Sunday, July 16, 2006

War=Rape


HARSH.



Soldiers' rape trial hits obstacles in Iraq
Jul. 16, 2006. 08:48 PM

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — U.S. military officials fear that religious hurdles in exhuming the body of a teenager could complicate the prosecution of American soldiers accused of raping and murdering the girl — and create a political nightmare for the U.S. mission here.
Given the seriousness of the allegations, U.S. officials believe a vigorous prosecution is essential and punishment should be severe if the six servicemen and one former soldier are convicted.
Anything short of that would be seen by Iraqis as a cover up and could shatter remaining support for the U.S. presence here.
Five soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division are accused of raping and murdering Abeer al-Janabi near the town of Mahmoudiya on March 12. A sixth soldier is accused of failing to report the crime.
The soldiers allegedly saw the victim at a checkpoint in the town and plotted the attack for a week, according to federal court documents. Three of her family members were killed in the assault.
But the victim's male relatives have refused to allow her body to be exhumed because of objections from a Muslim cleric. Islamic law frowns on exhumations as desecration of the dead.
"Chief among our concerns is carrying out justice. But when you get town officials or an imam saying that exhuming the body doesn't jive with our cultural sensitivities, that creates a massive stumbling block," a U.S. military official in Baghdad close to the investigation said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to media.
Without forensic evidence, prosecutors must rely heavily on statements from the suspects. Defense lawyers will doubtless claim those statements were made under duress and seek to keep them from the jury.
While some evidence has been collected at the home where the assault allegedly occurred, officials say none of it confirms guilt.
A photograph of the girl's Iraqi identity card, viewed by The Associated Press in Baghdad, showed the girl was 14 at the time of the attack, with her birthdate listed as Aug. 19, 1991. The identity card was issued in 1993 and shows a picture of the girl as a toddler.
The soldiers — Sgt. Paul E. Cortez, Spc. James P. Barker, Pfc. Jesse V. Spielman and Pfc. Bryan L. Howard — are accused of rape and murder. They allegedly conspired with former soldier Steven D. Green, who was arrested last month in North Carolina.
Green, who was discharged from the Army because of a personality disorder, likely will be tried in federal court. The former Army private pleaded not guilty to one count of rape and four counts of murder and is being held without bond.
Sgt. Anthony W. Yribe, is charged with failing to report the attack but is not alleged to have been a direct participant.
Those still on active duty face an Article 32 hearing, the military equivalent of a grand jury proceeding, to determine if they should stand trial. If the case does go to trial, the murder suspects could face the death penalty.
Yet Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has complained that Iraqi courts should try cases of abuse by American soldiers — something the U.S. command strongly resists — and last week called for a review of an agreement giving foreign troops immunity from Iraqi prosecution.
"Those who are free from being punished misbehave, and they have misbehaved a lot," al-Maliki said.
The U.S. military always has insisted it will punish soldiers who commit crimes against Iraqis. During a visit last week, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld underscored that position, insisting that "no one" in the U.S. force "is immune," meaning from U.S. though not Iraqi prosecution.
The attack was the latest in a string of allegations that U.S. soldiers and Marines in Iraq have killed civilians, including the alleged massacre of dozens in Haditha.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

finally


The NBA draft came and went yesterday. If you watched did you happen to see Commisioner David Stern take some jabs at ESPN's Dan Patrick. That was one of the better moments.

The Raps picked 1 and chose Italian centre Andrea Bargnani. This is huge for Toronto, which has 700,000 plus of Italians living within the city.


I like this pick. As most of us know, Italians are known for being creative, whether in art, the trades or food, (this is me stereotyping) I hope Andrea brings some creativeness to the ACC, we need it.

New GM, Colangelo is also of Italian background and he is creative, maybe the Leafs should hire an Italian GM, god knows they need some creativeness.

