Showing posts with label Nation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nation. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Meet Earth"s Martians! | YouTube Nation | Tuesday

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Meet Earth"s Martians! | YouTube Nation | Tuesday

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

NSA records all calls in targeted foreign nation: report



WASHINGTON Tue Mar 18, 2014 2:48pm EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. National Security Agency has created a surveillance system that can record all phone calls in a targeted foreign nation, allowing it to play back and listen to conversations up to 30 days later, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday.


The newspaper cited unnamed sources with direct knowledge of the system as well as documents supplied by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, who since last year has leaked extensive data revealing sweeping American spying activities.


The voice interception program is known as MYSTIC and started in 2009, with its “retrospective retrieval” capability, called RETRO, reaching full strength in 2011 against the first target nation, the Post reported.


The newspaper said that at the request of U.S. officials, it was withholding details that could be used to identify the nation where the system is being used or others where it might be used in the future. The Post cited documents that envisioned similar U.S. spying operations in other nations.


A classified summary of the system said the collection effort was recording “every single” conversation nationwide in the first target country, storing billions of conversations in a 30-day rolling buffer that clears out the oldest calls as new ones are made, the Post reported.


A senior manager for the program likened it to a time machine that can replay voices from any phone call without the need to identify a person for spying in advance, the newspaper reported.


The Post said that no other disclosed NSA program captures a nation’s telephone network in its entirety.


Current and former U.S. officials quoted anonymously by the Post said large numbers of conversations involving Americans would be gathered using the system.


White House spokesman Jay Carney, at his regular news briefing on Tuesday, sidestepped a question about the Post article, saying that “we don’t, as a general rule, comment on every specific allegation or report.”


“We make clear what activity the NSA and … our intelligence community engages in, and the fact that they are bound by our laws and the oversight of three branches of government,” Carney told reporters.


Carney also noted that President Barack Obama announced a series of steps in January to “significantly reform our activity.


Obama on January 17 began reining in the vast collection of Americans’ phone data and banned U.S. eavesdropping on the leaders of close allies in a series of limited reforms triggered by the revelations from numerous documents leaked by Snowden.


In a statement published by the Post, White House National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden refused to comment on “specific alleged intelligence activities.”


But Hayden said “new or emerging threats” are “often hidden within the large and complex system of modern global communications, and the United States must consequently collect signals intelligence in bulk in certain circumstances in order to identify these threats,” the Post reported.


NSA spokeswoman Vanee Vines told the Post that “continuous and selective reporting of specific techniques and tools used for legitimate U.S. foreign intelligence activities is highly detrimental to the national security of the United States and of our allies, and places at risk those we are sworn to protect.”


Snowden last year fled to Hong Kong and then to Russia, where he has asylum. The United States wants him returned to face criminal prosecution.


(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Richard Chang)






Reuters: Politics



NSA records all calls in targeted foreign nation: report

Thursday, March 6, 2014

What Country Should Crimea Be Part Of? Reflections on Nation Building and US Hypocrisy

What Country Should Crimea Be Part Of? Reflections on Nation Building and US Hypocrisy
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjA-P_lShMUYlIO0LKzHPKwBEG7EBA7-5T8TsvYAYyZnKCJmVOYQgFdMYQXIxAh8siYt4XzI7akH9woxsjNUPax4HsMx5yAPSwIEtenP4Pj6kI_ctSDHwi2MnIVgSLXUr0Mrk_fxgsJq5c/s400/Kurdistan.png

An up or down vote on whether Crimea stays with Ukraine or joins Russia is slated for March 16, just 10 days from now.


Please consider Crimea Votes to Join Russia, Accelerating Ukraine Crisis.

Crimea’s parliament voted to join Russia on Thursday and its Moscow-backed government set a referendum on the decision in 10 days’ time in a dramatic escalation of the crisis over the Ukrainian Black Sea peninsula.

The vice premier of Crimea, home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol, said a referendum on the status would take place on March 16. All state property would be “nationalized”, the Russian ruble adopted and Ukrainian troops treated as occupiers and forced to surrender or leave, he said.


Historical Background


Let’s take a look at the historical and political references as noted by the Financial Times.

“Crimea was, is and will be an integral part of Ukraine,” said Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Ukraine prime minister. Speaking in Brussels, he said the referendum had “no legal grounds” and urged the Russian government not to support those advocating separatism in Ukraine.

Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s acting president, said Crimea’s referendum would be banned, its parliament disbanded and snap elections held.


Crimea has been a bone of contention between Moscow and Kiev ever since Nikita Krushchev gave it to Ukraine in February 1954, in a move to mark the 300th anniversary of the 1654 treaty that unified Ukraine and Russia.


In 1992, Crimea’s parliament voted to declare the region independent of Ukraine and scheduled a referendum to confirm the vote. But after pressure from Kiev, lawmakers backtracked, announcing the peninsula was part of Ukraine.


What Country Should Crimea Belong To?


Like it or not, it’s pretty clear that in recent history Crimea was not part of Ukraine. Rather Crimea became part of Ukraine without a vote. In 1992 it almost left Ukraine, but the Crimea parliament was talked out of a vote.


What country should Crimea be part of? Should it be its own country? And should the people decide, or politicians?


U.S. Hypocrisy


Somehow it’s OK for the U.S. to send troops to Iraq and Afghanistan half a world away, supposedly to protect U.S. interests, but it’s not OK for Russia to protect its interests at its own doorstep.


Two wrongs don’t make a right, I simply want to note the hypocritical nature of U.S. statements on the matter.


In general, I don’t condone military actions. Nor do I condone Russia’s military actions now. That said, Russia at least has genuine political interest in its actions.


The U.S. had zero business in Iraq and there is certainly no justification for ongoing U.S. troops in Afghanistan for the last 10 years.


Rule of Votes


Politicians don’t want votes unless the vote is going their way.


That Crimea’s parliament is willing to hold a vote is a strong indication of which way the vote will go.


Reflections on Nation Building


No matter how the Crimea vote goes, there is going to be a significant number of people who will despise the outcome.


