TELEGRAPH– Evidence that life exists on Titan, one of Saturn’s biggest moons,
appears to have been uncovered by Nasa scientists.
Researchers at the space agency believe they have discovered vital clues
that appeared to indicate that primitive aliens could be living on the moon.
Data from Nasa’s Cassini probe has analysed the complex chemistry on the
surface of Titan, which experts say is the only moon around the planet to have
a dense atmosphere.
They suggest that life forms may have been breathing in the planet’s
atmosphere and also feeding on its surface’s fuel.
The first paper, in the journal Icarus, shows that hydrogen gas flowing
throughout the planet’s atmosphere disappeared at the surface. This suggested
that alien forms could in fact breathe.
The second paper, in the Journal of Geophysical Research, concluded that
there was lack of the chemical on the surface.
Scientists were then led to believe it had been possibly consumed by life.
GIZMODO– In response to a flood of Facebook and YouTube videos that depict police
abuse, a new trend in law enforcement is gaining popularity. In at least three
states, it is now illegal to record any on-duty police officer.
Even if the encounter involves you and may be necessary to your defense, and
even if the recording is on a public street where no expectation of privacy
exists.
The legal justification for arresting the “shooter” rests on
existing wiretapping or eavesdropping laws, with statutes against obstructing
law enforcement sometimes cited. Illinois,
Massachusetts, and Maryland
are among the 12 states in which all parties must consent for a recording to be
legal unless, as with TV news crews, it is obvious to all that recording is
underway. Since the police do not consent, the camera-wielder can be arrested.
Most all-party-consent states also include an exception for recording in public
places where “no expectation of privacy exists” (Illinois
does not) but in practice this exception is not being recognized.
Massachusetts attorney June
Jensen represented Simon Glik who was arrested for such a recording. She
explained, “[T]he statute has been misconstrued by Boston
police. You could go to the Boston Common and snap pictures and record if you
want.” Legal scholar and professor Jonathan Turley agrees, “The
police are basing this claim on a ridiculous reading of the two-party consent
surveillance law – requiring all parties to consent to being taped. I have
written in the area of surveillance law and can say that this is utter
nonsense.”
The courts, however, disagree. A few weeks ago, an Illinois
judge rejected a motion to dismiss an eavesdropping charge against Christopher
Drew, who recorded his own arrest for selling one-dollar artwork on the streets
of Chicago. Although the
misdemeanor charges of not having a peddler’s license and peddling in a
prohibited area were dropped, Drew is being prosecuted for illegal recording, a
Class I felony punishable by 4 to 15 years in prison.
Wendy McElroy is the author of several books on anarchism and feminism.
She maintains the iconoclastic website ifeminists.net
as well as an active blog at wendymcelroy.com.
SALON– One of the primary reasons the Turkish Government has been so angry in its denunciations of the Israeli attack on the flotilla is
because many of the dead were Turkish citizens. That’s what governments
typically do: object vociferously when their citizens are killed by
foreign nations under extremely questionable circumstances. Needless to
say, that principle — as all principles are — will be completely discarded when it comes to the U.S. protection of Israel:
A U.S.
citizen of Turkish origin was among the nine people killed when Israeli
commandos attacked a Gaza-bound aid flotilla . . . An official from the Turkish
Islamic charity that spearheaded the campaign to bust the blockade on Gaza
identified the U.S.
citizen as 19-year-old Furkan Dogan . . . . Dogan, who held a U.S.
passport, had four bullet wounds to the head and one to the chest . . .
.
Will the fact that one of the dead at Israel’s
hands was an American teenager with four bullet wounds to his head alter the
Obama administration’s full-scale defense of Israel? Does
that question even need to be asked? Not even American interests can
undermine reflexive U.S.
support for anything Israel
does; even the Chief of the Mossad acknowledged this week that “Israel
is progressively becoming a burden on the United
States.” One dead 19-year-old
American with 4 bullet holes in his head (especially one of Turkish origin with
a Turkish-sounding name) surely won’t have any impact.
Yesterday, newly elected British Prime Minister David Cameron became the
latest world leader to unequivocally condemn Israel,
saying the attack was “completely unacceptable”
and demanding an end to the blockade. But last night on Charlie Rose’s
show, Joe Biden defended Israel with as much vigor as any Netanyahu
aide or Weekly Standard polemicist. Biden told what can only be
described as a lie when, in order to justify his rhetorical question
“what’s the big deal here?,” he claimed that the ships could
have simply delivered their aid to Israel
and Israel would
then have generously sent it to Gaza (“They’ve
said, ‘Here you go. You’re in the Mediterranean. This
ship — if you divert slightly north you can unload it and we’ll get the stuff
into Gaza’.”). In fact,
contrary to the Central Lie being told about the blockade, Israel
prevents all
sorts of humanitarian items having nothing whatsoever to do with weapons from
entering Gaza, including many of the supplies carried by the flotilla.
