William Greider is a former Washington Post and Rolling Stone editor, and now writes for the Nation. Greider has written numerous books and articles on the economy over the course of many decades, including the leading book on the Federal Reserve, Secr…
Posts Tagged ‘Lincoln’
Leading Journalist Confirms that Government Could Take Over the Power of Money-Creation for the Public Good
Nude Man Who Was Hot Lied About Robbery
LINCOLN, Neb. — Lincoln police arrested a man who they said made up a story about being robbed to explain why he was walking around a city park naked. Police spokeswoman Katie Flood said the man was arrested and jailed Wednesday night on…
Mother of Iraq hostage speaks
Avril Sweeney, whose son Peter Moore was abducted in 2007, wants high-profile Foreign Office campaign for his release
The mother of a British man held hostage in Iraq for more than two years has called on the Foreign Office to launch a high-profile campaign pressing for the release of her son and his fellow captives, expressing frustration at the government’s low-key approach.
Avril Sweeney, 53, said she had argued with the Foreign Office over its insistence of minimal publicity around the continued imprisonment of Peter Moore and two of his security guards, even after the bodies of two other guards were dumped in Baghdad last month.
“I’ve had arguments with the Foreign Office, I have felt frustrated,” said Sweeney, who describes the hostages as “forgotten men”. “They [the Foreign Office] wanted us to keep everything so low-key but that didn’t feel right to me. But if someone gets kidnapped abroad you have to rely on them [and] hope that they are doing the right thing.”
Moore, 35, an IT specialist, is being held along with two men who have not been officially named. The bodies of Jason Cresswell, 39, and Jason Swindlehurst, 38, were handed to the British embassy in Baghdad on 19 June. Both had been shot weeks or months before.
“After I found out that the two Jasons were dead, it did panic me,” said Sweeney. “But when I had a chance to calm down and reason about why the terrorists would do this, I thought in their culture this is probably a goodwill gesture to give the bodies back to their families. It’s not our culture but it was a goodwill gesture.”
Sweeney, from Blackpool, added: “But it made me think, I have had enough of this, I’ve got to get a message to him.”
Her message is simple: “Peter, you’ve never been forgotten.
“No one’s ever forgotten you. Peter, if you see this message, hopefully we will be seeing you soon.”
On Wednesday 29 May 2007, Moore was installing computer software at the finance ministry in Baghdad that would help track billions of dollars that were unaccounted for. Up to 100 men raided the offices, abducting Moore and four British security guards.
It is believed that for the past two years the men have been held separately with no contact with each other.
From the start, the Foreign Office insisted on a low-profile approach, refusing to release the names of the hostages. A high media profile was “no guarantee of success and there are often grounds to think it can worsen the situation”, according to an official.
Sweeney described her son as “a big guy” who “likes his food” and she was shocked by the first video of him, released by his kidnappers 10 months after his capture. “He looked absolutely terrible. He had lost so much weight. He had big black rings around his eyes. He looked really awful.”
A more recent video sent to the British embassy in Baghdad in May reassured his mother. “On it, he looks great. He has put on weight … and he says we are all coming home soon.”
His mother thinks he will cope with whatever he has to face. “Peter won’t go to pieces. I think after the initial shock he would be intelligent and strong enough to pull himself through. I don’t know how he is coping over the last two years but he is strong and clever. He will be strong enough to bear it.
“I still feel he will be released. How long, I don’t know. Terrorists don’t have time limits, do they? They can wait and wait until they get what they want. I don’t know if it matters what the Foreign Office does, it doesn’t matter what the media do. The only time they will be freed is when they want to do it, I suppose.”
Moore was born when Sweeney was 18, the son of a troubled and soon-to-be estranged marriage. Sweeney remarried, but that relationship ended too, and she moved out of the family home when Peter was 12. Mother and son have not lived together since.
“He was 12, he had his friends, he was happy at school, he didn’t want to leave and come with me,” she said. “He was a very independent boy. A very strong and independent boy and that’s what I think will help him through all this.”
Moore was then raised by his step-parents, Pauline and Patrick Sweeney, who have also appealed publicly through the BBC for his release.
Sweeney remembers her son as having an early aptitude with computers. “He got his first job in computers working for an American lady who opened a computer shop in Lincoln. I remember her saying how brilliant he was at the computer thing. So he had to go off and get his qualifications.”