This is precisely what is guaranteed to happen when politicians merge regions into countries for political reasons.


Iraq was once three distinct countries. Wikipedia offers these notes on Iraq History.


Following WWI … “Britain imposed a Hāshimite monarchy on Iraq and defined the territorial limits of Iraq without taking into account the politics of the different ethnic and religious groups in the country, in particular those of the Kurds and the Assyrians to the north. During the British occupation, the Shi’ites and Kurds fought for independence.


Iraq achieved independence in 1932. Then came multiple coups, two US invasions, religious wars, and ethnic battles that continue to this day.


The Kurds want their own country. They once had it. Here is a Map of Kurdistan.



Turkey and Iraq are both involved in the Kurdish mess.  Kurdistan once overlapped part of Turkey and part of Iraq. The Kurds now want their own independent area of Iraq. Turkey does not want that to happen fearing it will unite Kurdish sentiment in Turkey.


Historically speaking, no good ever came from the “nation building” political exercise of forcing together widely different ethnic and religious groups into a single country.


Why should it be any different this time?


So let me ask again: What country should Crimea belong to and who should decide?


Whatever you answer, the U.S. should stay out of this mess. It’s not our battle, and sending missiles to the Czech Republic as part of the solution as McCain proposes is decidedly preposterous.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis




Read more about What Country Should Crimea Be Part Of? Reflections on Nation Building and US Hypocrisy and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, February 23, 2014

"Face The Nation" Panel Forecasts 2014, 2016 Elections



Amy Walter, Dan Balz, Jonathan Martin, and CBS News’ John Dickerson discuss the upcoming midterm election and offer some early thoughts on the 2016 presidential race.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



"Face The Nation" Panel Forecasts 2014, 2016 Elections

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

AM TV Commentary - SCANDAL: Michelle Obama Divorce Rumours Threaten Nation

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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AM TV Commentary - SCANDAL: Michelle Obama Divorce Rumours Threaten Nation

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Colorado Boy Asks Nation Not To Find His Missing Little Brother



Subscribe to The Onion on YouTube: http://bit.ly/xzrBUA The Onion News Network’s Karen Christopher takes you Beyond The Facts, ripping open the chest of news…



Colorado Boy Asks Nation Not To Find His Missing Little Brother

Monday, November 25, 2013

Obama "One Nation Under God" Controversy


“President Obama’s recitation of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address is sparking hysteria from the right-wing media who slammed the president for omitting the phras…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Obama "One Nation Under God" Controversy

Friday, November 22, 2013

Nation pauses to remember JFK assassination

Nation pauses to remember JFK assassination
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(CNN) – Five decades after it served as the backdrop for a nation’s grief and disbelief, Dallas’ Dealey Plaza took center stage once again Friday as Americans commemorated the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination.


“A new era dawned and another waned a half century ago when hope and hatred collided right here in Dallas,” Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said in his remarks commemorating Kennedy’s death.


Some 5,000 invited guests were expected to attend the commemorative events, which began Friday afternoon with bagpipers — a JFK favorite — under a spitting gray sky.




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Read more about Nation pauses to remember JFK assassination and other interesting subjects concerning Top Stories at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Jim Rogers: US is exceptional…it’s largest debt nation in the world!


RT
October 15, 2013


There may be progress in US over the government shutdown and debt ceiling, but it’s not all good. The deal being talked about now wouldn’t resolve the crisis – but rather kick the can down the road setting the scene for another budget showdown early next year. For more on this RT talks to investor Jim Rogers, author of ‘Street Smarts – Adventures on the Road and in the Markets’.


This article was posted: Tuesday, October 15, 2013 at 10:59 am









Prison Planet.com



Jim Rogers: US is exceptional…it’s largest debt nation in the world!

Friday, October 11, 2013

Race-Baiting Oneida Nation Leader Has Problems of His Own


The so-called representative of New York’s Oneida Indian Nation, Ray Halbritter, is a hard-left Democrat who has lined his own pockets inciting racial animosity, much like Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson. The man behind the media-hyped attack on Dan Snyder’s Washington Redskins enlisted his Harvard Law School colleague Barack Obama to add his two cents. The Oneida Indian and Obama are well acquainted.


In 2012, Halbritter helped raise millions to get Obama reelected. In a sign of burgeoning political clout,70 Indian officials including Halbritter attended a first-ever Native-American campaign fund-raiser with President Barack Obama in Washington, D.C. on January 27. After donors shelled out a maximum $ 35,800 for a meet-and-greet, Obama promised to “stick by” the Indian leaders if they stuck by him.


The casino-rich tribes are few in number compared to the overall number of Indian nations, which prompted Halbritter to comment on the unfair American campaign finance system.


It’s not what some people would like–that only people who can afford it have access. It’s a notion we all dislike; however, how to change [the system] is a good question.



In fact, Halbritter admitted he went to Harvard because he was frustrated with the limits of tribal politics. He wanted  to be a part of the white man’s system, “an exclusive club” he called it. “I wanted to sort of break into the key of what motivated these people and these politicians and these judges…I wanted to get the education that, in my opinion, the most powerful people in America have had.”


In 1993, Mr. Halbritter negotiated a gaming compact for the Oneidas with New York Governor Mario Cuomo, and built the highly profitable Turning Stone Casino in central New York. Gas stations, luxury hotels, media outlets and textile factories would soon follow making Halbritter a very rich man. But Halbritter has faced harsh criticism from tribe members, including his own 71 year-old aunt, for his corporate style representation of the Oneida Indian Nation.


In the mid-1980s, wolf clan mother Maisie Shenandoah selected her nephew with two other men as representatives to the Grand Council of Chiefs  in the hopes of establishing a traditional form of governance. By the mid-1990s, Ray was the only one left on the Council, and in 2002, Maisie accused him ofoperating under self-assumed authority.


