Thursday, December 20, 2007

Made it safe to Africa, after two dayslight delays of air travel and a shit load of the flight delays. Tanzania is the real Afica you picture when you think of it and not the Morocco I visited. People either smile at you, glare at you, or tell you not to take thier picture and then glare at you. It is a little odd staying in a air conditioned apartment, went 50 feet away are people living in sheds. But only two days in I like it! I will off the internet or phone world for eight days starting Saturday night! More after that!!!

Paz and AMor
TY
NEW PICTURES
http://picasaweb.google.com/tywolosin

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

NEW PICTURES
http://picasaweb.google.com/tywolosin
(10 Reasons TO vote in the primary!!!!.....this is the one time where we really can change who will be running!!)
How to Vote in the Primaries and Make It Mean Something
By David Swanson, After Downing Street.

LINK
We Are What We Eat
By Jamey Lionette, South End Press.
I am not a scientist, journalist, or other specialist. I sell food. I help run a family-owned and operated neighborhood market and café that buys and sells predominantly local, clean, and sustainable food. I cannot speak about the reality of our food supply around most of the world. I can only can speak of what is happening in the first world, where, unfortunately, only the privileged elite can choose to put real food on their dinner tables.

Lately it seems every mass media newspaper or magazine, from the New York Times to Rolling Stone, has an article digging into the true filth that most food in the U.S. really is. Some people are actually questioning mass produced and monoculture organic food. Even Time magazine proclaimed "Local Is the New Organic" on its cover. Everywhere I turn people tell me that there is a new wind in the U.S.; that people are now concerned about eating local, clean, and sustainable food. From my vantage point in the market, behind the counter, I just don't see it. Yes, in Massachusetts there are more farms today than in the last 20 or so years, but fewer total acres than ever recorded. Farmers markets are becoming popular or perhaps trendy. Chain supermarkets are "listening to their customers" and capitalizing on cheap "organic" food. But the chain-supermarket owners are some of the same people who screwed up our food supply in the first place. How can we trust them?

Outdoor food markets are a mainstay in most cultures in the world and were once a given in our culture. Now most people go there to shop for the luxury food treats (locally grown food) and get their staples at the supermarket. I think that because of the Depression (when there was no money to spend on food) and World War II (when there was rationing and everyone was focused on the war effort) Americans lost their taste-buds. Along came the mass-produced foods of the 1950s at cheap prices. Supermarkets were a "progressive" thing, as suburban living was progressive....LINK

Friday, December 07, 2007

A much needed and I am sure highley anticipated update!

So after much demand, well actually only one person, I figured I should write a short update on the events that have passed since my last entry. Where to begin....Once upon a time...just kidding. Well class has generally been the same with no real changes or revalations. I continue to stuggle in remembering all the rules and vocabulary that comes with a new language. But my understanding of people speak spanish, at least slowley, has certainly improved....but for me I think it is more due to communication then studying. For me I think the best thing the US could do is make children learn Spanish from a young age (and once they are older, say high school give them more choices)....we need to encourage a bilingual US.
I have been very busy not only trying wrap up my thesis interviews (I currently have 8....and I wanted 10), school, my new passion for climbing (bouldering), and trying to enjoy the last few weeks with my girlfriend. It is always very hard for me to find someone that I like alot knowing that I am leaving in the end. Hopefully, we will stay in contact and meet again for Spring Break or after I graduate.
This past weekend me and the crew went on a trip to the moutain villiage of Lanjaron...near Granada. It was a great time and the highlight was my first jump off a bridge and sitting around a chimney talking and driking with friends....both Spanish and English. The dry cold moutain air was refreshing and the view of snow reminded me of the real winter happening in Montana.
One more week and off I go on to the next chapter.......
My siter and cunado arrive tomorrow and today I rented a car to take them around in! Should be interesting! Well maybe I will write some more before I head off!

Paz and Love
Ty

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Barbarism on the Rise – Civilization on the Wane
by Siv O'Neall
Democracy has become an empty word that the world leaders kick around like an inflated balloon when it serves their interests. What is of importance to the Corporatocracy that is running the planet is very much the opposite of democracy. What the leaders are depending on for the continuation of the current misrule of the world is centralized power and dumbed-down, apathetic and poverty-stricken masses who pose no danger to the status quo.

Democracy doesn't promote the interests of the ruling plutocrats. Their goal is to concentrate all the money and power in the tiny elite that hold the strings of the dancing puppets who are politicians. Government and business are all one and the same. Or different parts of the same monster. Some hold the strings of power, others do the kicking and dancing.

What is the difference between a totalitarian state which controls all the means of production and one where the owners of the means of production control the state? A different brand of totalitarianism but the contempt for the people could not be more deadly.

To make the control game possible, the people have to be drugged, muzzled and rendered powerless. Also, the means of running the show have to be deprived of all transparency. Propaganda, biased or filtered media news coverage, violent punishment of 'disobedient' individuals, all clouded in a web of secrecy – these are the tools for running this show of the most flagrant in-egalitarian state of the world that has ever existed. The former lords of money empires pale in comparison to the multi-billionaires of today's distorted world.

Laws have to be ignored or annulled. People who might possibly become a threat to the puppeteers have to be rendered harmless. By any means possible. There are no more any legal limits to what can be done to individuals who are arbitrarily declared to be terrorists or aiding and abetting the 'enemy'. Since international and national laws have become irrelevant, it is no more a big deal to get rid of undesirable persons.

There is also a general tendency to destroy what are considered superfluous masses of people through calculated starvation, wars and well planned genocide. Added to this, there is a carefully staged neglect of the lower classes – with more and more of the so-called middle classes falling into the category of the working poor.
LINK
Carlyle + 300 Bush Cronies control 50% of ALL "bear shares" on US markets -- using offshore accounts
Tip of the hat to kickysnana:

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.ph...

http://www.almartinraw.com/public/column335.html

"Indeed, of the short interest in domestic equity markets, if one looks at all exchanges – NYSE, Amex, OTC, etc. – here’s a startling statistic -- half of all of the short interest is controlled by eight offshore funds, all managed by Carlyle Group or its subsidiaries, trusts, limited partnerships and other such vehicles. I heard this last Wednesday. In these 8 funds, there are only 300 investors common to all 8 funds. They are, in fact, the top 300 members of the Bush Cabal.

Most hold interest through offshore blind trusts, ranging from the Cayman Islands to Panama. But they are all Bush-Cabal-aligned interests. They are the top 300 members of the Cabal that, for lack of a better definition, control the short side of domestic equity markets."

The author interprets this as evidence that only the neocon investors (Bush cronies) think the market will recover, and are hoping to reap a windfall, Hudsucker-style.

Given what happened on 9/11, I see something far more sinister at work here.

(For those of you who dismiss such alarming statistics about trust ownership as conspiracy-buzz, consider this factoid: 80% of all new development in the country -- the towns you inhabit, the roads you drive on, the McMansions you admire as evidence someone has attained the American Dream -- is designed, built, financed and sold by five -- count 'em five -- firms, several of whom are privately owned. Some of these firms are involved in projects like the Freedom Tower and other redevelopments of Manhattan that involve concentrations of capital so intense, the owners of the resulting skyscrapers have absolute power over the operation of the resulting business districts and the average citizen commuting in for work is nothing more than ants to them... Due to limitations on the inflationary economic system, which requires endless population growth and white flight out of older neighborhoods, 90% of all new construction is designed, built and financed for the upper income brackets.)
Who ARE You People?
Posted by NanceGreggs in General Discussion
Don’t get me wrong. I’m all for accommodating religious and cultural differences, acknowledging that not everyone has exactly the same perspective on every issue, even making life a bit clearer for the common-sense-impaired.

But when it comes down to coddling the abjectly stupid, or those who seem to spend every waking hour looking for something to be offended about, I have to stand back and yell, “What the f*ck!”

Who are you people who think shopping mall Santas should refrain from saying “ho, ho, ho” because it might be construed by female passers-by as an insult to their sexual activities? Shouldn’t such people be kept out of the malls because stupidity might be contagious, and we’ve already got enough of that going around?

Who are you people who report to parents of pre-schoolers that their children’s tendency to nuzzle against your chest is a blatant sexual advance? Shouldn’t such alleged ‘adults’ be kept as far away from innocent children as possible? Just how repressed/sexually confused do you have to be before someone decides that maybe the ‘problem’ lies not with the kids, but with you?
LINK

Monday, November 26, 2007

(Great Energy plan Bush, now small farmers and poor people get fucked over once again)
Ethanol proves to be the big letdown of 2007
By Joe Carroll and Mario Parker
Bloomberg News
Ethanol, the centerpiece of President Bush's plan to wean the U.S. from oil, is 2007's worst energy investment.
The corn-based fuel tumbled 57 percent from last year's record of $4.33 a gallon and drove crop prices to a 10-year high. Production in the U.S. tripled after Morgan Stanley, hedge fund firm D.E. Shaw & Co. and venture capitalist Vinod Khosla helped finance a building boom.
Even worse for investors and the Bush administration, energy experts contend ethanol isn't reducing oil demand. Scientists at Cornell University say making the fuel uses more energy than it creates, while the National Research Council warns ethanol production threatens scarce water supplies.
As oil nears $100 a barrel, ethanol markets are so depressed that distilleries are shutting from Iowa to Germany. An investor who put $10 million into ethanol on Dec. 31 now has $7.5 million, a loss of 25 percent. Florida and Georgia have banned sales during the summer, when the fuel may evaporate and create smog.
''I don't anticipate any sort of immediate rebound,'' says Barry Frazier, the 50-year-old president of Center Ethanol LLC in suburban St. Louis. ''It's going to take 12 to 24 months before the market is able to absorb the large amount of new capacity.'' LINK
In Miles of Alleys, Chicago Finds Its Next Environmental Frontier
By SUSAN SAULNY
CHICAGO, Nov. 25 — If this were any other city, perhaps it would not matter what kind of roadway was underfoot in the back alleys around town. But with nearly 2,000 miles of small service streets bisecting blocks from the North Side to the South Side, Chicago is the alley capital of America. In its alleys, city officials say, it has the paved equivalent of five midsize airports.
Part of the landscape since the city began, the alleys, mostly home to garbage bins and garages, make for cleaner and less congested main streets. But Chicago’s distinction is not without disadvantages: Imagine having a duplicate set of streets, in miniature, to maintain that are prone to flooding and to dumping runoff into a strained sewer system.

