Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Boeing loses notebook PC

Not a lot of news coverage about this - maybe people are getting used to it? - but Boeing had a notebook PC stolen from an HR person. On the PC was the personal data of some 161,000 current and former Boeing employees including names, addresses, social security numbers, banks, routing numbers for the banks, and bank accounts. The saving grace is that the information was password protected (no word on what sort of encryption). Boeing is providing current employees with info on credit checks and offering to pay for credit alerts (the very least that they can do and an appropriate response, IMO). One person in the article asks the obvious question: why was this person carrying around so much data in the first place? Why wasn't the data maintained on a secure server on the network and accessed when needed?

I don't want to drag on Boeing too much because their response has been about as good as can be expected, short of preventing this from happening in the first place. And the event appears to have occurred off site, which begs the above questions even more. Still, having wandered around Boeing plants now for several weeks, I can honestly say that I'm not surprised by security breaches there. Now, if the information does fall into the wrong hands, wouldn't it be nice if there were some sort of civil recourse for citizens who had their data compromised?

From the story in the Seattle Times (linked above):

Highly sensitive personal data on 161,000 current and former Boeing workers are missing after the theft of a company personal computer.

The data included "names and Social Security numbers, and in some cases birth dates and banking information," according to a Boeing statement released Friday afternoon.

The news incensed workers who were notified by the company.

"It's absolutely ridiculous if that kind of information is on a personal computer," said Rob Hall, a mechanic in the Integrated Defense Systems division at Boeing Field.

The banking information included names of banks, routing numbers and account numbers for some workers who had elected to have their paychecks directly deposited into their accounts, according to Tim Neale, a Boeing spokesman.

No credit-card numbers were on the computer.

The information was password protected, Neale said. "It was locked and thus not easy to access the information."

No follow-up story has yet been published in the Seattle Times, though they did a good job reporting this story to begin with.

Not to rag too much on the Seattle Times, but they printed this story last week on the so-called bird flu pandemic possibility and once again forgot to mention that the reason that the Tamiflu the Bush administration ordered will not be ready until 2007 is because they ordered it late - behind 40 other countries, mostly European countries. That's right, the Bush administration dropped the ball on ordering and preparing it's stockpiles of the only drug thought to work against the flu strain. They had plenty of warning, too, from the UN about it. The Europeans took notice and the Bush administration did not and, apparently, neither does the news media which continues to allow the administration to guide this story without reporting the fact that they dropped the ball in the first place.

I've written to the Seattle Times about this sort of thing on this particular issue and one other (global warming). This story, like others mentioned, was not originated by the Seattle Times, but was published in their paper. It neglects to mention the previous information that was available in the Seattle Times. I chalk that up to poor editing, though they would probably defend it by A) saying their resources were stretched too thinly, B) that they are highly compartmentalized and therefore not every editor has the opportunity to familiarize themselves with every story, and C) they didn't write the news; they only print it.

Privacy

My friend, Scott, posts a very well reasoned and cogent argument against lying, war, and the war crimes committed by George W. Bush and his administration. His arguments are persuasive. The only thing that I'd add to them are that I believe that the U.S. should participate in the World Court War Crimes Tribunal. The U.S. is one of the nations in the world that argues that the rule of law, not the whims of dictators and corrupt justices, should govern men. It's a good speech, if only we'd back it up with actions. If we were participating in the World Court War Crimes Tribunal, then we'd have a seat at the table when these laws are established. Any concerns that we might have regarding the laws and how they are applied could be addressed in a democratic fashion within the court. By doing so, we'd be better able to protect our citizens who no doubt one day will come in front of the court. Not being there only does greater disservice to future generations, but that is par for the course for this administration and it's Republican minions.