In 2003, the Oneida nation government led by Halbritter issued eviction orders for homes on Territory Road in Oneida. Among the evictees was Ray Halbritters Aunt Maisie and her daughter Diane Shenandoah.“The sad thing is that every one of the members of the Men’s Council, including Ray, has come to my mother for help over the years,” said Diane “She has never refused to help. For her to be treated like this is a disgrace. I am ashamed of each and every one of them.”


Halbritters hard line with his own people was evident early on. In a 1998 interview with Chief Executive.net he mingled tradition with the profit motive. 


In our culture, we’re supposed to keep in mind the effect whatever decisions we make now will have on the seventh generation to the future…at the same time I want to maximize revenue.



Halbritter explained that he’s a realist playing by the rules that were given to him. If he hasn’t doled out favors to tribe members, it’s because Natives must learn to adhere to the same requirements as non-Indians. Despite intense backlash, he filled key positions with non-tribe members. “This is not easy stuff to do,” he acknowledges. “But the rules have to be the same for everybody–my own son had to be fired.”


Halbritter actually has three sons, two of whom were arrested in April, 2012 by the New York State Department of Health Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement and the New York State Police in LaFayette. The charges were for third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, a class B felony; second-degree criminal possession of a forged instrument, a class D felony; and first- degree falsifying business records, a class E felony.


Predictably, Halbritter did not bring up his own childrens’ troubles or his failed marriages at the October 7 Name-Change symposium held at Georgetown’s Ritz Carlton. Instead, he blamed the Redskins mascot for injuring the collective psyches of all youngsters.


These mascots need to end because they are disparaging. As we saw today, there is scientific evidence that it damages not only Native children, but all children. That cannot go on anymore.



In spearheading this decades-old campaign against the Redskins, the Oneida Indian Nation representative and CEO of Nation Enterprises has opened the door for a real look at how the ruling class elites like himself and his pal Obama use people of color to amass power and wealth.




American Thinker Blog



Race-Baiting Oneida Nation Leader Has Problems of His Own

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Nation Demands New Photograph Of Edward Snowden



For More Breaking News: http://www.theonion.com/video A report confirms that many Iraqis are still holding a petty grudge about the U.S. invasion, an area ma…



Nation Demands New Photograph Of Edward Snowden

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Nation pauses on 9/11 to pay tribute to victims







A visitor walks through the “Empty Sky” memorial to New Jersey’s victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013, in Jersey City, N.J. One World Trade Center is visible across the Hudson River. Ceremonies will be held Wednesday to mark the 12th anniversary of the attacks. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)





A visitor walks through the “Empty Sky” memorial to New Jersey’s victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013, in Jersey City, N.J. One World Trade Center is visible across the Hudson River. Ceremonies will be held Wednesday to mark the 12th anniversary of the attacks. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)





President Barack Obama lowers his head during a moment of silence at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013, during a ceremony to mark the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo rides with firefighters and first responders with the FDNY Motorcycle Club Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013, from FDNY Rescue 1 headquarters to the World Trade Center site for the 12th anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks. The ride represented the firefighters who responded to the attacks on that day. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)





Four World Trade Center, center, stands next to One World Trade Center, left, in lower Manhattan, Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013 in New York. Ceremonies will be held Wednesday at the memorial to mark the 12th anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)





Daniel Henry, a Port Authority of New York/New Jersey police officer, pauses during a moment of silence at 9:01 a.m., at the south reflecting pool at the 9/11 Memorial, during ceremonies marking the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, in New York, Wednesday Sept. 11, 2013. (AP Photo/Stan Honda, Pool)













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(AP) — As bells tolled solemnly, Americans marked the 12th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on Wednesday with the reading of the names, moments of silence and serene music that have become tradition.


At a morning ceremony on the 2-year-old memorial plaza at the site of the World Trade Center, relatives recited the names of the nearly 3,000 people who died when hijacked jets crashed into the twin towers and the Pentagon and near Shanksville, Pa., as well as the 1993 trade center bombing victims’ names.


In Washington, President Barak Obama, joined by first lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and wife Jill Biden, and members of the White House staff, walked out to the South Lawn at 8:46 a.m. — the moment the first plane struck the south tower in New York. Another jetliner struck the Pentagon at 9:37 a.m.


“It is an honor to be with you here again to remember the tragedy of 12 Septembers ago, to honor the greatness of all who responded and to stand with those who still grieve and to provide them some measure of comfort once more,” Obama said. “Together we pause and we give humble thanks as families and as a nation.”


A moment of silence was also held at the U.S. Capitol.


At the site in lower Manhattan, friends and families silently held up photos of the deceased. Others wept.


“Twelve years is like 15 minutes,” said Clyde Frazier, whose son Clyde died in the attack and whose remains were never found. “Time stands still because you love your child, you love your son. … Nothing changes except he’s not here. It takes a toll on your body. You still look like you, but inside, you’re a real wreck.”


Bells tolled to mark the second plane hitting the second tower and the moments when the towers fell. Near the memorial plaza, police barricades were blocking access to the site, even as life around the World Trade Center looked like any other morning, with workers rushing to their jobs and construction cranes looming over the area.


“As time passes and our family grows, our children remind us of you,” Angilic Casalduc said of her mother, Vivian Casalduc. “We miss you.”


The anniversary arrived amid changes at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, where construction started Tuesday on a new visitor center. On Wednesday, the families of the passengers and crew aboard United Flight 93 recalled their loved ones as heroes for their unselfish and quick actions. The plane was hijacked with the likely goal of crashing it into the White House or Capitol, but passengers tried to overwhelm the attackers and the plane crashed into a field. All aboard died.


“In a period of 22 minutes, our loved ones made history,” said Gordon Felt, president of the Families of Flight 93, whose brother, Edward, was a passenger.


In New York, loved ones milled around the memorial site, making rubbings of names, putting flowers by the names of victims and weeping, arm-in-arm. Former Gov. George Pataki, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and others were in attendance. Continuing a decision made last year, no politicians will speak, including Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who was watching the ceremony for his final time in office.


