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Amaunet

03/30/05 10:24 AM

#3195 RE: CoalTrain #3193

That intervention will take the form of either an armed intrusion as seen in Iraq or the hiring and training of mob mercenaries in productions of gigantic proportions lurking under the guise of ‘democracy’ as most recently seen in Georgia, Ukraine and now Kyrgyzstan. The latter being worse in that it’s more abstract nature lends to an insidious takeover that the courser mind cannot conceive.


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CoalTrain

03/31/05 2:37 AM

#3208 RE: CoalTrain #3193

Nukes going off in America soon? Welcome to Nuclear Democracy

http://www.harktheherald.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=50140&...

IN OUR VIEW Nuclear weapons testing won't reveal anything new

The Daily Herald


You'd expect the son of a downwinder to be against the resumption of nuclear weapons testing in the Nevada desert.

Yet U.S. Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, is not. Cannon, who believes his father's cancer was due in part to radioactive fallout from atomic bomb tests, wants the country to resume nuclear testing.
He supports testing of the proposed Robust Nuclear Ground Penetrator and of our existing weapons stockpile to ensure our current arsenal still works.

"What we really need here is deterrence. We want people to get out of their holes and into the democratic process, and we want to scare them out," Cannon said in an Associated Press story. "We need to give them the fear of destruction, and hopefully, over time, people will realize that the democratic system works."


If terrorists are storing chemical or biological weapons in underground bunkers, there is no question that some means must be developed to take them out. Perhaps conventional military methods would be sufficient. Bunker-busting nuclear weapons have been proposed, but they raise other concerns. Do they really require live testing?

Utahns have already paid a terrible price, as Cannon knows, for America's security in the Atomic Age. Government officials assured us in the 1950s and 1960s that the tests were perfectly safe and that radioactive fallout raining down on Utah was harmless. Even the "safer" underground tests in the latter years released considerable radiation into the atmosphere, and it blew far beyond the confines of the Nevada Test Site.

It was only after Utahns started developing cancer at startling rates that the government's lie was unmasked.

Now it's a new age, and we face a new kind of enemy. The United States, and the rest of the civilized world, must respond with vigor and speed to the threat of weapons of mass destruction in the hands of terrorists. It is the greatest threat of our time.

But what knowledge would be gained from renewed testing that would be worth risking the lives of American families again? With more than 40 years of testing data, scientists can develop new nuclear weapons and achieve a high degree of certainty in their effectiveness without actually conducting a live-fire test.

Experts say testing of current weapons won't reveal anything new, either. There are ways to test a nuclear weapon's operational status without having to actually detonate it. Diagnostic programs can check the weapon's electronic components, and an examination of a warhead can determine whether the weapon will still achieve its design potential.

If the United States were to resume nuclear testing, we would undermine our own efforts at getting North Korea and Iran to shelve their weapons programs. It might even spur them to redouble their efforts to find a way to strike us before we attack them.

Cannon would do well to use his influence as Utah's senior House member to lobby against the resumption of nuclear tests. He should be teaming up with another son of a downwinder, Rep. Jim Matheson, who is proposing legislation that requires environmental safety and health reviews, and congressional approval, for any new tests.

Matheson's bill, which is being sponsored in the Senate by Utah Republican Sen. Bob Bennett, would also require the government to solicit comments from people who would be affected by potential fallout and install radiation monitors in any Utah community that requests it. In short, if we can't stop renewed nuclear testing, we need to make sure to get as many safeguards in place as possible.

Beyond the matter of testing, the use of nuclear bombs against terrorist stockpiles deserves close scrutiny. A massive bomb could actually spread deadly chemicals or biological agents. And it would create radioactive fallout that could poison both civilians and American troops in the region of the blast. And it could further undermine efforts to negotiate with the Irans and North Koreas of the world.

There are no easy answers in the age of terrorism. But there is one thing that's clear enough: American civilians living on American soil should never again be placed in harm's way by government-sponsored nuclear testing.

This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page A5.
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CoalTrain

03/31/05 2:40 AM

#3209 RE: CoalTrain #3193

Funding halted for fallout study

By BRIAN PASSEY
bpassey@thespectrum.com
http://www.thespectrum.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050330/NEWS01/503300303/1002


ST. GEORGE - In three more years, Dr. Joseph L. Lyon might have known more about the connection between atomic testing in Nevada and thyroid disease. But now that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has halted funding for the program, his life's work may never be complete.

Thyroid disease is one of many health problems attributed to radiation exposure by people, often called downwinders, who lived in Southern Utah during the aboveground testing from 1951 to 1961.

The CDC recently notified Lyon that the funding for his University of Utah study would not be renewed past September, though he said it will take three years to complete.

