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Result!

This probably doesn’t mean much to anyone but me and the other Plymothians who’ve vociferously protested Halliburton’s involvement in running Devonport’s nuclear dockyard over the years (and who’ve been surveilled, harsssed and arrested and who now have MI5 files for our trouble).

Just to give some idea of what exact Halliburton practices we were protesting against here’s an excerpt from my 2002 blogpost about the way nuclear fuels are stored and handled at the Dockyard by Halliburton’s subsidiary Kellogg Brown & Root:

Even a very minor breach of a reactor container on a sub would affect people within a 2km radius… DEVPUBSAFE allows for a 550m radius. Co-incidentally this is the average radius of the Dockyard.

Most likely to be affected in a minor accident are children. There is a primary school 440 m from the Dockyard. I’ve been told by a local NUT rep that teachers have been ordered that if there is an incident, they must lock the doors and not let any parents in or children out. DEVPUBSAFE says “Don?t try to collect children from school. Their teachers will make sure that they are looked after.” If your children were in danger from by a nuclear accident, would a locked door stop *you*?

A major incident, ie a total hull breach, fire/explosion and leakage of fissionable material, could potentailly affect an area of 50km circumference. That’s Devon, Cornwall, and Dorset.

[DEVPUBSAFE is the civil nuclear emergency plan, which at that time was funded only to the level of 10,000 pounds]

So you can imagine this news that KBR may lose the dockyard cheered me up no end. It’s not the end of the matter, but it’s a start.

Britain has made a last-minute demand that Halliburton, the US oil services group, withdraw the imminent flotation of its KBR subsidiary or face being stripped of its ownership of the Devonport naval dockyard.

Halliburton had intended to price the offering of KBR on Tuesday night, with its market debut scheduled for Wednesday. However, as reported in the Financial Times last week, Lord Drayson, the British defence procurement minister, has been seeking urgent guarantees from Halliburton about the future financial viability of KBR before giving his support to the float.

Ha! Up yours, Cheney. Excuse me, I have to go do a very small victory lap. Slowly slowly, incrementally, is the way to win against globalised militaristic capitalism. Or that’s what iI tell myself because if it weren’t for these small victories it’d be tempting to give in to despair.

So yay for us pinko lefties, and yay for the beautiful county of Devon.

Read more: Halliburton, KBR, Trident, Plymouth, Devonport, Dockyard, Nuclear weapons, DML

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Freedom, Democracy and A Pony Axe In The Head

This is why the internet is the best invention ever. Via Teresa at Making Light comes a whole site dedicated to world translations of the phrase “Oh my god, there’s an axe in my head”, which, as the cognoscenti will tell you, is the most common phrase heard anywhere in the universe.

  • Goa’uld: Yo me Weiafei! Te monba im tap-ei.
  • Greek, Ancient: O Thee! Echo ten labrida en te mou kephale!
  • Greek, Modern: The’Mou! Eho ena tsekouri sto kefali mou!
  • Gujarati: Aare Bhaghwan! Mara matha ma ek kuladi chhe.
  • Gullah: Me Gawd! Dey en’ ax een me haid!

  • Hausan: Kai! Ina da bambaro ciken kaina!
  • Hebrew: Oh Ellohim! Yesh li garzen ba-rosh.
  • Hindi: Hay Bhagwaan! Mere sar mein kulhaadi hain.
  • Hungarian: Jaj Istenem, fejsze van a fejemben!
  • Huttese: Tcheesa watichika bo! Ava pi killee krusp da ma green

If only the Borden family had had access to the internets they might’ve been saved…

Read more: Internets, Weird stuff, Languages

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    International Joementum

    Via Jesus General, meet Lee Boggs, just one of the many reasons why current US healthcare policy is immoral, cruel and wrong.

    Given that that statement’s so blatantly demonstrable, why is New Labour bringing US healthcare policy to the UK?

    And why, because of their doing so, might British taxpayers be repaying an electoral favour done for the White House?

    The White House is lobbying British ministers to allow the world’s main drug companies unrestricted access to the NHS as part of a package of free market reforms for the service. The US government is positioning itself behind the giant pharmaceutical firms, predominantly based in America, which have been piling pressure on the body that approves drugs for use in hospitals and for prescription by GPs.

    […]

    In a surprising intervention, the US deputy health secretary, Alex Azar, forced the issue in London yesterday, ahead of talks with officials following a trip to the US last week by the health secretary, Patricia Hewitt. He said attempts to use rationing mechanisms such as Nice to cut soaring drugs bills would stifle innovation – an argument that is constantly made by the pharmaceutical industry.

    But why is the White House pushing this now – don’t they have other priorities, like Iraq perhaps? This push seems a bit small-potatoes, given the current crisis in foreign policy. So why the urgency?

    Maybe, just maybe, they have an electoral favour to settle. But whoever with?

    The pharmaceutical industry lobby is a growth industry ; there’s lots of lovely moolah to be made by Republicans and Democrats alike in promoting drug company interests. Take Joe Leiberman, the Bush-kissing, war-mongering, Israel-boosting, Zionist former Democratic VP candidate for example, who split the Democratic vote in Connecticut and nearly lost them the Senate by running as an independent after losing the the party nomination to the unknown Ned Lamont in the primary.

    After an unpleasant campaign Leiberman retained his seat, but will sit as an independent Democrat – it’s quite possible that his could be the vote that settles a hung issue in the Senate, say on Medicare drug benefit or FDA regulations, just to give a couple of off-the-cuff examples that handily spring to mind.

    So the White House and the Republican leadership (such as it has left) needs to keep Leiberman sweet if they want to get any of their policies, including those on drugs, insurance and healthcare, through Congress.

