The Roll
- 4GW, IO & Intel
- Abu Muqawama
- Arms Control Wonk
- Danger Room
- Global Security Newswire
- Haft of the Spear
- Intel Dump
- Mountain Runner
- Nukes & Spooks
- Pakistan Defence
- PogoWasRight
- Question Everything
- Rethink Afghanistan
- Sic Semper Tyrannis
- Spies for Hire
- Swedish Meatballs Confidential
- Swiss Whistleblower
- Waq al-Waq
- War in Context
- War is Boring
- World War 4 Report
- Congo Watch
- Concerned Africa Scholars
- Stealth Conflicts
- Stop the War in North Kivu
- Document Archives
- AfterDowningStreet
- Amped Status
- cloudprivacy
- Dark Data
- government attic
- Newsmine
- NSWBC Archives
- Smoking Gun
- Economics & Markets
- Angry Bear
- Baseline Scenario
- Calculated Risk
- Daily Reckoning
- Dollars and Sense
- Econbrowser
- Economist's View
- Global Financial Integrity
- Implode-O-Meter
- New Economist
- Nouriel Roubini
- Rude Awakening
- The Big Picture
- The Financial
- Visualizing Economics
- Zero Hedge
- Elections Watch
- Avi Rubin
- Bradblog
- Election Fraud News
- News from Underground
- Solar Bus
- Energy & Oil
- Energy & Capital
- Energy Bulletin
- NewsNow Oil
- The Oil and the Glory
- The Oil Drum
- In Depth
- Chompers
- Consortium News
- Counterpunch
- Crisis Papers
- F. William Engdahl
- In These Times
- Multinational Monitor
- Pragati
- The Public Record
- TomDispatch
- Wallerstein
- WhoWhatWhy
- International Media
- Asia Times
- BBC
- CBC
- DutchNews
- Financial Times
- Globe & Mail
- Ha'aretz
- Hindu
- IHT
- Middle East Online
- Reuters World News
- SACSIS
- The National (UAE)
- The NEWS
- Times of India
- Upside Down World
- War and Peace
- Journals
- EDGE
- Le Monde Diplomatique
- Miller-McCune
- Monthly Review
- Pambazuka News
- The Humanist
- Legal Eagles
- Balkinization
- Is That Legal?
- Lawyers, Guns and Money
- LIFT
- Media Watch
- Ad Busters
- BAGnewsNotes
- Center for Citizen Media
- Daily Censored
- Daily Howler
- FAIR
- Media Matters
- Nieman Watchdog
- NPR Check
- Spinwatch
- Stop Big Media
- WhoWhatWhy
- Must See TV
- Al Jazeera
- Fault Lines
- Listening Post
- Mosaic
- Political Prosecutions
- Russia Today
- Torturing Democracy
- Policy Watch
- Boiling Frogs
- BRussells Tribunal
- Current Intelligence
- Democracy Arsenal
- Foreign Policy
- Foreign Policy in Focus
- Global Policy Forum
- Global Research
- Global Sociology
- Global Witness
- GlobalSecurity.org
- IC Global Affairs
- Institute for Policy R&D
- Institute for Southern Studies
- ISN/EHT Zurich
- Rethink Aghanistan
- SHAFR
- Strategic Security
- Trita Parsi
- William Pfaff
- Political Video
- Brasscheck TV
- Crooks and Liars
- Real News
- +972
- AlterNet
- American Chronicle
- Baltimore Brew
- Environment Newswire
- Flashpoints Radio
- Flesh & Stone
- History News Network
- Information Liberation
- Inter Press
- Irin News
- Legit Gov
- Mad Cow
- MAMA Radio (Columbia)
- Media Freedom Foundation
- Monsters & Critics
- Narco News
- OpEd News
- Project Censored
- ProPublica
- Raw Story
- Scoop
- Secrecy News
- TBIJ
- The Free Press
- Truthdig
- Tyee
- Washington Independent
- WSWS
- Rhizomatic Trim
- Agonist
- American Politics Journal
- Antifacist Calling ...
