Tax cheating by super rich out of control

August 1, 2006 by newsfree

RAW STORY
Published: Monday July 31, 2006

According to an article to appear in Tuesday’s New York Times, a new Senate report on high-level tax schemes will reveal that “so many super-rich Americans evade taxes using offshore accounts that law enforcement cannot control the growing misconduct,” RAW STORY has learned.

The report estimates that tax cheating now costs the government as much as $70 billion a year, or 7 cents out of every dollar. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), whose staff ran the investigation, says, “The universe of offshore tax cheating has become so large that no one, not even the United States government, could go after all of it.”

Among the six cases cited in the report are those of the billionaire owner of the New York Jets, Robert Wood Johnson IV, and the producer of “Mighty Morphin Power Rangers,” Haim Saban, who are described as victims. They are both scheduled to testify on Tuesday before the Senate Permanent Investigations subcommittee and are expected to blame their tax advisers for assuring them that the deals they were engaged in were probably lawful.

The report also discusses prominent George W. Bush supporters Charles and Sam Wyly, who are characterized as active participants in tax schemes. The Wyly Brothers told the subcommittee they planned to invoke their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and have not been called to testify.

http://www.rawstory.com/news/2006/Tax_cheating_by_super_rich_out_0731.html

IDF prepared for attack by Syria

August 1, 2006 by newsfree

By YAAKOV KATZ
Jerusalem Post
Jul. 30, 2006 13:59 | Updated Jul. 31, 2006 0:52

While Israel is not interested in opening a front against Syria, the IDF will respond harshly and with its full might if President Bashar Assad decides to attack Israel, a high-raking IDF officer in the Northern Command told The Jerusalem Post Sunday.

“We are continuing with our message that we are not interested in fighting with Syria,” the officer said, “But we are fully prepared for a Syrian attack, in the case of which we will strike back extremely hard.”

The officer said he believed Damascus had been receiving the clear message Israel had been sending its way that it did not want to fight Syria. Whatever happened on the border completely depended on Assad, the officer said.

“It is up to him, and at the moment we don’t know what he plans to do,” he said.

He added that Saturday’s IAF attack on a road that led from Syria into Lebanon near the Syrian border was meant to thwart weapons smuggling attempts.

The IDF was also concerned about a possible Syrian attack in response to the ongoing IDF operations in Lebanon. It was also known that Syria had increased its alert out of fear in Damascus that Israel might attack.

Defense officials told the Post last week that they were receiving indications from the US that America would be interested in seeing Israel attack Syria.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1153292032964&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

In Court Papers, a Political Note on ’04 Protests

August 1, 2006 by newsfree

By DIANE CARDWELL
New York Times
Published: July 31, 2006

When city officials denied demonstrators access to the Great Lawn in Central Park during the 2004 Republican National Convention, political advocates and ordinary New Yorkers accused Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of squelching demonstrations that could embarrass fellow Republicans during their gathering.

The Bloomberg administration denied being guided by politics in banning the protests. Instead, officials said they were motivated by a concern for the condition of the expensively renovated Great Lawn or by law enforcement’s ability to secure the crowd.

But documents that have surfaced in a federal lawsuit over the use of the Great Lawn paint a different picture, of both the rationale for the administration’s policy and the degree of Mr. Bloomberg’s role in enforcing it.

Those documents, which include internal e-mail messages and depositions in the court case, show that Mr. Bloomberg’s involvement in the deliberations over the protests may have been different from how he and his aides have portrayed it. They also suggest that officials were indeed motivated by political concerns over how the protests would play out while the Republican delegates were in town, and how the events could affect the mayor’s re-election campaign the following year.

“It is very important that we do not permit any big or political events for the period between Aug. 23 and Sept. 6, 2004,” read one Parks Department e-mail message, referring to issuing permits for the days framing the convention. “It’s really important for us to keep track of any large events (over 1,000 people), and any rallies or events that seem sensitive or political in nature.”

City officials have said in the case that these statements concerned the logistics of scheduling so many events during that time. But, just after the convention ended, Parks Department officials told the organizer of a commemorative event for John Lennon that they could not offer access to the Great Lawn because, as one marketing official wrote, “we had to admit that it was going to be difficult right after all our problems with the rally requests for the park and right before Mike’s re-election.”

“There are practical and political reasons for this decision,” said an e-mail message to the organizer, “which follows, as you know, very closely on the heels of the court cases during the RNC.”

Throughout his tenure as mayor, Mr. Bloomberg has made much of his political independence, saying that his decision-making is guided more by a sense of what is right, than by political expediency or popular opinion. But the documents, which are part of the lawsuit brought by the National Council of Arab Americans and the Answer Coalition, an antiwar civil rights group, indicate that politics and appearances were at the center of the administration’s strategy and that Mr. Bloomberg was more intimately involved in the discussions over demonstrations in the park than he said.