Monday, June 26, 2006

ammo



well the Toronto Raptors have the first pick in the NBA draft this Wednesday. I am pretty excited, as are many other Raps fans. I cannot get enough news on who we will pick or what we will do. But one thing that is ticking me off, is the talk of "soon to be superstar", Adam Morrison's and the fact that he had diabetes.

I read a few Canadian publications this morning mentioning his diabetes and that it may scare off some teams. Such bullshit!




This kid has been balling for probably 10 years with no problems and he has a deep understanding of his body and when he needs insulin or sugar. There were times when he was giving himself shots at timeouts in college. Sure if health is involved teams should look into it, but I am sure Adam's diabetes is a blip on his overall standings as a player, and for the media to state that it could scare off teams to me is not truthful and grasping at straws.

Basketball media is a bit bent these days, with sites like Hoopshype and RealGM, all over ever rumour and such, so for reporters to actually feel that Adam has a downside because of diabetes is scary to me.

I am not sure who the Raps will pick but if Adam is the guy, I will be happy.

Friday, June 16, 2006

blah!


THEY SHOULD CHARGE ALL THESE BILLIONAIRES A FEE TO ENTER AFRICA.

COME TO NAMBIA FOR YOUR KID'S BIRTH
IT'S THE LOUISANA OF CHILDBIRTHING.

For real though, I think charging them is a great idea. Why does she pick Namibia anyway?



Spears now eyeing a Namibian birth
Jun. 16, 2006. 01:37 PM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WINDHOEK, Namibia — Following in the steps of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, Britney Spears is considering a Namibian birth for her next baby, a government official said Friday.
Leon Jooste, deputy environment and tourism minister, said officials have received an inquiry on behalf of the 24-year-old pop star, who has a nine-month-old son, Sean Preston, with husband Kevin Federline.
"She has shown interest to come over to Namibia," Jooste said by telephone from a conference in neighbouring South Africa. ``Nothing has been confirmed yet, but there is a definite possibility of that happening."
He declined to provide further details, saying: "She wants to come in very low profile and have some privacy. She might change her mind if we reveal too much now."
There was no immediate response from Spears's New York-based representative, Leslie Sloane Zelnik, to requests by The Associated Press seeking comment.
Spears, who recently announced she is expecting a second child, has taken a beating in the tabloids, which have questioned her parenting skills. She has been photographed driving with Sean Preston in her lap, and nearly dropped him when she tripped outside a New York City hotel.
Spears would probably appreciate some of the peace and privacy that Pitt and Jolie enjoyed when their daughter, Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt, was born last month in the sleepy southwest African country.
The Namibian government shielded the Hollywood couple from the paparazzi, insisting that visiting journalists obtain permission in writing to cover them.

Monday, June 05, 2006

livin

I did an interview today with a friend who is also a minister about tomorrow which on the calender is "666", and in the interview he said, "there is nothing more deceitful than organized religion that is self serving".

this really stood out for me, after all the islamic extremism getting a national eye in Canada.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

drive slow


click above to check Kanye West's new video for "Drive Slow". That is my track on Late Registration. Got that cool soulful Hank Crawford horn sample.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006


Listening to my one year old trying to say some new words behind me as I write this - he is killing me- some kind of high pitched - EEEEEAHHHHHH! then a DADADAY.

If you were in Toronto, you know TTC went on a "wildcat" strike at 4 am yesterday throwing the city into a bit of hectic turmoil. Like the blackout - I love when this kind of stuff happens to a major city. It really brings out the character of the city. So many cyclists, and walkers and I also noticed many patios full with those you skipped work. Although I am glad it was short lived, it sure was interesting to watch.

Friday, May 26, 2006

head burst-downtime


long time no blog. I am bad at this. I think George Stroumboulopoulos has got a link to me at his site stroumbo.com - it has not launched yet but when it does I guess I better update this thing because someone may actually hit it.

as i am writing this it is early am and I am listening to some George Benson guitar jazz. I like a lot of jazz, but not much guitar oriented stuff - I need horns or Bill Evans piano. But Benson chills my bones instantly, especially after a crazy week. If you want to chill, I highly recommend some mellow Benson (he also gets funky sometimes) .