GM is laying off 10% of their work force (17% of their domestic work force). Now those people are going to be added to the unemployed and/or pension rolls (which GM will no doubt try to turn over to the U.S. government at some point, complaining that because the law allowed them to underfund the pensions and instead pay their executives and shareholders - you know, the people that Republicans are now so anxious to provide tax cuts for - GM can no longer afford the pensions without grave consequences for their executives and shareholders, therefore the middle class should pay for their own pensions through taxes - see the circular argument?). This sounds more like the 80s each day. The economy numbers show more people employed, but wages are stagnant (except for the upper classes) and fewer people seem to be benefiting beyond those on Wall Street. Is this really the sort of economy Americans want or would they prefer the one (now so derided by Republicans) from the 90s when more people benefited, there was less unemployment, and the deficit was shrinking rather than growing?

Speaking of the 80s, Scott mentions the Alito nomination and abortion. My early days of political cognizance did not focus a great deal on the right to privacy. During the late 70s when it came to women's rights, I was focused on the equal rights amendment. I remember my mother and I arguing over the amendment. She argued against it based on the old "do we want women going to war?" issue. She was horrified when I told her it made sense to me. If men could join the armed forces and go to war, then women should be offered the same opportunities. To this day, I still hold firm to that belief.

Some time during the 80s, however, the issue of abortion became more dominant in our discussion of women's rights. Perhaps it was the death of the ERA that spurred this development, but abortion didn't really appear on my radar screen in a big way until the 1980s. Since then it has dominated politics of both parties. A great deal of time, energy, and money has been spent on a question that, if polled, the American people largely agree upon - and have agreed upon since the 70s. Polls have consistently shown that somewhere between 67 and 73% of Americans support a right to privacy, which is to say that they support a woman's right to choose, which is to say that it's no one else's business what she decided in privacy with her doctor and, possibly, her mate.

So, why do we continue to argue the issue? Oh, sure, it's easy to point to the right wing extremists who over the years have bombed clinics, places death threats on doctors, created havoc outside of clinics, and so on. It's also easy to blame the political allies of these extremists. Let there be no confusion of my position: these people are a threat to the civil rights of women. However, let's be clear: if the Democrats didn't gain something from this relationship, then it would have been resolved long ago. From abortion the Democratic party also gains a rallying point, a funding point, and necessary drama to keep their moribund party active. They benefit from moderate Republicans having lost control of their party to the extremists due to their own lack of diligence (fueled by a thirst for power over ethics). I put to you, dear reader, that if the Democratic party really wanted to have done so, they could have settled this issue long ago by proposing an amendment to a right to privacy. The Democratic party didn't do so because it would have eliminated a hot button issue that raises funds, rallies troops, and distinguishes itself from the Republican Party. In other words, neither party is truly interested in seeing this issue go away.

What other issue can you think of where the American public is in 70% agreement? How much of a slam dunk would this have been or could be? Why not end the debate so we can move forward with more constructive discussions such as the economy, health care, national security?

Ooops, I shouldn't have mentioned that last one. You see, an amendment to the Constitution regarding privacy might have very real impact on national security. In the 80s or 90s such an amendment would have passed without much thought to national security, but in the new millennium, national security would be used as a tactic of Republicans to defeat the amendment. Indeed, it is exactly the Republican and Democratic party's convergence of using the state apparatus (F.B.I., C.I.A., Fatherland Security) to violate it's citizen's rights that is the reason such an amendment is needed now more than ever.

The so-called Patriot Act was passed overwhelmingly by Democrats and Republicans just 4 years ago. At the time opponents were assured that abuses would not be committed. Checks and balances were in place to prevent such abuses, we were told. Old tales from the Johnson/Nixon era of law enforcement investigations of innocent citizens - investigations that were similar to the way the KGB filed reports on it's citizens - would never be repeated, according to supporters of the Patriot Act. And, yet, it is becoming clearer that such reassurances were not true.

The so-called Patriot Act has emboldened law enforcement agencies to invade the privacy of citizens in exactly the ways we were told it would not. The desire to prevent terrorism has driven some officers to violate the privacy of citizens of this country (who are their employers, in fact). Cases are mounting and they are not terribly limited. Because the so-called Patriot Act provides a great deal of privacy to government agencies, ordinary citizens do not often hear about the abuses. Yet some diligent organizations are fighting in courts to expose those abuses and some information is leaking out.

