Tuesday, November 28, 2006

I Ran

I purchased a pedometer that links to my ipod. Here is my best run yet. Yeah Me!

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

My Doggies

Yumpin and a Yumpin

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Rafting Colorado

Leaving Gore Canyon


Leaving Gore Canyon, originally uploaded by jimmyside.

Fishbone Video

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

US Interventions

Hazardous occupations

U.S. military forays since 1898

Introduction
Post-war American occupations transformed Germany and Japan from despotisms into democracies.
But not all U.S. occupations left a better world behind them.
Explore below.
1898-1902: Cuba
Victory in the Spanish-American War of 1898 left the U.S. in possession of Spain’s last major Caribbean colony. After independence in 1902, Washington sent troops back well into the 1930s, when Fulgencio Batista seized power. The U.S. helped keep him there until Fidel Castro’s revolution in 1959.
1898-1946: Philippines
Washington governed the Philippines as a province from the end of the Spanish-American war until 1946. A hefty garrison force fought a bloody conflict with pro-independence Filipino rebels. By the time Japan
conquered the Philippines in 1942, however, a path toward independence already had been agreed. After independence in 1946, U.S. troops remained on two large bases leased from Manila until 1999 and Washington routinely intervened in domestic politics.
1904-1999: Panama
Washington won rights “in perpetuity” to the territory around the Panama Canal after helping locals secede from Colombia. Washington did little to promote democracy for decades. In 1999, the canal and adjacent territory were turned over to local sovereignty and the county currently is a functioning democracy.
1905-1924: Dominican Republic
U.S. Marines intervened and occupied this nation on the eastern side of Hispanola after European states hinted they would intervene to stave off the nation’s bankruptcy. American troops left in 1924, but the U.S. Treasury controlled the country’s finances until 1941. In 1965, Marines imposed a new pro-American government. True democratization failed to take root until the mid-1970s. Today, the country is a functioning democracy.
1912-1925: Nicaragua
American Marines ruled Nicaragua for 13 years beginning in 1912, fighting nationalist rebels before leaving in 1925. They returned in 1928 to fight a new rebel leader, Augusto César Sandino. The U.S. withdrew in 1934 after killing Sandino, leaving Anastasio Somoza in charge. Somoza ruled as U.S.-based dictator until his overthrow by Soviet-inspired Sandinista guerrillas in 1979. A CIA-based war against them ended in 1989, when free elections forced the Sandinista regime out of power.
1915-1934: Haiti
U.S. Marines entered Haiti in 1915 after a mob killed the Haitian ruler. Some 20,000 American troops stayed there, running the country via military administration, until 1934. The Marines left power in the hands of Haiti’s national guard, which, in turn, installed the brutal Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier into power. He and his son Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier ruled until 1986, when Baby Doc fled to Paris.
1945-1952: Japan
Gen. Douglas MacArthur sat as military governor of Japan between 1945-1949. By absolving Emperor Hirohito of his wartime guilt, MacArthur successfully blunted opposition to the democratization of Japan, most notably the drafting of a new constitution that foreswore war and established electoral laws. In April, 1952, a peace treaty took effect and the Allied occupation ended.
1945-54: Germany
The four victorious Allied powers occupied sectors of German territory and quadrants of its capital city, Berlin. The occupation quickly broke down into rival Western vs. Soviet zones. “De-Nazification” and Marshal Plan aid began to transform Western Germany by the early 1950s, and in 1954 it emerged as the independent West German state.
1945-1948: South Korea
The defeat of Japan left Korea, a Japanese colony, split between U.S. and Soviet control. The U.S. military governed the southern part of the peninsula until 1948, when elections established the Republic of Korea. U.S. forces remained, however, when the Soviet-backed north refused to hold elections. In 1950, North Korea attacked and war raged until 1953. U.S. forces – some 38,000 – have stayed ever since.
1945-1955: Austria
As in Germany, Austria – which had been annexed by the Germans in 1938 – was split between victorious powers. Austria's status remained unclear for a decade until a treaty ended the occupation, recognized independence and forbade unification with Germany.
1965-73: South Vietnam
When communist guerillas defeated French efforts to reestablish its Indochina colony in 1953, the U.S. stepped in to back the anti-communist Vietnamese government. Drawn progressively into the maelstrom, Washington formally landed combat troops in 1965, their numbers topping out at 500,000 in 1969. Throughout, the South’s government remained undemocratic and corrupt. The U.S. pulled out in 1973, and the South was overrun by communist North Vietnamese troops in 1975.
1983-84: Grenada
U.S. troops landed on this tiny Caribbean island, citing the arrival of Cuban military advisers and the threat they allegedly posed to American medical students studying there. After a short battle, U.S. troops took control of the island, deposed its left-leaning “military council” and organized free elections before leaving in 1984. The country is now a functioning democracy.
1994-99: Haiti
When the Duvalier dictatorships ended in 1986, the Haitian military took direct control of the country. An election in 1993 quickly led to a coup, which in turn caused the U.S. to threaten invasion. The threat forced the generals into exile, restoring the ousted president, Jean-Bertrande Aristide. U.S. and other international forces patrolled the country until 1999.
1995-present: Bosnia-Hercegovina
The collapse of Yugoslavia beginning in 1990 led to civil war in its most ethnically diverse republic, Bosnia-Hercegovina. European-led U.N. force tried to restore order but failed. In 1995, after years of steering clear, the U.S. intervened and imposed a peace treaty that included a NATO-led occupation of the fractured state. Some 6,000 U.S. troops are still there, along with 40,000 other forces, in 2003. A democratic state is struggling to emerge.
1999-present: Kosovo
Repression by Serbia in ethnic Albanian province of Kosovo spiraled into civil war in 1999, and the U.S. led a NATO invasion of the country to force an end to Serb efforts to deport the Albanian population. Some 60,000 U.S., British, French and German troops occupied Kosovo after the war, and a force about half that size remained in place in 2003. Prospects for democracy in Kosovo and in Serbia remain uncertain.
2002-present: Afghanistan
A U.S.-led campaign to find al-Qaida leaders harbored by the Taliban government swept elements of both from the central Asian nation. Prospects for democracy remain extremely fragile. In early 2003, some 9,000 U.S. forces remained in and around Afghanistan, many engaged in the hunt for Osama bin Laden.

