God and the President
Matt Bivens, The Daily Outrage

In his late 30s, soon after an evening of talks with evangelist Billy Graham, George W. Bush declared himself a born-again Christian.

Does he therefore believe -- as born-again Christians often do -- that even good and kind people are doomed to Hell, unless they accept Jesus Christ as their Lord and savior?

Does he believe that Jews and Muslims are ultimately damned? If he doesn't believe that, then is he saying one can reject Jesus Christ -- yet still go to Heaven? If he does believe that, then does the inevitable damnation of the majority of humanity ever enter into his Earthly calculations?

Does the President believe that he's doing God's work?

Has he been telling other world leaders that God told him to invade Iraq?

Does he actually hear God's voice? If so, when does this happen for him, and what does it sound like? Does he just receive a message, or does he have actual two-way conversations?

We journalists rarely get a serious crack at this particular President, and so we're all quite excited at the prospect of one of our own sitting down for a full hour with him this weekend. The questions we would ask are piling up (my colleague David Corn has an excellent list here), and interviewer Tim Russert will no doubt assemble a menu of narrow facts-and-headlines-driven inquiries about deficits, desertion and the like.

Me, I want to hear the President explain his exact relationship with his God. He has been talking more and more about God lately; he seems quite sincere, and yet no Washington journalists are interested -- they automatically assume it's a calculated pose. But Bush has made some amazing Moses-and-the-burning-bush assertions in private, apparently, and these ought to be explored. He has never disputed the story, recounted in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, that he himself told the Palestinian leadership, "God told me to strike at al Qaida and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam"; and now we have a similar account, courtesy of The Globe and Mail, of Bush telling a bug-eyed Canadian Prime Minister he was carrying out divine commands:

"Though it wasn't publicized at the time, Prime Minister Paul Martin got a sense of [the White House's] sanctimony when he met with Mr. Bush in early January in Mexico. Mr. Bush let the Prime Minister know that he believed himself to be on the side of God and tending to God's mission. The Canadian side, while aware of the President's penchant for religiosity, had been expecting to talk more about softwood lumber than the Ten Commandments. The Canadians didn't expect the morality play. Nor did they expect that, almost in the same breath, Mr. Bush would be filling the air with the f-word and other saucy expletives of the type that would surely leave the Lord perturbed. ... Mr. Martin was somewhat taken aback by what he heard. After the meeting, he was barely out the door before he was asking someone in his entourage what was to be made of all the God stuff. ..."

Let's find out what is to be made of all the God stuff. We've got the prime ministers of Palestine and of Canada saying, via the media, that Bush tells them he and God have some sort of understanding. When the President of Macedonia visited the Oval Office, he and Bush knelt and prayed together. When Bush met Russia's Vladimir Putin, the first topic of discussion was, as Bush described it, their Christian faith (which they each wear on their sleeves).

But as Ira Chernus has observed, "In a democracy, it is the people, not God, who make the decisions." And, "If he truly believes that he hears the voice of God, there is no telling what God might say tomorrow."




From The Center for American Progress:

SCALIA WAS CHENEY'S GUEST: Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was Vice President Dick Cheney's guest when the two went duck hunting last month. Despite the fact that the Supreme Court announced three weeks prior that they would hear a case involving the Vice President, Cheney flew Scalia to the private hunting camp on Air Force Two. Taxpayers also paid for "a second, backup Air Force jet that carried staff and security aides to the vice president" and "two military Black Hawk helicopters" which " were brought in and hovered nearby." Scalia is refusing to recuse himself from the case. But as New York University law professor Stephen Gillers said, "It is not just a trip with a litigant. It's a trip at the expense of the litigant. This is an easy case for stepping aside." (On top of this, remember that Cheney's case in front of the Supreme Court deals in part with how much influence the oil industry may have had in the creation of Cheney's Energy bill? The private hunting camp is owned by wealthy oilman "Wallace Carline, the head of Diamond Services Corp., an oil services firm that is on 41 acres of waterfront property in Amelia, La. The company provides oil dredging, pile driving, salvage work, fabrication, pipe-rolling capability and general oilfield construction.")

