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Anonymous Comrade submits:

"Camejo, Huffington Form Unorthodox Alliance"

By Lee Romney, Los Angeles Times , August 13, 2003

SAN FRANCISCO - Green Party gubernatorial candidate Peter Camejo
announced Tuesday that he and nonpartisan Arianna Huffington will
jointly campaign for issues in the coming months, then decide
together near the end of the race which candidate is better prepared
to sprint to the finish line.

Anonymous Comrade submits:

"Experts See Hurdles for Suits over USA Patriot Act"

Marcia Coyle, National Law Journal News

Washington--Two new challenges to parts of the USA Patriot Act -- Congress'
massive response to Sept. 11, 2001 -- face daunting hurdles but are likely to
be only the first of several suits.

"This is not the final gunshot. It's the opening salvo," said Charles
Shanor of Emory University School of Law. "It's a complex process that no
doubt will involve the courts, the legislature and public opinion. And it
could turn on matters that are as nonlegal as whether there is another
terrorist attack between now and judicial decision time."

"Iran-Contra, Amplified"

Jim Lobe, Asia Times

WASHINGTON - A specter of the Iran-Contra affair is haunting Washington. Even some of the people and countries are the same. And the methods -- particularly the pursuit by a network of well-placed individuals of a covert, parallel foreign policy that is at odds with official policy -- are definitely the same.

Anonymous Comrade submits:

Suhrkamp Drops 9/11 Book for "Terrorist" Sympathies

Associated Press,

Berlin -- A German publisher has dropped a British-Canadian
philosopher's book dealing with the fallout of the Sept. 11
attacks because of recent statements by the author that
appear to support Palestinian "terrorism."

jim submits :


"Debian Celebrates Its 10th Birthday"

Martin Schulz

On August 16th, the Debian Project will celebrate its 10th birthday
with several parties around the globe. The Debian Project was
officially founded by Ian Murdock on August 16th, 1993. At that time,
the whole concept of a "distribution" of GNU/Linux was new. Ian
intended Debian to be a distribution which would be made openly, in
the spirit of Linux and GNU. The creation of Debian was sponsored by
the FSF's GNU project for one year.

Rob writes


Interview with ISM activist Tarek Lubani who was arrested along with 3 other ISM activists in Arrabony. They had been in the town which is located outside of Jenin, for 3 days in a peace camp set up on confiscated Palestinian land.


The original report of their arrest was posted here

.....from Z Magazine


"Liberty and National Security:

Can We Have Both?"


by George Katsiaficas

August 05, 2003


[Editor’s note: On July 11, two students, Kim Yong-chan and Kim Jong-gon, of Konkuk University in Seoul, were arrested for possession and propagation of enemy-benefiting publications including For Marx (by Louis Althusser), Capital (Karl Marx), The Imagination of the New Left: A Global Analysis of 1968 (George Katsiaficas). They were prosecuted on July 24 under the National Security Law.


“Enemy” refers to North Korea. Article 7 of the National Security Law punishes the act of benefiting North Korea by praising it, encouraging it, and siding with it, or conspiring any of these acts, with the knowledge that it will endanger national security and the survival of the free and democratic order. However, the three books that were used as evidence by the government against the students are freely available at any good bookstores in South Korea. What makes the case more outrageous is that the current justice minister Kang Gum-sil had to resign as a judge under the military government in 1989 when her husband were arrested under the National Security Law for publishing Capital.

"Lepers, Witches and Infidels:

Or Shall We Just Call Them Refugees?"


Karen Eliot, Adelaide, 28 July 2003


In the space of just under 4 hours the crispy blue Adelaide winter
morning turned to fat grey rain and wind. In the climate-controlled Room
R on Level 5 of the Family Court in the city centre the passage of time
and weather didn't directly touch the crowd of sixty activistas, human
rights observers, Indigenous elder, lawyers, media, translators,
parents, ACM drones, Federal Police and ghosts. Just as the five Afghani
children whose immediate fates and long-term futures were at stake
didn't touch us by their actual presence. The un-famous five existed,
like the weather, outside of this impersonal room, in the liminal space
of immigration detention, 'between the floor and the sky', somewhere
no-one wants to be.

nolympics submits "The Guardian reports that the paramilitary police officer who shot and killed Carlo Giuliani has been seriously injured in a 'suspicious' car accident.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/italy/story/0,12576,1013 120,00.html"

hydrarchist submits "Whilst our values diverge radically from those advnaced by bthe Economist, weekly epistle from the church of free-trade dogma, it is noetheless interesting to read their latest attack on the arch clown Berluska. Note that this is the third vituperatoive of this type in two years. Clashes amidst the dominant class how are you..... Berlusconi's reposne is that he has not ime to read the article but his lawyers will respond. He of course is too busy 'looking after his responsibilities' to pay attention to those who 'fear his new Italy' (sic).


Economist on Berlusconi
Dear Mr Berlusconi...

Jul 31st 2003 From The Economist print edition
Why we are sending an open letter to the Italian prime minister
TO HIS many other talents, Silvio Berlusconi has recently added that of ironist. The Italian prime minister entered the role of president of the European Union's Council of Ministers with a bang, by likening a German member of the European Parliament to a Nazi-era concentration camp guard. Many failed to see the joke. And the resulting imbroglio with the German government had a paradoxical effect: it distracted attention from the very accusation that the German MEP had been noisily making, namely that Mr Berlusconi has exploited his parliamentary majority in Italy to put himself beyond the reach of the law.
For that is indeed what he has done. Dogged by a series of judicial investigations and court cases when he entered office in 2001, Mr Berlusconi has managed to defeat the prosecutors and the courts. He secured the downgrading of the charge of false accounting for private companies, with retrospective effect, thus making accusations against him barred under the statute of limitations. He tried to change the rules on the admissibility of documents obtained from across the border in Switzerland, and tried to get the jurisdiction of his big remaining criminal trial moved. Finally, having failed with those measures he managed to bring in a law making Italy's prime minister, along with the country's other top officials, immune from prosecution during their time in office. As a democratically elected leader, with grave and onerous responsibilities to the people, Mr Berlusconi argued that he should not be made subject to the indignity of a trial. His justice minister, Roberto Castelli, went even further, causing a furore within the governing coalition last week by trying to block a judicial investigation into alleged tax fraud at Mr Berlusconi's biggest media company. (This week he was forced to relent.) It is beyond the prime minister's dignity even to be investigated.

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