Monday 29 June 2009

Cut Off The DNC's Money! - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

Cut Off The DNC's Money! - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

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Feliciana Basset

http://www.flickr.com/photos/81127501@N00/sets/72157620569101427/


I miss her sooooooo much. Its now been a little over a year since she went to live with another family.......
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Saturday 27 June 2009

dragon park


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Super diver



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Friday 26 June 2009

Tuesday 23 June 2009

BBQ with Neen and Tim at the Cabbin

Neen and Tim drove down to our Devil's lake cabbin for some R&R. We cooked up a storm

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neen and tim on the lake

Thursday 18 June 2009

What up Yahoo? This stinks! The case of Shi Tao and how Yahoo gave China what it needed to jail him




Shi Tao

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Shi Tao (simplified Chinese: 师涛; traditional Chinese: 師濤; pinyin: Shī Tāo; born 25 July 1968) is a mainland Chinese journalist, writer and poet, who in 2005 was sentenced to imprisonment for 10 years for releasing a document of the Communist Party to an overseas Chinese democracy site after Yahoo! China provided his personal details to the Chinese government.

Contents

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[edit] Brief history

Shi Tao was born in Yanchi County (盐池县), Wuzhong, Ningxia province in 1968. He studied at East China Normal University in Shanghai. He graduated in July 1991, and was married in 1994.

Shi Tao works in Fushun Institute of Technology during 1997-99 but moved to Canada with family for personal reasons.

On October 18, 2005, the Committee to Protect Journalists announced that Shi was one of four winners of the 2005 CPJ International Press Freedom Awards.[1] The Committee's website states he will be officially presented with the award when he is released from prison.[2]

In March 2006, he was given the Vasyl Stus Award. On November 28, 2006, he was given the Golden Pen of Freedom Award by the World Association of Newspapers.

[edit] Arrest and imprisonment

In 2004 at the age of 37, Shi Tao was working for the Contemporary Business News in the Hunan province of China.

On April 20, 2004, the Chinese government released the Number 11 document "A notice concerning the work for maintaining stability" (关于当前稳定工作的通知). In the document, it warned journalists that overseas pro-democracy Chinese dissidents may come back to mainland China during the 15th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Protests of 1989 on June 4, which would affect the politico-social order's stability. It asked all news media to not report anything regarding the so-called "June 4th event", Falun Gong or people calling for politico-social change. Shi used his private Yahoo! email account and sent a brief of the document to an overseas web site called Asia Democracy Foundation.

When the Chinese government found out, it demanded the sender's personal information from Yahoo!'s Hong Kong office. Yahoo! turned the information over without asking what it was for. Shortly thereafter, Shi Tao was detained on November 24, 2004. The Chinese authorities confiscated his computer and documents without showing any proper permit or document, and warned his family members not to talk about it with others. He was formally arrested on December 14.

His lawyer, Guo Guoting (郭国汀), famous for taking human rights cases, stated that the search and seizure and subsequent arrest were illegal. As a result, his license to practice law was suspended for one year by Shanghai's Department of Law. He was later put under house arrest, and one of his co-workers had to take over the case.

On March 11, 2005, Hunan Changsha Intermediate People's Court held its first hearing secretly. It lasted for two hours. Shi Tao's mother and brothers came all the way from Ningxia to Changsha, but they were not permitted to go inside and observe. After the hearing was over, Shi was permitted ten minutes of private time with his family members. Fifteen days later, he was sentenced to prison for ten years, and will lose his political rights for two years on the charge of leaking state secrets.[3]

On June 2, 2005, the Hunan High People's Court rejected his lawyer's arguments and denied his appeal, keeping the original sentencing. Shi's mother, Gao Qinsheng, alleged "serious procedural defects" in her son's case, but his appeal was rejected without a hearing.