The Dead Center
29 January 2004, Robert B. Reich
Op-Ed Contributor, The New York Times

The dismal fifth-place showing by Senator Joseph Lieberman in the New Hampshire primary on Tuesday serves as both reminder and motivator to the other Democratic presidential candidates on what it will take to win in November. For so long now, everyone has assumed that recapturing the presidency depends on who triumphs in the battle between liberals and moderates within the party. Such thinking, though, is inherently flawed. The real fight is between those who want only to win back the White House and those who also want to build a new political movement — one that rivals the conservative movement that has given Republicans their dominant position in American politics.

Senator Lieberman's defeat on Tuesday could be a good indicator of which side is ahead. To their detriment, Mr. Lieberman and the perennially dour Democratic Leadership Council have been deeply wary of any hint of a progressive movement, preferring instead an uninspired centrist message that echoes Republican themes.

On the other extreme is Howard Dean, who could be called the quintessential "movement" Democrat. His campaign is both grass-roots and reformist, and is based on the proposition that ordinary people must be empowered to "take back America." Similar threads can also be seen in the campaigns of Senators John Edwards and John Kerry. (Full disclosure: I've been helping Senator Kerry.) It was no accident after last week's caucuses in Iowa that a beaming Senator Edwards told supporters they had "started a movement to change America."

I hope that Mr. Edwards and the others will stay on message — and movement. After all, Democrats have seen what the Republican Party has been able to accomplish over the years. The conservative movement has developed dedicated sources of money and legions of ground troops who not only get out the vote, but also spend the time between elections persuading others to join their ranks. It has devised frames of reference that are used repeatedly in policy debates (among them: it's your money, tax and spend, political correctness, class warfare).

It has a system for recruiting and electing officials nationwide who share the same world view and who will vote accordingly. And it has a coherent ideology uniting evangelical Christians, blue-collar whites in the South and West, and big business — an ideology in which foreign enemies, domestic poverty and crime, and homosexuality all must be met with strict punishment and religious orthodoxy.

In contrast, the Democratic Party has had no analogous movement to animate it. Instead, every four years party loyalists throw themselves behind a presidential candidate who they believe will deliver them from the rising conservative tide. After the election, they go back to whatever they were doing before. Other Democrats have involved themselves in single-issue politics — the environment, campaign finance, the war in Iraq and so on — but these battles have failed to build a political movement. Issues rise and fall, depending on which interests are threatened and when. They can even divide Democrats, as each advocacy group scrambles after the same set of liberal donors and competes for the limited attention of the news media.

As a result, Democrats have been undisciplined, intimidated or just plain silent. They have few dedicated sources of money, and almost no ground troops. The religious left is disconnected from the political struggle. One hears few liberal Democratic phrases that are repeated with any regularity. In addition, there is no consistent Democratic world view or ideology. Most Congressional Democrats raise their own money, do their own polls and vote every which way. Democrats have little or no clear identity except by reference to what conservatives say about them.

Self-styled Democratic centrists, like those who inhabit the Democratic Leadership Council, attribute the party's difficulties to a failure to respond to an electorate grown more conservative, upscale and suburban. This is nonsense. The biggest losses for Democrats since 1980 have not been among suburban voters but among America's giant middle and working classes — especially white workers without four-year college degrees, once part of the old Democratic base. Not incidentally, these are the same people who have lost the most economic ground over the last quarter-century.

Democrats could have responded with bold plans on jobs, schools, health care and retirement security. They could have delivered a strong message about the responsibility of corporations to help their employees in all these respects, and of wealthy elites not to corrupt politics with money. More recently, the party could have used the threat of terrorism to inspire the same sort of sacrifice and social solidarity as Democrats did in World War II — including higher taxes on the wealthy to pay for what needs doing. In short, they could have turned themselves into a populist movement to take back democracy from increasingly concentrated wealth and power.

But Democrats did none of this. So conservatives eagerly stepped into the void, claiming the populist mantle and blaming liberal elites for what's gone wrong with America. The question ahead is whether Democrats can claim it back. The rush by many Democrats in recent years to the so-called center has been a pathetic substitute for candid talk about what the nation needs to do and for fueling a movement based on liberal values. In truth, America has no consistent political center. Polls reflect little more than reflexive responses to what people have most recently heard about an issue. Meanwhile, the so-called center has continued to shift to the right because conservative Republicans stay put while Democrats keep meeting them halfway.

Democrats who avoid movement politics point to Bill Clinton's success in repositioning the party in the center during the 1990's. Mr. Clinton was (and is) a remarkably gifted politician who accomplished something no Democrat since Franklin Delano Roosevelt had done — getting re-elected. But his effect on the party was to blur rather than to clarify what Democrats stand for. As a result, Mr. Clinton neither started nor sustained anything that might be called a political movement.

