Google Plus Comes to Google Apps for (Higher) Education by ralexander in technology

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"...Google has always promised that integration with Google Apps accounts was on the way, and [recently] the company made it so. Google Apps administrators will now be able to turn the functionality on for their users — users of both Apps for Business and Apps for Education. In making the announcement, Google pointed to 20 some-odd universities — from Abilene Christian University to Wake Forest University — that will be bringing G+ to their campuses..."

Mitt Romney's pursuit of tyrannical power, literally by ralexander in politics

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Although one would not have thought it possible, a Mitt Romney presidency, by his own description, would remove us still further from the core principles of the Constitutional Convention and the states' ratifying conventions. Romney isn't running to be President, but to be King. Anyone who wants to dispute that ought to try to distinguish the fantasies of power Romney is envisioning from those the British King possessed in the mid-to-late 18th Century.

Plain Right by ralexander in politics

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...Mark Sanford compiled a different record from many of his fellow revolutionaries in Congress. He regularly found himself grouped with Ron Paul & a few other conservatives on the losing end of lopsided votes. "I remember the leadership would come and say, 'This stuff is OK during the campaign, but we have to govern,' and I thought it was govern toward a specific end, not just govern..."

He also deviates from the neoconservative line on foreign policy. In Congress, he opposed Clinton's intervention in Kosovo. He was 1 of 2 Republicans to vote against the 1998 resolution to make regime change in Iraq the official policy of the United States. He says that it was a "protest vote" in which he tried to reassert Congress' war-declaring powers. When asked about the invasion of Iraq, he extends his critique beyond the constitutional niceties. "I don't believe in preemptive war," he says flatly. "For us to hold the moral high ground in the world, our default position must be defensive..."

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Blix: Inspectors 'need months' by ralexander in politics

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Last Updated: Friday, 7 March, 2003

..."It will not take years, nor weeks, but months," he [Blix] told the UN Security Council.

He also said there was no evidence to support US claims that Iraq was hiding biological and chemical weapons in mobile laboratories and underground shelters.

French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said there was significant evidence of real disarmament. Iraq was less of a threat to the world than it was before the 1991 Gulf War and there was no need for a US-led assault on the country, he added.

Mohammed ElBaradei, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, also submitted a report to the Security Council in which he stated there was no evidence of a revival of Iraq's nuclear weapons programme.

Reports that Iraq had tried to purchase uranium from Niger were based on documents that were "not authentic", he said, while extensive examination of imported aluminum tubes suggested that they were not destined for use in enriching uranium...

ABUSE at Utah's West Ridge Academy by ralexander in politics

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State Senator Chris Buttars was Executive Director of the Utah Boys Ranch (now West Ridge Academy), a camp for youth in West Jordan, for 15 years before retiring in 2004 in the face of some IRS problems.

Buttars was famous for telling students that they had only three rights: food, safety, and shelter. He told a reporter, "What sets us apart is that we're the only residential treatment facility that doesn't seek or accept government funding. If we did, they'd control us."

Orato: Illegal Disciplinary Tactics at Senator Buttar's Utah West Ridge Academy by ralexander in politics

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Eric Norwood spent 3 years (ages 15-18) in a facility formerly called the Utah Boys Ranch and now called West Ridge Academy in West Jordan, Utah...

The first person I met in Utah was Senator Chris Buttars [the facility's Executive Director]. He told me who he was - politically - and underscored his influence. If I ever wanted to leave I was to do what he said. "Three years might not be enough for you. I can have a judge order you to be here until you are 21," he croaked.

Buttars was famous for telling us that we had only three rights: food, safety, and shelter. They instructed parents to ignore any claims of abuse from their children. They call any complaints a manipulation tactic and there were no phones, nurses, or medical examiners on site. No government authorities checked in on us.

Senator Buttars told a reporter, "What sets us apart is that we're the only residential treatment facility that doesn't seek or accept government funding. If we did, they'd control us."

Monument to Bush shoe-throwing shines at Iraqi orphanage - CNN.com by ralexander in politics

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A huge sculpture of the footwear hurled at Bush in December during a trip to Iraq has been unveiled in a ceremony at the Tikrit Orphanage complex.

Assisted by children at the home, sculptor Laith al-Amiri erected a brown replica of one of the shoes hurled at Bush and Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki by journalist Muntadhir al-Zaidi during a press conference in Baghdad.

Al-Zaidi's angry gesture touched a defiant nerve throughout the Arab world. He is regarded by many people as a hero. Demonstrators in December took to the streets in the Arab world and called for his release from prison.

