discovery :: hegemony :: prophecy :: conspiracy :: eschatology :: anthropology :: cosmology :: philosophy :: epistemology :: teleology  [?]

Thursday, May 29, 2003

Fourteen Defining Characteristics Of Fascism

Dr. Lawrence Britt has examined the fascist regimes of Hitler (Germany), Mussolini (Italy), Franco (Spain), Suharto (Indonesia) and several Latin American regimes. Britt found 14 defining characteristics common to each:
Doctor takes US to court for creating AIDS

An AIDS activist who is convinced the U.S. government is behind the spread of the virus is finally getting his day in court.
Dr. Boyd Graves is suing the government for creating AIDS and will finally present his case before a San Diego judge on June 27.
He claims he has hundreds of government documents proving AIDS was designed as biological terrorism against African-Americans.
Government lawyers have told Graves they can't find the information he claims he found in public documents. Still, he's not worried, claiming he has one last piece of evidence he's convinced will force the judge to rule in his favor.
If that happens, Graves says the government will be forced to release all sorts of previously-classified research which he says proves the real origins of AIDS.
American Account of Killing of 2 Journalists Is Disputed

There is no evidence that American forces were fired on from the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad before they shelled the building, killing two of nearly 100 journalists staying there, a journalist advocacy group said today.
Soldier found disobedient for refusing anthrax shot

A military panel on Wednesday found an Army reservist guilty of disobeying an order for refusing to take the anthrax vaccine. The panel of eight officers took only 40 minutes before returning a guilty verdict against Pvt. Kamila Iwanowska.
Iwanowska, 26, admitted in a court "stipulation of fact" that she refused to follow the verbal and written orders of her commanding officers. Army prosecutors read a statement to the panel and rested their case without calling any witnesses.
"Good order and discipline and following orders is essential in the United States Army," Capt. Wesley Rowley said in a brief opening statement. Rowley said Iwanowska's signed statement was all the proof the panel needed for a conviction.
Way Out There in Arp 299, a Factory for Supernovas

Penetrating thick dust where two galaxies are colliding, radio telescopes have observed the fireworks and afterglows of stars exploding at such an extraordinary rate that astronomers are calling the turbulent region a "supernova factory.

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

Gulf War Syndrome 'does not exist'

There is no such thing as Gulf War Syndrome, an official scientific study has concluded.
The Medical Research Council (MRC) said there was "little evidence" the illnesses of campaign veterans were caused by the multiple vaccinations they received.
The government-funded body also said there was no evidence of a link between veterans' symptoms and the use of depleted uranium shells or nerve agents.
But the study was dismissed by the Gulf Veterans and Families Association, which said: "How can the MRC say that Gulf War Syndrome does not exist when it appears in the Royal College of Medicine encyclopaedia?"
Oil wars Pentagon's policy since 1999

A top-level United States policy document has emerged that explicitly confirms the Defence Department's readiness to fight an oil war.
According to the report, Strategic Assessment 1999, prepared for the US Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Secretary of Defence, "energy and resource issues will continue to shape international security".
Oil conflicts over production facilities and transport routes, particularly in the Persian Gulf and Caspian regions, are specifically envisaged.
Although the policy does not forecast imminent US military conflict, it vividly highlights how the highest levels of the US Defence community accepted the waging of an oil war as a legitimate military option.
Strategic Assessment also forecasts that if an oil "problem" arises, "US forces might be used to ensure adequate supplies".
CIA Bribe Neutralized Baghdad

You may remember a bit of mixed news regarding the taking of Baghdad Airport: the US insisted it was in the process of being taken. Non-embeded journalists said it was all quiet on the day. Perhaps the following explains the inconsistency:
One of Saddam Hussein's cousins, Special Republican Guard chief Maher Sufian Al-Tikriti, betrayed the deposed Iraqi leader by ordering his elite forces not to defend Baghdad after making a deal with the United States, the French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche reported yesterday.
Citing an Iraqi source close to Saddam's former regime, the newspaper said that the general, responsible for defending the Iraqi capital, left Baghdad aboard a US military transport plane, bound for a US base outside Iraq.
His departure, along with that of a 20-strong entourage, came on April 8 - the day before US forces swept into Baghdad, and after US Marines announced that the general had been killed, the paper reported.
Sufian does not appear on the US military's list of most wanted Iraqis, which names Barzan Al-Ghafur Sulayman Majid as commander of the Special Republican Guard.
Being cautious, those who accepted the deal only agreed to defect once the American soldiers were in sight. The signal was to be the taking of the airport in Baghdad, the diplomat added.
Alchemy with light shocks physicists

