Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Ira Chernus is a real bitch

Ira Chernus is an idiot.

But then, most Palace guards are.

Ira wants to slam the questions around Benghazi. 

He can't be honest in his column but are we surprised.  He's just another in a long line of whores for Barack who, four years ago, cared about stopping war and closing Guantanamo.

But these days the little whore just writes pieces attacking anyone that might question Dear Leader.

It's a real shame the Soviet Union collapsed before Ira could visit, take notes and attempt to import the cult of personality so rampant there.

Ira writes, "No matter how hard editors try, though, some stories just don’t stick. But the Libya story stuck. It struck a chord somewhere in the hearts and minds of a lot of Americans. You have to wonder why."

Why did it stick?  Why do people still care?

Ira let me give you four reasons to start with.

Tyrone Woods, Glen Doherty, Sean Smith and Chris Stevens.

 It's important for me to note that with Ira because, despite his awful piece of writing being 2192 words, he never includes the names of Tyrone Woods, Glen Doherty or Sean Smith. 

Why is that?

Here's how the little bitch writes it, "Yet for weeks, the deaths of the U.S. Ambassador to Libya, J. Christopher Stevens, and three other Americans became the rallying cry of the campaign to unseat Barack Obama."

"And three other Americans"?  He's using approximately 2,200 words but can't name veterans Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty or the State Department's Sean Smith.

"And the other Americans" goes to why the little bitch can dismiss the story, it's not about people.  He renders three of the dead invisible.

He's a bitch and a liar and should rot in hell.




"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):

Tuesday, October 30, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, corruption continues, the State Dept wants nearly $150 million next year for Iraqi police training, the same media that served up Chris Stevens' mother as a voice for all refuses to acknowledge Tyrone Woods' father, and more.
 
 
 
On October 16, 2012, the Council of Ministers dismissed Central Bank of Iraq (CBI) Governor Sinan al-Shabibi, amid allegations of corruption leveled against him. This peremptory and constitutionally questionalbe move occured as an audit of the DBI's foreign currency auctions surfaced. The audit purportedly found that perhaps 80% of the $1 billion purchased at weekly CBI-managed auctions was tied to illegal transactions, with the funds subject to those transactions potentially lost abroad to money laundering. This development is symptomatic of a troubled year in Iraq, evidenced by increased corruption, resurgent violence, deepening ethnosectarian strains, growing apprehensions about the conflict in Syria, and widening divides within the coalition government.
 
 
 
 
So notes the latest quarterly report from the US Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction which was released today. It's findings will largely be ignored by the US press that focuses on the disaster and aftermath from Hurricane Sandy and the race of president. Since we mentioned al-Shabibi, let's go back to the report:
 
 
The former CBI Governor is credited by many analysts for maintaining the stability of the Iraqi dinar and for keeping inflation and interest rates low -- all viewed as crucially important prerequisites for the kind of well-managed economic growth Iraq hopes to achieve with its enormous oil wealth.
Political opponents of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, along with many banking and financial experts expressed immediate concern that the dismissal of Dr. al-Shabibi -- who is widely viewed as personally honest and professionally effective -- was an attempt to bring the CBI and its $63 billion in reserves under executive branch control. They pointed to the CoM's action as just one of among several steps the Prime Minister has taken to concentrate power within his office. For example, in 2010, al-Maliki won a legal case that effectively shifted control of independent agencies, such as the CBI, from the Council of Representatives (CoR) to the CoM. In an advisory opinion issued in February 2012, the Higher Judicial Council affirmed the earlier ruling, this time naming the CBI. The ruling drew criticsm at the time as a violation of the CBI's independence as guaranteed under the 2005 Iraqi Constitution.
 
 
 
September 19th, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing on Robert S. Beecroft's nomination to be the next US Ambassador to Iraq. He was confirmed the Saturday after the hearing. We covered the hearing in the September 19th and 20th snapshots. Senator John Kerry is the Committee Chair, Senator Richard Lugar is the Ranking Member. From the hearing:
 
 
 
Ranking Member Richard Lugar: Now you mentioned the relative security of our embassy and what have you. In the past, there's been considerable discussion, not only among diplomats but among the American public about the size in Iraq. There was discussion when this was first built -- a monumental structure, to say the least. I remember at one conference, I suggested in fact that this structure is so big that it might really serve as a unifying purpose for Middle Eastern countries -- a sort of united forum in which they would all come together -- or like the Hague or what have you. And some people found some interest in this even if the Iraqis did not necessarily nor could our government since its our embassy. But what is the future, simply of all of the real estate, all of the responsibilites? They're huge and this is going to be an ongoing debate, I'm certain, in the Congress as we come to budget problems in this country.
 
 
 
Charge d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft: Uhm, thank you very much. We-we recognize that this is an issue we started with an embassy that was staffed to address all possible contingencies, to follow up on the wonderful work that the US military had done in Iraq. Since that time, and again starting with Ambassador [James] Jeffrey, and it's something that I personally am continuing and have been very closely involved in and we will pursue -- We're calling it a "glide path exercise" where we're looking at what our objectives are and how we are resourced and staffed to meet those objectives. And what we've found is that we can prioritize and can focus our mission and will continue to do that on what we really need to accomplish. And as we do that, we're able to reduce personnel. Since the beginning of the year, we have reduced personnel by more than 2,000. We're now somewhere between 13,000 and 14,000 personnel in Iraq -- down from over 16. Facilities? We have given back in the last couple of days, facilites we had in Kirkuk, had an airbase up there, and facilities we had in Baghdad for police training center. And we have another facility in the next few days which we'll give back also in Baghdad. So we're reducing not just the number of personnel but we're reducing the number of pieces of property we occupy and use and we are very mindeful of the cost that it takes to support the mission in Iraq and I personally am dedicated to reducing those costs by again focusing on the mission on what we really need to achieve.
 