If you wanna get out of that daze that Benson puts you in - hit up some Cannonball Adderley- I recommend Cannonball Plays Zawinul- uptempo craziness.

Anyhow - back to Benson.

The show I work at The Hour has a new website - click my title above (head burt-downtime) to get to it.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

$279,527,656,846



$279,527,656,846 was the cost of the war in Iraq at midnight Tuesday, May 9,2006

146 million children in poor countries are underweight, a condition that kills 10 children every minute.

Frustrating.

Monday, May 08, 2006

ty-d-blaine



Watched David Blaine craziness this eve. He was in that bubble near the Lincoln Center in NYC for a couple weeks - which was totally a wild stunt. He had planned to hold his breath for 9 minutes after and release himself from chains. His problem was throwing the chains into the stunt, cause at 7 minutes he was damn close.



I could not stop thinking of those old toilet bowl commercial and the ty-d-bol man who drove around the toilet bowl in his boat. Not sure why I thought of this?

Friday, May 05, 2006

Cloud Watch



another algonquin shot from my friend Matt- such a beautiful place- It used to be more touristy (is that a word?) up there. I have a hard time believing that. The gov't that decided to scale back development and logging in the area did good. I found this

http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0006097
"ALGONQUIN, established in 1893, was the first Canadian provincial park established to protect a natural environment. The idea for such a park was conceived in 1885 by an Irish immigrant, Alexander Kirkwood. As a clerk of the Crown Lands Department, he had become concerned about the destruction of the northern forests and wildlife and was impressed by the new NATIONAL PARKS at Yellowstone in the US and BANFF in the Canadian Rockies."

I also read that Rondeau Park was the second provincial park created in Ontario. That is cool, I grew up real close to it and spent lots of time there.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

soon come




I am so looking forward to some summer. I gotta build a deck this year in the backyard. Always makes for a better summer.

Monday, April 24, 2006

Creature meet creature







I cannot think of much to blog about these days so I thought I would start posting photos from my day or the week.

Here are a couple males who don't know it yet but will probably be best friends.

Right now, one of them harasses the other, while the other follows the one around for food droppings.

A strange chemistry these two have got going.

Monday, April 03, 2006

weak week's and



wow - my blogging efforts have been weak lately. I have been on the road a lot with my job and I am not one of those "wired" people.

I caught a bit of the Juno's lastnight, only out of curiousity. Makes me feel glad that I do not work in the music side of TV anymore. I used to work at the NewMusic and Muchmusic and loved it, but when I left I started to really get into and enjoy music again. Not sure why I noticed a change but it happened.

CTV did a good job with the shooting of the show- it looked nice. I could have predicted some discontent amongst the artist there. Broken Social Scene mentioned something-I know these groups want to have some recognition, but people it is the Juno's. Like they say, it is what it is. The reason groups like BBS and The Arcade Fire are cool is because outfit's like the Juno's have no idea who the hell you are (lthough I think they both won one award) . Fuck them I say (sorry mom). I can honestly say that I do not know one Michael Buble song, but the Juno folks have and so has a lot of the population who listen to the radio. I did see Buble on our show in an interview and he did seem smart, and likeable, and that goes a long way.

I think the Juno's accomplish one thing- the term "juno award winner", looks good on a press release. As does Grammy award winner, American Music Award Winner, Billboard Music Award Winner, Brit Awards, Latin Grammy Awards, MTV Music Awards, MuchMusic Video Music Awards............................................

Monday, March 20, 2006

Montreal's Finest







click above to....
check this promo for DJ A-Trak's new DVD, Sunglasses Is A Must. Dude has been representing Canadian scratch DJ's for a long time, and he is still a young man. I was glad to see Kanye West recruit him as his show DJ, cause that was something that Mr. West was lacking in his live performances.