Moore was also an adventurer, signing up for the Voluntary Service Overseas, which sent him to Guyana to work in the IT department of a college of education.
Periodically he would turn up at Sweeney’s home on his motorbike. “One Easter, he turned up at my door in his big black helmet, black leather jacket and frightened the life out of me. He stands there like Schwarzenegger, takes his helmet off , and I just said well come on then, let’s go for a ride, and that was it. He loves his motorbike. It is a big thing for him. He was very much a free spirit.”
Additional reporting by Guy Grandjean and Mona Mahmoud
Mike Gordon Fall 2009 Tour
Mike Gordon Fall 2009 Tour
![]() Mike Gordon |
Mike Gordon and his band will embark on a 20-plus date Fall Tour beginning just after Labor Day in Brooklyn, NY and winding down at the beginning of October in Burlington, VT.
The headlining club tour features a return to Park West in Chicago, Barrymore Theatre in Madison, State Theatre in Falls Church, and first time stops at the Music Hall of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, Town Ballroom in Buffalo and a north-of-the-border trip to the Mod Club in Toronto, Ontario. And yes, there’s even a stop in Florida.
After two highly acclaimed runs last year touring on the release of his album The Green Sparrow, Mike returns with the same five-piece lineup, including longtime collaborator Scott Murawski on guitar, Vermonters Craig Myers on percussion and Tom Cleary on keyboards and Brooklyn drummer Todd Isler.
A limited number of tickets are available via a fan presale NOW at mikegordontickets.rlc.net. The presale ends Thursday, July 23 at 5 p.m. EST, at which point tickets will go on sale through traditional outlets.
MIKE GORDON FALL 2009 TOUR DATES
09/09/09 Wed Somerville Theatre Somerville, MA
09/10/09 Thu Port City Music Hall Portland, ME
09/11/09 Fri Bearsville Theater Woodstock, NY
09/12/09 Sat The State Theatre Falls Church, VA
09/14/09 Mon Lincoln Theatre Raleigh, NC
09/15/09 Tue Orange Peel Asheville, NC
09/17/09 Thu Variety Playhouse Atlanta, GA
09/18/09 Fri Freebird Live Jacksonville Beach, FL
09/19/09 Sat WorkPlay Birmingham, AL
09/21/09 Mon Minglewood Hall Memphis, TN
09/22/09 Tue The Mercy Lounge Nashville, TN
09/24/09 Thu Vogue Nightclub Indianapolis, IN
09/25/09 Fri Park West Chicago, IL
09/26/09 Sat Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI
09/28/09 Mon 20th Century Theatre Cincinnati, OH
09/29/09 Tue The Blind Pig Ann Arbor, MI (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
09/30/09 Wed Mr. Small’s Theatre Pittsburgh, PA (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
10/02/09 Fri Mod Club Toronto, ON (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
10/03/09 Sat The Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
10/04/09 Sun Higher Ground Burlington, VT (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
For more on Gordo, check our exclusive feature/interview here.
Washington diary
By Matt Frei
BBC News, Washington
Different countries mourn their fallen in different ways.

The flag-draped coffins of Italian soldiers are applauded as they prepare to get lowered into the ground.
In Israel, relatives and friends display unfettered and unembarrassed grief as they throw themselves on the coffins.
In America, a democracy which worships its military more than any other I know, the ritual after death in battle is dignified, understated and wrapped in etiquette.
If you have any doubts about this, I suggest attending a burial at Arlington National Cemetery.
The undulating fields of gravestones peer out over the National Mall, the Lincoln Memorial and Capitol Hill.
In Washington, the prize of liberty is architecturally linked to the price of life.
Respect
This country owes its creation to the blood of its soldiers and never lets you forget it.
The military is a part of every day life. At virtually every airport you see soldiers returning from the front in Afghanistan or Iraq.
The radio is full of spots advertising discounts for military families. On Memorial Day, Independence Day and Veterans Day, our neighbours – who loathed George W Bush and his war in Iraq – hang out a super-sized Stars and Stripes.
I was on the shuttle flight to New York last month with the usual crowd of Capitol Hill staffers – a few congressmen, some agitated banking executives and napping lobbyists.
Suddenly, the captain announced that we had some soldiers on board who had just returned from Iraq. The whole plane erupted in applause. Respect for the military transcends party lines and opinions about war.
