Friday, December 30, 2005
Dictators defend freedom
The following excerpt is taken from a review of the book Hitler's Prisons:
The similarity of Bush administration policies to "those of abusive regimes that we have historically condemned" is brought home to us by historian Nikolaus Wachsmann’s Hitler’s Prisons (Yale University Press 2004).
Wachsmann’s book is a detailed history of the conflict and cooperation between the traditional legal/judicial/prison system on the one hand and the police/SS/concentration camp system on the other. He does not mention George Bush or Bush’s "war on terror." However, the similarities leap off the pages.
Just as 9/11 was a crystallizing event for Bush’s seizure of executive power to suspend civil liberties, detain people indefinitely without evidence, and spy on American citizens without warrants, the Reichstag fire of 27 February 1933 was followed the next morning by Hitler’s Decree for the Protection of People and State. This decree became the constitutional charter of the Third Reich. It "suspended guarantees of personal liberty and served as the basis for the police arrest and incarceration of political opponents without trial."
In a frightening parallel to our own situation, Wachsmann writes: "Various police activities during the ‘seizure of power’ clearly damaged legal authority. Indefinite detention without due judicial process was incompatible with the rule of law. But, on the whole, there were no loud complaints or protests from legal officials." I read this passage the same day I heard on National Public Radio University of Chicago law professor Eric Posner defend President Bush’s use of extra-legal, extra-Constitutional authority to protect the people and state from terrorists.
The precedent for Alberto Gonzales’ declaration that Bush is the law was Reich Minister of Justice Franz Gurtner, who agreed in a cabinet meeting on 3 July 1934 that "Hitler was the law." Bush’s claim that extraordinary powers are necessary for him to be able to defend our country under extraordinary circumstances is identical to Hitler’s claim that he was entitled to ignore the rule of law because he was "responsible for the fate of the German nation and thereby the supreme judge of the German people." What is the difference between Hitler’s claim and the US Department of Defense’s claim that President Bush has the right to violate domestic and international laws?
Wachsmann’s book shows that it is extremely easy for extraordinary measures in the name of national emergency to become permanent. Germans did not understand that the Decree for the Protection of People and State was the beginning of legal terror.
Glad to know I'm not the only person who can clearly see the similarities.
Bowls of Baksheesh Part 3
The Bagwhan says always believe. friday december 30th: MUSIC CITY BOWL VIRGINIA CAVALIERS vs MINNESOTA GOLDEN GOPHERS (-7) NO REASON VIRGINIA CAN'T WIN THIS ONE OUTRIGHT (2 BOWLS OF BAKSHEESH)
SUN BOWL NORTHWESTERN WILDCATS VS UCLA BRUINS (-3) NORTHWESTERN WANTS IT BAD (5 BOWLS OF BAKSHEESH)
INDEPENDENCE BOWL MISSSOURI TIGERS VS SOUTH CAROLINA GAMECOCKS (-4.5) SEC VS BIG 12. NUFF SAID TAKE SC (2 BOWLS OF BAKSHEESH)
PEACH BOWL LSU TIGERS VS MIAMI HURRICANES(-7) BIG DOGS HAVE COVERED EVERY BOWL GAME SO FAR. LSU (1 BOWL OF BAKSHEESH)
SATURDAY DECEMBER 31st: MEINEKE CAR CARE BOWL SOUTH FLORIDA BULLS VS NORTH CAROLINA STATE WOLFPACK(-4.5) GIMMIE A BREAK! NC STATE (1 BOWL OF BAKSHEESH)
LIBERTY BOWL TULSA GOLDEN HURRICANES VS FRESNO BULLDOGS (-7.5) FRESNO HAS SOMETHING TO PROVE AFTER THE WAY THEY ENDED THE SEASON (1 BOWL OF BAKSHEESH)
HOUSTON BOWL IOWA STATE CYCLONES VS TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY HORNED FROGS(-3) TCU HAS'NT PLAYED IN ALMOST 2 MONTHS. IOWA STATE IN THE UPSET (4 BOWLS OFBAKSHEESH)
Thursday, December 29, 2005
I don't think it's funny no more
Wednesday, December 28, 2005
Police State Blues
I love trucks
Monday's fierce winter storm knocked out the local electric transformer, and today a new one arrived at the Quichapa substation. The pictured crane truck, that will first pick up the destroyed transformer and then lift into place its replacement, totally blocked both lanes of Hwy. 56, taking its own sweet time backing in. A gigantic metal dinosaur controlled by a human brain. Way cool.