At the time of the convention, Mr. Bloomberg said that he had largely delegated responsibility for determining where protesters could demonstrate to the Parks Department and the Police Department, and he told the court later that he had no knowledge of specific permit denials other than the one for the enormous rally for 250,000 people organized by United for Peace and Justice, an antiwar group.

Mr. Bloomberg wrote that he did “not have unique, personal knowledge regarding the basis of the decision,” and that he had “no knowledge at all regarding the denial of a Parks Department permit to plaintiff,” the National Council of Arab Americans, “beyond a general understanding that other groups sought and were denied Parks Department permits to demonstrate on the Great Lawn during the RNC.”

But an e-mail message from Adrian Benepe, the parks commissioner, to Mr. Bloomberg in June 2004 indicates otherwise.

“Following your call, I spoke to Ray about 10 minutes ago,” Mr. Benepe wrote, referring to Raymond W. Kelly, the police commissioner. “Coincidentally, our lawyer and Chief McManus and the Law Department are meeting at this very minute to agree on the language and strategy of the letter rejecting the Arab-American rally on the Great Lawn,” Mr. Benepe continued, referring to Assistant Chief John B. McManus, who oversaw Police Department strategy for the convention.

Mr. Benepe’s message added: “I assume the rejection letter will go out today. I will let you know.”

Stu Loeser, the mayor’s chief spokesman, declined last week to comment on the documents. But in court papers, Mr. Bloomberg said that he did not remember the phone call, the e-mail message or the specific protest they concerned.

The internal communications, some of which were reported in The New York Sun the week before last, offer a rare look at the machinations of the administration and paint a picture of officials scrambling to lock in their approach and then figuring out how to justify it.

Lawyers from the Partnership for Civil Justice, the group representing the protest organizers, argue that the lengths to which administration officials went in rationalizing their approach showed that they understood their actions were flawed.

“The system is a political system, not a permitting system,” said Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, one of the lawyers. “The fact of the mayor’s involvement, the extraordinary lengths officials went through to justify it, makes it clear that free-speech rights are doled out based on politics and viewpoint, and that’s clearly unconstitutional.”

Bloomberg administration officials have said that they do not have a policy to exclude protests, but the court papers suggest otherwise.

In 2003, for instance, when the Parks Department denied a permit for an antiwar protest, Douglas Blonsky, the Central Park administrator, wrote in a memorandum to Mr. Benepe, “It would be imprudent to hold large rallies on Central Park’s lawns at any time of the year,” and later said that “rallies do not work on lawns.”

So when it came time to plan for the large protests expected at the Republican convention, Parks Department officials moved to ensure that the lawns would remain no-protest zones, even though police officials supported allowing the rallies there.

In early March 2004, Parks Department officials scrambled to make sure Mr. Bloomberg would be on their side in that debate in advance of a meeting he had called to discuss protest permits.

The meeting of city officials also included Kevin Sheekey, who was then president of the privately financed NYC 2004 Host Committee for the convention.

On March 18, Elizabeth W. Smith, chief of marketing and corporate sponsorship at the Parks Department, sent an e-mail message to Mr. Benepe pressing him to enlist Patricia E. Harris, a deputy mayor, in urging Mr. Bloomberg to agree to a ban before that meeting to decide the issue.

The e-mail message suggested that she worried that Mr. Kelly would persuade Mr. Bloomberg to allow the rally on the lawn because it would be easier to police.

“The more I think about it, the more I think that you do NOT want Mayor Mike to walk into that meeting hearing for the first time you and Kelly possibly presenting your opposing views for general debate,” the e-mail message said. “This is just a reminder to you to get to Patti sometime soon so that she can get the mayor on board, which I think is very possible. ‘Security’ trumps everything in this debate, so Kelly goes in to that meeting with the benefit of the doubt.”

The tactic appears to have worked. On March 23, Mr. Benepe’s daily report said, “Today’s meeting with the mayor went quite well,” and added, “We are gratified that he supported the idea of not having any rallies on lawns in Central Park.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/31/nyregion/31protest.html?ex=1155009600&en=b9969eb24f4c38eb&ei=5065&partner=MYWAY

Environmental ‘crisis’ in Lebanon

August 1, 2006 by newsfree

By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website
Monday, 31 July 2006, 22:41 GMT 23:41 UK

The United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) has expressed its “grave concern” about oil pollution in Lebanese coastal waters.

An oil slick caused by Israeli bombing of the Jiyyeh power station now covers 80km (50 miles) of coast.

Local environmental groups describe the slick as an “environmental disaster”.

Almost as much oil may have entered the water as during the 1989 Exxon Valdez tanker incident in Alaska, which led to widespread ecological damage.

The UN and other international organisations are assisting the Lebanese government as it attempts to contain thousands of tonnes of oil.

Local environmental groups describe the slick as an “environmental disaster”.

Almost as much oil may have entered the water as during the 1989 Exxon Valdez tanker incident in Alaska, which led to widespread ecological damage.

