Showing posts with label antiwar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antiwar. Show all posts

"I am under a lot of pressure to not diagnose PTSD"

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

"I am under a lot of pressure to not diagnose PTSD"

A secret recording reveals the Army may be pushing its medical staff not to diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder. The Army and Senate have ignored the implications.

Editor's note: Last June, during a medical appointment, a patient named "Sgt. X" recorded an Army psychologist at Fort Carson, Colo., saying that he was under pressure not to diagnose combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder. Listen to a segment of the tape here. {via}

By Michael de Yoanna and Mark Benjamin on Salon.com

Read More ...

Read more...

He will make Cheney look like Gandhi

Wednesday, August 13, 2008


He will make Cheney look like Gandhi.

Some opinions of McCain from his own party and military "commrades".

Read more...

Memo To Petraeus

Monday, April 14, 2008

Memo To Petraeus
by Dick Cavett

On Petraeus: Its rule: never use a short word where a longer one will do. It must be meant to convey some misguided sense of “learnedness” and “scholasticism” — possibly even that dread thing, “intellectualism” — to their talk. Sorry, I mean their “articulation.”

No crook ever gets out of the car. A “perpetrator exits the vehicle.” (Does any cop say to his wife at dinner, “Honey, I stubbed my toe today as I exited our vehicle”?) No “man” or “woman” is present in Copspeak. They are replaced by that five-syllable, leaden ingot, the “individual.” The other day, there issued from a fire chief’s mouth, “It contributed to the obfuscation of what eventually eventuated.” This from a guy who looked like he talked, in real life, like Rocky Balboa. And there’s nothing wrong with that.

What would the general be forced to say if it weren’t for the icky, precious-sounding “challenge” that he leans so heavily on? That politically correct term, which was created so that folks who are legally blind, deaf, clumsy, crippled, impotent, tremor-ridden, stupid, addicted or villainously ugly are really none of those unhappy things at all. They are merely challenged. (Are these euphemisms supposed to make them feel better?) And no one need be unlucky enough to be dead or hideously wounded anymore. Those unfortunates are merely “casualties” — a sort of restful-sounding word.

I have a friend who would like the opportunity to say to our distinguished warrior, “General Petraeus, my son was killed in one of your challenges.”

Read More »

Read more...

Criminal War / War Criminal

Tuesday, April 8, 2008



Criminal War / War Criminal


Read more...

Saturday, October 20, 2007


October 18th, 2007

This is Rahna Rasheed’s younger brother.

That’s her body you can see covered on the stretcher in the background. She was 17.

She was shot this morning by green zone government forces who mistook her for a fighter during a raid on her village north of Baqubah.

She was rushed to Baqubah hospital but died of gunshot wounds to the head.

The lady with bloodstained clothers and blood on her face is her mother. The other two adults are Hamid and Shokriya Hasan her uncle and aunt. The photograph was taken this morning at Baqubah hospital morgue.

The savages of war reign down on anyone in their way

Via: Uruknet | Link: gorillasguides.com

Read more...

The Big Disconnect

Thursday, August 30, 2007

War is good for business. Everything else be damned. In that same context people always want to give Bush a good deal on a Brooklyn Bridge or an ocean front property in Kansas (or yellow cake or wmd's, etc) and without reservation he goes for his wallet like a father handing out cash to his kids.

Washington's Wars and Occupations
Month in Review #28
August 30, 2007
By Max Elbaum, War Times/Tiempo de Guerras

THE BIG DISCONNECT

The promised September assessment of where things stand in Iraq is around the corner.

So right on cue George Bush declared (Aug. 22) that "a free Iraq" is within reach.

The same day Iraq's Electricity Minister told reporters that "armed groups" - not the Iraqi government - control the switching stations that channel power throughout Iraq's energy grid. A new report from Bush's own Intelligence apparatus declared that prospects for the Iraqi government to unite the country were somewhere between bleak and gloomy.

Bush's dreamland "free Iraq" is part of the President's "support for freedom and democracy throughout the Middle East."

