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April 28, 2007

Caution, wake turbulence....

Jet Exhaust Causes Small Plane To Roll - Local News Story - KSAT San Antonio:


SAN ANTONIO -- Two people escaped injury Thursday night following a runway accident at San Antonio International Airport.

Airport officials said that a Boeing 737 was taxiing to a runway for takeoff when its increase thrust caused a small Cessna plane that was behind it to flip.

Two people on board the Cesnna were not hurt.

The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the incident.

Our government could NEVER be arbitrary and capricious!

U.S. can't alter 'dolphin-safe' tuna rules: court - Yahoo! News:


SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The U.S. government has arbitrarily and capriciously sought to ease rules for foreign fisherman on "dolphin-safe" tuna, a U.S. federal appeals court ruled on Friday in upholding current standards.

The decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to back the standards is the latest in a long-running dispute on what tuna sold in the United States can be labeled "dolphin safe" -- a designation that means tuna is fished using practices that protect dolphins.

Previous such decisions have angered Mexican and South American fishing industries.

The dispute involves the use of huge "purse seine" nets, which fisherman have used since the late 1950s to boost their capture of tuna swimming beneath dolphins. The nets get their name as they can be closed like a drawstring purse.

Dolphins, which are air-breathing mammals, can be easily spotted by fishermen when they surface for air.

As decades of such fishing dramatically lowered the numbers of certain species of dolphins, the U.S. Congress enacted a law in 1990 that said companies could not market tuna as "dolphin-safe" if they caught the fish by purposely surrounding dolphins with the nets.

Worrying that they could be shut out of the U.S. tuna market, officials in Latin America have since lobbied for a less stringent rule that would allow the "dolphin-safe" label if observers on the foreign boats had not seen dolphins killed or seriously injured.

The U.S. secretary of commerce has backed the rule change, but the 9th Circuit, reaffirming its 2001 ruling on the issue, said the U.S. effort was not based on proper scientific analysis on the impact to dolphins and was politically influenced. In the ruling, the court deemed the secretary's findings "arbitrary and capricious."

FOREIGN POLICY CONSIDERATIONS

"This evidence shows that the agency's decision-making process, which was devised to conduct a scientific analysis of the fishery's effect on dolphins, was influenced to at least some degree by foreign policy considerations rather than science alone," Chief Judge Mary Schroeder wrote for a three-judge panel.

The San Francisco-based Earth Island Institute and other environmental groups have led the litigation against the U.S. government and Latin American fishing interests in the case.

"As a practical matter ... there will be no change in tuna labeling standards absent new congressional directive," the court ruling said. "The label of 'dolphin-safe' will continue to signify that the tuna was not harvested with purse-seine nets, and that no dolphins were killed or seriously injured when the tuna were caught."

The court said such fishing practices have killed more than 6 million dolphins.

According to the Earth Island Institute, more than 90 percent of tuna canners in 51 countries worldwide follow "dolphin-safe" standards.

Earlier this year, the World Wildlife Fund warned that illegal fishing has critically depleted global stocks of tuna and urged nations to undertake measures to reduce the large numbers of dolphins and other species ensnared in tuna hooks and nets.

April 26, 2007

Only Muslims are Terrorists?

Bomb found at women's clinic - CNN.com:


(CNN) -- An explosive device "which could have caused substantial harm" was found Wednesday in the parking lot of an Austin, Texas, women's clinic where abortions are performed, authorities said.

"It was configured in such a way as to cause serious bodily injury or death," Austin Police Assistant Chief David Carter told reporters Thursday.

An employee reported the suspicious device at the Austin Women's Health Center, and Austin police responded at about 2:15 p.m. The employee also notified the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, as per clinic protocol, police said.

Southbound lanes of nearby Interstate 35 were closed as bomb technicians detonated the device, and the clinic, an insurance agency and an apartment building behind the clinic were evacuated.

"[Officials] came in banging on the doors, telling us to get out. I got home from work early today and said, 'Are you serious?' and they starting taping off the area," one resident told News 8 Austin.

After the detonation, "closer examination of the package revealed an unknown powdery substance in the device," police said. Field analysis showed the substance was an explosive powder, but not a biological hazard, authorities said.

Austin police spokesman Kevin Buchman said there are no reports thus far of anyone suspicious in the vicinity at the time the package was found, but said authorities were canvassing the area for potential witnesses.

The clinic does have cameras in its parking lot. Asked whether that might aid police in their investigation, Carter said, "Time will tell."

Carter said the device was in a "carry-all type bag", but Austin police and the FBI would not provide more details on the device and its makeup. The Joint Terrorism Task Force was investigating, Carter said. Authorities were also making contact with other clinics in the city.

Spinal Tap resurface for Live Earth | The Register

Spinal Tap resurface for Live Earth | The Register:


Cult rockers Spinal Tap have agreed to reform for Al Gore's Live Earth concert in July, the Telegraph reports.
The band has been keeping a low profile since releasing its 1992 record Break Like the Wind, but is still fondly remembered for its legendary 1984 contribution to the rockumentary genre This is Spinal Tap.