Over his years as mayor and chairman of the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum, Bloomberg has sometimes tangled with victims’ relatives, religious leaders and other elected officials over an event steeped in symbolism and emotion. But his administration has largely succeeded at its goal of keeping the commemoration centered on the attacks’ victims and their families and relatively free of political image-making.


Memorial organizers expect to take primary responsibility for the ceremony next year and say they plan to continue concentrating the event on victims’ loved ones, even as the forthcoming museum creates a new, broader framework for remembering 9/11.


Douglas Hamatie, whose 31-year-old cousin Robert Horohoe worked for Cantor Fitzgerald and died on 9/11, said the day should become a national holiday.


“The kids today, they know when the next iPhone’s coming out, and they know when the next Justin Bieber concert is, but they don’t know enough about 9/11. So let’s change that, please,” he said, to applause from the crowd.


Around the world, thousands of volunteers have pledged to do good deeds, honoring an anniversary that was designated a National Day of Service and Remembrance in 2009.


By next year’s anniversary, the museum is expected to be open beneath the memorial plaza. While the memorial honors those killed, the museum is intended to present a broader picture of 9/11, including the experiences of survivors and first responders.


“As things evolve in the future, the focus on the remembrance is going to stay sacrosanct,” memorial President Joe Daniels said.


The organizers expect they “will always keep the focus on the families on the anniversary,” Daniels said. That focus was clear as relatives gathered on the tree-laden plaza, where a smaller crowd was gathering Wednesday — only friends and family of the victims were allowed.


Denise Matuza, who lost her husband on Sept. 11, said people ask her why she still comes to the service with her three sons.


“It doesn’t make us feel good to stay home,” she said. Her husband called after the towers were struck. “He said a plane hit the building, they were finding their way out, he’d be home in a little while. I just waited and waited,” she said.


“A few days later I found an email he had sent that they couldn’t get out.”


___


Associated Press writers Verena Dobnik, Jennifer Peltz and Meghan Barr in New York, Nedra Pickler in Washington and Kevin Begos in Shanksville, Pa., contributed to this report.


___


Follow Jennifer Peltz at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Nation pauses on 9/11 to pay tribute to victims

Friday, September 6, 2013

Obama to address the nation on Syria


President Barack Obama will address the American people on Syria from the White House on Tuesday in an effort to shift public opinion in favor of military action, he said Friday, while declining to rule out military action if he’s unable to get sufficient congressional support.


“In the coming days I’ll continue to consult with my fellow leaders around the world and continue to consult with Congress, and I will make the best case that I can to the American people, as well as to the international community, for taking necessary and appropriate action,” he said Friday during a press conference at the G-20 summit in St. Petersburg, Russia.





Obama: The world set a red line




Analysis from VandeHei, Allen




Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and other administration officials spent the week urging lawmakers to support the administration’s call for a strike against Bashar Assad’s regime, but are still struggling to build traction.


(PHOTOS: Obama, world leaders at G-20 summit)


Members of Congress and others have been urging Obama to make his case with a public address — an idea the White House initially shrugged off — but with public opinion and congressional views solidifying, some supporters of the administration’s policy said Tuesday’s speech may come too late.


As he and his aides have for days, Obama expressed confidence that he would able to get Congress to approve a resolution for a strike against Syria and wouldn’t say he’d take action if one or both chambers of Congress voted against it. “I think it would be a mistake for me to jump the gun and speculate,” he said, adding that he didn’t call on Congress for “symbolism.”


Asked twice to clarify his position, the president stayed evasive. “You’re not getting a direct response,” he said. Obama has kept his options open since calling Saturday for Congress to hold a vote on Syria, arguing that he has the authority to take military action without congressional approval, but that getting lawmakers’ support is best for the democracy.


(VIDEO: VandeHei, Allen analysis on Syria situation)


Obama acknowledged that he has staked out an unpopular position, but said it is his job to offer his judgment, and to try to persuade lawmakers and the American people. “I trust my constituents want me to offer my best judgment. That’s why they elected me. That’s why they re-elected me,” he said.


House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) welcomed Obama’s plans to address the nation on Syria, while voicing concern that Obama might have been better off delivering a speech earlier in the process.


“The speaker has consistently said the president has an obligation to make his case for intervention directly to the American people,” spokesman Brendan Buck said. “Members of Congress represent the views of their constituents, and only a president can convince the public that military action is required. We only hope this isn’t coming too late to make the difference.”


(Also on POLITICO: President Obama could lose big on Syria in House)


Obama discussed Syria with other world leaders at the G-20 on Thursday and Friday, and with Nordic leaders in Sweden earlier in the week, and said he was “encouraged” by the response he got. While some leaders expressed a desire to work through the United Nations, he said, the body has become a “barrier” to real action in Syria.


“I would greatly prefer working through multilateral channels and the united nations to get this done,” he said. “But ultimately, what I believe in even more deeply … requires that when there’s a breach this brazen of a norm this important and the international community is paralyzed and frozen and doesn’t act, then that norm begins to unravel. And if that norm unravels, then other norms and prohibitions start unraveling. And that makes for a more dangerous world.”


After Obama finished speaking, the White House released a joint statement from the United States and 10 other G-20 attendees blaming Assad for August’s chemical weapons attack and calling for the Syrian regime to be held accountable. “We support efforts undertaken by the United States and other countries to reinforce the prohibition on the use of chemical weapons,” said the statement, which was signed by Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom.


The statement took a tough stance against the UN Security Council — whose members include five of the statement’s signatories — arguing that the body “remains paralyzed as it has been for two and a half years” on Syria. “The world cannot wait for endless failed processes that can only lead to increased suffering in Syria and regional instability,” the statement read.


Russia has played a central role in blocking Security Council action, but Obama was cordial in describing that nation’s behavior at the summit, which was hosted by Russian President Vladimir Putin.


Obama commended Putin for “facilitating … a full airing of views” on Syria among leaders. Obama and Putin spent about 20 minutes meeting on the margins of the summit earlier Friday, and the president described it as “a candid and constructive conversation, which characterizes my relationship” with Putin.