Most Arabs and Muslims, though, see that kind of support as "the kiss of death," according to Turki al-Rasheed, a prominent (and largely pro-U.S.) Saudi reformer. "The minute you are counted on or backed by the Americans, kiss it goodbye, you will never win," al-Rasheed told the New York Times (Aug. 10). The Times went on to report that "The paradox of American policy in the Middle East - promoting democracy on the assumption it will bring countries closer to the West - is that almost everywhere there are free elections, the American-backed side tends to lose."

It's Alice-in-Wonderland come to life. Bush's imaginings (and the imperial interests they are conjured up to defend) vs. the real world and most of the people in it.

And if it isn't hard enough to parse through the bullshit, we have to read between the lines when the Dems say "end the war."

"Even as they call for an end to the war and pledge to bring the troops home, the Democratic presidential candidates are setting out positions that could leave the U.S. engaged in Iraq for years. John Edwards would keep troops in the region to intervene in an Iraqi genocide and be prepared for military action if violence spills into other countries. Hillary Clinton would leave residual forces to fight terrorism and to stabilize the Kurdish region in the north. And Barack Obama would leave a military presence of as-yet unspecified size in Iraq to provide security for American personnel, fight terrorism and train Iraqis."

Bush says we're making progress in Iraq and anyone who differs is "undermining the troops."

I just can't. I'm done. (as Father Luke says)

(italics are mine; the rest is via an email newsletter from war-times.org; not yet published to the website)

Read more...

Operation 2012

Friday, July 27, 2007

Operation 2012

Operation: 2012 is dedicated to the establishment of social justice and bringing about the end of both government and corporate tyranny by utilizing progressive media in order to promote worker solidarity, greater consumer awareness and encourage non-violent civil disobedience or civil initiative. We promote a five-step process dedicated to changing the existing power structure that has invaded the American/global political system.

We call for a collective movement by the nations labor unions to strike in protest to governments domestic policy.

We call for a boycott of non-sustainable corporations and endorse rescinding corporate personhood.

We reject the campaign of falsification, disinformation, and misrepresentations of the corporate media.

We promote greater consumer awareness in the market place and encourage sustainable socially responsible investing.

We encourage civil disobedience/civil initiative.

Operation 2012 recognizes the American and coalition military presence in Iraq as an illegal occupation in violation of international law. We call for an immediate military and corporate withdrawal. We also encourage impeachment hearings against the current administration to become a part of mainstream political discourse.

We are not anti-government, nor anti-democratic, but rather we seek to expose the corporate interests that currently dictate the U.S. foreign and domestic policy. The liberation of America from the grip of corporate influence is contingent upon grassroots organizing and local efforts to stop feeding the corporate machine by withholding our dollars and re-examining our role in its workforce. Rather than dwelling on problems and social ills, we focus on reversing these trends and righting the wrongs.

Operation 2012 is also a source of daily headlines related to our movement.

The term 2012 is derived from the Mayan civilization; the year that human beings will enter a new era of awareness.

link

Read more...

Bone Dance: A Late Epiphany at the New York Times

Monday, July 9, 2007

Bone Dance: A Late Epiphany at the New York Times

This is the sound of a very large bone, lodged for a very long time, being hocked up at last:
"It is time for the United States to leave Iraq, without any more delay than the Pentagon needs to organize an orderly exit." -- the New York Times, July 8, 2007.
Only four years -- and hundreds of thousands of dead bodies -- too late, of course. And it might have been nice if the Times editorialists had noted the very large part their own paper played in what they now call -- they now call -- "this unnecessary invasion."

[Read More from writer Chris Floyd]

Read more...

G8 Summit Protests

Saturday, June 2, 2007

More On The G8 Summit Protests

700 anti-war activists started a new settlement in two places on the planned bombing range at the Kyritz-Ruppiner Heide. The former command tower was painted in anti-militaristic pink, accompanied by a performance by musicians from "Lebenslaute" and over 100 clowns. Tons of accommodations for protesters. link

Here you can see underreported videos on g8tv, g8 radio transmissions, and get updates from the g8 protest timeline, see the anti-g8 camps, etc.

Links:
Dissent!-Network
G8 Podcast
G8 Protests Timeline
G8-TV
G8 Radio
Indymedia - Germany

Read more...

Unknown Civilian Casualties

Wednesday, May 30, 2007


The 100 Mile High Untombed Stack of Unknown Civilian Casualties

--Mr Fish

Read more...