Agreeably, the band has filmed a 15 minute "consciousness raising" film as part of its Live Earth contribution, which shows them "driving around in their 4x4s and leaving all the lights on in their mansions".
The short, directed by This is Spinal Tap creator Rob Reiner, will also let fans see what the boys have been up to over the last 15 years.
According to the Telegraph, Nigel Tufnel (Christopher Guest) has been "raising miniature horses to race but cannot find jockeys small enough to ride them", David St Hubbins (Michael McKean) "is a hip-hop producer who also owns a colonic clinic", and Derek Smalls (Harry Shearer) "is in rehab for internet addiction".
As well as the film, the band has recorded a new song, Warmer than Hell, to support the Live Earth cause. Whether the cover will feature "a greased naked woman on all fours with a dog collar around her neck, and a leash, and a man's arm extended out up to here, holding onto the leash, and pushing a black glove in her face to sniff it" is unconfirmed.

April 23, 2007

It is SO about time!

Wiccan symbol OK for soldiers' graves - CNN.com:
MADISON, Wisconsin (AP) -- The Wiccan pentacle has been added to the list of emblems allowed in national cemeteries and on government-issued headstones of fallen soldiers, according to a settlement announced Monday.

A settlement between the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and Wiccans adds the five-pointed star to the list of "emblems of belief" allowed on VA grave markers.

Eleven families nationwide are waiting for grave markers with the pentacle, said Selena Fox, a Wiccan high priestess with Circle Sanctuary in Barneveld, Wisconsin, a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

The settlement calls for the pentacle, whose five points represent earth, air, fire, water and spirit, to be placed on grave markers within 14 days for those who have pending requests with the VA.

"I am glad this has ended in success in time to get markers for Memorial Day," Fox said.

The VA sought the settlement in the interest of the families involved and to save taxpayers the expense of further litigation, VA spokesman Matt Burns said. The agency also agreed to pay $225,000 in attorneys' fees and costs.

The pentacle has been added to 38 symbols the VA already permits on gravestones. They include commonly recognized symbols for Christianity, Buddhism, Islam and Judaism, as well as those for smaller religions such as Sufism Reoriented, Eckiankar and the Japanese faith Seicho-No-Ie.

"This settlement has forced the Bush Administration into acknowledging that there are no second class religions in America, including among our nation's veterans," said the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, which represented the Wiccans in the lawsuit.

The American Civil Liberties Union said the agreement also settles a similar lawsuit it filed last year against the VA. In that case, the ACLU represented two other Wiccan churches and three individuals.

VA-issued headstones, markers and plaques can be used in any cemetery, whether it is a national one such as Arlington or a private burial ground like that on Circle Sanctuary's property.

Wicca is a nature-based religion based on respect for the earth, nature and the cycle of the seasons. Variations of the pentacle not accepted by Wiccans have been used in horror movies as a sign of the devil.

April 21, 2007

Yahoo! Sued about China Again - John Quarterman

Yahoo! Sued about China Again:




A year ago, someone

lodged a complaint against Yahoo! in Hong Kong regarding jailed
activist Shi Tao.

This month, there's another suit against Yahoo! for revealing user information
to the Chinese government, this time in a U.S. court:


A suit filed in federal court in San Francisco on Wednesday by the wife
of Wang Xiaoning accuses Yahoo of "aiding and abetting" torture and
human rights violations by linking her husband and others to e-mail and
online comments.



Yahoo sued in US court for giving user data to China
,
Sydney Morning Herald,
April 20, 2007


The previous suit noted that Yahoo! operates as a Hong Kong company,
so it's not clear whether it actually had to go by mainland Chinese
rules instead of Hong Kong ones.


However, this activist was apparently convicted in a mainland court:


Yahoo was referred to 10 times in the Chinese court verdict on September
12, 2003 that declared Wang guilty of "incitement to subvert state power"
and sentenced him to a decade in prison.


"I feel very angry," Wang's wife, Yu Ling, said after a news conference
on Thursday announcing the filing of the suit.


"Yahoo betrayed my husband for their business interests. They literally
destroyed my family. All my husband did was express his political views."


Any company that operates in a country not its home has to abide
by the laws there, or accept the consequences of not obeying them.
Yahoo! did the former, and apparently there may be consequences
of obeying Chinese laws.


-jsq

April 17, 2007

Prudence, or Overreaction?

Parents from Fairfax County Public Schools received the following email a few minutes ago:
----
Yesterday’s tragic incident at Virginia Tech involved several FCPS graduates who were
killed or wounded. You may see an increased presence of Fairfax County Police and Virginia
State Police at some of our schools today and possibly throughout the week. This police
presence is in response to the Virginia Tech incident. Please be assured that the police
are onsite to carry out their investigation and to ensure the safety of our students while
they are in school.
-----

So what do you think? Will that make our kids even more nervous? Will stepping up police presence in a county 2 hours away from the shootings do any good? Will their presence make kids feel more secure?

I don't know what to think. The nerves are still a bit too raw.

April 16, 2007

The 150.00 burger

NBC2 News Online - Cape resident flies 150 miles for Krystal burger - monthly:


KISSIMMEE: It's a lot more than a Big Mac attack that has one Cape Coral man flying 150 miles from his home several times a year to the nearest Krystal fast-food restaurant.

Jay Barr picks up 24 burgers about ten times a year. He says the hour-long flight from the Kissimmee airport is more worth it. He typically leaves Fort Myers around 6 am and is home by 8:30 am, sometimes before his wife even wakes up.

Saturday, the fast-food company unveiled a hamburger box and drink cup with Barr's face and an airplane printed on them. Hundreds of thousands of the boxes will hit about four-hundred restaurants in the Southeast.