Researchers have documented new control over light: a way to shift the frequency of light beams to any desired colour, with near 100 per cent efficiency. "The degree of control over light really is quite shocking," comments photonics expert Eli Yablonovitch at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Claims by photonics crystal pioneer John Joannopoulos and his group at MIT, are soon to be published in Physical Review Letters.

Thursday, May 22, 2003

Innovative Wing Design Could Soar in Martian Skies

A team of undergraduate engineering students from the University of Kentucky scored a partial success in a recent test of a prototype Mars exploration aircraft whose wings would inflate to take on their aerodynamic shape once within the thin martian atmosphere.
Inflatable wings are seen as a promising solution for a vexing problem facing NASA engineers: building an aircraft that can be successfully unfurled or unfolded into its flight configuration after being stowed within the tight confines of a space capsule for the long journey to the red planet. The problem has twice abruptly halted NASA efforts to develop a glider or powered aircraft to explore Mars.
Recovered Meteor Reveals Solar Secrets


The extraordinary find of a meteorite that was photographed as it plummeted to Earth has helped resolve some of the mysteries about the solar system's rocky wanderers, but also created new ones.
The shooting star was photographed on April 6, 2002, by a time-lapse camera set up in southern Germany by the European Fireball Network, a group of astronomers.
The picture revealed a 91-kilometer (57-mile) trail as the rock entered the Earth's atmosphere after a journey through space that lasted millions of years.
The astronomers traced the trajectory of the path they saw and on July 14 they found a 1.75-kilo (3.85-pound) chunk of the debris near the turreted castle of Neuschwanstein, in Bavaria.
Troops 'vandalise' ancient city of Ur

In the grand tradition of military types visiting foreign lands and wrecking them comes this:
One of the greatest wonders of civilisation, and probably the world's most ancient structure - the Sumerian city of Ur in southern Iraq - has been vandalised by American soldiers and airmen, according to aid workers in the area.
They claim that US forces have spray-painted the remains with graffiti and stolen kiln-baked bricks made millennia ago. As a result, the US military has put the archaeological treasure, which dates back 6000 years, off-limits to its own troops. Any violations will be punishable in military courts.
Ur is believed by many to be the birthplace of the biblical patrirch Abraham. It was the religious seat of the civilisation of Sumer at the dawn of the line of dynasties which ruled Mesopotamia starting about 4000 BC. Long before the rise of the Egyptian, Greek or Roman empires, it was here that the wheel was invented and the first mathematical system developed. Here, the first poetry was written, notably the epic Gilganesh, a classic of ancient literature.
The most prominent monument is the best preserved ziggurat - stepped pyramid - in the Arab world, initially built by the Sumerians around 4000 BC and restored by Nebuchadnezzar II in the sixth century BC.
Six French journalists detained on arrival at Los Angeles, sent back to France

Reporters Without Borders today protested against the detention of six French journalists on arrival a week ago at Los Angeles international airport to cover a video games trade show and their forcible repatriation after being held at the airport for more than 24 hours.
"These journalists were treated like criminals - subjected to several body searches, handcuffed, locked up and fingerprinted," Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Robert M?nard complained in a letter to the US ambassador to Paris, Howard Leach.

Wednesday, May 21, 2003

US conceives a morning-after-the-blast-before pill

Military officials in the United States are expressing enthusiasm about an experimental drug that they say could help protect troops, police officers and emergency medical personnel against nuclear weapons or "dirty bombs."
The drug appears to offer significant protection from radiation sickness.
"We want it on the fast track," said Navy Admiral James Zimble, a top military health official who is president of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences. "We've been very encouraged by the very positive results" of tests on animals.
Radiation specialists said tests of the drug on mice, dogs and monkeys suggest that it will work in people and won't prove toxic.
Since the 1950s, military researchers have scrutinised thousands of compounds in a search for something that could protect troops in a nuclear war.
'Spooky stuff' puts US on orange alert

Undersecretary of Homeland Security Asa Hutchinson said intelligence indicates "terrorists continue to plan attacks against targets in the US, and for this reason, the alert level has been raised. "There is increased specificity in what we hear, but not necessarily in terms of the target," Hutchinson said.
Senior US officials said the chatter suggests a significant attack inside the United States might be in the works. It is "reasonably spooky stuff," a knowledgeable official said.