Bush’s Fleurs du Mal

Monday, May 28, 2007

Bush's Fleurs du Mal
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: May 27, 2007

The president thinks he can save face if he keeps taunting Democrats as the party of surrender - just as Nixon did - and dumps the Frankenstate he's created on his successor.

For me, the saddest spot in Washington is the inverted V of the black granite Vietnam wall, jutting up with the names of young men dying in a war that their leaders already knew could not be won.

So many died because of ego and deceit - because L.B.J. and Robert McNamara wanted to save face or because Henry Kissinger wanted to protect Nixon's re-election chances.

Now the Bush administration finds itself at that same hour of shame. It knows the surge is not working. Iraq is in a civil war, with a gruesome bonus of terrorists mixed in. April was the worst month this year for the American military, with 104 soldiers killed, and there have been about 90 killed thus far in May. The democracy's not jelling, as Iraqi lawmakers get ready to slouch off for a two-month vacation, leaving our kids to be blown up.

The top-flight counterinsurgency team that President Bush sent in after long years of pretending that we'd "turned the corner" doesn't believe there's a military solution.

--MORE--

So many deaths; so little truth.

Read more...

Four Dead In Ohio

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Four Dead In Ohio

Sandra, Bill, Allison and Jeffrey

"RIGHT HERE, GET SET, POINT, FIRE!"
Kent State Audio Tape Released
Click here for audio file

Thirty seven years ago on May 4, 1970, an anti-war student demonstration at Kent State University, Ohio, left four students dead. I was a senior in high school and the news slapped me across the face. I watched the guardsmen shoot down these college kids for peacefully protesting against the war. Can you imagine how that would play out today with our 24 hour news saturation? It was easy to be pissed off and angry at police and lawmakers when they were sending my friends off to war and now killing those left behind. If you weren't already radically involved with change, Kent State was going to change you.
"Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming
Four dead in Ohio."
("Ohio" lyrics by Neil Young)

Kent State: May 1-4,1970
Why the Protest began
Nixon announced a troop offensive into Cambodia on April 30, and said going into Cambodia was necessary to "win the peace". But it was really an escalation of war into another country we had no business being in. (sounds familiar) When the the fires from the artillery began to burn in Cambodia, a raging fire of protest spread across the US, especially on college campuses. There wasn't much protesting in the streets until the students got fired up. Students were the nucleus of protest back then as many demonstrations and marches were born there.

This day is as important to me as any other day in history. There would be no turning back now in our rage against war. Remember Kent State.

Read more...

On This Day: My Lai Massacre

Friday, March 16, 2007

ON THIS DAY - MARCH 16, 1968

1968 - Vietnam: My Lai Massacre
Carrying on the tradition of 'teaching' American values to the godless & the communist, Captain Medina leads a 'victorious' attack on the village of Xom Lang, near My Lai in South Vietnam.

While the upper brass circles overhead in helicopters,
Charlie Company enters the hamlet of My Lai 4 &
methodically & ruthlessly murders an estimated 347
civilians over an 8-hour period.

Most are women, children & old men. Some are slain by
bullets fired into their houses, others herded into small
groups & mowed down, & still more die when they are
hurled into a ditch & sprayed with automatic rifle fire.

The Army will first try to cover it up & the US media will
refuse to report it. Later they will portray it as an aberration,
one bad guy (Calley), one good guy (who stops it). Calley
is later convicted, sent to his room for being a bad boy,
then released.


Photograph of Kim Phuc (reprinted above) running from a napalm attack on My Lai with her clothes burnt off, one of the most enduring images of the Vietnam War. She recalls: "Nick Ut [the photographer,] took us to the hospital nearby and then he dropped us there and ran into the darkroom to develop the film that he took."

Read more...

Anti-War Protests

Live from the electronic teat..... the Anti-War edition

* On March 19 the fifth year of the illegal, immoral, disastrous war in Iraq will begin. Activists across the country are mobilizing to mark the occasion with demonstrations, vigils and direct actions from Friday March 16 through Tuesday March 20. Add your voice to the rising call for peace: right here

* Congress is expected to vote on the bill to suspend operations at the SOA/WHINSEC in as early as May 2007. April will be a critical time for us to organize and make our voices heard.

