Afghanistan and Iraq, the two-star yutz who commanded Walter Reed has been relieved of his command.

Relieved of command is Armese for fired; he just got fired.

Walter Reed is officially designated to close in 2011. As Bush wages two wars in Asia and rattles his saber threatening more wars, the crown jewel of Army medicine is going out with an incompetent and shameful whimper.

A fundamental question lingers: With Walter Reed wheezing, screwing up and mistreating combat soldiers, what's the Bush administration's message for the future of military medicine? As the wars continue and wounded soldiers keep flying back for treatment, will the quality bar rise -- or is the Bush administration shepherding a permanent lowering of expectations for how the military treats its wounded uniform personnel? When Walter Reed is no more, what kind of medical care can soldiers and their families expect from the scores of more undistinguished Army hospitals around the country?

More fundamental: Will this story grow legs? Will the American people loudly demand the finest medical treatment for the young men and women whom we sent into combat?

Or, as usually happens after American wars since Korea, will soldiers and discharged combat veterans be left to twist in neglect and agony, and to be drowned in bureaucratic paperwork that never ends and never leads to positive resolutions?

Well, they fired the yutz. Will the Department of the Army replace him with a superb medical commander focused on soldier-patients, who demands nothing but the best?

Or will the next permanent commander of Walter Reed just be the last guy who turns out the lights on the crown jewel of Army medicine?

~ ~ ~

The New York Times
Friday 2 March 2007

General Is Fired Over
Conditions at Walter Reed


by David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON, March 1 -- The two-star general in charge of Walter Reed Army Medical Center was relieved of command on Thursday, following disclosures that wounded soldiers being treated as outpatients there were living in dilapidated quarters and enduring long waits for treatment.

The officer, Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, a physician and a graduate of West Point, was fired because Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey "had lost trust and confidence" in his ability to make improvements in outpatient care at Walter Reed, the Army said in a brief statement.

The revelations about conditions at the hospital, one of the Army’s best-known and busiest centers for soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan, have embarrassed the Army and prompted two investigations, several Congressional inquiries and a rush to clean up the accommodations for outpatients, where residents lived with moldy walls, stained carpets and other problems.

A series of disclosures published prominently in The Washington Post about the living conditions, the red tape ensnarling treatment and other serious problems have challenged the notion promoted for years by the Army, especially since the war in Iraq, that wounded soldiers receive unparalleled care at Walter Reed.

Army officials have defended the treatment provided to most patients at Walter Reed, especially the most serious cases, those admitted to inpatient wards on the hospital’s campus a few miles from the center of Washington.

But they have acknowledged that the large number of wounded from Iraq and Afghanistan, currently around 650 patients, has taxed doctors, nurses and other care providers and forced them to rely more heavily on overflow facilities to house outpatients who must remain near the hospital for treatment.

Officials refused to provide the specific reasons for General Weightman’s firing.

The Army has admitted in recent weeks that the system it uses to decide whether wounded soldiers who have been moved to outpatient status will be able to return to active duty often takes too long and has promised to change the system. At Walter Reed the process has taken an average of over 200 days, a source of frustration to soldiers and families who are awaiting decisions about what benefits they will receive if they retire.

Treatment of wounded soldiers has also been spotlighted recently in a documentary recounting the treatment received by the ABC News anchorman Bob Woodruff, who was wounded in Iraq last year. Mr. Woodruff contrasted his care with that of soldiers, finding that Veterans Administration regional medical centers provide retired soldiers with good care but that local V.A. hospitals are less skilled at dealing with complex problems like traumatic brain injuries.

Mr. Harvey told reporters Thursday that the Army was also examining conditions at other medical facilities, both in the United States and abroad. "We’ll fix as we find things wrong," he said.

Paralleling the Army effort, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates appointed a panel last week to examine conditions at Walter Reed and other Defense Department hospitals it chooses, including the Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.

Mr. Gates endorsed the decision to relieve General Weightman in a statement Thursday.

"The care and welfare of our wounded men and women in uniform demand the highest standard of excellence and commitment that we can muster as a government," he said. "When this standard is not met, I will insist on swift and direct corrective action and, where appropriate, accountability up the chain of command."

Mr. Gates had signaled earlier, after a visit to Walter Reed, that senior officials would probably be relieved of command.

A Pentagon official said that, in addition to General Weightman, a captain, two noncommissioned officers, and an enlisted soldier involved in outpatient treatment were being reassigned. He said he could not provide further information because of Defense Department confidentiality rules.

