Month: March 2005

  • Minneapolis Bus Service Cuts

    As someone who has spent time in Boston and Vancouver, the twin cities already has relatively poor public transit. Sadly, it looks like it is soon to get worse. A combination of route cuts and limitations with fare hike will make our bus system even less functional than it currently is.

    Right now, unless you live, work, and shop in the transit hub areas, it is fairly difficult to get around the cities by bus. If the system is cut, it will be worse.

    There are some public hearings coming up which people who care should check out. Read more about it at Metro Transit or Pioneer Press

  • Three Texas surgeons were playing golf together and discussing surgeries they had performed.

    The first said, “I’m the best surgeon in Texas. A concert pianist lost 7 fingers in an accident. I reattached them and 8 months later he performed a private concert for the Queen of England.”

    The second said, “That’s nothing. A young man lost both arms and legs in an accident. I reattached them and 2 years later he won a gold medal in the Olympic decathlon.”

    The third surgeon said, “You guys are amateurs. Several years ago a cowboy who was high on cocaine and alcohol rode a horse head-on into a train traveling 80 miles an hour. All I had left to work with was the horse’s ass and a cowboy hat. Now he’s president of the United States.”

  • Another forward:

    When you shop at Victoria’s Secret you are supporting the destruction of the great northern Boreal forest of Canada for their catalogues. Sent out at the rate of about a million a day almost all of these catalogs are produced from virgin fiber paper with little or no recycled content. An area the size of Delaware is cut in the Boreal every year, the majority of which goes to make pulp and paper for export to the U.S. From Alaska to the Atlantic the Boreal forest stretches. Most of the Boreal is the traditional territory of Canada’s aboriginal peoples, and critical habitat for bears, wolves, the threatened woodland caribou, as well as over 40% of North America’s waterfowl and 30% of our songbirds. Forest clear-cutting and pollution from logging and processing operations threaten the health and continuity of many of these populations.

    “Victoria’s Secret mails out more than a million catalogs a day, and the cost of these catalogs isn’t sexy—they’re printed on paper made from some of the world’s last remaining Endangered Forests.”

    http://www.victoriasdirtysecret.net/

    Besides, from what I’ve seen, most of their stuff, while better than fredriks, isn’t all that good anyway.

  • I’ve mentioned this situation before, but I wasn’t aware that it was still unresolved. This article was forwarded to me by a friend:

    Op/Ed – USATODAY.com

    Padilla’s indefinite detention puts your rights at risk

    Fri Mar 4, 6:13 AM ET Op/Ed – USATODAY.com

    You’re a U.S. citizen landing at a major airport from abroad. You’re pulled out of line at customs, arrested, thrown in jail for a month and then spirited off to a military prison.

    Nearly three years later, you’re still there, never charged with any crime. The government claims it can hold you forever without answering to any judge or court.

    The scenario is not fiction. It’s happening now. Only a federal judge in South Carolina is standing in the way. At stake is the constitutional guarantee of every American to be free from arbitrary imprisonment.

    Jose Padilla, a U.S. citizen born in Brooklyn, N.Y., was arrested at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport in May 2002. He’s still being held. No charges have been filed.

    Despite the clear language of the Constitution that prohibits detention without trial, the Bush administration insists that it can indefinitely hold Padilla – or anyone else it chooses – as an “enemy combatant” without trial or even formal charges.

    Padilla is one of a handful of Americans known to have been swept up in the war on terror, but he is the lone suspect not released or handled by the courts. So far, he has received only indictment by press conference – and with dubious credibility at that.

    The Justice Department (news – web sites) first claimed Padilla was sent home by al-Qaeda to set off a radioactive “dirty bomb” in Washington. That scenario was downplayed last year in favor of new allegations: An alleged plan to blow up high-rise apartment buildings using natural gas. Still no charges, still no trial. In South Carolina on Monday, U.S. District Judge Henry Floyd ordered the government to either try Padilla or let him go. Floyd, a Bush appointee, ruled that the government had failed to cite any law or legal precedent to justify holding him indefinitely.

    Defenders of the administration argue that Padilla is dangerous. Putting him on trial, they say, could endanger intelligence sources that provided evidence against him.

    Perhaps he is a threat. Perhaps there’s reason for suspicion but not enough evidence to convict. Or perhaps the government erred in arresting him and would rather not admit it. Without a trial, there’s no way to find out.

    For obvious reasons, the Constitution denies the president or his aides the power to decide by themselves that a citizen can be imprisoned indefinitely without judicial review. Armed with such power, an administration could imprison its political opponents or silence them with the threat.

    Yes, there is a risk that if Padilla is freed he might make trouble. But tracking potential criminals is a job intelligence and police agencies can handle. The cost of setting a precedent that presidents can jail whomever they choose would be far greater.

    This case is not just about Jose Padilla. It’s about every citizen’s liberty. If the foundations of freedom crumble under the stresses of the war on terrorism, the terrorists will have won.

    Indefinite detention of an American citizen without trial or even charges by the American government. In a land where freedom and self determination trump almost every other value…?

    Its only one person, but the step from zero to one is far greater than the step from one to more than one.