I like Tiffany Hadish.  I 
wish she made better films but she's always good in them even when the 
films are weak.  She had a stand up that did not go well.
As CNN notes, some are 
slamming her and some are defending her.  I asked C.I. and Kat about it 
because they do a lot of speaking.  They said the mood of the room can 
make a huge difference.  C.I. also noted that
 she doesn't 'prepare' and gets mad if people start talking about it 
beforehand -- as in, "What are you going to say?  What are you going to 
do?"  If she thinks about it, she will get nervous.  I didn't know this 
until today but she is very shy -- is that the
 word?  Uncomfortable might be a better word.  She has a technique were 
she grabs one wrist and squeezes it if she's getting nervous.  But she 
speaks to people over and over and I had no idea that it made her 
uncomfortable and I've been with her when she's
 spoken.   And you would never guess that she was the least bit 
uncomfortable or nervous. 
But she stressed that the 
mood of the room can be deadly and if you can't ride it out or turn it 
around, you're going to stumble and that may be what happened to 
Tiffany.  If so, she said it happens and you learn
 to manage it.  I hope so because I really do love Tiffany's comedy and I
 also love her in films.
For me, public speaking's 
fun but I don't do it that often and I also don't fret over it when I do
 it because I'm usually taking in whatever the locale is and enjoying 
that. 
Ava and C.I. are the same 
way, by the way, when they write together for THIRD or a newsletter.  
They have no idea what they're going to write and they can't plan it or 
worry about it because it will be too much. 
 They have written at least one media commentary at THIRD every week 
since January of 2005.  That's 14 years -- good heavens.  They really do
 great work.  In fact, their latest is "TV: Does TV ever change?" and it really pissed
 me off when I read it.
My boys aren't into 
superheroes -- they think they're too old.  My daughter doesn't care for
 superheroes unless it's a guy she thinks is good looking (she loves the
 man who playes Falcon and the man who plays
 Captain America).  So I don't watch those superhero shows on The CW.  
But they did a three-part episode where they went from THE FLASH to 
ARROW to SUPERGIRL.  And on SUPERGIRL, Supergirl is kept imprisoned for 
at least half the episode.  They bring on not
 one but 2 Supermans as well as Arrow and the Flash.  But the woman is 
sidelined and on her own show.  These are action shows, how dare they do
 that.
And here's the kicker, Ava 
and C.I. checked Rotton Tomatoes and all these critics praised the 
3-parter -- including female critics!
WTH?  You don't praise a 
show that imprisons the only female superhero on her own show -- keeps 
her away from the action, sidelines her.  That's outrageous.
Ava and C.I. are real critics, feminist critics.  We are lucky  to have them.
"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Wednesday, January 2, 2019.   The new year is upon us and already Jake 
Tapper's making clear that he's more obsessed with gossip (Donald 
Trump's mean Tweet) than actual issues (such as Senator Elizabeth 
Warren's major essay that is the opening salvo in her campaign to win 
the Democratic Party's presidential nomination).
Let's start with the grifter.
Let's start with the grifter.
The Russian Gov’t is basically holding an American hostage. A retired Marine. Who works for an automotive components supplier. Who served two tours in Iraq. Why isn’t Trump doing anything about this? Oh, because he’s on the Russian Govt’s side, not USA. What will he give Putin?
SPLINTER NEWS noted of scam artist Dworkin:
According to a piece out on Wednesday by The Daily Beast, one of these new anti-Trump PACs, the Democratic Coalition Against Trump,
 has been sinking its donors’ money into consultants and its own legal 
expenses rather than tangible action to fight back against the 
president.
As the site reports, the group 
brought in half a million dollars last year, $130,000 of which was paid 
to the Bulldog Finance Group—a consulting firm run by political 
operative Scott Dworkin, who is also a senior adviser at the Democratic 
Coalition. More than half of the money raised by the Democratic 
Coalition last year was funneled to its employees or their consulting 
firms. In 2016, the numbers were even worse: “Dworkin and other staff 
members received more than 90% of all of the Democratic Coalition’s 
expenditures, either personally or through a consulting company.” 
