In this previous article (dated June 25), I lauded the heroic showing of my sentimental pick in this year’s World Cup, Trinidad and Tobago (T and T), before they were eliminated by quadrennial favorite England. I also reveled with undisguised schadenfreude, however, over the (superpower) U.S. being kicked out of contention by (Third World /… Read more.
Archives for 2006
It’s official: Second-hand smoke kills!
Alas, more bad news for a few of my colleagues and their fellow smokers who stand in formation and puff gauntlets of toxic fumes in the front of office buildings all over America. Because, now that the U.S. Surgeon General has declared second-hand smoke an “alarming public health hazard”, one can be sure swift measures… Read more.
What’s all this rubbish about the Times revealing state secrets?!
To hear President Bush and members of his Administration wailing indignantly this week because the New York Times reported on the U.S. (war-on-terror) strategy of tracking terrorists through bank records, one would have thought its reporters burglarized the White House war room and stole the information that appeared in the report. But nothing could be… Read more.
Good (news) Friday…sort of: U.S. Supreme Court rebukes Bush on Guantanamo (Gitmo) Bay prison
Yesterday, after reading newspaper headlines and hearing TV sound bites about the notorious Gitmo case, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, one might have thought the U.S. Supreme Court had decided that President George W. Bush was himself a war criminal. But after reading the decision (and all the news deemed fit to print about it), I realized… Read more.
PetroCaribe: Let’s look this Chávez gift horse in the mouth
On Wednesday, Caribbean Net News reported that Grenada and Dominica are the latest Caribbean countries to sign up for PetroCaribe. That, of course, is the energy/economic pact Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez is touting as a “Bolivarian Alternative” to the Free Trade of the Americas (FTAA). If one buys Chávez’s sales pitch, PetroCaribe promises to: …contribute… Read more.
Wither the Roadmap for Peace in the Middle East…
Just months ago, I published this article heralding the peace agreement brokered by the United States between the Israelis and Palestinians as “one giant leap for peace in the Middle East.” But anyone reading news reports coming out of that region today can be forgiven for asserting now that that agreement merely promised comfort to… Read more.
Buffet to Gates: The richest charitable gift in history…
When Warren Buffet, the world’s second richest man, announced his charitable gift on Monday, even more shocking than the amount involved ($31 billion) was the fact that the recipient was Bill Gates, the world’s richest man. And, I suspect I was not alone in wondering:Why not his children? He has 3: Susan, Howard, and Peter.… Read more.
Hallelujah! Namibian backlash against the Jolie-Pitt baby caper…
A few weeks ago, when the whole world was singing the praises of Angelina Jolie – for condescending to give birth to her child in Namibia, I published this article entitled To Jolie and Pitt – a child is born…to save Namibia? As the title suggests, mine was a discordant voice of unmitigated apostasy (towards… Read more.
Bush rekindles European friendships and builds new coalition of the willing against North Korea and Iran…
Given international media obsession with the World Cup and American media preoccupation with Ann Coulter and Angelina Jolie, chances are that many of you heard little – and read even less – about President George W. Bush’s pivotal performance at a European summit last week. Yet he traveled to Austria and assembled a bona fide… Read more.
Wonder why the U.S. was kicked out of the World Cup in the first round?
Last Thursday, with its humiliating loss to Third-World Ghana in Nuremberg, Germany, great expectations that the U.S. would accomplish its mission of winning this year’s Word Cup were summarily dashed. Alas, its mission in Iraq is not the only victory America’s superpower is unable to guarantee…. NOTE: Although I harbored no great expectations, they were… Read more.