So it always struck me and my American friends as odd that the Bush administration maintained the ban on footage of the flag-draped coffins of fallen soldiers returning from Iraq.
The ban was first implemented by Mr Bush’s father during the first Gulf War, in an attempt to avoid the kinds of images that had undermined support for the Vietnam War.
"There is plenty of personal material to put a face, a name and a story to the awful statistics of war"
But the images themselves do not create a mood swing for or against a conflict, they merely underpin existing impressions.
The concealed coffins of Dover Air Force Base – a ban which has since been lifted by the Obama administration – mirrored the many veiled justifications for a war that was overshadowed by too many questions.
And so we come to Britain, a country that has gone to war more often than any of its European neighbours since World War II.
Britain fought the Falklands War in 1982 to much of the world’s astonishment.
For the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges it was like "two bald men fighting over a comb".
Worthy cause
Britain relishes a just war. Lady Thatcher egged on President George Bush Sr to dispatch troops to Saudi Arabia after Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait.
British public opinion was far more enthusiastic about a military engagement in the boggy Balkans than the House of Commons.
It was Tony Blair who persuaded Bill Clinton to use force in Kosovo.
Apparently, the two had a stand-up row in the Oval Office with the British Prime Minister shaming the American President into action.

The Iraq war was the exception to the rule and Afghanistan is proving to be an interesting case.
After 9/11 there was very little opposition to the Afghan war.
The combination of going after al-Qaeda and removing a medieval regime that banned women’s education was considered a worthy cause.
The war appeared to be over almost before it began and warnings about the treacherous terrain of Afghanistan soon dissipated.
How things have changed.
In the space of two days last week, Britain lost eight soldiers, three of them just 18 years old.
Some of the soldiers had kept journals which have been reprinted in the press. Others had been featured on national TV before they were killed.
In other words, there is plenty of personal material to put a face, a name and a story to the awful statistics of war.
Insufficient armour
The town of Wootton Bassett, which is close to the air force base where coffins are flown into, has provided a chorus of grief.
Thousands of people lined the quaint streets on Tuesday to welcome back the fallen heroes.
Many cried. Others cheered. Uniformed veterans hung their heads in honour before applauding.
Wootton Bassett has done this 80 times since the beginning of the Afghan war and twice in the last week alone.
This is raw and unscripted grief, leavened by shock. Who knows where it will lead
Everyone is watching whether the beast of public outrage will stir once again.
It has done so often enough this year, most memorably over the MPs’ expenses scandal.
So far the picture is mixed. There have been some poignant questions about insufficient armour in Afghanistan.
They have been asked in some of the journals of the fallen soldiers, and repeated in the pub and on the floor of the House of Commons.
This is damaging and – almost inevitably – the government of the day will be blamed. Take cover, Gordon.
Every country hates the idea that its sons and daughters are being asked to risk their lives on the battlefield with dodgy equipment.
The latest opinion polls indicate that the public and parliament are still behind this war.
But the casualties mount, the possibility of defeat is discussed and the definitions of victory become increasingly woolly.
Britain still mourns its dead in Afghanistan with pride and applause. That may change if the cargo of coffins becomes more regular.
Meanwhile, Britain’s colonial history lingers uncomfortably on the sidelines.
In 1842, 16,000 men and their dependants evacuated Kabul after a disastrous occupation.
Only one of them, Dr William Brydon, a military surgeon survived.
The rest were killed by winter, hunger and Afghan tribesmen who resented the presence of armed foreigners and infidels on their soil.
The last thing that the British government now needs is for the public to start re-reading the history books.
Matt Frei is the presenter of BBC World News America which airs every weekday on BBC News, BBC World News and BBC America (for viewers outside the UK only).
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Frans de Waal: Sotomayer’s Empathy: Not for the Birds
That a candidate for the Supreme Court needs empathy, as Obama emphasized, is almost too obvious to pay attention to. Because apart from psychopaths, all…





Digital media and the future of journalism
I mentioned earlier this week the session on digital media and journalism I chaired at the Communicate conference in London. One of our speakers was Ruth Sunderland, business and media editor of The Observer – The Guardian/Observer media group being one of the earliest adopters of digital in the mainstream UK media. Ruth kindly shared [...]