[edit] Reactions

The incident sparked a controversy about the business practices of Yahoo!, whose Hong Kong arm provided technical information connecting the message and email account with Shi Tao's computer. Yahoo! was criticized by Reporters Without Borders for acting as a "police informant". The United States Congress held a hearing about this and other similar incidents with representatives from Yahoo!, Google, and MSN, etc. In August 2007, Congress began an investigation into Yahoo!'s handling of the case,[4] with Yahoo! founder Jerry Yang testifing in a hearing before Congress. [5]

On August 28, 2007, the World Organization for Human Rights USA sued Yahoo! for allegedly providing information (email and IP address) to the Chinese government that caused the arrests of writers and dissidents. The suit was filed in San Francisco for journalists Shi Tao and Wang Xiaoning.[6]

On November 6, 2007, the U.S. congressional panel criticized Yahoo! for not giving full details to the House Foreign Affairs Committee the previous year, stating it had been "at best inexcusably negligent" and at worst "deceptive".[7] In a February 2006 hearing, Yahoo! swore that they had no information about the nature of the investigation. Some months later, it was found out that the document provided to Yahoo! China on April 22, 2004 by the Beijing State Security Bureau actually stated, “Your office is in possession of the following items relating to a case of suspected illegal provision of state secrets to foreign entities…”(emphasis added)[8].

On November 13, 2007, Yahoo settled with Shi for an undisclosed sum. Shi remains in prison.[1]

Shi is married and has a son born in Fushun, Liaoning.

According to the International Herald Tribune, while visiting China United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on 27 February 2008 that she had raised the issue of a journalist and a writer jailed by China for expressing their views over the Internet during meetings with the Chinese foreign minister, Yang Jiechi. The Yahoo chief executive, Jerry Yang, asked Rice in a letter sent during the previous week to help secure the release of the journalist, Shi Tao, and the writer, Wang Xiaoning, who were imprisoned for sending pro-democracy information using e-mail messages or Yahoo groups
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Wednesday 17 June 2009

Adam's Birthday 2009




adam's bday 2009





Mom, Dad and I drove up to Camas for my brother Adam's birthday. We cooked a pork roast and some creamed potatoes. The kids each decorated a cake...

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Monday 15 June 2009

Sunday 14 June 2009

family and friends over for dinner







sat june 13 dinner

I have to cook in an interview and needed to try out a few recipes so mom, dad, Jason, Susie and Dick all willingly allowed themselves to be guinea pigs. Lots of fun and lots of foood.

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video also on youtube at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpYJf4pxmLY

Thursday 11 June 2009

KBR Got Bonuses for Work that Killed Soldiers





KBR Got Bonuses for Work that Killed Soldiers

By Jeremy Scahill

May 20, 2009

The Department of Defense paid former Halliburton subsidiary KBR more than $80 million in bonuses for contracts to install electrical wiring in Iraq. The award payments were for the very work that resulted in the electrocution deaths of US soldiers, according to Department of Defense documents revealed today in a Senate hearing. More than $30 million in bonuses were paid months after the death of Sgt. Ryan Maseth, a highly decorated, 24-year-old Green Beret, who was electrocuted while taking a shower at a US base in January 2008. His death, the result of improper grounding for a water pump, has been classified by the US Army Criminal Investigations Division (CID) as a "negligent homicide." Maseth's death had originally been labeled an accident. Bonuses were paid to KBR in 2007 and 2008, after CID investigato

rs had officially expressed concerns about the quality of KBR's electrical work. For its part, KBR denies any culpability for the electrocution deaths.

This information was revealed at a hearing of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee. According to the committee's chair, Sen. Byron Dorgan, the rewards KBR received under its LOGCAP contracts were supposed to be for work of the "highest quality" with "no deficiencies" or problems. Dorgan said KBR's work was "shoddy" and "u nprofessional." Some eighteen US soldiers have died since 2003 as a result of KBR's "shoddy work," according to Sen. Frank Lautenberg. KBR/Halliburton, of which Dick Cheney was chairman and CEO from 1995 to 2000, has been the single largest corporate beneficiary of the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It continues to operate globally on US government contracts.

Charles Smith, the former Army official who managed the contracts under which KBR performed electrical work in Iraq, testified that it was "highly inappropriate" that KBR received these bonuses for what he called "dangerously substandard" work. He said that the Army was well aware of KBR's "poor performance" since the beginning of the Iraq invasion, and yet continued to reward KBR because the military was "afraid" KBR would cease work. He said there was "a culture that decided KBR was too big to fail and too important to be held to account." The "perverse incentive is that there was no incentive" for KBR to do quality work because they received bonuses for poor work.