source http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4448418/

Technorati Tags:

Look into Haiti

Special Report submitted to the
Haiti Information Project 5000 soccer fans in Haiti witness machete and hatchet massacre by police and the new death squads
by Tom Luce with AUMOHD investigators
Dredging up fearsome memories of days thought to have gone by forever, eyewitnesses here in Port-Au-Prince have portrayed an unbelievable massacre-by-machete/hatchet rampage by red-shirted killers, backed up by the Haitian National Police (PNH), of up to 50 victims on Aug. 21 at a soccer field in Gran Ravin-Martissant. This summary, extra-legal execution follows similar type massacres in Bel Air and Solino earlier this month. This time the killings were done in plain daylight in front of and involving 5000 soccer fans, an incredibly bold assault by Haitian police and their civilian accomplices in the presence of troops from MINUSTAH. As has been the case this entire past year, the "targets" in Saturday's massacre, were all identified as "bandits", "Lavalas" scum (Rat pa caca).
Eyewitnesses described to a group of human rights agents today this super t.v. drama styled event. As fans were being entertained during one of the breaks in the soccer game--highly attended because national league players had joined the local teams--a group of police and men wearing red tee shirts and head bands entered the playing field and took over the microphone from the announcer. The people in the crowd at first thought that this was a friendly show of security by the police. But that idea was immediately dashed when the red shirt announcer stopped the music being played by the DJ and then demanded everyone to lay on the ground. A shot was fired into the air and people began a panicked response. Some tried to run away, some tried scaling the walls to escape and several of these were shot. Others tried running into the adjoining rooms of the stadium and later were found hacked to death. The red shirts, backed up by the police began demanding specific individuals lying on the ground if they were affiliated with Aristide, asking for confirmation from others whether these people were "bandits". Then without mercy these red shirts either hacked their victims to death or hacked them and then had their victims shot by the police. According to eyewitnesses and the family members of the victims interviewed today, the victims of the executioners were innocent people and were attacked only because they were allegedly Lavalas supporters.
The red shirts were equipped with machetes and hatchets that were distributed, according to witnesses, by the police at the Martissant police station. These same civilians who appeared in red shirts and head bands at the soccer game, armed with machetes were recognized by people in the area as the same people who at least a month previously were thrown out of the area as trouble makers among whom were some prison escapees and thieves. Some of these executioners were named by witnesses: Georges Jean Yves, Gérard, aka, Gwo l'Ombril (Big Belly Button), ...lifet aka TÍte Calé (Shaved Head), Ti Clody, Rudy, JoÎl, Eddy, Apoupann aka Colonel, Ronald Toussaint, Kiki , Rocky Rambo, and Cliska. The chief of police of Martissant was also implicated in the operation by the witnesses and according to the witnesses threatened to come after them and "wipe them out the next day."
On Sunday, Aug. 21 the same red shirts, accompanied by the police, invaded residential areas and burned more than four houses alleged to be inhabited by Lavalas supporters. They also severely damaged an electricity transformer in the area. They also damaged several other houses

http://www.teledyol.net/KP/HUS/HUS.mp4

http://www.teledyol.net/HIP/about.html.

Technorati Tags:

Saturday, February 05, 2005

Surf Hog


Surf Hog, originally uploaded by jimmyside.

The Hog @ Avellanas

Costa Sunrise


Costa Sunrise, originally uploaded by jimmyside.

On the Coast To Coast Challenge early morning

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

Has He Gone Mad?


Has He Gone Mad?, originally uploaded by jimmyside.

Thats the Wazoo


Thats the Wazoo, originally uploaded by jimmyside.

Wazoolious

Happy New Mo


Happy New Mo, originally uploaded by jimmyside.

I hope you have a great 2005 Mo. It was nice to meet you.

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Blue the beauty


P1010021, originally uploaded by jimmyside.