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billcoe

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Everything posted by billcoe

  1. Ahhh, so you must be refering to the open market policy which the Clinton Administration persued with China. OK, ....got it. Yes, I agree with you. Very different. Now I understand.
  2. Are you saying that Nazi Germany, Italy, Japan, Phillipines, Cuba (the first time, not the 2nd time:) , Nigarqua, Chile, USSR and Grenada just to name a few did not change via war and economic presure? Now we have a discussion.
  3. That could very well be the case.
  4. 100 K - Not even close. The opponents of the war have signifigantly less. Small consolation if your family was one of 23,000 people "accidentally" wiped out. as the independant site doesn't seem to count insergents separatly, it may be tht they count insurgents as civilians? No? Following is their methodology, which seems to be saying that insurgents are civilians, how would you separate the numbers. So of the 23000 plus, 22000 of them may be rotten bastards well deserving of death: or reversed, who can determine? (cut and pasted) "Methodology: Overview Sources Data Extraction Data Storage Publication of data (including conditions of use) Limitations 1. Overview Casualty figures are derived from a comprehensive survey of online media reports and eyewitness accounts. Where these sources report differing figures, the range (a minimum and a maximum) are given. All results are independently reviewed and error-checked by at least two members of the Iraq Body Count project team in addition to the original compiler before publication. 2. Sources Our sources include public domain newsgathering agencies with web access. A list of some core sources is given below. Further sources will be added provided they meet acceptable project standards (see below). ABC - ABC News (USA) AFP - Agence France-Presse AP - Associated Press AWST - Aviation Week and Space Technology Al Jaz - Al Jazeera network BBC - British Broadcasting Corporation BG - Boston Globe Balt. Sun - The Baltimore Sun CT - Chicago Tribune CO - Commondreams.org CSM - Christian Science Monitor DPA - Deutsche Presse-Agentur FOX - Fox News GUA - The Guardian (London) HRW - Human Rights Watch HT - Hindustan Times ICRC - International Committ of the Red Cross IND - The Independent (London) IO - Intellnet.org JT - Jordan Times LAT - Los Angeles Times MEN - Middle East Newsline MEO - Middle East Online MER - Middle East Report MH - Miami Herald NT - Nando Times NYT - New York Times Reuters - (includes Reuters Alertnet) SABC - South African Broadcasting Corporation SMH - Sydney Morning Herald Sg.News - The Singapore News Tel- The Telegraph (London) Times - The Times (London) TOI - Times of India TS - Toronto Star UPI - United Press International WNN - World News Network WP - Washington Post For a source to be considered acceptable to this project it must comply with the following standards: (1) site updated at least daily; (2) all stories separately archived on the site, with a unique url (see Note 1 below); (3) source widely cited or referenced by other sources; (4) English Language site; (5) fully public (preferably free) web-access. The project relies on the professional rigour of the approved reporting agencies. It is assumed that any agency that has attained a respected international status operates its own rigorous checks before publishing items (including, where possible, eye-witness and confidential sources). By requiring that two independent agencies publish a report before we are willing to add it to the count, we are premising our own count on the self-correcting nature of the increasingly inter-connected international media network. Note 1. Some sites remove items after a given time period, change their urls, or place them in archives with inadequate search engines. For this reason it is project policy that urls of sources are NOT published on the iraqbodycount site. 3. Data extraction Data extraction policy is based on 3 criteria, some of which work in opposite directions. 1. Sufficient information must be extracted to ensure that each incident is differentiated from proximate incidents with which it could be potentially confused. 2. Economy of data extraction is required, for efficiency of both production and public scrutiny. 