Most of their conversation was about Syria and, on the issue, Obama said he told Putin: “I don’t expect us to agree on this issue of chemical weapons use, though it is possible after the UN inspectors’ report, it may become more difficult for Mr. Putin to maintain his position.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Obama to address the nation on Syria

Obama Says He Will Address Nation Tuesday on Syria



ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) — President Barack Obama says he will address the nation about Syria on Tuesday as he seeks public and congressional authority for military action against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.


Obama wants to strike against the Syrian regime in response to a chemical attack on civilians last month that the Obama administration says was carried out by Assad’s military. Obama says failing to chemical weapons use would , quote, “send a signal to rogue nations.”


Obama spoke at a news conference at the conclusion of a Group of 20 summit in Russia where Syria dominated much of the discussion.


Amid tepid support for a strike, lawmakers have called on Obama to build support with the public by making such an address. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Obama Says He Will Address Nation Tuesday on Syria

Sunday, August 18, 2013

China Gobbling Up Wheat, as US Exports to Nation Soar

China, the world’s largest grower of wheat, is making its largest purchase of the grain from the United States in nearly two decades after severe flooding earlier this year cut into its reserves.

China has purchased 3.7 million metric tons of wheat from the U.S. so far this season, or nearly 4.6 times more wheat than last year’s purchase of 805,400 metric tons.


In addition to the flooding this spring — the worst in some areas since 1954 — increased demand for high-quality wheat have dented grain stocks in China.


A year earlier, China “controlled about 30 percent of the world’s wheat stocks,” Steve Mercer, spokesman for U.S. Wheat Associates, told Newsmax. The value so far of this year’s wheat sales to China is conservatively over $ 1 billion, or nearly 10 percent of total U.S. wheat exports, Mercer said.


Factors influencing the growing Chinese desire for U.S. wheat include affordable prices, the consumer preferences of a rising middle class, and a growing urban population resulting from a demographic shift from the countryside, which has also led to a demand for higher-quality food products, including more protein and animal feed.


Sinograin, the name given to the state-owned China Grain Reserves Corporation created by China’s State Council in 2000, is currently in the process of shoring up the nation’s grain reserves.


Food security has long been a core national security concern for the Chinese government, hence the creation of Sinograin. Mercer said the food is a “huge … security issue for them.”


A Chinese team of six milling executives and purchasing managers on August 13 completed a tour of grain facilities in Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and North Dakota for direct talks with wheat researchers, farmers, and storage facility operators, gaining first-hand experience with U.S. wheat regional production and storage.


“We found the opportunity to … convey our long-term requirements to the industry,” the Chinese millers said in a joint statement to Newsmax. “It is important as we will buy more [Dark Spring, Dark Northern Spring and Soft White wheat] since they are suitable to blending with our domestic wheat to make premium value foodstuffs.”


The expansion in China of companies like McDonalds, Starbucks, and Yum Brands (a group that includes Taco Bell, KFC, Pizza Hut, and WingStreet restaurants) also are pacing the demand for higher-quality wheat, Mercer said.


Crops for Soft Red Wheat — used primarily for baking cakes, pastries, flat breads, and crackers– have been good for the last two years, Mercer said, and that is primarily what the Chinese have purchased.


Agricultural exports are one of the few bright spots for U.S. trade, as the deficit with China has grown from $ 6 million in 1985 to more than $ 315 billion in 2012, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The nation’s overall trade imbalance for 2012 was $ 729 billion.


“Agricultural exports continue to be a strong and growing component of U.S. exports,” an Agriculture Department spokesman told Newsmax. In fiscal 2012, agricultural exports reached $ 135.8 billion, supporting 1 million jobs for U.S. farmers and ranchers.
“More than $ 23 billion worth of those agricultural products went to China alone,” he said.


While wheat sales for the year are not complete, this would be their highest level to China since the 1991-92 season, the agriculture department spokesman said, adding “current USDA projections forecast that China will import 8.5 million tons of wheat from all sources in the 2013-14 crop year” – with some 43 percent coming from the United States.


“The United States is the world’s chief food exporter,” John R. Block, who served for six years as secretary of agriculture for President Reagan, told Newsmax.


Block, now a senior policy advisor with OFW Law in Washington, said it could be argued that the United States is still the breadbasket of the world.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



China Gobbling Up Wheat, as US Exports to Nation Soar

Monday, July 8, 2013

Extreme weather grips nation


A cockpit voice recorder recovered from Asiana Airlines Flight 214 revealed the pilots attempted to abort the landing just 1.5 seconds before the jet crashed in San Francisco, killing two and injuring scores, investigators said Sunday.






Extreme weather grips nation

Friday, June 14, 2013

India "most populous nation" by 2028


Commuters disembark from trains in Mumbai (file photo)India’s population is forecast to continue to grow until 2050, according to the United Nations


India looks set to overtake China as the world’s most populous country from 2028, according to the United Nations.


At that point, both nations will number 1.45 billion people each. Subsequently India’s population will continue to grow until the middle of the century, while China’s slowly declines.


The UN also estimates that the current global population of 7.2 billion will reach 9.6 billion by 2050.


That is a faster rate of growth than previously estimated.


The population growth will be mainly in developing countries, particularly in Africa, the UN says.


The world’s 49 least developed countries are projected to double in size from around 900 million people in 2013 to 1.8 billion in 2050, whereas the population of developed regions will remain largely unchanged.


The UN said the reason for the increase in its projection for total global population in 2050 is largely new information on fertility levels in certain high birth rate countries.


Nigerian growth

Large developing countries, such as China, India and Brazil, have seen a rapid fall in the average number of children per woman, but in other nations, such as Nigeria, Niger, Ethiopia and Uganda, fertility levels remain high.


Nigeria’s population is expected to exceed that of the United States by the middle of the century, and could start to rival China’s by 2100.


China’s population is expected to start decreasing after 2030.


“Although population growth has slowed for the world as a whole, this report reminds us that some developing countries, especially in Africa, are still growing rapidly,” commented Wu Hongbo, the UN’s Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs.


