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Find textbooks at Alibris!

NOTE: Overstock bests Amazon's prices and is "blue."

THE BOOKS WITH "BUZZ":
______________

Senator Edward M. Kennedy tells his extraordinary personal story:

True Compass: A Memoir
by Edward M. Kennedy.

Read Barack Obama's vision for America:

The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream
by Barack Obama

Boran2 and maryb2004 recommend:

The Big Over Easy: A Nursery Crime
by Jasper Fforde

Must-have information for all presidents-and citizens-of the twenty-first century?

Physics for Future Presidents: The Science behind the Headlines
Richard A. Muller

rae recommends:

Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire
by Morris Berman.

On BooMan’s shelf:

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
by Doris Kearns Goodwin

This looks interesting:

Adventure Divas
by Holly Morris

Here’s a good one from
Elizabeth Gilbert:

Eat Pray Love
by Elizabeth Gilbert

"Crash" * Best Motion Picture, Academy Awards * Only $11.79 at Overstock * 2006 SAG Winner, Best Ensemble

Check out
Powell's new section:
NEW FAVORITES

Selected new arrivals at 30% off

Recommended by Indianadem and ejmw:
The Conscience of a Liberal
by Paul Wellstone

From northcountry’s bookshelf:

The New Golden Age:
The Coming Revolution Against
Political Corruption and Economic Chaos
by Ravi Batra

A novel about contractors in Iraq from the woman that runs The Spy That Billed Me:

Outsourced: A Novel
from RJ Hillhouse.


Great Deals
----- * ^ * -----

Find mystery novels by Nancy Pickard ("Kansas")



Challenging Empire: How People, Governments, and the UN Defy US Power by Phyllis Bennis (interviewed on DN!)


Featured by Keith Olbermann, New (Powell's Sale): Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower by William Blum (whose other books merit serious consideration)


"Explosive" State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration
by James Risen


The book the CIA doesn't want you to read: Jawbreaker: The Attack on Bin Laden and Al Qaeda: A Personal Account by the CIA's Key Field Commander
Larry Johnson's review


BT's all-time best seller:

PERMACULTURE:
A Designers' Manual

$79.95 * Sale: $59.95


Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural Reader in U.S. Women's History (Third Edition)


The Undercover Economist: Exposing Why the Rich Are Rich, the Poor Are Poor And Why You Can Never Buy a Decent Used Car!


The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl
by Timothy Egan


Green Press Initiative
----- * ^ * -----


Journalistas: 100 Years of the Best Writing and Reporting by Women Journalists by Eleanor Mills * NYT review


Bury Me Standing: the Gypsies & Their Journey


1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus



Brokeback Mountain
by Annie Proulx
----- * ^ * -----
Check out Powell's
"At The Movies"


Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World by Noam Chomsky (Power & Terror: Post 9-11 Talks)


The Price of Privilege:

How Parental Pressure and
Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of
Disconnected and Unhappy Kids

by Madeline Levine


Save 35-70% on
name brand clothing,
footwear, and outdoor gear
at SierraTradingPost.com

:





We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris. (Selection (MP3) excerpted from "The Skin.")

Alibris - Books You Thought You'd Never Find
Banned Books * Are you a fan of Film Noir, Art House, Documentaries or Hong Kong Action? * Searching for a long-lost children's book or a first printing of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue on vinyl? Find it at Alibris!

:
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www.Patagonia.com


Display:
There is an Australian tv channel called SBS - it was created to serve the non-english speaking people of Australia & our multicultural background in general. As a result it has excellent in-depth news coverage, particularly of international issues & their implications for Australia. Their flagship program in this sense is Dateline, which has been running for 20 years.

An award-winning reporter for Dateline, Olivia Rousset, who has previously covered Abu Ghraib and the Iraq qar in general, was given these photos and videos by the ACLU. The Australian newspapers are sourcing them from the SBS website etc.

here is the transcript of the Dateline program on the new photos & videos of Abu Graib:

REPORTER: Olivia Rousset

These are the photos the American Government doesn't want you to see. While researching a story on guards at Abu Ghraib, I obtained a copy of the unreleased photographs and videos. Taken at the same time as the photos released in 2004 and often of the same abuses, this is the first time they have been shown to the public.

AMRIT SINGH, LAWYER, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION: We hope that the release of these photographs will bring about further pressure to hold high-ranking officials accountable for what we now know to have been systemic and widespread abuse occurring throughout Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.

American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Amrit Singh has not seen the photos. The ACLU has taken the Department of Defense to court to force the release of these pictures under the Freedom of Information Act.