Senator Dorgan said there are "tens of thousands of examples" of unnecessary risks to US soldiers, including deaths that have arisen as a result of KBR's work. "Why should [KBR] be getting more contracts now that we know all this information?" asked Sen. Bob Casey. "The Defense Department has not answered these questions."

James Childs, a master electrician hired by the Army to review electrical

work in Iraq during 2008, testified that KBR's work in Iraq was the "most hazardous, worst quality work" he'd ever seen. He said his investigation found improper wiring in "every" building KBR wired in Iraq (of which there are thousands) and that KBR's rewiring work in buildings that were previously safely wired resulted in the electrical system becoming unsafe. Childs said that KBR did not do any work "according to code." He also testified that the same risks exist in Afghanistan, which he recently visited. "While doing inspections in Afghanistan, I found the exact same code violations," Childs said.

Eric Peters, a master electrician who worked for KBR in Iraq as recently as 2009, said that 50 percent of the KBR-managed buildings he saw were not properly wired. "I worried every day people would be injured or killed as a result of this work," Peters testified. He estimated that at least half the electricians hired by KBR--many of them cheaper-costing Third Country Nationals (TCNs)--to service the US military in Iraq would not have been hired to work in the United States, saying they were not trained in US or UK electrical standards. TCNs--from places like India, Bangladesh and Bosnia--are estimated to have done some 60 percent of the electrical work for KBR in Iraq. Peters charged that KBR allowed tr

ainees to take notes in to certification tests, making it very easy to be cleared for work.

Peters also charged that KBR "frowned upon" any refusal to sign off on work that Peters deemed incomplete or unsafe. Peters and others who testified said that "all over theater," meaning everywhere in Iraq, KBR would effectively double-bill US taxpayers by leaving electrical work half-done or incorrectly done and then billing taxpayers again to repair its own shoddy work.

Peters characterized KBR managers as "completely unqualified" and said he is not a "disgruntled former employee" but rather a "disgusted former employee."

About Jeremy Scahill

Jeremy Scahill, a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at The Nation Institute, is the author of the bestselling Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army, published by Nation Books. He is an award-winning investigative journalist and correspondent for the national radio and TV program Democracy Now!. more.


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Daily Notes June 6 - 9

Tuesday, June 9th 2009

Drove up the Columbia Gorge to the View Point Inn with mom and had lunch. Increadible property... loved it. Then hopped over the river to Camas, WA to see my brother and his kids.

Went to a wine party in honor of my dad who is retiring from the board of directors for the local Habbitat for Humanity chapter (he served 6 years).

Discovered at the event a blue cheese called "Caveman" that rocked my sock... great stuff and chatted with a high school classmate, Eric Wolf. Eric has turned into a really nice guy. He runs a roofing company that donates to Habbitat. File under cool... And he's got a wife and several kids. Always fun to see what people make of themselves.... boy's done well.

Monday, June 8th 2009

Got several call backs on very good jobs....
Cooked balsamic and pepper spiced pecans and topped a sudo waldorf with them. Waldorf had a mint and yogurt dressing with honey, grapes, purple cabbage, apple and celery. took the salad to a BBQ (even on a Monday these people BBQ! its over the top). -- overheard an older lady there say the salad was "nothing to write home about.... she brough baked beans that were pretty much straight out of the can... Whatever!

Guy there smoked a brilliant soy and ginger marinated pork loing (and some tofu for a few vegetarians in the group - no one drinking.... ?????? except me, I brought beer... a BBQ with no libations? Not possible in my book - tofu on the BBQ and no alcohol to numb the obsurdity of it???? No way). Kidding aside the group was a lot of fun. A bit uncomfortable for me as they talked about stuff I've not heard people talk about in a very long time. My crowd in HK and Shanghai weren't very adept at subjects like tree pruning and the delicate art of the perfectly roasted marshmallow..... Fun for me but left me feeling very much the outsider.

Hooked up with long time buddy Robbi Lazano (or Roberto as he calls himself now that he's all grown up..... he'll aways be Robbi to me..). Chatted like teen girlfriends who haven't seen each other all summer long. So wonderful to have people you know so well you can just pick up where you last left off after not seeing them for so long!

Went to see Star Trek again with Robbi..... damn busy day.