This handicapped his administration from the start. In 1994, when battling for his health care proposal, Mr. Clinton had no broad-based political movement behind him. Even though polls showed support among a majority of Americans, it wasn't enough to overcome the conservative effort on the other side. By contrast, George W. Bush got his tax cuts through Congress, even though Americans were ambivalent about them. President Bush had a political movement behind him that supplied the muscle he needed.

In the months leading up to the 1996 election, Mr. Clinton famously triangulated — finding positions equidistant between Democrats and Republicans — and ran for re-election on tiny issues like V-chips in television sets and school uniforms. The strategy worked, but it was a Pyrrhic victory. Had Mr. Clinton told Americans the truth — that when the economic boom went bust we'd still have to face the challenges of a country concentrating more wealth and power in fewer hands — he could have built a long-term mandate for change. By the late 90's the nation finally had the wherewithal to expand prosperity by investing in people, especially their education and health. But because Mr. Clinton was re-elected without any mandate, the nation was confused about what needed to be accomplished and easily distracted by conservative fulminations against a president who lied about sex.

As we head into the next wave of primaries, the Democratic candidates should pay close attention to what Republicans have learned about winning elections. First, it is crucial to build a political movement that will endure after particular electoral contests. Second, in order for a presidency to be effective, it needs a movement that mobilizes Americans behind it. Finally, any political movement derives its durability from the clarity of its convictions. And there's no better way to clarify convictions than to hone them in political combat.

A fierce battle for the White House may be exactly what the Democrats need to mobilize a movement behind them. It may also be what America needs to restore a two-party system of governance and a clear understanding of the choices we face as a nation.

Robert B. Reich, former United States secretary of labor, is a professor of social and economic policy at Brandeis University and the author of the forthcoming "Reason: Why Liberals Will Win the Battle for America."



©2004 The New York Times
Scott Ritter appearing with Brian Lamb January 30 on Washington Journal.

CALLER: Yes, Mr. Ritter. I remember you being interviewed on all the late night cable talk shows and what I remember is you were the only one prior to the war who said that there’s no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. In other words, you’re the only one who was accurate. Why have you all of a sudden disappeared from all these shows? Gosh, for the last year, I’ve wondered what ever happened to Scott Ritter, the only guy who seemed to know what was going on? I’m just wondering whether you were silenced in this regard? Have the networks blacklisted you? Or is there a reason why your opinions aren’t getting proper airplay?

RITTER: Well, it’s probably a question best posed to the producers and the bookers at the various television shows and radio talk shows. I’ve always been confident that I’m saying things that are factually sound, based upon the truth, that I’m not spinning them for anyone’s benefit. Unfortunately, I don’t believe the mainstream media acted responsibly in regard to Iraq. Back in the fall of 2002, I was belittled, I was called a traitor, I was called crazy—Paula Zahn of CNN accused me of drinking Saddam Hussein’s Kool-Aid for making accurate statements in response to aluminum tubes and uranium allegedly coming from Niger. I think we have a problem here in that the media is culpable for the misleading of the American public. They bought into the Bush administration’s rhetoric and war fervor, they sold the war to the American public, and now they have to deal with the fact that they’re the ones that were out there beating the war drums and you have this guy, Scott Ritter, who was saying something different and—maybe they just don’t know how to deal with me. I think, though, the facts are on the table and the people who stuck to the facts are the ones who have credibility and hopefully people will realize that, on the issue of Iraq, I have enormous credibility.



The Daily Howler

Seat at the Table, Hand on the Pen
3 February 2004, Steve Hannaford, Oligopoly Watch

Oligopolies are most effective when they not only sit at the table, but when they help legislators in the hard task of writing guidelines and regulations. That's well illustrated in a New York Times article called "Making Drugs, Shaping the Rules" by Melody Peterson (2/1/2004). [pdf]

Peterson shows that merely marketing drugs is not enough; better yet to "persuade" state health boards  to mandate them for patients, making it hard for doctors to prescribe an alternative, even when the alternative is cheaper and equally, or more, effective.

Ten major drug companies, for example, used such tactics to make sure that state mental hospitals and Medicaid adopted their drugs in preference to others, Notable among these were new antipsychotic drugs made by Johnson & Johnson in preference to generic drugs whose patents have run out. These tactics were recently brought to light by a Pennsylvania lawsuit.