This April 25-27, SOA Watch activists will organize local public fasts and events throughout the United States to educate the general public and members of Congress on the SOA/WHINSEC issue. link

* Activists 'Purify' Site After Bush Visit link

* 20 Arrested At SDS New York Counter Recruitment Action - link

* Do you have a protest or topical song available on the web? As of today Neil Young's Living With War website has 1430 song listings. Send your song link to: songs@lwwtoday.com

* Sign The Petition - The US Copyright Office has released their new set of rates for the payment of royalties by Internet Radio -- royalty rates so high that they will put RP and every other US-based indie webcaster out of business.

Quote For Today
"Those who love peace must learn to organize as effectively as those who love war." --Martin Luther King, Jr.

Read more...

Tibet House Benefit Concert at Carnegie Hall

Wednesday, February 28, 2007


Smith and Tibetan monks at Carnegie Hall Monday night. Photo: AP

Death loomed large at the Philip Glass curated benefit concert for Tibet House U.S. Monday night at Carnegie Hall, when a parade of legendary talents - among them Lou Reed, Patti Smith, and Michael Stipe - performed numbers in honor of deceased friends. And as if that weren't depressing enough, when the thrilling succession of reimagined hits and covers stopped, we suddenly realized that all our idols onstage talking about death will die, too. Oh, God.

There were chanting monks, a beautiful, minimalist set from Sigur Rós, and Ben Harper. Debbie Harry happily danced to an acoustic version of "Heart of Glass." And then came Lou Reed, the first to sing about getting old. Ray Davies harkened back to the Kinks' glory days, getting the crowd to sing along with "Lola," "Sunday Afternoon," and "Dedicated Follower of Fashion." He admitted to being foggy about why, exactly, he was there: "This is a great event. I'm not sure of all the details, but the spirit moved me." And then he, too, got wistful about age. "Being in a band at this point in my life is a separation anxiety of the worst sort," he said. "We never know when we'll meet again.

"A very chatty Stipe sang a duet of "Everybody Hurts" with Smith; then he performed "Chorus and the Ring," written in honor of two dead friends, Kurt Cobain and William S. Boroughs, and dedicated to Karin Berg, the A&R rep who'd originally signed R.E.M., the Cars, and Television, who died in 2006. "I've never sung it live before," he said, "other than with my band in my apartment yesterday."

It may have been the best concert we've seen in years, and the night belonged to Smith. She did an amazing cover of "Within You Without You," in honor of George Harrison's birthday on Sunday; she rocked "1959," the rousing antiwar anthem she wrote "addressing the rise of the Beats, the takeover of Tibet by the Chinese, and the beautiful Chevy Impala"; she and Glass gave an incredible tribute to departed friend Alan Ginsberg. Back in 1995, a few months after her husband's death, Smith explained, Ginsberg had brought Smith out of her seclusion to perform at a Tibet House benefit. Every year since Ginsberg's death, Smith and Glass have performed his poem "Wichita Vortex Sutra." Monday night it rose on a slow crescendo till Smith intoned in strident staccato, "I declare the end of the war!"

If only it were that easy. —Jada Yuan

Stipe sang the R.E.M. oddities "New Test Leper," and "Chorus and the Ring," which he said developed after conversations he had with the late beat poet William S. Burroughs. The latter song has never been performed by R.E.M., according to Stipe.

All of my favorite people were there --must have been really great. Let's see if I can find a podcast or mp3 link of the music.

link

Read more...

Filibuster to End the War Now!

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

It Only Takes 41 Senate Votes to End the War. Republicans Show the Way.

Filibuster to End the War Now!

By JOHN V. WALSH

We hear over and over again that it "takes 60 votes to get something serious done in the Senate." That is a lot of malarkey. It takes only one senator to begin a filibuster against any bill. And then it takes only 41 votes to uphold that filibuster and prevent any proposed law from coming to the floor.

Thus, the present authorization for defense funding in the coming fiscal year can be stopped cold if it contains funds for the war on Iraq. And this can be done by just one courageous Senator, backed by 40 colleagues.

