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ProgressiveMe

Last seen: 21 months ago

ProgressiveMe is a 35 year old woman from Generation X, California, USA

Please sign my guestmap! "A human being is part of the whole called by us universe ... We experience ourselves, our thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest. A kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from the prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. The true value of a human being is determined by the measure and the sense in which they have obtained liberation from the self. We shall require a substantially new manner of thinking if humanity is to survive." ~Albert Einstein~

See my amigo's website: The Guerrero Azteca Project

  • http://news.com.com/Congress%20may%20make%20ISPs%20snoop%...

    Rated May 16 2006 4 reviews conservative politics, news, fascism, war of terror news.com.com

    Congress may make ISPs snoop on you

    A prominent Republican on Capitol Hill has prepared legislation that would rewrite Internet privacy rules by requiring that logs of Americans' online activities be stored, CNET News.com has learned.

    The proposal comes just weeks after Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said Internet service providers should retain records of user activities for a "reasonable amount of time," a move that represented a dramatic shift in the Bush administration's views on privacy...

    Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, called Sensenbrenner's measure an "open-ended obligation to collect information about all customers for all purposes. It opens the door to government fishing expeditions and unbounded data mining."...

    One unusual aspect of Sensenbrenner's legislation--called the Internet Stopping Adults Facilitating the Exploitation of Today's Youth Act--or Internet Safety Act--is that it's relatively vague.

    Instead of describing exactly what information Internet providers would be required to retain about their users, the Internet Safety Act gives the attorney general broad discretion in drafting regulations. At minimum, the proposal says, user names, physical addresses, Internet Protocol addresses and subscribers' phone numbers must be retained.

    That generous wording could permit Gonzales to order Internet providers to retain records of e-mail correspondents, Web pages visited, and even the contents of communications....

    Oh boy, the neofascists are really out of control... they've been doing this for years, now they're legalizing it in our faces. With the NSA spying on millions of Americans, the proposed "Bush Wall", and now this, I can only see this as a blatant attempt to establish dictatorship... with the approval of a mere 29%. What WILL they do to rally support? Something to do with another "October Suprise" involving Iran, I bet.
    http://news.com.com/Congress%20may%20make%20ISPs%20snoop%20on%20you/2100-1028_3-6072601.html
  • The Abu Ghraib files - Torture - Salon.com

    Rated Mar 14 2006 15 reviews conservative politics, politics, iraq, news salon.com

    The Abu Ghraib files

    279 photographs and 19 videos from the Army's internal investigation record a harrowing three months of detainee abuse inside the notorious prison -- and make clear that many of those responsible have yet to be held accountable.

    The human rights scandal now known as "Abu Ghraib" began its journey toward exposure on Jan. 13, 2004, when Spc. Joseph Darby handed over horrific images of detainee abuse to the Army's Criminal Investigation Command (CID). The next day, the Army launched a criminal investigation. Three and a half months later, CBS News and the New Yorker published photos and stories that introduced the world to devastating scenes of torture and suffering inside the decrepit prison in Iraq.

    Today Salon presents an archive of 279 photos and 19 videos of Abu Ghraib abuse first gathered by the CID, along with information drawn from the CID's own timeline of the events depicted. As we reported Feb. 16, Salon's Mark Benjamin recently acquired extensive documentation of the CID investigation -- including this photo archive and timeline -- from a military source who spent time at Abu Ghraib and who is familiar with the Army probe....
    The Abu Ghraib files - Torture - Salon.com
  • The Raw Story | ACLU releases first concrete evidence of...

    Rated Mar 14 2006 5 reviews liberties, fascism, politics, news rawstory.com

    ACLU releases 'first concrete evidence' of domestic spying for anti-war views

    Documents released today by the American Civil Liberties Union reveal that the Federal Bureau of Investigations has indeed monitored political groups solely on the basis that they opposed a U.S.-led war.

    According to a memo written in 2002, the FBI launched a classified investigation into the activities of Pittsburgh's Thomas Merton Center after becoming concerned that the group held "daily leaflet distribution activities in downtown Pittsburgh and [was] currently focused on its opposition to the potential war on Iraq." The memo aimed to summarize the investigation's results.

    It identifies the group as "a left-wing organization advocating, among many political causes, pacifism."

    The ACLU has filed Freedom of Information Act requests on behalf of over 150 organizations and individuals. The documents released as a result have revealed monitoring and infiltration of political, environmental, anti-war and faith-based groups by the FBI and local law enforcement agencies.

    "Something is seriously wrong in how our government determines who and what constitutes terrorism when peace activists find themselves targeted," remarked Jim Kleissler, Executive Director of the Thomas Merton Center for Peace & Justice.

