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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mannie who wrote (6207)9/12/2002 2:44:33 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
<<...O'Reilly won't let him finish a sentence I bet...>>

LOL...you may be right...he may be better off on Larry King Live <G>.

O'Reilly asks tough questions BUT at times I feel he has his own agenda...It will be interesting to see how he handles things tonight...Ritter is NOT shy and he is a former Marine -- I think he can take care of himself.



To: Mannie who wrote (6207)9/12/2002 2:47:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Some interesting comments on Ritter...

Message 17983654



To: Mannie who wrote (6207)9/12/2002 2:58:08 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
There's Still Time for Americans to Stop Insanity

commondreams.org

There's Still Time for Americans to Stop Insanity
by Robert Jensen
September 9, 2002
The Houston Chronicle

The evening of Sept. 11, I wrote an essay that ended with a plea that "the insanity stop here," that the brutal act of terrorism not spark more terrorism, theirs or ours.

But the insanity didn't stop.

Instead, the Bush administration cynically manipulated people's grief and rage to unleash an unlimited war against endless enemies, which has made the world more dangerous and the American people less secure in any land, home or abroad.

A year later, it's clear the so-called "war on terrorism" is primarily a war to project U.S power around the world. Its goal is to extend and deepen U.S. control, especially in the energy-rich Middle East and Central Asia. Ordinary people have not benefited, and will not benefit, from this war or the economics that drive it.

The antiwar movement argued from the start that conventional war could not produce security from terrorism, and we were right. Administration officials this summer acknowledged that the attack on Afghanistan didn't significantly diminish the terrorist threat and may have complicated counterterrorism efforts by dispersing potential attackers.

Those of us who criticized the mad rush to war also suggested the Bush administration would use terrorism as a pretext to justify a wider war; again, we were right. Officials have floundered trying to justify an attack on Iraq with claims about Iraqi connections to al-Qaida or other terrorist networks that are so unconvincing they have largely been abandoned.

Claims about Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction are more plausible, but riddled with inconsistencies. Iraq may have developed, or be developing, limited biological or chemical weapons programs, but no one has offered proof or a scenario in which Iraq might use them, except in the case of a U.S. attack. And the Bush administration has repeatedly announced that it won't be satisfied with renewed weapons inspections and is determined to topple the Saddam Hussein regime, destroying hopes for the diplomacy needed for multilateral regional arms control.

Bush's talk of democracy in Afghanistan or Iraq is a bad joke. U.S. manipulation of the political process in Afghanistan to install a handpicked puppet, Hamid Karzai (now being guarded by U.S. troops and agents to protect him from his own people), was barely concealed. In Iraq, "democracy" will be acceptable to the Bush administration so long as a democratic process produces a similarly pliant leader.

These failed attempts to build a case for war only highlight what has long been clear: The war in Afghanistan and a possible war in Iraq are about U.S. dominance, at two levels. The first involves the specific resources of those regions. In the case of Afghanistan, the concern is pipelines to carry the oil and natural gas of the Caspian region to deep-water ports. In Iraq, it's about controlling the country with the world's second-largest oil reserves.

Beyond those direct interests, the logic of empire requires violence on this scale; when challenged, imperial powers strike back to maintain credibility and extend control. U.S. control is through mechanisms different from Rome or Britain in their imperial phases, but there can be no doubt that we are an empire.

Much of the world is frightened by these imperial ambitions. A friend traveling in Europe reports back that people talk of their fear of America's militarism. Politicians in allied nations are questioning, or openly repudiating, American war plans.

The task for U.S. citizens is clear: We must ensure that the U.S. empire is the first empire dismantled from within, through progressive political movements that reject world dominance that perpetuates inequality in favor of our place in a world struggling for justice and peace.

On Sept. 11, we got a glimpse of what it might look like if the empire is taken down from the outside.

Today we still have a choice. We can learn from history and step back from empire, or suffer the fate that history makes clear lies down the imperial path.

We still have time to turn away from empire and toward democracy, away from unilateralism toward engagement, away from hoarding power and toward seeking peace.

We still have time to demand of our government that the insanity stop here.

__________________________________________________

Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin and author of Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream. He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.



To: Mannie who wrote (6207)9/12/2002 4:15:11 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
InfoSpace Shareholders Approve 1-for-10 Reverse Stock Split; Approval Addresses Nasdaq Notice of Bid Price Deficiency

Business Editors

BELLEVUE, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 12, 2002--InfoSpace, Inc.
(Nasdaq: INSP), a provider of wireless and Internet software and
application services, today announced that its shareholders approved a
1-for-10 reverse stock split of all outstanding shares of common
stock, as recommended by the Company's Board of Directors.
The reverse split will be effective tomorrow, Sept. 13, 2002, and
it is anticipated that the shares will begin trading on a post-split
basis effective at the beginning of trading tomorrow.
"We applaud our shareholders' decision to approve the proposed
reverse stock split," said Ed Belsheim, president and chief operating
officer of InfoSpace, Inc. "We expect the reverse split authorized by
today's vote to raise the per share trading price of InfoSpace stock
and address the issue of compliance with the Nasdaq Stock Market's
listing maintenance standard regarding minimum bid prices as well as
help position us to achieve our goal of stock trading levels that meet
the criteria of institutional holders."
InfoSpace shareholders will receive one share of the Company's
common stock for each ten shares of common stock held as of the
effective date of the reverse split. Upon tomorrow's (Sept. 13, 2002)
anticipated effective date, the number of shares of InfoSpace common
stock outstanding will be approximately 30.9 million.

