Nazis infiltrating United States armed forces


This is a National Geographic video about nazis in the USA.

From David Neiwert’s blog in the USA:

Neo-Nazis working their way inside the military: Salon report has stunning details

Remember how the right-wingers screamed and yelled about that Homeland Security bulletin which indicated that white supremacists might be recruiting Iraq war veterans or pushing recruitment within military ranks?

Remember how the ensuing hissy fit ended with Janet Napolitano apologizing (for a report that originated in the Bush administration)? Notice how even now, after the report has been proven prescient in its warning about “lone wolf” domestic terrorists, guys like Joe Scarborough are still trying to claim that it “insulted our veterans”?

Well, Matt Kennard at Salon has an eye-opening report that should permanently shut up the right-wing whining, because it demonstrates clearly the broad nature of the problem — namely, not only are veterans being actively recruited, but neo-Nazis and other radicals are actively joining up to fight — and the military is turning a blind eye to it:

“Since the launch of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the U.S. military has struggled to recruit and reenlist troops. As the conflicts have dragged on, the military has loosened regulations, issuing “moral waivers” in many cases, allowing even those with criminal records to join up. Veterans suffering post-traumatic stress disorder have been ordered back to the Middle East for second and third tours of duty.

The lax regulations have also opened the military’s doors to neo-Nazis, white supremacists and gang members — with drastic consequences. Some neo-Nazis have been charged with crimes inside the military, and others have been linked to recruitment efforts for the white right. A recent Department of Homeland Security report, “Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment,” stated: “The willingness of a small percentage of military personnel to join extremist groups during the 1990s because they were disgruntled, disillusioned, or suffering from the psychological effects of war is being replicated today.” Many white supremacists join the Army to secure training for, as they see it, a future domestic race war. Others claim to be shooting Iraqis not to pursue the military’s strategic goals but because killing “hajjis” is their duty as white militants.

Soldiers’ associations with extremist groups, and their racist actions, contravene a host of military statutes instituted in the past three decades. But during the “war on terror,” U.S. armed forces have turned a blind eye on their own regulations. A 2005 Department of Defense report states, “Effectively, the military has a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy pertaining to extremism. If individuals can perform satisfactorily, without making their extremist opinions overt … they are likely to be able to complete their contracts.”

Carter F. Smith is a former military investigator who worked with the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command from 2004 to 2006, when he helped to root out gang violence in troops. “When you need more soldiers, you lower the standards, whether you say so or not,” he says. “The increase in gangs and extremists is an indicator of this.” Military investigators may be concerned about white supremacists, he says. “But they have a war to fight, and they don’t have incentive to slow down.”

Tom Metzger is the former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan and current leader of the White Aryan Resistance. He tells me the military has never been more tolerant of racial extremists. “Now they are letting everybody in,” he says.”

Now, much of this, in fact, we have already reported at C&L. Indeed, this is not a new problem, as Kennard makes clear:

“Following an investigation of white supremacist groups, a 2008 FBI report declared: “Military experience — ranging from failure at basic training to success in special operations forces — is found throughout the white supremacist extremist movement.” In white supremacist incidents from 2001 to 2008, the FBI identified 203 veterans. Most of them were associated with the National Alliance and the National Socialist Movement, which promote anti-Semitism and the overthrow of the U.S. government, and assorted skinhead groups.

Because the FBI focused only on reported cases, its numbers don’t include the many extremist soldiers who have managed to stay off the radar. But its report does pinpoint why the white supremacist movements seek to recruit veterans — they “may exploit their accesses to restricted areas and intelligence or apply specialized training in weapons, tactics, and organizational skills to benefit the extremist movement.”

In fact, since the movement’s inception, its leaders have encouraged members to enlist in the U.S. military as a way to receive state-of-the-art combat training, courtesy of the U.S. taxpayer, in preparation for a domestic race war. The concept of a race war is central to extremist groups, whose adherents imagine an eruption of violence that pits races against each other and the government.”

And yes, the danger of returning veterans being recruited into extremist belief systems is also part of this picture. Because that recruitment takes on an added edge when those doing the recruiting are also their Army buddies.

See also here.

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Navy and dead dolphins


From British daily The Independent:

Navy exercises blamed over dead dolphins

By Emily Beament, Press Association

Tuesday, 16 June 2009

Naval exercises could have contributed to the mass stranding of 26 dolphins on the Cornish coast a year ago, a scientific report found today.

The pod of dolphins beached themselves at four separate locations around the Percuil river near Falmouth in June last year after Navy exercises in the area involving surface ships and a submarine.