"(The federal government) essentially declared they have no interest in the adverse effects of nuclear radiation," Lyon alleged.

But the CDC said the study was scheduled to be complete by September and has already extended the funding twice, committing more than $8 million to it, said Tom Skinner, a CDC spokesman.

"A lot has been learned from this study," Skinner said. "We're committed to evaluating the exposure to radiation."

Skinner said the University of Utah study is just one of many radiation studies the CDC is funding around the country, including studies in Washington state, Idaho and New Mexico.

St. George resident Jeff Bradshaw, who has thyroid problems, is one of the downwinders who is participating in Lyon's study. He heard about the funding cut Tuesday afternoon.

"I'd just say it's another one of (the federal government's) schemes," Bradshaw alleged. "I think they're trying to get away from doing anything for the downwinders because they want to start the testing again."

He has been participating in Lyon's various studies for about 20 years. Though Lyon began this particular study in 1998, he has been looking at health problems associated with the downwinders for 27 years.

Lyon, like Bradshaw, said he thinks there is more to the funding cut than money. He said a core problem is that the federal government is both the "polluter" and the one trying to find solutions.

Lyon said they have only completed examinations on about 1,300 of 4,000 individuals. Ideally, Lyon said the people should be followed throughout their lives.

"We've got three more years of hard work to complete the study by," Lyon said.

But without the funding, the study will not be completed.

"We have to shut down," Lyon said. "We'll have to archive this information."

It likely will cost several million to restart the study if funding is ever obtained, Lyon said.

The funding cut will not affect the local Radiation Exposure Screening and Education Program at Dixie Regional Medical Center because it is not funded by the CDC, said Becky Barlow, project director. The program also operates clinics in Hildale and at Valley View Medical Center in Cedar City.

The clinic is basically the screening arm for the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990, which provides payments to downwinders who contracted certain diseases, Barlow said. Those at the clinic check for cancerous conditions and offer education about the increased risk of cancer among downwinders.

"Our clinic does an overall assessment on the whole body," Barlow said. "We look at more than just the thyroid."

Barlow said it was a shame that Lyon's program had lost funding because of the amount of information it had gathered on thyroid problems. She said her clinic has referred patients to Lyon's study.

"He literally has made that his life," Barlow said.


Originally published March 30, 2005

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CoalTrain

03/31/05 2:43 AM

#3210 RE: CoalTrain #3193

READ THIS!

http://www.ratical.org/radiation/SecretFallout/

An excellent read. It puts nuclear fallout and government suppression of the effects of nuclear fallout in a clear context.
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CoalTrain

03/31/05 2:46 AM

#3211 RE: CoalTrain #3193

Matheson reintroduces nuke testing bill

By ED KOCIELA
ekociela@thespectrum.com

http://www.thespectrum.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050310/NEWS01/503100303/1002

Just days after a fellow Utah lawmaker spoke in favor of renewed nuclear testing in Nevada, Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, re-introduced a bill Wednesday afternoon that would require the federal government to conduct a nationwide environmental impact assessment and set up nationwide monitoring systems before renewing atomic weapons tests.

"I'm committed," Matheson said moments after stepping off the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday afternoon. "We got the money for this zeroed out last year, but it's not over.

"(Secretary of Energy) Samuel Bodman said he's ready to move ahead with getting the Nevada Test Site ready. He said it would not just be for the development of new nuclear weapons, that we have an aging nuclear arsenal, and we have to test to make sure it works. I'm concerned about that."

Bodman's remarks were echoed by Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, who told the Salt Lake Tribune in Washington, D.C., earlier this week that he believed the United States needs a clear deterrent for its enemies.

"To the degree that we have people blow up our skyscrapers and hiding underground we have to have the ability to respond to them," Cannon told the Tribune. "I don't ever expect we'll end up using a bunker buster, but the other side needs to know that we have them." Cannon also said he believes tests can be conducted safely.

The idea of renewed testing didn't sit well with some Southern Utah "downwinders," who were among the 40,000 area residents exposed to radiation during nuclear weapons tests in the 1950s and '60s.

Michelle Thomas, a St. George resident and downwinder, called Cannon's support of the resumption of testing "cavalier." She said his backing of renewed tests shows an "incredibly short-term memory on his part" because Cannon has said in the past that he believes his father died as a result of the radioactive fallout.

Matheson's bill to put hurdles in front of renewed tests, the Safety for Americans from Nuclear Weapons Testing Act, is similar to legislation he introduced a year ago.

It would require:


The government to conduct a National Environmental Policy Act review to assess health, safety and environmental impacts prior to conducting nuclear tests.

Congressional authorization prior to the resumption of testing at the Nevada Test Site.

One week's notice before any test.

Governmental and private monitoring of radiation levels throughout the country.