What is an old, alley-laden city to do?

Chicago has decided to retrofit its alleys with environmentally sustainable road-building materials under its Green Alley initiative, something experts say is among the most ambitious public street makeover plans in the country. In a larger sense, the city is rethinking the way it paves things.

LINK
Unthanksgiving
By Joel Hirschhorn
Most Americans have succumbed to tradition and advertising and stuffed their bellies with unhealthy food and stuffed their shopping carts with unnecessary stuff. Now, here are some tough facts about the sad state of the American economy from the late 1960s to the early 2000s, as revealed recently by the Economic Mobility Project.

Anyone who still gives thanks for the classic American dream of rising from poverty to riches is not facing reality. Research has documented that only 6 percent of children born to parents with family income in the bottom fifth of the income spectrum move to the top fifth. The rags to riches story is garbage. Meanwhile, an amazing 42 percent of children born into that lowest fraction remain stuck in that lowly economic class, not even making into middle class status. At the other end, four out of 10 children born to rich parents stay rich.

Looking more generally at economic mobility this is reality: 34 percent of Americans make more than their parents' family income and move up at least one rung on the economic ladder. But more experience downward mobility, with 38 percent moving down the economic ladder.

What about black Americans?
LINK
Bush Admin: What You Don't Know Can't Hurt Us, 2007 Version
By Paul Kiel
Another year has almost passed under the Bush Administration, and so it's time to review how much less we know.

Last year, we launched the insanely ambitious project of recording every significant instance of this administration stifling government information. As we said then, "they've discontinued annual reports, classified normally public data, de-funded studies, quieted underlings, and generally done whatever was necessary to keep bad information under wraps." To be sure, the list will continue to grow through January, 2008.

TPMm research hounds Adrianne Jeffries and Peter Sheehy set to updating our already extensive tally, and those items have been added below (don't miss our new section on global warming!). But TPMm readers made the list what it is, so if you see something else that should be on there, let us know, and we'll update it accordingly.
LINK
Impeachment: If not now, when?
Lawmakers need to stand up for the Constitution and support impeachment
By LINDA BOYD
GUEST COLUMNIST
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors. -- Article II, Section 4

On Nov. 6, Rep. Dennis Kucinich introduced articles of impeachment against Vice President Dick Cheney on the floor of the House of Representatives. For one shining moment the will of the majority of Americans and the promise of this nation's founders were truly represented.

The detailed charges were solemnly read from the House podium and televised on C-Span. House Democratic Leader Steny Hoyer made a motion to table the bill. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi lobbied hard for votes to table.

In a stunning turnaround, House Republicans changed strategy and voted decisively to prevent tabling the impeachment resolution.
LINK

Saturday, November 24, 2007

A History of the Wine
The Wine....

Ok so this story begins with the lovely thought of purchasing some wine to send back to the states for personal use and for presents, sounds easy, not so fast my friend. The purchase and shipment went very smoothly and quickly without any flaws which led me to believe that all was ok. But two days later I got "the call" from my mom letting me know that the wine was not going to make it. I got declined because I do not have a import/export license (this is a license that you get basically for paying the government a shit load of money, fucking capitalism) and because I was trying to send to a private address (I tried to fix this by sending it to a winery but this did not work either). Some how 12 bottles of medium prized wine does not make me think that I am going to flood the American market with black-market Rioja from Spain, but evidently they think else wise. I am thinking that I might attempt to send 6 bottles to the US via the vineyard. What do you think, worth a shot?...probably not but what the fuck! I just would really like to bring some back because it will be impossible or nor wise to try and take them to Tanzania. I still do not understand what happened. The Spanish blame it on the US and US blames it on Spain....must be easy to never admit you’re at fault!!
Such as life either way but it really pisses me off and adds to my growing frustration with all. I understand living day to day and just being happy but it ekes me to think of the current and future of this world. To think that we will eventually crumble away on this tiny dot in the universe, not ever knowing what the endless universe beholds. I guess a person can get lost searching for answers to the endless but I find myself trying to answer questions to many things that seem impossible to answer or fix. But I go on trying to make a difference little by little, person to person, and enjoy the great experiences and people I meet along the road.
I am still combating my cold through ridiculous amounts of vitamin C....4,000 mg a day and some odd Spanish sinus medicine powder that dissolves in water.
I have been hanging out a lot more with the Italian/Argentina/American girl. She has begun to mean the world to me, not only with an attraction physically but with her personality as well. I am sure that I will break another heart when I move on....and this I am sorry for because I do not want this. I really like her as well but I guess I am pretty used to moving on....and I have promised not only myself but other people that I will finish my thesis this Spring. But I warned her that I had to leave....maybe and hopefully a different place and different time are paths will cross in this small world....who knows, only the future.
I am hoping my cold lets up so that I can get some last ditch exercise in for the coming assent in Africa. School continues as is it....learning some but more frustrating then anything. Had two interviews this week, looking like one on Sunday and another on Monday....that makes seven....not to bad but 10 would be nice. Well Love to ALL and do not forget to check out Dennis Kucinich who is running for president.....he has great plans...if only people would listen!!
PAZ Y AMOR
TY

Friday, November 23, 2007

(Great article on Kucinich)
The Heroics of Dennis J. Kucinich
by Maryann Mann
Consider five major points:
1.) Dennis Kucinich was right on Iraq. The Congressman stood up to ideological war hawks, refusing to submit to the constitutional calamity of preemptive invasion. 2.) He was right on the Patriot Act. Kucinich lambasted the serpentine piece of legislation which acts as a gateway to eroding our cherished civil liberties. 3.) The Congressman is right on health care. Unlike slipshod “universal coverage” plans proposed by Hillary Clinton, John Edwards and Barack Obama (all of which attempt to incurably fix a broken, private system by virtually mandating that every American buy into it) Kucinich knows first hand that the only morally and economically satisfying version of health care is the one beginning with the words: not-for-profit. 4.) Strength through Peace: The hallmark of the Congressman’s presidential campaign would end using war as an instrument of policy. Haters call him a peacenik devoid of reality. I submit that the intellectually curious might see a president who would embody unparalleled leadership in nuclear non-proliferation and in tackling global warming (mother nature’s WMD) to bridge frayed international alliances, combat climate change and, in effect, revive the plummeting dollar. 5.) Kucinich is right on impeachment. Dennis, as it currently stands – along with 22 courageous signatories – has been the only Congressman brave enough to officially propose articles of impeachment against the dangerously dark Vice President Richard B. Cheney. And on this, he hits the bull’s eye too.
LINK

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

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What Would Jesus Buy?
By Amy Goodman
"Black Friday” is the name retailers have given to the day after Thanksgiving in their attempt to make Christmas synonymous with shopping. On Black Friday, Americans are expected to flock to the malls and shopping centers, eager for discounts, armed with plastic. Business analysts fill the airwaves with predictions on how the fickle consumer will perform, how fuel prices and the subprime mortgage crisis will impact holiday shopping. Black Friday is followed by “Cyber Monday,” a name coined by the retail industry to hype online shopping. Listening to the business news, one would conclude that the future not only of the U.S. economy but of humanity itself depends on mass, frenzied shopping for the holidays.

Rev. Billy is the street preacher played by Bill Talen, a New York City-based anti-consumerism activist who is the subject of a new feature-length documentary hitting theaters this week, “What Would Jesus Buy?” The film is produced by Morgan Spurlock, who gained fame with his documentary “Super Size Me,” in which he showed his physical and emotional decline while eating only McDonald’s food for breakfast, lunch and dinner for a month.
LINK

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

First Woman, First Black, First Latino, or First Honest President?
Most Dishonest Politicians Have a Better Chance of Winning
By Joel Hirschhorn
The phrase honest politician has become an oxymoron. We should not be impressed by the prospect of having the first woman, first black or first Latino president. What would be far more radical would be to have the first honest president, if not ever, certainly in a very long time.

Presidents in recent memory have been excellent liars, contributing mightily to our culture of dishonesty. Bill Clinton had the audacity to look right into the TV camera and blatantly lie to the American public. George W. Bush has probably set a record for official lying, though it might take many decades to fully document them. Carl M. Cannon saw the bigger truth: "posterity will judge [George W. Bush] not so much by whether he told the truth but whether he recognized what the truth actually was."

