Frontal Passage: EMS Helicopter Crashes

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In Case I Disappear By William Rivers Pitt t r u t h o u t PerspectiveSeptember 29, 2006 I have been told a thousand times at least, in the years I have spent reporting on the astonishing and repugnant abuses, lies and failures of the Bush administration, to watch my back. Be careful, people always tell me. These people are capable of anything. Stay off small planes, make sure you arent being followed.” A running joke between my mother and me is that she has a “safe room” set up for me in her cabin in the woods, in the event I have to flee because of something I wrote or said. I always laughed and shook my head whenever I heard this stuff. Extreme paranoia wrapped in the tinfoil of conspiracy, I thought. This is still America, and these Bush fools will soon pass into history, I thought. I am a citizen, and the First Amendment hasnt yet been red-lined, I thought. Matters are different now. It seems, perhaps, that the people who warned me were not so paranoid. It seems, perhaps, that I was not paranoid enough. Legislation passed by the Republican House and Senate, legislation now marching up to the Republican White House for signature, has shattered a number of bedrock legal protections for suspects, prisoners, and pretty much anyone else George W. Bush deems to be an enemy. So much of this legislation is wretched on the surface. Habeas corpus has been suspended for detainees suspected of terrorism or of aiding terrorism, so the Magna Carta-era rule that a person can face his accusers is now gone. Once a suspect has been thrown into prison, he does not have the right to a trial by his peers. Suspects cannot even stand in representation of themselves, another ancient protection, but must accept a military lawyer as their defender. Illegally-obtained evidence can be used against suspects, whether that illegal evidence was gathered abroad or right here at home. To my way of thinking, this pretty much eradicates our security in persons, houses, papers, and effects, as stated in the Fourth Amendment, against illegal searches and seizures. Speaking of collecting evidence, the torture of suspects and detainees has been broadly protected by this new legislation. While it tries to delineate what is and is not acceptable treatment of detainees, in the end, it gives George W. Bush the final word on what constitutes torture. US officials who use cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment to extract information from detainees are now shielded from prosecution. It was two Supreme Court decisions, Hamdi v. Rumsfeld and Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, that compelled the creation of this legislation. The Hamdi decision held that a prisoner has the right of habeas corpus, and can challenge his detention before an impartial judge. The Hamdan decision held that the military commissions set up to try detainees violated both the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions. In short, the Supreme Court wiped out virtually every legal argument the Bush administration put forth to defend its extraordinary and dangerous behavior. The passage of this legislation came after a scramble by Republicans to paper over the torture and murder of a number of detainees. As columnist Molly Ivins wrote on Wednesday, Of the over 700 prisoners sent to Gitmo, only 10 have ever been formally charged with anything. Among other things, this bill is a CYA for torture of the innocent that has already taken place. It seems almost certain that, at some point, the Supreme Court will hear a case to challenge the legality of this legislation, but even this is questionable. If a detainee is not allowed access to a fair trial or to the evidence against him, how can he bring a legal challenge to a court? The legislation, in anticipation of court challenges like Hamdi and Hamdan, even includes severe restrictions on judicial review over the legislation itself. The Republicans in Congress have managed, at the behest of Mr. Bush, to draft a bill that all but erases the judicial branch of the government. Time will tell whether this aspect, along with all the others, will withstand legal challenges. If such a challenge comes, it will take time, and meanwhile there is this bill. All of the above is deplorable on its face, indefensible in a nation that prides itself on Constitutional rights, protections and the rule of law. Underneath all this, however, is where the paranoia sets in. Underneath all this is the definition of enemy combatant that has been established by this legislation. An enemy combatant is now no longer just someone captured during an armed conflict against our forces. Thanks to this legislation, George W. Bush is now able to designate as an enemy combatant anyone who has purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States. Consider that language a moment. Purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States is in the eye of the