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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (297412)3/20/2009 8:06:18 PM
From: Ruffian2 Recommendations  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793883
 
OBAMA’S “VOLUNTEER CORPS”
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES HAS JUST PASSED A PLAN TO SET UP A NEW “VOLUNTEER CORPS” IN THE UNITED STATES. THIS NEW “VOLUNTEER CORPS” WOULD WEAR “UNIFORMS.” IT WOULD BE TRAINED AT “CAMPUSES.” IT WOULD INCLUDE 250,000 “VOLUNTEERS.” DURING THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN, OBAMA REFERRED TO THE CREATION OF A “NATIONAL CIVILIAN SECURITY FORCE.” LET’S LISTEN TO HIS OWN WORDS.

CHILLING. BUT EVEN MORE CHILLING ARE SOME OF THE DESCRIPTIONS IN THE BILL ITSELF OF WHAT THIS NEW VOLUNTEER CORPS COULD BE. IT DISCUSSES THE POSSIBILITY THAT ALL INDIVIDUALS IN THE UNITED STATES MAY BE, EXPECTED TO PERFORM NATIONAL SERVICE” OR MAY BE “REQUIRED TO PERFORM A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF NATIONAL SERVICE." ACCORDING TO THE BILL, THIS WOULD, “STRENGTHEN THE SOCIAL FABRIC OF THE NATION AND OVERCOME CIVIC CHALLENGES BY BRINGING TOGETHER PEOPLE FROM DIVERSE ECONOMIC, ETHNIC, AND EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUNDS."

PERHAPS WHAT OBAMA IS AIMING FOR IS SOMETHING ALONG THE LINES OF THE YOUNG PIONEERS IN THE SOVIET UNION. THE YOUNG PIONEERS WERE A “SCOUTING” GROUP WHICH WAS USED TO INDOCTRINATE GENERATIONS OF RUSSIAN CHILDREN INTO COMMUNIST THINKING. OR POSSIBLY, IT’S BEING DESIGNED ALONG THE LINES OF THE NAZI S.A. THE S.A. WAS A POLITICAL ARMY WHICH PROTECTED THE NAZI PARTY LEADERSHIP, BATTLED POLITICAL OPPONENTS, AND TERRORIZED THE JEWS. ERNST ROHM, THE HEAD OF THE S.A. REJECTED CAPITALISM, PUSHED FOR THE NATIONALIZATION OF GERMAN INDUSTRY AND REDISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH. PERHAPS THIS IS WHAT OBAMA HAS IN MIND.

BUNGLING IRAN
BARACK OBAMA HAS JUST RELEASED A VIDEO AS A GREETING TO THE PEOPLE IRAN AND PRESUMABLY TO THE HITLER OF IRAN, AHMADINEJAD. IT COINCIDES WITH THE IRANIAN HOLIDAY OF NOWRUZ, WHICH MARKS THE ARRIVAL OF SPRING. APPARENTLY OBAMA PREFERS THIS TO THE TRADITIONAL EASTER EGG ROLL ON THE WHITE HOUSE LAWN. IN HIS MESSAGE, OBAMA SAID THAT HE IS PREPARED TO END THE “STRAINED RELATIONS” BETWEEN THE U.S. AND IRAN IF TEHERAN TONES DOWN ITS “COBATIVE RHETORIC.” HE EXTENDED A HAND OF PEACE, AND IT WAS INTERESTING TO OBSERVE THAT IN THE VERSION OF THE VIDEO THAT WAS DESIGNED TO BE SHOWN IN IRAN, ALL OF THE AMERICAN FLAGS WERE REMOVED.

BUT AS OBAMA EXTENDED HIS HAND OF PEACE, HE SLIPPED ON A BANANA PEEL. THE SAME DAY THE VIDEO WAS RELEASED, TWO NAVY VESSELS COLLIDED IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ. A SUBMARINE AND AN AMPHIBIOUS SHIP COLLIDED, RIGHT BETWEEN THE ARABIAN PENINSULA AND – YOU GUESSED IT – IRAN. SO AT THE SAME TIME THAT OBAMA IS MAKING THE U.S. LOOK WEAK TO IRAN THROUGH HIS WORDS, THE ACTIONS OF THE MILITARY UNDER HIS COMMAND MAKE US LOOK WEAK AS WELL.