Things have gotten so bad that hardly anyone can even imagine an honest president. But if we don't expect an honest president, how can we expect to trust government?
LINK
(Wow, seems like are money could go to something better. Kind of big brother as well, tracking what we do through are waste)
Flushing Out a Record of Local Drug Use
Researchers have perfected a method of taking a small sample of incoming sewage at a water treatment plant and extracting the record of local drug use
By David Biello
In the latest attempt to crack down on illegal drug use, scientists say they can determine the extent and pattern of illicit drug use—from marijuana to heroin to cocaine—by sampling sewage and extracting the telltale by-products.

For example, cocaine is snorted, does its brain-altering business and then passes through the liver and the kidneys on its way out of the body. It emerges in urine as benzoylecgonine and, as that urine travels from toilet to treatment plant, it mixes with a host of other by-products of human activity.

Environmental analytical chemist Jennifer Field of Oregon State University and her colleagues, using an automated system they developed, test small samples automatically collected at wastewater treatment plants over a 24-hour period. Solids are centrifuged out and the sewage sample then travels at high pressure through a machine that chemically separates the various compounds of interest chemically, such as benzoylecgonine. By measuring the relative mass of the various residual chemicals, the chemists can then identify what specific drugs have been recently used in that community.

LINK

Monday, November 19, 2007

The Weekend Report from the one, the only and perhaps reigning champ....Ty

Well if you are one of the three or four people that actually read by blog and check out my pictures online you might have a general feel for how the weekend went for me. All my pictures are uploaded on http://picasaweb.google.com/tywolosin in case you did not know. This was another great weekend of taking advantage of the higher than normal (for me, not Almeria) temperatures that Almeria is known for. As the northern countries pass into the cold winter, the flocks of RVers appear out of nowhere to claim their parking spot for the winter. They are easy to pick out normally because of the sandals with socks, shorts and abnormally pale skin.
So Saturday was a day of hiking in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of Spain. These are the mountains that begin in Granada and stretch to the east into Almeria and South towards El Ejido (another town in Almeria...where the majority of the greenhouses are) and the Mediterranean. It is in these mountains where the majority of the moisture is sucked out of the air to leave Almeria with little moisture. All three of my amigas came along and we met bright in early Saturday morning to catch the bus. Immediately I realized the first fault of the hiking trip, 27 people!!! Way too much for this Soltero. Anyhow I figured I would make the best of getting out of the city and into the mountains....
We were planning on doing a hike on a ridge line but after stopping for about 20 minutes we were told that the hike was a no go. This was due to the danger of Javelin pigs that were spotted in the area. Although I doubt seriously that they would attack a large group I understand that the University and the group have to take precautions. So back into the bus we went and 30 minutes later arrived at are new hiking destination. The hike started out like the kind of hiking I like to do, leg burner straight up the mountain but of course we had to take stops for the group to recover (not the whole group but older people, smokers, etc.). The trail made its way along the side of a mountain following a old Aqueduct that was used to power a small hydroelectric plant. The path/aqueduct passed through a few caves, and around some deep drop offs, finally ending in a beautiful little river and our lunch spot. On the way back we just followed the road....not to exciting but hey it is like the old man says, a loop is always better.
On Sunday I went bouldering with two of my rock climbing friends. We went about an hour away from Almeria in the Parke Natural Cabo de Gata. It was a lot of fun until my hands started to deteriorate into something that resembled a dog toy. I put too much chalk on my hands....which along with volcanic rock worked to rip off a good bit of my skin on the finger tips (dedos). After two hours the other two were not in much better shape so we decided to take off and come better prepared next week (tape for my fingers, food for other friend, and climbing shoes for the third). We went to the nearby pueblo and ate at an excellent Italian restaurant.
Well that is a general rundown of the weekend...
Three interviews planned for this week, so I should have plenty to talk about at the end of the week. Stay Tuned.

PAZ AND AMOR
TY

Friday, November 16, 2007

The Pharmaceutical Industry: Creating Mental Illness for Profit
by max blunt
....On September 4, 2007, the New York Times reported, "The number of American children and adolescents treated for bipolar disorder increased 40-fold from 1994 to 2003 ... Drug makers and company-sponsored psychiatrists have been encouraging doctors to look for the disorder."

Not too long ago, a child who was irritable, moody, and distractible and who at times sounded grandiose or acted without regard for consequences was considered a "handful."

In the U.S. by the 1980s, that child was labeled with a "behavioral disorder" and today that child is being diagnosed as "bipolar" and "psychotic" -- and prescribed expensive antipsychotic drugs.

Bloomberg News, also on September 4, 2007, reported, "The expanded use of bipolar as a pediatric diagnosis has made children the fastest-growing part of the $11.5 billion U.S. market for anti-psychotic drugs." ..... LINK
It’s Treason: Dems Stay Silent on Bush White House Crimes
By Richard W. Behan, AlterNet.
Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.

--Article III, Section 3, United States Constitution (emphasis added)
The mainstream Democrats -- represented, say, by Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards, Joe Biden, and Christopher Dodd -- have not levied war against the United States. Their treason lies instead in committing the second offense: They adhere to enemies of the country, giving them aid and comfort.

The enemies are President George W. Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney. Like no other president and vice president in history, these men attacked their country.

It was not our geography George Bush and Richard Cheney invaded. Instead they abandoned and subverted the bedrock institution of our constitutional democracy: the rule of law. By word and deed, Mr. Bush repeatedly and arrogantly sets himself above the law, claiming obedience to be a matter of presidential choice. Mr. Cheney orchestrates, coaches, applauds and iterates....... LINK
Week report from the confused soltero
This week of school brought me back to the usual frustrated confused state of being with the introduction of the indirect verb usage. Not only is this a torture to learn in Spanish but as well in English. The problem arises in the fact that to tell someone what was said by someone else, normally we shorten it because we do not remember all of what was said. This normally gets the point across and the person can hopefully use some of their brain to put together the rest. However in class we have to repeat word for word what the person said and change the verb tense to what best suits the sentence. Really I am confused just writing about it....needless to say this week was like being shot in the stomach, rolling in pain for about two hours, then fixed up, and finally shot again the next day to endure the same process again.
On a somewhat lighter note I did get to play soccer on Monday night. Being that Almeria is a desert, the only grass fields are for the professional teams and instead the people play on clay courts. Basically it’s playing indoor soccer, outside....a bit of an oxymoron but you get the point. If rock-climbing had not already completely liquefied my muscles, indoor soccer put on the final touch....putting me in a hobbled state for the next couple of days. In addition, I took a direct shot to the shin with the soccer ball which I think might have realigned my entire face...not really but that is how I felt. No hard food for 12hours but now its fine!!! I guess I am bitching a lot but that kind of how the week went.
After this week with not interviews......Next week I have two interviews planned and possibly a third.
This weekend I am going hiking on Saturday and Bouldering on Sunday. I am looking forward to both although for hiking, a 8am start will come early but I guess it is a good reason not to go out drinking. I should have pictures and stories by Sunday afternoon....so stay tuned. Well that is all for now
.......

Peace and Love
Ty

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Sane Bush Hatred
by Joel S. Hirschhorn
The Wall Street Journal gave the top half of its opinion page yesterday to a long essay by Peter Berkowitz titled “The Insanity of Bush Hatred.” If anything, it deserves a gold medal for political propaganda – make that political lies. What caught my attention immediately was the frequent use of the word “progressive” to describe the people Berkowitz was attacking. It was used ten times. In other words, progressives were attacked for hating Bush.

There is a major lie of omission. No mention was made of the vast number of Americans that certainly do not call themselves progressives that hate Bush. Surely there are many millions of sane independents, moderates, libertarians, conservatives and liberals that rightfully hate Bush. To ignore all these Americans betrays the intellectual legitimacy of the article and its arguments.......

There is some truth to the opening statement: Hating the president is almost as old as the republic itself. But the growing consensus that George W. Bush will go down in history as the nation’s worst president is a much larger truth. It is perfectly reasonable for ALL Americans to hate Bush for squandering the lives of the many people in our armed forces, for squandering the nation’s wealth, and for squandering our nation’s good name and reputation. Bush is a national embarrassment and disgrace, and for that he deserves to be hated..... LINK

Monday, November 12, 2007

Weekend update from the mysterious soltero

Well what a weekend, perhaps the best yet, not in the productive sense thesis wise but in pure enjoyment definitely. Friday I woke up in anticipation for my normal Friday filled with being pumped full of new Spanish verb tenses that seem to have no end. About twenty minutes before departure on my lovely bike ride to campus I received a SMS (text message) from the professora saying that she was not going to be in class and asked that I pass the message along to my roommates. So usually a person would be ecstatic of such news but with a double espresso in the blood stream going back to sleep seemed as likely as walking on water. So instead I met up with two of my classmates and one of their friends who had just arrived that morning. He (the friend) has been traveling Europe (and next Central America) after losing his job and receiving a nice severance pay.

We had the plan to show him a few of the sights around town but the first few were closed because it was too early and the third one we had to leave early because the girls needed to go. Needless to say it was a nice walk but not to productive. In the afternoon I agreed to go with one my friends to the beach to exercise. The plan was that she would ride my bike while I ran because she has some serious shin splint problems. All was well until on the way back the cassette on the back wheel broke. So this means that the bike is unrideable, so we walked back to her house because it was the closest of the two and parked it in the garage. To finish up this story I will summarize what has happened this weekend. A friend knows the owner of the store I bought the bike at so he took my bike to the store....now there are two possibilities: 1) they fix it for free because it has only been a month since I bought it or 2) me and the girl split the cost of the repairs if it is a reasonable price. So this weekend I felt a little lost without my bike but my roommates broken old bike at least gave me a little faster way then walking to get around.

