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Politics : CONSPIRACY THEORIES -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sea_urchin who wrote (166)9/8/2005 3:37:36 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 418
 
Re: You are so preoccupied with your own political self-righteousness and your criticism of my shortcomings that you seem to forget there are people, of whatever colour, who are actually in dire need of sustenance, anything -- and they are not getting it from their government. All your "I told you so's" will not make one iota of difference to their lives at this moment. Frankly, I think it's time to put your money where your mouth is. Or as they say in less polite parlance, "Put up or shut up."

There's nothing I can do about that. Anyway, that a job for FEMA and Homeland Security -- and Mr Michael Chertoff. Then again, Searle, don't get mad about it... The yanks will tough it out --they don't need THAT much help. Clue:

Castro: U.S. hasn't responded to Katrina offer

From Lucia Newman
CNN

Monday, September 5, 2005; Posted: 11:48 a.m. EDT (15:48 GMT)

HAVANA, Cuba (CNN) -- Cuban President Fidel Castro told more than 1,500 doctors Sunday night that American officials had made "absolutely no response" to his offer to send them to the U.S. Gulf Coast to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Castro, a longtime adversary of the United States, initially offered to send 1,100 doctors and at least 26 tons of supplies and equipment, but the Communist leader announced Sunday during a televised speech that he had increased the number of physicians to 1,586. Each doctor would carry about 27 pounds of medicine.

"You could all be there right now lending your services, but 48 hours have passed since we made this offer, and we have received absolutely no response," Castro said at Havana's Palace of the Revolution.

"We continue to wait patiently for a response. In the meantime, all of you will be taking intensive courses in immunology and also something that I should be doing -- an intensive brush-up course in English."

Besides Cuba, several other countries and international agencies have offered money and supplies to the hurricane victims.

In the past, Cuba has refused U.S. offers of aid, the most recent following Hurricane Dennis. That storm killed more than 10 people in the Caribbean island nation in July.

At that time, Castro said he would not accept help from Washington because of the U.S. trade embargo against his country. The United States has no diplomatic relations with Cuba.

Castro has named the Cuban rescue team the Henry Reeve Brigade in honor of an American who fought with Cuba's rebel forces during the Cuban War of Independence against Spain that began in 1895.

The doctors who have been mobilized went to South Asia after the December tsunami and have worked in other disasters.

cnn.com



To: sea_urchin who wrote (166)9/8/2005 3:50:55 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 418
 
Follow-up....

Europeans Wonder About Slow Katrina Relief

By KARL RITTER, Associated Press Writer
Wed Sep 7, 7:51 PM ET

STOCKHOLM, Sweden
- For four days, a C-130 transport plane ready to lift supplies to Katrina victims has stood idle at an air base in Sweden. The aid includes a water purification system that may be urgently needed amid signs deadly diseases could be spreading through fetid pools in New Orleans.

The one thing that stands in the way of takeoff? Approval by U.S. officials.

Although some foreign aid is on the way to the U.S., many international donors are complaining of frustration that bureaucratic entanglements are hindering shipments to the United States.

"We have to get some kind of signal (from the U.S.) in the next few days," said Karin Viklund of the Swedish Rescue Services Agency. "We really hope we will get it." Aside from water purification units, the country has offered blankets and mobile network equipment.

The United States has accepted offers of nearly $1 billion in assistance from some 95 countries, said Harry K. Thomas Jr., the State Department's executive secretary. One of those rejected came from Iran. The U.S. has accepted Switzerland's offer for tarpaulins, plastic sheeting, bedding, crutches. It made the offer Tuesday night.

Tehran offered to send 20 million barrels of crude oil if Washington waived trade sanctions, but Thomas said the offer was rejected because it was conditional. The sanctions were imposed after militants stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and took its occupants hostage in 1979.

Thomas said "every country has heard from us, all have been told their offers are being evaluated and that 'we may take your offers later.'"

But Poland, Austria and Norway said they had not heard back on their aid offers, and countries outside Europe said they were also waiting for replies:

• India, which regularly is hit by flooding from monsoon rains, has said it has a planeload of supplies waiting. The United States said Thursday night that it has accepted $5 million in aid.

• Taiwan said it was waiting to hear for guidance its $2 million pledge. The U.S. said late Monday that it has the financial offer along with medical supplies.