The UN and other international organisations are assisting the Lebanese government as it attempts to contain thousands of tonnes of oil.

“The Lebanese government has requested international assistance from the UN, and we stand ready to do all we can,” said Unep Executive Director Achim Steiner.

A number of Mediterranean countries are contributing equipment and personnel.

But according to the Lebanese environment ministry, “minimal amounts of dispersants, booms, adsorbents, and skimmers are readily available”.

Fishing and tourism

The incident began with Israeli raids on the Jiyyeh power utility 30km (19 miles) south of Beirut between 13 and 15 July.

Initial reports indicated that 10,000 tonnes of heavy fuel oil had escaped from damaged tanks, but the eventual total could be 35,000 tonnes.

By comparison, spillage from the Exxon Valdez accident totalled just under 40,000 tonnes of crude oil.

“What we have here is equivalent to a tanker sinking, and 20,000 to 30,000 tonnes reaching the shoreline,” said Berj Hatjian from the Lebanese environment ministry.

“We’ve had it immediately rushing into the sea from the beach line,” he told BBC News.

The Malta-based Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre (Rempec) for the Mediterranean, which is advising the Lebanese government, says “a small quantity of tar balls” also reached the Syrian coast further north.

A coalition of environmental groups declared the Jiyyeh spill “one of the worst environmental crises in Lebanese history”.

The group Green Line says that some of the oil has settled on the sea floor, threatening areas where tuna spawn.

It also says that slicks on beaches will prevent baby turtles from reaching the sea after they hatch.

The green turtle, whose eggs hatch in July, is an endangered species.

Unep agrees that the oil is a significant threat to some Mediterranean wildlife, but also says the slick could compromise livelihoods when the current conflict ends.

“Firstly our thoughts are with the suffering of the civilian population,” said Mr Steiner.

“But we must be concerned about the short and long term impacts on the marine environment, including the biodiversity upon which so many people depend for their livelihoods and living via tourism and fishing.”

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5233358.stm

Flights home stopped as US figures out Baghdad security plan

July 31, 2006 by newsfree

WASHINGTON Any American family thinking their soldier is coming home soon from Iraq may be in for a nasty surprise. All flights out of there for troops at the end of their deployment are canceled, while the military tries to figure out how to make Baghdad safe.

President Bush had said earlier this week that soldiers in other parts of Iraq would go to the capital. Today, defense officials say commanders are working out the details of a plan to move as many as five-thousand soldiers with tanks and armored vehicles. They’d team up with Iraqi police and army units, turning every Baghdad operation into a joint effort.
America now has about 130-thousand troops in Iraq, with 30-thousand in the capital.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

http://www.wtvm.com/Global/story.asp?S=5206912&nav=8fap

‘Definitive answer’ on depleted uranium sought for troops

July 31, 2006 by newsfree

Associated Press
July 30, 2006 DAYTONA BEACH — After years of veterans pleading for help with illnesses occurring after service in the Gulf wars, the U.S. House and Senate are calling for an immediate study of health effects of exposure to a radioactive metal used in U.S. weapons and armor.

Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., co-author of a Senate bill on depleted uranium that passed June 20, said other studies have been done on the subject. Those studies concluded there was no evidence that exposure to the metal caused illnesses.

“It is time for a review by the Pentagon to see if there has been scientific progress that would provide a more accurate and definitive answer to possible links to adverse health,” Lieberman said in a written statement to The News-Journal. “This amendment would require the Pentagon to provide that assessment.”

The House passed a similar bill in May, and details are being hashed out in a joint committee. If the proposal becomes law, results of the study would be submitted to Congress within one year from its effective date. But the study comes too late for one Ormond Beach mother of an American soldier who believes exposure to depleted uranium in Iraq killed her son.

UNCOVERING A CONTROVERSY

In 2004, at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, Lori Brim’s son, Army Spc. Dustin Brim, died at 22 of very aggressive cancers. The military physicians who tried to save him said exposure to depleted uranium did not cause his diseases.

But Lori Brim took the whispered advice of a social worker there and started looking into the issue.

She discovered political and medical controversies — about whether the U.S. military should be using depleted uranium munitions and what effects exposure brings — that have been raging since soldiers began returning home from the first Gulf War with mysterious ailments.

Though that war marked the first time depleted uranium munitions had been used in combat, military sources have consistently discounted a link. Risks of exposure are minimal and abated by training, they say. And, they add, because tank armor and munitions made with the extremely dense material are so effective, use of depleted uranium saves U.S. lives.

Brim said she has been frustrated in her efforts to acquire medical records that might offer evidence the cancers that killed her son resulted from exposure to depleted uranium.

“I’m trying to share Dustin’s voice, create awareness and make a difference,” Brim said. “I believe to this day that, if soldiers and other personnel had been made aware of the risks of exposure to DU and how dangerous it is — Dustin said he went for medical help 11 times while he was in Iraq — somebody may have paid attention to him.”