Let me propose the following scenario. Just one Senator, Ted Kennedy or Russ Feingold or Robert Byrd, arises in the Senate and declares that he will filibuster the present defense authorization bill if it contains funds for the war on Iraq or Iran. That bill is then dead unless there are 60 votes (3/5 of the 100 Senators) to end the debate, i.e., to invoke cloture. That is it. Bush no longer has the funds to prosecute the war. He has to come back with a funding bill acceptable to the 41.

READ MORE »»

Read more...

Two Films About The 60s

Monday, February 5, 2007

2 Upcoming Films With Links To The 60s

Neal Cassady - From the bars of Denver to the Steel Mills of Utah to the avant-garde parties of Manhattan, across a nation whose heart is calling for a role-model, a leader, a hero... Neal Cassady's on the road again, and all his old pals are there with him--Jack Kerouac, Ken Kesey, The Merry Pranksters. They're searching for Neal's long-lost father, who holds the key to the great unwritten American novel. But in the end it's Neal alone, and in the rear-view fast-approaching are cops, groupies and the dark chimera of his own vanity.

Release Date: To Be Announced
link


Across The Universe - A love story set against the backdrop of the 1960s amid the turbulent years of anti-war protest, mind exploration and rock 'n roll, the film moves from the dockyards of Liverpool to the creative psychedelia of Greenwich Village, from the riot-torn streets of Detroit to the killing fields of Vietnam. The star-crossed lovers, Jude (Jim Sturgess) and Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood), along with a small group of friends and musicians, are swept up into the emerging anti-war and counterculture movements, with "Dr. Robert" (Bono) and "Mr. Kite" (Eddie Izzard) as their guides. Tumultuous forces outside their control ultimately tear the young lovers apart, forcing Jude and Lucy – against all odds – to find their own way back to each other.

I don't know if I would like this one or not. I've read that it's more like a series of punctuated scenes and characters each represented by a Beatles song - 32 in all. Too much of a musical for me...maybe it has more of a story.

Now the Neal Cassady film sounds promising because the people are interesting. Cassady, Kesey, Kerouac, the the Pranksters, of whom I thought were the end-all and be-all of the universe when I was growing up.


Release Date: September 28, 2007.
View trailer
Link

Read more...

Tuesday, December 5, 2006

W E B T R A I L

* See The Night Sky @ SkyTonight.com. Have you seen the moon lately? Wow!

* Dec 5, Tuesday in Celestial Timings: The still nearly full Lunar Standstill Moon is crossing the center point of the Galactic Edge as it moves into Cancer. This is what is referred to as the ?out of bounds? Moon and it is transmitting energies from beyond our galactic realm. This suggests we are receiving a whole new download of inter-galactic information and vibrational frequency that is beyond the bounds of our ordinary reality. Greater ease in assimilating these energies occurs when we consciously engage our thoughts and actions releasing attachment to results and limiting beliefs about who we are. See more on the Galactic Edge and the Lunar Standstill at Shamanic Astrology.

* A Stunning New Look At Déjà Vu at Science Daily describes an ongoing thesis that involves in part a study on a blind person. Fascinating read.

* I keep reading glowing reviews about The Fountain. Angela-Eloise has discovered the same thing. Sounds pretty good.

* More on Firefox Tweaks here. See Screenshot Firefox Extensions

* Whole Lotta CDs - Robert Plant's new 9-cd package. If you liked "Kashmir", and I happen to think it's his strong suit, this is for you.

* Today in Peace & Justice History, December 5:
1000 antiwar protestors try to close NYC induction center; 585 arrested including Allen Ginsberg and Dr. Benjamin Spock. (1967)

* Greatest Hits - Satirical Living Will

Read more...

Monday, December 4, 2006

This Week in Peace & Justice History is a collection designed to help us appreciate the fact that we are part of rich history advocating peace and social justice. While the entries often focus on large and dramatic events there are so many smaller things done everyday to promote peace and justice.

Sign up for weekly Peace History Newsletter

December 4, 1969
President Richard Nixon, Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew, and 40 U.S. governors embarked on a fact-finding mission to discover the causes of the generation gap. They viewed films of "simulated acid trips" and listened to hours of "anti-establishment rock music."

December 4, 1968
264 were arrested at a military induction center in New York City during War Resisters League civil disobedience action.