AMRIT SINGH: The government has taken the position that the conduct of US soldiers depicted in these photographs is so egregious that the American public cannot have a right to it.
So it is a bizarre position, from our point of view, obviously, because the Freedom of Information Act, under which we are seeking these photographs, is precisely the legislation that was enacted so that the public could find out what its government is up to.

Last September the ACLU won its case but the government immediately appealed, stalling the release of the photos. The government's main argument against their release was that they would stir up anti-American sentiment. Judge Alvin Hellerstein directly responded to this in his decision.

JUDGE ALVIN HELLERSTEIN, STATEMENT: Our nation does not surrender to blackmail, and fear of blackmail is not a legally sufficient argument to prevent us from performing a statutory command. Indeed, the freedoms that we champion are as important to our success in Iraq and Afghanistan as the guns and missiles with which our troops are armed.

In a stinging rebuke to the Pentagon over America's freedom of information, Judge Hellerstein even quoted President Bush's State of the Union speech back at them.

PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH, STATE OF THE UNION SPEECH: The attack on freedom in our world has reaffirmed our confidence in freedom's power to change the world. We are all part of a great venture to extend the promise of freedom in our country, to renew the values that sustain our liberty and to spread the peace that freedom brings.

What has now emerged is that well before the first pictures were leaked and even before the abuses were photographed, the ACLU had already filed an earlier freedom-of-information request concerning the treatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib.

AMRIT SINGH: And the government ignored that Freedom of Information Act request. At the time we filed our Freedom of Information Act request policies authorising the abuse of detainees had already been put in place, and detainees at Abu Ghraib were being tortured as we were asking for those documents. So it only goes to confirm that not only was what happened at Abu Ghraib horrific for the detainees, horrific for this nation, horrific for the American public to have on its conscience, the government engaged in a massive cover-up of what happened. And that is utterly astounding given that this country is, after all, in the eyes of some, a country which believes in the rule of law.

These are the photos that have already been seen. They were taken within weeks of the ACLU's freedom-of-information request. Images such as the man in the hood with wires attached to his fingers, and Lynndie England with a detainee on a leash were seared into the memory of the public, creating a PR nightmare for the administration's Iraq policy.
When this original batch of photographs was leaked to the press, members of Congress were given a private viewing of the entire set, including the unreleased ones.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: The military dogs and the victim lying on the floor near a pool of blood, with a clear wound on his leg, it is so graphic.

ABC NEWS REPORTER: Several described a gruesome photo of a partially decapitated body, though no-one knew if the photo was taken at the prison or elsewhere in Iraq.

RICHARD SHELBY, REPUBLICAN SENATOR: I saw a horrible picture, it looked like somebody's face had been blown away or beaten away.

Despite some American journalists having seen and referred to these new photographs, none have so far been published.

Many of the new photos show Lynndie England and Charles Graner having sex, but more disturbingly the new photos and video apparently reveal more torture, sexual humiliation and killings seemingly perpetrated by soldiers at Abu Ghraib.

This video shows naked men apparently forced to masturbate in front of the soldiers and their camera.
Based on the American Army's own inquiry we can reveal the following details of the new photographs and videos. This man, listed as 'detainee 10', is thought to be an Iraqi general who was resisting relocation from the outside camp to the cell blocks, known as the hard site, at Abu Ghraib. The report states that he was pushed against a wall at which point guards noticed blood coming from underneath his hood. The 1.5-inch cut on his chin was sutured by a medic. While an army report lists a description of this photo as, "detainee apparently shot by MP personnel with shotgun using less than lethal rounds", the circumstances surrounding the incident are unknown.

An American soldier told me that this man was first held in the camp outside the hard site at Abu Ghraib, and that after causing problems with the other detainees, he was brought into the cells where the high value prisoners were kept. Known to the soldiers as 'shit boy', due to an alleged habit of covering himself in his own faeces, he was left without psychiatric care. He apparently became a plaything of the guards who experimented with ways to restrain him. He's filmed here from several different angles handcuffed to a cell, slamming his head into the metal door. The soldiers chose to film him several times from different angles rather than try to prevent his self-harm.

An American soldier who worked as a guard at Abu Ghraib told me these two women were arrested for working as prostitutes and were held in Abu Ghraib for 48 hours.

AMRIT SINGH: The government documents we have show that the overwhelming majority of detainees held in Abu Ghraib were in all likelihood innocent. So for people who think that, you know, that these detainees got what they deserved and this was just a lawful exercise of executive authority to get information - first of all, these detainees were in all likelihood innocent and secondly, we have documents from the FBI at Guantanamo saying that coercive interrogation techniques are not good at producing actionable intelligence. If anything rapport-building techniques are much better at producing actionable intelligence that can be used to sort of wage the so-called war on terror.

