Monthly Archives: February 2004

I’d Like to Read the Rest of This

This editorial, Injustice Unchallenged, in the Washington Post has a great beginning.

THE CONSTITUTION guarantees a right to counsel for criminal defendants and obligates states to provide lawyers to those who cannot pay for them. Virginia, as a recent report prepared for the American Bar Association documents, woefully fails to meet this constitutional duty. The state's failure is so extreme that it cannot be constitutional. Yet it goes unchallenged. To understand why, consider the tale of the last lawyer who tried to raise a challenge.

Unfortunately, it gets a bit odd after that.

Continue reading

Posted in Readings | 2 Comments

Tales From the Tech Support Crypt

True tales from tech support. Reed 'em and weep. Probably with laughter.

Posted in Completely Different | 2 Comments

CIA Lied To Congress, Admin Lied to Us All, On Key Iraq Fact

So it seems the CIA lied when it told Congress it was giving the UN Inspectors the info they needed to do a good hunt for the alleged WMD. That means that US policy was to hamstring the inspectors, then blame them for doing a bad job.

Smart Washington insiders always release the really bad news late on Friday in the hopes that everyone will forget it by Monday.

I've boldfaced the key point in the quote from the New York Times below. This would be a major bombshell were it not for the fact that we've already had so many bombshells about Bush administration falsifications about Iraq/WMD/threat-to-the-USA not to mention false al Queda ties, that we're all a bit, well, shellshocked.

Then again, agencies that lie to Congress and get caught doing it, usually get at least a nice public grilling.

Intelligence: C.I.A. Admits It Didn't Give Weapon Data to the U.N.: The Central Intelligence Agency has acknowledged that it did not provide the United Nations with information about 21 of the 105 sites in Iraq singled out by American intelligence before the war as the most highly suspected of housing illicit weapons.

The acknowledgment, in a Jan. 20 letter to Senator Carl Levin, Democrat of Michigan, contradicts public statements before the war by top Bush administration officials.

Both George J. Tenet, the director of central intelligence, and Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser, said the United States had briefed United Nations inspectors on all of the sites identified as “high value and moderate value” in the weapons hunt.

The contradiction is significant because Congressional opponents of the war were arguing a year ago that the United Nations inspectors should be given more time to complete their search before the United States and its allies began the invasion. The White House, bolstered by Mr. Tenet, insisted that it was fully cooperating with the inspectors, and at daily briefings the White House issued assurances that the administration was providing the inspectors with the best information possible.

In a telephone interview on Friday, Senator Levin said he now believed that Mr. Tenet had misled Congress, which he described as “totally unacceptable.”

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OK, I’m Jealous

I got some very useful private responses to my plea for help about some basic home network questions . But Doc Searls's similar plea —admittedly one of more urgency—resulted in personal advice from the Head Lemur.

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The Cyborgs Are Coming

I think this means cyborgs, but it could be androids….

Cells can grow on silicon: Researchers at the University of Calgary have found that nerve cells grown on a microchip can learn and memorize information which can be communicated to the brain.

“We discovered that when we used the chip to stimulate the neurons, their synaptic strength was enhanced,” said Naweed Syed, a neurobiologist at the University of Calgary's faculty of medicine.

The nerve cells also exhibited memory traces that were successfully read by the chip, said Syed, co-author of the landmark study published in February's edition of Physical Review Letters, an international journal.

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Why It’s Called “Pandagon”

How blogs get their names tends to be either obvious or interesting. My blog got its name from a paper I wrote about the Internet and Habermas's theory of discourse. Here's how Pandagon got its name.

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