AND WHILE IT’S TRUE THAT OBAMA MAY NOT HAVE CAUSED THIS ACCIDENT DIRECTLY, ONE HAS TO CONSIDER: FOR HOW MANY YEARS HAS THE MILITARY BEEN UNDERMINED BY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION? FOR HOW MANY YEARS HAS THE MILITARY BEEN UNDERMINED BY MARXIST POLITICIANS SLASHING AWAY AT ITS BUDGET? FOR HOW MANY YEARS HAS THE MILITARY BEEN UNDERMINED BY AN INFLUX OF ILLEGAL ALIENS? THIS COLLISION IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ IS THE INEVITABLE RESULT. WE MUST SHOW A FIST CLENCHED IN RAGE BEFORE WE CAN OFFER A HAND IN PEACE. AND WE MUST STOP WEAKENING OUR MILITARY, SO THAT IT WON’T FALL APART AT THE SEAMS WITHING SIGHT OF THE ENEMY.

Michael Savage



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (297412)3/20/2009 8:39:46 PM
From: Sdgla11 Recommendations  Respond to of 793883
 
Maybe MQ. As of right now my belief is the POTUS has no idea how to run anything other than a local Chicago volunteer group.

Inept doesnt even begin to cover it.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (297412)3/20/2009 9:47:15 PM
From: average joe  Respond to of 793883
 
Customs accuses B.C. lawyer of human trafficking

Article Comments JANE ARMSTRONG

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

March 19, 2009 at 5:29 AM EDT

VANCOUVER — A Vancouver lawyer with "sterling" credentials said he was handcuffed and detained as he made his way to board a Beijing-bound flight this week after customs officials at Vancouver International Airport accused him of being a human trafficker.

Dongdong Huang, 51, was en route to China after wrapping a court case in Vancouver on behalf of 15 Chinese nationals whose requests for seasonal work visas had been denied. Mr. Huang was seeking a judicial review in Canada for his clients and was carrying their passports.

On Tuesday, he was scheduled to fly to China on a business trip to return the Chinese passports to the Canadian embassy there.

But when he attempted to pass through the international departure gates, a security official searched his carry-on bag and discovered the passports. Mr. Huang said he explained that they were for a court case, but the security official summoned customs officials, who handcuffed him and accused him of being a human smuggler.

Mr. Huang was then led through the departure lounge, his wrists handcuffed behind his back and taken to an interview room, where two officials interrogated him for about an hour.

The march through the departure lounge was humiliating, said Mr. Huang, who has a PhD in law from the University of Ottawa. He practises commercial law from his firm in Port Coquitlam just west of Vancouver. He is also licensed to practice law in China and is a seasonal lecturer at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C.

Mr. Huang said the only reason he took the immigration case was as a favour to some relatives in China.

"I've never been handcuffed before," he said yesterday in an interview at Vancouver International Airport just before his flight, which he was forced to re-book. "I am well known in the Chinese community and this was humiliating to be handcuffed in public.

"As far as I know, it's not an offence to carry passports."

Mr. Huang suspected racism played a factor in the decision to handcuff and detain him. The two Customs officials appeared incredulous when he said he was a lawyer. Mr. Huang has lived in Canada for 25 years but still speaks with a thick accent. Mr. Huang recorded the badge numbers of the officials but they weren't wearing name tags.

As they walked through the departure lounge, Mr. Huang said, one Customs official radioed instructions to have Mr. Huang's baggage removed from his flight.

"You must be involved with human trafficking with so many passports," the Customs official warned him

"I said: 'No, I am a lawyer, I told you.'"

A spokesman for the Canada Border Services Agency said she would look into the incident, but did not return calls later in the day.

Mr. Huang has worked for some of the top law firms in Canada, including Fasken Martineau in Vancouver and Torys in Toronto.