3. Data extraction should be uniform, so that the same information is available for the vast majority of incidents. This is best guaranteed by restricting the number of items of information per incident to the core facts that most news reports tend to include. The pragmatic tensions in the above have led to the decision to extract the following information only for each incident: * Date of incident * Time of incident * Location of incident * Target as stated by military sources * Weapon (munitions or delivery vehicle) * Minimum civilian deaths (see Note 2) * Maximum civilian deaths (see Note 2) * Sources (at least two sources from the list in section 2 above) Reliability of data extraction will be increased by ensuring that each data extraction is checked and signed off by two further independent scrutineers prior to publication, and all data entries will be kept under review should further details become available at a later date. Note 2. Definitions of minimum and maximum Reports of numbers dead vary across sources. On-the-ground uncertainties and potential political bias can result in a range of figures reported for the same incident. To reflect this variation, each incident will be associated with a minimum and maximum reported number of deaths. No number will be entered into the count unless it meets the criteria in the following paragraphs. This conservative approach allows relative certainty about the minimum. Maximum deaths. This is the highest number of civilian deaths published by at least two of our approved list of news media sources. Minimum deaths. This is the same as the maximum, unless at least two of the listed news media sources publish a lower number. In this case, the lower number is entered as the minimum. The minimum can be zero if there is a report of "zero deaths" from two of our sources. "Unable to confirm any deaths" or similar wording (as in an official statement) does NOT amount to a report of zero, and will NOT lead to an entry of "0" in the minimum column. As a further conservative measure, when the wording used in both reports refers to "people" instead of civilians, we will include the total figure as a maximum but enter "0" into the minimum column unless details are present clearly identifying some or all of the dead as civilian - in this case the number of identifiable civilians will be entered into the minimum column instead of "0". The word "family" will be interpreted in this context as meaning 3 civilians. [Average Iraqi non-extended family size: 6. -CIA Factbook 2002.] 4. Data storage Although it is expected that the majority of sources will remain accessible on the web site from which they were drawn, the project will create a secure archive of all original sources (in both electronic and paper form). Where judged appropriate by the project team, this data may be released to bona-fide enquirers, for verification purposes. At an appropriate juncture, the entire archive will be passed to an institution of public record (such as a University or National Library) for permanent access by bona-fide researchers. The copyright of original sources will remain with the originators. The copyright of the Iraq Body Count data extraction remains with the named researchers on the project (see About us). 5. Publication of data (including conditions of use) Once verified through the processes described in section 3 above, each new incident will be added as a new line on a spreadsheet database which will be updated regularly (at least daily) on the www.iraqbodycount.org site. The total minimum and maximum deaths will be automatically updated, and will feed through to all remotely positioned web-counters donwloaded from the site. Permission is granted for any individual or agency to download and display any of the web counters available on this site, provided that the link back to the www.iraqbodycount.org site is not disabled or otherwise tampered with when displayed on a live interactive web-site. Permission is also granted for cut-and-paste downloads of the spreadsheet database listing each incident. All press and non-commercial uses are permitted. Other commercial uses are prohibited without explicit permission (contact info@iraqbodycount.org). We request that you acknowledge any use of the Iraq Body Count data base or its methodology by mentioning either the project name ("Iraq Body Count") or the url (www.iraqbodycount.org) or the names of the principal researchers, Hamit Dardagan and John Sloboda. 6. Limitations and scope of enquiry: Any project has limitations and boundaries. Here are some FAQs about this topic and our answers to them. Why don’t you report all civilian deaths in Iraq since the 1991 Gulf War ended? Our decision to stick with deaths from Jan 2003 is mainly tactical, and based on the resources we have. We would rather provide one stream of verifiable evidence to a high degree of reliablity than spread ourselves too thin. Current deaths are more newsworthy than past deaths, and will be of more interest to the general websites who will carry the IBC Web Counters. We agree that reckoning total deaths since 1991 is a very worthwhile project. We would be happy to support someone wanting to do this, but we can't manage it ourselves with current resources. Why don’t you report civilian injuries as well as deaths? Injuries are difficult to quantify. Anything from shock to loss of limb can be classified as an injury. Also, injuries can recover, so that by the time there is independent verification the injury can have healed. The level of resource we would need to track and categorise the far higher number of injuries would likely overwhelm our resources. Deaths are irreversible and immutable. Again, they are the most "newsworthy" tip of the iceberg, and the greatest crime against innocents. "Does your count include deaths from indirect causes?" Each