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Saturday, September 26, 2009

Iran

May 2009 -  Iran says it has successfully test launched a mid-range surface-to-surface missile, state media have reported.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the Sajjil-2 missile with a range of 2,000km (1,240 miles), used "advanced technology" and had landed on target.

The US confirmed the launch had taken place, and reiterated that President Barack Obama was "concerned" about Iran's missile development.

Sept 25, 2009  Pressure mounted on Iran yesterday to halt its nuclear program as world leaders at the United Nations warned of the threat posed by Tehran to a global consensus on disarmament.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said a newly revealed nuclear enrichment plant is "perfectly legal", after criticism from world leaders including US President Barack Obama and French leader Nicolas Sarkozy.


The next day, Iran  tested two short-range missiles during a military exercise, Iranian state television reports.

See a pattern here?

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Clash

Rock the Casbah

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAkfHShATKY

(Video embedding disabled)

lyrics addressing the Iranian (Islamic Republic of Iran) clampdown on imports of Western music to a bouncy dance rhythm in 1982

Now the king told the boogie men
You have to let that raga drop
The oil down the desert way
Has been shakin' to the top
The sheik he drove his Cadillac
He went a' cruisin' down the ville
The muezzin was a' standing
On the radiator grille

CHORUS
Sharif don't like it
Rockin the casbah
Rock the casbah
Sharif don't like it
Rockin the Casbah
Rock the Casbah

By order of the prophet
We ban that boogie sound
Degenerate the faithful
With that crazy Casbah sound
But the Bedouin they brought out
The electric kettle drum
The local guitar picker
Got his guitar picking thumb
As soon as the sherif
Had cleared the square
They began to wail

CHORUS

Now over at the temple
Oh! They really pack 'em in
The in crowd say it's cool
To dig this chanting thing
But as the wind changed direction
The temple band took five
The crowd caught a wiff
Of that crazy Casbah jive

CHORUS

The king called up his jet fighters
He said you better earn your pay
Drop your bombs between the minarets
Down the Casbah way

As soon as Sharif was
Chauffeured outta there
The jet pilots tuned to
The cockpit radio blare

As soon as Sharif was
Outta their hair
The jet pilots wailed

Chorus

Sharif don't like it
Rock the casbah
(He thinks it's not kosher)
Rock the casbah
Sharif don't like it
Rock the Casbah
(Fundamentally he can't take it.)
Rock the Casbah
Sharif don't like it
Rock the Casbah
(You know he really hates it.)
Rock the Casbah

 

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Adware introduced malware

Within the last few days, i have unfortunately found some bad things on 2 of the 4 computers in my home network...all of which are protected by up to date antivirus and multiple firewalls.

How could this happen? Because we are people and innocently clicked on something. I think Honey clicked on an ad for free instant scan of your computer and introduced a Trojan, which unloaded a user logon hijacker, while I must have allowed a popup that introduced a Trojan that unloaded a script that took over my browser. In both cases I found and eliminated the problems with a new software that I am still a little skeptical about, but so far it seems to work.

The Trojans were Vundo (variant 4) and FakeAlert....

It just so happens I discovered this while during the day attending some classes for Information Security professionals, and found that many of the people in class had experienced similar malwares on their home computers and work networks....

The truth is, eternal vigilence is not just a catchy phrase, its the requirement to protect your information and privacy. A momentary lapse on my part reinforced that concept...

Friday, September 18, 2009

Probe shows 9/11 is, sadly, forgotten

What others are saying, in an editorial from the Atlanta Journal Constitution...

It’s very hard to maintain a Sept. 12 view of the world,” says David Nahmias, a thought that well explains why some CIA agents may soon face criminal prosecution.

Nahmias, recently appointed to the Georgia Supreme Court after a career of prosecuting, among others, terrorists after Sept. 11, spoke those words a few days before the Obama administration reopened a criminal probe of CIA interrogators. But his observation about the difference between the raw wounds of The Day After and our more comfortable perspective eight years hence is right on target.

Let’s be honest. Liberals can get away with tsk-tsking about a handful of unauthorized CIA interrogation techniques — some of which would fit right into a Monty Python spoof: “Talk, or I’ll speak ill of your mother! And after that, turn on an electric drill in this very room!” — precisely because the CIA’s interrogations helped to prevent another terror attack on U.S. soil.

Had just one of the foiled terror plots gone off, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.
Some commentators have jumped on the conclusion by CIA Inspector General John Helgerson, in a 2004 report released publicly Monday concurrent to the reopening of the probe, that gauging the efficacy of “enhanced interrogation techniques” (EITs) is a “subjective process and not without some concern.”