One can express all sorts of outrage over the Obama administration’s
depressingly predictable defense of the Israelis, even at the cost of
isolating ourselves from the rest of the world, but ultimately, on some level,
wouldn’t it have been even more indefensible — or at least oozingly
hypocritical — if the U.S.
had condemned Israel? After
all, what did Israel
do in this case that the U.S.
hasn’t routinely done and continues to do? As even our own military
officials acknowledge, we’re slaughtering an “amazing number” of innocent people
at checkpoints in Afghanistan. We’re routinely killing
civilians in all sorts of imaginative ways in countless
countries, including with drone strikes which a U.N. official just concluded are illegal. We’re even targeting our
own citizens for due-process-free
assassination. We’ve been arming Israel
and feeding them billions of dollars in aid and protecting them diplomatically
as they (and we) have been doing things like this for decades.
What’s the Obama administration supposed to say about what Israel
did: we condemn the killing of unarmed civilians? We
decry these violations of international law? Even by typical
standards of government hypocrisy, who in the U.S. Government could possibly
say any of that with a straight face?
* * * * *
What this really underscores is that the mentality driving both Israel
and the U.S.
is quite similar, which is why those two countries find such common cause, even
when the rest of the world recoils in revulsion. One of the more amazing
developments in the flotilla aftermath is how a claim that initially appeared
too self-evidently ludicrous to be invoked by anyone — Israel was the
victim here and was acting against the ship in self-defense –has actually
become the central premise in
Israeli and (especially) American
discourse about the attack (and as always, there is far more
criticism of Israeli actions in Israel than in the U.S.).
How could anyone with the slightest intellectual honesty claim that Israel
and its Navy were the victims of a boat which Jon Stewart said last night looked like “P Diddy’s St. Bart’s
vacation yacht”; or that armed Israeli commandos were the victims of
unarmed civilian passengers; or, more generally, that a nuclear-armed Israel
with the most powerful military by far in the Middle East and the world’s
greatest superpower acting as Protector is the persecuted victim of a wretched,
deprived, imprisoned, stateless population devastated by 40 years of brutal
Israeli occupation and, just a year ago, an unbelievably destructive invasion
and bombing campaign? The casting of “victim” and “aggressor”
is blatantly reversed with such claims — which is exactly the central premise
that has been driving, and continues to drive, U.S.
foreign policy as well. In Imperial Ambitions, Noam Chomsky —
talking about America’s
post-9/11 policies — described the central mental deception that is at the
heart of all nations which dominate others with force (and if you’re one of
those people who hear “Noam Chomsky” and shut your mind, pretend that
this comes from “John Smith”):
In one of his many speeches, to U.S.
troops in Vietnam,
[Lyndon] Johnson said plaintively, “There are three billion people in the
world and we have only two hundred million of them. We are outnumbered
fifteen to one. If might did make right they would sweep over the United
States and take what we have. We have
what they want.” That is a constant refrain of imperialism.
You have your jackboot on someone’s neck and they’re about to
destroy you.
The same is true with any form of oppression. And it’s psychologically
understandable. If you’re crushing and destroying someone, you have to
have a reason for it, and it can’t be, “I’m a murderous
monster.” It has to be self-defense. “I’m protecting
myself against them. Look what they’re doing to me.” Oppression
gets psychologically inverted; the oppressor is the victim who is defending
himself.
Thus, nuclear-armed Israel
is bullied and victimized by starving Gazans with stones.
The Israel Navy is threatened by a flotilla filled with wheelchairs and
medicine. And the greatest superpower the Earth has ever known faces a
grave and existential threat from a handful of religious fanatics hiding in
caves. An American condemnation of Israel, as welcomed as it would have
been, would be an act of senseless insincerity, because the two countries (along
with many others) operate with this same “we-are-the-victim” mindset.
* * * * *
A prime cause of this inversion is the distortion in perception brought
about by rank tribalism. Those whose worldview is shaped by their
identification as members of a particular religious, nationalistic, or ethnic
group invariably over-value the wrongs done to them and greatly under-value the
wrongs their group perpetrates. Those whose world view is shaped by
tribalism are typically plagued by an extreme persecution complex (the whole world is against us!!!; everyone who criticizes us is hatefulandbiased!!!).