(Dworkin’s Twitter handle is literally @funder.)
Dworkin’s PAC scam isn’t some sort of new invention—such groups proliferated among conservatives who
 exploited the backlash against Obama for their own profit. 
Unfortunately, the grift is bipartisan and will endure until the laws 
that lightly police these organizations are tightened. 
So what's Scammy Dworkin Tweeting about now?
A Canadian citizen of British parents who apparently acquired American citizenship at some point. Is he a spy? A US government spy? A corporate spy?
Who knows.
Despite Scammy Dworkin's hysterical Tweet both Congress and the State Dept are aware of the arrest.
The State Dept, noting privacy concerns, have declared that they are working on the issue of consular access.
Scammy showed no concern over Maria Butina's arrest or imprisonment here in the US. But he and others are sure eager to tie Maria into the arrest of Mr. Multi-citizenship.
Professional Liar Samantha Vinograd is among the people pimping the hypothesis (presented as fact) that this man was arrested because of Maria Butina.
That would be the Samantha who works for Goldman Sachs when not delivering 'commentary' on CNN. Because that's what a 'good' American does, right?
Back in the day, she had to hide in the shadows. Why? She's also Jewish -- a fact Barack worked hard to conceal when he put over Iraq during his presidency. Why? Iraqis already feel that they have been controlled and manipulated by the government of Israel. The revelation that Saint Barack had installed some Jewish person over supervising their country might have been the last straw for the US occupation.
Having done nothing that improved life for the Iraqi people, Big Money Samantha shows up to tell us what she knows must be taking place. Does she still have a security clearance? If she does, her statements are in violation and she needs to have her clearance pulled.
The Iraqi people continue to suffer while 'helpers' like Samantha grow rich with Goldman Sachs.
It's a real shame that there were no women in Barack's administration who could have addressed this never-ending issue.
If only the National Security Council had a woman over Iraq -- Oh, wait. They did. We were just talking about Samantha Vinograd. She did nothing to help Iraqi women. Oh, and wasn't there a Secretary of State?
No, not John Kerry. If John tries to run for the Democratic Party nomination, we'll float what he doesn't want anyone to remember -- his infamous cranky meltdown where he declared that women's rights didn't matter and he had more to focus on. He had that meltdown not in the 70s or 80s or even 90s. He had that public meltdown while he was Secretary of State. Retire from public life, John, no one needs you.
No, we're talking about Hillary Clinton. What did she do to stop female genital mutilation? The problem existed before she was Secretary of State. And she has repeatedly presented herself as the defender of women's rights. So what did Hillary do?
Hint: Nothing.
The US government has never cared about the well being of the Iraqi people. After 15 years of war and occupation, if you're still not grasping that, you really need some sort of remedial instructor to assist you before you next try to speak in the public square.
Speaking of stupidity in the public square . . .
Retired four-star Admiral William McRaven, the commander of U.S. Special Operations Command from 2011 to 2014 (which included the OBL mission), just issued the following statement to CNN in response to POTUS attacking GEN McChrystal on twitter: 
1/4
2/4
“Stan McChrystal is one of the great generals of this generation and the finest officer I ever served with.  He is a deep strategic thinker, tactically brilliant, with unparalleled personal courage.  His leadership of special operations forces in Iraq and Afghanistan...
3/4
“... unquestionably saved the lives of thousands of American and allied troops, as well as countless civilians.  No general I know has given more in the service of this country."
4/4 
Trump’s tweet this morning attacking McChrystal was in response to the general saying the president is dishonest and immoral:
Oh, Jake, you think you're running with the big boys but you're just standing there in a soggy diaper.
Where's your Tweet about the genital mutilation? Or about Iraq at all?
Instead you're wasting everyone's time over Stanley McCrystal? The general Barack Obama fired? A detail you leave out in your Tweet as you rush to defend this idiot. Just because Donald calls him out doesn't mean you have to defend him. There's nothing worth defending.
