the cat killer cashes out

This comes from Business Week:

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a potential presidential candidate in 2008, sold all his stock in his family’s hospital corporation about two weeks before it issued a disappointing earnings report and the price fell nearly 15 percent.

Frist held an undisclosed amount of stock in Hospital Corporation of America, based in Nashville, Tenn., the nation’s largest for-profit hospital chain. On June 13, he instructed the trustee managing the assets to sell his HCA shares and those of his wife and children, said Amy Call, a spokeswoman for Frist.

Frist, for those of you who don’t know, was also in the practice of adopting cats from the Humane Society when he was younger, for the purpose of killing and experimenting on them… And, it’s also worth noting, when he’s not torturing animals or profiting for insider trading, he’s a leader of the so-called “Christian values” movement.

Posted in Politics | 11 Comments

detroit, the next new orleans

A clip from the website of James Kunstler, the author of, “The Long Emergency.” (Thanks, Laurie.)

Take a good look at America around you now, because when we emerge from the winter of 2005 – 6, we’re going to be another country. The reality-oblivious nation of mall hounds, bargain shoppers, happy motorists, Nascar fans, Red State war hawks, and born-again Krispy Kremers is headed into a werewolf-like transformation that will reveal to all the tragic monster we have become.

What we will leave behind is the certainty that we have made the right choices. Was it a good thing to buy a 3,600 square foot house 32 miles outside Minneapolis with an interest-only adjustable rate mortgage — with natural gas for home heating running at $12 a unit and gasoline over $3 a gallon? Was it the right choice to run three credit cards up to their $5000 limit? Was I chump to think my pension from Acme Airlines would really be there for me? Do I really owe the Middletown Hospital $17,678 for a gall bladder operation that took forty-five minutes? And why did they charge me $238 for a plastic catheter?

All kinds of assumptions about the okay-ness of our recent collective behavior are headed out the window. This naturally beats a straight path to politics, since that is the theater in which our collective choices are dramatized. It really won’t take another jolting event like a major hurricane or a terror incident or an H4N5 flu outbreak to take things over the edge — though it is very likely that something else will happen. George W. Bush, and the party he represents, are headed into full Hooverization mode. After Katrina, nobody will take claims of governmental competence seriously…

On a somewhat related note, I just read in the Detroit News today that GM is “enthusiastic” about their line of 12 new, full-size SUVs…. I may have implied as much before, but now I’ll just come right out and say it — like New Orleans, it might just be time for Detroit to fade away… We had a hundred year headstart and we fucked it up. In my estimation, that’s just as stupid as building a city beneath water level… Here’s a clip from the article:

But by betting big on a redesigned fleet of 12 full-size SUVs, including the Chevrolet Tahoe and Cadillac Escalade, GM is trying to buck a consumer shift toward smaller, more fuel-efficient cars and crossover vehicles.

Rising gas prices have hit the large SUV segment hard this year, with U.S. sales down 11 percent through August. Yet GM, the biggest player in the full-size SUV market, expressed confidence that its new lineup will invigorate a segment that has been steadily shrinking.

“It may contract, but it’s not going away,” said Mark LaNeve, GM’s head of sales and marketing. “This is a very large, very important and very profitable market.”

GM deserves its fate… We all do.

Posted in Observations | 13 Comments

pissing on those below you

Regardless of whether you agree with Kanye West that Bush doesn’t like black people, and suspect that might have something to do with the less than acceptable response from the federal government to the situation in New Orleans, I think it’s hard to deny that race played a part in what we all saw unfolding there. Those individuals more likely to have been “left behind” to take the brunt of the storm weren’t the people with cars and access to money for hotel rooms, they were the predominantly black residents of New Orleans’ poorer wards… The good thing about Katrina, if it can be said that anything good could come of such a thing, is that the questions of race in America has been swept back out from under the rug, at least temporarily. With this in mind, I have a few links to leave you with tonight.

The first is to the new issue of Harpers, which has an article in it on the de-facto segregation in America’s schools today. The article’s entitled, “Still Separate, Still Unequal: America’s Educational Apartheid,” and it’s well worth a read.

And, while we’re on the subject of race, I wanted to share a little piece of distressing news from right here in Washtenaw County. According to the University of Michigan student paper, two undergraduates may face charges in a racially motivated felony. Here’s a clip:

The Ann Arbor Police Department has issued warrants for two University students for allegedly yelling obscenities and urinating on two students in a racially motivated act.

The incident began when one of the suspects, a 21-year-old, allegedly urinated from a second-floor balcony on two Asian students walking down the 600 block of South Forest Avenue Thursday night.

After the couple asked why they were being urinated on, the suspect and another student reportedly began to use racial slurs disparaging the couple’s Asian heritage…

Having just read the Metafilter discussion on racism in the wake of Hurricane, it makes me wonder if perhaps the two things might be connected in some way. Instead of making us face the situation and think about issues of race and inequality in America, is it possible that the experience of Katrina is going to drive us all further apart form one another?