Haaretz
today reports that “Jewish Republicans and Democrats in the U.S. gave
a rare demonstration of unity on Wednesday when they backed Israel’s raid of a
Gaza-bound humanitarian aid flotilla.” Gee, whatever could account
for that “rare demonstration of unity” between these left-wing Jewish
progressives and hard-core, Jewish right-wing war cheerleaders who agree on
virtually nothing else? My, it’s such a mystery.
I can’t express how many emails I’ve received over the last week, from
self-identified Jewish readers (almost exclusively), along the lines
of: I’m a true progressive, agree with you on virtually every
issue, but hate your views on Israel. When it comes to Israel, we
see the same mindset from otherwise admirable Jewish progressives such as
Anthony Weiner, Jerry Nadler, Eliot Spitzer, Alan Grayson, and (after a brief
stint of deviation) Barney
Frank. On this one issue, they magically abandon their opposition to
military attacks on civilians, their defense of weaker groups being bullied and
occupied by far stronger factions, their belief that unilateral military
attacks are unjustified, and suddenly find common cause with Charles
Krauthammer, The Weekly Standard, and the Bush administration in
justifying even the most heinous Israeli crimes of aggression.
It will never cease to be mystifying (at least to me) that they never
question why they suddenly view the world so differently when it comes to Israel.
They never wonder to themselves:
I had it continuously drummed into my head from the time I was a
small child, from every direction, that Israel was special and was to be
cherished, that it’s fundamentally good but persecuted and victimized by Evil
Arab forces surrounding it, that I am a part of that group and should see the
world accordingly. Is this tribal identity which was pummeled into me
from childhood — rather than some independent, dispassionate analysis — the
reason I find myself perpetually sympathizing with and defending Israel?
Doesn’t the most minimal level of intellectual awareness — indeed, the
concept of adulthood itself — require that re-analysis? And, of
course, the “self-hating” epithet — with which I’ve naturally been bombarded
relentlessly over the last week — is explicitly grounded in the premise that
one should automatically defend one’s “own group” rather than
endeaveor to objectively assess facts and determine what is right and true.
This tribalism is hardly unique to Israel and Jews; it’s instead
universal. As the Bush years illustrated, there is no shortage of
Americans who “reason” the same way:
I was taught from childhood that America is right and thus, even in
adulthood, defend America no matter what it does; my duty as an American is to
defend and justify what America does and any American who criticizes
the U.S. is “self-hating” and anti-American; the wrongs
perpetrated by Us to Them pale in comparison to the wrongs perpetrated by Them
on Us.
Or listen to Fox News fear-mongers declare how Christians in the U.S.
and/or white males — comprising the vast majority of the population and every
power structure in the country — are the Real Persecuted Victims, from the War
on Christmas to affirmative action evils. Ronald Reagan even managed
to convince much of the country that the true economic injustices in America
were caused by rich black women driving their Cadillacs to collect their
welfare checks. This kind of blinding, all-consuming tribalism leads
members of even the most powerful group to convince themselves that they are
deeply victimized by those who are far weaker, whose necks have been under the
boots of the stronger group for decades, if not longer.
That’s just the standard symptom of the disease of tribalism and it finds
expression everywhere, in every group. It’s just far more significant —
and far more destructive — when the groups convincing themselves that they are
the Weak and Bullied Victims are actually the strongest forces by far on the planet,
with the greatest amount of weaponry and aggression, who have been finding
justifications for so long for their slaughtering of civilians that, as Israeli
Amos Oz suggested this week about his country, there are virtually
no limits left on the naked aggression that will be justified. Thus, even
when Israel attacks a ship full of civilians and wheelchairs in international
waters and kills at least 9 human beings, this is depicted by its tribal
loyalists as an act of justified self-defense against the Real Aggressors.
UPDATE: A few related items worth
noting:
(1) Max Blumenthal catches the IDF trying to quietly withdraw its absurd claim
that the flotilla was linked to Al Qaeda;
(2) Reporters Without Borders notes that, as of
yesterday, Israel continued to detain most journalists on the ships,
including their film and cameras, thus preventing any of them from disputing
Israeli propaganda; as the NYT
reported, Israel was also “refusing to permit journalists access to
witnesses who might contradict Israel’s version of events.”
Manifestly, all that was done to ensure that the highly selective and edited
video released by the IDF would shape the narrative of what happened and
could not be challenged in the first few days of reporting.
(3) The truth, however, always emerges. See this interview with just-released Al Jazeera
reporter Jamal Elshayyal, who was aboard the ship that was attacked, about
what really happened and who began the shooting.