Brim said she has been unable to find a Florida legislator willing to introduce a bill similar to several passed by other states, demanding study of the issue and testing for National Guard members returning from Iraq.

She also has been disappointed by attorneys unwilling to help her and other mothers she knows pursue a class-action lawsuit against manufacturers of weapons she believes are polluting the Earth. She’s hired Holly Hill author Lonnie Story to write her son’s story.

BODY MAY BE EXHUMED

Dr. Asaf Durakovic, founder and head scientist at Uranium Medical Research Centre in Toronto, Canada, said Brim could exhume her son’s body to be tested for radiation exposure.

“If I found DU in his bones, it could prove his sickness could have been related to DU contamination,” said Durakovic in a phone interview from Washington D.C, where he also has an office. “Radiation will not decompose.”

Brim said that’s too emotional a decision for her to make now but continues to try to obtain the medical records.

Those who, like Brim, are looking for answers about depleted uranium’s health effects, “are facing a multibillion-dollar industry making radioactive ammunition,” Durakovic said.

Attempts to talk with some manufacturers of weapons containing depleted uranium went either unanswered or spokespeople declined interviews.

The Department of Defense takes the position that depleted uranium is the best metal available for tank armor and munitions to penetrate armor on enemy vehicles. The military says that all personnel who use such equipment are adequately trained to safely handle depleted uranium.

Doug Rokke, a veteran of the Gulf War, who has a doctorate in technology from the University of Illinois and was charged with cleanup of depleted uranium contaminated equipment after the first Gulf War, has been outspoken about the issue. He said soldiers are not properly trained and that “medical care has been willfully denied to a majority of DU casualties who are supposed to receive care.”

He said he’s not sure that, if the bill before the joint committee makes it to law, it would have any effect on the use of weapons or treatment of soldiers.

“The directive is to continue to use uranium munitions and avoid all liability,” said Rokke, 57, of Rantoul, Ill. He said he is seeking medical care for exposure to radiation from depleted uranium. “The legal requirement to provide medical care has always existed, but the military disregards that.”

The military said more than 2,100 Operation Iraqi Freedom service members have been tested for exposure to depleted uranium, and eight were found to be positive.

“All eight were involved in combat situations where they were exposed to depleted uranium fragments,” said Dr. Michael Kilpatrick, deputy director of Deployment Health Support in the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, in a written statement. “The depleted uranium testing that is done for the military personnel is done at the U.S. Army laboratory at the Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, and at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.” He said all testing is paid for by the Department of Defense.

At Northern Arizona University biochemist Diane Stearns said her recent studies should make the issue hard to ignore.

Her results — published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at a recent Society of Toxicology conference — established that when cells are exposed to uranium, the uranium binds to DNA, and the cells mutate. She said exposure during the Gulf wars may link to increased cancers and birth defects in soldiers and in civilian survivors of exposure in the Middle East.

http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/News/Headlines/frtHEAD01073006.htm

Chavez to sign Vietnam deals

July 31, 2006 by newsfree

By Bill Hayton
BBC News, Hanoi
Sunday, 30 July 2006, 23:49 GMT 00:49 UK

The President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, arrives in Vietnam on Monday on the latest leg of a world tour.
Mr Chavez is expected to sign co-operation pacts with his Vietnamese counterpart Nguyen Minh Triet, including deals on agriculture and oil.

He will also visit sights such as a military museum, which are associated with Vietnam’s war against the US.

The Venezuelan president’s tour has already taken him to Russia, Belarus and Iran.

Anti-US stance

President Chavez is a fierce critic of the United States and his current tour has taken him to two countries which are equally hostile – Belarus and Iran.

In Hanoi, he is making a point of visiting the military museum which contains many shot-down American planes and a centre treating people who were injured in the long and bitter war against the US.

However, if he has come to Vietnam in search of further moral support for his anti-imperialist campaign, he is going to be disappointed.

Ironically, there are few places in the world more pro-American than modern Vietnam.

Vietnam needs foreign investment and good relations with the international community and long ago made its peace with Washington.

New deals

But President Chavez will be pushing forward his own ties with Vietnam.

He and President Nguyen will sign co-operation agreements on agriculture, mining and perhaps most importantly, oil – the two countries are significant exporters.

There will also be talks about the United Nations Security Council – on which both countries are currently seeking non-permanent seats.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/5229980.stm

TheirSpace

July 31, 2006 by newsfree

The attack on “net neutrality” threatens your favorite porn, politics or people-gazing website.

BY FIONA MORGAN
7/26/2006

John D. Rockefeller realized 135 years ago that the way to control the oil market was to control the transport of oil. So in 1871, he colluded with the railroad industry to form a cartel called the South Improvement Company.
Under their plan, the rate to ship oil would double, and Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company would get rebates for every gallon of oil shipped, even those shipped by its competitors. South would also collect information on the destinations, costs and dates of competitors’ oil shipments.