December 4, 1916
Five members of a woman's suffragist group unrolled a banner from the visitor's gallery during President Wilson's annual message (state of the union) to Congress, asking, "Mr. President, What will you do for woman suffrage?" There was no mention of the issue in his speech.

December 4, 1833
The American Anti-Slavery Society was formed by Arthur Tappan in Philadelphia. He and his brother Lewis were active abolitionists throughout their lives, including providing legal defense for the Africans who mutinied on the slave ship Amistad.

December 4, 1970
Cesar Chavez was sentenced to 20 days in jail for refusing to call off United Farm Workers? consumer boycott of lettuce.

December 4, 1980
United Nations agreed to establish the University of Peace and a short wave radio station, Radio Peace International, in Costa Rica.

link

Read more...

Friday, September 29, 2006

NEW BILL COULD DEFINE ANTI-WAR PROTESTORS AS ENEMY COMBATANTS

Attorneys for the Center for Constitutional Rights claim that what appears to be the final version of the Military Commissions Act of 2006 could allow the government to detain the attorneys themselves as 'enemy combatants.' CCR Legal Director Bill Goodman said: "This bill makes a mockery of the rule of law."

The current version of the Military Commissions redefines an "unlawful enemy combatant" so broadly that it could include anyone who organizes a march against the war in Iraq."

link - [via]

Read more...

ABOUT

* The BROKEN HALLELUJAH name is taken from "Hallelujah", a song by Leonard Cohen.

* Easy Bake Coven , my previous website, ran from 2002 - 2009. It was time for a change so it will now be a mostly music-related website. All of our old EBC posts are stored there and here as well.