beholder, and this administration has proven itself to be astonishingly impatient with criticism of any kind. The broad powers given to Bush by this legislation allow him to capture, indefinitely detain, and refuse a hearing to any American citizen who speaks out against Iraq or any other part of the so-called War on Terror. If you write a letter to the editor attacking Bush, you could be deemed as purposefully and materially supporting hostilities against the United States. If you organize or join a public demonstration against Iraq, or against the administration, the same designation could befall you. One dark-comedy aspect of the legislation is that senators or House members who publicly disagree with Bush, criticize him, or organize investigations into his dealings could be placed under the same designation. In effect, Congress just gave Bush the power to lock them up. By writing this essay, I could be deemed an enemy combatant. Its that simple, and very soon, it will be the law. I always laughed when people told me to be careful. Im not laughing anymore. In case I disappear, remember this. America is an idea, a dream, and that is all. We have borders and armies and citizens and commerce and industry, but all this merely makes us like every other nation on this Earth. What separates us is the idea, the simple idea, that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are our organizing principles. We can think as we please, speak as we please, write as we please, worship as we please, go where we please. We are protected from the kinds of tyranny that inspired our creation as a nation in the first place. That was the idea. That was the dream. It may all be over now, but once upon a time, it existed. No good idea ever truly dies. The dream was here, and so was I, and so were you. Source:http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/092906J.shtml_______________________
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A Textbook Definition of CowardiceKeith Olbermann comments on Bill Clinton’s Fox News interviewBy Keith OlbermannAnchor MSNBC NewsSept. 26, 2006The headlines about them are, of course, entirely wrong.It is not essential that a past president, bullied and sandbagged by a monkey posing as a newscaster, finally lashed back.It is not important that the current President’s portable public chorus has described his predecessor’s tone as “crazed.”Our tone should be crazed. The nation’s freedoms are under assault by an administration whose policies can do us as much damage as al Qaida; the nation’s marketplace of ideas is being poisoned by a propaganda company so blatant that Tokyo Rose would’ve quit.Nonetheless.The headline is this:Bill Clinton did what almost none of us have done in five years.He has spoken the truth about 9/11, and the current presidential administration.At least I tried, he said of his own efforts to capture or kill Osama bin Laden. That’s the difference in me and some, including all of the right-wingers who are attacking me now. They had eight months to try
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-ne Keith O’Brien - (68 Points) - 7 sinks - 13 cups hit (2nd place)Dan Murdzek - (66 Points) - 3 sinks - 17 cups hit (1st Place)Ron Gambardella - (61 Points) - 3 sinks - 7 cups hit (1st Place)Jamie Jones - (36 Points) - 1 sink - 15 cups hit (3rd Place)Brian Gaffey - (24 Points) - 0 sink - 6 cups hit (2nd Place)Christopher Smith - (19 Points) - 3 sinks - 4 cups hitKevin Lamay - (15 Points) - 3 sinks - 5 cups hitMaynard Lumbra - (12 Points) - 0 sinks - 5 cups hit (3rd Place)Dan Gibson - (10 Points) - 2 sinks - 4 cups hitChad Uhlman - (10 Points) - 0 sinks - 3 cups hitKeith Garceau - (6 Points) - 2 sinks - 2 cups hitJamie Valentine - (4 Points) - 1 sink - 3 cups hitTodd McNeil - (4 Points) - 1 sink - 5 cups hitPatrick Wrenn - (1 Point) - 3 cups hitDennis Redican - (0 Points) - 1 cup hitRichard Natlo - (0 Points) - 1 cup hitPablo Valentin - (-3 Points) - 1 cup hitMatt Fiderio - (-3 Points)*500 points gets u into the Hall of Fame
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The highest percentage of fatalities (61%) in the 59 accidents included in this study resulted from continued VFR flight into IMC.Further studies will be necessary to determine which changes will decrease the fatal crash rate and which are cost effective.Again this is already known, but the lessons learned from previous studies are soon forgotten.Recurrent flight training in flight simulators (not in the actual aircraft), in my opinion, will yield the most positive results in accident reduction. That’s why pilots sometimes (especially at night) find themselves in unforeseen IMC through no fault of their own.Flight scenarios in the simulator can include all the elements involved in an actual aircraft accident and prepare the pilot to better handle the same or similar situation.Those pilots who have experienced this type of simulator training know of its benefits.
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Array-ne