    Hi spy! If I only had a dollar for all the "conservatives" who called me a chicken little for knowing about this long ago. How much more will it take? How many more lives have to be destroyed so you can still look at yourselves in the mirror and pretend you are right? Forget your precious little egos and consider how much damage you are causing!
    The Raw Story | ACLU releases first concrete evidence of domestic spying for anti-war views
  • Jonathan Raban: Dictatorship is the danger |...

    Rated Mar 13 2006 1 review conservative politics, politics, news, fascism guardian.co.uk

    Dictatorship is the danger
    A Reagan-appointed supreme court justice voices her fears over attacks on US democracy

    ... Liberal fears that democracy is endangered by Republicans in Congress are so widespread, so endemic to the jittery political climate in the US, that they hardly bear repeating. It'll surprise no one to learn that another voice was added to the chorus last Thursday, warning that recent attacks on the American judiciary were putting the democratic fabric in jeopardy and were the first steps down the treacherous path to dictatorship.

    What is surprising - more than that, electrifying - is that the voice belonged to Sandra Day O'Connor, who retired a few weeks ago from the supreme court. O'Connor is a Republican and a Reagan nominee. Regarded as the "swing vote" on the court, she swung the presidential election to George Bush in 2000....

    "I, said O'Connor, am against judicial reforms driven by nakedly partisan reasoning. Pointing to the experiences of developing countries and former communist countries where interference with an independent judiciary has allowed dictatorship to flourish, O'Connor said we must be ever-vigilant against those who would strong-arm the judiciary into adopting their preferred policies. It takes a lot of degeneration before a country falls into dictatorship, she said, but we should avoid these ends by avoiding these beginnings."

    Delivered by someone who was, until recently, one of the nine guardians of the US constitution, these are spine-chilling opinions, and you might have thought they'd have been all over the papers the next day. Not so. I happened to catch Totenberg's NPR report last Friday, and have been following up references to it. A cable TV talkshow and a handful of blogs have mentioned Totenberg's piece: otherwise there's been a disquieting silence, as if the former justice had laid an unsavoury egg and had best be politely ignored....

    WAKE UP "CONSERVATIVES"!!! It's all right, we'll forgive you, eventually.
       Jonathan Raban: Dictatorship is the danger |    Comment is free |    The Guardian
  • The Seattle Times: Opinion: Iraq: a solution to nothing
  • Would Justice Clean the House? - TIME

    Rated Feb 25 2006 2 reviews conservative politics, politics, news time.com

    Would Justice Clean the House?
    If Congress doesn't start policing itself more seriously, federal prosecutors say they might step in

    The Justice Department has a message for Congress: clean up your house or else we may have to do it for you. A senior federal law enforcement official told TIME that the paralyzed and often lax House ethics committee has created a vacuum that prosecutors won't hesitate to fill. The House's internal mechanism for keeping corruption in check is "broken," says the official.

    By contrast, current criminal probes of lawmakers are expanding rapidly. Like the Abramoff probe, the investigation into former Republican Representative Randy "Duke" Cunningham from San Diego is also widening. Last week, defense contractor Mitchell Wade OF MZM, INC. pleaded guilty to supplying more than $1 million of the $2.4 million in bribes Cunningham previously admitted taking in a scheme that touches Defense Department officials and two other members of Congress....

    There is always hope! This contractor also told the Feds that he funnelled illegal campaign contributions to Katherine Harris of the theft of the 2000 election. Yet another special congressional election coming up soon?
    Would Justice Clean the House?  - TIME
  • Cheney, &A Beer or Two& and a Gun -- UPDATED

    Rated Feb 15 2006 1 review politics, news thenation.com

    Cheney, "A Beer or Two" and a Gun

    ... Up to now, the whole "hunting-accident" controversy has been little more than a diversion from more serious matters involving Cheney--not least among these, the investigation into whether the Vice President authorized the release of classified information as part of a scheme to discredit critics of the Administration's rush to war. But if Cheney used his Secret Service unit to prevent a necessary and proper official inquiry at a time when it might have uncovered relevant information regarding his condition when he shot a man, then the Vice President has abused his office in a most serious manner.

    The prospect that such an abuse occurred requires Cheney and any White House aides who were involved in "managing" the story--put Karl Rove at the top of this list--to stop stonewalling and provide a detailed explanation of their actions in the hours that followed the shooting incident. This is certainly not the only issue on which the Vice President needs to come clean, but it is no longer a joking matter--or, more precisely, it is no longer merely a joking matter.

    Murphy's Law takes down Cheney, Poppy appoints Jebby VP, Bush steps down (finally!) and they're all set for 2008... just a thought...
    Cheney, &A Beer or Two& and a Gun -- UPDATED
  • Federal agents expand probe into wiretap leak / Law enforcement, intelligence services come under scrutiny
  • Peace activist Cindy Sheehan considers run against Sen. Feinstein
  • Criminal Negligence Killed the Sago Miners