Asheville, NC

    Blue Ridge Mtns-click for larger view

LastFM

easybakecoven's Profile Page

Labels

100Things (1) 2012 (7) 60s (185) Abbie Hoffman (8) absinthe (6) act locally (7) activism (40) addiction (50) advertising (11) Al_Gore (10) Alan_Moore (5) Alan_Watts (3) Albert Hofmann (2) Aleister Crowley (3) Alejandro Jodorowsky (7) Alex-Grey (5) Alice-in-Wonderland (8) Allen-Ginsberg (13) alt-fashion (39) alternative (5) alternative_news (3) anarchy (11) Andy-Warhol (7) Animal Collective (10) animation (15) Antero_Alli (3) antiwar (64) Arcade Fire (1) Art (204) Arundhati Roy (3) asheville (147) Asia_Argento (5) Aung San Suu Kyi (25) avantgarde (15) ayahuasca (6) baby (3) bands (19) Banksy (5) Beatles (14) Bhopal (3) Big-Pharma (1) Bikini Atoll (1) Bill Maher (16) bizarre (4) Bjork (18) Black_Panthers (6) Bob Dylan (50) Bolivia (1) books (143) Brian Eno (10) Buddhism (29) Burma (21) Burning-Man (22) Bush (5) capitalism (1) Captain Beefheart (5) cartoons (11) Charles Bukowski (3) cheney (4) Christiania (4) Christmas (10) Coca (1) Cockettes (4) comedy (1) comix (6) communes (25) conceptual_art (9) condom_ads (12) consumerism (1) counterculture (13) cult films (9) cyberculture (4) Dalai Lama (6) dance (2) Daniel Pinchbeck (4) Darfur (12) David Lynch (7) David_Byrne (4) David-LaChapelle (6) deerfields (6) Democracy (1) demonstration (2) design (12) designers (3) diamanda galas (4) dickheads (18) Directors (58) disaster (7) DIY (3) documentary (49) Dr Bronner's (2) drugs (72) drum circle (3) egypt (1) elections (64) Emma-Goldman (5) Emperor-Has-No-Clothes (3) entertainment (2) entheogens (7) environment (21) environmental_activism (11) equality (1) equinox (11) Espers (2) events (13) evironment (1) experimental music (14) facebook (1) family (1) fashion-photography (1) feminist (20) Festivals (15) Fever-Ray (2) films (210) firefox (28) Flash_Mob (4) flickr (11) Floria Sigismondi (3) fractals (1) Frank Zappa (6) freakfolk (1) freecycle (5) freedom (1) freeganism (1) Friday Random 10 (43) fringe (5) full_moon (25) fun (2) fungi (1) g8 (1) gaia (5) gaimedianews (1) General (4) Genesis Breyer P-Orridge (4) George_Orwell (5) George-Carlin (5) goddess (27) graffiti (4) green (18) Greenpeace (8) guerilla (10) habitat (1) Healthy-Living (6) hippies (39) holidays (11) homeless (1) hubby (10) human rights (23) humor (13) Hunter S Thompson (18) husband (91) hypocrisy (1) ibogaine (7) illustrations (10) inbox (2) Indigenous rights (3) injustice (4) inspirational (5) Ira_Cohen (3) Iran (26) Iraq (176) Israel (18) Jeff Beck (8) jewelry (17) Jimi Hendrix (33) Jimmy Page (8) John_Lennon (11) Johnny Depp (22) Julian_Schnabel (3) justice (3) Keith Richards (23) Ken Kesey (7) Kent_State (6) Larry Carlson (4) Lars_von_Trier (6) Led-Zeppelin (37) Leonard Cohen (2) LGBTQ (67) liberal (27) lies (1) links (6) literary (1) Lou Reed (2) lowbrow (3) lsd (27) magazines (4) mainstreammedia (2) marijuana (24) Mark_Ryden (8) Martin Luther King (11) mathematics (2) Maureen-Dowd (15) mccain (21) mdma (8) Memento-Mori (29) memories (2) Merry Pranksters (2) Michael Moore (16) Michael Stipe (6) Mick Jagger (20) Mickey-Rourke (5) Molly_Ivins (2) mp3s (26) MTR (5) music (274) My_Sister_Robin (18) Nagi-Noda (2) Naked Bike Rides (3) NCAA (6) Neal Cassady (1) Neil_Young (9) neocons (5) news (3) Nina Hagen (5) NSFW (21) nuclear (1) Obama (31) occult (2) off the grid (5) oil (8) opinions (15) Osho (3) ouija (5) pagan (18) Paintings (6) Pakistan (1) Palestine (9) Patti Smith (19) Paul Krassner (6) peace (127) Pearls (1) People (1) People's Park (3) performance_art (19) Pete Townshend (5) petition (44) Philip Glass (3) Philip K. Dick (1) photography (80) Pink Floyd (11) playlist (1) podcasts (3) poetry (18) political art (1) politics (28) pranksters (10) President_Obama (2) progressive (19) protest (96) psychedelia (9) psychedelic (45) psychedelics (2) quetzalcoatl (3) quit-smoking (2) quiz (4) quotes (78) R Crumb (12) racism (9) radical_ideas (29) radio (94) Ralph Abraham (1) recovery (20) recycle (4) reference (1) religion (6) repubs (12) revolution (1) Rickie Lee Jones (18) Rights (7) rightwingnutjobs (2) RIP (2) Robert Anton Wilson (5) Robert Plant (14) Rolling Stones (59) Rumi (8) sabbats (11) salvia divinorum (2) Sarah_Palin (16) satire (5) Saturday Morning Me (193) save our mountains (6) sculptures (10) SDS (5) Sedaris (15) Senate (1) Seymour Hersh (4) shamanism (7) shopping (1) shrooms (12) Sigur Ros (1) Simpsons (9) sixties (225) Skyler (104) SOA (6) solstice (17) space (1) Spirituality (11) steampunk (2) Stephen-Colbert (6) Stew_Albert (8) Stewart Brand (7) street-art (13) subculture (6) subversion (2) Sudan (8) surrealism (16) sustainability (12) synchronicity (5) tarot (16) tattoos (12) tea (31) tech (1) Terence_McKenna (2) Texas (1) Thanksgiving (5) theremins (2) Tibet (4) Tim-Burton (15) Timothy Leary (21) toys (11) underground news (7) Underground Press (5) underreported (31) utopia (11) Valentine's Day (13) video (2) videos (82) vinyl (1) visionary_art (20) Weather Underground (4) webtrail (8) webzines (4) weirdness (3) Werner-Herzog (4) Whole-Earth-Catalog (11) William Blake (2) William S Burroughs (10) women's rights (5) wtf (19) Yeasayer (4) youtube (67) zen (20)

  © Free Blogger Templates Columnus by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP