Author Archives: Lisa

Video: The Fall Of Bushville

Here’s footage of the June 3rd eviction of “Bushville,” an encampment of 30 homeless families on the outskirts of Jersey City, NJ, who wished to make a statement about the Shrub’s policies and how they are slowly killing American families with the lack of affordable housing in this country. They feel that he is wasting billions of dollars on this senseless war in Iraq while millions of families across the country are wasting away.

The Fall Of Bushville
(Quicktime – Small – 29 MB)

“The poor in this country are dying under the policies of George W. Bush, and frankly we can’t afford to be invisible. Our lives are at stake here as poor and homeless families across this country and George W. is responsible for that and we can’t allow it to continue because our very lives are at stake.”

Also mirrored here in my own archive. (For safekeeping)
(Note: this won’t be up for a few minutes)

The Fall Of Bushville
(Newsbrief)

Killer 60 Minutes Bumped By Regan Retrospective

Man oh man am I pissed. The greatest 60 minutes ever got bumped tonight while they all got together to kiss Reagan’s butt for 60 minutes. Damn.
Listen to the show that was supposed to air tonight:

“An FBI whistleblower says that the unit translating information from terrorism suspects deliberately slowed the process; America’s power elite and Yale’s Skull and Bones Society; the frailty of fingerprint evidence.”

That FBI translation story and the skull and bones story better air next week!
Somewhere in the afterlife, Reagan is laughing…

Clinton vs. The Shrubs

Update 6/5/04 – No, nobody got a clip, and, seemingly, nobody cares.
I also heard Clinton say a couple days ago during some publicity for his book that he “liked” daddy Shrub. So it could have all been in fun anyway.

Hey did anybody grab the clip of Clinton getting pushed by daddy shrub at the WWII Memorial last weekend? This is all I heard about it.
Thanks!!
lisa

Bush I pushes Clinton
by kos
Sat May 29th, 2004 at 16:22:31 EDT
Hmmm, I wasn’t watching the WWII Memorial ceremony, but apparently there was a bit of jostling around. Reef the Dog reports in the Open Thread comments:
It was on CNN. Bush 41, 43, and Clinton were talking at the end of the ceremony. Clinton wagged his finger in Bush 43’s face. Dunno what they were talking about but it seemed at least superficially cordial. Then Poppy suddenly shoved Clinton in the chest with both hands, enough to throw Clinton off balance. I don’t know why, but it was completely inappropriate and almost seemed to me like 41 was trying to prove his manhood or something. I’m not even sure what happened after that, the camera quickly went somewhere else.
I wonder what happened…

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Archive Back Up!

So I’ve got my archive up till about March 2004 back up online here:

http://www.lisarein.com/videos/

I’ve done a global search and replace to fix the links in my blog. Hope it worked ok.
Do let me know!
I’ll be catching up on the last few months over the next few weeks.
Please alter your links accordingly by replacing this:
http://ftp.archive.org/movies/lisarein/….
with this
http://www.lisarein.com/videos/
Peace,
lisa

Bill Moyers On Relevance Of Shrub Administration’s Policy Of Rejecting The Geneva Convention

Michael Isikoff discovered
this Shrub Administration memo
which outlines a policy of rejecting the Geneva Convention for War On Terror prisoners.
Here’s the Newsweek story that got this all started:

Double Standard?
.
This is a big deal guys, and Bill Moyers and Brian Brancaccio do their usual great job of explaining exactly why — and within a historical context. Then Brian interviews Columbia Law School Professor Scott Horton about the frighting implications of this policy.
This is from the May 21, 2004 program of Bill Moyers Now.
Want to mirror these clips?? Let me know! (
Mirror 1
of the complete version.)
This first clip provides details of the memo and some historical context:

Moyers On The Shrub’s Geneva-Rejection Policy – Part 1 of 3
(Small – 10 MB)
These next two clips contain an interview with Scott Horton where he analyses the Shrub’s justifaction for a Geneva Convention “double standard”:

Moyers On The Shrub’s Geneva-Rejection Policy – Part 2 of 3

(Small – 14 MB)

Moyers On The Shrub’s Geneva-Rejection Policy – Part 3 of 3

(Small – 14 MB)

Here’s the whole thing in a huge 37 MB file

David Brancaccio talks to Scott Horton, President of the International League for Human Rights. Horton will discuss the legal basis for the global war on terror and the U.S. government classified memo that puts forth what NEWSWEEK described as “a legal framework to justify a secret system of detention and interrogation that sidesteps the historical safeguards of the Geneva Convention.” Mr. Horton also recently spearheaded a Bar Association of New York report: “
Human rights standards applicable to the United States’ interrogation of detainees
.”

More about Scott from his website:

Mr. Horton has been a lifelong activist in the human rights area, having served as counsel to Andrei Sakharov, Elena Bonner, Sergei Kovalev and other leaders of the Russian human rights and democracy movements for over twenty years and having worked with the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights and the International League for Human Rights, among other organizations. He is currently president of the International League and a director of the Moscow-based Andrei Sakharov Foundation. Mr. Horton is also an advisor of the Open Society Institute’s Central Eurasia Project, and a director of the International Center for Not-for-Profit Law, the Council on Foreign Relations’s Center for Preventive Action and numerous other NGO organizations.
Mr. Horton is an adjunct professor at the Columbia University School of Law and the author of over 200 articles and monographs on legal developments in nations in transition.