Barr was one of thousands who e-mailed stories to the company about their love for Krystal's food.

He will be added to their online Hall of Fame in the coming weeks on its website: http://www.krystal.com/

April 15, 2007

Logistics of having so many critters...

Why yes, I'm afraid we do run a petting zoo. 10 dogs, 4 cats, 3 parrots and a marine fish tank. Many have asked about the logistics involved with dealing with so many aminals, so I decided to finally write about how a "normal" week with critters goes.

Food and water: That used to involve a weekly trip to PetsMart for the dogs, every couple weeks to the American Bird Company for the boids, to the McLean Animal Hospital for the cats, and to Fins and Feathers for the fish. However, my life has been made a LOT easier by the addition of a few simple things. lionessindc turned me onto Canine Caterers who also deliver cat food of the type that my kids can eat (the two indoor cats have IBD and eat special food). They bring good food without fillers from China, drop them on the doorstep and bill the credit card. Wonderful. I used to have a similar service for the birds, but they stopped doing that, so I get someone to go out to the Bird Co, and I've found most of the fish food online except for the frozen stuff that I still have to schlep out to get. Outdoor cats eat anything. They're not really "mine" they just adopted me. They're pretty feral but sometimes allow you to pet them. Water is pretty easy, just clean and fill everyone's water dishes cept for the fish :-).

General Maintenance: Here's where things get sticky. 5 dogs are Chinese Crested Puffs, , 4 Chinese Crested Hairless and one big black muttley dog. Nobody sheds cept for the muttley dog. However, the puffs need regular grooming, especially my children who love to play in mud or whatever else is available. The choice is 45.00 each for bathing and grooming, or do it myself, which I generally do. This weekend I did all 5 puffs, and had to empty the vacuum 3x cleaning up all the hair. Some are easier to groom than others, some taking one person to hold them still and the other to clip as quickly as possible, leaving the dog looking as if it tried to have sex with a lawn mower.

Cat maintenance for cats with IBD is really disgusting, so I won't go into it. Fish tank maintenance consists of lots of water testing, lots of water changing, lots of watching and worrying, and lots of "wow, this is really coooool" Bird maintenance includes letting the monsters out of their cages, grooming their new feather sheaths, keeping them from eating remotes and electrical wires and furniture, while chasing them around the room with them usually yelling something ridiculous like "bad bird, no screams."

Output Maintenance: Here's where things get smelly. The bedroom is made up of two areas, separated by a two sided fireplace. One side belongs to the dogs. It is blocked off from the other side which belongs to ME. Both of the sides have hardwood floors, which is not great since I already have to refinish the floors on the dogs' side. The dogs have a doggie door that opens onto the deck so they can run down the stairs and do their doggie stuff outside, where it is collected weekly and thrown into a makeshift compost pile. The cats have a litter box. The birds have newspapers, and the fish tank has a protein skimmer. Changing THAT can be highly amusing.

Toys and entertainment: Here's where it gets silly. The dogs have many toys, many remnants of toys, and many objects that they have confiscated as toys. They seem to get hold of various household objects and somehow sneak them out the dog door where they are found in less than usable condition. These objects include wooden spoons, socks, shoes (only the expensive ones), underwear (Chiana once paraded in front of the picture window with my bra on her head in front of guests), etc. Timing of how long toys actually last can be from 5 seconds (literally) to a few weeks, depending on how long it takes them to remove the insides of whatever and strew them all over the room. I just finished cleaning up the innards of a disemboweled stuffed cow. The cats have various cat toys that last much longer. The fish find all kinds of things to play with. The birds have toys that also have variable times to live, depending on how quickly the birds chant "power of CHAIN SAW" and get to work, leaving a pile of splinters and an eerie cackling sound. The evil birds consist of a Moluccan Cockatoo, a Blue and Gold Macaw, and a singing Yellow Nape Amazon.

Vetting: Here's where it gets expensive. We are VERY lucky to have a vet who makes house calls. When it's time for shots, the assembly line begins. Grab dog. Find record. Weigh dog. Examine dog. Shoot dog. Repeat until finished. This vet also does cats. Hooray. Birds have to be driven about an hour to Purcellville, which generally includes hideous screeching along the way. For the fish, I call Sean at Fins and Feathers and sound pathetic til he comes to help.

Attention: Everybody gets as much attention as is humanly possible. It's no wonder I need vacations. But I can't take many with hubby because someone has to aminal sit. Oh the fun :-)

But they really are worth it. They're great little critters.

Still think the DMCA is a great idea?