Would passage of a privacy amendment prevent law enforcement from preventing a terrorist attack? I'd argue not likely. In over 200 years, this country has experienced only 1 major terrorist attack from a foreign source. Most of the terrorist attacks in this country have been caused by it's own citizens. Indeed, as reports in the media have shown, if the FBI had listened to it's own field agents, the 9-11 attacks might never have happened and that was before any of the provisions of the Patriot Act were in place. If portions of the Patriot Act have prevented terrorist attacks since then, I'd expect the administration to be touting their successes. Instead, I read of cases like the one in Detroit where we find out that the administration, according to the courts, had wrongfully prosecuted a group of people. Or the case in Portland where one citizen was wrongfully accused of participating in the terrorist bombings in Spain. Or the case in Tacoma where a military chaplain was accused of terrorism while attending prisoners in Guantanamo.

Sure, supporters of the act will tout other cases, but can they prove that it was the Patriot Act specifically that was the make or break of those cases? Not likely because they cannot tell us how it was used. Government has more privacy rights than the citizens that provide it legitimacy.

A privacy amendment to the Constitution, therefore, would assist in preventing unnecessary government intrusions. It would provide yet another check and balance against those who would abuse law enforcement privileges to inflict state terror on it's citizens (and I'm not just referring to the national government here as studies have shown an increasing desire of local prosecutors to apply portions of the so-called Patriot Act to crimes in their jurisdiction - crimes not originally intended to be covered by the Act - where are the great defenders of "original intent" when these issues arise?). It would also end the abortion debate (at least, legally and politically) thereby freeing up gridlock and talking points for both political parties. Such an amendment would also have implications regarding sodomy laws throughout the country, ending yet another stagnating, bickering point for the political parties. It would most likely have effects in other areas of law enforcement such as illegal searches of cars/homes/boats without due cause (a favorite trick used in the so-called drug war). Plus, a properly written privacy amendment would cover the personal information of people when dealing on the Internet, with financial institutions, and other agencies that might use that information (as it stands today, such information can be gathered with or without the knowledge of the individuals involved).

The time has come for such an amendment to the Constitution. But do not expect political parties to deliver this. They would rather have easy fund raising issues. Political parties would rather have stagnation over abortion rather than discourse and creative solutions on issues such as health care, retirement, housing, economics, and/or the poor. Rather, a privacy amendment needs to first be a grass roots effort. It needs to well up in such numbers that it forces politicians to take notice and embrace it. No politician will embrace it on it's own as it is the type of thing politicians fear.

Alito and his scourge often argue that Roe v. Wade was wrongfully decided. The argument goes that there is no constitutional right to privacy (which would negate the Griswold decision as well which provided a right to privacy for couples seeking to purchase contraception, but they don't like to bring that up because to do so would expose their anti-sexuality agenda) and therefore the Roe decision was an issue of judicial activism enshrining in the Constitution something that it does not explicitly endorse. I'd wager that most Americans, however, endorse that concept. We need a privacy amendment to end this discussion and make the nominations such as Alito about larger issues such as state rights, federalism, and corporate rights versus citizen's rights. Alito is a pro-corporate rights, pro-federal government rights over citizen's rights justice nomination. To whittle the discussion down to a tired abortion debate - one that most people think should be settled - does a disservice to everyone.

Update: Bruce Schneier has a good column today on security, the Patriot Act, and the importance of transparency. Choice quote:

These differences illustrate four principles that should guide our use of personal information by the police. The first is oversight: In order to obtain personal information, the police should be required to show probable cause, and convince a judge to issue a warrant for the specific information needed. Second, minimization: The police should only get the specific information they need, and not any more. Nor should they be allowed to collect large blocks of information in order to go on "fishing expeditions," looking for suspicious behavior. The third is transparency: The public should know, if not immediately then eventually, what information the police are getting and how it is being used. And fourth, destruction. Any data the police obtains should be destroyed immediately after its court-authorized purpose is achieved. The police should not be able to hold on to it, just in case it might become useful at some future date.

