(no subject)
Apr. 9th, 2003 09:13 amI am bereft of a theme for today's post I'm afraid. It may come off as a series of random thoughts, so I apologize in advance.
Got home from my errands last night in time to water the plants, also noted that the mostly dead strawberry plant is producing what look to be huge fruits. Thank the gods I'm an optimist when it comes to my little green babies, and that my composting skillz rule. I'm quite convinced the combination of good soil, compost, and some moisture retaining moss is going to lead to a kick ass strawberry patch this year. That is if I can keep the snails at bay. A trip to OSH should take care of that problem. Yay copper!
Aelf and I settled in for some crocheting and "Stargate" last night, got my sister L-'s afghan finished and started on my own. Woo! Love the navy-grape color and I've got enough purple homespun to create a kickass border on it. Of course I'll be finishing it up just as the weather gets warm 'cause that's how my life works. At least I've got the veil to work on too, a lapfull of veil is a lot less heavy and warm to work with. Must get more trim for that.
Must...practice...dance...tonight. I have too many choreography ideas and not enough time to actually work on them or even jot them down. I've got my own choreography pretty well worked out in my head, it's just a matter of trying to emulate it physically, that's the tricky bit.
Also, for anyone interested in learning to drum or who'd like to practice with their zills
aelfsciene picked up some fantastic practice mixes from Alyne on Monday. Most of one CD is drumming stuff and the rhythms start with a fairly simply beladi and then escalate into complexity later on. I have this vision of a bunch of us sitting around on my deck with the music playing in the background while some play drums and others keep time on their zills. Sound like fun to anyone else?
And for those of you who haven't done so yet, take at least one of Alyne's classes. Seriously, do it. I don't often go over the top praising a teacher, but even my kindest words for her are not nearly enough to describe my respect and admiration of the lady's talent and generosity of spirit. Anyone even considering it please check out her site bellydance.com, or ask me for more details. She will be holding a double veil workshop this Sunday, and the beginners class is just that, no experience necessary! If you've ever had any desire at all to give veils a try this is the perfect chance to do so. She even has loaner veils, so no excuse not to go, got it?
Exclusive: The Evil of Cluster Bombs
On that particular street, many Iraqi military vehicles were abandoned, burned out after being targeted by US planes. A resident of the street, who said his uncle and sister were killed in the bombings, told Arab News: “I think the Americans wanted to destroy these military trucks, but in order to do that they had to destroy our neighborhood three streets deep.”
In an adjacent ward lay a 15-year-old boy, his left arm missing from below the elbow and his face and stomach severely burned. No one Arab News spoke to was celebrating the reported news of Saddam Hussein’s death. “I don’t believe what we are hearing,” said a 42-year-old hotel receptionist.
“Even if he is dead, it’s not worth the price our children and families have paid,” he added.
Saddam Hussein General Hospital alone has seen 307 deaths and treated 920 injuries. Of those, only 20 of the dead and 50 of the injured were soldiers.
The people of Najaf need water, electricity and munitions clearing teams more urgently than they need a new government.
Aid that comes too little, too late
"We have had no food for a month," said Mr Hussain. An English teacher by profession, he now drives a taxi for a living, ferrying people from Basra to the nearby market town of Zubayr. As he walked around his living room, he pointed to empty tables. The family's other belongings, he said, including a TV set and hi-fi, had been sold years before to pay for basic essentials. "First, the government kills us," he said. "Then, the Americans and the British bomb our houses. We cannot do anything. We have nothing."
Full list of casualties
Wednesday April 9, 2003
Casualties so far
US - 91 killed (27 non-combat);172 injured; 16 missing; 7 PoWs
UK - 30 killed (22 non-combat); 74 injured
Iraqi military - about 4,000 (coalition estimate); 9000 PoWs
Iraqi civilians - (Iraqi estimate) 1,252 killed; 5,103 injured
Journalists - 9 killed; 2 injured; 2 missing
British military casualties. Source: MoD
British personnel officially confirmed as dead: 30
British personnel officially confirmed as missing in action: none
British personnel officially confirmed as prisoners of war: none
Somehow I can't think of a single thing to say...
Got home from my errands last night in time to water the plants, also noted that the mostly dead strawberry plant is producing what look to be huge fruits. Thank the gods I'm an optimist when it comes to my little green babies, and that my composting skillz rule. I'm quite convinced the combination of good soil, compost, and some moisture retaining moss is going to lead to a kick ass strawberry patch this year. That is if I can keep the snails at bay. A trip to OSH should take care of that problem. Yay copper!
