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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Enigma who wrote (21)1/29/2004 3:45:57 PM
From: Patricia Trinchero  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Every post Bill writes is an advertisement for the Democrats!!LOL

Pat



To: Enigma who wrote (21)1/29/2004 6:25:09 PM
From: PartyTime  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Posted on Fri, Mar. 14, 2003 story:PUB_DESC
Ex-CIA Officers Questioning Iraq Data
JOHN J. LUMPKIN
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - A small group composed mostly of retired CIA officers is appealing to colleagues still inside to go public with any evidence the Bush administration is slanting intelligence to support its case for war with Iraq.

Members of the group contend the Bush administration has released information on Iraq that meets only its ends - while ignoring or withholding contrary reporting.

They also say the administration's public evidence about the immediacy of Iraq's threat to the United States and its alleged ties to al-Qaida is unconvincing, and accuse policy-makers of pushing out some information that does not meet an intelligence professional's standards of proof.

"It's been cooked to a recipe, and the recipe is high policy," said Ray McGovern, a 27-year CIA veteran who briefed top Reagan administration security officials before retiring in 1990. "That's why a lot of my former colleagues are holding their noses these days."

A CIA spokesman suggested McGovern and his supporters were unqualified to describe the quality of intelligence provided to policy-makers.

"He left the agency over a decade ago," said spokesman Mark Mansfield. "He's hardly in a position to comment knowledgeably on that subject."

McGovern's group, calling itself Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, includes about 25 retired officers, mostly from the CIA's analytical branch but with a smattering from its operational side and other agencies, he said.

Carrying an anti-war bent, they invoke the names of whistle-blowers like Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers, a top secret study on U.S. involvement in Vietnam.

Leaking classified national defense information is illegal, and CIA officers take a secrecy oath when they join. Prosecutions of violations are rare, but government personnel caught leaking nondefense information may lose their security clearances, or their jobs.

Federal law also offers protections to whistle-blowers in some cases.

McGovern and his supporters acknowledge their appeal to their colleagues inside the CIA and other agencies is unusual. The CIA's culture tends to keep disputes inside the family, and many intelligence officers shun discussions of American policy - such as whether war on Iraq is justified - saying it is their job to provide information, not to decide how to act on it.

McGovern, who now works in an inner-city outreach ministry in Washington, said of his group's request, "It goes against the whole ethic of secrecy and going through channels, and going to the (Inspector General). It takes a courageous person to get by all that, and say, 'I've got a higher duty.'"

Agency spokesman Mansfield said, "Our role is to call it like we see it, to provide objective, unvarnished assessments. That's the code we live by, and that's what policy-makers expect from us."

The administration says its information is sound. During Secretary of State Colin Powell's address to the United Nations Security Council last month, he said, "These are not assertions. What we are giving you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence."

But other countries have challenged the accuracy of several of Powell's statements. And it is no secret that in the past some people with access to intelligence information - such as members of Congress or a presidential administration - have leaked selected pieces that lend support to a given policy. This can provide the public with a less-than-complete picture of what the CIA and other agencies have learned.

Another member of McGovern's group, Patrick Eddington, resigned from the CIA in 1996 to protest what he describes as the agency's refusal to investigate some of the possible causes of Gulf War veterans' medical problems.

Eddington said would-be whistle-blowers can privately contact members of Congress to get their message out.

"They have to basically put conscience before career," he said.

Vince Cannistraro, a former CIA counterterrorism chief, said he saw little chance of CIA analysts going public to contradict the Bush administration.

"Sure, there's a lot of disagreement among analysts in the intelligence community on how things are going to be used (by policy-makers)," he said. "But you are not going to see people making public resignations. That would mean giving up your career."

kansascity.com



To: Enigma who wrote (21)1/30/2004 10:34:42 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
The Word 'Evolution' Has Become a Firestorm in Georgia
BACK TO THE DARK AGES FOR ANOTHER SOUTHERN STATE!!!!!
A move to delete it from a proposed high school curriculum is decried by scientists and teachers.

By Ellen Barry, Times Staff Writer

ATLANTA — Georgia's state school superintendent on Thursday defended
deleting the word "evolution" from a biology curriculum proposed for high
school teachers, calling it "a buzzword that causes a lot of negative reactions."