Once word leaked, independent oil producers revolted and managed to stop South before it shipped a single gallon. But to a great extent, the damage had been done. Rockefeller offered to buy out his competitors, showing them his books so they’d know what they were up against. They had a choice: Sell out now, or be run into the ground. Standard Oil went on to control the production of oil throughout the United States until the Supreme Court broke it up in 1911.

What does a 19th-century oil monopolist have to do with the modern-day Internet world of ones and zeroes? Well, we all know how nicely things work out when oil men are in charge.

But the real key is the railroad—the transport route, the superhighway. It’s more than a stale metaphor for talking about the abstract technicalities of the Internet. The way valuable goods are delivered—be they gallons of oil or binary packets—hasn’t changed much.

When the invention of radio and telephones spurred Congress to regulate communications, legislators used transportation law as a model—with the airwaves treated like public space over which information travels.

Now, as Congress votes on its first major telecommunications bills since 1996, telecom and cable companies are seeking preferred status for Internet content providers willing to pay for fast downloads, with slower service for everyone else—an Information Super-Tollway, if you will.

By now, you’ve probably heard about the issue of “network neutrality.” The term doesn’t tell you much. (And it’s not much of a rallying cry—as Arianna Huffington recently observed on her blog, HuffingtonPost.com: “Why are the bad guys so much better at naming things? Especially legislation.”) A term like “Internet equality” might be more evocative in the political arena and would make the same point better: that all content should be treated as equal regardless of its source. In other words, that all Internet companies continue to get charged the same rate per byte of info they’re transmitting, rather than higher rates for faster access. That’s been the protocol since the Internet was created.

But the telcos want to create a tiered system that would leave them free to price the market well out of reach for your favorite website, be it porn or politics, forcing that site off the super-Tollway and into the Internet equivalent of I-5 at rush hour.

When cable companies got into the business of broadband, the FCC ruled that the net-neutrality protocols in place since the Internet’s creation didn’t apply to them, says Craig Aaron, a spokesman for the net-neutrality coalition SavetheInternet.com.

After the Supreme Court last year upheld that FCC conclusion, phone companies sought similar treatment, and Aaron says they stand to get it in August.

All that’s stopped cable, and all that would stop the phone companies, from creating different tiers for better access is the technology and the desire to “be on their best behavior” until Congress completes that first overhaul of telecommunications law in a decade, Aaron says.

“Once the genie is out of the bottle,” he says, “you can’t put it back.”

The last Telecom Act, in 1996, deregulated the communications industry, bringing about widespread media consolidation. It opened the door for Clear Channel’s acquisition of hundreds of radio stations. It allowed phone and cable companies to consume one another ravenously, undoing many decades’ worth of antitrust measures. From a public-interest point of view, the law has been a disaster. It’s also out of date: The Internet is mentioned fewer than a dozen times.

Now the Senate is considering the Communications, Consumers’ Choice, and Broadband Deployment Act of 2006, a massive overhaul of telecom policy sponsored by Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska). A House version, called the Communications Opportunity, Promotion, and Enhancement Act passed last month.

Both bills cover a lot of ground. They would overturn state laws that prevent cities from setting up their own community Internet services, which is good. (Portland’s plan to provide citywide wi-fi is not affected by the bill, since Oregon communities have always been free to provide such services.) They would establish a national video franchise system to allow telephone and cable companies to offer broadband TV service without having to make the local agreements the cable companies currently have; thanks to public outcry, the bills also ensure funding for public-access programming, though many would say it’s not nearly enough.

Of most concern is the appearance that Congress will let telephone and cable companies charge different rates to different content providers. To preserve the Internet itself, Congress needs to make a clear stand during this deregulation against letting Internet service providers filter content—30 years of protocols and global standards demonstrate that the Internet by its very nature is neutral in how information has moved from one computer to another.

Net-neutrality legislation would ensure that every Web-based business and every site, be it personal, political or commercial, would be treated the same by the systems that power the networks. If those networks cease to be open, consistent and predictable, if they begin to interfere with the content that passes through their pipes, we’ll still have broadband networks, but the Internet as we know it will be history.

Repeated attempts to add net-neutrality protections to both versions of the legislation have failed. On June 28, the Senate Commerce Committee voted down the net-neutrality amendment offered by Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.). The measure failed in a tie vote of 11-11, with Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) voting against.
Smith spokesman Chris Matthews says the senator is “very concerned about adding government regulation to the Internet, especially when it has nothing to do with consumer rights and runs the risk of delaying and discouraging the deployment of broadband.”

It’s not a consumer rights issue, Matthews says, because network service providers aren’t trying to restrict access to websites or software.

“This is simply a question of whether the companies that have laid the fiber-optic cable to run the Internet at high speeds…will be able to charge accordingly and whether a free market is going to exist or whether the government is going to regulate it and set prices,” Matthews says. “The government actually telling the providers how to run their business is a dicey proposition at best. The senator happens to believe that the Internet functions best when it functions freely.”

But Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) disagrees and is fighting for net neutrality. Last Friday, he took to the Senate floor to denounce what he called a “handful of insiders in Washington, D.C.” who want to eliminate that neutrality, leading to discrimination on the Web between the haves and the have-nots.

Wyden’s stance is in keeping with his actions right after the Commerce Committee vote last month when he marched to the Senate floor and placed a “hold” on the Stevens bill just as the Senate was preparing to vote—in other words, he announced his intention to filibuster, holding up other Senate business. Wyden announced that he would not allow Stevens’ bill to pass without net-neutrality provisions.

“Without a clear policy preserving the neutrality of the Internet and without tough sanctions against those who would discriminate, the Internet will be forever changed for the worse,” he said. “Those who own the pipes, the giant cable and phone companies, want to discriminate in which sites you can access. If they get their way, not only will you have to pay more for faster speeds, you’ll have to pay more for something you get free today: unfettered access to every site on the World Wide Web. To me, that’s discrimination.”

Stevens lacks the 60 votes among 100 senators needed to override a filibuster, so for now, net-neutrality advocates are lobbying the fence-sitters. If they can get 41 senators to hold firm defending Wyden’s hold on the measure, they can stop the entire telecom overhaul from going through, making net neutrality the deal-killer.

Here’s the danger of life without net neutrality: Currently, an Internet service provider, or ISP, charges the companies whose sites it hosts, be they Google or Willamette Week, the same amount of money per byte that’s transmitted. What Verizon, Qwest, BellSouth, Time Warner, SBC, Comcast and AT&T—the main supporters of the new telecom legislation and opponents of net neutrality—want is to charge content providers more for higher levels of service.

A news content site like The New York Times could sign a high-dollar agreement with an ISP for that fast service, making its competitors less appealing to the 80 percent of Americans who get their news online. How slow will rank-and-file websites be in that system? How easy will it be to read the liberal blogs or download the indie podcasts? That would be up to the ISPs.

In March, Qwest CEO Richard Notebaert told a crowd at a Voice over Internet Protocol convention in San Jose, Calif., that net neutrality is a pipe dream. He let the heads of silicon startups and content sites know that they’re going to have to start shelling out if they want to keep their traffic. “If you have enough money,” Notebaert said, “we can make a lot of things happen.”

The industry says it needs a tiered system because it needs to pay for providing bandwidth to all those little video clips that YouTube posts on its site—even though YouTube pays the same amount per bandwidth volume it uses as does the smallest video site that uses much less bandwidth.

The next time you see an ad for Qwest’s DSL broadband service, notice that streaming video is part of the lure of paying $26.99 or more a month. A recent Associated Press story quoted Verizon and BellSouth spokesmen warning that as the video trend continues, the Internet could choke: Like an overbooked flight, an ISP would be over capacity if all of its subscribers downloaded high-quality video at the same time.

But as the story also points out, Internet traffic doesn’t work that way. It grows along with the capacity, not ahead of it. We wouldn’t be watching YouTube videos over a 64K modem, because it would be too slow and wouldn’t be worth the aggravation.

The industry says all that innovation will cost money, and that they will have no choice but to pass even more cost on than they already do to consumers. The fact is, ISPs have been whining about multimedia content since RealAudio first launched its streaming sounds in 1995. Not only has the Net survived, ISPs have raked in billions in profits as a result.

In addition to charging different fees for different providers, there is also the fear that telcos would use their gatekeeping power to block access to the sites of their competitors and critics.

The telcos insist they would never do anything like that: The FCC wouldn’t let them get away with it, they say—and anyway, they wouldn’t want to.
At the very least, it’s no stretch to think they would give preferential access to their own content. When AOL bought Time Warner in 2001, it was a delivery system merging with a content company. Time Warner owns CNN, HBO and a huge movie library. The ongoing convergence of content and telecom companies would reach its logical conclusion in offering faster Road Runner downloads for those sites and channels. Why wouldn’t the industry go there if the law let them?

So is net neutrality a lost cause, the failing hope of a few consumer activists and First Amendment types?

Not necessarily. The giants of the Web are on their side. Amazon, Google, eBay and every other major content site don’t want to pay a toll. They’re part of a coalition urging Congress to enshrine net neutrality into law. Like the successful alliance that pushed back on media-ownership deregulation two years ago, the net-neutrality coalition spans the political spectrum.

It includes not only lefty groups such as MoveOn and Common Cause, and mainstream groups such as the American Library Association and Consumers Union, but also the Christian Coalition, Gun Owners of America, the Parents Television Council (crusaders for decency laws), and Prof. Glenn Reynolds, better known as the right-wing blogger Instapundit.

It’s not hard to understand why this issue reaches across the political spectrum. The Internet has made possible a democratic discourse that is truly stunning, transforming political organizing and communication while the mainstream tries harder and harder to suffocate ideas that don’t follow standard party lines.