• The government also said in a statement Thursday that it had accepted South Korea's promised aid of $30 million and 100 tons of goods such as blankets, diapers, crutches, bunk beds and wheelchairs. South Korea had promised the aid by this weekend. But Foreign Ministry spokesman Lee Kyu-hyung said Wednesday the delivery will likely be delayed until next week as "preparations are not going well."

Even Honduras — the second-poorest country in Latin America and the Caribbean — has offered aid. It was told by the U.S. Embassy that "at this moment, the U.S. government is not asking for international assistance."

However, some countries said they received detailed requests for help from U.S. authorities and have started shipping supplies.

European Commission spokeswoman Barbara Helfferich said "the coordination effort is going much, much better because aid is now leaving and aid is arriving."

She said glitches are to be expected. "The Europeans and the Americans had to learn to work together," she said. "Coordination is the most difficult thing in any relief effort."

The British government said it began sending some 500,000 military ration packs with food on Monday and that it was working closely with U.S. authorities in the recovery effort.

German officials approved sending forensic experts to help identify Katrina victims after being asked by the U.S. government, spokesman Thomas Steg said.

He said that on Wednesday, a separate group of some 90 technicians left the U.S. Ramstein Air Base in Germany aboard a U.S. military plane equipped with 15 large-capacity pumps to help clear floodwaters from residential areas.

European aircraft maker Airbus said the world's largest air cargo plane, the A300-600 Super Transporter, was carrying French and British relief supplies to hurricane-stricken areas.

The global mobilization has been accompanied by widespread surprise at the mayhem in New Orleans. People around the world have been shocked by the images of the devastation, and also by the looting and disorder that followed and the perceived shortcomings in the response by U.S. authorities.

"We have all watched as a large part of the United States fell from a First World society into Third World death, chaos and social breakdown," historian J.L. Granastein, a fellow of the Canadian Defense and Foreign Affairs Institute, wrote in Canada's The Globe and Mail.

Fintan O'Toole, writing in The Irish Times, said the disaster revealed "the underlying nature of a troubled country."

"When America looks at the huge expanse of filthy, fetid water that has drowned New Orleans, it becomes a mirror in which it finally sees the scars on its own face. The scars of poverty, of racism, of ideological zealotry, of public corruption and of environmental degradation, usually concealed by a cosmetic media, become visible," he wrote.

news.yahoo.com

As you see, Searle, there's no hurry --chill out!
(As I said on another thread, I suspect the Pentagon brass don't want the damned euros --much less third-world countries-- to spoil their "Louisiana/Mississipi Relief" operation... They wanna make sure the US military reap all the kudos!)



To: sea_urchin who wrote (166)9/8/2005 5:03:37 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 418
 
Searle, before you crack your piggy bank open and wire the money to the Katrina victims, make sure you don't send it to the wrong charity... After all, you don't want your donation to end up in the hands of some neonazi, white-supremacist, bogus charity, now do you?

September 8, 2005
After the Storm, the Swindlers
By TOM ZELLER Jr.


Even as millions of Americans rally to make donations to the victims of Hurricane Katrina, the Internet is brimming with swindles, come-ons and opportunistic pandering related to the relief effort in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. And the frauds are more varied and more numerous than in past disasters, according to law enforcement officials and online watchdog groups.

Florida's attorney general has already filed a fraud lawsuit against a man who started one of the earliest networks of Web sites - katrinahelp.com, katrinadonations.com and others - that stated they were collecting donations for storm victims.

In Missouri, a much wider constellation of Internet sites - with names like parishdonations.com and katrinafamilies.com - displayed pictures of the flood-ravaged South and drove traffic to a single site, InternetDonations.org, a nonprofit entity with apparent links to white separatist groups.

The registrant of those Web sites was sued by the state of Missouri yesterday for violating state fund-raising law and for "omitting the material fact that the ultimate company behind the defendants' Web sites supports white supremacy."

Late yesterday afternoon, the Federal Bureau of Investigation put the number of Web sites claiming to deal in Katrina information and relief - some legitimate, others not - at "2,300 and rising." Dozens of suspicious sites claiming links to legitimate charities are being investigated by state and federal authorities. Also under investigation are e-mail spam campaigns using the hurricane as a hook to lure victims to reveal credit card numbers to thieves, as well as fake hurricane news sites and e-mail "updates" that carry malicious code aimed at hijacking a victim's computer.