At the time, rescuers said they believed the worst mass stranding of the marine mammals in UK waters was the result of the dolphins being panicked by an underwater disturbance. …

In the wake of the report, the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society said it believed that as all other potential causes had been ruled out, the military was to blame of [sic; for] the strandings.

Sarah Dolman, ocean noise campaigner for WDCS, said: “The post-mortem results have shown us that those [common] dolphins that died were healthy animals prior to stranding.

“Something frightened them ashore, way up inside the river system, where this species in not generally known to go.

“The unusual behavioural response of all these groups of otherwise healthy animals was triggered by something.

“An ‘error of navigation’ would not lead this many dolphins to strand, and other groups to behave in such an unusual manner, on the same morning – but over a distance of 20km.”

She called on the Ministry of Defence to conduct transparent environmental assessments of its exercises to see what effect they were having on marine life, and to suspend use of sonar once a stranding occurs until rescued animals are out of danger.

The mass beaching in Cornwall was one of two unusual stranding events of cetaceans – the group of marine mammals including whales, dolphins and porpoises – last year.

No cause could be found for the other event, in which a number of long-finned pilot whales and various species of beaked whale were found stranded in Scotland, Wales and Ireland over a three-month period at the beginning of 2008.

The annual report for 2008 from the UK Cetacean Stranding Investigation Programme, also published today, revealed the number of dead and stranded whales, dolphins and porpoises increased by 6.2% on the previous year.

Some 583 cetaceans were reported to the programme, of which 485 were found stranded and dead, 81 were live strandings and 17 were found dead at sea.

The most common species reported were harbour porpoises which were mainly found to have died of starvation, disease, attacks by bottlenose dolphins or as a result of being accidentally caught by fishermen, and short-beaked common dolphins, which mostly died as a result of stranding themselves live, the report revealed.

New Sub “War” Range May Harm Rare Whales, Critics Say: here.

Vast Mediterranean driftnets killing thousands of dolphins illegally: here.

Killer whales visit ‘social clubs’: here.

Northern bottlenose whales strandings: here.

Little terns of Texel island


Little tern

Translated from Staatsbosbeheer in the Netherlands:

The number of little terns, breeding on De Hors (Texel) is bigger than ever. 202 nests have been counted. Also on this sandy plain, some ringed plovers, and very probably one or more Kentish plovers, nest.

Little terns of Texel in 2016: here.

Sandwich terns of Griend island: here.

Schwarzenegger against conservation


This video from the USA is called: Arnold [Schwarzenegger] To Special Interests – “I’ll Be Back”.

Two years ago, there was an item on this blog, called USA: Arnold Schwarzenegger ‘green’? Not really. Though Schwarzenegger did have a quarrel with fellow Republican Bush on energy policy, basically he is a chip off the old George W. block of anti-environmentalism.

Frow the New Scientist:

Schwarzenegger tries to terminate conservation funding

11:46 16 June 2009 by Peter Aldhous

Conservation projects in California’s state parks face a bleak future, if cuts proposed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger go through.

To tackle a swelling state deficit that has reached $24.3 billion, the “Governator” wants to slash spending across the board – including funding for 80 per cent of the 270 sites run by the California Department of Parks and Recreation. Those parks earmarked for closure include world-famous attractions such as the giant sequoias at Calaveras Big Trees State Park in the Sierra Nevada mountains.

Gated access roads to some parks would be closed, but many parks can be easily entered from public highways. With no rangers on hand to keep a watchful eye on visitors, that could be bad news for threatened species such as the desert tortoise.

Moving targets

In a recent survey, researchers led by Kristin Berry of the US Geological Survey in Moreno Valley found a worryingly high death rate among young animals in the Red Rock Canyon State Park, north of Los Angeles – some of which had gunshot wounds.

The proposed funding cuts would also eliminate conservation management activities such as the removal of invasive plants and efforts to prevent catastrophic fires. In Calaveras, this involves the removal of fir trees allowed to grow by earlier fire suppression efforts – and which now threaten a conflagration that could engulf the sequoias.

“That’s work that would have to stop,” says Rick Rayburn, chief of natural resources with the California Department of Parks and Recreation.

Safety fears

California’s state parks also host at least 120 field-research projects each year. These include a four-decade study of breeding elephant seals at the Año Nuevo State Natural Reserve, south of San Francisco, by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

“We’re concerned that we’ll be locked out of our research sites,” says Steve Davenport, who manages the Año Nuevo research site for the university. “And if the public can get in there and there is no ranger staff, there could be serious disruption to populations – and people could get hurt.”