The creation of a consortium of universities to study the health effects of radiation exposure.

Provisions that ensure local citizen involvement.
The last item was picked up from a bill introduced last year in the Senate by Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah.

"We liked that idea," Matheson said. "Sen. Bennett sort of wrote his bill off mine last time. I talked to him about this one."

Bennett has said that he will reintroduce his measure this session, which would require the installation of radiation monitoring stations in any Utah county that requests one and establish the citizen review board to meet with the Department of Energy to discuss testing concerns.

As Matheson introduced his measure on the House floor, he pointed first to a large photograph of the 1970 Shot Baneberry underground test that reportedly tossed debris and a mushroom cloud 10,000 feet into the air. He also cited a map that researchers from the National Cancer Institute claim shows the atmospheric flow of Iodine 131 as a result of nuclear tests.

"Counties in upstate New York and Vermont received fallout," Matheson said from the House floor. "This is an issue of national importance and national scope."

Matheson condemned the behavior of the federal government as it conducted testing from 1951 to 1992.

"At the time, the government told the people the tests were safe," he said in introducing his bill. "What we know is the government lied. Now the history is pretty clear. We know the government knew people were at risk and thousands died from nuclear testing."

One of those victims was Matheson's father, Scott, who served as governor of Utah and obtained documents proving the federal government's culpability.

While some downwinders said they appreciated the obstacles Matheson's bill would put in place, some residents said any renewed testing would result in a betrayal of trust.

"I think it was very ignorant of the government to use their own people as guinea pigs, and I never want that to happen again," said Jeff Bradshaw, a St. George resident and downwinder.

Besides Matheson and Bennett, the Utah Legislature also has spoken out against renewed testing. In the recently concluded session, the Legislature passed a resolution against testing, which was signed by Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr.

"A resumption of nuclear testing at the federal government's Nevada Test Site would mean a return to the mistakes and miscalculations of the past, which have marred many Utahns," the resolution said. It "would signify a dramatic step backward in the United States of America's resolve to learn from its tragic nuclear testing legacy."


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CoalTrain

03/31/05 2:54 AM

#3213 RE: CoalTrain #3193

Bin Laden, Not Bush, may be the Change Agent in the Middle East
America's Gunboat Diplomacy
By JUDE WANNISKI

In the last three decades, there always has been little doubt in my mind that democratic institutions would soon replace or subsume the world's last remaining monarchies, including those in the Middle East.

Monarchs could rule effectively when the world moved at a snail`s pace, but with the accelerated pace of change in the global political economy, the monarchical form of government simply can`t keep up. In my 1978 book, The Way the World Works, I wrote:

"The electorate, being wiser than any individual in the society, is society`s most precious resource. It is the job of the politician to try to divine what it is the electorate wants.

"Politicians have the most important and difficult task in all of society, for they are the only channel through which the electorate can realise its self-interest and in so doing preserve itself and progress.

"It politicians repeatedly fail to discern the interests of the electorate, winning office only because their political competitors have even less discernment, the society will ultimately resort to either war or revolution to bring about a correction."

Like all Americans, President Bush believes in "democracy", because it has worked so well for the United States. But also like most Americans, he has never thought much about "democracy" other than that it means popular elections of political leaders--as opposed to inherited political power.

Bush and his team are now taking the elections in Iraq and signs of democratic political change elsewhere in the Mideast as justification for his taking the United States to war, although no mention of spreading the gospel of democracy was mentioned at the time.

Where is this leading? Mr Bush`s pro-war supporters in Congress and in the news media are already trumpeting a prediction that he will go down in history for forcing change upon those elites who have long resisted freedom and democracy for their people.

Thomas L Friedman of The New York Times sees him perhaps as a new Napoleon, a populist who rose out of the common clay to change the world in many positive ways, even while using force of arms as the battering ram for change.

On the other hand, there is Pat Buchanan, the conservative political commentator who worked for presidents Nixon and Reagan during the Cold War and twice ran for president.

In his 14 February 14 column, Buchanan notes that Bush says "democracy and freedom" are on the march.

But instead, it may be that revolution is on the march. If Bush turns out to be right, he "will be viewed by history as a Reaganite visionary who, seeing deeper into the Islamic soul than critics, understood that an invasion of Iraq would unleash the liberating force of freedom, not the demonic force of Islamic revolution".

An opponent of the war with Iraq, Buchanan clearly expects that when the dust settles a bit, the Middle East will not look the way President Bush expected it to.

It is already clear that Iraq may form a government that will not only be much less secular than the regime that Bush overturned, but also may invite the United States to pull stakes and leave completely.

Even with the interim government practically installed by the United States, democratic principles of free press and free speech were shelved, with Al Jazeera itself barred from reporting while news outlets supportive of the Allawi regime were favoured.