    Co-incidentally enough, Joe’s wife Hadassah is a drug industry lobbyist, and Joe himself is not averse to a little cosying-up:

    Sen. Lieberman has long been known to cultivate the insurance and pharmaceutical industries, which provide jobs in his home state and contributions to his campaign fund. But he has literally been sleeping with one of their Washington representatives ever since his wife, Hadassah, joined Hill & Knowlton last year. The legendary lobbying and PR firm hired her as a ?senior counselor? in its ?health and pharmaceuticals practice.?

    […]

    When a senator?s wife works for one of the capital?s largest lobby shops, appearances tend to matter. In this case, something happened immediately that didn?t look very good.

    Mrs. Lieberman signed up with Hill & Knowlton in March 2005. The firm?s clients included GlaxoSmithKline, the British pharmaceutical giant that manufactures flu vaccines along with many other drugs. In April 2005, Sen. Lieberman introduced a bill that would award an array of new government ?incentives? to companies like GSK to produce more vaccines?notably patent extensions on other products, at a cost of billions to governments and consumers.

    That legislation provoked irritated comment by his hometown newspaper, the New Haven Register. In an editorial headlined ?Lieberman Crafts Drug Company Perk,? the Register noted that his bill was even more generous to the pharmaceutical industry than a similar proposal by the Senate Republican leadership. ?The government can offer incentives and guarantees for needed public health measures,? said the editorial. ?But it should not write a blank check, as these bills do, to the pharmaceutical industry that has such a large cost to the public with what may be an uncertain or dubious return.?

    Mrs. Joementum does very well for her clients, whilst at the same time doing not that badly at all for the household bank accounts. Lieberman’s senatorial campaign coffers have done nicely from big pharma as well. Open Secrets has his 2005-2006 PAC Contributions figures:

    • Abbott Laboratories ? $2,500
    • Baxter Healthcare ? $2,000
    • Bristol-Myers Squibb ? $4,500
    • Caremark RX ? $4,000
    • Chiron Corp ? $1,000
    • Eli Lilly & Co ? $8,000
    • Genentech Inc ? $10,000
    • GlaxoSmithKline ? $5,000
    • Invitrogen Corp ? $3,500
    • Johnson & Johnson ? $2,000
    • Medtronic Inc ? $3,000
    • Merck & Co ? $1,000
    • Purdue Pharma ? $15,000
    • Wyeth ? $2,500

    I would not be at all surprised were Joe and Mrs Joe to do equally well from the US healthcare and insurance industry’s expansion overseas. The Guardian on US deputy health secretary Alex Azar’s press conference, again:

    He also wanted to share the US experience of offering private insurance packages to people on Medicare – the healthcare scheme provided by the government to the poor and elderly. It might be possible for the UK government to consider something similar, he suggested, so that everyone could choose either a basic healthcare deal or top it up themselves if they wanted to pay for more than the state could afford.

    All this is very co-incidental and circumstantial to be sure and anyone who makes any connection between Leiberman and Azar’s sudden, international drug push would be speculating wildly.

    You might speculate wildly: I couldn’t possibly comment.

    Read more: UK politics, US politics, Healthcare Bush, Joe Lieberman, Congressional election, Pharmaceutical industry lobbying

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    War on Women, UK Edition

    Your caring, sharing, equal opportunity New Labour in action:

    “A young lesbian who fled Uganda after her Muslim father threatened to kill her is being deported back home tonight, despite facing persecution and a jail sentence of up to seven years because of her sexuality.

    Faridah Kenyini, 20, arrived in Britain in 2004, aged 17. At an earlier asylum hearing, the judge questioned her sexuality, implying that she was too young to be aware of her sexual orientation. Since moving to Newcastle, at the behest of social services, Ms Kenyini has been in a settled relationship with Sarah Garanette, 25, a security officer and British citizen.

    Sarah has offered to return to Uganda with Faridah and apply for a fiancee visa from there for a UK civil partnership, dangerous for them both and fraught with difficulty given strained diplomatic relations. Ms Garanette says that she’s “petrified” at the prospect.

    The couple play an active part in the lesbian and gay community in Newcastle and have widespread support from community groups and students. Local playwright Kathleen McCleary and actress Miriam Margoyles are backing the campaign for Ms Kenyini to stay.

    Ms Margoyles said: “In this country, we say we have the freedom to be who we are, but do we?”

    Uganda has a well documented record of persecuting homosexuals. Section 140 of its penal code criminalises “carnal knowledge against the order of nature” and the offence carries a maximum seven-year prison sentence. The country’s president, Yoweri Museveni, once proposed the arrest of all homosexuals, though he subsequently modified his position and called for a return to days when “these few individuals were either ignored or speared by their parents”.

    In August, the Ugandan tabloid, Red Pepper, published the names and workplaces of alleged homosexuals, aimed at “showing the nation how fast the terrible vice of sodomy is eating up our society”. The legislation banning same sex relations was inherited from British colonial rule.

    Speaking from Yarls Wood” [immigration dettention centre] “yesterday, Ms Kenyini said that said that she was doing very well at college in Newcastle before she was arrested and that her aim was to qualify as a nurse. She said that none of her family in Kampala would help her and that she regarded her partner in Newcastle as her only relative.

    “I am afraid that my removal documents will have details about my sexuality and that I will be handed over to the police and abused,” she said.

    Faridah is due to be deported tonight – please let the minister know what you think of such an anachronistic barbarism.

    UK Immigration Minister Liam Byrne:

    Private Office to Liam Byrne. Telephone: 020 7035 0195; Fax: 0870 336 9034; Email: liam.byrne.submissions@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk …

    Contact other Home Offfice Ministers, inc Home Secretary John Reid

    Read more: UK, Uganda, Homophobia, Immigration, GLBT, Lesbian, Women, Partner’s rights