Boy dupes YouTube to delete videos - New Zealand's source for technology news on Stuff.co.nz:


A 15-year-old West Australian pretending to represent ABC TV succeeded in having more than 200 clips removed from the video-sharing website YouTube.
The boy signed a form claiming, "under penalty of perjury", that he represented the clips' copyright owners.
The segments, taken from The Chaser's War on Everything, were removed over a month and replaced by this message: "This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Australian Broadcasting Corporation."
The latest clip to be removed featured Charles Firth accosting Hillary Clinton. It had been viewed more than 100,000 times before it was taken down yesterday.
"The head of ABC legal is contacting those involved," the head of arts, entertainment and comedy at ABC TV, Courtney Gibson, said. "We are very much keeping our options open in terms of what kind of action we take."
The ABC contacted YouTube after the clip was removed, and was provided with a copy of the form used to claim that a copyright infringement had been committed.
It had been filled out by hand, listing "Loop Australia" as the company acting for the "Australian Broddcasting Corperation".
The ABC has no affiliation with the company, or the boy whose Hotmail account was given as a business contact.
"I don't think we should prosecute him - we should probably hire him," said the Chaser's Julian Morrow. "If they are copyright crusaders, I hope they don't look too closely at the old days' The Chaser newspaper."
Ms Gibson said the removal of the clips was in direct contrast to ABC's policy on content sharing. "[ABC wishes] to get our content out there on as many platforms as possible, run by as many different operators as possible."
The incident comes after Viacom, parent company of MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, filed a lawsuit seeking more than $US1 billion ($1.28 billion) from Google and YouTube for copyright infringement.

Blogger Civility - John Quarterman

Blogger Civility:




Doubtless everyone has heard of Tim O'Reilly's

Draft Blogger's Code of Conduct
,
which is an attempt to instill (restore? inspire?) civility in blogging.
I had some difficulty with the concept from the beginning, since
it centers around the "tone of the blogs", which is a vague and very
subjective thing.
O'Reilly's draft code of conduct isn't much less vague and subjective:


We define and determine what is "unacceptable content" on a case-by-case
basis, and our definitions are not limited to this list. If we delete a
comment or link, we will say so and explain why. [We reserve the right
to change these standards at any time with no notice.]


Now if "we" means the individual blogger, fine.
However, if "we" means some external authority, well, I have problems
with that "we".


Plus some of Tim's draft goes beyond "civility" into changing the way
discussion works in the blogosphere:


3. We connect privately before we respond publicly.


Connect for what?
Any response to a comment?
That isn't the way blogs work these days.

Cory Doctorow has related reservations:

However, I was very uncomfortable with Tim's draft, as it seemed to preclude real anonymity and invite censorship.

Cory links to a dissection of Tim's draft by Tristan Louis, which quotes the ACLU vs. Reno Supreme Court Decision of 10 years ago:

The record demonstrates that the growth of the Internet has been and continues to be phenomenal. As a matter of constitutional tradition, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we presume that governmental regulation of the content of speech is more likely to interfere with the free exchange of ideas than to encourage it. The interest in encouraging freedom of expression in a democratic society outweighs any theoretical but unproven benefit of censorship.

This was the decision that struck down the Communications Decency Act. I was one of the plaintifs.

Sure, Tim is proposing self-policing, not government censorship. But given a political environment in which the FCC recently got a "muzzle award" for censorship of free speech and expression, I don't want to give public officials any excuse to say that they need to move to enforce a blogger best practice because the blogosphere isn't adequately policing itself.

Finally, Markos has nailed the root of the matter:

Look, if you blog, and blog about controversial shit, you'll get idiotic emails. Most of the time, said "death threats" don't even exist -- evidenced by the fact that the crying bloggers and journalists always fail to produce said "death threats". I suspect many are like this gem I recently received:

Death threats and blogging, by kos, Daily Kos, Wed Apr 11, 2007 at 11:45:43 PM PDT

He quotes a classic crazy rant received in the mail. That one took me back. Back to 1990, when I was already receiving mail just like it, because of a book I wrote about networks. There's nothing new about this kind of mail. Except maybe to people who aren't used to being in the public eye.

What we have here is a tempest in a teapot, which is no reason to call out the battleships of civility. Civility is good; enforcing it on the basis of vague "tone" and undefined "unacceptable content" is not. Squelching free speech because of apparently imagined threats is not good risk management.

-jsq


April 04, 2007

Looney Tunes to Annoy Buddhists

So, I wonder how these loons would feel if a band of, let's say Wiccans, showed up at all of their churches and tried to convert THEM! How bout Mormons? Jehovah's Witnesses? It's really too bad we can't find some way to protect innocent people from being deluged with pushy lunatics who want to shove Jesus down everyone's throat.

Evangelicals hope to 'reach' Dalai Lama's followers :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Metro & Tri-State:


If you're a Tibetan Buddhist or you're leaning that way, you may not know it, but you need Jesus.

That's the thinking behind a series of Christian evangelical workshops -- including one later this month in Wheaton -- that will coincide with the Dalai Lama's trip to Chicago and other American cities this spring.

The Dalai Lama, seen in March, is set to visit Chicago in May. A Philadelphia-based Christian missionary group is holding a series of workshops on how to share the gospel with Tibetan Buddhists.
(AP)

RELATED STORIES
• Official site: Dalai Lama's Chicago visit
• Official site: Interserve USA
• Biography: The 14th Dalai Lama
Interserve USA is putting on the workshops to teach Christians how to talk to Buddhists and, perhaps, to win converts.
"We welcome the Dalai Lama here, but we also want to have a chance to reach Tibetan Buddhists with the gospel," said Doug Van Bronkhorst, executive director of Interserve, an international missionary group based just outside of Philadelphia.

The online announcement for the upcoming workshop offers this enticing hook: "Tibetan Buddhism. It's ancient. It's complex. It's trendy. And its leader, the Dalai Lama, is visiting your city this spring."

But Van Bronkhorst said in a telephone interview Tuesday, "We are interested in people, not notches on a belt."