The events in Lebanon are even less likely to satisfy the Bush administration, stunned into silence by Hizb Allah`s show of political power that surprised all American observers.

Bush seemed to believe the Lebanese people would dance in the streets singing his praises for demanding an end to the Syrian presence. And 70,000 did.

But the following day, 500,000 Lebanese showed up at the same square to denounce America. They represented the forces that originally invited Syria`s military presence to end the military clashes between Maronite Christians and Palestinians in Southern Lebanon.

It was a conflict that could not be avoided by Lebanon`s concessionary democracy--which allocates power by percentages to the Christians, Sunnis, Shia and Druse. They clearly wish Syria to play a role until the elections next month.

The turnabout was so quick that it did not leave President Bush time to change his celebration of the first Beirut demonstration and in a speech the following day, he behaved as if the outpouring of 500,000 Lebanese was another sure sign of democracy on the march.

Shaikh Hasan Nasr Allah, Hizb Allah`s leader, could make the obvious point that a majority clearly favours Syria`s presence, and if that isn`t democratic, what is?

What happens next? The US, now backed by a UN resolution, demands Syria`s retreat behind its borders before the spring elections in Lebanon, but UN officials prefer to hold the elections before the Syrian withdrawal.

It`s not at all clear how this will play out. Buchanan observes that "almost every revolution demands the expulsion of foreign troops. The Syrian army may leave Lebanon, but this presages a demand that the US army get out of Iraq and the Israelis get off the Golan Heights and out of the West Bank".

To appreciate the ironies of the moment, we can recollect that the outlines of President Bush`s call for a worldwide democratic crusade were hatched a dozen years ago by the intellectuals around him

These were the young men chosen by president Nixon for his foreign-policy team: Donald Rumsfeld, Richard Cheney, the elder George Bush; and the "neo-cons" who were nominally Democrats: Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, James Woolsey.

In his 1992 book, Seize the Moment, Nixon wrote that "the death of Soviet communism and the disintegration of the Soviet empire in 1991 revolutionised the global landscape. I believe that it is imperative that the US seize this moment to secure peace and advance freedom around the world."

In that sense, US foreign policy is still the design of an American president who died soon after writing his book. As an admirer of Nixon`s world-view, I`ve often believed that he would not have followed the course plotted by the neo-cons in subsequent years, which has left us with such a mess today.

Earlier in the same book, in fact, Nixon had this to day about a march of democracy at the end of a gun, what I call "gunboat democracy", with the neo-cons actually having as one of their heroes Teddy Roosevelt, who practised what came to be called "gunboat diplomacy":

"Those who call for a global democratic crusade ignore the limits of our power. Recognising these limits does not mean that we should shrug off forces struggling to advance democracy of that we should give a green light to dictators poised to strike against fragile democratic regimes.

"But we do not have sufficient power to remake the world in our image. Even in the West, democratic government has existed for only two hundred years.

"Nations in Asia, Africa, and Latin America cannot develop overnight the traditions, cultures and institutions needed to make democracy work.

"What works for us may not work for others. In these regions, democratic government does not necessarily mean good government.

"It could lead to majority repression of minorities and to mob rule that would make authoritarian rule enviable by comparison."

Nixon`s followers obviously ignored the old man`s counsel when they devised their Project for a New American Century in 1994, which was an explicit design for a New World Order based on the exercise of America`s economic and military might.

But they were fully in accord with his view that the sanctions imposed on Iraq in 1991 after the Gulf War should not be lifted until Saddam was gone from power, no matter how much he cooperated with the United Nations. Nixon clearly believed Saddam would be overthrown by his own people in a year or two.

When he wasn`t, and the murderous sanctions wound up causing the deaths of at least 500,000 Iraqi civilians, it was Usama bid Ladin and al-Qaida who came into the picture at 9/11.

Indeed, Eric Margolis, an astute columnist for the Toronto Sun, recently wrote that bin Ladin, not Bush, is "the man most responsible for pushing the Arab world towards political change ..."

"For over a decade, bin Ladin has agitated for the overthrow of the corrupt, despotic Arab regimes supported by the US, and their replacement by a traditional Islamic democratic consensus.

"As bin Ladin`s anti-American insurgency gathers strength and resonates among the restive Arab masses, the Bush administration has urged the frightened kings and generals running Washington`s client Arab regimes to make a show of democratic reforms to head off popular uprisings."

We will have to patiently wait and watch to see how it all comes out. History seems to be moving faster than ever, but still it happens one day at a time.

Jude Wanniski is a former associate editor of The Wall Street Journal, expert on supply-side economics and founder of Polyconomics, which helps to interpret the impact of political events on financial markets.