Wolfowitz Admits That Iraqi WMD ‘Threat’ Was Chosen As Justification For The War For ‘Burecratic reasons’

Wolfowitz reveals Iraq PR plan
By John Shovelan for The World Today.

The Deputy Defence Secretary, Paul Wolfowitz is seen as one of the most hawkish figures in the Bush administration, and it was he who, shortly after the terrorist strikes on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, laid out the reasoning for President Bush why the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein needed to be overthrown.
In an interview with Vanity Fair, Mr Wolfowitz is quoted at saying the reason for choosing Iraq’s alleged stocks of chemical and biological weapons to justify going to war was taken for bureaucratic reasons.
It was, he says one of many reasons. The magazine quotes Mr Wolfowitz saying “for bureaucratic reasons, we settled on one issue

Black Voices For Peace President Damu Smith Interviewed On CSPAN About Yesterday’s FCC Vote

The group Black Voices For Peace were protesting yesterday outside of the FCC Building in Washington D.C. during yesterday’s meeting.
Here is an interview with its President, Damu Smith, that was broadcast yesterday on CSPAN yesterday after the re-broadcast of the meeting/vote/protest.
This is a really solid and concise three minute explanation about the greater situation and how groups such as Black Voices For Peace, and others, are starting to organize to help raise public awareness about Media Consolidation and other issues.
Damu Smith, President, Black Voices For Peace – Complete Interview
Damu Smith At FCC Vote Protest (Small – 14 MB)
Damu Smith At FCC Vote Protest (Hi-Res – 170 MB)
Audio – Damu Smith At FCC Vote Protest (MP3 – 5 MB)

FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein Explains Why Changing The FCC Media Ownership Rules Is Such A Bad Idea

Here’s most of FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein’s speech from yesterday’s FCC meeting. (I missed the very beginning of it.)
He gave his speech, received polite applause, and before the applause was even over, Michael Powell took a vote, democracy went down the drain, and the meeting was adjourned.
That’s when the Code Pink ladies began singing their song and were escorted out of the room by the cops.
No Hi-res or highlight reels on this one guys. There’s just no time.
If anyone ever really needs a high resolution version of this for something, just let me know and I’ll generate one for you (even on short notice).
FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein – Near Complete
Jonathan Adelstein At FCC Vote (Small – 33 MB)
Audio – Jonathan Adelstein At FCC Vote (MP3 – 19 MB)

New Category: The Shrub War – WMD Lies

So the Shrub Administration is now admitting openly to the American Public that it was lied to in order to gain public support for the war.
I just wanted all of these articles in one place so we can remind everyone of the truth when election day grows near and the Repubs start up with the revisionist history regarding its official position as to why the war was necessary.

Video of Code Pink Speaking Out (Singing In Protest) At Today’s FCC Vote – Members Escorted Out By Police

Here’s a little web movie of the very end of fcc commissioner Jonathan Adelstein’s speech before the vote was taken and Medea Benjamin (Media Alliance, Code Pink) and Victoria Cunningham (Code Pink) and other Code Pinkers that you can’t see off camera (including Rebecca Stone Gordon, Adjunct Professor, Computer Science, Audio Technology and Physics at American University) started singing “the mass deregulation of the mass communication is the end of democracy” and got taken away by police:
Code Pink Protests The FCC Deregulation Of Media Ownership Rules (Small – 4 MB)
Code Pink Protests The FCC Deregulation Of Media Ownership Rules (Hi-res – 44 MB)
Audio – Code Pink Protests The FCC Deregulation Of Media Ownership Rules (MP3 – 2 MB)
Audio – Code Pink Protests The FCC Deregulation Of Media Ownership Rules (AIFF – 8 MB)
Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein’s speech will be in the same directory later today:
Directory Of Goodies From Today’s FCC Vote






Public Domain Dedication

This work is dedicated to the
Public Domain. (Take it and run, baby!)

Excitement At The FCC Hearing!

Wow I just recorded Medea Benjamin, Founding Director of Global Exchange and co-founder of Code Pink and Friends getting taken away by police immediately after the vote was taken on the media ownership rules in Washington DC today.
Maybe they woke up Jesse Jackson. (He was falling asleep in the audience 🙂
From the CSPAN footage, it looks like they broke up the meeting over it.
I guess things were over with anyway at that point.
Commissioner Adelstein gave a nice speech at the end there, too.
I’ll have this stuff up in an hour or so max. Capturing and generating movie files now…

Webcasting Rates and Terms Agreement Reached Between RIAA/SoundExchange and the Intercollegiate Broadcasting System

A group of non-commercial webcasters including American Council on
Education (ACE), Collegiate Broadcasters, Inc. (CBI), Intercolegiate
Broadcasting System (IBS), Harvard Radio Broadcasting (WHRB) and National
Religious Broadcasters Music License Committee (NRBMLC) reached an
agreement over the weekend with the RIAA/SoundExchange on rates and terms
for webcasting.