Friday night I made my way to campus for my rock-climbing class. The first class was pretty intimidating and reminded me of the first day of high school. Such anticipation and the knowledge of not being able to speak the language makes you question what the hell you are doing walking into the unknown. Somehow I was put in the "professional" group which made me even more nervous since it was only me and two other people. But it turned out it was great because the other two were extranjeros (foreigners) as well...France and Germany. Class was pretty cool and I got a course on the basic equipment to climbing as well as the double eight knot.

Saturday and Sunday were the climbing days. We were about 15 minutes outside Almeria and a dry canyon with plenty of rock to be climbed. In total I did eight climbs, seven different and one repeal. It was a great time and I think I have found a new sport to practice at least occasionally. I really liked the rush of being on the side of a rock face and the feeling you get when you make it to the top. Plus the other people in the class all (pretty much) seemed pretty cool and most the people I know in Missoula do at least a little bit of climbing. Today I am pretty sore but not too bad. Next Sunday I am going with three of the climbers to boulder (a type of climbing without a rope....but not high or dangerous) on the beach about 40 minutes from Almeria. It should be a good time and I look forward to it. On this Thursday night I am meeting up with some of the group to go for tapas and beer or at least I think that is why we are meeting.

No partying but I did cook for friends on Saturday night.
Well that is a general rundown of the weekend. This week I am hoping to get one to two interviews...we shall see. O and tonight I am playing indoor soccer so that should be interesting.
The days seem to be getting shorter and shorter and I can feel my time line here be squeezed. Only a month and I will be gone!!! Wow I would love to stay here longer but I really want to finish my thesis and just be done with school!!

Paz and AMor
Ty
A Conspiracy of Two Parties
The Grand Delusion
By JOEL S. HIRSCHHORN
With an endless, futile and costly Iraq war, a stinking economy and most Americans seeing the country on the wrong track, the greatest national group delusion is that electing Democrats in 2008 is what the country needs.
Keith Olbermann was praised when he called the Bush presidency a criminal conspiracy. That missed the larger truth. The whole two-party political system is a criminal conspiracy hiding behind illusion induced delusion.
Virtually everything that Bush correctly gets condemnation for could have been prevented or negated by Democrats, if they had had courage, conviction and commitment to maintaining the rule of law and obedience to the Constitution. Bush grabbed power from the feeble and corrupt hands of Democrats. Democrats have failed the vast majority of Americans. So why would sensible people think that giving Democrats more power is a good idea? They certainly have done little to merit respect for their recent congressional actions, or inaction when it comes to impeachment of Bush and Cheney.
One of the core reasons the two-party stranglehold on our political system persists is that whenever one party uses its power to an extreme degree it sets the conditions for the other party--its partner in the conspiracy--to take over. Then the other takes its turn in wielding excessive power. Most Americans--at least those that vote--seem incapable of understanding that the Democrats and Republicans are two teams in the same league, serving the same cabal running the corporatist plutocracy. By keeping people focused on rooting for one team or the other, the behind-the-scenes rulers ensure their invisibility and power...... LINK

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Dollar's Fall Collapses the American Empire; Bring Those 737 Overseas Military Bases Home!
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
The US dollar is still officially the world's reserve currency, but it cannot purchase the services of Brazilian super model Gisele Bundchen. Gisele required the $30 million she earned during the first half of this year to be paid in euros.

Gisele is not alone in her forecast of the dollar's fate. The First Post (UK) reports that Jim Rogers, a former partner of billionaire George Soros, is selling his home and all possessions in order to convert all his wealth into Chinese yuan.

Meanwhile, American economists continue to preach that offshoring is good for the US economy and that Bush's war spending is keeping the economy going. The practitioners of supply and demand have yet to figure out that the dollar's supply is sinking the dollar's price and along with it American power.

The macho super patriots who support the Bush regime still haven't caught on that US superpower status rests on the dollar being the reserve currency, not on a military unable to occupy Baghdad. If the dollar were not the world currency, the US would have to earn enough foreign currencies to pay for its 737 oversees bases, an impossibility considering America's $800 billion trade deficit.... LINK

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Well another midweek report from the lone American researcher lost in his Spanish plastic world.
Well this week has been pretty relaxed for the most part. Class is its normal mix of everlasting torture of new words and rules that ridicule my mind....and other times I surprise myself with a bit of new knowledge.
I have made the decision to not drink during the week anymore because I was starting to feel like it was taking its toll on both my mind and body. Though it has only been a few days I already feel better mentally and physically. During the past three (maybe four) I have spent at my classmates’ house. Now all three of the fellow ISA students live in the same house so I find myself hanging out there. In addition, I like one of them and we have...not been dating but teetering with the idea, although we talked the other day and agreed it was better not to really date because I am leaving in basically a month.
Hanging out at this other house for the past few nights has given me a new appreciation for my current house life. It is much chiller here and the food is much healthier. I do not think I could handle deep fried food for both lunch and dinner every day. It is in Olive Oil but the amount I have seen used in the food surpasses any amount that could be healthy. Plus they eat two big meals a day, where as I have been eating one.
Yesterday afternoon I conducted the best interview yet. It was with my friend I made this summer that owns greenhouses that are open for tours. Unlike the other interviews, this one lasted an hour that passes quickly and only now I am I understanding how much information I have. In addition, although only three interviews, I am beginning to see/hear similarities between interviews. I would still like to have ten interviews but feel that I am beginning to better understand both the past and the possible future of this region.
Shitty sleep the past three nights has dampened my mood a bit but I continue to keep my health up for the Mt Kilimanjaro climb and good health in general. The weather here makes it easy to ride a bike and run....temperatures range from 68-73 during the day and about 57-60 at night. I do miss the winter but know that there is always plenty of cold weather if you want it.
I keep up with the politics of are horrible corrupt government and only wish that The People would wake up and make a change. But alas I know that things remain the same and we go along worrying about I and not the big picture. I have been thinking a lot about what I want to do after Grad School and more and more the idea of sitting in front of a computer playing with GIS seems unlikely. Maybe there is a way to integrate what I know in a positive way somewhere in the world but I do not think so. I think the best thing to do might just be to go help people that we (western governments) have made into dire states.

Paz and Amor
Ty
Amazing Grace
By Charles Sullivan
It seems inexplicable that so many of the American people can be so dazed and confused, while moral degenerates ransack our nation, piss and defecate upon the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, and brazenly loot the public domain, making a mockery of the rule of law and societal norms; whatever they may be.
Incredible lies are routinely passed as truth and the world as we know it is unraveling, as we prepare to invade and occupy yet another country, perhaps igniting World War Three. We go on with the insipid routine of our dull lives: we go shopping, and bombard our senses with mind numbing entertainment, telling ourselves that it—fascism—can’t happen here, even as its poisoned blossoms unfold before our astonished eyes and fill our lungs with their noxious fumes.
We refuse to believe what we are seeing and we dismiss it as too preposterous to be real. We no longer wholly trust our own senses or follow our most innate instincts, failing to recognize that they are all that is true; all that allow us to survive the wretched madness that pursues us like rabid dogs, and relentlessly nips at our fleeing heels.
Increasing numbers of us move through this world with a sense of impending doom but we do not fully comprehend its origins or the breadth of the disaster it portends. We sense not only that something is wrong—something is terribly, irreconcilably, sickeningly, wrong. We do our utmost to repress those feelings, telling ourselves that our worst fears, our darkest nightmares, are irrational, unfounded phantoms of the imagination; so many ghosts lurking under our beds. LINK

Monday, November 05, 2007

Weekend Update.

Well this weekend was again probably a little too much. It’s one of those that leave you feeling like you have dropped such an amount of brain cells that your brain capacity and intelligence is growing towards hamster status. It really is the Spanish way, particularly for people my age but I really cannot do it anymore. The fun you have at night does not equalize to the day light that is lost and the lost feeling that comes with the following day.
Friday night was the best of the weekend with a great reggae concert at La Cueva. Well I guess it was more of a DJ Reggae show then an actual show but still it was good stuff. They played mostly stuff I did not know and wish I did know. I would have been perfectly content with going home after that but alas I did not.
Saturday night was fun as well with beer, wine, and drinking games at a friend’s house. Soon enough however it was 5 in the morning with the sunlight quickly marching towards the horizon and my mind slowly deteriating into a glob of nothingness.
Sunday during the day I hung out at the beach, read, and tried to relax.
One of the most frustrating things about not being able to speak a language is an inability to have your word in a political discussion. There are so many times when I want to explain some of views that I know friends would find interesting but alas with a Spanish vocabulary of an elementary student this seems impossible. It pisses me off so much though and adds to the frustration.
Interesting side notes. It turns out that my roommates are ripping me off for rent; at least in comparison to every other friend I have in Almeria. Still it is cheaper than the US but that does not change the felling of disappointment that I feel. In addition, the relationship between all of seems to have changed. Living with a woman couple has and will continue to be an interesting experience. Actually it is my first time to live with a couple....so maybe a guy/girl couple is similar.
A thing that disappoints me about Spain (I think) is that my roommates tend to only hang out with other homosexuals. I guess this means that Spanish people segregate them into that or they have chosen that. I think that the first is true but perhaps I am wrong.
My general knowledge of basic Spanish is pretty good....basically the essentials to travelling in a Spanish speaking country...but I am far from being the conversational I claim on my resume. One more month to go!!!
I have an interview tomorrow afternoon and I am working on another one for the week as well. Stay tuned for updates.