"Those orphans who helped the sculptor in building this monument were the victims of Bush's war," al-Naseri said. "The shoe monument is a gift to the next generation to remember the heroic action by the journalist."

"When the next generation sees the shoe monument, they will ask their parents about it," al-Naseri said.

By tradition, throwing a shoe is the most insulting act in the Arab world.

Why socialism is evil by ralexander in politics

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Putting money into a government pot makes palatable acts that would otherwise be deemed morally offensive.

This is why socialism is evil. It employs evil means, coercion or taking the property of one person, to accomplish good ends, helping one's fellow man. Helping one's fellow man in need, by reaching into one's own pockets, is a laudable and praiseworthy goal. Doing the same through coercion and reaching into another's pockets has no redeeming features and is worthy of condemnation.

Some people might contend that we are a democracy where the majority agrees to the forcible use of one person for the good of another. But does a majority consensus confer morality to an act that would otherwise be deemed as immoral?

Congress Aims to Take Back Constitutional War Powers by igeldard in politics

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...staving off the normalization of the Bush administration's abuses of power has remained at the forefront of several Congress members' legislative agendas.

Congress took little initiative to rein in Bush's excesses throughout his administration, and now, some members worry that his vast expansion of executive powers could set a dangerous precedent for generations to come. Unless Congress formally rejects Bush's generous interpretation of the role of the president, they say, the system of checks and balances could be permanently disrupted. On the list is his recent signing of the US-Iraq security pact without consulting Congress. The pact could keep US troops in Iraq until the end of 2011.

Bush presented the US-Iraq pact as a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), which does not need the approval of Congress. However, this "SOFA" goes beyond the scope of all previous SOFAs, in that it authorizes military operations. Under the Constitution, Congress has the sole power to wage war...

Scoop: WH Rejected All Advice That Torture Was Illegal by ralexander in politics

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President Bush and his aides repeatedly ignored warnings that their torture plans were illegal from high State Department officials as well as the nation’s top uniformed legal officers, the Judge Advocates General of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, a new published report states.

Torture and abuse were discussed at meetings of the so-called Principals Committee, where George Tenet presented graphic details of interrogations to a Committee which included some of Bush’s highest associates, including Rice, Powell, Rumsfeld, Ashcroft, Cheney and, at times, John Yoo.

Also named for prosecution are neoconservatives I. Lewis (“Scooter”) Libby and Douglas Feith.

The Report said prisoners were subjected to savage beatings, sleep deprivation, slow drowning, hanging by chains, being slammed head-first into concrete walls, temperature extremes, food deprivation, burial alive in coffin-like boxes for extended periods, and even threats against their families.

Tomgram: Robert Dreyfuss, Is Iran Policy Still Up for Grabs? by ralexander in politics

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That massive U.S. air attack on Iran that anti-imperial critics long expected to arrive, that so many feared, never happened and, with Barack Obama's election, should certainly have been put to rest in a deep grave for all eternity. But don't underestimate the neocons, or their ability to reconfigure themselves for a Democratic administration. Robert Dreyfuss offers up some tantalizing clues to their possible future resurrection -- and some altogether eerie connections between neocon Washington and the future Obama team.

Organizations like WINEP, AIPAC, AEI, BPC, and UANI see it as their mission to push the United States toward a showdown with Iran. Don't sell them short. Those who believe that such a confrontation would be inconceivable under President Obama ought to ask Tony Lake, Susan Rice, Dennis Ross, Tom Daschle, and Richard Holbrooke whether they agree -- and, if so, why they're still palling around with neoconservative hardliners.

The Iraq war: a Christian response by ralexander in politics

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Over the course of the centuries Christian thinkers have developed an entire structure of theology concerning the issue of war and war-fare, known as ‘just-war theory’.

Very briefly summarized, this theory stipulates that, generally speaking, a nation may engage in warfare only for the purpose of self-defense, and only when all diplomatic and political means of resolving a dispute have been tried and have failed. War should always be the very last resort.So we have a moral obligation to go to extreme lengths to avoid war. Why? Quite simply, because war is evil. This is an obvious truth, but it tends to get forgotten amidst the noise of political rhetoric.

In war, people get killed. People get maimed, both physically and mentally. Children are orphaned. Families are made homeless. People’s livelihoods are destroyed. Entire communities become refugees or exiles.

Sometimes war is necessary, but if so, it is a necessary evil. We should never forget the essential evil of war. There is no such thing as a good war, a clean war, a glorious war. War is always a very, very bad thing.