That's not quite how it sounds to the head of the Council of Religious Leaders of Metropolitan Chicago, which includes bishops and leaders from most of the largest Christian, Jewish and Muslim groups in the area.

"I'm speaking without knowing anything about this group," said the Rev. Stan Davis, acting director of the council. "But my sense is that their goal is to try to convert to Christianity. Our goal would be to enter into a dialogue with them, to find out about their faith in a two-way conversation."

'He's a very thoughtful man'
So does Van Bronkhorst think Christians can learn something from the Dalai Lama and his teachings?
"Oh, sure," Van Bronkhorst said. "He's a very thoughtful man. He has a lot of good things to say about peace in the world, and he's quite knowledgeable about other faiths, including the Christian faith."

Van Bronkhorst says his organization has no plans to send Christian evangelicals to greet the Dalai Lama during his American tour. "Of course that's up to [individuals] if they want to do that," Van Bronkhorst said.

The Rev. Patti Nakai, a part-time minister at Buddhist Temple of Chicago in Uptown, says Buddhists in general may not disagree with the Bible, just the evangelical spin.

"Most Buddhists would not have a problem with what is written in the gospel," said Nakai, who does not follow the particular practices of the Dalai Lama's sect. "It's what evangelical Christians say -- the idea that you have to be saved in a certain way or you're doomed to eternal damnation, that's what we have a problem with."

The Dalai Lama is due to travel to Chicago in early May, making his first public appearance in the city since 1999.

The spiritual leader is expected to stay on the 24th floor of the Palmer House Hilton in the presidential suite, where amenities include three bathrooms.

April 02, 2007

'Star Trek' actor's ashes heading to space this month - CNN.com

'Star Trek' actor's ashes heading to space this month - CNN.com:


LAS CRUCES, New Mexico (AP) -- The ashes of James Doohan, who played chief engineer Montgomery "Scotty" Scott on the original "Star Trek" TV series, have been loaded into a rocket that is set to launch in New Mexico later this month.

The remains of Doohan, Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper and some 200 others were loaded into the rocket Friday by Charles Chafer, chief executive of Celestis, a Texas company that contracts with rocket firms to send cremated remains into space.

"And we're ready to go," Chafer said after inserting the silver canister.

Jerry Larson, president of Connecticut-based UP Aerospace Inc., said the rocket will be launched April 28.

Families paid $495 to have a few grams of their loved one's ashes placed on the rocket.

Chafer said he's aware of the dedication of "Star Trek" fans.

"There's no doubt that we'll find a way to accommodate fans who travel here and want to be part of that experience," he said.

Doohan died in July 2005 at age 85.

The remains of "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry were blasted into space in 1997.

Don't We Feel Ever So Safe Now?

Ever think those bozos who give you so much hassle at airport security are doing this just for their egos, and not to really find anything worthwhile to keep off of airplanes? Unfortunately, you may be right....

9NEWS - Article - Undercover agents slip bombs past DIA screeners:


KUSA - Checkpoint security screeners at Denver International Airport last month failed to find liquid explosives packed in carry-on luggage and also improvised explosive devices, or IED's, worn by undercover agents sources told 9NEWS.

"It really is concerning considering that we're paying millions of dollars out of our budget to be secure in the airline industry," said passenger Mark Butler who has had two Army Swiss knives confiscated by screeners in the past. "Yet, we're not any safer than we were before 9/11, in my opinion."

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screeners failed most of the covert tests because of human error, sources told 9NEWS. Alarms went off on the machines, but sources said screeners violated TSA standard operating procedures and did not hand-search suspicious luggage, wand, or pat down the undercover agents.

"The good news is we have our own people probing and looking and examining the system," said Rep. Ed Perlmutter, a Democrat in the 7th congressional who sits on the House Homeland Security and transportation committees. "The bad news is they're finding weaknesses."

After 9NEWS told Perlmutter about the undercover results, he requested a classified briefing from the TSA about the team. Four TSA and Homeland Security Department officials briefed the congressman last week.

"The bottom line is, we've got to plug those holes," said Perlmutter. "We can't have those kinds of problems because we want to have people who fly across this nation be as safe as possible."

In one test, sources told 9NEWS an agent taped an IED to her leg and told the screener it was a bandage from surgery. Even though alarms sounded on the walk-through metal detector, the agent was able to bluff her way past the screener.

"If they miss something that's obvious, often times that could happen, we will pull them off the line and retrain them," said Security Director Earl Morris at TSA headquarters in Washington, D.C. "That's how we audit and keep track of which people are doing a better job than others and how we keep this whole process so that it really is one that's legitimate and factual and actually is effective."

The TSA would not confirm the test results obtained by 9NEWS.

The covert testers who were at DIA are part of the TSA's Red Team. The Red Team was formed by the Federal Aviation Administration after terrorists blew up Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988, killing 270 people.

The Red Team tests about 100 airports nationwide every year, according to Morris. It halted testing after 9/11. Since it re-started testing in 2003, the Red Team has investigated security at approximately 735 airports. The team tested DIA once during 2006 and on February 12 to 14, said Morris. The agents act and think like terrorists to find vulnerabilities in the aviation security system.

The Red Team uses very expensive chemical simulates in the test devices that look, smell and taste like real explosives, except they do not explode. To the CTX bomb detection machines at DIA, they are real explosives, according to a former Red Team leader.