The United Nations publishes an assessment of past, current and future population trends every two years, in a recurrent series known as the World Population Prospects.


Researchers have used data for 233 countries and areas to produce Friday’s report.




BBC News – Asia



India "most populous nation" by 2028

India "most populous nation" by 2028


Commuters disembark from trains in Mumbai (file photo)India’s population is forecast to continue to grow until 2050, according to the United Nations


India looks set to overtake China as the world’s most populous country from 2028, according to the United Nations.


At that point, both nations will number 1.45 billion people each. Subsequently India’s population will continue to grow until the middle of the century, while China’s slowly declines.


The UN also estimates that the current global population of 7.2 billion will reach 9.6 billion by 2050.


That is a faster rate of growth than previously estimated.


The population growth will be mainly in developing countries, particularly in Africa, the UN says.


The world’s 49 least developed countries are projected to double in size from around 900 million people in 2013 to 1.8 billion in 2050, whereas the population of developed regions will remain largely unchanged.


The UN said the reason for the increase in its projection for total global population in 2050 is largely new information on fertility levels in certain high birth rate countries.


Nigerian growth

Large developing countries, such as China, India and Brazil, have seen a rapid fall in the average number of children per woman, but in other nations, such as Nigeria, Niger, Ethiopia and Uganda, fertility levels remain high.


Nigeria’s population is expected to exceed that of the United States by the middle of the century, and could start to rival China’s by 2100.


China’s population is expected to start decreasing after 2030.


“Although population growth has slowed for the world as a whole, this report reminds us that some developing countries, especially in Africa, are still growing rapidly,” commented Wu Hongbo, the UN’s Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs.


The United Nations publishes an assessment of past, current and future population trends every two years, in a recurrent series known as the World Population Prospects.


Researchers have used data for 233 countries and areas to produce Friday’s report.




BBC News – Asia



India "most populous nation" by 2028

Friday, June 7, 2013

Meet tiny nation bucking eurozone"s pain






  • The euro club has suffered major shockwaves but its newest member has emerged as a shining economic light.

  • Estonia, which joined the euro in January 2011, has rising employment and growth exceeding its peers

  • Its economy has been through financial restructuring and a credit-fed boom and bust

  • Joining the bloc has helped buoy its economy due to increased confidence from investors



London (CNN) — The euro club has suffered major shockwaves but its newest member has emerged as a shining economic light.


Estonia, which joined the euro in January 2011, has shaken off its painful Soviet Union history and a credit-fed boom and bust to rebuild itself as an economy with shrinking unemployment numbers and growth far exceeding its peers.


The fortunes of the small Baltic country, perched on the edge of northern Europe, run in stark contrast to the eurozone’s troubled south, where unemployment has soared to record levels and recessions are becoming entrenched.


But Estonia’s finance minister, Jurgen Ligi, told CNN Greece — the eurozone’s most troubled nation — was “paradise” compared to what his country had suffered after the USSR fell.





We appreciate solidarity but we do not forget personal responsibility
Jurgen Ligi, Estonian Finance Minister




Estonia, vice-chair of last week’s Organisation for Economic Development and Cooperation Ministerial Council Meeting in Paris, joined the euro seven months after Greece had taken its first bailout and as the common currency slid into crisis.


Ligi told CNN joining the euro was a “natural choice” for a “small open economy.” The country, which has just 1.3 million people, had always been “very much dependent on the eurozone, and now we are participating and influencing the decisions,” he said.


WATCH MORE: Post-Soviet winners and losers





How Estonia supports wealthier countries


Accession to the eurozone, despite its problems, ensured the country offered a more stable currency, which gave confidence to investors, Ligi said, as well as showing “solidarity and political cooperation.


“Sometimes you have obligations that you don’t like but [do them] for general stability.”





Foreign workers solve skills shortage


Ligi said the austerity drive being pushed through Europe barely justified the label. “I would not use the word austerity in Europe, where the size of the social system is half of that of the world and consumption level among the highest.”





Building a sustainable future


Estonia went through its own harsh program of cuts in 2009, slicing back state salaries and freezing pensions, after its real estate bubble went bust. The program helped ensure Estonia stayed inside the rules of entry to the eurozone.


The country’s growth rate averaged 8% between 2003 and 2007, before crashing into recession in 2008: its GDP shrank 14.3% in 2009 but has since rebounded. According to Ligi, real GDP will recover to pre-crisis levels next year. Ligi said the contraction was based on a “credit, real estate and consumption bubble” while today’s economy “is on a much stronger basis.”


Estonia’s debt to GDP ratio remains markedly lower than that of its European peers, sitting at 10.1% compared to Greece at a heady 156.9% and Italy at a painful 127%.





This is no miracle that Estonia is developing quicker than the others
Jurgen Ligi, Estonian Finance Minister




WATCH MORE: Doing business in Estonia


Estonia’s export economy is also supported by its strong links with Scandinavian countries, including Finland and Sweden. Its unemployment, at 10%, remains high but lower than the eurozone as whole, which now sits at 12.2%. The OECD has predicted this will rise to 12.3% in 2014. Estonia’s youth unemployment sits at 23%, again lower than the eurozone’s 24.4%.


The former Soviet nation has built itself into a free market, highly educated country with a strong telecommunications industry. The birthplace of Skype become known as E-Stonia following the USSR’s collapse in 1991.


It drove through an ambitious program of connectivity credited in part to Toomas Hendrik Ilves, the bow-tie wearing former ambassador to the United States who is now the country’s president.


Ligi said the country did not forget the crisis which followed its independence, when inflation reached 1000% and it underwent rapid monetary reform.


“We have been making right and sustainable decisions,” Ligi said. “There are lots of countries with similar history and situation than Estonia are not taking advantage.


“This is no miracle that Estonia is developing quicker than the others.”


Estonians bore with structural changes with the culture of practicality, Ligi said. “[Estonians] are very rational …we have a lot of common sense,” he said. “We appreciate solidarity but we do not forget personal responsibility.”