In Case I Disappear By William Rivers Pitt t r u t h o u t PerspectiveSeptember 29, 2006 I have been told a thousand times at least, in the years I have spent reporting on the astonishing and repugnant abuses, lies and failures of the Bush administration, to watch my back. Be careful, people always tell me. These people are capable of anything. Stay off small planes, make sure you arent being followed.” A running joke between my mother and me is that she has a “safe room” set up for me in her cabin in the woods, in the event I have to flee because of something I wrote or said. I always laughed and shook my head whenever I heard this stuff. Extreme paranoia wrapped in the tinfoil of conspiracy, I thought. This is still America, and these Bush fools will soon pass into history, I thought. I am a citizen, and the First Amendment hasnt yet been red-lined, I thought. Matters are different now. It seems, perhaps, that the people who warned me were not so paranoid. It seems, perhaps, that I was not paranoid enough. Legislation passed by the Republican House and Senate, legislation now marching up to the Republican White House for signature, has shattered a number of bedrock legal protections for suspects, prisoners, and pretty much anyone else George W. Bush deems to be an enemy. So much of this legislation is wretched on the surface. Habeas corpus has been suspended for detainees suspected of terrorism or of aiding terrorism, so the Magna Carta-era rule that a person can face his accusers is now gone. Once a suspect has been thrown into prison, he does not have the right to a trial by his peers. Suspects cannot even stand in representation of themselves, another ancient protection, but must accept a military lawyer as their defender. Illegally-obtained evidence can be used against suspects, whether that illegal evidence was gathered abroad or right here at home. To my way of thinking, this pretty much eradicates our security in persons, houses, papers, and effects, as stated in the Fourth Amendment, against illegal searches and seizures. Speaking of collecting evidence, the torture of suspects and detainees has been broadly protected by this new legislation. While it tries to delineate what is and is not acceptable treatment of detainees, in the end, it gives George W. Bush the final word on what constitutes torture. US officials who use cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment to extract information from detainees are now shielded from prosecution. It was two Supreme Court decisions, Hamdi v. Rumsfeld and Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, that compelled the creation of this legislation. The Hamdi decision held that a prisoner has the right of habeas corpus, and can challenge his detention before an impartial judge. The Hamdan decision held that the military commissions set up to try detainees violated both the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions. In short, the Supreme Court wiped out virtually every legal argument the Bush administration put forth to defend its extraordinary and dangerous behavior. The passage of this legislation came after a scramble by Republicans to paper over the torture and murder of a number of detainees. As columnist Molly Ivins wrote on Wednesday, Of the over 700 prisoners sent to Gitmo, only 10 have ever been formally charged with anything. Among other things, this bill is a CYA for torture of the innocent that has already taken place. It seems almost certain that, at some point, the Supreme Court will hear a case to challenge the legality of this legislation, but even this is questionable. If a detainee is not allowed access to a fair trial or to the evidence against him, how can he bring a legal challenge to a court? The legislation, in anticipation of court challenges like Hamdi and Hamdan, even includes severe restrictions on judicial review over the legislation itself. The Republicans in Congress have managed, at the behest of Mr. Bush, to draft a bill that all but erases the judicial branch of the government. Time will tell whether this aspect, along with all the others, will withstand legal challenges. If such a challenge comes, it will take time, and meanwhile there is this bill. All of the above is deplorable on its face, indefensible in a nation that prides itself on Constitutional rights, protections and the rule of law. Underneath all this, however, is where the paranoia sets in. Underneath all this is the definition of enemy combatant that has been established by this legislation. An enemy combatant is now no longer just someone captured during an armed conflict against our forces. Thanks to this legislation, George W. Bush is now able to designate as an enemy combatant anyone who has purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States. Consider that language a moment. Purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States is in the eye of the beholder, and this administration has proven itself to be astonishingly impatient with criticism of any kind. The broad powers given to Bush by this legislation allow him to capture, indefinitely detain, and refuse a hearing to any American citizen who speaks out against Iraq or any other part of the so-called War on Terror. If you write a letter to the editor attacking Bush, you could be deemed as purposefully and materially supporting hostilities against the United States. If you organize or join a public demonstration against Iraq, or against the administration, the same designation could befall you. One dark-comedy aspect of the legislation is that senators or House members who publicly disagree with Bush, criticize him, or organize investigations into his dealings could be placed under the same designation. In effect, Congress just gave Bush the power to lock them up. By writing this essay, I could be deemed an enemy combatant. Its that simple, and very soon, it will be the law. I always laughed when people told me to be careful. Im not laughing anymore. In case I disappear, remember this. America is an idea, a dream, and that is all. We have borders and armies and citizens and commerce and industry, but all this merely makes us like every other nation on this Earth. What separates us is the idea, the simple idea, that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are our organizing principles. We can think as we please, speak as we please, write as we please, worship as we please, go where we please. We are protected from the kinds of tyranny that inspired our creation as a nation in the first place. That was the idea. That was the dream. It may all be over now, but once upon a time, it existed. No good idea ever truly dies. The dream was here, and so was I, and so were you. Source:http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/092906J.shtml_______________________
link