"His credentials are sterling," Vancouver lawyer Bruce McLeod said. "It's quite a shock to hear this. He is a very experienced lawyer and has been practising in B.C. for many years."

Customs officials took Mr. Huang to an interview room, he said, and continued to grill him about the passports. He repeated that he was a lawyer and instructed them to call the lawyer who argued the government side in the visa court case. He also gave them the name of the clerk in the Federal Court registry.

But Mr. Huang didn't know either numbers by heart and he said the Customs officials refused to provide him with a blue pages directory.

At one point, when he asked for a second glass of water, one official replied in a mocking tone, "Say please."

About 40 minutes after he first walked through the security gates, Mr. Huang said he was permitted to search his laptop for the telephone numbers of the government lawyer who was involved in the visa case.

Mr. Huang gave the telephone numbers to one of his interrogators, who called the government lawyer. Another official, who was entering the data of the 15 Chinese passports on a computer, told Mr. Huang he would be released once he finished.

A short time later, he was released. When Mr. Huang complained about his missed flight, the official replied, "It is not our business."

Mr. Huang said he missed client meetings in Beijing that were scheduled for yesterday.

He has written a letter of complaint to the Customs office at the Vancouver International Airport. Mr. Huang said he wants financial compensation for the missed work day and the cost of re-booking his Beijing flight as he was a no-show on Tuesday.

In the written letter of complaint, Mr. Huang also demanded an investigation into the incident and an apology.

"If these Customs officers behave like this to me, how do they behave to other people?" he said as he gathered his belongings before heading to the departure gate. Yesterday, Mr. Huang proceeded through the gates without incident.

A sign on the wall at the international departure gate warns passengers that they may be required to undergo a search.

theglobeandmail.com



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (297412)3/21/2009 12:35:51 AM
From: LindyBill1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793883
 
You have been keeping this from us, you rascal!

Selling sex legally in New Zealand
BBC
In terms of attitudes towards prostitution, New Zealand and Europe are almost as diametrically opposed as they are in geography. Kiwis have opted for wholesale liberalisation of the sex trade, while Europeans are increasingly restricting it.

Does the New Zealand liberal approach provide a model or a warning? Henri Astier looks at its prostitution industry six years after decriminalisation, in the first of two articles.

When "Sophie", a medical worker from Christchurch, fell behind on her mortgage payments last year, she found that her job was not paying enough. Her only option was a temporary career change: she became a prostitute.

"I needed money fast so I didn't lose my house," she explains.

A soft-spoken 30-something with a shy smile, Sophie does not look like the stereotypical scarlet woman, even in the low-cut dress she wears at work.

She does not feel like one either. "I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't do drugs. I'm a vegetarian," she says, adding that she had qualms about her new job.

But the city centre parlour she joined - basically a pub with a sitting area at the front and bedrooms at the back - was not the drug-fuelled dive she had imagined.

"All the women here are lovely," she says. "We spend a lot of time sitting and talking. I'll stick it out a bit longer."

Good money

Some might question the morality of Sophie's choice, but legally it cannot be faulted.

Since the Prostitution Reform Act of 2003, brothels have been allowed to operate more or less freely.

" I make twice what I was earning in retail - it's by far the most gratifying work I've ever had "
"Lucy"

Sex workers have the same rights as everyone else. In the eyes of New Zealand's law, the oldest profession is just like any other.

This policy stands in marked contrast to Europe. In 1999 Sweden criminalised the purchase of sex services, and several countries are introducing similar laws in an attempt to combat trafficking.

Ask New Zealand sex workers what they think of Swedish-style strictures, and the response is overwhelmingly negative.

"Whether you're prosecuting the men or the girls, you're still prosecuting the business," says "Lucy", 23, from Wellington.

Lucy works in Bon Ton, an exclusive establishment in the capital where an hour-long session costs NZ$400 (£140; $200). She says the reform has given her the opportunity to work for a legitimate business in a safe environment.

"I make twice what I was earning in retail. I am appreciated by customers and my boss. I can work whenever I want to - it's by far the most gratifying work I've ever had," she says.

