Tag USA

It may well turn out to be the largest war profiteering in history.

There's no doubt about it: the war had its critics, and there were many of them, even before it became a mainstream affair, in late 2002; much like the 'discussion' about an attack on Iran is today, there were those that foresaw what was about to unfold. Over the years much has been said or written about the corruption, the unbelievable cost, the blatant disregard not just of the life of Iraqis, arguably of little importance to the leaders, military or political, of the US, but of the domestic social and economic impact of the war within the United States. Few had any significant evidence to back it up. BBC's Panorama investigates the matter and claims that up to $25 billion (€16.2 billion) of the budget allocated by the US Congress to the rebuilding of Iraq may have been 'lost, stolen or not properly accounted for'. At the same time, a gag order in the US prevents anyone from discussing it. Even if no political argument, no humanistic, ideological or ethical platform of discussion is capable of penetrating those thick enough not capable of comprehending the severity, futility and cost of this war, I'm hoping that the economics of a dwindling US economy are in the coming US elections in November.

An ex-superpower in the making

Salon has an interesting, yet excessive article on how the oil crisis of the mid-to-late 2000s potentially strips the United States from its economic and military might and at the same time revives Russia as a powerful player in the world. While over-the-top in its conjecture, the article is a strong reminder of how fragile our economic and political structures are and how long-established hegemonies are dependent on oil.

Obama gets a few tips…

Late night advice from a friend (and an Obama supporter) here in Hellas:
Niceness will get you nowhere when you are up against the Orwellian Mrs. Clinton, who, by gaining a last gasp of air in Ohio, thinks she has a mandate; she reminds me of Greece’s PASOK party, who lose an election and manage to convince us that they won it.
It's surprising Obama hasn't resorted to nasty tactics already. Still, I guess some of his appeal lies in just that. Of course he is bound to get 'nasty', given the way these primaries turned out, if he's really going after the nomination. That's part of what politics is about, after all.

USAspending.gov

There's not much to write about this besides the fact that it's --- at first glance --- great. On one hand it's a token of public accountability and transparency sorely missing from many European governments, yet on the other I'm quite certain it conceals or downright omits any mention of several billions spent 'in vain' under the guise of classified research or military programmes. Yet even with those flaws, it's better than nothing.

Google Earth οι μεν, Lonely Planet οι δε.

Διαβάζω στη Καθημερινή [μέσω buzz] πως μέλη των Ταξιαρχιών Μαρτύρων του Αλ Ακσά δηλώνουν ανοιχτά πως κάνουν χρήση του Google Earth "προκειμένου να εντοπίσουν τους στόχους των αυτοσχέδιών τους ρουκετών". Kαι σχεδόν ταυτόχρονα διαβάζω το εξής άρθρο στο BBC News το οποίο συνοδεύεται από απόσπασμα video [RealPlayer] του νέου ντοκυμαντέρ του BBC 'No Plan, No Peace' στο οποίο δηλώνεται 'ανοιχτά' από την ταγιεροφορούσα συνταξιούχο εδώ και μια τριετία Αμερικανίδα διπλωμάτη, Barbara Bodine, πως οι αμερικάνοι χρησιμοποιούσαν έναν τουριστικό οδηγό Lonely Planet (ω τι ειρωνία!) των αρχών της δεκαετίας του 1990 ώστε να προγραμματίσουν τη κατοχή της χώρας. Δε ξέρω τι με τρομάζει περισσότερο...

National Broadband Strategy

Or how to say 'Market Failure' loudly. The FCC is waking up to the fact that the US lacks both the infrastructure and the mechanisms that would allow for its development and keep the country ahead (or even on par) with the rest of the world. Hopefully the realisation will translate to practical incentives to telcos and ISPs and regulations that would liberate the market from the ruling oligopoly and spur competition as well as a comprehensive benchmark that will guide the market towards some reference point. Alternatively, the temporary euphoria of WiMAX induced activity of the near future will probably mask the deep and basic problems with telecommunications in that country.

Multinational companies [..] now know that the EU will take a much harder line when it comes to competition.

And that seems to frustrate the Department of Justice Corporate Pampering. Reading the DoJ statements about the EUs treatment of Microsoft and how it 'may have the unfortunate consequence of harming consumers by chilling innovation and discouraging competition' makes me wonder whether it is referring to the same case, the same software, the same company and the same planet or whether they've been smoking the corporate crack pipe for far too long. Microsoft's dominance of the market has anything but helped competition and innovation over its twenty year reign of the industry. But then again, these are the same people that found Microsoft guilty seemingly only because the evidence was overwhelmingly against it, but then decided to do nothing about it. Kroes is absolutely right to express her frustration about the DoJ's public criticism on the EU's policy; it's none of their business and definitely not within their jurisdiction.

Φάτε τους κλώνους!

Χωρίς ειδική σήμανση και με τις ευλογίες της FDA, το κρέας κλώνων θα βρίσκεται στα κρεοπωλεία κοντά σας...αν βρίσκεστε στις ΗΠΑ. Μια ακόμη αποτυχία της FDA να κάνει τη δουλειά ενώ προωθεί τα συμφέροντα των αμερικάνικων επιχειρήσεων ή δείγμα των καιρών μας;

Galileo Global Positioning threatened by the US Military?

I just read this article in The Register regarding the potential effect/degradation of the Galileo Global Positioning System by the US Military; apparently they are not that happy about its 1m resolution that is to be publicly available. I sincerely hope that no such demands are accepted by the EU. Galileo is a fantastic project and it's utility to Europeans and everyone else is paramount, both in civilian and military contexts. Unfortunately, I can see how the US military is concerned about this and how they will use their military and political muscle/influence to 'convince' the EU that Galileo should be degraded to a toy-GPS.