- APOV
- Back to Iraq
- Booman Tribune
- Carta Blanc
- Chycho
- Clusterfuck Nation
- Dandelion Salad
- Decline of the Empire
- Empire Burlesque
- Horse's Ass
- Mercury Rising
- Monbiot
- NewsHoggers
- Northman's Fury
- Pen and Sword
- Regressive Antidote
- Roads to Iraq
- Smirking Chimp
- The Osterley Times
- Think Progress
- Toner Mishap
- Winter Patriot
- ZERO ANTHROPOLOGY
- Slapping idiots
- Pharyngula
- Real Climate
- Slurp
- BigNews
- BuzzFlash
- Google News
- memeorandum
- My Way News
- Popurls
- Radical Reference
- schema-root
- SOTT News
- Uruknet
- What Really Happened
- Wikio
- World News
- Worldwide Sawdust
- Tech
- cnet
- Register
- Tech Crunch
- Wired
- US Commercial Media
- Military Times
- NY Times
- The Blotter
- UPI
- WaPo
- Vue International
- 'Aqoul
- Abiding in Bolivia
- africa comments
- Bernard Avishai
- BoRev.Net
- China Confidential
- Cutting Edge
- Der Spiegel
- Gary's Choices
- Healing Iraq
- Hevallo
- Indian Punchline
- Inside South America
- MESH
- News of the Restless
- Palestinian Pundit
- Postcards from the Revolution
- Registan
- Siddharth Varadarajan
- Syria Comment
- Tikun Olam
Shockfront
Recent Posts
- Tricks of the Libyan Trade
- Mubarak is gone
- Sino-Russian oil pipeline goes operational
- Obama DoJ Refuses Cooperation on Polish "CIA Black Site" Investigation
- Iran Suspends Fuel Delivery to Afghanistan
- Halliburton settles, Cheney skates
- "We are filing charges against Cheney"
- Students Storm La Torre di Pisa, Colosseum
- "Evidence of Informed Trading on the Attacks of September 11"
- "Drones Strikes Based on Scant Evidence"
Archives
- May 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
Shockfront
Anderson
Wednesday, 31 March 2010
White House proposes DBD offshore oil agenda
One ascertains a diminishing level of surprise with each new fraught, corporately long-sought, proposal emanating from Barack Obama's White House. Now, the Obama administration has embraced the pre-election GOP chant of "drill baby, drill!" and is now proposing off shore drilling, an historical first, an historical first wherein "Mr. Obama curries favors with pro-drilling interests."
Change was promised. And change, baby, change is being delivered, though perhaps its form is somewhat adulterated compared to what may have been inferred or implied, in whole or in part, during the campaign.
But who amongst us can look at this map and see the span and veil of red state coasts about to be blighted by the depredations of the oil industry. They were, after all, the ones demanding drill, baby drill.
Well, they got it.
The Obama administration is proposing to open vast expanses of water along the Atlantic coastline, the eastern Gulf of Mexico and the north coast of Alaska to oil and natural gas drilling, much of it for the first time, officials said Tuesday.[...]More
The proposal —
Friday, 26 March 2010
Obama and the Whales
the U.S. delegation to the IWC [International Whaling Commission] may be supporting a proposal to overturn the ban on commercial whaling.The position of this "US delegation" would run "counter to campaign pledges made by then presidential candidate Barack Obama."
Oh, repetitious cruelty! Oh, cruel repetition!
More
Thursday, 25 March 2010
Reform Minded
While it may be premature to speculate (actually, it's never to early to speculate) on what the final health care bill will actually do for or to most Americans, there is a small sector of American society for whom the predictions and prognostications appear fully flushed. Kaiser Söze "Health News" let's us in on the hopeful details. Naturally, the news is not so much about health care as it is about health care profits.
Most health industry sectors are winners – some bigger than others -- under sweeping health care legislation that will expand coverage to 32 million uninsured Americans over the next decade, analysts say.Quite a bold piece of reform there. The major problem to be addressed by health care reform was the very fact that the health industry is a growth industry -- a tumorous growth that will condemn the country. The new health care bill makes a growth industry [...]More
Hospitals, doctors, drug makers and most health insurers will pick up armies of new paying customers. Nursing homes and Medicare's private health plans will face steep government payment cuts, however.
Overall, "the health industry was a growth industry before the bill was approved and it will continue to be a growth industry," said Jonathan Oberlander, a health policy expert at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Ukraine ponders pipeline sell-off
This week he opened negotiations with the Kremlin to sell control over the pipelines’ operations to a consortium including Ukraine’s usual antagonist in these disputes, Russia’s natural gas giant Gazprom, and an unspecified European company.Russia has already negotiated similar agreements with Belarus and Armenia, where Gazprom owns stakes in the pipeline systems with implied vetoes over strategic energy decisions and in exchange sells gas at steep discounts. Belarus, for example, now pays $168 for 1,000 cubic meters of gas compared with $305 in Ukraine.
If Ukraine had the lower price, it would save about $3.7 billion a year, supporters of Mr. Yanukovich’s proposal say.
Ironically, it is IMF strictures that demand reduction in oil and gas subsidies, as well as state asset privatization, that will potentially net Russia the prize of "supremacy of the Eurasian pipeline network."