Sunday, June 7th 2009

Made left over curry rice into a brilliant soup and folded the remaining smoked tomatoes into a nice pesto bow tie pasta. Mom is complaining that she's 5# heavier due to my presence..... I'm feeling it as well, but that didn't stop us from finishing off the rest of Kaila's pies.

Watched the Tony Awards.... Very fun actually. More interesting than the Oscars.

Saturday, June 6 2009

Cooked my version of Char Siu Pork for Ross, Katlin, mom, dad and a couple of Ross's friends. The marinade and smoke was the best I've done yet. Brown sugar, Dark soy, Garlic, Chinese 5 spice, sichuan pepper, kosher salt, powdered cardimon, powdered ginger and beat juice (rather thank red dye).Thursday, June 4th 2009. Marrinated the pork loins for several hours then slow cooked them in the bbq with wood chips.

Rest of the meal.: Fresh beets cooked in cranberry vinegar, raw sugar and salt with served and steamed beet greens. Oven roasted potatoes with parsnips and carrots. Spinach salad with warm bacon dressing.

Katlin made a chocolate pudding pie and a strawberry rubarb pie that were out standing.

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Taiwan gay MV-谢曜仲《爱情进行曲》(Love march)







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Wednesday 10 June 2009

Stolen Renoir Recovered



To turn off the blog background music go to the bottom of the page




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Monday 8 June 2009

BBQ is a serious sport in Oregon




Hanging with buddy Robbi Lazano.... super fun.



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Betty Boo: Take off.....





Not new but I can't get enough of it.... Luv it


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Sunday 7 June 2009

Daily Notes May 31 - June 7

Saturday, June 6 2009

Cooked my version of Char Siu Pork for Ross, Katlin, mom, dad and a couple of Ross's friends. The marinade and smoke was the best I've done yet. Brown sugar, Dark soy, Garlic, Chinese 5 spice, sichuan pepper, kosher salt, powdered cardimon, powdered ginger and beat juice (rather thank red dye).Thursday, June 4th 2009. Marrinated the pork loins for several hours then slow cooked them in the bbq with wood chips.

Rest of the meal.: Fresh beets cooked in cranberry vinegar, raw sugar and salt with served and steamed beet greens. Oven roasted potatoes with parsnips and carrots. Spinach salad with warm bacon dressing.

Katlin made a chocolate pudding pie and a strawberry rubarb pie that were out standing.

Thursday, June 4th 2009

Up to Salem to visit with Dick and Susie Francois. Storm knocks out power in McMinnville. Working on second painting: Baloon Faces.

Tuesday, June 2nd 2009

Finished first painting: Wooden Houses.

Friday, May 29th

Had a great day on the Oregon Coast yesterday and an excellent interview at the Ocean View. Getting myself prepared to work again after so many months of not working.


Monday, May 18th 2009

The whale had a brilliant Sunday with an old friend from Hawaii. Now to the task of packing. When it comes to shipping things across an ocean what is really necessary? Its amazinghow much of what we used to carry physically now fits into a hard drive (photos, books, journals)

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Vaginas with teeth — and other sexual myths A romp through history reveals a host of absurd beliefs once held as truth


By Brian Alexander
msnbc.com contributor
updated 5:59 a.m. PT, Thurs., April 23, 2009



Brian Alexander

E-mail

Your genitals are connected to your nose. Women are infertile males. Orgasm is necessary to make a baby. Masturbation leads to insanity. Menstrual blood is actually sperm gone bad. At one time or another, medical science believed all these statements. What is it about sex that allows the imagination of doctors and the scientifically-minded to run free?

A walk down the memory lane of misbegotten sex theories reveals that such fanciful “truths” often grow from the fertile soil of bias and prejudice.

for the rest of the article go to: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30332998/




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new gay pride anthem from Hong Kong's DJ Stonedog



Love this dj who works out of HK and AUS. Everything he does is brilliant. To turn off the background music scroll to the bottom of the page.



http://www.volume.com.hk


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Thursday 4 June 2009

Wednesday 3 June 2009

Tuesday 2 June 2009

First Painting in Oregon: Wooden Houses



18 by 48 inches. Acryllic on canas. Stretched on pine. painting is for sale. email bids to dinerbosschina@gmail.com



wooden houses






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