(4) Jeremy Scahill was on MSNBC today debating the flotilla attack with Israel-centric Ed Koch,
and did a superb job debunking several of Koch’s lies. There is no excuse
for any television network to host discussions of this incident without
including critics of the attack and the blockade, including that rarest of all
American TV events: hearing from Palestinian or other Muslim
critics of Israeli policy.
(6) One of the tired, clichéd epithets being spat by right-wing
war cheerleaders at critics of the Israeli attack (such as myself)
is “Useful Idiots.” Yet just as nothing helped
Al Qaeda (and Iran) more than the invasion of Iraq, the U.S.
torture regime, Guantanamo and the like, nothing helps Hamas more than these
types of naked acts of Israeli aggression which repulse the world. As
Gazan-born journalist Taghreed El-Khodary explained
yesterday inSalon:
Israel has given Hamas a present. Hamas’ morale is high; it’s a boost for
them. They feel stronger and that’s what they needed at this time when they had
been weakened somewhat.
So who are the actual Useful Idiots?
UPDATE II: This morning, John Cole predicted that because of Turkey’s opposition to
Israel in this case, “the new mission du jour for the wingnut Wurlitzer is
to begin a full-fledged demonization of Turkey.” Leading the way,
however, is Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner, who, speaking today toNational Review — that’s National Review —
denounced Turkey as “our former ally.” By
“our,” he presumably means “the United
States.” So apparently, even if a stalwart American ally like
fellow NATO member Turkey evinces insufficient devotion to Israel, then
they must be declared a non-ally of the United States (h/t
Steve
Hynd). It doesn’t matter if Turkey is actually important to American
interests; the fact that they are odds with Israel means they must be
jettisoned by the U.S. See above for how and why that works.
UPDATE III: I was on Al Jazeera
English on Wednesday night talking about the Obama administration and Israel
policy. The 4-minute segment can be viewed here.
I was able to get the new camera working (the one I wanted to use
for the Spitzer interview), and though it needed to be positioned somewhat
higher, it illustrates the high video quality possible with Skype
TV interviews. The new lapel microphone is also working now (though
not for this interview), but the face mic I used for this interview also
reflects the high audio quality that’s possible.
Relatedly: here is another first-hand account from a flotilla
passenger about what happened which you will barely, if at all, hear on
American television. As Anonymous Liberal put it
— in response to my request to all television journalists that they interview journalist Jamal Elshayyal about what he
witnessed on the ship — “why do that when you can interview some U.S.
politician who wasn’t on the ship but knows what Israel said
happened?” And I would add: “or watch
highly edited videos from the IDF, which spent days blocking access to
witnesses and journalists and continues to conceal the full, unedited
videos”? But that’s American “journalism” for you in a
nutshell.
PALM BEACH POST– A Florida beach might get hit
with oil from the Deepwater Horizon accident for the first time Wednesday as
sheen likely caused by the accident was reported less than 10 miles off Pensacola
Beach.
A charter boat captain reported the oil Tuesday afternoon and state and
local environmental officials confirmed that it was about 9.5 miles offshore. Winds are
forecast to blow from the south and west, pushing the outer edges of massive
slick from the spill closer to western Panhandle beaches.
Emergency crews began Tuesday scouring the beaches for oil and shoring up
miles of boom. Escambia County will use it to block oil from reaching inland
waterways, but plans to leave beaches unprotected because they are too
difficult to protect and easier to clean up.
The spill’s arrival coincides with the beginning of the Panhandle’s summer
tourism season, which normally brings millions of dollars to the region.
“It’s inevitable that we will see it on the beaches,” said Keith
Wilkins, Escambia’s deputy chief of neighborhood and
community services.
SF GATE– Farmers planting strawberries and other crops in California
will soon have to contend with cancer-causing poison instead of bugs, worms and
fungus if regulators get their wish.
The California Department of Pesticide Regulation has proposed registering
methyl iodide as a pesticide in California
to the dismay of scientists and environmental groups, who say it is so toxic
that even chemists are reluctant to handle it.
The chemical will become legal for growers to use after a 60-day comment
period ending June 29 unless there is some kind of public outcry.
“This is one of the most egregious pesticides out there,” said
Sarah Aird, the state field organizer for Californians for Pesticide Reform, a
coalition of watchdog groups opposed to the use of potentially harmful
chemicals. “It is really, really toxic. It is actually used in the
laboratory to induce cancer cells.”
Methyl iodide was approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in
2007 for use as a fumigant over the protests of more than two dozen California
legislators and 54 scientists, including five Nobel laureates, who signed a
letter opposing registration of the chemical.