On the other hand, Schwarzenegger stopped a referendum in which California voters wanted to end the Iraq war. Now, if that referendum would have stopped putting all that tax money into the bottomless pit of Bush’s wars, that REALLY would have been good news for the environment and other good stuff on which Schwarzenegger is now cutting back.

California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is likely to veto a bill proposing a special day of commemoration for gay rights activist Harvey Milk: here.

New Zealand’s endangered shore plovers


From BirdLife:

BirdLife grant helps Endangered shorebird

16-06-2009

A grant from the BirdLife International Community Conservation Fund is helping establish a new population of Endangered Shore Plover Thinornis novaeseelandiae on Mana Island, off the west coast of Wellington, New Zealand.

The project is showing early signs of success. A pair from among 41 juveniles introduced to the island in 2007 hatched and fledged a chick during 2008, and five more young Shore Plovers have fledged in 2009.

The first chick was born to one-year-old parents. Shore Plovers normally breed from two years.

The sole natural breeding population of Shore Plover is on Rangatira (South East) Island in the Chatham Islands. The species was once widespread around the coast of New Zealand’s South Island, but had been extirpated by the 1870s. Their global population is estimated to be less than 250 birds, with a total range of just 4 km2. …

The [Mana] island is a scientific reserve, and Shore Plover joins other successful introductions of New Zealand’s endemic bird species that are rare on the mainland, including two more Endangered species – Takahe Porphyrio hochstetteri and Brown Teal Anas chlorotis.

Battle to protect New Zealand’s native birds continues: here.

Stowaway threat to New Zealand’s island sanctuaries: here.

Critically endangered Takahe numbers crash – But some good news: here.

Blackwater defrauded taxpayers in Iraq


This video says about itself:

Iraq For Sale – 1:15:34

Robert Greenwald‘s film about corporate corruption in Iraq, including Blackwater, Caci, Halliburton. Film examines vested interests in the connections between these companies and politicians. Produced for Brave New Films.

From the Wall Street Journal in the USA: (known, already before its takeover by arch-warmonger Rupert Murdoch, as the “War Street Journal“; so, my Rightist readers, don’t start any “liberal media” nonsensical moaning):

JUNE 16, 2009

Audit Finds That U.S. Overpaid Blackwater

By YOCHI J. DREAZEN

WASHINGTON — A government audit found that the State Department overpaid the contract-security firm once known as Blackwater Worldwide by tens of millions of dollars because the company failed to properly staff its teams in Iraq.

The report didn’t identify any specific security breaches, but it said the State Department should have withheld at least $55 million in payments to the company because of the shortfalls.

The audit by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction and the State Department’s Inspector General said the firm didn’t employ enough guards, medics, marksmen and dog handlers to fully man the teams, which were responsible for protecting the U.S. ambassador to Iraq and other high-level officials.

The failure to consistently field the right numbers of guards endangered the U.S. officials whom the company was being paid to protect, the report concluded.

“We believe the full manning of protective details is important to the safety of the principal being protected, as well as to the members of the protective details,” the audit noted. “Insufficient manning exposed the department to unnecessary risk.”

The audit also found that Blackwater, which this year changed its name to Xe, sometimes overcharged for airfare to and from Iraq and failed to properly account for some equipment received from the U.S. government. …

The audit is the latest report to raise questions about Blackwater, which was for years the best known Western contractor in Iraq. Under the new name, Xe, the company is seeking new contracts worth tens of millions of dollars in Afghanistan for services ranging from training Afghan personnel to flying cargo for the U.S. military.

Blackwater wound down its Iraq operations earlier this year, after the Iraqi government refused to renew its operating license because of a 2007 shooting incident involving one of its security teams in which 17 Iraqis died. In December, U.S. prosecutors charged five former Blackwater guards with manslaughter and weapons charges for their alleged roles in the incident. Families of several of the dead Iraqis have also sued Blackwater in federal court seeking financial compensation.

The company also faces civil and criminal scrutiny stemming from the alleged killing of an Iraqi guard by a Blackwater employee inside Baghdad’s heavily protected Green Zone on Christmas Eve 2006.

In Afghanistan, four U.S. contractors affiliated with Xe are under U.S. military investigation in the shooting of a civilian vehicle in Kabul last month, wounding at least two Afghan civilians.

Blackwater Seeks Gag Order: here.

Furious protests threaten to undermine the Iraqi government’s controversial plan to give international oil companies a stake in its giant oilfields in a desperate effort to raise declining oil production and revenues: here.