General Weightman assumed command of the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command and Walter Reed Army Medical Center on August 25, 2006. He oversees medical facilities in seven other states in addition to Walter Reed and is one of the most senior officers to be relieved in connection with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He could not be reached for comment.

The Army said that command of Walter Reed would be taken over temporarily by Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, the Army’s top medical officer.

A 1973 graduate of the United States Military Academy, General Kiley received a medical degree in 1982 from the University of Vermont and has held a series of medical commands in the past two decades, including "land component command surgeon" during the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

In comments to reporters on Feb. 16, just before the first of a series of articles was published by The Post, General Weightman conceded that there were problems with outpatient care at Walter Reed, but said that improvements were being made.

"The family members get a little frustrated because, I mean, we are really disrupting their lives," The Associated Press quoted him as saying.

In the last year, General Weightman said, Walter Reed had increased to 17 from 4 the number of caseworkers charged with helping outpatients with the paperwork and other requirements of the patient disability evaluation system, which determines whether soldiers can remain in the military or retire with full benefits.

He said that the process often took months or years at Walter Reed because the hospital handled some of the most complex medical cases, involving head trauma and other conditions that made gauging recovery difficult.

Outpatients at Walter Reed have received initial treatment but require further care or rehabilitation before retiring from the armed forces or returning to active duty.

Addressing reports that recovering soldiers were asked to attend daily inspection, even when under medication, Paul Boyce, an Army spokesman, said that there would be periodic inspections in the outpatient facilities. Mr. Boyce added that soldiers who are able were asked to attend a daily morning meeting where treatment options and other information were discussed but that the sessions were not inspections.

Mr. Boyce said the worst conditions in the outpatient residences had been corrected but added the Army was planning to make more repairs, like replacing a faulty heating and air-conditioning system that was the cause of the mold on the walls.

- 30 -

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

01 March 2007

Blood money / Blutgeld / Cost of Iraq War in the blood of our neighbors' children / Cost in money


click for larger
make a poster
wear a t-shirt

In both US Dollars and in Euros (today's exchange rate), the order of magnitude is Hundreds of Billions.

Not a penny of this will ever be used to build a school, university, community college, hospital or clinic.

In U.S. cities, gang-related murders are soaring, because federal grant programs for anti-gang youth activities like after-school athletic programs -- which had been very effective in keeping kids in school and away from gangs -- have dried up. The war needs the money.

So if the purpose of waging this war is to keep Americans safe from terrorists, we'll be less likely to die in a terrorist attack -- and are already more likely to be killed in a gang-related shooting. Patriotic citizens should be happy about this success of the War on Terror.

The War is also hosing up money that should be attending to the health and medical needs of those who fight American wars for us: veterans. The Department of Veterans Affairs neglect of older veterans from our old wars is a perpetual, systemic tradition. This politicized, corrupt and incompetent bureaucracy's torment and neglect of our soldiers and Marines returning from combat in Iraq and Afghanistan has aleady begun.

When this amount is brought to the attention of warhawks on the Internet, the warhawks say: Freedom is priceless.

By coincidence, the organization which keeps a running tab of the Cost Of The Iraq War, the National Priorities Project, is my neighbor, its office about a mile from me in Northampton, Massachusetts USA. On their website the digits that show the War Cost spin wildly -- always Up. The NPP will also supply an electronic window display, in Red LEDs, of the ever-rising Cost of the Iraq War. There's one in the window of the best independent bookstore in town, and you can see how much Americans are paying for the War in Iraq at any time night and day.

NPP also computes how much the Iraq War is costing your town or your city. To date, my neighbors in Northampton, Massachusetts owe or have paid

$43,195,000

for the war. The citizens of Ann Arbor, Michigan owe or have paid

$127,848,000

for the war.

What will the American people get in return for the Hundreds of Billions we're paying for the Iraq War? Freedom? We used to have lots more freedom before Bush responded to the 9/11 attacks by hosing up and extinguishing a lot of the freedom Americans once enjoyed, some by new laws passed by Congress -- and some by secret presidential orders. Federal court rulings on the constitutionality of Bush's executive orders have not been generous to the Bush administration.

Congressman Abraham Lincoln, himself a veteran of the Black Hawk War, called James K. Polk's Mexican War a "scoundrel's war" and denounced it in bitter, angry speeches in Congress. But he voted for every appropriation for troops already committed to Mexico. In doing so, Lincoln established something in American politics that war enthusiasts always deny: The most patriotic American citizens and political leaders can say

Support Our Troops

and

Stop The War

at the same time.