Friday, March 10, 2006

Thank You For The Money



Gotta love this handwritten note from the Sex Pistols (most likely John Lydon) rejecting an induction into the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame. I am sure if the Pistols got offered some big bucks they would come, remember their comeback tour?

Thursday, March 02, 2006

tribute



http://www.alternet.org/wiretap/32980/

Nice article on the late great J Dilla from Alternet

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

bushy did a heck of a good job


So more info has come out on the Bush administration's total lack of interest and competence in prevention and preparation for Hurricane Katrina, and specifically the knowledge that the levee's were doomed.

This to me is worst than any botched vote tally in Florida, or the Karl Rove fiasco, or the previous president's under the desk blow job. Sure, it was a natural disaster, but these new videos show that President Bush had knowledge of the depth of the disaster and it's potential. What was done in preparation at the federal level- not much. State officials were understaffed and without power to have any real force in getting people out of New Orleans.

Disgusting work and another dumb ass showing by Dubya. I try to see bright spots in his reign, but they are few.


That is my man Thomas with me on Blackcomb

I was in whistler this past week- I feel like I have not been at home base for a few months. Whistler is funny. Quite the place, I met a lot of locals this week and they are all warm and nice and understand the hugeness of the "resort" side of Whistler. I have a bunch of friends there also. My son also came and it was his first trip west, and his first time flying. He acted like he had been flying for years.


My friend Jeff and I - high on mountain air.

It is funny, lots of drunkeness in the village in Whistler, which is ok I guess. I was walking back from a friends to the hotel after a few beers and watched some of the loogans. I wondered if I ever acted like that. Probably. This is one thing that sort of drives me crazy about Whistler, but everything that sucks about Whistler, the mountain makes up for.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

vegas


just got back from Las Vegas - was there for 6 days- way too many days for Vegas.

I was there for work and did a lot of walking around also. I am not much of a gambler so I hardly lost any money.

We interviewed David Copperfield and took in one of his shows. It started off slow but man did he end it amazingly. He basically teleported to a beach in Singapore before our eyes. Hard to explain yes, go see it when he comes to Canada. Which he is doing soon.

I have been to Vegas a bunch of times, all with work. I am not sure if I would pay to go. Place is cool and fun for a weekend, but by Day 5 and 6, I wanted out. I missed my little guy lots, he was started to walk as I left, and six days away from him and my wife is tough. Oh boo hoo, I know but maybe if i was a card player or high roller it would be different.

We were shooting some stories in Vegas for The Hour, and got some stuff, even stuff off the Vegas Strip. I am tired sorry for the poor update and grammer. I am home for day then off to Whistler, the fam is coming with me for this one! woo hoo!

Sunday, February 12, 2006

ahhhh hip hop


Hip Hop music is the target for negativity. People are always on about how it sucks and has lost it lustre. This may be true but those in the hip hop know that radio hip hop is not representative. So on this note I gotta give props to J Dilla, of Detroit, and Slum Village fame. Althought it will not make the headlines, producer/artist Jay Dee passed away this weekend. He was a favorite of mine. Basically what J put out I got. R.I.P J Dilla. He lived soul music. Artist like De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Madlib. Dwele, The Roots, and Common owe much to Jay Dee.

On another hip hop note, I was out a a club with friends and they were playing some of the Notorious B.I.G stuff that is like a Duets record. It is so weak, I cannot believe it got released. I am not a P Diddy hater nor fan, but what I have heard of this BIG duets sucks. Bad




Tomorrow is my son's birthday. This is his first year. I cannot believe it. I never would have thought I would be a dad. It is crazy. He is such a great kid. When my wife was preganant I tried to imagine our kid, and the son I have today is not the kid I imagined, and that is what makes him so awesome. Happy Birthday Buzz!!!!!!!!!!!!