http://www.democraticunderground.com/top10/01/top10_2001_13.html

http://www.opensecrets.org/bush/cabinet/cabinet.rice.asp

http://www.public-i.org/story_01_022801.htm

http://aztlan.net/oiltanker.htm

http://www.matrixmasters.com/wtc/lch/condoleezza/condoleezza.html

http://www.counterpunch.org/nimmo1010.html

http://www.tiesweb.org/interviews/rice.htm
"Any other way of getting civil society on board?
Of course you can try, but I think you have to have a very strong sense of
when that is possible and when it is not. The notion that the people in
Seattle were there because they wanted to protect the rights of developing
countries' workers is purely ludicrous. Somebody should have said it is
ludicrous. The only people who said it was ludicrous were the developing
countries. They said these people in the streets are going to keep
developing countries from developing. I think that the weakness was not in
calling them to the table and acknowledging that they had purpose.
Environmental groups are a little bit different in this regard I guess -
although I believe that environmental standards get better when countries
get richer. No the real problem is that when you are talking about trying to
transport American labour standards to South Africa, what you are talking
about is protecting American jobs, at the low end so that South Africa never
finds its way into the international economy.
So I am all for trying to bring groups in, but for understanding that there
are some interests that are crucial to