FULL POST


A Million Thanks!
2 February 2004, Matt Bivens, The Daily Outrage

Public Citizen is calling for an investigation of Billy Tauzin, the Republican Congressman from Louisiana, who had a key role in writing the Medicare prescription drug law -- and now that he's done with that, got a big thank-you in the form of a sweet offer to lobby in Washington for the pharmaceutical industry. The compensation package, rumored to be somewhere from $1 million to $2.5 million a year, would be "likely the largest compensation package on record for anyone at a trade association," Public Citizen says. Tauzin hasn't said yet whether he'll accept it; he seems to have been given pause by the drumbeat of indignation that's risen at the idea.

"The record size of the [drug industry] contract and the fact that the offer became public less than two months after the drug industry scored a major victory with this legislation raises serious questions about whether Representative Tauzin's actions were tainted," says Joan Claybrook, Public Citizen's president. "While Rep. Tauzin was writing the bill, he put out the word that he was retiring from Congress and looking for new work. This doesn't pass the smell test."

Tauzin is not the only politician who seems to be cashing in his chips with the drug industry. Tom Scully, the White House point person on the Medicare bill, recently quit government to go work for law firms that represent pharmaceutical interests. "So we have a situation where the lead administration person on the bill and the lead manager on the bill in the House of Representatives are going to work for the pharmaceutical companies," Pelosi says. "I think it would be important to the American people to know when the negotiations for these positions began."



FULL POST
Faulty Intelligence My Eye
3 February 2004, David Morris, AlterNet

Have we suffered from collective amnesia?

Have we forgotten that there were highly credible people who were telling the White House that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction? Scott Ritter, former intelligence officer and senior official in the UN's inspection team in Iraq for seven years was one such highly visible – and highly credible – critic. Back in 1991 during Operation Desert Storm, Ritter told his superiors something they not only didn't want to hear but didn't believe: that the allies had failed to destroy any Iraqi Scud missile launchers. He was later vindicated.

Ritter indicated that as of 1998, when the UN team was withdrawn from Iraq, 90-95 percent of its capacity to produce chemical and biological weapons had been eliminated. And there was no evidence that Iraq had nuclear weapons.

In the halls of Congress and on the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal Ritter's well-reasoned argument was dismissed as the ravings of a lunatic. He was accused of being in the pay of Saddam Hussein.

When asked about Ritter's allegations Richard Butler, Ritter's old boss at the United Nations weapons inspection team said on CNN, "I don't know why. I'm not a psychoanalyst." David Kay told Congress, "I cannot explain it on the basis of known facts." Secretary of State Colin Powell contrasted his own scientific approach with that of Ritter, "We have facts, not speculation."

Ritter wasn't the only credible skeptic. Have we forgotten the repeated rebuttals of assertions by the White House of mobile and underground biological labs by Hans Blix, head of the UN inspection team in 2003? Have we forgotten the terse refutation by Mohamed El Baredi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency of the Pentagon assertion that Iraq had nuclear weapons?

Have we forgotten the flurry of stories in national newspapers in late 2002 and early 2003 that described how the White House and Pentagon were pressuring the CIA to come up with "intelligence" that would support their position? In March 2003 The Washington Post quoted a senior administration official with access to the latest intelligence who said, "I have seen all the stuff. I certainly have doubts." The U.S., he said, will "face significant problems in trying to find" such weapons.

Have we forgotten how Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld set up an intelligence unit in the Pentagon to help him undermine the CIA's cautionary intelligence reports on Iraq?

"Even as it prepares for war against Iraq, the Pentagon is already engaged on a second front: its war against the Central Intelligence Agency," wrote Robert Dreyfuss in The American Prospect in December 2002. Dreyfuss quotes Vincent Cannistraro, a former senior CIA official and counter-terrorism expert who describes the "tremendous pressure on (the CIA) to come up with information to support policies that have already been adopted."

What should be done? First, insist that those who got it right, like Scott Ritter, become regular commentators on Iraq on network and cable news stations. Second, widen the mandate of the Commission so that it can examine whether and to what extent the intelligence community was bypassed or compromised by the White House and Pentagon. Third, ask the Commission to report back before the election.

And finally, stop asking David Kay for advice and counsel. He's admitted he was wrong. He's refused to own up to the reason for his mistake. Such behavior deserves no reward.



