U.S. Corporations Aren’t Disclosing Biological Warfare Research Work
A number of major pharmaceutical corporations and biotech firms are concealing the nature of the biological warfare research work they are doing for the U.S. government.
How do you pay for your education?
Graduating with a college degree is more than ever a necessity today. Students and their families are doing whatever it takes to pay for higher education, including taking on excessive amounts of debt.
Kucinich Comes to Take Back America
Kucinich opened with the need to cut off the money. He proposed simply not offering any more bills to fund the war. Kucinich won huge applause as he shouted about the troops coming home, the bases being closed, the oil being left to the Iraqi people.
Atlanta: City Council Nixes Free Speech Zone Ordinance
The Atlanta City Council voted unanimously Monday to file an ordinance creating free speech zones, essentially killing the legislation.
Two Judges Tear Down Bush's Wall!
The Iraqi government isn't meeting their benchmarks (conditional demands that Iraq must meet in order to receive US funds to repair their US battered land) and President Bush isn't getting good response from the appellate bench in Richmond, VA either.
Republican Presidential Hopefuls Are Just Lil' Bushes
The Republican presidential candidates are a pretty incoherent, hateful, confused, and sometimes paranoid bunch of nincompoops. But they have made one thing clear: vote for them and the war in Iraq will go on and on and on.
A Dying Wish to Governor Spitzer
On June 21, 2007 the New York State legislative session is expected to end without any reform of the Rockefeller Drug Laws. To most people it will not mean much. But to Veronica Flournoy it will.
Canada: Labor welcomes Supreme Court ruling
Catching everyone by surprise, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled on June 8 that sections of Bill 29, the Health and Social Services Delivery Improvement Act passed by the Campbell Liberal government in 2002, violate the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
War Foretold: Mark Twain and the Sins of Our Race
When I resorted to Mark Twain’s writings I attempted to escape, at least temporarily from my often distressing readings on war, politics and terror. But his “The Mysterious Stranger”, although published 1916, still left me with an eerie feel.
Bush's Search for Affection
Albania was really the only place where Bush got any affection; to such an extent that the reception in Bulgaria where several thousand people awaited him waving little American flags seemed cool to him.