Tuesday, May 20, 2003

Strange creature terrifies Nigeria

Women in Maru, headquarters of Maru Local Government area of Zamfara have been forced to remain indoors in the evenings for fear of a strange creature which chases them. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) learnt that the mysterious creature, said to be half human, half horse, usually appear in the early hours of the morning and in the evenings.
The appearance of the strange creature has crippled the socio-economic activities in the town, especially at night as people prefer to stay at home from 4 pm till morning. The creature believed to have surfaced in different locations of the town is causing so much anxiety and fear among residents, particularly women.
When contacted to comment on the issue, one of the sons of Emir of Maru, Alhaji Isa Maru said the rumour was strong and "we are still trying to get to the root of it."
Bombings may spur antiterror unity

Get thee behind me (and follow)...
The Moroccan bombings may bring more of the world together in trying to quell terrorism. To the extent that such attacks continue and include non-American targets, they reinforce the notion temporarily lost during the animosity over the Iraq war that much of the world is vulnerable to terrorist violence and that strong international cooperation is needed curb it.
Remains of toxic bullets litter Iraq

Picture shows effect of depleted-uranium bullets from Iraq's first confrontation with US forces.

At a roadside produce stand on the outskirts of Baghdad, business is brisk for Latifa Khalaf Hamid. Iraqi drivers pull up and snap up fresh bunches of parsley, mint leaves, dill, and onion stalks.
But Ms. Hamid's stand is just four paces away from a burnt-out Iraqi tank, destroyed by - and contaminated with - controversial American depleted-uranium (DU) bullets. Local children play "throughout the day" on the tank, Hamid says, and on another one across the road.
No one has warned the vendor in the faded, threadbare black gown to keep the toxic and radioactive dust off her produce. The children haven't been told not to play with the radioactive debris. They gather around as a Geiger counter carried by a visiting reporter starts singing when it nears a DU bullet fragment no bigger than a pencil eraser.
A Terror Tracking System By Any Other Name

The Total Information Awareness program headed by controversial ex-Navy Admiral John Poindexter is slated to be re-named with the more narrowly-focused moniker Terrorist Information Awareness, sources in and outside the Pentagon tell TIME. Pentagon spokespeople declined comment on the plan or on what, if any, substantive changes might accompany a possible name-change.
In a recent congressional hearing, Tony Tether, head of the Pentagon agency that houses the program, said TIA would be operated with the expectation that "the American public and their elected officials must have confidence that their liberties will not be violated before they would accept this kind of technology."

Monday, May 19, 2003

9/11: icing on the "Let's create an enemy" cake

Opposed by everyone in the world who was not bought off, the illegal invasion of Iraq was undertaken for many reasons -- the imminent replacement of the dollar by the euro as the world's primary currency, the tempting lure of untapped oil reserves, the desire to consolidate U.S./Israeli military hegemony over a strategically vital region -- but the most important reason was to further obscure questions about the awesome deception staged by the American government that has come to be known as 9/11.
Escape 'The Matrix,' kill your landlord, parents, or someone



Ninteen year old Josh Cooke's fascination with The Matrix is shared by others who also have been charged with murder. Some high-profile crimes since the movie's 1999 release have allegedly been committed without any obvious motive other than attempts to escape The Matrix.
The cases in which the movie has emerged as a central theme span the country. Even last fall's sniper shootings in the Washington region have overtones from the popular science-fiction film, which posits that computers have taken over the world.
"Free yourself of the matrix," sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo, 18, wrote in his jail cell. "You are a slave to the matrix 'control.' "
Just this week, in Ohio, a woman who told police that she lived in The Matrix and that "they commit a lot of crimes in The Matrix" was found not guilty by reason of insanity to charges of killing her landlord.
And in San Francisco, a man who believes he was sucked into The Matrix also was found not guilty by reason of insanity on charges that he killed his landlord.
From The Wilderness subscriber pays for full page ad in The Washington Post

From The Wilderness today ran a full-page ad in the front section of The Washington Post intended to educate the American people, support heroic leaders and promote a number of independent media outlets which have made important contributions since 9/11. The ad was the direct result of a donation from a subscriber who had recently viewed FTW Publisher Mike Ruppert's video "The Truth and Lies of 9-11". ?The ad that ran today was actually a second version, the text of which had to be changed after the first version apparently caused some nervousness in Washington.

Sunday, May 18, 2003

Five Suicide Bombings Kill 41 in Morocco

Just days after U.S. officials warned of possible worldwide attacks by Osama bin Laden (news - web sites)'s al-Qaida network, a quick succession of five suicide bombings in Casablanca, the economic capital of Morocco, killed 31 bystanders and 10 terrorists Friday night, officials said Saturday.
Comet Could Brighten Night Skies Next Spring

Most comets would be completely invisible at great distance, even to the telescopes that found them, so the implication is that the recently discovered Comet NEAT C/2001 Q4 may be an unusually large and active object.
On Aug. 28, 2001, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) announced the discovery of a new comet spotted by Near Earth Asteroid Tracking team at Palomar Observatory in southern California. Like several other comets, this one has come to be called NEAT, the acronym for the discovery program.
The comet was nearly a billion miles (1.6 billion kilometers) from the Sun when it was discovered. At that time it was shining at magnitude 20, or more than 398,000 times dimmer than the faintest star visible to the unaided eye.
On Oct. 29, 2002, The IAU announced the discovery by the LINEAR survey of a comet that may also become a bright naked-eye object in May 2004.

Friday, May 16, 2003

Planet X takes Iraqi village by surprise

The US military says a pre-dawn raid called Operation: Planet X in northern Iraq Thursday netted more than 260 prisoners. Heavily armed US Army troops stormed a village near Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit.
Reported to be among those rounded up was a general from Saddam Hussein's security forces who had disguised himself as a shepherd.

Wednesday, May 14, 2003

Pardon me but your slip is showing

For reasons best known to the incorruptible watchdogs of the Washington press corps, Bush senior's self-interested mercy upon Caspar Weinberger instigated no searching examination of the other pardons granted by the departing president.
Indeed, the final dozen pardons given by Bush -- including the unexplained release of a Pakistani heroin trafficker, a Watergate felon and a a Cuban exile terrorist -- received virtually no coverage at all.
Eye-catching celestial helix images unveiled

Astronomers have unveiled images of one of the nearest planetary nebulae to Earth one of the largest and most detailed celestial images ever. The images show a fine web of filamentary 'bicycle-spoke' features embedded in colourful red and blue gas ring.
Hubble astronomers took several exposures then combined the views with a wider photo taken by Kitt Peak's Mosaic Camera.
The result is a breathtaking look down a tunnel of glowing gases that is a million million kilometres long. The fluorescing tube is pointed nearly directly at Earth, so it looks more like a bubble than a cylinder. Thousands of comet-like filaments embedded along the inner rim of the nebula point back toward the central star, which is a small but superhot white dwarf. These tentacles formed when a hot stellar 'wind' of gas ploughed into colder shells of dust and gas previously ejected by the doomed star. Astronomers have known about these comet-like filaments from ground-based telescopes for decades but have never before seen them in so much detail. The filaments may lie in a disc around the hot star, like a collar.
Math discovery may aid resource management


'One of the basic concepts of ecology for generations had been that the complexity of the natural world is a big part of what makes it persistent, that the many interrelationships, interactions and food webs among different species evolved into stable systems that worked well together,' said Hiram Li, an OSU professor of fisheries and wildlife.
'But Robert May came along with a mathematical theory that suggested that increased complexity in a natural system should actually make it less stable,' Li said. 'The math seemed to work perfectly, but our observations of the real world ran contrary to this.'
For 30 years researchers have debated this paradox between the way the world appeared to work ' a 'tangled web' of thriving organisms, as Charles Darwin described it ' with May's mathematical description of the way it should work. Since the mathematical theory had not been reconciled with real-world observations, many field ecologists dismissed its importance. Applied mathematics are being used to manage fishing, hunting and control of pests, Li said, in situations that only relate to one or two species ' but they have not been applied to ecosystems or communities.
'What we came to realize, however, is that May's mathematical analysis was not really wrong, it just didn't go far enough, as even May conceded,' Rossignol said. 'So what we've tried to do is shine some light into this black box, by identifying more degrees of stability and using more variables, allowing the math to consider complexity and eventually arrive at different conclusions.'
Bush quick to finger al-Qaeda on Saudi suicide bombings



Bush says he "wouldn't be surprised" if al-Qaeda,was behind this weeks four Saudi attacks.
Powell also pointed his finger at al-Qaeda, saying,"I believe al-Qaeda has been weakened, but it has not been destroyed."
A counterintelligence official in Washington said intelligence from the past two weeks indicated al-Qaeda was close to launching a strike in Saudi Arabia.
The incident follows an alert this month from the U.S. State Department warning Americans not to travel to Saudi Arabia because of concerns over terrorism.
Recently, Saudi officials said al-Qaeda was planning attacks in the oil-rich kingdom, which is the birthplace of Osama bin Laden and home to 15 of the 19 hijackers in the Sept. 11 terrorism attacks.

Tuesday, May 13, 2003

Workers miss pay so Bush can announce tax cuts

Incredible, but true. George W. Bush's visit to a nonunionized plastics factory in Omaha to pitch his $550 billion tax cut plan as helping workers will cost those workers up to $130 each in lost wages, because the plant will be closed for Bush's speech.
Airlite Plastics CEO Brad Crosby is giving the workers a choice of being docked for the time the plant is closed, work next Saturday to make up the time, take an unpaid day off or use a paid vacation day. In any event, the workers lose while Bush promotes his additional tax cuts for the rich as helping average folks.
Aliens in their own land

The United States of America that we thought we knew is gone, finished, kaput and we only have ourselves to blame.
Most of our fellow citizens, who continue to mouth platitudes to freedom and democracy, have not yet been bitten by the police state that grows more powerful by the day with the blessings of Republicans and Democrats alike.
We no longer have a country that operates on the consent of the governed, if, indeed, we ever did. But we did have the illusion, perhaps foolishly so in the face of the reality that has come to pass. We the people are now superfluous to the decisions made by the ruling elite in Washington, the state houses and city hall.
Bush administration expands the infrastructure of a police state

While claiming democracy and freedom as the goal of its invasion and occupation of Iraq, the Bush administration is moving step by step to restrict freedom and undermine democracy at home, building up the infrastructure of a police state with essentially unlimited powers to spy on, interrogate and arrest American citizens.
These measures have repeatedly received enthusiastic support from the Democratic and Republican politicians in Congress and from the federal courts: all three branches of the government joining in a concerted assault on the democratic rights of the American people.
The latest action was taken by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which voted unanimously May 1 to approve a huge increase in funding for spying activities by the US government, including authorization for the creation of a government-wide ?watch list? of suspected ?terrorists,? defined so broadly that virtually any immigrant from the Middle East or a predominantly Islamic country, and virtually any left-wing political opponent of American imperialism, could fall under suspicion.

Monday, May 12, 2003

Lightning strikes again

An Etobicoke man who survived a lightning strike in 1998 was taken to hospital in critical condition last night after being struck a second time.
The 39-year-old was dubbed the Miracle Man in The Toronto Sun when he survived a bolt from the blue on June 30, 1998.
Searchers baffled by report of ditched plane

Police and Tauranga Volunteer Coastguard remained baffled over the fate of a plane reported crashed into the sea about 15km off Pukehina Beach near Te Puke.
Three holidaymakers having breakfast on their deck about 9.30am called police after watching what they believed was a low-flying plane level out and splashing into the sea.
Their call sparked a major search but after three hours of scouring the sea for signs of survivors or wreckage, nothing which could have come from a plane or microlight was found.
Mr Murray said the matter had to be treated seriously because it was such a credible sighting of the aircraft which appeared to be heading in the direction of Whakatane.
Flight plans had been checked, all airports and private airstrips in Bay of Plenty contacted by police but no aircraft was overdue or had been reported missing.
Mercury makes rare appearanceMercury makes rare appearance

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The planet Mercury will pass between Earth and the sun today in a rare astronomic event that occurs only a dozen times in a century.
Observers in Asia, Africa and Europe will have the best view, but those in North America will only see the last 20 or 30 minutes of Mercury's five-hour-long trip across the sun, known to astronomers as a transit.
Mercury is too small -- about 1/160th the size of the Sun's diameter -- to be seen with unaided eyes, and direct telescope viewing of the transit is not recommended, because special precautions are needed to prevent permanent eye damage.
"People will see a small, perfectly round, black dot slowly moving across the solar disk," NASA eclipse expert Fred Espenak said in a statement from Goddard Space Flight Centre outside Washington.
Skeptics Say Shuttle Worn Out, Obsolete

As NASA picks up the pieces from the Columbia disaster and works on returning the three remaining space shuttles to flight, a growing chorus of skeptics is saying the 20-year-old space plane may have become unacceptably worn out and obsolete.

Sunday, May 11, 2003

The two faces of Rumsfeld

2000: director of a company which wins $200m contract to sell nuclear reactors to North Korea
2002: declares North Korea a terrorist state, part of the axis of evil and a target for regime change
Video of Bush being told of second airplane attack

By now you have all heard the strange story of how George Bush claimed to have seen the first plane hit the World Trade Tower on TV before going into a school room to read to some children. This is a strange story because there was no video of the first impact until a day later, when a video shot by a documentary film crew that captured the first impact surfaced.
Still stranger was Bush's reaction on being told of the second impact by Andy Card. There was none. Bush simply went on visiting with the school children and reading a story to them. For twenty minutes.
An Interesting Day: President Bush's Movements and Actions on 9/11

Why, at 9:03am -- 15 minutes after it was clear the US was under terrorist attack -- did President Bush sit down with a classroom of second-graders and begin a 20-minute pre-planned photo op? No one knows the answer to that question. In fact, no one has even asked Bush about it.
Bush's actions on September 11 have been the subject of lively debate, mostly on the internet. Details reported that day and in the week after the attacks - both the media reports and accounts given by Bush himself - have changed radically over the past 18 months. Culling hundreds of reports from newspapers, magazines, and the internet has only made finding the "truth" of what happened and when it happened more confusing. In the changed political climate after 9/11, few have dared raise challenging questions about Bush's actions. A journalist who said Bush was "flying around the country like a scared child, seeking refuge in his mother's bed after having a nightmare" and another who said Bush "skedaddled" were fired. [Washington Post, 9/29/01 (B)] We should have a concise record of where President Bush was throughout the day the US was attacked, but we do not.
Big Dicks up to no good: Cheney firm paid millions in bribes, Perle on the scam again
Richard Perle, an influential Pentagon adviser, was accused of a new conflict of interests after it was revealed that he had briefed investors on how to profit from a potential war with Iraq or North Korea after attending a classified intelligence meeting on the two countries.
Mr Perle, who declined to comment yesterday, resigned as chairman of the board in March after bad publicity concerning his links with the failed telecoms firm Global Crossing, which was seeking a favourable ruling from the Pentagon; his directorship of the UK intelligence firm Autonomy; and his meeting with Adnan Khashoggi, a Saudi arms dealer, and another businessman who wanted to influence Washington's Iraq policies.

Friday, May 09, 2003

Asteroid Will Miss By A Whisker

An asteroid is heading in Earth's direction and is expected to come within spitting distance - in space terms.
Known as 2003 JD11, it measures 45 to 95 metres in diameter, and is travelling at nearly 15 kilometres a second.
Auckland's Stardome Observatory says while technically the asteroid's voyage is considered an astronomical near-miss, it will, in fact, be about three million kilometres away.
Spokesman Warren Hurley says a close watch is being kept on the space visitor, but it will be nine times further away than the moon, so there is no chance of being hit by it.
An bigger asteroid, due in July, will come a lot closer.

Sunday, May 04, 2003

Possible media blackout on Russian UFO sighting

The entire Russian Baltic Fleet and a larg number or residents of Kaliningrad (formerly Koenigsburg), a city of over 3 million inhabitants, in the Russian Baltic enclave on the Baltic Sea, watched in awe as a "flying wing" shaped Unidentified Flying Object winged over rapidly and plunged into Kaliningrad Harbour at approximately 6:17 pm. Local Time. The event was caught on videotape by a local RTR Russian State Television news crew, which was present on the massive naval base, filming a documentary segment on the fleet for airing on Russian television. The Unidentified Flying Object, described as a "Flying Wing", with two enlongated, dome like protrusions on top, and three similar structures, underneath, was overflying the Baltic Fleet, which lay at anchor in Kaliningrad Harbour. According to a Russian Naval Commander, who wishes to remain annomyous, the craft was apparently caught, accidently, withing the sweep patterns of ship mounted search radars, which came on to track it?s progress, causing some sort of malfunction which resulted in the crash.
Parallel Universes and multiverses

Is there a copy of you reading this article? A person who is not you but who lives on a planet called Earth, with misty mountains, fertile fields and sprawling cities, in a solar system with eight other planets? The life of this person has been identical to yours in every respect. But perhaps he or she now decides to put down this article without finishing it, while you read on.
The idea of such an alter ego seems strange and implausible, but it looks as if we will just have to live with it, because it is supported by astronomical observations. The simplest and most popular cosmological model today predicts that you have a twin in a galaxy about 10 to the 1028 meters from here. This distance is so large that it is beyond astronomical, but that does not make your doppelg?nger any less real. The estimate is derived from elementary probability and does not even assume speculative modern physics, merely that space is infinite (or at least sufficiently large) in size and almost uniformly filled with matter, as observations indicate. In infinite space, even the most unlikely events must take place somewhere. There are infinitely many other inhabited planets, including not just one but infinitely many that have people with the same appearance, name and memories as you, who play out every possible permutation of your life choices.
Two killed in Iraq demo shooting

IT started when a young boy hurled a sandal at a US jeep - it ended with two Iraqis dead and 16 seriously injured.
I watched in horror as American troops opened fire on a crowd of 1,000 unarmed people here yesterday.
Many, including children, were cut down by a 20-second burst of automatic gunfire during a demonstration against the killing of 13 protesters at the Al-Kaahd school on Monday.
Key McVeigh Witness Testimony Questioned

Timothy McVeigh's Lawyers Never Learned of Questions Over Key Testimony in Okla. City Bomb Trial
Ten days before Timothy McVeigh was executed, lawyers for FBI lab employees sent an urgent letter to the attention of Attorney General John Ashcroft alleging that a key prosecution witness in the Oklahoma City bombing trial might have given false testimony about forensic evidence.

Saturday, May 03, 2003

New sub-atomic particle confounds theory

A sub-atomic particle predicted to exist by physicists has been detected for the first time in a particle accelerator in California - but its properties do not fit with theory.
The particle, called Ds (2317), was discovered in the debris of collisions between other sub-atomic particles. But it has baffled and intrigued the 500 physicists working on the project.
They think the particle belongs to a family of eight particles known as the charm-strange mesons. Four of them have been found so far, all precisely fulfilling the theorists' predictions. But the mass of the newly found Ds particle is significantly smaller than expected, casting doubt on current theories of the nature of matter.
The discrepancy means physicists are confronted with a particle they predicted but cannot explain, says the University of Pisa's Marcello Giorgi, leader of the international BaBar project that made the discovery. "This has never happened before," he says. "It is very, very exciting".
Venice in the desert: Gilgamesh tomb believed found

Gilgamesh was believed to be two-thirds god, one-third human.
"We covered more than 100 hectares. We have found garden structures and field structures as described in the epic, and we found Babylonian houses."
But he said the most astonishing find was an incredibly sophisticated system of canals.
Bush's 'Christian' Blood Cult

Bush mocked Tucker's appeal for clemency. In an interview with Talk magazine, Bush imitated Tucker's appeal for him to spare her life - pursing his lips, squinting his eyes, and in a squeaky voice saying, "Please don't kill me." That went too far for former GOP presidential candidate Gary Bauer, himself an evangelical Christian. "I think it is nothing short of unbelievable that the governor of a major state running for president thought it was acceptable to mock a woman he decided to put to death," said Bauer.