Murdered US doctor George Tiller, and cartoonist Mikhaela


George Tiller, by Mikhaela

This cartoon by Mikaela is a tribute to murdered US doctor George Tiller by an extreme Right murderer. More about this on Mikhaela’s blog.

Heroine of the anti-abortion lobby is exposed as a fantasist: here.

Arizona’s state legislature this week moved toward major restrictions on abortion and contraception with the passage of two reactionary bills; here.

The right to an abortion is meaningless without the ability to afford one, writes Sarah Wilhelm, a member of the board of the Seattle-based Community Abortion Information and Resource Project: here.

Despite Everything, Choice Survives in Kansas. Eleanor J. Bader, Truthout: “‘You know, when we first started talking about reestablishing a clinic in Wichita back in 2010, people were still shell-shocked by Dr. Tiller’s murder,’ Burkhart admits. ‘There was almost a deer-in-the-headlights reaction to the idea of once again offering abortions in this city. Then, once we started to talk about the idea, people came around and became eager to do it'”: here.

This 2019 video from the USA is called Remembering Dr. George Tiller, 10 Years After the Abortion Provider Was Assassinated in Kansas.

Wildlife discoveries in Ecuador


This is a National Geographic video on the new discoveries in Ecuador.

From New Scientist:

Meet the amphibian only its mother could love

* 00:01 16 June 2009 by Catherine Brahic

A bug-eyed salamander that looks like ET and a see-through frog are among the weirder species that were discovered by conservation biologists in a far-flung corner of Ecuador.

They were discovered in the Cordillera del Cóndor, an outlier of the main Andean chain which rises to a maximum elevation of about 2900 metres and marks part of the international border between Ecuador and Peru. Because of its geographical seclusion from the rest of the Andes, the Cordillera is thought to be home to many unique species that have evolved in isolation.

Peru and Ecuador fought over the region for more than 160 years and only agreed on the exact location of their border in 1998.

Hoping to encourage the Ecuadorian government to increase the protection of flora and fauna in the area, Conservation International, Fundación Arcoiris and the Catholic University of Ecuador sent teams of biologists to the cordillera to survey its wildlife.

They discovered a number of species which they believe are new to science, including a bug-eyed salamander, a tiny, endangered poison arrow frog, a colourful, polka-dotted lizard and a number of bizarre-looking crickets.

They also found a number of endangered species including Hyalinobatrachium pellucidum, a glass or crystal frog that has translucent skin.

More, including photos, are here. And here.

A plant that pretends to be ill has been found growing in the rainforests of Ecuador: here.

Hyalinobatrachium ibama, a species of Glass Frog, is listed as ‘Vulnerable’ on the IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM. It is found in Colombia in old-growth forests, in humid montane forests and near mountain streams. The distribution of this species is now severely fragmented: here.

Afghan air strike massacre report not published?


This video from Afghanistan says about itself:

A video shot by al-Jazeera English shows wounded civilians, destroyed houses and graves of villagers killed by a US-led air strike in the Bala Boluk district of Farah (Thursday 7 May 2009).

From Associated Press:

Pentagon may not release report on air strike

By Pauline Jelinek – The Associated Press

Posted : Monday Jun 15, 2009 14:50:13 EDT

WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is delaying release of its investigation into air strikes last month that killed dozens of civilians in Afghanistan, debating whether any more information on the incident should be made public.

Two senior defense officials said Monday the Pentagon was reconsidering a promise last week of an imminent release of a summary of the probe along with supporting video. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal Defense Department deliberations while release of the report is on hold.

Officials have already acknowledged publicly that U.S. troops did not follow proper tactics and procedures, and that mistakes were made during at least some of the May 4 air strikes targeting Taliban fighters in Farah province. Afghans say 140 civilians were killed,

The pro US Kabul government says this

while Americans say the number was about 30.

Asked about the delay, Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman would say only that the report was being reviewed.

The subject of how to control civilian deaths has been extremely sensitive in Afghanistan for some time.

One problem acknowledged in the May 4 operation was that an Air Force B-1 bomber received permission for a strike, then had to circle around and did not reconfirm its target before finally dropping a 2,000-pound bomb.

That left the possibility that civilians had entered the area or that the Taliban had left in the interim. Defense Department press secretary Geoff Morrell said last week that there was no way to know whether that caused civilian casualties, though other officials said previously that mistakes with a number of the strikes likely resulted in some deaths.

Electricity woes a way of life in Afghanistan: here.