FULL ARTICLE

Playing with our money

2 February 2004, David Sirota, Christy Harvey and Judd Legum, TomPaine.com

David Sirota, Christy Harvey and Judd Legum are a trio of writers with the Center for American Progress, a nonpartisan research and educational institute.

In what may be the most deceitful budget submission in memory, President Bush claims that the United States can continue operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, fund a trillion-dollar tax cut, increase spending on defense, homeland security and counterterrorism, and launch a manned mission to Mars, while cutting the $521 billion deficit in half over the next five years. And astoundingly, even these depressing deficit projections are wildly unrealistic. They rely on a grab bag of gimmickry and distortion that, taken together, dramatically underestimate the scope of America's fiscal crisis. A more sober budget projection reveals that, five years from now, the budget deficit will be $477 billion—almost exactly what it is today.

When President George W. Bush took office, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that from 2002-2011 there would be a total surplus of $5 trillion. Now, over the same period, the country is projected to amass a $4.3 trillion deficit—a total deterioration of $9.3 trillion. And a new poll shows this is on America's mind —88 percent of Americans now say the federal deficit is either a "very serious" or "somewhat serious" problem.

The president continued his attempts to blame Congress for the massive deficits that he has racked up, but a new study by the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) shows how ridiculous this argument is. All told, tax cuts account for 35 percent of the $9.3 trillion deterioration in the budget outlook since Bush took office—more than even the post-9/11 defense and homeland security spending increases. That is almost $3.3 trillion in deficits over the next 10 years due to tax cuts. For a graphic representation of how specious the president's argument is, see this new American Progress graph. As New York Times columnist Tom Friedman says, the administration's total disregard of fiscal discipline has led to "budgets of mass destruction."

The president's budget does not include any funding for military operations and reconstruction in Iraq or Afghanistan beyond September 30. The administration used the same gimmick last year, then requested $87 billion in additional funds. It has already been reported that the administration plans on requesting at least $50 billion in additional spending for Iraq and Afghanistan—but only after the November elections.

The president has repeatedly called for his tax cuts, many of which are scheduled to expire over the next several years, to be made permanent. But his budget excludes the true cost of extending the tax cuts—estimated to be $1.7 trillion over the next 10 years—by only projecting the budget for the next five years instead of the traditional 10. In 2012, for example, the CBO estimates extending the tax cuts will cost $275 billion.

The alternative minimum tax (AMT) was designed to make sure that the very rich pay some taxes. But because the AMT is not indexed to inflation, without reform, millions of middle-class families will be subject to the AMT and face tax hikes. Instead of dealing with the problem—and protecting middle-class taxpayers over the long term—the president's budget includes a one-year, $23 billion "patch." The CBO estimates that over 10 years, fixing the AMT would cost at least $469 billion.

The White House estimates a deficit of $521 billion for 2004—more than $40 billion dollars higher than the CBO estimates. The Washington Post reports that "budget aides in both parties noted that the higher number makes it easier to say the deficit would be cut in half in five years." Another explanation for inflating this year's figures: "A higher deficit forecast now could also help Bush show progress when his budget office delivers its updated projection in July." A White House official dismissed the criticism saying, "It's not at all unusual for projections to be different."

Landing as it does in the beginning of an election year, you can be sure that Congress and the White House will play hot potato with the question of who is responsible for government spending and the bulging deficit.




From The Center For American Progress:

Ten Things You Should Know About President Bush’s Budget

The Bush administration’s 2005 budget presents a misleading picture of our nation’s finances and includes a number of manipulative tactics to hide the true costs and consequences of the administration’s fiscal priorities.




Reality of the President's Budget

The President's 2005 budget confirms the worst fears – this administration simply cannot be trusted to manage the nation's budget in a fiscally responsible way that works to the benefit of all Americans. When the Bush Administration took office in 2001, they inherited a $5.5 trillion in projected budget surpluses over the decade. Within three years, the surplus has become a record one and a half trillion dollar budget deficit for 2005 alone, with accumulated deficits estimated to top $5 trillion over the next ten years.



US miracle is based on longer hours for less pay
2 February 2004, Doug Henwood, The Guardian

In the late 1990s the US was famous across the globe for its New Economy. Computers had unleashed a productivity miracle, recessions were relics of a transcended past, ideas had replaced things as the motors of economic life, the world had become unprecedentedly globalised, work had evolved into something deeply meaningful and mutual funds had put an end to class conflict.