Sources told 9NEWS the Red Team was able to sneak about 90 percent of simulated weapons past checkpoint screeners in Denver. In the baggage area, screeners caught one explosive device that was packed in a suitcase. However later, screeners in the baggage area missed a book bomb, according to sources.

"There's very little substance to security," said former Red Team leader Bogdan Dzakovic. "It literally is all window dressing that we're doing. It's big theater on TV and when you go to the airport. It's just security theater."

Dzakovic was a Red Team leader from 1995 until September 11, 2001. After the terrorist attacks, Dzakovic became a federally protected whistleblower and alleged that thousands of people died needlessly. He testified before the 9/11 Commission and the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the US that the Red Team "breached security with ridiculous ease up to 90 percent of the time," and said the FAA "knew how vulnerable aviation security was."

Dzakovic, who is currently a TSA inspector, said security is no better today.

"It's worse now. The terrorists can pretty much do what they want when they want to do it," he said.

TSA's Morris disagrees with that.

"We have a very robust program of which we are very proud, in which we utilize testing at all of our airports every single day," said Morris.

The security chief says he expects screeners to fail the Red Team tests because they are difficult.

"We could put these tests together so that we have a 100 percent success rate every single time," said Morris. "Then, they wouldn't be challenging, they wouldn't be realistic and they really wouldn't be stretching the limits and the imagination of the Transportation Security Officer."

Morris says the tests are designed to be tough so that officers can learn from their mistakes and successes.

"It's a test but it's also a learning experience," said Morris. "It's a constant audit that we put on there to see where our employees are and where we need to enhance the weaknesses."

Morris says other agents, not with the Red Team, test and train screeners every day at the nation's 450 airports and says screeners pass most of those tests. In those kinds of tests, he said Denver has done well in the past.

However, tests done by the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Inspector General and the U.S. Government Accountability Office in 2006 found widespread failures. According to the GAO, screeners at 15 airports missed 90 percent of the explosives and guns agents tried to sneak past checkpoints.

Also, a Denver woman who carries a Taser for personal protection, told 9NEWS she carried it on board airplanes last year six times. Her Taser shoots 500,000 volts of electricity. She says the TSA never caught it and stopped her.

Most test results, including results from the Red Team, are secret, classified as SSI or sensitive security information. Morris says they do not make them public because they could point out holes in the system.

"We're actually fighting a war on terror. Our intent is not to educate the public on how we do tests and what are tests consist of. Our sole objective is to prevent those who have intent to do us harm from being able to successfully complete their mission."

Sources who leaked the test results to 9Wants to Know say they were concerned about the failures and want security improved.

Morris says the screeners were told about the failures and the problems were fixed. He called 9Wants to Know's sources 'disgruntled and underachieving employees.'

"Anyone who violates the rule we have in place for divulging information that is sensitive and secret, that jeopardizes the security of this country is wrong," said Morris. "They're out of line, it's not acceptable and it's not appropriate."

Dzakovic, who testified that the FAA ordered the Red Team to "not write up our findings," said the TSA is also trying to hide its results.

"The last thing TSA wants to do is look bad in front of congress and in front of the public, so rather than fix the problem, they'd rather just keep them quiet," said Dzakovic.

Dzakovic says aviation security needs fundamental changes if it's going to improve.

"If anything of value is to be achieved out of this latest round of testing in Denver, congressmen need to go into the internal mechanics of how TSA operates in order to really affect change," said Dzakovic. "Because if they don't, next year there will be another round of testing, get them same kind of results and it's just a matter of time before potentially thousands of more people get killed."

While Morris said security can always get better, it's already excellent.

"We understand that security is not perfect in every aspect but we understand that we go about trying to be perfect every single day and we are doing a tremendous job out there and the public should feel comfortable flying out today and quite frankly, they do," he said.

Sources tell 9Wants to Know screeners failed the tests because they feel pressured to put passengers on planes quickly and say they are short-staffed. When the TSA took over screening at DIA in 2002, there were 1100 officers. However, there are only 750 today because Congress capped funding for employees.

Perlmutter voted last week for a bill that gives more money for aviation security, but the President said he'll veto the bill because it includes time lines on ending the war in Iraq.



Sad, very sad.

I would truly have liked to see them address these issues rather than the cowardly bail out that occurred.

Analysis: Court denies detainees' habeas cases:


The Supreme Court on Monday denied review in two new Guantanamo detainee cases. Three Justices dissented, and two others wrote separately about the denial. Had any combination of four of those Justices voted for review, of course, the cases would have been granted.

The action of the Court, although nowhere near to being a ruling on the actual issues involved, nevertheless was a sweeping victory for the Bush Administration, and put the fate of the detainees primarily in the hands of the U.S. military at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, with only limited -- and later --- review in the civilian courts.

The practical results, so far as the detainees are concerned, are that (1) they no longer have any right to file a habeas challenge to their detention or to their designation as enemy combatants because Congress has taken that away and the lower court ruling that the Court left undisturbed Monday upheld that withdrawal, (2) those not charged with war crimes must now go through a military-only review of their enemy combatant status in proceedings that the detainees' lawyers consider seriously inadequate; some had had that review, but there is a question whether another is to be held for most of them, (3) those charged with war crimes must now go through trials before new "military comissions" with procedures also widely attacked as inadequate and can go further only if convicted, (4) and detainees in both groups, after going through those two processes, have only a limited right to challenge their detention status or their military commission convictions in the D.C. Circuit Court, with possible later review by the Supreme Court -- a process that, in its entirety, could take months, and maybe longer.