Legal rights

Lucy's manager, Sarah, also believes criminalising clients would be a disaster for the industry and put the girls at risk.

"This would scare away the quality customers," she says. "We would be left with the dangerous sort. The nasty men won't go away."

Bon Ton - which thrives on "quality customers" like lawyers and civil servants - certainly looks like an ideal showcase for New Zealand-style liberalisation.

The bedrooms look like luxury suites, the upstairs office looks like - well... an office, and the workers say they are treated with respect.

Sarah insists she has zero tolerance for abuse and will back the girls even if they refuse a client. "I can't force a woman to have sex," she says.

As she speaks another girl appears at the door, draped in a towel. "Myah" looks at the work ahead, and realises that a client who often insists on having oral sex without a condom wants to see her.

"I don't want him," Myah says. "No problem," Sarah replies. "I'll tell him you're not available."

NZ PROSTITUTION REFORM ACT
# Brothels allowed to operate
# Up to four prostitutes can set up collective as equal partners
# Advertising sale of sex legalised
# Brothels require certificate and registration by court
# Sex work subject to normal employment and health and safety standards
Myah is not afraid to turn down work. Her health is at stake, and the law requires a condom for any commercial sex act. "It is my legal right to make that demand," she says.

But are the benefits from legalisation confined to high-end businesses like Bon Ton?

According to Catherine Healy of the New Zealand Prostitutes Collective (NZPC), better and safer working practices are now the norm.

Across the industry, she says, women are now aware of their rights and exploitative brothel owners are becoming marginalised as a result of the reform.

"Sex workers say: I can work across town," she says. "The dynamic has altered."

Anna Reed, who was a sex worker in Christchurch for 23 years and is now NZPC's local spokesperson, agrees that exploitative practices have become rare.

"Owners used to demand huge fines for being late. They used to hire and fire workers without reason." But now, she says, "girls feel more able to stand up for themselves".

Limited change

Another key benefit of decriminalisation, according to Ms Healy, is a sea change in relations with the police: "If you're the one committing a crime, you won't ask the police for help."

Now, Ms Healy says, the girls find law enforcement officials are on their side.

This idea was borne out by a parliamentary report last year, which gave a positive assessment of the reform. It said prostitutes were more likely to report violence to police, and officers were treating their complaints seriously.

Some brothel operators, however, are not so sure the reform has made a big difference.

Bon Ton owner Jennifer - who got into the sex business after decriminalisation - says some old-style establishments are still exploiting people. "This is still an industry in transition," she says.

Monique, who ran brothels before 2003 and now owns Capri, a "Gentleman's club and garden bar" in Christchurch, also plays down the impact of the reform - but for the opposite reason.

She says relations with police were good even when bordellos operated illegally. And then, as now, exploitation of girls was never widespread, Monique adds.

"We now have a fat, legal agreement with the workers but they are treated the same."

Suspicions

A sure sign that New Zealand's sex trade has not been entirely revolutionised is that society still frowns on it.

Last year a teacher was sacked when it was learnt that she occasionally - and perfectly legally - moonlighted as a prostitute.

" We get so pissed off when politicians portray us as victims "
Anna Reed
NZPC

Many sex workers keep a regular part-time job to avoid leaving suspicious gaps on their CVs.

They tell only trusted friends about their main activity. None of the working prostitutes and madams interviewed for this report was ready to give their real names.

Brothels may be legal but most New Zealanders prefer not to live next to one.

Bon Ton never mentions an address in its adverts - only a phone number. In Christchurch operators had to fight a proposed zoning law that would have kept them out of most areas.

But the overwhelming majority in the business feels huge progress was made when the industry emerged from the shadow.

Anna Reed says she loved working as a prostitute - "I had sex, money and men!" - and resents enduring cliches about a job no-one in her right mind could willingly embrace.

"We get so pissed off when politicians portray us as victims," she says.

"It's important to blow down the stereotypes about sex workers - particularly that of the poor girl who is coerced into doing it."

Story from BBC NEWS:
news.bbc.co.uk