Eric Idle Says “Fuck You Very Much” To The Shrub, The FCC, Cheney, Condi, Arnie, and the Lot of Them

This just in from Eric Idle:

The FCC Song
.
Here’s
My mirror
of the song, in case you have trouble with the first link.
Lyrics:
Here’s a little number I wrote the other day while out duck hunting with a judge.
Fuck you very much the FCC
Fuck you very much for fining me
Five thousand bucks a fuck
So I’m really out of luck
That’s more than Heidi Fleiss was charging me
So fuck you very much the FCC
for proving that free speech just isn’t free
Clear Channel’s a dear channel
So Howard Stern must go
Attorney General Ashcroft doesn’t like strong words and so
He’s charging twice as much as all the drugs for Rush Limbaugh
So fuck you all so very much
So fuck you very much, Dear Mr. Bush
For heroically sitting on your tush
For Halliburton, Enron, all the companies who fail
Let’s send them a clear signal and stick Martha straight in jail
She’s an uppity rich bitch
and at least she isn’t male
So fuck you all so very much
So fuck you dickhead Mr. Cheney too
Fuck you and fuck everything you do
Your pacemaker must be a fake
You haven’t got a heart
As far as I’m concerned you’re just a pasty-faced old fart
And as for Condoleeza she’s an intellectual tart
So fuck you all so very much
So fuck you very much, the EPA
For giving all Alaska’s oil away
It really is a bummer
When I can’t fill my hummer
The ozone’s a nogozone now that Arnold’s here to say:
“The nuclear winter games are going to take place in LA”
So fuck you all so very much
So what the planet fails
Let’s save the great white males
And fuck you all so very much

Mayhemystic’s Record Release Party Thursday May 20 In San Francisco

Wide Hive Records is having a Record Release Party for Variable Unit‘s Mayhemystics record this Thursday night from 9pm-1am at Cafe du Nord in San Francisco.

Directions
to Cafe du Nord.
Wide Hive Acts DJ Zeph and DJ Quest will be spinning before and after the live show, and Telethon (a.k.a.
Ryan Junell
) will be doing visuals all night.
Last November, I was an extra in a music video that Ryan directed of the Variable Unit track
Under Surveillance
.
(That’s me with the walkie talkie in the first 10 seconds.)
I ended up working on a number of projects with Wide Hive over these last few months. I sing background vocals on a track called Black Gold that’s going to be a dub 45 single released later this year and included on for Variable Unit’s upcoming
Mayhem OutBreaks
album.
Anyway, it should be a good time Thursday night.
Hope to see you there!

More On The Pentagon-Approved Secret Interrogation Policy That Led To The Abu Ghraib Torture Situation


The Roots of Torture

The road to Abu Ghraib began after 9/11, when Washington wrote new rules to fight a new kind of war.
By John Barry, Michael Hirsh and Michael Isikoff for Newsweek International.

Indeed, the single most iconic image to come out of the abuse scandal – that of a hooded man standing naked on a box, arms outspread, with wires dangling from his fingers, toes and penis – may do a lot to undercut the administration’s case that this was the work of a few criminal MPs. That’s because the practice shown in that photo is an arcane torture method known only to veterans of the interrogation trade. “Was that something that [an MP] dreamed up by herself? Think again,” says Darius Rejali, an expert on the use of torture by democracies. “That’s a standard torture. It’s called ‘the Vietnam.’ But it’s not common knowledge. Ordinary American soldiers did this, but someone taught them.”
Who might have taught them? Almost certainly it was their superiors up the line. Some of the images from Abu Ghraib, like those of naked prisoners terrified by attack dogs or humiliated before grinning female guards, actually portray “stress and duress” techniques officially approved at the highest levels of the government for use against terrorist suspects. It is unlikely that President George W. Bush or senior officials ever knew of these specific techniques, and late last – week Defense spokesman Larry DiRita said that “no responsible official of the Department of Defense approved any program that could conceivably have been intended to result in such abuses.” But a NEWSWEEK investigation shows that, as a means of pre-empting a repeat of 9/11, Bush, along with Defense Secretary Rumsfeld and Attorney General John Ashcroft, signed off on a secret system of detention and interrogation that opened the door to such methods. It was an approach that they adopted to sidestep the historical safeguards of the Geneva Conventions, which protect the rights of detainees and prisoners of war. In doing so, they overrode the objections of Secretary of State Colin Powell and America’s top military lawyers – and they left underlings to sweat the details of what actually happened to prisoners in these lawless places. While no one deliberately authorized outright torture, these techniques entailed a systematic softening up of prisoners through isolation, privations, insults, threats and humiliation – methods that the Red Cross concluded were “tantamount to torture.”
The Bush administration created a bold legal framework to justify this system of interrogation, according to internal government memos obtained by NEWSWEEK. What started as a carefully thought-out, if aggressive, policy of interrogation in a covert war – designed mainly for use by a handful of CIA professionals – evolved into ever-more ungoverned tactics that ended up in the hands of untrained MPs in a big, hot war. Originally, Geneva Conventions protections were stripped only from Qaeda and Taliban prisoners. But later Rumsfeld himself, impressed by the success of techniques used against Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo Bay, seemingly set in motion a process that led to their use in Iraq, even though that war was supposed to have been governed by the Geneva Conventions. Ultimately, reservist MPs, like those at Abu Ghraib, were drawn into a system in which fear and humiliation were used to break prisoners’ resistance to interrogation.

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