As you might expect, opponents of net neutrality are pumping money into Congress. A recent report by the Center for Public Integrity noted that, while both sides of the debate contribute significant amounts of money to federal campaigns, the telcos spend more than three times the amount that Internet companies do—$9.1 million from the PACs, lobbyists and employees of cable and phone companies like Verizon and Comcast, compared with $2.7 million from those of Internet companies like Google and Amazon. While these are the main players atop the pyramid, groups like the Christian Coalition and MoveOn add some money to the fight—as do media content companies with ties to ISPs, such as Time Warner. The interested parties are legion.

Industry money is also funding a heavy-duty advertising and PR blitz, some of which is conducted by “Astroturf” (phony grassroots) organizations such as Hands Off the Internet (“Say no to government regulation of the Internet”) and FreedomWorks (“Lower Taxes, Less Government, More Freedom”), which are funded by the telecom companies. Their spin: The market will sort things out—if customers don’t like the tiered service, they can pick another provider; Internet service providers have no plans to block content, so there’s no problem; even if they did, the FCC already has the jurisdiction to punish them for it, so why get government any more involved?

The FCC’s connectivity principles state that consumers are entitled to access the lawful Internet content of their choice, run applications and services of their choosing and connect to their choice of legal devices that do not harm the network; they are also entitled to competition among network providers, application and service providers, and content providers. Like the airwaves, the broadband lines are regulated by the FCC because they run along public rights of way—wires and cables are run along public streets and buried under people’s back yards. ISPs charge for the privilege of connecting, but nobody “owns” the Internet.

Net-neutrality proponents warn that the current bills would prevent the FCC from strengthening or adding language to its regulatory power. There has been only one case in the United States in which an Internet service provider blocked access to a specific website or service. Mebane, N.C.-based Madison River was fined $15,000 last year by the FCC for blocking traffic to download an application from the website for Vonage, the online phone service.

Madison River had about 121,000 residential phone subscribers and nearly 40,000 broadband Internet subscribers at the time. Vonage had more than a million. About a month after Vonage complained to the FCC that Madison River was “port blocking,” or preventing certain types of Internet traffic from traveling through its networks, the agency took action.

But the FCC’s principles don’t address the kind of tiered system the telcos want to create. Nor do they establish clear methods of enforcement. Vonage was already hugely successful when it took on Madison River. What happens to the startups? Furthermore, these principles haven’t been formalized, and the FCC has indicated it will not enforce them without a mandate from Congress.

If the Senate does pass the Communications, Consumer’s Choice, and Broadband Deployment Act, the last-ditch option lies in the conference committee that will iron out differences between the House and Senate versions. The telecom bills specifically prevent the FCC from issuing new regulations on the issue of net neutrality, so while the agency could take action on a clear-cut case such as Madison River, there’s no real chance of strengthening its position. Google vice president Vint Cerf, one of the Internet’s creators, has said that if Congress won’t ensure net neutrality, Google won’t hesitate to file an antitrust case with the U.S. Department of Justice. “We will simply have to wait until something bad happens,” he said.

The fact is, the Internet supports the freest market in existence, and the tiered system would destroy it. Above all, it is this contradiction the net-neutrality movement must get across to Congress—and to the public. Otherwise, we’ll be signing over American democracy’s greatest asset to modern-day John D. Rockefellers.

A version of this story originally ran May 17 in The Independent Weekly in North Carolina. The writer updated the piece for WW.

Gains and Pains

The telecommunications bills Congress is fighting over deal with a broad swath of issues, some of which would benefit consumers and others of which would hurt them.

THE GOOD

• State laws barring cities from establishing community Internet services would be overturned.

• Funding for public-access programming would be ensured.

• The last telecommunications overhaul in 1996 barely dealt with the Internet, and the law needs updating to deal with the decade-long explosion of the Web.

THE BAD

• The bills would let Internet service providers charge websites more if they wanted faster access to your screen. The result: Some of your favorite sites wouldn’t be able to pay the toll and would download slowwwly.

• Those same ISPs could block access to the sites of their competitors and critics.

Net Losses

Will the loss of net neutrality be the Silicon Forest’s spotted owl, the catalyst that brings down an industry?

Bart Massey, associate professor for computer science at Portland State University, certainly believes it would.

Massey is an active participant in Portland’s vibrant open-source community, the breeding ground for software innovation that’s partially responsible for the city’s reputation as a hotbed of the creative class. He says that community would be “massively” affected since its members rely heavily on the free movement of large data packets as they exchange ideas.

These innovators aren’t nerds uselessly obsessing over ones and zeros; among them are the creators of the next Google or Linux software—tomorrow’s powerhouses of the high-tech economy. The loss of net neutrality “cuts down massively on the ability of these entrepreneurs to present a business plan anyone would fund,” says Massey.

Massey says U.S. open-source developers already “feel like the stepchildren of the world, because this whole question [of eliminating net neutrality] sounds silly in other countries.” He lists electronics exporter South Korea as one of the countries where “the government builds up the network, so that every stinkin’ home can have access to bandwidth.”