The plan, which also omits topics such as Charles Darwin's life, fossil evidence
and the emergence of single-celled microorganisms, has angered educators.
Under the proposed curriculum, Georgia educators would no longer be
required to devote much time and effort to teaching evolution.

Superintendent Kathy
Cox said the word
"evolution" could keep
some people from
considering the new
curriculum. She added
that the changes were
meant to take pressure
off teachers "on the front
lines."

If the curriculum is
adopted, most teachers
will skim over the subject, which remains
unwelcome in many parts of the state, educators
warned Thursday.

"This is a real infringement on the freedom of teaching, and it has serious implications," said David
Bechler, head of the biology department at Valdosta State University.

The state's science curriculum specialist, Stephen Pruitt, said the word "evolution" would not be banned
in the classroom. He recalled debates about evolution when he taught science, and said he hoped the
new plan would allow students to draw their own conclusions about the evidence for evolution. "I
personally believe we are dissecting the theory of evolution to look at the pieces of it," Pruitt said.

By Thursday, almost 1,000 people, including parents, teachers and scientists, had signed an online
petition demanding restoration of the omitted sections. Cox said that the department was seeking public
comment on the proposed curriculum and that final revisions could be made before the State Board of
Education votes on it in May.

A handful of states avoid using the word "evolution" in teaching plans, replacing it with euphemisms
such as "biological adaptation" or "change over time." Georgia, however, would be the first state to
remove the word "evolution" from teaching plans after including it for years, according to the National
Center for Science Education, a California organization that tracks anti-evolutionary teaching.

The revised curriculum was a major initiative for Cox, a Republican elected to the post in 2002. For six
months, panels of educators met to fine-tune the new curriculum and agreed to adopt most of the topics
recommended by the American Assn. for the Advancement of Science.

But the final version eliminated much detail about the origin of life, including Gregor Mendel's
identification of genes, the appearance of primitive life forms 4 billion years ago, and the long-term
dynamics of evolution. In its place is a statement listing five "historical scientific models of change" that
includes the sole mention of Darwin. The word "evolution," used nine times in the original document,
disappears entirely, and is replaced by the phrase "change over time."

Bechler, who participated in developing the curriculum, said he was astonished to discover that the
passages had been eliminated. He said cutting the curriculum could seriously hurt the understanding of
science.

There are, however, large sections of Georgia where evolution has never been fully accepted.

Susan McKinney, who teaches biology to high school students in Crisp County, said she had never
believed Earth could have come into existence without a divine hand. Neither do her students, and
neither do her colleagues, said McKinney, who has taught for 26 years.

McKinney said she believed in natural selection, but when her course touched on the fossil record and
single-celled organisms believed to be among the first life forms on earth — information she considers a
"tentative hypothesis" — she skims over it, recommending that students study the material
independently if they wish.

"I can tell you, being in rural south Georgia, that it's kind of loose where you go and how far you go" in
the teaching of evolution, said McKinney. "We don't go all the way down to how we came out of the
primordial ooze."

Georgia has lagged behind other states in the teaching of evolution. In a 2000 report, retired physicist
Lawrence Lerner classified Georgia among the 13 states that had received an F, failing "so thoroughly
to teach evolution as to render their standards totally useless."

Much of the trend can be attributed to social pressure, said Gerald Skoog, former president of the
National Science Teachers Assn. Statewide standards can insulate teachers, he said. "Teachers would
tell me, 'It offers a shield of protection when I can point to the standards and indicate that evolution
needs to be covered,'" Skoog said.

In Atlanta, an area that draws hi-tech workers and out-of-state academics, one scientist admitted his
primary reaction was acute embarrassment.

"I hope we don't have to change the word 'chemistry' to 'the movement of molecules across space'
next," said John Avise, a genetics professor at the University of Georgia. "I'll have to rewrite a lot of my
texts."



To: Enigma who wrote (21)2/1/2004 9:26:20 AM
From: PartyTime  Respond to of 173976
 
Is the US media reporting comprehensively on what's really going on now in Iraq?

Message 19756375



To: Enigma who wrote (21)3/11/2004 10:23:39 PM
From: PartyTime  Respond to of 173976
 
nytimes.com
hereinreality.com
Message 19902584
counterpunch.org
americanfreepress.net
americanfreepress.net
nssa.us
townhall.com
motherjones.com
yaledailynews.com
sfgate.com
ascotadvisory.com
daily.iaff.org