About InfoSpace, Inc.

InfoSpace, Inc. (Nasdaq: INSP) provides wireless and Internet
software and application services. The Company develops software
technologies that enable customers to efficiently offer a broad array
of network-based services under their own brand to any device.

InfoSpace corporate information can be found at
infospaceinc.com.



To: Mannie who wrote (6207)9/12/2002 4:51:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Send Inspectors First

Is a Domestic Political Agenda Driving War With Iraq?

by Scott Ritter
Editorial
Published on Sunday, September 1, 2002 in the Baltimore Sun


WAR WITH IRAQ looms on the horizon.

But there is an increasing consensus that if there exists a case for war with Iraq, the Bush administration has, to date, failed to make it. Speculation regarding the possibility of Iraq continuing to possess weapons of mass destruction (WMD, which are chemical, biological, nuclear weapons and long-range ballistic missiles), or seeking to reconstitute such a capability, does not suffice as evidence worthy of military intervention.

The consequences of war with Iraq are far-reaching and potentially disastrous. War should never be undertaken lightly, and any administration considering war should ensure that all available alternatives have been exhausted before committing our military to combat.

The justification for war hinges on the issue of Iraq's WMD. If Iraq possesses such weapons, more than a decade after the United Nations banned them, then clearly a case can be made that Saddam Hussein is a pariah leader at the head of a rogue state that threatens international peace and security and must be dealt with decisively, including the use of military force to remove him from power.

But until such time as this case can be made with substantive facts, the focus should be on ascertaining what, if any, WMD Iraq possesses today. Unfortunately, the White House seems intent on pursuing "regime removal" at the expense of a viable alternative to resolving the decade-long problem of Iraq's WMD programs.

The most viable of these alternatives would be to seek the return of U.N. weapons inspectors mandated by the Security Council to oversee the disarmament of Iraq's WMD programs. Such inspections have been absent from Iraq for nearly four years, and what Iraq may have done in the intervening period with regard to WMD is of great concern. U.N. inspection teams inside Iraq could go a long way toward determining the facts regarding the status and disposition of WMD programs.

From 1991 to 1998, U.N. weapons inspectors, among whom I played an integral part, were able to verifiably ascertain a 90 percent to 95 percent level of disarmament inside Iraq. This included all of the production facilities involved with WMD, together with their associated production equipment and the great majority of what was produced by these facilities.

The Security Council sought 100 percent disarmament, and that never was achieved. The potential for Iraq to reconstitute important aspects of its WMD programs, especially with inspectors out of the picture, should not be minimized.

The return of weapons inspectors to Iraq provides the best mechanism for bringing to closure many, if not all, of these concerns. Iraq has indicated its willingness to consider the return of such inspections.

Sadly, the Bush administration has done little to further the cause of getting inspectors back on the job. Instead, the administration has denigrated the efficacy of inspections and prevented any potential for diplomacy by insisting on an overall policy of regime change even if inspectors return to Iraq and find it in compliance with the U.N. ban.

Weapons inspections and regime change are inherently contradictory policies. The former focuses on multilateral diplomacy, the latter on unilateral military intervention.

For inspections to have a chance, the Bush administration will need to reformulate its policy on Iraq, placing disarmament ahead of regime change.

Given the amount of political capital that has been expended by the White House on removing Mr. Hussein, this seems unlikely to happen unless public opinion, as manifested by Congress and the news media, changes and radically transforms the political dynamic that seems to be propelling America toward war with Iraq.

The need for a national debate on U.S. policy toward Iraq is evident. If there is a case to be made that Iraq represents a real threat to the national security of America worthy of war, then it needs to be made as soon as possible.

But if a case cannot be made on national security grounds, then one must consider the real possibility that the administration's drive for war with Iraq is being pursued in support of a domestic political agenda, something that should concern all Americans, regardless of political affiliation.

The brave men and women in our armed forces have demonstrated their willingness to make the ultimate sacrifice so that our democracy can be preserved. To ask them to do so in support of politically driven motives would not only disrespect those to whom we look for protection, but also dishonor American democracy as a whole. It is up to our nation as a whole to ensure that is not, and never will be, the case.

____________________________________________________

Scott Ritter, a former Marine and U.N. weapons inspector, is author of Endgame: Solving the Iraq Problem -- Once and For All (Simon & Schuster, 1999).

Copyright © 2002, The Baltimore Sun

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