Just like a kid I still love trucks!
Ain't humans cool for building and maintaining such things as crane trucks and transformers?
Related news story: http://www.thespectrum.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051228/NEWS01/512280304/1002
Monday, December 26, 2005
Bowls of Baksheesh: Week 2
Today's weather in Zion Canyon seemed to befit the special energy flow needed by holy men to conjure up predictions of future events. After weeks of above normal balm, we are today greeted by the dramatic and windy high opera of a frontal low which has intruded upon our sunny holiday reverie. (It's still December after all.) Have a great week of football! Now on to the main feature:
THE BAGWHAN returns with the 2nd installation of BOWLS OF BAKSHEESH the first six games we went 3-3, but with the BOWLS OF BAKSHEESH we went 5-4, $25 bettors would be up an astounding $15 for now. LETS GO:
monday 12/26 MOTOR CITY BOWL AKRON ZIPS vs MEMPHIS TIGERS -(4) a MAC team plays in this bowl each year so we'll go with familiarity. AKRON +4 (1 bowl of baksheesh)
tuesday 12/27 CHAMPS SPORTS BOWL COLORADO BUFFALOES vs CLEMSON TIGERS (-10) i don't even want to discuss COLORADO we'll go OVER 45 total points (3 bowls of baksheesh)
tuesday 12/27 INSIGHT BOWL RUTGERS SCARLET KNIGHTS vs ARIZONA ST SUN DEVILS(-10) this is basically a home game for ARIZONA ST. RUTGERS hasn't been to a bowlin forever. ho hum for ARIZONA ST., something to prove for RUTGERS. RUTGERS +10 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
wednesday 12/28 MPC COMPUTER BOWL BOISE STATE BRONCOS vs. BOSTON COLLEGE EAGLES(-2) this IS a home game for BOISE. on the blue carpet. in the last game for the head coach that put this program on the map. BC is better, but emotion wins this for BOISEBOISE +2 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
wednesday 12/28 NEBRASKA CORNHUSKERS vs MICHIGAN WOLVERINES(-11)MICHIGAN in a non- new years bowl? do they give a rats ass about being in SAN ANTONIO?i don't think so. NEBRASKA +11 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
thursday 12/29 EMERALD BOWL UTAH UTES vs GEORGIA TECH YELLOW JACKETS (-9.5) where does GA TECH get off being almost a double digit favorite? UTAH +9.5 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
thursday 12/29 OKLAHOMA SONNERS vs OREGON DUCKS (-3.5) does OREGON have something to prove to the BCS or are they gonna bitch andmoan? bitch and moan OKLAHOMA +3.5 (1 bowl of baksheesh)
ALWAYS BELIEVE
TB
The Eagle Crags
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Friday, December 23, 2005
Thursday, December 22, 2005
The high for the state today
Springdale recorded today's high temperature for the state of Utah with a sparkling scrumptious 72 F. Christmas in the Holy Land of Zion indeed, where's my portable potted palm?Let's all root for California tonight against BYU in the Las Vegas Bowl----the Bagwhan's prediction notwithstanding. I like the Utes and Aggies but despise the Cougars. It's sorta like hating the white and shiny Dallas Cowboys from when I was a young Redskin fan growing up in DC, but at least the Cowboys were worthy opponents, unlike the white bread chicken shit, sprinkled with converted Samoans (adding a brown hue & much needed bulk) rag tag bullcrap they call football in Provo. "And they called it puppy loooove...."
BYU is in a bowl game because Las Vegas is a fun place for Mormons to come and gamble and frolic in the warmth of bright December sunshine, on a traditionally slow week in Sin City. I don't know how many fans from Berkeley come but probably a few, because it's a very cheap flight from Oakland to LV. Let's go you Golden Bears! Let's win one for Tookie Williams!
Wednesday, December 21, 2005
Not to jinx anyone---but the Bagwhan is 2-0!
You crushed on the first two bowl games, your eminence.