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
Global Water Vector
A tiny island claimed for years by India and Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal has disappeared beneath the rising seas
Water is moving from fresh to salt. For humans, and almost every other modern life form, this is the most significantly worry fact of global warming.More
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
The Hong Kong Redirect
This is an interesting gambit by Google, and one which Shockfront applauds. We've been critical of Google and their dominating paradigm of advertising, for fuck sakes, as the future of mega-business, but this is a ballsy move, regardless the motive. For it would have politico-economic repercussions, and indeed, is having now.
China’s biggest cellular communications company, China Mobile, was expected to cancel a deal that had placed Google’s search engine on its mobile Internet home page, used by millions of people daily. In interviews, business executives close to industry officials said the company was planning to scrap the deal under government pressure, despite the fact that China Mobile has yet to contract with a replacement.[...]More
China’s second-largest mobile company, China Unicom, was said by analysts
Bad Water & War
A total of 880 million people around the globe do not have access to clean water, while 2.7 billion lack proper sanitation facilities.
-- Red Cross
More people die from unsafe water than from all forms of violence, including war, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Monday in a message to mark World Water Day.[...]MoreThe United Nations children's agency UNICEF noted that more than 155 million people, or 39 percent of the population in West and Central Africa, do not have access to potable water, with only eight of 24 countries in the region on track to meet key poverty-reduction targets by 2015.
"These deaths are an affront to our common humanity, and undermine the efforts of many countries to achieve their development potential," Ban said as the issue was discussed at a high-level UN General Assembly dialogue.
"Day after day, we pour millions of tons of untreated sewage and industrial and agricultural wastes into the world's water systems," he said, noting that clean water has become scarce and would be even scarcer as a result of climate change.
US Secretary of State Hillary
Sunday, 21 March 2010
French land regionals blow on Sarkozy
President Sarkozy's centre-right UMP party has suffered a heavy defeat in the French regional elections.With approval ratings at an all time low, and having suffered a major blow in the regionals, in response to this dire political landscape, Sarkozy is planning a "modest reshuffle of the government." Which should fix everything.With over 97% of votes counted, the Socialist-led opposition alliance took 52% of the vote with the UMP on 35%.
Prime Minister Francois Fillon acknowledged the defeat, admitting the the left's "success" and is expected to offer his resignation.
The results leave the UMP in control of only one of France's 22 regions, the Alsace region in the east.
These elections are the last major electoral test in France before the presidential election in 2012.
More
Friday, 19 March 2010
Israel Lobby Launches on Commander CENTCOM
General David Petraeus has come under fire from the Anti-Defamation League for comments he made before the Senate Armed Services Committee this week in which he suggested that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict foments anti-American sentiment due to the perception that the US favors Israel.More"Enduring hostilities between Israel and some of its neighbors present distinct challenges to our ability to advance our interests in the area of responsibility," Petraeus said Wednesday. "Arab anger over the Palestinian question limits the strength and depth of U.S. partnerships with governments and peoples [in the region]."
In a statement released Thursday, the ADL labeled Petraeus' views on the issue "dangerous and counterproductive."
"Gen. Petraeus has simply erred in linking the challenges faced by the U.S. and coalition forces in the region to a solution of the Israeli-Arab conflict, and blaming extremist activities on the absence of peace and the perceived U.S. favoritism for Israel," the statement said.
Tony Blair and his secret go-juice ride
Tony Blair's secret links to Gulf oil giants were revealed today as fresh details emerged of his “carte blanche” support for George Bush's Iraq war.And then there is … the memo. More school yard love note, really.
The former prime minister has been in the pay of the Kuwaiti government and a South Korean oil firm for up to 18 months, a parliamentary watchdog has revealed.
But the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments allowed Mr Blair to keep his contracts secret because of “market sensitivities” and because the Kuwaitis requested confidentiality.
In a further revelation, a classified memo from Mr Blair to President Bush showed the full extent of his support for the toppling of Saddam Hussein.These issues [...]More
The personal note — which has been seen by the Chilcot Inquiry but not released by the Government — shows that Mr Blair wrote: “You know, George, whatever you decide to do, I'm with you.”
The contents of the memo, which is buried in Andrew Rawnsley's book The End Of The Party, confirm the exact words Mr Blair used to offer his strong backing for Bush in July 2002, eight months before the invasion.
The Chilcot committee was barred from quizzing Mr Blair publicly about the private notes to the US president when he gave evidence in January. Downing Street has refused permission to release the secret documents.
The 9/11 "Probe"
"9/11 panel was warned not to probe too deeply"And didn't they do just that?
From torture extracted "details" that constructed the terrorist narrative arc*, to the lying exposed by The Ground Truth, wherein the fantastical stories concocted by the FAA and Norad were reported as the "facts of the day" by the 9/11 Commission, the official story of 9/11 remains riddled with fantasy, fraud and fiction. Indeed, "the facts," as exposed to the 9/11 Commission and others, appeared to emerge as candy from a struck piñata; scattered, partially random in ejection. What? don't like that candy? Here, we'll take another whack, and we do mean whack, see how you like the next batch.