-ne

A Textbook Definition of CowardiceKeith Olbermann comments on Bill Clinton’s Fox News interviewBy Keith OlbermannAnchor MSNBC NewsSept. 26, 2006The headlines about them are, of course, entirely wrong.It is not essential that a past president, bullied and sandbagged by a monkey posing as a newscaster, finally lashed back.It is not important that the current President’s portable public chorus has described his predecessor’s tone as “crazed.”Our tone should be crazed. The nation’s freedoms are under assault by an administration whose policies can do us as much damage as al Qaida; the nation’s marketplace of ideas is being poisoned by a propaganda company so blatant that Tokyo Rose would’ve quit.Nonetheless.The headline is this:Bill Clinton did what almost none of us have done in five years.He has spoken the truth about 9/11, and the current presidential administration.At least I tried, he said of his own efforts to capture or kill Osama bin Laden. That’s the difference in me and some, including all of the right-wingers who are attacking me now. They had eight months to try
link

-ne Keith O’Brien - (68 Points) - 7 sinks - 13 cups hit (2nd place)Dan Murdzek - (66 Points) - 3 sinks - 17 cups hit (1st Place)Ron Gambardella - (61 Points) - 3 sinks - 7 cups hit (1st Place)Jamie Jones - (36 Points) - 1 sink - 15 cups hit (3rd Place)Brian Gaffey - (24 Points) - 0 sink - 6 cups hit (2nd Place)Christopher Smith - (19 Points) - 3 sinks - 4 cups hitKevin Lamay - (15 Points) - 3 sinks - 5 cups hitMaynard Lumbra - (12 Points) - 0 sinks - 5 cups hit (3rd Place)Dan Gibson - (10 Points) - 2 sinks - 4 cups hitChad Uhlman - (10 Points) - 0 sinks - 3 cups hitKeith Garceau - (6 Points) - 2 sinks - 2 cups hitJamie Valentine - (4 Points) - 1 sink - 3 cups hitTodd McNeil - (4 Points) - 1 sink - 5 cups hitPatrick Wrenn - (1 Point) - 3 cups hitDennis Redican - (0 Points) - 1 cup hitRichard Natlo - (0 Points) - 1 cup hitPablo Valentin - (-3 Points) - 1 cup hitMatt Fiderio - (-3 Points)*500 points gets u into the Hall of Fame
link

The highest percentage of fatalities (61%) in the 59 accidents included in this study resulted from continued VFR flight into IMC.Further studies will be necessary to determine which changes will decrease the fatal crash rate and which are cost effective.Again this is already known, but the lessons learned from previous studies are soon forgotten.Recurrent flight training in flight simulators (not in the actual aircraft), in my opinion, will yield the most positive results in accident reduction. That’s why pilots sometimes (especially at night) find themselves in unforeseen IMC through no fault of their own.Flight scenarios in the simulator can include all the elements involved in an actual aircraft accident and prepare the pilot to better handle the same or similar situation.Those pilots who have experienced this type of simulator training know of its benefits.
link

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