Jul
15
2008
Another one of the plates I began on July 9th, 2008. This one depicts the “contingency operating base,” at Qayyarah West, often called “Q-West” or “Key West” by troops and contractors. The contingency operating bases are reformulated, consolidated bases that were once called “enduring bases.” Though all the bases are highly fortified and becoming more so every day, the pentagon prefers to describe them with the word the word “contingency,” because it sounds less permanent than “enduring,” which replaced the term “permanent.” The language gets lighter as more and more concrete is poured.



As with the other plates I began on this date, I removed the cover of this one to prevent condensation from dripping back down onto the culture. Generally, cultures are stored upside down to prevent this from happening.

Jul
15
2008
This culture is one I began on July 9th, 2008. The bacteria has been stamped onto a ground of tryptic soy agar and is barely visible at this stage. When fully visible the pattern of growth will depict a satellite view of the airstrips and surrounding roads that make up the largest airbase in Iraq, Balad (a.k.a. Camp Anaconda). Balad, one of “enduring bases” is a small highly fortified city with its own neighborhoods and fast food joints like Subway, a Pizza Hut, a Popeye’s and Burger King.



Jul
14
2008
Here is documentation of a culture I began on July 9th, 2008. The bacteria has been stamped onto a ground of tryptic soy agar and is barely visible at this stage.
The bacteria is visible but condensation on the lid of the petri dish is obscuring the pattern of growth. The pattern of growth reflects the airstrips and surrounding roads that make up one of the biggest airbase in Iraq, Al-Asad

The bacteria is visible and the pattern of growth is clear. However, condensation on the lid of the petri dish continues to obscure the pattern of growth. The hot humid summer climate in South Carolina where my lab is located has made the bacteria grow very fast. in other experiments the Serratia has taken three days or more to reach this state of visibility by the unaided eye.
Condensation on the lid of the petri dish threatened to destroy the established pattern of growth which depicts the airbase. I removed the lid to make the culture more visible. While the condensation is no longer an issue, removal of the lid increases the risk of contamination of the sample.

Jul
14
2008
The contingency operating bases are four large bases in Iraq located near Al-Asad, Balad, Talil and Qayyarah. Once called “Enduring Bases” these bases are small cities with highly fortified concrete walls, and other permanent structures. The airbase at Balad “A.K.A camp Anaconda includes it’s own “neighborhoods” including “KBR-land” named after the engineering and construction company and Haliburton subsidiary formerly known as Kellogg Brown & Root. KBR-land is home to thousands of “independent contractors,” non-military personnel contracted to perform functions once handled by military service personnel.
See “The Biggest Base in Iraq Has Small-Town Feel: Most Troops at Balad Never Meet Iraqis” by By Thomas E. Ricks
Jul
12
2008

An American girl displays a souvenir brought back from Iraq by her father, an independent contractor.
Much has been written about the widespread use of private contractors in Iraq. Many jobs which used to be performed by the military are now farmed out to private contractors and private contractors in Iraq now greatly outnumber the number of military personnel. The issues are many: financial and legal accountability are the issues most often sighted by critics. Stories of corruption, cronyism, over-billing, substandard equipment and service abound.
What concerns me is that the practice of contracting out the process of warfare makes war, business as usual. Think about what that means to the average worker: making war is ‘just a job’ to the thousands of people who work for Haliburton, AT&T, Blackwater, not to mention Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, & Burger King and Kraft Foods Inc. That sounds an awful lot like the kind of logic which allowed millions of Nazis to work in death camps, and support the government that ran them. For most, it was just a job that they needed to take care of their families. The idea is so abhorrent, I am sure that whether or not one supports the war is based in large part upon who (what institution) signs one’s paycheck every month. If Uncle Sam signs your check, then you must be a supporter of the war. There is no other ethical position to take on the matter. To be paid by the Uncle Sam and take negative view of the war is a recipe for self destruction. The average human heart might go mad at the thought of it.
Here is a collection of articles on the subject. It is by no means an impartial collection.
Jul
12
2008
“Vector: An organism (e.g., Anopheles mosquitoes) that transmits an infectious agent (e.g. malaria parasites) from one host to the other (e.g., humans).”
The title of the American Vectors project is in part, a reference to the concept of a vector as it is defined within biology (see above). The example of a biological vector most often used to explain the concept is the transmission of the disease malaria from one person to another. Malaria is usually spread via the bite of mosquitoes, that transfer the disease from one infected host (animal or human) to another (animal or human). Once bitten, disease causing parasites (P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae.) are transfered to the new host. The parasites and the toxins they produce destroy red blood cells in the host. Ugly stuff.