Paz and Amor
Ty

Sunday, November 04, 2007

(Scary stuff here....worth the 10 minute read)
A “Presidential Coup,” The Continuity Of Government, And Blackwater Watching Midtown Manhattan
By: Naomi Wolf
I have argued that in the closing stages of a `fascist shift’, events cascade. I am hearing about them, even across the globe. Here in Australia I hear from the nation’s best-know feminist activist, and former adviser to Paul Keating, Anne Summers, who was also at the time this took place Chair of the Board of Greenpeace International. Summers was detained by armed agents for FIVE HOURS each way in LAX on her way to and from the annual meeting of the board of Greenpeace International in Mexico, and her green card was taken away from her. `I want to call a lawyer’, she told TSA agents. `Ma’am, you do not have a right to call an attorney,’ they replied. `You have not entered the United States.’

Apparently a section of LAX just beyond the security line is asserted to be `not in the United States’ — though it is squarely inside the airport — so the laws of the US do not apply. (This assertion, by the way, should alarm any US citizen who is aware of how the White House argued that Guantanamo is not `in the United States’ - is a legal no-man’s land — so the laws of the US do not apply.) Toward the end of her second five-hour detention she asked, `Why am I being detained?’ `Lady, this is not detention,’ the TSA agent told her. `Detention is when I take you to the cells out back and lock you up.’

LINK
(Good article from the OP Ed of NY Times. Use the link to read the whole article, it is worth it)
Noun + Verb + 9/11 + Iran = Democrats’ Defeat?
By FRANK RICH
WHEN President Bush started making noises about World War III, he only confirmed what has been a Democratic article of faith all year: Between now and Election Day he and Dick Cheney, cheered on by the mob of neocon dead-enders, are going to bomb Iran.
But what happens if President Bush does not bomb Iran? That is good news for the world, but potentially terrible news for the Democrats. If we do go to war in Iran, the election will indeed be a referendum on the results, which the Republican Party will own no matter whom it nominates for president. But if we don’t, the Democratic standard-bearer will have to take a clear stand on the defining issue of the race. As we saw once again at Tuesday night’s debate, the front-runner, Hillary Clinton, does not have one.
The reason so many Democrats believe war with Iran is inevitable, of course, is that the administration is so flagrantly rerunning the sales campaign that gave us Iraq. The same old scare tactic — a Middle East Hitler plotting a nuclear holocaust — has been recycled with a fresh arsenal of hyped, loosey-goosey intelligence and outright falsehoods that are sometimes regurgitated without corroboration by the press.

LINK

Saturday, November 03, 2007

Interview Two as promissed:

The typical crops grown here in Almeria include the following: Tomato, sweet pepper, cucumber, watermelon, melon, green bean, and eggplant. In addition, there are various other veggies (zucchini) and fruits (apples, oranges) grown but typically this is what you are going to find in a greenhouse. Most of these products are sold within the European Union and particularly to the ricer Northern European countries like Germany, Holland, England, etc. The majorities of the products are not organic and are grown with lots of pesticides. However, in the last year the number of products grown biologically has grown considerably. Biological means that instead of using pesticides, the greenhouse uses, for example spiders to eat the white fly or some other kind of carnivore bug that feeds on any bug that eats the products. Here they call this integrated agriculture because it is not organic and not normal but in-between.

In the last twenty years the greenhouses has changed a lot. This is because the agriculture business here is very competitive and a farmer must change with the times. This Means that when a more productive form of a greenhouse is discovered it is in the farmer’s best interest to change as well. Some of these changes include a more integrated ventilation system that allows for better and faster climate control; the structures are now higher than before (off the ground), and learning ways to control the microclimate in an inexpensive matter. Increasing the amount of windows to allow for better ventilation and sunlight is an example of an inexpensive change. The changes have not been huge ones but have been constant in the long term to make a big change.

There has been a problem with water shortages in the past but the building of three desalination plants (one more in the process of being completed) have solved the problem of water shortages for the most part. The interviewee said that the majority of the water from these plants was for agricultural purposes. In the last ten years the competition between tourism development and agriculture has begun to increase. So in the area of the Campo de Dalias, greenhouse production has actually decreased some from the growth in tourism. But a new area of greenhouse production is growing to the east of Almeria to make up for the decrease in the Dalias.
One of the bigger problems for the area is competition from other countries that are beginning to develop their greenhouse agriculture. Morocco is now the largest producer of green beans for the European Union, where before it was Almeria. Because of this, the farmer must change to a different product because he is unable to sell the green beans for a competitive enough price.

For now the majority of the greenhouses in Almeria are owned by small scale local families that pass the job from generation to generation but small enterprises are emerging as stiff competition for these families. For the interviewee he believes that the greenhouses will slowly be taken over by the enterprises and that already this is happening in a small scale. Most of the vegetables are sold to a cooperative that then sells them to the grocery store or the product is taken to an auction. At the auction, the various products are betted on by some form of buyer who then would sell them to the grocery store. This auction is much simpler than and not as hectic as a normal auction.

Well this was probably pretty boring for the majority of you but hope you liked it. There is a bit more on water policies that left out.

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Mid-week/Friday report,

Well its been a pretty busy week for me. Class wise the week started off with me in class by myself. The girls were returning from their trip in Morocco and got held up upon their return to Almeria. I had decided not to go because I hate tours or set trips especially to a country with such a high poverty rate. Although there stories of the trip sounded like fun it seemed far from the experience that I encountered this summer. Staying in a three star hotel with actual toilets and a swimming pool seems so far from sweating your ass off in a bug infested dump with a hole in the floor to shit in and perhaps a negative star rating if possible. Ok, so anyhow class went generally pretty well and for once my confusion was pretty limited. Monday night was an early one for me, doing nothing fun but enhancing my mine by reading a bunch.
Tuesday it was back to the usual class schedule with me being the odd man (literally because two other girl students and a women teacher) out because of my lack of vocabulary. It is really frustrating when you feel like your Spanish is getting progressively worse instead of better....The most enjoyable thing of class was me trying to argue the point that I did not find grammatical stuff as important as having a large array of vocabulary knowledge....and i think same with English, I think it’s far more important to have a large vocabulary then be a perfect speller because in time the one will lead to the other. After class I conducted an interview with a professor in the school of greenhouses here. I will write more about the interview in my next blog entry.
Wednesday....Happy Halloween!! Normal day of classes with nothing to report. The afternoon was set aside to wait for the arrival of my professor and chair of my committee to arrive in Almeria. She, her husband and one of their children are on vacation in Spain and were nice enough to make a trip to see me. At five (after I was starting to think she was a no show) I got the phone call and we met up. I took them to the Moorish fortress here in Almeria, then for some tapas, paella and then goodbyes. It was a short visit but still nice to see a familiar face. In addition, I got to learn a whole new world on Saffron. My professor is throwing around the idea of studying it and made a stop here in Spain to visit one of best known Saffron experts in the world. Now I know why these strands cost so much. Not only rare but great human care (rapid care) into preparing it.
Wednesday night was pretty fun and I dressed up as....well...I guess it would be an Australian cowboy with red and yellow stuff all over his face. Not too sure what that would be but that is the basic idea. Pretty fun but nothing to great.
Today I and 7 other friends went to the beach in Cabo de Gata. I posted a few pictures from the beach on my other site. It was really a beautiful day and I had a great time although a bit of a headache from the night. Just earlier it was movie night at a friend’s house...Resident Evil III and Hard Candy. The latter being the better of the two. RE was your basic action sci fi with lots of guns, hot babes, violence, and the norm....hard candy was good probably 3 1/2 out of 5. It just did not hit me as a great movie.
Well tomorrow or this weekend I will recap the latest interview and update everyone with anything else exciting that may have happened.

Peace and Love
Ty
Voting as Political Narcotic
By Joel Hirschhorn
Fast forward to Election Day 2008: Network anchors, cable pundits, and state and local election officials are going nuts as evening hours pass and voter turnout is hardly approaching 20 percent nearly everywhere. "What's going on?" everyone is asking incredulously. TV and computer screens all over the planet show Americans in streets celebrating and shouting things like "We've had enough political corruption. We're not going to take anymore!"

In contrast, news anchors are grim and aghast with little help from spin-fatigued and stammering Democratic and Republican spokespeople. At 2 A.M. on NBC Brian Williams sits with Tim Russett and Keith Olbermann, and sums up: "Americans have spoken and American politics have changed forever." "It's like the nightmare of entertainers: nobody shows up for their event," says bemused Olbermann. Russett grimly observes, "We should have seen this coming; people have been fed up with both parties for a long time." Meanwhile, the Internet is buzzing with talk of voiding the presidential and congressional election results, that President Bush may declare a national state of emergency, and that the Supreme Court might step in again. Did anyone think that the Constitution required a minimum voter turnout to make elections legit?
LINK

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

The American Police State
By Chris Hedges
Truthdig" -- -- A Dallas jury, a week ago, deadlocked in its deliberations and caused a mistrial in the government case against this country’s largest Islamic charity. The action raises a defiant fist on the sinking ship of American democracy.