That miracle did not quite work out as hoped, but now the US economy is working a new kind of miracle: clocking near-Chinese rates of GDP growth while producing hardly any new jobs. In the third quarter of 2003, the economy grew by 8.2% while employment rose 0.1%.

In the fourth quarter Canada, despite being about one-eighth the size of its southern neighbour, produced more new jobs than the US - not in percentage terms but in absolute numbers.

Strangely, the two miracles are not unrelated. The economic heart of the 1990s miracle was the productivity revolution. There is no doubt that the official productivity statistics shook off their 20-year-old torpor in the mid-90s and accelerated significantly. But what does that mean?

There are at least two ways to approach that problem: the technical and the philosophical. Let us take the technical approach first. Labour productivity measures real output per hour of labour. There are serious problems in estimating both the numerator and denominator of the productivity equation.

The labour inputs to the productivity calculations are not hours worked but hours paid, as reported by employers to the bureau of labour statistics (BLS). That is no small distinction.

One of the undisputed stars of the productivity revolution is the huge retail group Wal-Mart, which has repeatedly been sued for requiring its "associates" to work long after they have clocked off for the day. The BLS does not have firm estimates of how long management work weeks are; essentially it makes a guess.

At Wal-Mart, many store managers work 60- or 70-hour weeks, but the productivity statistics assume far less. The same goes with the computer industry. The BLS assumes that executives in the hi-tech sector work normal 35- or 40-hour weeks. To anyone in the industry, that assumption is hilarious.

There are plenty of problems with measuring output, too. Take, for example, the computer. If today's $1,000 PC is twice as fast as last year's then, according to conventional economic logic, its "real" value is twice the 2003 model's. Who knows if that is true? If you are typing letters and sending email, the speed increase hardly makes a difference.

But to the official US accountants, the matter is settled. That logic ripples throughout the statistical apparatus.

According to economist Robert Gordon, one of the few mainstream sceptics on the productivity revolution, most of the acceleration in productivity has occurred in the manufacture of computers and similar devices. Gordon's conclusion is controversial but even enthusiasts concede that productivity in heavy computer-using industries - such as finance, business services and communications - has either been increasing very slowly or declining.

But the technical argument needs a broader context. The point of increasing productivity is, or should be, to improve our material standard of living and make our lives a little easier. The American productivity miracle has done neither. Even at the peak of the boom, more than 60% of respondents to a Business Week poll said the miracle had done little to raise their incomes or improve their job security.

Over the longer term, productivity gains have done little to ease the work effort, either. A worker paid the average manufacturing wage would have had to work 62 weeks to earn the median family's income in 1947. In 2001, he or she would have had to work 81 weeks. So, despite the fact that productivity was up more than threefold over the period, the average worker would have to toil six months longer to make the average family income. Americans work more hours a year than just about anyone else on earth, and things only got tougher in the 1990s. Some revolution.

During the boom, there was plenty of irrational exuberance and spare cash to spice things up a bit. American workers saw some real wage growth in the late 1990s, a welcome change from the previous 20 years of stagnation alternating with decline.

With the bursting of the bubble and the emergence of a jobless recovery (with no real wage growth), the underlying reality of the productivity revolution has been revealed: wage squeezing and extra pressure in the workplace.

The essence of the US economic model was nicely encapsulated in a 1997 article by New York Times reporter Alan Cowell. In the midst of lecturing the Germans on the need to give up their long weekends and long vacations, Cowell recommended that they adopt the American approach, which he defined as "working longer for less."


Doug Henwood is the author of After the New Economy (New Press)

More US soldiers Die in Afghanistan
Story filed: 19:25 Thursday 29th January 2004, Ananova

The US says seven of its soldiers were killed, one is missing and three were injured in an explosion at an arms cache in Afghanistan. An Afghan interpreter was also injured in the mid-afternoon blast near the city of Ghazni, 60 miles southwest of the capital, Kabul. The explosion happened as the soldiers were working around the weapons cache. The wounded soldiers were evacuated to a hospital at Bagram Air Base, headquarters for US-led coalition in Afghanistan. It isn't yet clear whether the explosion was an accident or triggered deliberately.

Earlier this month, the US death toll in the two-year war in Afghanistan reached 100. Only 16 Americans died in the lightning war that drove the Taliban from power at the end of 2001.

Terminating the Bush Juggernaut
by Jeremy Brecher