side can readily claim that indirectly-caused deaths are the "fault" of the other side or, where long-term illnesses and genetic disorders are concerned, "due to other causes." Our methodology requires that specific deaths attributed to US-led military actions are carried in at least two reports from our approved sources. This includes deaths resulting from the destruction of water treatment plants or any other lethal effects on the civilian population. The test for us remains whether the bullet (or equivalent) is attributed to a piece of weaponry where the trigger was pulled by a US or allied finger, or is due to "collateral damage" by either side (with the burden of responsibility falling squarely on the shoulders of those who initiate war without UN Security Council authorization). We agree that deaths from any deliberate source are an equal outrage, but in this project we want to only record those deaths to which we can unambiguously hold our own leaders to account. In short, we record all civilians deaths attributed to our military intervention in Iraq. (The above FAQ does not apply to sanctions; although we are opposed to them, our study deals with the consequences of our current military actions in Iraq. It has also been newly revised due to our growing awareness that we were too narrowly-focused on bombs and other conventional weapons, neglecting the deadly effects of disrupted food, water, electricity and medical supplies. These effects, though relatively small at the outset of a war, are likely to become much more significant as time passes, and we will monitor media reports accordingly.) Won't your count simply be a compilation of propaganda? We acknowledge that many parties to this conflict will have an interest in manipulating casualty figures for political ends. There is no such thing (and will probably never be such a thing) as an "wholly accurate" figure, which could accepted as historical truth by all parties. This is why we will always publish a minimum and a maximum for each reported incident. Some sources may wish to over-report casualties. Others may wish to under-report them. Our methodology is not biased towards "propaganda" from any particular protagonist in the conflict. We will faithfully reflect the full range of reported deaths in our sources. These sources, which are predominantly Western (including long established press agencies such as Reuters and Associated Press) are unlikely to suppress conservative estimates which can act as a corrective to inflated claims. We rely on the combined, and self-correcting, professionalism of the world's press to deliver meaningful maxima and minima for our count. Will you co-operate with other similar projects? Many projects are needed to evaluate the full human cost of this war. We value them all, but this one is ours. We need to ensure that our study is focused and that its intent, scope and limits are widely and clearly understood. We will certainly build up and maintain our set of links to projects doing related work so that viewers of this site can be pointed to related activity."
  5. YOUR QUESTION WAS: 50,000 IS IT TRUE? http://www.iraqbodycount.net/database/ There is an indepandant site with over 23,000 confirmed CIVILIAN deaths. So no or yes, if not true, and you should be suspicious of a General with a round number like 50,000, it's still a shit load. How that gets distributed would be interesting. We have seen examples of ordinance causing collateral damage like walls on buildings falling over and killing kids. You have to figure that a truckload of the numbers are insurgents. I would tend to believe the military numbers more like in this case as they are on site to actually count, unlike the independant site refered which is reading news articals and only putting casualties down if they are verified by an independant secondary source... speaking for both sets of numbers in general.
  6. PS, wanna trade mice? Mine sucks.
  7. You mean, who's a "clownpuncher"? Soloed Zodiac and did South Seas is the Rumr. Nice job Tex!
  8. PS, Josephs looking for someone to get out today to Beacon (I just saw it on another thread), he may be out there right now, I'm sure you can get a route or 2 in around the work he wants to do.
  9. Don't make me take my shirt off! You'll both be sorry.
  10. Roger Smith fell off of the very top of Rooster Rock and landed head first into the Columbia River during a rare moment of flood stage water. Stuck fast into the mud head first - upside down. The luck of a young, quick thinking couple picnicing right there, who had the knowledge and speed to rush out to him and to gently float him up and out to the water/land edge (with a broken neck) is nothing short of unbelivable. But it happened. He had lots of other broken bones too. That was @ 1970-1971 I think. Rodger and Kathy (?) were caretakers at Mazama lodge for years in case anybody knew them, Roger took his life @ 1990 and his ashes were scattered at Angels Landing in the gorge. So- that probably doesn't answer the origonal question, although maybe in an extreme way it does.