For continuity's sake, all parties agreed, against the wishes of the aggrieved, to hush it up, and not to "probe too deeply" into the construction of the terrorists' narrative about their "jihad," a narrative then being extracted by torture in Guantanamo Bay while the 9/11 Commission sent the torturer questions via the CIA. The terrorists' narrative, as reported by the 9/11 Commission, was born in the USA.
Leaked confidential documents have revealed that senior officials from the former US administration had warned a 9/11 investigation panel against probing too deeply into the terrorist attacks.[...]More
In a letter obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the 9/11 Commission was refused permission to question terror suspects, with the Bush administration arguing that by doing so the panel would "cross" a "line" and obstruct the administration's efforts to protect
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
China Moves on SoAm Oil Front
Cnooc, China’s top offshore oil explorer, said on Sunday that it had secured a South American beachhead by agreeing to pay $3.1 billion in cash for a stake in one of the largest Argentine oil explorers, with fields in Argentina, Bolivia and Chile.More
The acquisition is the Chinese oil industry’s latest move to expand its reach around the world. Starting at the beginning of the decade, companies like PetroChina, Sinopec and Cnooc began buying assets across Africa, Asia and the Middle East to drive the country’s booming economy. More recently, they have struck deals to develop Iraq’s huge reserves and Canada’s oil sands.
Cnooc, a unit of the China National Offshore Oil Corporation, said it would form a joint venture with the Argentine oil explorer, Bridas Energy, by acquiring a 50 percent share in one of the company’s subsidiaries, the Bridas Corporation.
The Bridas unit has proven reserves of 636 million barrels of oil, and daily production of 92,000 barrels a day. It owns 40 percent of Pan American Energy, the Argentine oil producer, with BP owning the rest.
Global Economic Domination: Tastes Like Chicken
A lot of griping sallies forth, but one striking passage did not escape notice. Currently, under these exploitable trade rules, China has four WTO complaints filed against two other economic regions: two against the United States, and two against the EU, respectively on "poultry and tires," and "steel fasteners and poultry."
What are we to glean from this interesting little fact? That, in the global struggle for economic domination between forces East and West, the common commodity denominator in geo-economic trade disputes is … chicken.
More
DHS scraps SBInet
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has put the brakes on SBInet, the $3 billion plan to build a virtual fence along the U.S. border with Mexico.Now, mind you, this isn't the end of the "virtual" border fence, just that SBInet is not living up to the Boeing hype, and so a replacement is being sought. />More“Not only do we have an obligation to secure our borders, we have a responsibility to do so in the most cost-effective way possible,” Napolitano said in a statement Tuesday. “The system of sensors and cameras along the Southwest border known as SBInet has been plagued with cost overruns and missed deadlines.”
With that in mind, Napolitano is withholding funding for the program’s first deployment until a review she ordered in January is finished. And she’s taking away $50 million in stimulus funds from the Boeing-managed program.
…
Tuesday, 16 March 2010
WHO Pandemic Phase 6: Kaching!
Wolfgang Wodarg, a member of the German parliament, tells the European Council in Strasbourg that "millions of people worldwide were vaccinated for no good reason." According to Wodarg, the WHO's classification of the swine flu as a pandemic have earned the pharmaceutical companies $18 billion in additional revenues. Annual sales of Tamiflu alone have jumped 435 percent, to €2.2 billion.
"We wanted to overestimate rather than underestimate the situation,"
-- Keiji Fukuda
World Health Organization (WHO)
Well, they sure as shit did that now, didn't they?
"Sometimes some of us think that WHO stands for World Hysteria Organization."
-- Richard Schabas,
Former CMO
Province of Ontario
Though notably less lethal than nominal seasonal flu, swine flu hit the rafters with a media/CDC/WHO/BigPharma swing. Finally, a human-to-human transmissible! Hell, it even sounded dirty. Gotta be bad. Terribly, terribly bad. Of course, the pig, swine, cloven hoof, it gets all Biblical in no time. Further media spectacle was to be had in the odd range of actual victims, furthering the weirdness and intrigue.
Blaze your way to Der Spiegel's tale of the pandemic nature of the swine flu.
Swine flu kept the world in suspense for almost a year. A massive vaccination campaign was mounted to put a stop to the anticipated pandemic. But, as it turned out, it was a relatively harmless strain of the flu virus. How, and why, did the world overreact?Here's a core nugget:
three weeks before the swine flu was declared a pandemic, 30 senior representatives[...]More
This work licensed under a Creative Commons license