If we lived in a state where due process and the rule of law could curb the despotism of the Bush administration, this mistrial might be counted a victory. But we do not. The jury may have rejected the federal government’s claim that the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development funneled millions of dollars to Middle Eastern terrorists. It may have acquitted Mohammad el-Mezain, the former chairman of the foundation, of virtually all criminal charges related to funding terrorism (the jury deadlocked on one of the 32 charges against el-Mezain), and it may have deadlocked on the charges that had been lodged against four other former leaders of the charity, but don’t be fooled. This mistrial will do nothing to impede the administration’s ongoing contempt for the rule of law. It will do nothing to stop the curtailment of our civil liberties and rights. The grim march toward a police state continues.

Constitutional rights are minor inconveniences, noisome chatter, flies to be batted away on the steady road to despotism. And no one, not the courts, not the press, not the gutless Democratic opposition, not a compliant and passive citizenry hypnotized by tawdry television spectacles and celebrity gossip, seems capable of stopping the process. Those in power know this. We, too, might as well know it.
LINK
Where Have All the Protests Gone?
By Tom Engelhardt

As I was heading out into a dark, drippingly wet, appropriately dispiriting New York City day, on my way to the "Fall Out Against the War" march -- one of 11 regional antiwar demonstrations held this Saturday -- I was thinking: then and now, Vietnam and Iraq. Since the Bush administration had Vietnam on the brain while planning to take down Saddam Hussein's regime for the home team, it's hardly surprising that, from the moment its invasion was launched in March 2003, the Vietnam analogy has been on the American brain -- and, even domestically, there's something to be said for it.

As John Mueller, an expert on public opinion and American wars, pointed out back in November 2005, Americans turned against the Iraq War in a pattern recognizable from the Vietnam era (as well as the Korean one) -- initial, broad post-invasion support that eroded irreversibly as American casualties rose. "The only thing remarkable about the current war in Iraq," Mueller wrote, "is how precipitously American public support has dropped off. Casualty for casualty, support has declined far more quickly than it did during either the Korean War or the Vietnam War." He added, quite correctly, as it turned out: "And if history is any indication, there is little the Bush administration can do to reverse this decline."
LINK

Monday, October 29, 2007

Weekend Update

Well the weekend was pretty good. Friday I went out with a German friend but ended up hanging out with some Spanish friends that I made just that night. It was generally a pretty good time but perhaps a bit too late. I had attempted to call some of my contacts prior in the day but did not have any luck contacting anyone. I did however on Friday night make friends with a Masters student studying greenhouses who was more than willing to do an interview. Now the hard part of actually setting it up.
Saturday during the day did not amount to anything to productive besides a ride down by the beach just to get some air and sun. I watched Manchester United pounce Mittalsbourgh although I do not know how it is fare with such a gap in talent but I guess that is how sports seem to work. Just look at the World Series if you want a sport closer to the US. After that my roommates came back home to watch a movie. After several different arguments on what to watch somehow we ended up watching perhaps the oddest movie I have ever seen. It was basically a silent film mixed with Claymation and real actors, The Adventures of Tom Thumb. It lasted an hour and as odd and fucked up as it was....it was actually not too bad and kept my full and screwed eyes fixated to the screen for the full one hour. After the movie we went for sushi and found out how typical Spaniards think going out for sushi is. Actually ordering sushi is not likely and instead tempura, fried rice, and spring rolls are more likely. Also none of the Japanese beer for sale here was made in Japan....just a odd side note.
After returning to the house for a cocktail with the roommates I headed for La Cueva to catch a blues/rock band from Granada. Unfortunately by the time I got there only three songs remained. Although the lead was not Janis Joplin, she did a damn good job, certainly being Spanish speaking as well. The main guitarist was quite good and fit the bill with long hair and a mustache. Perhaps the best in the band was the German looking keyboardist jamming out for every song. Once the concert was over I hung out with my Spanish professor, her boyfriend, friend, and sister. At about 2 I was introduced to a guy from Costa Rica.
In addition to names being introduced I was labeled an "American" and said that I had visited Costa Rica several times when I was younger. Then came a conversation of spanglish in which he ridiculed the American people for not actually caring about the people of Costa Rica and instead liking the idea of cheap land to grab up. Although I agree with what he is saying it was a pretty intense conversation for 2am on a Saturday. But it goes to show the dark shadow we have shed across the world as a imperial power that does not care about the people and instead about how we can make more money. After 45 min of the conversation I was ready for bed.
Sunday I headed with one of my roommates and two of her friends to San Jose. San Jose is about 40km to the east of Almeria and located on the opposite side of Cabo de Gata, the natural park. We drove to the two different beaches that people go to. Regrettably the wind was in full force today and made the weather not to productive for beach walking. The sand grains seemed to be flying through the air at unrealistic speed splintering into any bare skin. However it was quite beautiful and easy to tell that on a more tranquil day it would be lovely. The second beach I found out is where people go to practice rock-climbing because when bouldering if you fall it is into soft sand. Check out my pictures for a visual tour of the weekend.
Sunday night Almeria played Barcelona in futbol. Almeria played damn well but lost 2-0, although the second goal via a penalty shot was a horrid called penalty by the ref. Today class by myself as the girls were returning from a weekend in Morocco.

PAZ AND AMOR
Ty
(A little French History and how it correlates to the modern day US Government....thanks to my French connection for this good article)
Bush’s Dangerous Liaisons
By FRANÇOIS FURSTENBERG
MUCH as George W. Bush’s presidency was ineluctably shaped by Sept. 11, 2001, so the outbreak of the French Revolution was symbolized by the events of one fateful day, July 14, 1789. And though 18th-century France may seem impossibly distant to contemporary Americans, future historians examining Mr. Bush’s presidency within the longer sweep of political and intellectual history may find the French Revolution useful in understanding his curious brand of 21st- century conservatism.

Soon after the storming of the Bastille, pro-Revolutionary elements came together to form an association that would become known as the Jacobin Club, an umbrella group of politicians, journalists and citizens dedicated to advancing the principles of the Revolution.

The Jacobins shared a defining ideological feature. They divided the world between pro- and anti-Revolutionaries — the defenders of liberty versus its enemies. The French Revolution, as they understood it, was the great event that would determine whether liberty was to prevail on the planet or whether the world would fall back into tyranny and despotism.

LINK TO REST

Friday, October 26, 2007

(GET OUT THERE AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE)
What We Can Do to End the War
By Tara Lohan, AlterNet.

The majority of Americans and Iraqis oppose the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq. Polls indicate that 70 percent of Americans are against the war and over 80 percent of Iraqis want coalition troops out of their country. In the four and a half years since the invasion, nearly 4,000 U.S. soldiers have been killed and nearly 30,000 seriously wounded. There have also been an estimated 1 million Iraqi civilians killed and over 4 million have fled for their lives.

The war has racked up a bill of over $600 billion of our taxpayer money and yet left Iraq a country in economic shambles and political unrest, and with a population living in fear of daily violence. (Check out the video to the right.)

For the duration of this war, people in the United States have raised their voice in opposition. They have marched, signed petitions, held vigils and written to their elected officials. But it hasn't been enough. Yet.

This Saturday, Oct. 27, United for Peace and Justice, the largest anti-war coalition in the United States, has organized 11 massive anti-war rallies to take place around the nation. Participating organizations include veterans and military family groups, as well as hundreds of national and local peace groups.

LINK
Friday report

Nothing to exciting to report really. Yesterday I had class until 230 which was pretty typical class. There were times when the frustration levels were immense, similar to a my head being like the top a thermometer….just waiting for that next word not to make since, because of a complete understanding of the Spanish being thrown around the rooms and then were times when I do pretty good. My expertise of course is more in the cultural things....this seems easier for me to at least attempt to put a sentence together. The only unusual thing that happened was one of my classes mates kind of freaked out. We were taking turns talking about the city we live and it was this persons time to go....me and the other classmate were silently clowning around....the person talking thought we were laughing at her and snapped into almost tears....we explained are selves and all was better but still a little odd. Shit like that makes me nervous and contradicts how I can act around her because I have to worry about hurting her feelings. My profesora did say that she thinks I have all ready learned a lot, so she is either a nice person or it has approved somewhat.
Flash forward to the night. After running (along with two friends who are trying to get into running), we met back up for a few tapas. My friend Demali helped me to semi translate my interview from Wednesday. I found out a couple more interesting facts but things I kind of all ready knew. It was a good start but a bit short. She refused to let me buy here tapas for helping me and said that she liked to translate because it helped her with Spanish and English. So cool for me.....the problem that may arise is not having direct quotes to use in the paper and instead paraphrasing from what they are saying.
Today I did not have class until 1pm so I got to sleep in. It was one of the better nights of sleep I have had in awhile and was needed. Tonight I think I will go out with my friend Roman that is if he calls me. Tomorrow night there is a blues/rock concert at my favorite bar, La Cueva. Ooo In addition I got the names of three professors that should give me interviews or at least point me to where I can get one. In addition, Roman has one friend that works for a seed company here in Almeria and another friend that is a chemist or hydrologist for a greenhouse that should be willing to give me an interview. The final row of interviews will hopefully come via the husband of a friend’s friend.....
Que Mas
I signed up for Rock-climbing (3 days), hiking (only a day trip) and Mountain Biking (day trip). I figure that five days of play cannot be too bad.