This isn't about our ability to combat terrorism; it's about police power. Traditional law already gives police enormous power to peer into the personal lives of people, to use new crime-fighting technologies, and to correlate that information. But unfettered police power quickly resembles a police state, and checks on that power make us all safer.

As more of our lives become digital, we leave an ever-widening audit trail in our wake. This information has enormous social value -- not just for national security and law enforcement, but for purposes as mundane as using cell-phone data to track road congestion, and as important as using medical data to track the spread of diseases. Our challenge is to make this information available when and where it needs to be, but also to protect the principles of privacy and liberty our country is built on.

Monday, November 21, 2005

Weekly World News does Bush

This is just too funny:

WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Bush is so worried that many of his top aides
and associates in Congress will be imprisoned for assorted wrong-doing that he’s
busily converting the West Wing of the White House into an “Arrest Wing” — a row
of prison cells from which these aides can keep working if they’re ever
convicted.

Recently, House Majority Leader Tom Delay was indicted for money laundering
and conspiracy. Karl Rove may be indicted for his role in leaking the name of a
CIA operative. Speaker of the House Bill Frist is also under investigation as
are several other advisors to Bush.

“Bush can’t function without these people,” a top White House aide told
Weekly World News under condition that we not tell Karl Rove. “This way, even if
they’re in prison, Bush will be able to pick their brains.”

In fact, the White House is even attempting to put a positive spin on it.

“If all these folks go to jail, this administration will be even more
productive since they won’t have anything else to do but work,” said another
source close to Bush, frequent Weekly World News source ‘CR.’

American Edit

American Edit is a mashup album featuring Green Day's "American Idiot" material. Like most such projects, it's a mixed bag.

Sony suits begin to fly

Two lawsuits were filed against Sony today for the rootkit debacle: the EFF filed a class action suit while the Texas Attorney General is suing on behalf of his citizens. Word has it that Sony is catching a LOT of heat from artists on it's label as well.
From uComics.

Foxtrot on Sony Rootkit

The newspaper comic, Foxtrot, takes a stab at the Sony rootkit debacle. Too funny.

Friday, November 18, 2005

Georgia voter ID

Georgia is trying to require citizens to pay for an ID in order to have the right to vote. This recalls the heyday of the racist south when poll taxes were the norm in order to prevent poor blacks from voting (other methods of "persuasion" were used to prevent more affluent blacks from voting). Of course, the legislators in Georgia who support this effort say that they are just trying to decrease voter fraud. Now comes this report with the choice quote from the sponsor of the Georgia legislation:

According to the memo, Burmeister told the Justice Department that she was "aware of vote-buying in certain precincts" and detailed one episode in which she said former Augusta Mayor Ed McIntyre offered to put her name on a card and then round up black voters and "pay them to vote for the candidates on the card in exchange for $2,000." McIntyre, who died last year, was convicted in 1984 in connection with extortion.

The memo, leaked to The Washington Post, went on to state: "Rep. Burmeister said that if there are fewer black voters because of this bill, it will only be because there is less opportunity for fraud. She said that when black voters in her black precincts are not paid to vote, they do not go to the polls."