From these original photos we know that this man is Munadel al-Jumaili. These are new photos of his corpse. I was told these two photos were taken in the room, where he was killed whilst under CIA interrogation.
The reason for the deaths of these men is also largely unclear, however, the number next to the corpse of this detainee corresponds to an entry in another army report. He is listed as one of three men killed during a riot in the camp at Abu Ghraib. The riot began when the detainees were protesting their living conditions, which, according, to army reports, were filthy, crowded and dangerous.

Two soldiers from Abu Ghraib have told me that during the riot when the guards ran out of rubber bullets they were ordered to use lethal rounds. The detainees were fenced in a camp compound with nowhere to run or hide.

REPORTER: Any regrets?

SOLDIER: No, ma'am.

REPORTER: Any apologies?

Accountability for the abuses has been sheeted home to seven low ranking guards. These 'bad apples', as Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld called them, are serving various sentences - the longest being 10 years for the ringleader, Charles Graner, and three years for his then lover, Lynndie England.

There have been 10 government investigations into the abuse and torture of detainees in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay, but no high ranking officials have been held accountable.

REPORTER: What do you think of what happened to those seven soldiers who were charged when the scandal first emerged?

AMRIT SINGH: Well, I think looking at the documents that we have received under the Freedom of Information Act so far, it is very clear to us that the actions of these soldiers were part of a larger program to abuse detainees that was put in place by high ranking officials.

We have consistently called out for an independent commission to evaluate the responsibility of high ranking officials but nothing has been done so far. If anything, these high ranking officials who put in place policies that resulted in the abuse of detainees have been exonerated and promoted.

Americans pride themselves on free speech and open government. This is why Amrit Singh and the ACLU feel these photos should be released.

AMRIT SINGH: The photographs really have to be released so that the public has some idea of what exactly happened at Abu Ghraib. And it has been our position consistently through this litigation that the subject of detainee abuse has been a matter of intense public debate and the appropriate high ranking officials who put the policies in place that resulted in the abuse of detainees have not been held accountable. And it is now for the public to decide for itself, by looking at these documents, what needs to be done.

Can I also just point out that from a non-American point of view, with Australians not only serving in Iraq, but one officer implicated in the Abu Ghraib scandal, we and the rest of the world has just as much right to have investigative journalists do their job, and reveal these photos and their story. These happenings affect my country, and many others, not just the USA.   


"this just can't get more disturbing!" - Willow

by myriad (imogenk at wildmail dot com) on Wed Feb 15th, 2006 at 08:21:06 PM EST
bold emphasis mine above, and here is   a link to Dateline

"this just can't get more disturbing!" - Willow
by myriad (imogenk at wildmail dot com) on Wed Feb 15th, 2006 at 08:24:08 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Thanks, Myriad!  I added your info and your name to my story.

However, this:

, I obtained a copy of the unreleased photographs and videos.

That's a leak, unless i missed something else in the story.

Hickok: "You know the sound of thunder. Can you imagine that sound if I ask you to? Ma'am, listen to the thunder."

by susanhu (susanhuatearthlinkdotnet) on Wed Feb 15th, 2006 at 08:56:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]
that according to the ACLU lawyer interviewed above, the ACLU apparently absolutely supported and wanted this 'leak'. - IE, you worry that the release of the new pictorial evidence undermines the ACLU's case, yet it is the ACLU that sanctioned it.

From that point of view, and the point I was trying to make, is that this evidence has not been released without the ACLU's knowledge and sanction, so I find it hard to see it as someone trying to undo their case. Rousset clearly went straight to the ACLU when she got hold of the photos etc. and framed the story around their case.

"this just can't get more disturbing!" - Willow

by myriad (imogenk at wildmail dot com) on Wed Feb 15th, 2006 at 09:48:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I don't see how this undermines the ACLU case, and, as the transcript reveals, they were consulted and in fact participant in the release.

These happenings affect my country, and many others, not just the USA. 
 

I wish more people in the international community would come to this conclusion and act on it in efforts to expose to the rest of the world just what kind of criminality runs rampant  in the federal gov of this country.

It seems to obvious to me that we, the people, do not have the means (in many cases, because we do not have the will) to hold this gov accountable for its actions or to "humiliate" it into doing anything it doesn't want to do.

The more the international community steps up to the plate to remind us and our government that there is a whole, wide world beyond the shores of New York and Los Angeles that is being devastated by our actions, the better.

We need to get a serious grip on the fact that we are not "the world" just a very small but pathetically arrogant part of it.

The rest of the world is not the "playground" of the world--and when the "games" Americans play begin having an effect on everyone else--it is time for the rest of the world to stand up and do whatever they think is appropriate to expose the BS and to get it to stop.

juslilolme at Historical Footnotes

by starkravinglunaticradical (non) on Thu Feb 16th, 2006 at 10:05:17 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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