Paz and Amor
Ty

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

(Check this out guys and gals.....VOTE FOR KUCINICH he is the one person who may be able to put us in the right direction before all really is lost!!!)
The BRAD BLOG Speaks with Dennis and His Wife About Voting Rights, Election Reform, Impeachment, and the Need for an Outcry from the American People
Rep. Kucinich Vows to Use 'Privileged Resolution' to Force Vote on Impeachment of Cheney in U.S. House
ED NOTE: The BRAD BLOG's Emily Levy sat down with Dennis Kucinich on Sunday, just before serving as a hand-counter for votes in the first Democratic San Mateo County Presidential Straw Poll. Results of that poll are below. Kucinich spoke about his plans to force a vote in the U.S. House on the Impeachment of Dick Cheney; on having officially removed his name as co-sponsor of Rep. Rush Holt's flawed Election Reform Bill; his interest in hand-counted paper ballots; and concerns about e-voting systems. As it turns out, however, his wife Elizabeth may have stolen the show with an impassioned speech on what America must do to restore "a rigged and a fake political system," which, she told Levy, is "very, very undemocratic."
LINK FOR INTERVIEW

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

My first day out in the greenhouse world
....Finally
So I have been my usual self and put off contacting my short list of contacts to conduct interviews. Finally the end of last week I got the huevos, cojones, balls, will, nerves or whatever you choose to call them, to call first the person who's greenhouse I toured this summer (Lola) and two the man I met during this tour (Fernando). Lola said that she would call me next time she was in Almeria to meet up and get coffee so that I could ask her the questions. Fernando asked if I could come to El Ejido (about 40km from Almeria) today at 4pm. So finally today the nerves of actually having to conduct an interview (in spanglish no less) hit both my head and stomach hard....the gargling could be heard in class, as could the lack of patience in the class.
I caught the direct bus to El Ejido remembering that the last time I took a similar route it was anything but direct and was like being stuck on a burning bus with no way out. Basically a ride that should take 30min took an hour and a half....including stopping at every possible bus stop known to man/woman. So needless to say I was looking for the direct. Once upon arrival in El Ejido, I took a Taxi to the Centro de commercial where I was to meet Fedrico. In my normal fashion I was about an hour early so I got a snack to eat and walked in circles a couple of times. Surely looking like some crazy person or like the tourist I am.
Fedrico, in usual Andalucía fashion was about 25 minutes late and with a coworker. We went for coffee so that I could ask my questions. I actually do not know exactly what he answered but it seemed like it was good stuff, although it was shorter than I expected.
After the interview we went to three different greenhouses so that I could see differences between them. The first was the least typical but most environmental friendly of the bunch. It used or reused I should say all of the water necessary for the mass of tomatoes plants being grown in sheetrock likes material. In addition to the water recycling, these greenhouses used a radiant heat like system of pipes that could be used to moderate the temperature of the greenhouse. I was told that this idea comes from the Dutch. I was pretty impressed with this although he admitted that it only up one percent of the greenhouses.
The second greenhouse was the most typical of the tree. Its only ventilation came from the screen windows surrounding the greenhouse. The water system was not recycled but was drip irrigation. This greenhouse used the most common "Sand Plot" technique for soil. This consist of the regular ground, a layer of clay, fertilizer, and then finally sand. He said that this is the most traditional and most widely used form of greenhouse agriculture. Why? Because the other system cost a lot of money and only a smaller profit benefit...some farmers do not see the benefit even if it better for people and the environment. During this visit I got to meet the owner of the greenhouse who was picking his zucchini with three of his Moroccan workers. Turned out that the majority of the greenhouses are owned by multiple families and it goes generation to generation....I could explain more but I will save that for the thesis.
Ok so finally we went to a kind of "in-between" the other two greenhouses. The water was not recycled, heavy chemical use, but instead of the sand plot technique they used recycled coco mulch to grow the tomatoes in. The owner of this greenhouse was a short, stocky man, very friendly, and very socialist (this I found out later but I had kind of guessed it). He and his wife (woman as he called her) were picking tomatoes when we arrived without the help of any workers. What soon exploded was a flurry of Spanish in which I picked up only a few words. Enough to realize that it was a discussion on politics.....I wish I would have recorded it because it was a great example of Spanish people just talking about politics. I wish we in the USA had similar conversations. We said are goodbyes, drove past the "bad" vegetable recycling center where veggies not sent to France, Germany, England, or pick your rich northern European country are recycled into fertilizer and used in the sand plots.
He gave me a ride back to the bus station and we said our goodbyes and I thanked him for being such a nice host. He said that if I could not understand any of the interview to just call him and that he would Two other interesting figures:
1) 22,000 hectors of greenhouses in the Campo de Dalias and 10,000 in the Campo near Almeria
This means Almeria has the highest number of greenhouses and largest concentration of greenhouses in the world.
2) The seed company and nursery are both locally owned and do not make genetically modified seeds.
The Bad (at least from visually seeing the greenhouses and understanding the bit of Spanish that I do)
The plants that do not recycle their water, i.e. the majority, are also the greenhouses that use the highest amounts of chemicals. The problem arises that since there is no drainage system the only place for the chemical to drain is into the earth, then the water (both drinking and AG water), and then back onto the plants via the drip irrigation. This could be the case why my roommates tell me that Almeria has one of the higher parentages of children with genetic disorders (like MS, autism, etc.). But this is only putting this together and not scientific proof.

Paz y Amor
Ty
Iraq: Was the US Occupation Deliberately Fucked Up?
by max blunt
It's the Oil Reserves, Stupid
Iraq is ‘unwinnable’, a ‘quagmire’, a ‘fiasco’: so goes the received opinion. But there is good reason to think that, from the Bush-Cheney perspective, it is none of these things.

Indeed, the US may be ‘stuck’ precisely where Bush et al want it to be, which is why there is no ‘exit strategy’.

Iraq has 115 billion barrels of known oil reserves. That is more than five times the total in the United States. And, because of its long isolation, it is the least explored of the world’s oil-rich nations.

A mere two thousand wells have been drilled across the entire country; in Texas alone there are a million.
It has been estimated, by the Council on Foreign Relations, that Iraq may have a further 220 billion barrels of undiscovered oil; another study puts the figure at 300 billion.
LINK
On the Eve of Destruction
By Scott Ritter

Don’t worry, the White House is telling us. The world’s most powerful leader was simply making a rhetorical point. At a White House press conference last week, just in case you haven’t heard, President Bush informed the American people that he had told world leaders “if you’re interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing [Iran] from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon.” World War III. That is certainly some rhetorical point, especially coming from the man singularly most capable of making such an event reality.

Pundits have raised their eyebrows and comics are busy writing jokes, but the president’s reference to Armageddon, no matter how cavalierly uttered and subsequently brushed away, suggests an alarming context. Some might note that the comment was simply an offhand response to a reporter’s question, the kind of free-thinking scenario that baffles Bush so. In a way, this makes what the president said even more disturbing, since we now have an insight into the vision, and related terminology, which hovers just below the horizon in the brain of George W. Bush.
LINK
(Have to keep the people from wanting to take action....this seems like the step of a government who knows that they are wrong. The sad thing is that our congress does not do anything about it. What has happened?)
Some 60 demonstrators arrested outside U.S. Capitol
22 Oct 2007 15:07:48 GMT
Source: Reuters
WASHINGTON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - About 60 peaceful demonstrators, including several dressed as polar bears, were arrested outside the U.S. Capitol on Monday protesting the Iraq war and global warming, authorities said.
"People are being arrested out here because you (Congress) are not doing your job," antiwar activist Ann Wright shouted into a bullhorn.

Demonstrators were arrested on charges of unlawful assembly and blocking entrances to the Capitol, which was ringed by members of the U.S. Capitol Police.

Sgt. Kimberly Schneider, a police spokeswoman, said, "We've had about 60 arrests." She said she had received no reports of violence LINK