The country’s leaders — including Ilves — have also proved feisty defenders of their economic reforms. In an infamous Twitter battle with Nobel economics prize winner and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, who questioned whether Estonia’s GDP recovery could be classed as an “economic triumph,” Ilves slapped down the “smug, overbearing & patronizing” report.




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Meet tiny nation bucking eurozone"s pain

Friday, May 31, 2013

Ecocide and the Soul of a Nation


At the front of the political madness enveloping the United States are anti-government, anti-science extremists who reject evidence of global warming and block any response to this existential threat. But the disconnect between environmental destruction and today’s humanity goes deeper, says Phil Rockstroh.


By Phil Rockstroh


The reality of and the outward toll inflicted by greenhouse-gas engendered Climate Change is clearly evident (to all but the corrupt and devoutly ignorant) e.g. increasingly destructive and deadly tornadoes and hurricanes, destruction of marine life, severe droughts and rapacious wild fires — landscapes of death, scattered debris and shattered lives.


But what are the psychical effects of chronic denial, noxious indifference and compulsive prevarication as related to a matter as all-encompassing and crucial as our relationship with the climate of our planet?



A tornado touching down in central Oklahoma on May 3, 1999. (U.S. government photo)



Our current catastrophe of estrangement, termed “our way of life,” we experience as a denuding of resonance, meaning and purpose, as a prevailing sense of emptiness and unease, as a craving for distraction, as an inchoate longing for change and transformation, yet a diffidence to the point of paralysis insofar as any means to expedite longing and libido into societal-altering action.


Estrangement from nature is estrangement from the landscape of the soul. The cosmos and the soul carry the same blueprint; the forces were forged in the same fires of infinity. In matters, galactic and quotidian, there is not a form that rises, waxes and wanes in nature that does not have an analog in our human physicality, faculties and endeavors.


To turn a blind eye to the natural world, as we have done, translates into psychical ecocide. Perception is degraded. Language truncated. Life becomes dispossessed of purpose and meaning. Apropos, the rise and banal persistence of: The United States of Whatever.


Under these circumstances “whatever” translates into, inner and extant, deadly super storms, ecocide and desertification (including and related to the desertification of language). As we decimate the earth’s biodiversity, we diminish our lexicon. Our thoughts cannot take wing; our imaginings cannot take root and flower; our passions cannot flow; our putrefying pathologies cannot be composted.


Divested of an eloquence of thought, expression and action — devoid of a deep connection to and denied of constant dialog with earth, sky, wind and water — we cannot retain enough humanity to remain viable as a species.


By evincing a state of mind that is indifferent to the wanton destruction of our planet’s interdependent web of biodiversity, we lay waste, on a personal and collective basis, to the evolving, vital ecosystem of the psyche, thereby creating a bland, dismal, corporate monoculture, that is both manifest and internalized.


The emptiness of life in the neoliberal corporate/consumer state has grown increasingly unbearable; the carnage inflicted on our planet is indefensible; and its present trajectory is tragically untenable.


Our last, best option is a top-to-bottom re-visioning. In diametric opposition, at paradigm’s end, we are witness to the deranged marriage of the profligate and the parsimonious. The covert offshore bank accounts of the greed-maddened hyper-wealthy and the teeming landfill are dismal emblems of late-capitalist madness.


The moribund mythos (manic in the face of its undoing) of “productivity” exists at the core of the capitalist delusion. Discussing the matter with a capitalist true-believer is like talking to an obsessive lunatic about his vast collection of string and his compulsive hoarding of rubber bands and bread ties.


Behind the situation is the crackpot pragmatism of state capitalism, e.g., that all things must have a practical purpose in order that they be exploited for maximum productivity as a means of generating obscene sums of wealth for a tiny (loose knit) cabal of global economic elite. (Yet the motives driving the mania of a system geared to perpetual growth, conveniently, are omitted from almost all mainstream discussions of the matter.)


One’s humanity is restored by tears and laughter … by the marriage of eros and empathy. We must grieve for the harm we have wrought and guffaw at our egoist folly; we must shed copious tears and be seized by outright, sustained laughter. Self-awareness is tantamount to salvation, and an experience akin to rebirth is bestowed by the apprehension of the ridiculous nature of vanity and empty striving.


Then and only then, do conditions become favorable for restoration and re-visioning. Thus, grace falls as a forgiving rain.


In May of last year, my family laid my father to rest. Shortly after my return to New York City from Georgia, we received the news that my wife, Angela, was pregnant. Thus, fate fitted me with the garments of fatherhood. The clothing of the son sent to the consignment shop, I stood in awe, and with more than a little trepidation, before unfolding circumstance.


Grief and longing mingled and merged within me. At night, I dreamed of friends from my youth who have died over the passing years. With increasing frequency, during this past year, I have had reoccurring dreams involving one post-adolescent friendship, in particular, the period surrounding the dawning of our awkward and painful puberty.


Chuck was redheaded, freckled, bespectacled, bully-bedeviled — a bright, sensitive, wounded soul, who would later succumb to the ravages of alcoholism. We shared an enthusiasm for books. We read Tolkien, of course, but also Camus, Celine, even Cervantes (having an ardor for books was a quixotic propensity in those days in the Deep South, and I suspect it still is).


We collected tropical fish — their bright, color-emblazoned markings stood in vivid contrast to the desolate, laboring-class milieu that was foisted as our fate.


“You two, heads-in-the-clouds, noses-in-books losers will have to face the real world one day, and, I’ll tell you what, that will be one sorry-ass sight,” some figure of grim authority would bandy at us.


“Do you understand what I’m saying, boy?”


“Yes.”


“Yes, what?”


“Yes, I understand.”


“You, show some respect for your elders, by answering, ‘Yes, sir.’ Do you understand me?”


“Yes,” I replied, earnestly … having grown obtuse by the anxiety inflicted by attempting to appear submissive to the demands of unreasonable power.


“Look here, smart-ass. I’ve about had my fill of your insolence.”