IBS Announcement

A low fixed price agreement has been reached that also provides for no reporting/recordkeeping for participating IBS Member radio stations/webcasters. The period covered by the agreement is October 1998 through December 31, 2004…

Here’s a PDF of the agreement.
Here are the rate specs from the “rates and terms” that were published today:

(1) $200 for the period beginning on October 28, 1998, and ending on
December 31, 1999 (which shall be treated as one year for purposes of
these Rates and Terms);
(2) $250 for each of the years 2000 through 2003; and
(3) $500 for 2004, except in the case of an NEE that is, or is affiliated
with, an educational institution with fewer than 10,000 enrolled students,
in which case the minimum fee shall be $250.
(b) Other Noncommercial Webcasters Transmitting a Single Channel. Except
as provided in Section 3(c) and subject to Section 4, each Noncommercial
Webcaster that is not an NEE shall pay nonrefundable minimum annual fees
as set forth below for all or any portion of a year in which it made or
makes any digital audio transmissions of sound recordings under the
section 114 statutory license (whether a Broadcaster Simulcast, an
Internet-only transmission or otherwise):
(1) $200 for the period beginning on October 28, 1998, and ending on
December 31, 1999 (which shall be treated as one year for purposes of
these Rates and Terms);
(2) $250 for 2000;
(3) $300 for 2001, except in the case of a Noncommercial Webcaster
substantially all of the programming of which is reasonably classified as
news, talk, sports or business programming, in which case the minimum fee
shall be $250;
(4) $350 for 2002, except in the case of a Noncommercial Webcaster
substantially all of the programming of which is reasonably classified as
news, talk, sports or business programming, in which case the minimum fee
shall be $250;
(5) $400 for 2003, except in the case of a Noncommercial Webcaster
substantially all of the programming of which is reasonably classified as
news, talk, sports or business programming, in which case the minimum fee
shall be $250; and
(6) $500 for 2004, except in the case of a Noncommercial Webcaster
substantially all of the programming of which is reasonably classified as
news, talk, sports or business programming, in which case the minimum fee
shall be $250.
(c) Noncommercial Webcasters Transmitting Multiple Channels.
Notwithstanding Section 3(a) or (b) as applicable, the nonrefundable
minimum annual fee shall be $500 for each year (as identified in Section
3(a)(1) through (3) or 3(b)(1) through (6)) for any Noncommercial
Webcaster that made or makes digital audio transmissions of sound
recordings on more than one channel or station of programming; provided
that –
(1) if the digital audio transmissions of sound recordings over any
channels or stations in excess of one consist only of “Incidental
Performances” (as defined in Section 9(f)), the nonrefundable minimum
annual fee shall be as provided in Section 3(a) or (b) as applicable;
(2) if substantially all of the programming of all of a Noncommercial
Webcaster’s channels and stations is reasonably classified as news, talk,
sports or business programming, the minimum fee shall be $250;

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FCC Vote In: We Lose

CC Vote In: We Lose 3 to 2 – Media Diversity Loses Straight Across The Board
Hey guys. We know that we all worked really hard on this, and at least we made our voices heard, even if it turns out that they just don’t care what we think.
We should be used to that by now from this regime. Michael Powell is, of course, another arm of the Shrub Regime that believes that the wealth of our nation belongs in the hands of a few select individuals that “know best” for everyone else.
Well you can bet that this isn’t over yet. It just means War. War on media conglomerates that don’t care about their responsibilities to the public as broadcasters. If these companies are going to be in charge of everything we see and hear over television and radio, it’s going to be up to us to keep watchful eye over them. And I don’t mean a friendly, understanding watchful eye, I mean more like a watchful eye that they have to contend with on a regular basis in order to conduct business in a profitable manner.
To my knowledge, there are still some requirements that stations have to meet in order to fulfill their public interest requirements as broadcasters. Let’s determine exactly what those requirements are and start organizing inspection teams that travel from station to station checking their public records and sending the inevitable violations to the FCC.
“Like weapons inspectors?” a friend said to me when I told him this idea.
“Yeah, very much like weapons inspections.” I replied. “This is War, isn’t it?”
Here’s a link to the real video of today’s meeting at the FCC.
Here’s a story by Frank Ahrens for the Washing Post with more details:
FCC Votes to Ease Media Ownership Rules

An ideologically fractured Federal Communications Commission voted 3 to 2 along party lines today to relax or eliminate some key media ownership rules, allowing a newspaper to own a television station in the same city and broadcast networks to buy more stations at the national and local levels…
The vote has engendered public opposition by lawmakers, consumer and advocacy groups and unaligned citizens who fear that further media consolidation will make it more difficult for those with minority viewpoints to get their message out. On Friday, the FCC’s voice- and e-mail systems were temporarily shut down by a deluge of public comments. The agency has received more than 500,000 e-mails and postcards opposing the changes…
For better or worse, the proposed regulations are to be known as the “Powell Rules.”
“I have had to make peace with myself, to know with every fiber of my being and intellect and faith with the law that this is the right answer, at least in the short term,” Powell said. “Though it’s not the popular answer.”
Others think the answer is both unpopular and wrong.
“I’m glad they won’t be remembered as the Copps rules,” said Copps, who has opposed Powell’s attempts to relax media ownership rules at nearly every turn. “They will take the media and the country into very perilous waters. I think we are damaging localism, diversity and competition, making it harder for alternative viewpoints and information to see the light of day.”
Copps and Adelstein suggested several edits to the proposed rules changes, such as requiring merged media properties to spell out what public service programming they would produce and holding them accountable. Their modifications were rejected by the Republican majority, which said the suggestions came late in the process and were based on flimsy legal justification.

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