Friday Random Twenty

Direct from iTunes:

1) Juxtaposeur - JuxtaPoeCreature
2) Doppleganger - Dark Side of the Gooom
3) Denise Levertov - Woman Alone/Homage to Pavese
4) The Durutti Column - Madeleine
5) Paul Weller - The Pebble and The Boy
6) Lou Reed - Guilty (song)
7) The National - Mr. November
8) Marcin Wasilewski, Slawomir Kurkiewicz, Michal Miskiewicz - Hyperballad
9) Martha and the Muffins - In Between Sleep and Reason
10) Les Baxter - Amazon Falls
11) Nina Simone - Cherish
12) Tuxedomoon - Cagli-Five-O (live)
13) Stan Ridgway - Heat Takes A Walk
14) Kate Bush - Prologue
15) Champion Jack Dupree - She Makes Good Jelly
16) Paul Weller - Bring Back The Funk (pts 1 & 2)
17) Cabaret Voltaire - I Want You
18) Nitin Sawhney - Journey
19) Ted Leo and the Pharmacists - Better Dead Than Lead
20) Badi Assad - Valse D'amelie

Bonus: Suzie Seacell - My and My Vibrator

More random Friday mess


Vonn Cummings Sumner


Amanda Vissell.

The Boston Globe reports that the U.S. has killed 13 journalists since invading Iraq and currently has 5 held in secret detention. Choice line:

A military investigation said the soldier who shot him acted reasonably, noting that the soldier saw a man with ''dark skin and dark hair" and mistook his camera for a grenade launcher.
A Virginia Church, unhappy with state initiatives to ban gay marriages, decides to stop performing marriages altogether. Choice quote:

We're in the Jesus business, not the marriage business.
Totally not safe for work: Several galleries of Femdom art in which men have their heads stuck up the cracks of big bottomed girls.

More tame, but still perhaps not work safe: Galleries of Belly Dancers and Harem Girls.

Ananova reports on an Indian television station that broadcast a Russian porn film instead of the news by mistake.

Years ago I mentioned to friends that I was going to raise a fortune by my invention of "breast muffs". They'd be soft and warm and would also prevent the pointing nipples effect (copyrighted - new band name). It was a joke, of course, but since then I've seen several entries into that category on the internet. Now comes a heated bra from Japan that looks like a friend of Bjork designed it. Try hiding that under your blouse!

Also NSFW: Novelty aprons...perfect for Thanksgiving! WWII airplane nosecone art (retro cool). While we're in the era, how 'bout some 1940s Pinup Covers. Japanese porn dolls that are dispensed in bubble gum dispensers.

Friday Art blogging


Jenny Hart


Michael Slack



Stephane Tartelin



Ossi Pirkonen

Jeff Neumann



Sam Weber

Sony Rootkit Roundup

This story has really taken off, as it should have. If you haven't heard by now, Sony installed a rootkit onto PCs without user's knowledge in order to track the use of the music files from said discs on user's PCs. The kit phoned home periodically, also without user's knowledge. The kit also hid itself from the users by disguising itself as a Windows software. The kit damages Windows OS. The kit leaves a backdoor that can and has been exploited by hackers. Sony, at first, denied the problem, then offered a patch that revealed the kit, then offered another removal patch that damaged Windows further, and now has recalled all of the CDs. Microsoft will issue a removal software later this month.

Mark Russinovich was the first person to publicly report on the problem. His blog details (and I mean technically details) the discovery and removal problems.

Security Focus has done a good job reporting on this. They have a 2 part article describing root kits. Part 1 and Part 2. Sony faces legal issues over this ploy.

Boing Boing pointed out Sony's "non-apology" over the rootkit. They're second roundup of articles here.

Here's a list of all of the titles Sony released with this rootkit. Collect all 52 invaders before they're exterminated!

Bruce Schneier wrote an article for Wired News about the topic in which he points out the real danger exposed by this episode is that the public is spending millions of dollars per year on security software to prevent exactly this type of thing and yet Norton, McAfee, et al missed it. Or did they miss it? Did they just ignore it because it came from a friendly corporate entity? If not, then why did they react so slowly? Whole thing here.

Update: This just in, according to ZDNet, Sony will replace the rootkit infected CDs with new copies plus MP3s. At least, I hope they mean new CDs plus mp3s because as much as people claim otherwise, MP3s do not sound as good as CDs.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Firefox 1.5 Release candidate 3 out now

Here it is. Confusingly, I just got an update notice and restarted Firefox. However, in the about page there is no mention of "release candidate". Instead it just says Firefox 1.5. Try using your check updates tool under the help menu. It's pretty slick now.

