Author Archives: Lisa

Foo Camp Interviews: Lisa Rein

Nat Torkington turned the tables on me (or the cameras on me, as the case may be) and simply would not leave alone for several minutes. I’ve edited out some of the boring part in the middle (hope it’s not all boring 🙂
Thanks for doing this Nat. Most of the time, when I’m in historical archivist mode, I forget to capture myself for the time capsule reel.
Towards the lend of the interview, I was viciously attacked by Paul “Shmoo” Holman (Jack of All, Wireless, and Often Other Top Secret Trades). Glad I have the photographic evidence so I can make my case during the trial 🙂 Photos below of me getting roughed up below.
In all seriousness, this “shmoo” fella is one violent guy. I’ve got video of him beating up Jeremy Borenstein. And he even brags that he’s planning to do it in another clip. (Making it a premeditated attack!)
Anyway, this is from October 12, 2003.
Foo A-Z

Lisa Rein – Complete
(Small – 27 MB)

Lisa Rein – Part 1 of 2
(15 MB)

Lisa Rein – Part 2 of 2
(13 MB)







Lots Going Up Tonight

Okay I’ve got another 10+ foo movies and interviews, 2+ new music tunes, and a few more news clips and things all ready to go, but I just gotta finish my homework first!
Tomorrow I’ve got school all day and plans for the evening, so I’ll make sure to stay up late if I have to and get it all up tonight.
Back soon!
lisa

Michael Moore In SF Today

Michael Moore is at San Francisco State in the Gym tonight at 7pm.
I’m going to try to make it, but I might not. I’ve got a ton of blogging and homework to do and my good camera is busted anyway, so it wouldn’t come out that good if I filmed it. And it’s kind of frustrating for me these days to go to events I can’t film. So I’ll probably skip it.
I have a feeling I’ll get to meet Mike in person someday anyway, if I’m patient (and do my homework, and eat my vegetables 🙂
Just wanted to make sure you knew about it.

Remember To Skip Ticketmaster’s “Print Your Own Ticket” Service

Better yet, skip Ticketmaster altogether, if you actually have a choice. But usually you don’t. Here’s the problem with printing your own tickets:
Ticketmaster gives you an option to print your own tickets on your home printer. It sounds good at first, but let me assure you, it’s just another bait and switch from the “masters.”
Not only does Ticketmaster charge you the same $8.00 service fee (despite the fact that it’s managed to pass on the printing costs on to you and has managed to save itself all postage costs for the transaction), but it also sells large, full color ads on the full page “tickets” that you are required to print out completely (because the “ticket” itself is on the top part of the page, and its corresponding bar code is on the bottom part of the page). So your color ink cartridge takes big hit too.
Entrepreneurs of the world: please oh please overthrow the Ticketmaster regime. It truly sucks.

FBI Special Agent Coleen Rowley Explains How The Shrub Administration’s Intimidation Tactics Erode Our First Amendment Liberties

Right On Coleen! Thanks for having the guts to publish this article. It means a lot coming from you.
There are a lot of good people working for the government right now that are working for change, but it’s really hard because their hands are tied. Most of them are in Damage Control mode and just trying to make it through their day-to-day activities without having to participate in anything too horrible until this administration can be replaced.

Coleen Rowley: The wrong side of ‘us vs. them’

By Coleen Rowley for the Star Tribune.

I didn’t attend Attorney General John Ashcroft’s speech last month in Minneapolis, but newspapers have quoted him as saying that Americans are “freer today than at any time in the history of human freedom.”
Well, this American disagrees! And I would venture to say that many others feel the same way — those who have been put on the “them” side of the “us vs. them” equation in the context of the administration’s “you’re either with us or against us” mentality.
It didn’t matter whether you were a career FBI agent, a decorated war veteran, a duly elected congressman or senator, a military general or even a former president, you were labeled a traitor for voicing any criticism of administration policies. You were accused of giving aid and comfort to the enemy, called a friend of Osama bin Laden and thrown to the wolves (or more accurately, the FOXes).
The intimidation in this country that’s been whipped up by this official fear and warmongering has been far more effective than any Patriot Act in whittling away our civil liberties…
It’s also no secret that this administration has used its considerable power to fight giving any real legal protection to government whistle-blowers and even attempted to water down the Sarbanes-Oxley Act’s protections recently enacted for corporate whistle-blowers.
Of course, no “whistle-blower protection” exists for public disclosures or articles such as this one. But even without it, the First Amendment should suffice and is what I rely on. However, the official warnings along these lines that I’ve repeatedly received in the course of my attempts to speak on issues of public importance seem little more than veiled threats; or are they perhaps a warning that the First Amendment is not as robust as it used to be?
There’s another large segment of our citizenry who have found themselves cast as “thems” by this “war” mentality. Complaints of discrimination against Muslim workers and reports of hate crimes against people believed to be of Middle Eastern descent have at least doubled…
Although it must be recognized that the origin of this problem was in the horror of the violent attacks themselves and that certain government leaders, such as FBI Director Robert Mueller, have undertaken efforts to reach out to affected Arab groups, the social scientists point to other government actions following 9/11 (including the government’s roundup and detention of illegal immigrants, the special registration requirements that single out students and visitors from Muslim nations, and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq) as sending “social signals” that are worsening these biases.
A specialist in the issues of prejudice and stereotyping has noted that people who perceive themselves under threat naturally tend to think of “who’s with me” and “who’s against me.” In any event, I doubt that many in the Arab-American segment of the populace feel “freer today,” as Ashcroft’s generality suggests.