Nonplussed. I would have said anything to end the encounter. But some life-bestowing daemon would stir within … most likely, it was the same inner, trickster entity responsible for occluding my ability to comprehend what this authoritarian jerk-rocket was demanding of me.


“What is your problem, boy? Just what kind of a stupid animal are you?” — an inquiry that provided an opening for the daemon.


“I was raised by raccoons, sir.”


“You … what?”


“My parents were killed by your Klansman relatives. I escaped into the woods. And I was adopted by nocturnal, fur-bearing mammals. I’m untrainable. I scurry through the darkness. I bite when cornered. My destiny has been forged by fate. I am Raccoon Boy, enemy of racists and power mad freaks.


“I have to confess, it is my reverence for my poor, slain parents that will not allow me to address you with deference nor grant you respect, as you have demanded. In short, I can either submit to calling you sir or I can betray my destiny. But I cannot do both.


“Therefore, do with me what you will. But you will never again sleep easy … for my raccoon brothers and sisters will track you down and you will wish we had never met. You will never again hear a rustling in the underbrush and not be stricken with the knowledge that you are in the presence of your doom.”


These sorts of responses would often end such encounters. In the South, in those days, crazy people were given a great deal of latitude.


At present, in my nighttime dreams of the time, I often find myself in the company of Chuck at the intersection of two major streets that cut through the area near our school, North Decatur and Clairmont Road. In waking life, Chuck and I, in order to avoid confrontations with neighborhood boys who viewed us as “hippie faggots” did not venture beyond this demarcation point. The landscape beyond was fraught with peril.


Even in adult life, Chuck never ventured far from home, and when he did, he was fortified with drink. Many times, at transition points in my life, my soul summons dreams of Chuck and me, our hearts … filled with yearning — yet we stand diffident, to the point of paralysis, at the intersection of North Decatur and Clairmont Road.


The world outside of the boundaries decreed by outward circumstance and imposed by one’s fears is fraught with uncertainty to the degree that it is veiled in mystery. There are legions of authoritarian bastards and mindless bullies about. Regardless, one must venture forth. One does have allies — the spirit of departed friends and inner daemons with quicksilver wit et al.


The future is always uncertain. But Raccoon Boy will be there to meet what comes.


Climate Change denial. Political duopoly. The corrosive effect of empire, maintained by militarism, on a foundering republic. The noxious food manufactured and consumed under corporate state oligarchy.


The catastrophic consequences that the demise of the public commons has on the human personality, in combination with the societal repercussions of a populace that receives the vast majority of information from within the bubble of an enveloping media hologram attendant to a grid of authoritarianism that determines and degrades the criteria of almost all experience in the corporate state.


Yet these unhinged conventionalities do not create a catalyst to action, but inflict angst, ennui and anomie. How can this be? By what means does passivity before and complicity in one’s own debasement become normalized? By small bribes as reward for compliance and severe consequences for attempts at defiance … that is how. This state of affairs serves as the sine qua non for any reign of oppression and cultural track towards catastrophe.


If an individual is coerced into conformity by his/her livelihood being threatened, even by implicit means, angst will be experienced. As a result, one will attempt to find a means of relieving the incurred sense of unease. And this is where the small bribes, that serve as palliatives to ease angst, come in.


If challenging (seemingly) implacable power results in a termination of employment or a stint of incarceration, of which, a record will follow one through life, most will find the repercussions of defying authority unbearable. One’s image of oneself would be endangered, or so it seems, by such a circumstance.


Yet what are the consequences of submission, in regard to one’s sense of self? Because, in order to submit, an individual must shunt from consciousness the painful implications of one’s predicament, a general diminution of perception occurs. Thus, for example, Climate Change denial is but part and parcel of a larger, enforced cosmology of deception, both personal and societal in origin.


At our present rate, the oceans and seas of the world will be dead in less than half a century. Humankind has become a mindless, devouring leviathan. Slice open our collective belly and the ill-gotten bounty of our besieged earth will be disgorged.


What is the music of the spheres? asked Schopenhauer. “Munch. Munch. Munch.”


Yet, tone-deaf, and rapacious, we are devouring the world in a manner that is closer in form to a banal pop song; a pestilence of ditties, resonant of the landfill, is descending in the form of consumerist locust.


When our days are denuded of depth, meaning and inspired purpose, we gorge our bellies in an attempt to alleviate the ache of emptiness. The operatives of the corporate/commercial hologram have induced us to devour the planet like a serving of Hot Pockets. Yet the emptiness within only grows.


We have been enticed to believe that remedy will be found in more of what caused our misery in the first place. Relief, even redemption, will be found in yet MORE. Thus, we come upon the insatiable leviathan that glides within. We are lodged in the monster’s belly, wherein we mistake his impersonal appetite for our own. In this way, the consumer is consumed by the collective.


How does one sate a force that is insatiable? By seizing back one’s unique identity. The angel whose name is Enough arrives within one’s reclaimed human voice. It comes down to this: ecology or catastrophe.


Because one’s humanity is formed and rounded by one’s limits, we must be open to the infinity of forms that is the ecosystem of the soul but not allow vanity to attempt to claim dominion over what is ungovernable. Thus, one regains one’s soul by speaking in a human voice.


Yes, it is tinged with universal fire, but, to we human beings, its home is the hearth of the human heart, within which empty appetite is transmuted into the yearnings of the heart; thereby, empty motion becomes emotion; passion deepens into compassion.


The matter does not involve searching for redemption nor striving for perfection; instead, it involves awakening … an awakening to the vast multiverse of the dreaming heart. Therein, the oceans are teeming with vivid life.


And where there exists the implicate order of the soul there exists the wherewithal to rise up and resist the forces that lay siege to one’s innate humanity.


Phil Rockstroh is a poet, lyricist and philosopher bard living in New York City. He may be contacted at: phil@philrockstroh.com/ And at FaceBook: http://www.facebook.com/phil.rockstroh


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Ecocide and the Soul of a Nation