Tuesday, December 20, 2005
Balmy retreat for the holidays

This year I'll be basking in the Zion sun for the Christmas holidays. A strong high pressure cell is dominating the weather over the Southwest and it is projected to be in the mid-60's and sunny for the foreseeable future. We are receiving the weather of the Holy Lands as a nice present from Mother Nature. Thanks a heap hon!
Click the Bit & Spur link for information about New Year's Eve at das Bit: www.bitandspur.com
Monday, December 19, 2005
The Bagwhan picks the first week of bowl games
tuesday 12/20 New Orleans Bowl arkansas st vs. southern mississippi (-16.5) so. miss is much beter than ark st, but i'll call for the backdoor cover: ark st. +16.5 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
wednesday 12/21 GMAC BOWL UTEP vs TOLEDO (-3) small favs are 21-11 in bowl games: take the ROCKETS and give the 3 (1 bowl of baksheesh)
thursday 12/22 LAS VEGAS BOWL BYU vs CAL (-7.5) cal doesn't care, the mormon boys will stay sober and focused: take BYU+7.5 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
thursday 12/22 POINSETTA BOWL COLO ST vs. NAVY (-3) san diego's a big naval town but it's a long damn way from annapolis: take COLO ST +3 (2 bowls of baksheesh)
friday 12/23 FORT WORTH BOWL HOUSTON vs KANSAS (-3) the big 12 BLOWS: take houston +3 (1 small bowl of baksheesh)
John Riggins
saturday 12/24 HAWAII BOWL CENTRAL FLA vs. NEVADA (-2) florida to hawaii? why bother? take NEVADA and give the 2 (1 small bowl of baksheesh with a side of poi)
more from ON HIGH next Monday
MERRY CHRISTMAS
HAPPY HANUKKAH
THE BAGWHAN
His holiness at a recent spiritual conference.
Sunday, December 18, 2005
It just sorta made sense to me, I'm not a nut, yet
"I know all of your ways: you are neither hot nor cold. How I wish you were either hot or cold! But because you are lukewarm, neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth. You say, 'How rich I am! And how well I have done! I have everything I want in the world.' In fact, though you do not know it, you are the most pitiful wretch, miserable, poor, blind, and naked. So I advise you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, to make you truly rich; and white clothes to put on to hide the shame of your nakedness, and ointment for your eyes so that you may see."
$210 Billion Down the Hole
According to the latest estimates, the United States government has spent over two hundred and ten billion dollars on the war in Iraq. How do we put that in perspective?We could divide $210 billion by 300 million Americans. That would tell us that the war has cost $700 for every man, woman, and child in America.
(How about you? Do you personally feel that you have received seven hundred dollars worth of freedom and security thanks to all the bombs we've dropped in Iraq?)
We can also divide the $210 billion by seventy million American taxpayers. That tells us the war has cost $3000 per taxpayer. Are those taxpayers satisfied with the 'freedom' from life and limb that our weapons have brought to so many Iraqi children – or would those taxpayers have preferred to 'selfishly' spend the money on college tuition and health care for their own children?
But maybe Americans don't count. President Bush says we will do 'whatever it takes' to help Iraq, implying that he'd even sacrifice America to save Iraq. Assuming we all agree with that sentiment, what have the Iraqis received – aside from demolished cities – for our $210 billion dollars?
Well, they haven't received enough to eat. A visit to a supermarket will confirm that microwave meals can be purchased for a dollar each, and so it is possible to provide a person with three square meals a day for only three dollars a day. The twenty-five million people of Iraq could be fed on $75 million a day, or $27 billion a year. That's only a small fraction of the $210 billion we've spent on Iraq. Yet, amid the ruins created by our violent occupation, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children are malnourished. Apparently, not even fifteen percent of our money is going toward nation-feeding – let alone 'nation-building.'
Nor has anywhere near the bulk of the spending on the Iraq War gone to our soldiers. Divide $210 billion dollars by 160,000 American soldiers in Iraq, and you see that we're spending $1.3 million per soldier. These are the same soldiers complaining about no air conditioning in 110-degree weather, poor medical care, the lack of body armor, the need to scrounge junkyards for vehicle armor, and a shortage of ammunition. None of our soldiers seem to have even $1300 worth of camping gear, let alone $1.3 million worth of high-tech equipment. And they sure aren't receiving $1.3 million apiece in pay.
(Maybe all those pro-war folks with those 'Support Our Troops' signs should wave them at the Oval Office. That's where their message needs to sink in.)
Perhaps you think that the $210 billion dollars went toward offensive military capability. But it is estimated by President Bush himself that the US military has at most killed only thirty thousand Iraqi insurgents, and if you divide $210 billion dollars by that number, you see that it is costing us $7 million to kill each insurgent. If George Washington had wasted $7 million in logistics to kill each Redcoat, the Continental Congress would have stripped him of command and regarded him as more damaging to the Patriot cause than Benedict Arnold! Today, however, the Bush Administration awards medals to generals who have achieved that astounding level of inefficiency in the Iraq War.
We're assuming, though, the money actually went toward fighting the war. Or does the word 'misappropriation' come to mind?
The Bush Administration admits it may have misappropriated a billion or two in Iraq because of accounting errors. But the scandal is far bigger than that. What about willful, conscious misappropriation – into a swollen federal bureaucracy, Congressional pork-barrel programs, and all those no-bid contracts for corporate political donors? Such practices might be perfectly legal, but still they have the whiff of corruption, do they not?
They also have a whiff of a deeper evil, considering that so many innocents have died for the prosperity of the unscrupulous. And we do have more important matters on which to spend the money – such as, say, a manhunt for real terrorists (Osama, remember him?).
Two hundred and ten billion dollars is a lot of money to spend with nothing positive to show for it. And the Bush Administration has nothing positive to show for the Iraq War. Not in making America safer, not in making Iraq better.
So just exactly where did the money go? It went where taxpayer money dedicated for 'idealistic' purposes often goes: down a fiscal black hole. And thanks to our current leadership, with our national debt already above sixty-five percent of GDP, America itself is rapidly accelerating toward the same event horizon.
For though we have squandered nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars on Iraq, there is no end in sight – unless, it is the end of America itself.
December 17, 2005
Joe Schembrie [send him mail] is an engineer and writer living in Washington.
Amen brutha!
"Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues!" - Revelation 18:4
Saturday, December 17, 2005
Same old lies, by the same old liars
"This authorization is a vital tool in our war against the terrorists. It is critical to saving American lives. The American people expect me to do everything in my power, under our laws and constitution, to protect them and their civil liberties and that is exactly what I will continue to do as long as I am president."
-----President George W. Bush on his authorization of illegal wiretaps of American citizens without judicial approval or oversight.
"The government will make use of these powers only insofar as they are essential for carrying out vitally necessary measures...The number of cases in which an internal necessity exists for having recourse to such a law is in itself a limited one."
-----Adolf Hitler on the Enabling Act.
It was officially called the "Law for Removing the Distress of the People and the Reich." When it passed in 1933, it wiped democracy out of existence in Germany and established the legal dictatorship of Adolf Hitler. At least Hitler pretended he would limit his use of the act, unlike Shrub who arrogantly says he'll do whatever he wants "to save American lives" whenever he feels like it. The emeging little dictator should get someone smoother and slicker to write his stuff for him, somebody intelligent like Goebbels.

Bush must be impeached!
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20051217/D8EI8O180.html

Dead American soldier. For what?
Friday, December 16, 2005
Bowling with the Bagwhan

Historic meeting of the Bagwhan and Devastatin' Dave at the former ashram in Bethesda.
Thursday, December 15, 2005
Wilco and Buckethead
Buckethead
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
Holocaust denial
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/12/14/D8EG922O0.html
Now if he is to censured for such a statement, how come the Russians are still able to deny the 10 million who perished from deliberately planned government starvation of peasants in the Ukraine in the early 1930's? Is Turkey ready to officially acknowledge that from 1900 to 1923, various Turkish regimes killed from 3.5 to over 4.3 million Armenians, Greeks, Nestorians, and other assorted Christians? Will the United States federal government ever officially acknowledge the planned and systematic genocide and gulaging of the native tribes of the American West or the deliberate poisoning of the populace with 126 above ground nuclear tests from 1951-62, which blew across the entire country on the prevailing wind patterns? What about the use of torture this very day in some secret CIA camp abroad?
Why get so worked up about Holocaust denial when known genocide has still not been fessed up to by supposedly legitimate and respectable governments? Are the Germans and Japanese the only ones who have to atone for their crimes?
We've all seen the pictures of Dachau. I believe there was a Holocaust. So now let's talk about the other 194 million people killed by central governments in the 20th-century!
While we're at it let's also cut President Ahmadinejad some slack. He's entititled to his own opinions about the truth as long the rest of the world's central governments continue to remain silent about thier own crimes against humanity.
Long Night Moon
Stay the course
Being an amateur historian is a painful hobby to have. Careful study reveals the regular and oft-repeated tendencies of tyrannical central governments, especially the modus operandi they employee in the harmful prosecution of wasteful wars.Listening today to Shrub, who has been forced to admit to failures in his warmongering, I was reminded of Adolf Hitler when he had to admit to the German people about the utter destruction of the vaunted Sixth Army at Stalingrad. He went on to use that opportunity to also explain that renewed sacrifice from the populace was expected and that staying the course in war was the only way to avoid total annihilation by the Asiatic Bolshevik rapers who would sweep across the Vistula River if they were not kept in tow on a battle front. Fighting them on their soil was making it safer for all German citizens by keeping them contained in military conflict in their own pig sty of a country.
Hitler then told the huddled masses that by invading Russia the Germans were doing these people a big favor by improving conditions in this backward land of peasants, cossacks, Jews and Mohammedans, all viciously dominated by a murderous madman in the Kremlin. Victory meant setting up the first civilized government structure in the whole long history of this strife torn country. Victory meant a public trial of Stalin as a war criminal. Victory meant the immense oil reserves of the Caucasus. No siree Bob we can't back out now. What kind of signal would that send to these savages? Germany must stay the course!
Sound familiar?
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Tattoo you
On the back of the print the caption reads:
The Sixth Annual People's Choice Awards held at the Hollywood Palladium.
Photo shows: Herve Villechaize (of Fantasy Island) and date, Darlene. (Jan., 1980)
Now if I'm not mistaken the woman shown next to Tattoo is really Charlene Tilton, who played Lucy Ewing on Dallas. This picture would have been taken before she landed that part on the show and was probably sleeping with Herve to advance her career. Whaddya think? Is it her?
Charlene as Lucy Ewing
Sunday, December 11, 2005
A musical gem
The Bonzo Dog BandHeigh ho!
Don't worry
Nobody can win
(Heigh ho! Heigh ho!)
No matter who you vote for, the government always gets in!
For a song that is over 30 years old it has a resonance and currency that made me smile and tap my foot in recognition. It caused Joe Jennings to laugh out loud for a few minutes. The complete lyrics, for those who might be interested:
http://www.lyricsdownload.com/bonzo-dog-band-no-matter-who-you-vote-for-the-government-always-gets-in-lyrics.html
Speaking of Nels Cline, the new Wilco album is out called Kicking Television. It is a two-CD live album recorded last May in Chicago. This is a phenomenal work and Nels makes them sound so sonically juiced up that they are literally a different band from just a few years back. Check it out dudes.
Nels Cline performs with Wilco in Los Angeles on 11/24/04.Tuesday, December 06, 2005
Georgia vs. West Virginia in the Sugar Bowl
Some fetching Georgia girls at the Redneck Games
Ain't American culture sumpfin' else?
Intellectual assessment of Las Vegas
The attached article, by a libertarian author and Nevada banker, presents a unique perspective on that phenomenon of urban geography known as Las Vegas. Having just spent a week there it is a timely reflection on a place that is unique and sometimes hard to nail down intellectually. This piece is a good start, with implications for the larger world of which Las Vegas is but a mere outgrowth.http://www.lewrockwell.com/french/french39.html
Monday, December 05, 2005
Let's hear it for Saddam!
Saturday, December 03, 2005
Las Vegas photo album
Fountains at the Bellagio
Paris

My kind of picnic spotFriday, December 02, 2005
Georgia vs. Louisiana State
Tomorrow the Georgia Bulldogs will go up against a very respectable opponent in LSU which will decide the Southeastern Conference Championship in Atlanta. Here in Las Vegas the odds makers have made LSU the favorite, by 2 points, which is quite close. I expect the Dawgs to win this one. Don't ask me why, but I feel a big upset in my bones. I'm going to a casino tonight and foolishly act upon my hunch.






