Murdoch dismisses Scientology critic


From British daily The Independent:

Scientologists wanted me out, claims journalist sacked by Fox

Travolta and Cruise deny pushing for the dismissal of entertainment reporter

By Guy Adams in Los Angeles

Tuesday, 16 June 2009

In a conspiracy as contorted as the plot of one of their action movies, Tom Cruise and John Travolta have been accused of persuading Rupert Murdoch‘s Fox News to sack an influential entertainment journalist who had a history of criticising the Church of Scientology.

Roger Friedman, who was dismissed in April after a decade covering the TV channel’s Hollywood beat, announced yesterday that he intended to sue his former employer for wrongful termination, claiming that they fired him so that Cruise and Travolta would sign on to future Fox movie projects.

The lawsuit, which Friedman bullishly described as a “slam-dunk,” promises to shed light on the close ties between powerful Scientologists and film studios that rely on their co-operation to get expensive movies off the ground. It is due to be filed in Manhattan later this week.

Cruise and Travolta have formally denied any connection to the sacking and Fox insists that the journalist was dismissed for writing a column on his “411” blog which encouraged readers to download an illegally pirated version of the 20th Century Fox blockbuster X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

In an interview with the New York Daily News, Friedman, who was a regular talking head on Fox News and wrote a blog on its website that was read by more than 50 million people, claimed that the official grounds were an elaborate cover story.

Though he was formally given the heave-ho for “promoting piracy” the journalist claims he was actually sacked to help Fox build stronger links with the Church of Scientology, of whom he had been a longstanding critic.

At the time of Friedman’s dismissal, Fox was involved in protracted (and subsequently successful) negotiations to hire Cruise to appear in the forthcoming romantic comedy Wichita, alongside Cameron Diaz.

Friedman, now at The Hollywood Reporter, also claimed that Travolta’s wife, Kelly Preston, had earlier attempted to get him fired last August after they became involved in a heated argument at the funeral of a mutual friend, the late actor and soul singer Isaac Hayes. After bumping into Preston (who, like Hayes and her husband, is a fervent Scientologist) Friedman said he was loudly berated for criticising Scientology in his column. “She called me a religious bigot,” Friedman says.

Later, Friedman alleges, Preston orchestrated a meeting between senior Fox executives Roger Ailes and John Moody and the communications department of the Church of Scientology in an effort to have his longstanding criticisms of the church and its most prominent members reined in.

Though Friedman has yet to produce any factual evidence beyond his own recollection to back up his version of his sacking in April, he does appear to have been hard done by. The column for which he was sacked was read and approved by at least four of his superiors.

“It’s outrageous that Rupert Murdoch made a decision to fire Roger after four of Roger’s editors and superiors reviewed his column and found it very good,” said Friedman’s attorney, Martin Garbus.

“In falsely claiming Roger engaged in piracy, they attempted to destroy the reputation of a fine journalist. I’ve seen how Scientology intimidates even the most powerful media. That seems to be what happened here.”

Asked about the specifics of Friedman’s allegations, Fox News declined to comment, while an attorney for Cruise said it was “utterly false” that the actor had sought his dismissal.

Friedman on Scientology: ‘Believing in this means believing in aliens

* “One possible theory for why the careers of Scientologists tend to go south is that the famous actors, such as Jenna Elfman or Juliette Lewis, ‘get so involved in thinking only they can save the world’ that the sect overwhelms them … John Travolta has headlined a series of flops.”

* “[Tom Cruise] is so consumed by Scientology at this point that he seems to have no awareness of the ridicule he’s subject to … Cruise is totally subsumed into the Hubbard world.”

* “To believe in this religion means also subscribing to a belief in aliens, for one thing. And by aliens I mean creatures from other planets and galaxies … [Looking at] the history of Scientology inventor L Ron Hubbard, one can only conclude that Cruise and Travolta share these same ideals.”

* “Katie Holmes’ parents must be beside themselves since their daughter joined the group.”

* “Scientology is notable for recruiting stars at low points in their careers or personal lives, preying on uncertainty, instability or just plain fear by promising to fix life issues.”

The leader of the Church of Scientology struck his subordinates numerous times and set an example for physical violence among the tightly controlled religion’s management team, four former high-ranking executives told a newspaper for a story published Sunday: here.

Scientology leader David Miscavige ‘physically attacked staff’: here.

Murdoch´s MySpace, here.

Bloggers don’t go to jail, Murdoch CEO laments: here.

Fox: New 9/11 Needed for U.S. to Become Violent Enough: here.

Murdoch and Australian education: here.

Murdoch sells MySpace: here.

Scientology and Belgian Vlaams Belang racists: here.