Maybe you're trying to erase Michael Hastings? In his very short life, Michael did journalism that mattered. You? Not so much, Jake, not so much.
CNN is a joke and a number of people will be fired soon. Jake, you'd do well to focus on actual journalism and actual news instead of joining the Trump hysteria. Don't come crying to me if it's decided that you're not really enhancing CNN's reputation. They want to get rid of Chris but don't feel they can because of his brother. Jake, you don't have a brother who's governor of New York so start focusing on news before it's too late for you.
For those late to McCrystal, he's a horrid man. He lied about Pat Tillman for propaganda reasons. There is no noble -- or even rational -- bone in his body. He wanted more US troops in Afghanistan in 2009. When he didn't get his way? He was insubordinate to the Commander in Chief (Barack) and leaked to his friends in the press. He got his way -- when he should have been fired -- but despite getting what he wanted, his assessment was proven wrong -- the increase did not win the war. McCrystal is a failure. And that's before we get to the part where Stanley The Bitch McCrystal mocks Joe Biden and Barack Obama to a reporter (Hastings). Talk about gross insubordination. He is no one to praise. He refuted the civilian control over the military that is basic to a democracy. He is no one to praise.
Instead of wasting our time on nonsense, Jake Tapper should be addressing real news. US Senator Elizabeth Warren wants to be president. She's considering a run for the Democratic Party's 2020 presidential nomination. As part of that consideration, she's contributed a major paper to COFR's FOREIGN AFFAIRS. We've noted it already this week but let's note what she says about war in the paper:
A foreign policy that works for 
all Americans must also be driven by honest assessments of the full 
costs and risks associated with going to war. All three of my brothers 
served in the military, and I know our service members and their 
families are smart, tough, and resourceful. But having a strong military
 doesn’t mean we need to constantly use it. An effective deterrent also 
means showing the good judgment to exercise appropriate restraint. 
Over the past two decades, the 
United States has been mired in a series of wars that have sapped its 
strength. The human cost of these wars has been staggering: more than 
6,900 killed in Afghanistan and Iraq, another 52,000 wounded, and many 
more who live every day with the invisible scars of war. By financing 
these conflicts while cutting taxes, the country has essentially charged
 the costs of war to a collective credit card for future generations to 
pay, diverting money that could have been invested in critical domestic 
priorities. This burden will create a drag on the economy that will last
 for generations. 
The costs have been 
extraordinarily high, but these wars have not succeeded even on their 
own terms. We’ve “turned the corner” in Afghanistan so many times that 
it seems we’re now going in circles. After years of constant war, 
Afghanistan hardly resembles a functioning state, and both poppy 
production and the Taliban are again on the rise. The invasion of Iraq 
destabilized and fragmented the Middle East,
 creating enormous suffering and precipitating the deaths of hundreds of
 thousands of people. The region remains a tangled mess—the promise of 
the Arab Spring crushed, Iran emboldened, Syria devastated, the Islamic 
State (or ISIS) and its offshoots stubbornly resilient, and a massive 
refugee crisis threatening to destabilize Europe. Neither military nor 
civilian policymakers seem capable of defining success, but surely this 
is not it.
A singular focus on 
counterterrorism, meanwhile, has dangerously distorted U.S. policies. 
Here at home, we have allowed an imperial presidency to stretch the 
Constitution beyond recognition to justify the use of force, with little
 oversight from Congress. The government has at times defended tactics, 
such as torture, that are antithetical to American values. Washington 
has partnered with countries that share neither its goals nor its 
ideals. Counterterrorism efforts have
 often undermined other foreign policy priorities, such as reinforcing 
civilian governance, the rule of law, and human rights abroad. And in 
some cases, as with U.S. support for Saudi Arabia’s proxy war in Yemen, 
U.S. policies risk generating even more extremism.