Read on, however, and you find that Abu Zubaydah, one of Osama bin Laden’s highest-level henchmen, “appeared to be more cooperative” after going through simulated drowning known as waterboarding. His cooperation included helping to identify Jose Padilla and other terrorists.

You find that another terrorist who provided valuable information, Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri, did so only after “receiving additional EITs.”

And you find that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks and the man who personally beheaded the kidnapped Wall Street Journal reporter Danny Pearl, was “an accomplished resistor” who “provided only a few intelligence reports prior to the use of the waterboard, and analysis of that information revealed that much of it was outdated, inaccurate, or incomplete.” After being subjected to EITs, he became “probably the most prolific” source of good intelligence gathered through interrogations.
The point here is two-fold. First, those who argue against these interrogation techniques on grounds of both morality and their supposed lack of effectiveness cannot have it both ways.

If you want to object to actions such as waterboarding for moral reasons, fine. But don’t pretend that eschewing these techniques wouldn’t have put thousands of innocent American lives at grave risk from terrorists. The inspector general’s report recounts a litany of plots blocked thanks to knowledge gleaned from interrogations, some of which certainly came to light through the use of rougher questioning techniques.

The second point is that the CIA officers who employed these techniques did so at a time when another attack was thought to be imminent. They were, by all accounts, operating on ever-shifting ground in terms of legal authorizations and security imperatives. We cannot treat them as criminals now just because things turned out OK.

In so many ways it is good that we no longer have the Sept. 12 mind-set: That was a mind-set of fear. But the agents working then did not have the luxury of eight years’ worth of security and perspective. Again, we have that luxury only because those agents’ work gave it to us.

Perhaps the saddest commentary in all of this came, those several years ago, from unnamed officers cited in the report. Realizing that the Sept. 12 view would fade away, they feared that the American public that demanded security of them at the time would turn on them in the future. “Ten years from now we’re going to be sorry we’re doing this … [but] it has to be done,” was the way one of them summed up such worries.
Shame on us for proving that officer right.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Pelsoi needs to retire

There are many reasons I think Nancy Pelosi has passed the required retirement age, but certainly this humorous view of her also underscores what a ninny she really is...

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
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Political Humor Healthcare Protests

Sunday, September 13, 2009

12 yrs for Freedom Tower...Burj Dubai completed before Dec 2009

On September 11, 2001 the World Trade Center Towers 1 and 2 were destroyed.

Once the grieving process for the deceased had moved on, the hundreds of funerals and memorial ceremonies held, some began planning for a tribute to the departed and almost more importantly, a symbolic rebuilding to rebuke the idea that terrorism would prevail over a free people.

The Freedom Tower idea evolved.  A final design for the tower was formally unveiled on June 28, 2006. On December 19, 2006, the first steel columns were installed in the building's foundation. Its projected completion date is currently 2018 – 12 years after the first columns. When completed the entire structure will be 1776 feet tall, although the top floor will be 1,368 feet (417 m)

Half a world away in Dubai, the Burj Dubai project begins in 2003. Construction began on 21 September 2004, and the tower is expected to be completed and ready for occupancy by the end of 2009. The Chicago-based architecture and engineering firm Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (SOM) is in charge of the project.

The building is now the world’s tallest human made structure at 2,684 feet (818 m).

It is due to be completed on time in a little over 5 years, with construction that was managed by Turner Construction of NYC.

OK, so here are my thoughts  

What the heck? How is it American companies can go overseas and go in 5 years from a dirt lot to a center piece of a new city in the desert, but American companies can’t get a tower at ground zero for almost 12 years???

Well, first…it’s not the money. Dubai spent $4 billion on this building, and the budget for what used to be called the Freedom Tower is already at $3 billion…

It has to be what then? Politics? Corruption?  

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Has Charlie Watts Quit The Rolling Stones?

Undercover.com.au - Your Daily Music Fix

by Paul Cashmere - September 2 2009
photo by Ros O'Gorman

Undercover has learned that Charlie Watts has quit The Rolling Stones.

A source within the Stones inner-circle says, “Charlie Watts has quit the band. He will never record or tour with the band again”.

The news does not come as a surprise. It was common knowledge that Keith Richards had to talk Charlie into contributing to the A Bigger Bang tour but this time it seems there is no calling Charlie back to active duty.

“The Stones are looking to Keith's Expensive Winos drummer Charlie Drayton to fill the void in all future Stones' callings,” our source says.

With Mick Jagger planning more Stones activity next year, the departure of Charlie will be a huge blow to the band. Charlie was the backbone of the band.

The 68-year old drummer simply doesn't want to do it anymore.

Charlie joined the Rolling Stones in January, 1963. He didn’t expect it would last. In fact, he kept his day job for several months until the band started to feel like a career.

Charlie’s decision to quit the band comes a three years short of the Stones 50th anniversary.