With that in mind, here’s a clip from a mass-distribution chain letter that was forwarded to me by a reader named Kathleen.

…But this is not a natural disaster. It is a man-made disaster.

The man-made disaster is not an inadequate or incompetent response by federal relief agencies, and it was not directly caused by Hurricane Katrina. This is where just about every newspaper and television channel has gotten the story wrong.

The man-made disaster we are now witnessing in New Orleans did not happen over the past four days. It happened over the past four decades. Hurricane Katrina merely exposed it to public view.

The man-made disaster is the welfare state.

For the past few days, I have found the news from New Orleans to be confusing. People were not behaving as you would expect them to behave in an emergency–indeed, they were not behaving as they have behaved in other emergencies. That is what has shocked so many people: they have been saying that this is not what we expect from America. In fact, it is not even what we expect from a Third World country.

No, it couldn’t be the failure of our educational system, and the fact that very few born into poverty are able to escape it… It’s that we’ve been too generous with “the blacks.”

I suspect that we’ll be hearing that a lot in the months to come.

Posted in Observations | 2 Comments

dumbed-down, tarted-up, and not really free: the story of the press in america

Following are a few clips from an article on Dan Rather’s recent speech at Fordham University in New York:

…occasionally forcing back tears, he said that in the intervening years, politicians “of every persuasion” had gotten better at applying pressure on the conglomerates that own the broadcast networks. He called it a “new journalism order.”

He said this pressure — along with the “dumbed-down, tarted-up” coverage, the advent of 24-hour cable competition and the chase for ratings and demographics — has taken its toll on the news business. “All of this creates a bigger atmosphere of fear in newsrooms,” Rather said…

Nevin asked Rather if he felt the same type of repressive forces in the Nixon administration as in the current Bush administration.

“No, I do not,” Rather said. That’s not to say there weren’t forces trying to remove him from the White House beat while reporting on Watergate; but Rather said he felt supported by everyone above him, from Washington bureau chief Bill Small to then-news president Dick Salant and CBS chief William S. Paley.

“There was a connection between the leadership and the led . . . a sense of, ‘we’re in this together,”‘ Rather said. It’s not that the then-leadership of CBS wasn’t interested in shareholder value and profits, Rather said, but they also saw news as a public service.

Nothing new, I know, but I didn’t think it would hurt to repeat it.

And, here, while we’re on the subject, is a brief clip from an article that ran a few days ago in the LA Weekly:

If big media look like they’re propping up W’s presidency, they are. Because doing so is good for corporate coffers — in the form of government contracts, billion-dollar tax breaks, regulatory relaxations and security favors. At least that wily old codger Sumner Redstone, head of Viacom, parent company of CBS, has admitted what everyone already knows is true: that, while he personally may be a Democrat, “It happens that I vote for Viacom. Viacom is my life, and I do believe that a Republican administration is better for media companies than a Democratic one.”

And what conversation about media would be complete without at least a passing mention of that fact that almost all if it is controlled by six extremely large international corporations.

So, the question now is, will our journalists keep the tiny balls they seem to have sprouted in New Orleans? And just how far can they push things before their support dries up at the corporate level? I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.

Posted in Media | 3 Comments

dirty bombs and magazines: choosing our priorities

A few weeks ago, when I first heard the rumor that the Justice Department, under the leadership of Alberto Gonzalez, would be focusing their attention on pornography, I didn’t think it could possibly be true, not with the threat of terrorism here at home, the corporate scandals, the war profiteering, and everything else we have going on right now. Apparently, however, it was true. Here’s a clip from today’s Washington Post:

The FBI is joining the Bush administration’s War on Porn…

Early last month, the bureau’s Washington Field Office began recruiting for a new anti-obscenity squad. Attached to the job posting was a July 29 Electronic Communication from FBI headquarters to all 56 field offices, describing the initiative as “one of the top priorities” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and, by extension, of “the Director.” That would be FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III…

The new squad will divert eight agents, a supervisor and assorted support staff to gather evidence against “manufacturers and purveyors” of pornography — not the kind exploiting children, but the kind that depicts, and is marketed to, consenting adults.

“I guess this means we’ve won the war on terror,” said one exasperated FBI agent, speaking on the condition of anonymity because poking fun at headquarters is not regarded as career-enhancing. “We must not need any more resources for espionage.”

I don’t know about you, but it would kind of piss me off if I lost friends or family members in a biological or nuclear attack, knowing that we’d kept teams of agents off the streets so that they could count the number of times that men on video ejaculated in or around the orifices of other consenting adults.

I bet you’re wondering what else our nation’s number one law-man has on his agenda… Well, it looks like when he’s not sniffing out acts of consensual sex, he’ll be fighting to “overturn a federal court ruling that the Pledge of Allegiance can’t be recited in public schools because it contains a reference to God.”

Anything to keep the evangelical base happy, even if it costs the lives of Americans, right? The important thing is that our children be forced to accept God, and that we aren’t allowed to see pictures of weiners rubbing up against butts.

Posted in Church and State | 3 Comments

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