Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Surprise? FBI spies on Bush critics

Those who remember when the CIA and FBI engaged in spying on left wing groups, Martin Luthur King Jr., ordinary citizens, and Nixon's "enemies list" may not be surprised to learn that the FBI is up to the same old tricks. In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, the FBI is again armed with expanded powers to collect information on ordinary citizens. And it has been doing so.

That is what the FBI itself disclosed in federal court yesterday. It acknowledged that it has collected 1,173 pages of files on the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), 2,383 on Greenpeace, the environmental advocacy group, and an undetermined number of files on an organisation called United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ), a coalition of more than 1,000 antiwar groups. The coalition allegedly was planning protests at the time of the Republican Party National Convention in New York.

...Beau Grosscup, a professor of international relations at California State University and author of ”The Newest Explosions of Terrorism: Latest Sites of Terrorism in the 90s and Beyond”, told IPS, ”All one has to do is look at the annual FBI report on terrorism to discover that as they watch the ACLU, Earth First, Greenpeace and the peace movement, they refuse to apply their political attention to the violence of the rightwing and in particular anti-environmental groups.”

Monday, July 18, 2005

Alcohol and driving don't mix, even in the tank

We knew it was too good to be true....

A study released from University of California-Berkeley finds that for every unit of energy yielded by ethanol, it takes 1.3 units to produce it from corn, and is nearly 3 times more expensive than gasoline per unit energy delivered. The study didn’t take into account the $3B in federal and state subsidies that are given out to ethanol producers every year, which means that the true cost of ethanol is likely even higher. Ethanol is widely used as a fuel additive across the country, and in some areas can be found as a blend where it’s the primary source of energy (so-called E85 is comprised of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, and must be used only in vehicles designed for it). Since ethanol can be made from corn or other sources of biomass, it’s attracting much attention as a source of renewable energy.

Additionally, ethanol might lead to more pollution than the highly toxic MTBE that it replaces. This is because bacteria in the soil prefer ethanol to gasoline (a choice that many of our readers will agree with), and therefore will break down less gasoline before it reaches underground water sources.

Fans of biodiesel will find that their fuels didn’t fair much better, with soybeans yielding similar results to corn-based ethanol, and sunflower-based biodiesel production requiring 2.2 times the amount of energy the fuel eventually yields.

Friday, July 15, 2005

Bullying the troops from the pulpit

Evidently the investigation of excessive recruiting and influence of evangelical chaplains at the US Air Force Academy was only one indication of the growing influence of evangelicals in the military. Here's an account of a weekend event sponsored by the Air Force:

"There were personal testimonies about Jesus from the stage, a comedian quoting Scripture and a five-piece band performing contemporary Christian praise songs. Then hundreds of Air Force chaplains stood and sang, many with palms upturned, in a service with a distinctively evangelical tone. It was the opening ceremony of a four-day Spiritual Fitness Conference at a Hilton hotel here last month organized and paid for by the Air Force for many of its United States-based chaplains and their families, at a cost of $300,000. The chaplains, who pledge when they enter the military to minister to everyone, Methodist, Mormon or Muslim, attended workshops on "The Purpose Driven Life," the best seller by the megachurch pastor Rick Warren, and on how to improve their worship services."

See link for entire article from NY Times.