"The numbers are still going up," said Dan Larkin, the chief of the Internet Crime Complaint Center operated by the F.B.I. in West Virginia. He said that the amount of suspicious, disaster-related Web activity was higher than the number of swindles seen online after last year's tsunami in Southeast Asia. "We've got a much higher volume of sites popping up," he said.

The earliest online frauds began to appear within hours of Katrina's passing. "It was so fast it was amazing," said Audri Lanford, co-director of ScamBusters.org, an Internet clearinghouse for information on various forms of online fraud. "The most interesting thing is the scope," she said. "We do get a very good feel for the quantity of scams that are out there, and there's no question that this is huge compared to the tsunami."

By the end of last week, Ms. Landford's group had logged dozens of Katrina-related swindles and spam schemes. The frauds ranged from opportunistic marketing (one spam message offered updates on the post-hurricane situation, with a link that led to a site peddling Viagra) to messages said to be from victims, or families of victims.

"This letter is in request for any help that you can give," reads one crude message that was widely distributed online. "My brother and his family have lost everything they have and come to live with me while they looks for a new job."

Several antivirus software companies have warned of e-mail "hurricane news updates" that lure users to Web sites capable of infecting computers with a virus that allows hackers to gain control of their machines. And numerous swindlers have seeded the Internet with e-mail "phishing" messages that say they are from real relief agencies, taking recipients to what appear to be legitimate Web sites, where credit card information is collected from unwitting victims who think they are donating to hurricane relief.

On Sunday, the Internet security company Websense issued an alert regarding a phishing campaign that lured users to a Web site in Brazil that was made to look like a page operated by the Red Cross. Users who submitted their credit card numbers, expiration dates and personal identification numbers via the Web form were then redirected to the legitimate Red Cross Web site, making the ruse difficult to detect. The security company Sophos warned of a similar phishing campaign on Monday.

"They're tugging at people's heartstrings," said Tom Mazur, a spokesman for the United States Secret Service. Mr. Mazur said there were "a number of instances that we're looking into with this type of fraud, both domestically and overseas," but he would not provide specifics.

The lawsuit filed in Florida last Friday accused Robert E. Moneyhan, a 51-year-old resident of Yulee, Fla., of registering several Katrina-related domain names - including KatrinaHelp.com, KatrinaDonations.com, KatrinaRelief.com and KatrinaReliefFund.com - as early as Aug. 28, even before the hurricane had hit the Louisiana coast.

By Aug. 31, according to the Florida attorney general, Charles J. Crist Jr., Mr. Moneyhan's sites had begun asking visitors to "share your good fortune with Hurricane Katrina's victims." A "Donate" button then took payments through a PayPal account that Mr. Moneyhan had set up.

Mr. Moneyhan did not respond to numerous phone calls and e-mail messages, but the Web site names in question are now owned by ProjectCare.com, a loose collection of Web sites that is using the Katrina sites as an information center for hurricane victims.

Kevin Caruso, the proprietor of ProjectCare.com, said that he had offered to buy the sites from Mr. Moneyhan on Sept. 2, but that Mr. Moneyhan, distressed over the lawsuit, simply donated them to Project Care without charge. Mr. Caruso also said that after several phone conversations, he believed that Mr. Moneyhan, was "trying to help the Hurricane Katrina survivors, but did not have the experience to proceed properly."

The lawsuit, however, states that Mr. Moneyhan had tried to sell his collection of Katrina-related domain names on Sept. 1 "to the highest bidder." The suit seeks $10,000 in civil penalties and restitution for any consumers who might have donated to the Web sites while they were controlled by Mr. Moneyhan.

Jay Nixon, the Missouri attorney general, sued to shut one of the more bizarre fund-raising efforts yesterday. A state circuit court granted a temporary restraining order against Internet Donations Inc., the entity behind a dozen Web sites erected over the last several days purporting to collect donations for victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Also named in the Missouri suit, which seeks monetary penalties from the defendants, is the apparent operator of the donation sites, Frank Weltner, a St. Louis resident and radio talk show personality who operates a Web site called JewWatch.com.