As a member of the Senate Armed 
Services Committee, I have seen up close how 17 years of conflict have 
degraded equipment, sapped forces’ readiness, and forced the 
postponement of investment in critical military capabilities. It has 
distracted Washington from growing dangers in other parts of the world: a
 long-term struggle for power in Asia, a revanchist Russia that 
threatens Europe, and looming unrest in the Western Hemisphere, 
including a collapsing state in Venezuela that
 threatens to disrupt its neighbors. Would-be rivals, for their part, 
have watched and learned, and they are hard at work developing 
technologies and tactics to leapfrog the United States, investing 
heavily in such areas as robotics, cybersecurity, artificial 
intelligence, synthetic biology, and quantum computing. China is making 
massive bets in these and other areas in an effort to surpass the United
 States as a global technological power. Whether the United States will 
maintain its edge and harness these technologies for good remains an 
open question. 
It is the job of the U.S. 
government to do what is necessary to protect Americans, but it is long 
past time to start asking what truly makes the country safer—and what 
does not. Military efforts alone will never fully succeed at ending 
terrorism, because it is not possible to fight one’s way out of 
extremism. Some challenges, such as cyberattacks and nuclear 
proliferation, require much more than a strong military to combat. And 
other dangers, such as climate change and the spread of infectious 
diseases, cannot be solved through military action at all. The United 
States will spend more than $700 billion on
 defense in the 2018–19 fiscal year alone. That is more in real terms 
than was spent under President Ronald Reagan during the Cold War and 
more than all the rest of the country’s discretionary budget put 
together. But even as Washington spends more and more, U.S. military 
leaders point out that funding a muscular military without robust 
diplomacy, economic statecraft, support for civil society, and 
development assistance only hamstrings American national power and 
undercuts any military gains. 
As a candidate, Trump promised to
 bring U.S. troops home. As president, he has sent more troops into 
Afghanistan. On the campaign trail, Trump claimed he did not want to 
police the world. As president, he has expanded the United States’ 
military footprint around the globe, from doubling the number of U.S. 
air strikes in Somalia to establishing a drone base in Niger.
 As a candidate, Trump promised to rebuild the military, but as 
president, he has gutted the diplomatic corps on which the Pentagon 
relies. He promised to reduce the threat of nuclear proliferation, but 
he has undermined a successful nuclear deal with Iran, has failed to 
roll back the North Korean nuclear program, and seems intent on spurring
 a new nuclear arms race with Russia. 
These actions do not make 
Americans safer. It’s time to seriously review the country’s military 
commitments overseas, and that includes bringing U.S. troops home from 
Afghanistan and Iraq. They have fought with honor, but additional 
American blood spilled will not halt the violence or result in a 
functioning democratic government in either place. 
Sidebar: I especially like the turned corner remark -- since we've made it here for over 10 years now. It's a bit like when I saw Alexandria's Tweet responding to Claire McCaskill. As Keesha's long said of this site, "This is a private conversation taking place in a public sphere." So if Claire found my words worth using, more power to her.
But at some point, does Jake intend to explore what Elizabeth Warren's advocating for? Does anyone? Because this qualifies as something that matters.
McCrystal's itty-bitty feelings? They don't matter at all.
There are issues that actually matter and if the press could stop obsessing over Donald Trump's insults, they might have time to actually cover the news that matters. But gossip is so much cheaper to manufacture, right, CNN?
In other news, PRESS TV reports:
The US military has issued a report, admitting killing additional civilians since it started its military campaign in Iraq and Syria in 2014.
The report released on Sunday 
shows that over 1,100 civilians were inadvertently killed in airstrikes 
over the last four years, marking an increase of 15 people since 
November.
War monitoring groups, however, estimate that the raids have killed thousands of civilians.
“The Coalition conducted a total 
of 31,406 strikes between August 2014 and end of November 2018. During 
this period, based on information available, CJTF-OIR assesses at least 
1,139 civilians have been unintentionally killed by Coalition strikes 
since the start of Operation Inherent Resolve,” said the report. 
A new year. Before we get fully into it, check out these end of the year pieces by Stan, Ann and Rebecca:
And here we had the following 2018 pieces:
New content at THIRD:











 