  11. Heading out with Nolse a couple of times should help you out.
  12. All of the advice so far has been good. DMM also makes a blue handle model which is good. If I had to buy 1: Trango shark. If I did alpine or long routes: Ushba titanium. But I don't have to choose one, so I have all of the tools mentioned except the Metlious, and I climb with 3 people who own that one and it works fine too. It did take me a few days to break my trango tool although it still sort of works. BTW: Joseph has a nice racking sling for his tool you should all check out. I think I've discovered why your beer tastes like shit dude!
  13. Thank you for sharing those pics Laura. I was surprised to see somebody so young have a heart attack, it must be so tough: wishing his family and friends well.
  14. 1) (Laps, you must be sore). I'll see you there. 2) Called, left message. Bolts are at home, so it will have to wait till next time. I'll give you what I call my "Dwayner Discount Deal", the 3 d's will be essentially cost, so that we can get some of these's unbolted lines all bolted up nice and snug. I know you want 400 bolts, but lets start with what I have - which is closer to 100. I'll count them first. PS, I'm not trolling for Pope here. 3) Concerning your last statment, not many really climb much around here, I include myself in that statement.
  15. No, as long as you don't breath it.
  16. Nolse, say something sooner, I could show up with bolts. Now I'm at work and will most likely show up tonight.....but boltless. Wait a sec. that was yesterday. You guys get out? Anyone for tonight?
  17. you sure? Looks too small. Could be the way it's framed.
  18. I give up. What is it. Don't make me beg.
  19. Are you saying that because neither of them appear to climb anything?
  20. billcoe

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    Total agreement CBS, except somebody who shows up in Nov. could have the same complaint. I had read Szyjakowski's post earlier and did not understand what he was talking about, but I didn't say anything because it wasn't clear why he was all pissy. Now I understand and he really doesn't have a leg to stand on. Szyjakowski- cleaning a route is hard, but important work, nobody pats you on the back. I'm OK with you not offering to help out, and I'm OK with you not thanking them. I even understand you not being happy that someone messed up your route for the day. I'd but really, really think you need to reconsider your uncalled for complaining and screaming about this. Those cracks didn't become clean by themselves. It sounds like you would you prefer people just go climb on it an and knock the rocks down over time on you and everyone else below? Or perhaps staying off of it forever is what you are getting at. Maybe nobody should ever climb there: EVER. I don't know. Maybe all the routes that have been done are all that should ever be done? Seeing that it was raining and middle of the week - what do you expect? I'd suggest you need to go climb somewhere else if somebody is cleaning, offer to help out, or wake up earlier and get there first.
  21. take that sheep with you and then you'd be talking some serious therapy. Had to edit: Specialized changed his avatar from a sheep to a breast. Seems like a major change in his lifestyle has occured. Congrats Specialized. However, you just made about 3,300 threads which contained sheep jokes obsolete.
  22. Translation: two people are missing and may be dead, but who cares 'cause we did a new route. Kind of mean don't you think, thats not a good translation at all. You might re-check your climber-to-english dictionary sir. You must have missed the previous NOLse post. 2nd what Iain said too. Sometimes just getting a scrap of info or 2 can make the difference for those who are looking for those who need to be looked for.
  23. Isn't the horse is trying to contact Johnny Cockran to litigate? Dumb ass doesn't know that he's dead! Maybe the farm animals will form a union next, wonder what they'd call it?
  24. Yeah, but you're a Llama. My advice is to by one that has a solid color middle mark, not a piece of tape like the Edelrids (although I love the Edelrid feel). My friend bought a Lanex, it's awesome. Best "feel" of any rope I've ever touched. Needs a better middle mark IMO. http://www.mylanex.com/en/sortiment/horolezecka/jednoducha/rocky.php I read on Rockclimbing.com that the Metolius Monster ropes are made by lanex, but haven't seen any yet. __________________________________________________________ edit: In previewing the Lanex site: they say they have a new permanent middle mark on their ropes. Check them out for sure.
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