The Party Line – October 28, 2011: NRC Moves to Adopt Fukushima Recommendations “Without Delay”

By: Gregg Levine Friday October 28, 2011 2:50 pm

The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission voted last week to implement recommendations from the Near-Term Task Force Review of Insights from the Fukushima Daiichi Accident (PDF), and to do so “without delay.” Coming over seven months after the earthquake and tsunami that started the crisis in Japan, and over four months after the Near-Term Task Force (NTTF) issued its report, the move highlights what might be accomplished when attention is paid, but also illustrates systemic flaws in the US nuclear regulatory regime.

NYT: Soufan Book Adds to Charges CIA Kept 9/11 Terrorist Info from FBI

By: Jeff Kaye Tuesday September 13, 2011 11:35 am

Soufan, a long-time special agent working with the FBI, worked on some of the more notorious terrorist cases post-9/11, including the interrogation of Mohamed Al-Qahtani and Abu Zubaydah. According to Soufan, he was pulled off these interrogations when the CIA or military officials wanted to use torture on the detainees. In these cases, and it turns out others, Soufan and his colleagues were pulled out of interrogations at the behest of the Bush administration or the CIA.

Liveblog: Homeland Security Hearing on Whether America is Safer Ten Years After 9/11

By: Kevin Gosztola Tuesday September 13, 2011 7:20 am

The Senate Homeland Security Committee, chaired by Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT), is holding a major hearing on whether the United States is safer ten years after the September 11th attacks. Homeland Security Department Janet Napolitano, FBI Director Robert Mueller and National Counterterrorism Center Director Matthew Olsen will be testifying before the committee.

Sunday Late Night: and… Exhale

By: Teddy Partridge Sunday September 11, 2011 8:01 pm

Behind us, then, this last and greatest anniversary: perhaps? Without forgetting the victims or disrespecting their loved ones — might it be? Can we now move on?

They Should Call 9/11 “First Responders Day”

By: Cynthia Kouril Sunday September 11, 2011 5:33 pm

I cannot believe that Eric Cantor, on the tenth anniversary of 9/11, thinks that slashing first-responder money nearly in half is the way to deal with disasters.

September 11 should be called “First Responders Day” as it showed America and the world the heroism and sacrifice of our police, firemen, and and medical people.

Reflecting on 9/11 Through Song

By: Kevin Gosztola Sunday September 11, 2011 4:00 pm

The deluge of 9/11 reflections and editorials on the aftermath has been overwhelming. It is tempting to contribute more commentary on how the US has responded to terrorism and what the government has treated as “terrorism” since the attacks. It would be easy to go through incident by incident and point to atrocity after atrocity, loss of liberty after loss of liberty to show that the US has responded in a way that likely brought joy to Islamic extremists seeking to wage war against America. But, as I sit and think about 9/11, how it defined my teenage years and transformation into the writer I am today, I find it more appropriate reflect through some the music the event has inspired.

Krugman is Right: We Should Be Ashamed of What Happened after 9/11

By: Blue Texan Sunday September 11, 2011 11:50 am

The far-right is flipping out over Paul Krugman’s remarks about 9/11 today.

Late Night FDL: In Which Fred Hiatt is Invited to Preach His Neocon Sermons in Fallujah

By: Phoenix Woman Saturday September 10, 2011 8:00 pm

There are things one reads that uplift one; things that bore one; things that irritate one.

And then there are things that make you want to hunt down the author and slap the taste out of his or her mouth.

Such was WaPo editor Fred Hiatt’s panegyric to the last misbegotten ten years of Treasury-draining wars of choice.

A Personal Reflection on September 11, 2001

By: dakine01 Saturday September 10, 2011 1:03 pm

On Tuesday morning, September 11, 2001, I was living in Springfield, IL. I had been laid off from my previous employer back at the end of July so my usual routine was to get up, make the coffee, check my email and the various job hunting sites for anything within my skills and career field to apply to, then surf the news sites. That routine stayed pretty much the same, even the week before when I had visited my best friend in Jacksonville, FL for a week, having returned to Springfield on Saturday, September 8.

It was a sunny morning and my then feline companion had joined me at the computer when I saw the first news article about a plane hitting the World Trade Center.

WikiLeaks Has No Blood on Its Hands

By: Kevin Gosztola Saturday September 10, 2011 12:30 pm

Cassandra Vinograd and Bradley Klapper of the Associated Press conducted a partial review of US State Embassy cables released by WikiLeaks focusing on the sources the State Department “categorized as most risky.” The findings in the report cast further doubt on the official party line the government promotes when commenting on anything WikiLeaks and concludes, US examples of threatened sources have been “strictly theoretical.” The review found “several of them” are “comfortable with their names in the open and no one fearing death.”

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