Serbs line up for testicle shocks

According to Ananova, men are lining up in order to temporarily make themselves infertile.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

Eating cake


Eating cake
Originally uploaded by oomingmak.
Mike and Heather had us over for Rowan's first birthday party. The occassion was bittersweet. We loved the party and Rowan got some pretty cool things. However, it was also a time for saying goodbye to that family as they are moving to the Bay area for Heather's new job. I'm saddened to see them leaving Seattle, yet happy for the family as they seek new adventures.

See the entire photo collection, taken by Leslie, here.

Friday, November 04, 2005

Friday Random Ten plus ten

Since I missed last week's random ten, here's an expanded edition from my iTunes player, which wasn't doing as good a job as my dbPowerAmp player earlier in the week.

1) Roger and the Gypsies - Pass the Hatchet
2) Gil Scott-Heron - Black History/The World
3) Queen - You and I
4) Holly Figueroa - Perfect (Live in Chicago)
5) Marvin Holmes - Find Yourself, Pt. 1
6) Cabaret Voltaire - Big Funk
7) Esquivel - Blue Danube
8) Prozac For Lovers - Love Will Tear Us Apart
9) Systemwide - Osmani Stepper
10) The Cowboy Church Sunday School - Those Bad Bad Kids
11) Holly Palmer - Down So Low
12) Anthony J Gnazzo - Hisnis and Hernia
13) Jill Sobule - Angel/Asshole
14) General Elektriks - Tu M'Intrigues
15) The Style Council - Promised Land
16) Goldfrapp - Ooh La La
17) Mohammed Wardi - Al Nas Al Giyafa
18) Madelyn James - Long Time Blues
19) Culture - Garvey
20) Chinga Chavin - Talkin Matamoros First Piece of Ass Blues

Dickie's Quickies

Ten thousand people show up in South America to protest George W. Bush. My guess, and this is simply a guess, is that his approval ratings sink at home is topped in South America.

Bound to hurt his ratings at home, immigrants brought in to help rebuild the Gulf Coast are being mistreated. Some aren't being paid. Some are housed in deplorable conditions, made to work 75 hours per week, and some are caught and rounded up by INS agents. Well, it would hurt his ratings at home if the mainstream media would report on this bullshit.

I wonder how reports of some in the Bush administration, including new Cheney chief of staff (Scooters replacement), David Addington, support torture of our enemies and alleged enemies? Of course, we may never know since many are housed in secret prisons.

Have you heard about the Sony rootkit scandle making the rounds? Sony, the record label, apparently installed a rootkit as part of their Digital Rights Management program without telling users in the EULA. A rootkit is a set of tools used to by hackers to gain access to computers. According to Wikipedia:

These tools are intended to conceal running processes and files or system data, which helps an intruder maintain access to a system for malicious purposes.
The legality of Sony's program is still being debated. However, if they left large numbers of users open to exploitation through a back door of some sort and didn't notify the users, then some sort of class action suit seems likely. In any case, if you want to read up on the original report along with all of the technical details, then look at Mark Russinovich's report here. I read Mark's blog regularly - he posts rarely - and it's generally worth it for the geeks.

In entertainment: check out this classic gallery of strippers in the UK.

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Alito, Bush, Rumsfeld, and Reid

The Bush administration attempted to change the topic this week. They wanted to move away from the damning indictment of Libby and present a more positive image of a government moving forward with it's "mandate". Last week was horrible for the Bushies. Not only did they have to contend with the Libby story, but they also had the whithering Harriet Miers debacle to deal with. Now, Roxie thinks that the Miers nomination was a set up in the first place. Her view is that Miers was a bait and switch nomination that was never meant to succeed. Instead, Miers was the sacrificial lamb - a role that the fundamentalist would surely covet for the most brilliant man she ever met - that would be followed by a more Roberts-like nominee in order to really rally the troops and fend off a Democratic attack. It's an interesting argument and looking at the evidence thus far, it's a compelling one - almost.

The thing that has struck in my craw about Miers is that Harry Reid recommended her. I think Reid set Bush up. He knew the nomination wouldn't fly with the right and Bush fell for it because he likes to set up people he trusts - which are not necessarily the most qualified people for the job. By suggesting Miers, Reid was able to sit back and let the Democrats look moderate while the right wing was foaming at the mouth. It divided the opposition and made the Democratic Senators look downright moderate, which they are anyhow.

So Bush delivers a rallying nomination for both Democrats and Republicans. However while those sides will argue about Alito's rulings on mostly social issues, what most people will miss is that like Harriet Miers, Roberts, and Stephen Breyer, Alito is a corporate shill. Like most Republicans, he believes in a hand's off approach to corporate freedoms. Like most Republicans, he's a statist in that he wants less control in the federal government's powers, but has no problem with giving great powers to state and local governments. He also is not at all friendly to individual rights, also a Republican trait. I suggest that people look into his business rulings VERY closely. You won't find many differences between his rulings, Miers' work, Roberts or Breyer's rulings when it comes to corporate domination.

Actually, from the standpoint of abortion and a load of other privacy rights issues, Alito could be helpful in that he might ignite the silent majority into supporting and passing state laws and amendments that would enshrine those rights. To do so would be to take the issues away from the courts and make them nearly permanent. It would also give the Republicans, and to a lesser extent the Democrats as well, a series of talking points that could no longer use to rally their most radical elements. In other words, passing such laws and amendments, especially if we got a federal constitutional amendment, would bury the issues and move us forward as a society freeing us up to deal with, frankly, much tougher issues that really do divide our society such as poverty, trade policy, and health care.

In another attempt to change the subject and appear effective, the Bush administration held a press conference today on the potential avian flu epidemic. As I've noted before, the Bush administration is lagging way behind other countries in preparing for any potential problems. Forty other countries, for instance, have placed orders for Tamiflu - the only medication that might be able to treat any outbreak - already. Realizing that we were that far down the list and that this was a potential disaster, the Bush administration as well as members of Congress pressed companies to increase production of the drug and even passed tax incentives to build more factories. Note during this paragraph the word "potential". An outbreak of this flu may never happen and much of this money may be badly wasted. Still, I've advocated a position critical of the Bush administration's late response because we should be prepared just in case. For our country, with it's vast resources, not to be prepared would be appalling. However, Bush's speech today, announcing his package of plans (some of which were already dealt with by the Senate), he used the language of fear much in the same way he does with terrorists alerts. He's attempting to scare people for support rather than comfort them and I wonder how long he thinks this tactic will work before fatigue sets in?

Someone who's gaining great comfort from this scare is Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. He was Chairman of the Board of the company that holds the rights to Tamiflu. He still holds millions of dollars in stock in the company and has recused himself of any decisions in combatting a potential epidemic. Nice. Rummy profits from a "potential pandemic" while Cheney profits from a war that was not necessary.

Not to be outdone by the Bush administration, Senator Harry Reid pulled his second shrewd political maneuver in a month by calling the Senate into a closed session. He completely caught the Republican leadership off guard with this tactic. By doing so, Reid some very valid points about the constitutional role of Congress to act as a check and balance to the executive branch by using investigative techniques towards oversight. In specific, Reid referred to the Libby indictment in the Plame leak case. Republicans have abdicated their role in investigating this issue. By doing so, they've handed Reid a big issue that he can use to hammer on them with for through the next election cycle. It also gave Reid a method to bring the media attention back to discussing the Libby case thereby circumventing the Bush efforts to change the topic from their corruption problems. I suspect that was Reid's intention all along.

Oh, and before you cry foul about using the closed session as a political stunt, check how many times the Senate had closed sessions while investigating Clinton's impeachment. (hint, more than 8 times)