That site - which indexes Adolf Hitler's writings, transcripts of anti-Semitic radio broadcasts and other materials, according to the Anti-Defamation League - attracted headlines last year when it appeared at or near the top of Google search results for the query "Jew." It remains the No. 2 search result today.

Most of Mr. Weltner's Katrina-related Web sites - which include KatrinaFamilies.com, Katrina-Donations.com, and NewOrleansCharities.com - appear to have been registered using DomainsByProxy.com, which masks the identity of a domain registrant.

However, Mr. Weltner's name appeared on public documents obtained through the Web site of the Missouri secretary of state yesterday. Those indicated that Mr. Weltner had incorporated Internet Donations as a nonprofit entity last Friday.

The various Web sites, which use similar imagery and slight variations on the same crude design, all point back to InternetDonations.org. There, visitors interested in donating to the Red Cross, Salvation Army or other relief organizations are told that "we can collect it for you in an easy one-stop location."

It is unclear whether any of the sites successfully drew funds from any donors, or if Mr. Weltner, who did not respond to e-mail messages and could not be reached by phone, had channeled any proceeds to the better-known charities named on his site. But the restraining order issued yesterday enjoins Mr. Weltner and Internet Donations Inc. from, among other things, charitable fund-raising in Missouri, and "concealing, suppressing or omitting" the fact that donations collected were intended "for white victims only."

"It's the lowest of the low when someone solicits funds" this way, Mr. Nixon said in an interview before announcing the lawsuit. "We don't want one more penny from well-meaning donors going through this hater."

nytimes.com



To: sea_urchin who wrote (166)9/8/2005 5:47:43 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 418
 
Searle, how LUCKY you ain't living in Cuba! BTW, do you think your fellow white farmers from Zimbabwe can be of any help? After all, Zimbabwe is also on the US's "No Thanks" list --Clue:

U.S. Mum on Cuba Offer for Katrina Relief

By ANITA SNOW, Associated Press Writer
19 minutes ago

HAVANA - More than a week after Cuba offered to send physicians to the United States to aid the Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, President Fidel Castro and his doctors still await an answer.

And it isn't likely to be positive.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack has suggested the Cuban doctors would not be needed because a government appeal for help "has seen a robust response from the American medical community." But he said all options would be considered.

The United States has branded Cuba one of the world's few remaining "outposts of tyranny" in a league with Myanmar, Belarus and Zimbabwe. A U.S. trade embargo on the communist island has been in place for more than four decades, and during that time the countries have not had diplomatic relations.

Despite that, Cuba has offered more than 1,500 doctors ready to leave at a moment's notice to provide free services to hurricane victims. Officials expect the death toll from the powerful Aug. 29 storm to reach the thousands; hundreds of thousands have been displaced from their homes.

"We are anxiously waiting, every moment, for a positive response," said Dr. Jesus Satorre, a 33-year-old cardiologist who helped an international team of doctors tackle a major cholera crisis in Guinea Bissau in 2002.

"It would be marvelous to be elbow-to-elbow with the American doctors, helping these people, saving lives for the love of humanity," Satorre said Wednesday at Havana's Latin American Medical School, where the physicians are living while awaiting word.

"We will wait as many days as necessary," Castro said Sunday when he gathered the doctors, equipped with new white smocks and olive green backpacks stuffed with medical supplies, to thank them for volunteering their services to save American lives.

"In the meantime, they will employ their time in intensive courses in epidemiology and perfecting the English language," the Cuban leader said at the meeting.

Castro rejected the notion that his offer was purely political.

"Perhaps those who do not know the honor and solidarity spirit of our people think this is a bluff or a ridiculous exaggeration," he said Sunday. "But our country never plays with such serious matters."

Castro, however, has routinely turned down offers of U.S. humanitarian relief for hurricanes and other disasters.

After Hurricane Dennis pummeled the island in July, he expressed gratitude but nevertheless roundly rejected the U.S. government's offer of $50,000 in aid.

In fact, Castro said Cuba would accept no American assistance while the trade embargo remains in place. "If they offered $1 billion we would say no," he said at the time.

Still Cuba has been careful not to criticize the lack of a U.S. response to its offer.

"I think the Cubans showed a lot of humanity in their offer," said Sandra Levinson, director of the Center for Cuba Studies in New York, a nonprofit group that supports cultural exchanges between the countries.

news.yahoo.com