Another community concerned with the loss of net neutrality is the blogosphere.

Kari Chisholm, one of the creators of the Blue Oregon blog popular with progressives, was also quick to point out the hardships the bill creates for the “tiny Internet start-ups, and the open-source community” in Portland.

Chisholm says the threat to net neutrality “is no big deal for the basic Web page” consisting mostly of print, as many blogs do.

But there are new places online “where people find out what’s going on locally and nationally,” he says. Sites such as leftyblogs.com feature engines that “go out and read 2,000 blogs every hour, and present their findings organized by state.” That requires a lot of bandwidth, and Chisholm fears for the future of these outlets. “If the bad guys want to charge extra for high-bandwidth operations,” he says, “this service will become unsustainable.”

—Jacques Von Lunen

To read what net-neutrality supporters are saying, go to www.SavetheInternet.com. To learn what opponents are saying, go to handsoff.org.

Attempts by Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) to explain cyber-technology have been lampooned at length online. In a much-circulated speech, he pointed out, “The Internet is not a truck, it’s a series of tubes.” This soundbyte soon swirled around said tubes in the form of techno re-mixes and spoof graphics.

Stevens’ speech is available at: www.blog.wired.com/27BStroke6/?entry_id=1512499. His metaphors are visualized here: www.southwestern.edu/~ramseyp/stevens-net/. And a club remix featuring Stevens on vocals can be found at www.boldheaded.com/podcast/steves_viral/DJ_teds_techno_tubes.mp3.

Portland-area Reps. Earl Blumenauer and David Wu (both D-Ore.) voted against HR 5252, a massive telecommunications overhaul that doesn’t include net neutrality provisions. Despite her support for net neutrality, Rep. Darlene Hooley (D-Ore.) voted in favor of the bill, citing other consumer benefits.

Blumenauer, Wu and Hooley voted with the minority in favor of the Network Neutrality Act of 2006 (HR 5273), which laid out specific definitions and enforcement mechanisms for net neutrality; enforcement remains under the FCC’s jurisdiction.

http://www.wweek.com/editorial/3238/7815

Dozens killed in Lebanon air raid

July 30, 2006 by newsfree

BBC News
Sunday, 30 July 2006, 11:13 GMT 12:13 UK

More than 40 people, including 20 children, have been killed in an Israeli air strike on the southern Lebanese town of Qana.

Displaced families had been sheltering in the basement of a site which was crushed after a direct hit.

The US secretary of state has cancelled a visit to Lebanon as its prime minister says he will only discuss a full and immediate ceasefire.

Hundreds of protesters are staging a violent demonstration in Beirut.

An angry crowd is attacking the UN building, chanting slogans against the US and in support of Hezbollah.

“People are fed up in Lebanon,” a protester told the BBC. “They are fed up.”

Israel said the Shia militant group was responsible for the Qana strike, by using the town to launch rockets.

But Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora denounced Israel’s “heinous crimes against civilians”, and said there was “no room on this sad morning” for talks until Israel had halted its attacks.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she was “deeply saddened by the terrible loss of innocent life.

“We are also pushing for an urgent end to the current hostilities, but the views of the parties on how to achieve this are different,” she said.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said earlier that Israel was not in a hurry to agree to a ceasefire until it achieved its goals in the area.

‘Stop’

Witnesses said the early-morning strike flattened several sites on top of sleeping residents.

One survivor said the “bombing was so intense that no-one could move”.

Reliable casualty figures are not yet clear, but reports said more than 40 had been killed, while sources in the Lebanese Red Cross said as many as 50 or 60 had lost their lives.

Elderly, women and children were among those killed in the raid, which wrought destruction over a wide area.

The BBC’s Fergal Keane at the scene saw two small boys pulled from the rubble.

Reporters spoke of survivors screaming in grief and anger, as some scrabbled through the debris with bare hands.

“We want this to stop,” a villager shouted.

“May God have mercy on the children. They came here to escape the fighting.”

Israel’s military said it had warned residents of Qana to leave and Hezbollah bore responsibility for using it to fire rockets at the Jewish state.

The BBC’s Jim Muir in Qana says many did not have the means – or were too frightened – to flee.

Correspondents say the town holds bitter memories for the Lebanese.

Qana was the site of an Israeli bombing of a UN base in 1996 that killed more than 100 people sheltering there during Israel’s “Grapes of Wrath” offensive, which was also aimed at destroying Hezbollah.

Before Sunday’s attack, the UN said some 600 people – about a third of them children – had been killed by Israeli action in Lebanon since their operations began 19 days ago.

A total of 51 Israelis, including at least 18 civilians, have been killed in the conflict, sparked by Hezbollah’s capture of two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid earlier in July.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5228224.stm

Handling of Iraq

July 30, 2006 by newsfree

July 26, 2006
July 26, 2006