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Lawyer Claims “Good Old-fashioned Torture” The Norm At Guantanamo Bay

The scariest part (aside from the torture allegations, of course) is in the last paragraph:
“The U.S. government says they could be held until it declares an end to its “war on terrorism.”
We know that the “War On Terrorism” is poorly defined with a definition that keeps changing to suit the current objectives of the Shrub Administration. These people need to be charged or released, as we would expect Americans to be treated under the Geneva Convention.
Oh yeah. That means torture’s out too 🙂

Lawyer Says Guantanamo Detainees Tortured

By the Associated Press in the NY Times.
Here’s the whole article. It’s just a little thing.

The U.S. military has tortured terrorist suspects held without charge at the Guantanamo Bay military prison, an Australian lawyer representing some of the suspects claimed Wednesday.
U.S.-based Richard Bourke, who has been working for almost two years on behalf of dozens of detainees at Guantanamo Bay, said American military officials were using old-fashioned torture techniques to force confessions out of prisoners.
The methods “clearly” fell under the definition of torture under international conventions, he told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio in an interview from the United States.
“They are engaging in good old-fashioned torture, as people would have understood it in the Dark Ages,” he said.
About 660 prisoners captured in Afghanistan and elsewhere are being held at Guantanamo without charges or access to lawyers — some since January 2002. The U.S. government rarely comments on activities at the prison which has been dubbed Camp X-ray because of the strict security.
Earlier this year, U.S. officials denied using torture and said detainees are interrogated humanely, allowed to practice their religion and given good medical care.
Families are denied access and can only communicate with detainees through heavily censored mail. Human rights groups and the media have been given only limited and strictly controlled access.
Bourke told ABC radio that his claims are based on reports leaked by U.S. military personnel and from descriptions by some detainees that have been released.
“One of the detainees had described being taken out and tied to a post and having rubber bullets fired at them. They were being made to kneel cruciform in the sun until they collapsed,” he said.
Media reports that many detainees have attempted suicide and are suffering mental health problems backed up claims of harsh treatment, he said.
Bourke said governments around the world must stand up to the U.S. government and demand that the United Nations investigate the reports of torture.
Almost all the detainees, from more than 40 countries, are said to be members of al-Qaida terrorist network or the ousted Afghan Taliban regime. They are to be tried by secret military tribunals. The U.S. government says they could be held until it declares an end to its “war on terrorism.”

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New Track: Studio Version of Slipping Away (Slipping Away v. 2.0)

I just released a studio version of Slipping Away today. (Slipping Away v. 2.0.
Here’s the scoop:

10/17/03 — I just rediscoverd this track when I was in Seattle a few weeks ago doing the RetarDEAD themesong.
I’d forgotten how good this came out, and just kinda never got around to doing anything with it. Now that I’ve played it for people, I’m told it may be my best track ever. (Which reminded me to make it available to you.)
I’ll be going back to Vagrant Records soon to cut some more tracks. This time with Ron by my side in the studio. I can’t wait. (Even if Evan Foster did play the hell out of this song! Thanks, Evan!)
One of the great things about recording with Evan was that he could really pull these songs out of my head. I would say something like “Randy Rhoads tone” (not for this song, but for say Poltergeist, and he would just know what I meant, and play it perfectly. I was really great working with him, and I’m told it will never happen again, because he’s about to be a rock star 🙂 So I feel especially lucky to have worked with him “when.”
Anyway, hope you like it. Check it out.