The Court's Orders List contained no entries to indicate how the Justices might react to a separate pending appeal by two detainees facing military commission trials Hamdan/Khadr v. Gates, 05-1169). But, in view of the denials in the other detainee cases, the prospects for review of that case are remote, at most.

The Court's denial of review of the two cases was not explained, as usual. But the two Justices who filed a separate "statement," John Paul Stevens and Anthony M. Kennedy, said that the Court had passed up review to avoid deciding constitutional issues before the detainees had used their "available remedies" under federal laws -- the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 and the Military Commissions Act of 2006.

Those Justices warned, however, that if the government later is found to have engaged in "unreasonable" delay of those remedies, or caused "some other and ongoing injury," then "alternative means exist for us to consider our jurisdiction" over the detainees' allegations. They added that the Court's denial of review does not amount to an expression of "any opinion" on the merits of the detainee claims. Even so, the detainees' situation for some time to come will be governed solely by the DTA and the MCA, with no role for federal habeas courts.

Justice Stephen G. Breyer, joined by Justices David H. Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, dissented from the denial. Breyer and Souter also said they would not only grant review, but expedite it.

It was apparent from the array of votes publicly recorded in the cases that those Justices who wanted to hear the cases, now or next Term, very likely had failed to attract the support of Justice Kennedy. While Justice Stevens probably would have been inclined to vote for review, that woud have meant only four votes for review, enough for review but leaving the outcome on the merits uncertain because of Kennedy. Thus, Stevens appeared to have opted to join with Kennedy in writing separately to salvage some prospect of ultimate relief for the detainees if the government does not deal promptly or fairly with the detainees. The nature of that potential relief, however, was uncertain. Stevens and Kennedy indicated that the Court retained authority under both the All Writs Act and the general habeas corpus law. But Congress, in enacting the court-stripping provisions of the Military Commissions Act, appeared to have moved to cut off any remedy other than the limited review in the D.C. Circuit. It is unclear what the scope of Supreme Court review would be beyond that, in any new appeal to the Justices.

The Court did not grant review of any new cases on Monday.

In a separate order (not included on the Orders List), the Justices raised a new issue that might prevent them from deciding a significant case on imposing a death sentence on a mentally impaired individual. The case is Panetti v. Quarterman (06-6407), which is now scheduled for oral argument on Wednesday, April 18, at 1 p.m. The Court added this question, with instructions to counsel to file new briefs on it by April 11: "Must petitioner's habeas application be dismissed as 'second or successive' pursuant to 28 U.S. C. 2244?" The Panetti case raises the question of whether the death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment for an individual whose mental illness includes a delusion about why he faces execution.

Among the actions noted on the regular Orders List, the Court chose to bypass three significant new cases:
** It declined to hear a new case on the duty of schools receiving federal funds to arrange for equal opportunities in sports for boys and girls. The new case involved a Sixth Circuit Court ruling that a Michigan state agency had violated Title IX on gender bias by scheduling all high school girls' sports seasons at times of the year less advantageous than boys' sports seasons. The case was Michigan High School Athletic Association v. Communities for Equity (06-1038).
** The Court refused to hear a new case on hostile work environment issues involving women employees under Title VII of the civil rights laws. The case involved a Ninth Circuit ruling that prisons may be held liable for creating a hostile work environment because of lewd sexial misconduct by inmates toward female guards. The case was Ayers v. Freitag (06-1085).
** And the Court declined review of a Georgia prison inmate's claim that his Eighth Amendment rights were violated because he was forced repeatedly to masturbate in the presence of a female prison guard. His claim was rejected by the Eleventh Circuit. The case was Boxer X v. Harris (06-7654).


Privacy? What Privacy?

Apparently, anyone who works as a government contractor is now less of a person than say, the illegal alien who isn't even supposed to be here. Important note: they are NOT asking for this information for security clearances. These people are NOT exposed to classified materials. Yet they want medical records? This is truly a "not good" thing.

And while our lovely HSA is wading through all of this information, the REAL terrorists are laughing their asses off because none of them are government contractors.
DHS requires government contractors' health, credit and travel records:


Cory Doctorow:
A NASA contractor who works on non-sensitive, non-secret projects is just one of millions of government contractors who are required to submit their credit-histories, medical records, travel history, and other invasive personal information to the Department of Homeland Security as part of a sweeping, horrendously expensive fishing expedition.


I have examined the “e-QIP” form. The questions include all the standard questions one would expect on a job application (name, social security information, address and telephone numbers, education–all degrees earned, and work history), but that is just the beginning. Employees are required to go back seven years and list all residences, all education, and month, year and purpose of trip for each foreign country visited for any reason, within that time period. Not only must employees give their marital status (to the level of specificity of whether one is separated versus legally separated); they must also provide all of the following information: date and place of marriage, spouse’s social security number, spouse’s place and date of birth, and spouse’s citizenship. They must also provide name, birthdate, citizenship information, and address for each parent, step-parent, foster parent, and child. Separate references must be provided to confirm both residence information and education information, plus 3 other people’s names and contact information must be given as general references.