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Weekend Report

I think this weekend, well actually since Wednesday, has been a little too much fun. It just goes to show you what a girl can do to someone. Wednesday night I, the two American, and one Italian girl went out for what was originally just a mellow Tapas excursion into the city. Somehow one of us came up with the idea of going to a nearby "Rock" (more swinging oldies) bar that they had wanted to show me. What then showed its self was a night of gluttony, like hoards returning from battle to celebrate are victories. I had been really attracted to one of the girls for some time (well generally since I first lay eyes on her) but had not made a "move" because of the tension that I figured would emerge with another one of the girls.
It turned out or at least I think it did that the girl liked me as well. Well a problem that I seem to always have with a girl I like is I start not thinking in common sense and instead I am transformed into a savage barbarian doff, the only thing on my mind is the girl and all else seems to just zip past my ears at light speed. Thursday night was thankfully pretty chill and in reflection I am glad because the weekend was much more then I wanted.
Friday night we went (Two girls and the German boyfriend number II) to the museum about 30 min before it closed. Actually it was a pretty impressive museum with a lot of interactive panel boards that are in Spanish and English. After the museum we came over to my house to have a few drinks and visit because my apartment is near the museum. We agreed that we would meet at La Cueva (A rock bar we were told was very cool) at sometime past midnight. Once they left my timid roommates creped out of their room to visit with me. It turned out they were going to La Cueva as well, so I went with them at 1130.
What a relief to actually go to a bar with good music....two stories with the top being the better of the two all night but Saturday, because of better music. A shitty DJ was rolling away on the turntables like he was newborn baby trying to put together a rubrics cube. I hung out with my Spanish friends for about an hour before the two girls showed up. The night was pretty fun and we even saw our Professora with her boyfriend. Funny that just that morning she was in the hospital for test and the same night having a good time at the bar.
We finished up at 330 and headed out in search of another bar (Me, two girls and the German guy). One of the girls did not want to continue into the darkness of the night so she headed back home with the German following after her. Turns out that she does not really like him anymore but cant tell him straight up....kind of sucks, I would much rather be told then played with. So we walked into a few bars only to walk right back out and then just walked around chatting until 430 or so.
Saturday was not much better. After sleeping late because of the 5am bed time, I went down to the beach to read my book and enjoy the beautiful day. After a couple of hours I ran into my roommates getting some lunch on the beach so I stopped to have a drink with them. They told me that tonight (Saturday) there was a very famous flamenco singer. My friend and I had been invited on Wednesday night by my roommate’s friends to get into the concert for free because her mom worked at the place. Flash forward to about 830 (concert at 10), my roommates are watching a movie when all of a sudden they get up and say I am I ready to go to the concert because we have to be there at exactly 845. I attempt to be ready but on the way I realize I still have to pick up my friend.....so I get dropped off and attempt to get the friend with time to spare but it was just to limited of a window. Another odd way of doing things here in Spain. O well, in reflection I should have gone but instead I went for the girl.
Sushi for dinner with the two friends, back to La Cueva to watch a blues concert. This time downstairs at the same bar, a great local blues band rocked out until 230am. It was a great time until the Germans arrived and then I got distracted from the good music. I stayed out until 540am that night. It was not such for the enjoyment of the night but more what a girl can do to your mind. In the end I do not know if I am being played with or what the case is but I cannot do the late night thing again. It is just not worth it....or maybe it is, for now I have to remember THESIS THESIS not fiesta, fiesta!!

Peace and Love
Ty

Friday, October 19, 2007

Let the rain kiss you. Let the rain beat upon your head with silver liquid drops. Let the rain sing you a lullaby. ~Langston Hughes

So today in this arid sun parched land the rain continues to beat down. It started yesterday at about 8pm or so and has not let up since now 2pm. It seems like such a odd sight when you have put so much energy into writing a thesis about the lack of water in a region with little. I even checked out the averages for this time of the year and at most for October its 1 inch. I think they exceeded this in the current storm so it’s either climate change or just a fluke storm.
To make things more interesting, I received a text message (sms) last night at 11pm from my profesora. She had been feeling bad in class today and this message was to let me know that we had no class today because she had to go the hospital for test. Hopefully she is ok. So I slept and slept well, like a bear hibernating wrapped in my blankets, blinds shut, thunder rumbling in the distance, rain popping on the roof like fairies dancing on the rooftops. 10 hours later I finally decided that I should probably come out my comfort and into the world. Of course it was raining so my options on what to do where immediately limited to a grain.
So I wrote 11 postcards...made my way through the flooded streets to the post office, and then went for one of my wandering walks to nowhere. On this one I went into a CD shop trying to find a Spanish musician I enjoy only for him to look at me like some unique species from another universe speaking in a unknown and undistinguishable form of tongue. SO I said adios and got out of there. Stopped for bottles of water and then back to the casa

Thats my day thus far
Paz and Love
Ty

Thursday, October 18, 2007

( A list of some of my favorite quotes)
Even society as a whole, a nation, or all existing societies put together, are not owners of the Earth. They are merely its occupants, its users; and like good caretakers, they must hand it down improved to subsequent generations.
-Marx, Capital, Vol I

The rich are tolerable only so long as their gains appear to bear some relation to roughly what they have contributed to society. John Maynard Keynes

"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds"
- Einstein

When men yield up the privilege of thinking, the last shadow of liberty quits the horizon. -----Thomas Paine----

"Only two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, and I am not sure about the former." - Albert Einstein

"The only thing for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing"
----- Edmund Burke


Master the toughest opponent you face in achieving your goal......Your Own State of Mind!
- Charles Austin, So High Sports & Fitness

All that we see or seem, Is but a dream within a dream.
Edgar Allan Poe

When the power of love is greater then love of power the world will know peace...anonymous

There are few things in life that are not only good for you both physically and spiritually, but can also bring you great joy and pleasure. Hiking is one of them.

The World is divided into armed camps ready to commit genocide just because we can't agree on whose fairy tales to believe.
In the end, Religion will kill us all.
-- Ed Krebs

As nightfall does not come all at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And it is in such a twilight that we all must be aware of change in the air-however slight-lest we become unwilling victims of the darkness. ~Justice William O. Douglas

euskara edozen txoriri eder bere kabia....every bird thinks its own nest is the best...Basque saying

Tomorrow when I die, do not come to me to cry, nor look for me in the ground, I am the wind of freedom. Ernesto Che Guevara

He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.
Nietzsche

...I have seen that we do not intend to free, but to subjugate the people.... We have gone there to conquer, not to to redeem...I am opposed to having the eagle put its talons on any other land. --Mark Twain (talking about occupation of Philippins)

A regime which provides human beigns no deep reasons to care about one another cannot long preserve its legitimacy. -- Sennett

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

A short midweek update...

Well class the last two days has been better than before but still frustrating. But I got some good advice on how to combat frustration when you may be trying to force something upon yourself that you can’t handle. So although I am not going to not take class seriously, I need to just lighten up, go with the flow like a coconut in the ocean and just float along picking up what I can along the ride.
Just a bit ago I made my first contact for a interview!!! The women, Lola, is the owner (daughter of owner but runs it now), of the greenhouse I toured this summer on my previous excursion into the unknown. She was great on the phone and said that as long as I try to speak Spanish, she can answer in English. SO luckily I have the interview questions translated all ready. I figure November will be my month of interviews and thesis information with a few other things thrown in the buffet to stay sane.
Ok so a quick story on another way the Andalucians are very into being.....do it later, take your time, etc etc. So I wanted to sign up for a rock-climbing and scuba diving course that the University offers because those are two things I really want to know how to do. More rock-climbing (escalado) then scuba (buceo). So I went to the deportes (US equivalent of intramural office) to attempt to sign up using my great hand gestures and broken Spanish. Like usual, hand gestures and a good smile worked....well kind of.
I was told that I need to go to a tent that was set up in the middle of the quad where a special booth was located where I could sign up. So I made my way over there. Once there I was told that I needed to go to the on campus bank to pay the 10 Euros necessary for a full year of intramural usage. So after waiting 20 minutes in line at the back, I went back to pick up my t shirt and....I thought sign up for the climbing and scuba. But the women had run out of forms for me to sign, or did not understand me, one or the other. I waited about ten minutes, cause I thought that is what she told me to do...eventually the crowd of swarming students overtook my metal stability and I biked away into the sun....hoping that tomorrow would bring better luck. Maybe the Spanish language ferry will visit me tonight!!! haha!
Current events wise: Two things of importance....of too many to list...1) Turkey moving into northern Iraq and the impacts that will have on the all ready torn country (thanks to us), 2) Will we really take aggressive action on Iran. If we do and people do not get out in the streets in MASS!!!! Then all really is completely lost! It may not happen but....things are already bad and with Hillary the primary democratic candidate, hell who knows what will happen. I wish Dennis Kucinich really had a chance in our country!!!! He will get my vote either way unless some other candidate arises with a similar conscience and government standards!!

Peace and Love
Ty
(I think we should putting more energy into devloping different things then devices used to spy on the citizens....what do you think!!!)
Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs.

By Rick Weiss

Vanessa Alarcon saw them while working at an antiwar rally in Lafayette Square last month.

"I heard someone say, 'Oh my god, look at those,' " the college senior from New York recalled. "I look up and I'm like, 'What the hell is that?' They looked kind of like dragonflies or little helicopters. But I mean, those are not insects."
Out in the crowd, Bernard Crane saw them, too.

"I'd never seen anything like it in my life," the Washington lawyer said. "They were large for dragonflies. I thought, 'Is that mechanical, or is that alive?'

That is just one of the questions hovering over a handful of similar sightings at political events in Washington and New York. Some suspect the insectlike drones are high-tech surveillance tools, perhaps deployed by the Department of Homeland Security.

Others think they are, well, dragonflies -- an ancient order of insects that even biologists concede look about as robotic as a living creature can look.
LINK

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Nemesis: The World Reacts to American Arrogance
by max blunt
Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic
In another “wake-up call for America,” Chalmers Johnson confronts the overreaching of the U.S. empire and the threat it poses to the republic.

In his prophetic book Blowback, Chalmers Johnson linked the CIA’s clandestine activities abroad to disaster at home.

In The Sorrows of Empire, he explored how the growth of American militarism and the garrisoning of the planet have actually jeopardized our safety.

Now, in Nemesis, the final volume in what has become the Blowback trilogy, he shows how imperial overstretch is undermining the republic itself, both economically and politically.

Delving into new areas -- from plans to militarize outer space to Constitution-breaking presidential activities at home -- Nemesis offers a striking description of the trap into which the grandiose dreams of America’s leaders have taken us.
LINK