Aelf and I settled in for some crocheting and "Stargate" last night, got my sister L-'s afghan finished and started on my own. Woo! Love the navy-grape color and I've got enough purple homespun to create a kickass border on it. Of course I'll be finishing it up just as the weather gets warm 'cause that's how my life works. At least I've got the veil to work on too, a lapfull of veil is a lot less heavy and warm to work with. Must get more trim for that.
Must...practice...dance...tonight. I have too many choreography ideas and not enough time to actually work on them or even jot them down. I've got my own choreography pretty well worked out in my head, it's just a matter of trying to emulate it physically, that's the tricky bit.
Also, for anyone interested in learning to drum or who'd like to practice with their zills
And for those of you who haven't done so yet, take at least one of Alyne's classes. Seriously, do it. I don't often go over the top praising a teacher, but even my kindest words for her are not nearly enough to describe my respect and admiration of the lady's talent and generosity of spirit. Anyone even considering it please check out her site bellydance.com, or ask me for more details. She will be holding a double veil workshop this Sunday, and the beginners class is just that, no experience necessary! If you've ever had any desire at all to give veils a try this is the perfect chance to do so. She even has loaner veils, so no excuse not to go, got it?
Exclusive: The Evil of Cluster Bombs
On that particular street, many Iraqi military vehicles were abandoned, burned out after being targeted by US planes. A resident of the street, who said his uncle and sister were killed in the bombings, told Arab News: “I think the Americans wanted to destroy these military trucks, but in order to do that they had to destroy our neighborhood three streets deep.”
In an adjacent ward lay a 15-year-old boy, his left arm missing from below the elbow and his face and stomach severely burned. No one Arab News spoke to was celebrating the reported news of Saddam Hussein’s death. “I don’t believe what we are hearing,” said a 42-year-old hotel receptionist.
“Even if he is dead, it’s not worth the price our children and families have paid,” he added.
Saddam Hussein General Hospital alone has seen 307 deaths and treated 920 injuries. Of those, only 20 of the dead and 50 of the injured were soldiers.
The people of Najaf need water, electricity and munitions clearing teams more urgently than they need a new government.
Aid that comes too little, too late
"We have had no food for a month," said Mr Hussain. An English teacher by profession, he now drives a taxi for a living, ferrying people from Basra to the nearby market town of Zubayr. As he walked around his living room, he pointed to empty tables. The family's other belongings, he said, including a TV set and hi-fi, had been sold years before to pay for basic essentials. "First, the government kills us," he said. "Then, the Americans and the British bomb our houses. We cannot do anything. We have nothing."
Full list of casualties
Wednesday April 9, 2003
Casualties so far
US - 91 killed (27 non-combat);172 injured; 16 missing; 7 PoWs
UK - 30 killed (22 non-combat); 74 injured
Iraqi military - about 4,000 (coalition estimate); 9000 PoWs
Iraqi civilians - (Iraqi estimate) 1,252 killed; 5,103 injured
Journalists - 9 killed; 2 injured; 2 missing
British military casualties. Source: MoD
British personnel officially confirmed as dead: 30
British personnel officially confirmed as missing in action: none
British personnel officially confirmed as prisoners of war: none
Somehow I can't think of a single thing to say...
Re:
Date: 2003-04-09 10:36 am (UTC)Even assuming that the Iraqi casualty figures (reprinted credulously by the Guardian) are wholly accurate?
Well they seem to jibe pretty closely with what the Red Cross is saying so far, from what I can tell.
The Dresden firebombing killed anywhere from 35,000 to 125,000 (depending on whose numbers you prefer), mostly civilians, in about 18 hours. We've been in Iraq for about that many days, at only a slightly diminished pace of bombing, and have killed and injured less than 20% of the low-end Dresden estimates.
I've tried to look at the numbers alone and compare and contrast them to others. I mean we've killed fewer civillians (theoretically) than were killed in the Congo and buried in mass graves recently. Uh..go us? Sorry, it's just hard for me to be objective about so many dead and suffering people right now. And yet they're nowhere to be found in any of the t.v. coverage...
no subject
Date: 2003-04-09 10:53 am (UTC)Before the war started, people were talking about the potential for tens or hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi lives lost to indiscriminate coalition bombing, usually in an attempt to portray the United States as indifferent to the human suffering caused by a sustained bombing campaign. Those kinds of horrific casualties haven't happened, and barring a dramatic and unforseen turn of events, aren't going to happen.
Appropos of nothing, I wonder how many of the civilian casualties resulted from the Saddam's goons deliberately putting innocents in harm's way. I also wonder whether Fedayeen Saddam casualties are considered military or civilian.
Re:
Date: 2003-04-09 11:18 am (UTC)Good questions, both, and I'm hoping the Red Cross will be able to come back with some equally good answers when they can really get into most of the war zones.