While many of these questions seem overly intrusive (for example, Homeland Security knowing that I have visited Paris is irrelevant and useless information to my non-secret job of counting photons), my biggest concern is with the very end of the form. In order to complete the process–before the form can be submitted–the employee must print out 3 signature forms: “Certification That My Answers are true,” “Authorization for Release of Information,” and “Authorization for Release of Medical Information.” Instructions state that these three forms, plus a “Credit Check Release Form,” must be printed and taken with you to your “Badging Appointment.” While I have no problem with the “Certification That My Answers are true,” taken together the other two documents give the government a “blank check” to explore anything about me that it wishes. The documents fail to provide any explanation of why this information is needed, or to identify who will have access to it and for what purpose(s). I am extremely reluctant to sign these forms, but if I do not comply, I will lose access to my worksite and therefore will lose my job. Of course I see a need for security clearances to work for the FBI or the Secret Service, but to study the visible spectrum of light at Goddard? Give me a break.

Link

(Thanks, Grant!)

Ok, just stop and think about this for a minute....

Is the cartel actually trying to tell us that ripping DVDs we have already PAID FOR is somehow illegal unless they can make money from it? And they are willing to throw hundreds of thousands of dollars at preventing someone from marketing an overpriced machine that will do it for you? Where do these looneys get off? Why do we continue to allow them to dictate what we are allowed to do with products we pay for? Crap like commercials we can't skip, DVDs that are region coded, etc. really ought to be illegal, just as detergent manufacturers don't tell you what kinds of washing machines you're allowed to use their soap in, and microwave manufacturers don't limit the kinds of foods you can cook, it's about time someone knocks these cartels over the head. Grrrrr.

DVD cartel pwned: DVD jukeboxes are legal!:


Cory Doctorow:

Kaleidescape, a company that makes hard-drive-based DVD jukeboxes, has been cleared of charges that it violated the DVD DRM license. This matters, a lot.

You can't make a legal DVD player without getting a license from the DVD-CCA, a secretive organization run by the studios and major tech companies. DVD CCA makes you promise that your DVD player won't have any features that it disapproves of, regardless of whether those features facilitate piracy.

Kaleidescape made an expensive DVD jukebox that, for $27,000, would rip 100 DVDs and put them its hard-drive, with additional DRM (groan) to keep you from copying those DVDs any further. The DVD CCA said that this device should be illegal, even though it's clear that this isn't a piracy tool. You'd have to be the world's dumbest pirate to spend $27,000 to pirate 100 DVDs -- you can manage the same trick with your existing PC, just by downloading some free software. What's more, the copies you make at home won't have DRM on them, so you can keep on copying them.

Even so, the DVD CCA argued that just having this feature -- a DVD player where you can watch your 100 favorite movies without getting up from the couch and changing the disc -- should be illegal, unless they approved it. It's like Ford telling you that you're not allowed to plug your iPod into the car-stereo until it can figure out a way to charge you money for doing so.

Three years into the lawsuit, a California court has exonerated Kaleidascape. The DVD CCA says it's going to appeal -- and get this statement from DVD CCA counsel William Sloan Coats: "While not pleasant, DVD CCA must enforce agreements and require adherence to specifications to protect the interests of all CSS licensees." Wait, did that guy just admit that his employers licenses are unpleasant?

The DVD CCA filed the suit after Kaleidescape marketed a video server that uses an elaborate system to transfer DVDs encrypted with the Content Scramble System (CSS) onto its hard disk drives. The content is recorded with CSS intact onto internal hard disk drives in order to provide convenience to users and prevent multi-generational copies.

Link

(Thanks, Kurt!)


April 01, 2007

"That's the LAST TIME you ask for decaf!"

FOXNews.com - Flight Attendant Arrested for Carrying Gun Aboard Flight - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News:


WASHINGTON —  A uniformed flight attendant was arrested at Dulles International Airport after she turned herself in for allegedly carrying a concealed handgun aboard a flight from Atlanta, authorities said Saturday.
The Transportation Security Administration, the FBI and other law enforcement agencies were investigating how the gun passed through security unnoticed in Atlanta, TSA spokesman Barry Phelps said. Flight attendants have to go through the same security procedures as all other passengers, he said.
Janet Tucker, 45, of Lithonia, Ga., turned herself in Friday for carrying the weapon on United flight 7591, said Rob Yingling, a spokesman for the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority. She was in uniform but was not part of the duty crew at the time, he said.
"It seems it was an inadvertent incident, from her description," he said.
Tucker was arrested and cited on charges of having a concealed weapon at the airport. She was interviewed and released on a summons to appear in Loudoun County Court in Virginia at a future date, Yingling said. It was not clear whether a court date had been scheduled and he didn't know whether Tucker had a lawyer.

D'OH. How'd we get HERE and why are they speaking German?

Dozing FedEx workers get free flight to Vienna - Yahoo! News:


PARIS (AFP) - Two workers for delivery company FedEx traveled from Paris to Vienna in a cargo plane after apparently dozing off, a company source said Saturday.

The two men were working early Friday at Charles de Gaulle airport. They are believed to have fallen asleep while waiting for a freight delivery that didn't arrive, the source said on condition of anonymity.

The doors for the plane's freight compartment were closed without anyone noticing they were there, the source said.

So off they went to Austria. The two workers were returned to France later in the day aboard an Air France flight. The company has opened an internal investigation to determine what happened.

"There is some doubt as to whether they were really sleeping," a FedEx spokesperson told AFP. "All we know is that they were repatriated and they are safe and sound."