 
 
"Since the beginning of the year, we have reduced personnel by more than 2,000. We're now somewhere between 13,000 and 14,000 personnel in Iraq -- down from over 16." That's what he said. Turns out it wasnt true. From the report:

 
 
Although Ambassador Beecroft told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on September 19 that the size of the U.S. Mission in Iraq continued to decline this quarter, reporting to SIGIR on the personnel totals indicated some ambiguity about actual numbers. U.S. Embassy-Baghdad reported that 16,035 persons supported the U.S. Mission in Iraq at the end of the quarter, including 1,075 U.S. government civilian employees and 14,960 contractor personnel. The Embassy said the discrepancy was due to earlier underreporting of certain staff categories.
 
 
 
Numbers are important, accurate ones even more so -- especially when the US government continues to spend vast sums in Iraq. For example, the report notes that the State Dept wants $149.6 million to 'train' the Iraqi police in Fiscal Year 2013. $149.6 million for one of the most trained and re-trained forces? For a force that the 'acting' Minister of the Interior stated does not need US training?
 
 
The US government has that money to waste when sequestration is supposedly looming, a 'financial cliff'?
 
 
 
Do people realize how many years the US has spent training the Iraqi police force? How much money?
 
 
 
We covered the November 30th House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the MiddleEast and South Asia in the December 1st snapshot and noted that Ranking Member Gary Ackerman had several questions. He declared, "Number one, does the government of Iraq -- whose personnel we intend to train -- support the [police training] program? Interviews with senior Iaqi officials by the Special Inspector General show utter didain for the program. When the Iraqis sugest that we take our money and do things instead that are good for the United States. I think that might be a clue." The State Dept's Brooke Darby faced that Subcommittee. Ranking Member Gary Ackerman noted that the US had already spent 8 years training the Iraq police force and wanted Darby to answer as to whether it would take another 8 years before that training was complete? Her reply was, "I'm not prepared to put a time limit on it." She could and did talk up Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Interior Adnan al-Asadi as a great friend to the US government. But Ackerman and Subcommittee Chair Steve Chabot had already noted Adnan al-Asadi, but not by name. That's the Iraqi official, for example, Ackerman was referring to who made the suggestion "that we take our money and do things instead that are good for the United States." He made that remark to SIGIR Stuart Bowen.
 
 
 
8 years. 8 years of training last November. And for Fiscal Year 2013, the State Dept wants $149.6 million dollars to train yet another year?
 
 
 
From that hearing:
 
 
Ranking Member Gary Ackerman: When will they be willing to stand up without us?
 
 
Brooke Darby: I wish I could answer that question.
 
 
Ranking Member Gary Ackerman: Then why are we spending money if we don't have the answer?
 
[long pause]
 
 
Ranking Member Gary Ackerman: You know, this is turning into what happens after a bar mitzvah or a Jewish wedding. It's called "a Jewish goodbye." Everybody keeps saying goodbye but nobody leaves.
 
 
 
The State Dept still can't answer Ackerman's question: "When will they be willing to stand up without us?" They can't even answer his second question: "Then why are we spending money if we don't have the answer?"
 
 
 
If sequestration kicks in and Americans see the safety net further gutted, you damn well better believe that $149.6 million dollars going to yet another year of 'training' the Iraqi police is going to be an issue.
 
 
Now let's talk about the 'acting' Minister of the Interior. That's Deputy Minister Adnan al-Asadi. He is one of the Iraqis Ranking Member Ackerman referred to in the November 30th hearing, "Interviews with senior Iraqi officials by the Special Inspector Generals how utter disdain for the program. When the Iraqis suggest that we take our money and do things instead that are good for the United States, I think that might be a clue."
 
 
 
Ackerman's right and Adnan al-Asadi is who stated, to SIGIR, that the US government should spend the money in the US. In addition, in July, the Office of the Special Inspector General For Iraq Reconstruction issued [PDF format warning] "Iraq Police Development Program: Lack Of Iraqi Support And Security Problems Raise Questions About The Continued Viability Of The Program."
 
 
What did that report find?
 
 
 
That the US State Dept had wasted ("de facto waste") approximately $206 million in training the Iraqi police since they took over October 1, 2011. How so? They spent $98 million on a Bsara training facility and $108 million on a Baghdad training facility.
 
 
What happened to those US-owned facilities?
 
 
The US turned it over -- at no charge -- to Nouri's government. Why?
 
 
The June 29th snapshot covered the most recent hearing on this topic (the June 28th House Oversight and Government Reform's Subcommittee on National Security, Homeland Defense and Foreign Operations hearing). Jason Chaffetz is the Subcommittee Chair but he'd stepped out of the hearing and US House Rep Black Farenthold was Acting Chair. As he established in his line of questions (to the State Dept's Patrick Kennedy and Peter Verga and the State Dept's Acting IG Harold Geisel, DoD's Special Deputy IG for Southwest Asia Mickey McDermott, US GAO's Michael Courts and SIGIR's Stuart Bowen Jr.), the US government did not secure a lease for the land. Here's that exchange.
 
 
 
Acting Chair Blake Farenthold: Mr. Courts, Ambassador Kennedy and I got into a
discussion about the absence of or presence of land use agreements for the facilities
we have in Iraq do you have the current status for that information from your latest
report as to what facilities we do and do not have land use agreements for?
 
 
Michael Courts: What Ambassador Kennedy may have been referring to that for 13 of
the 14 facilities the Iraqis have acknowledged a presence through diplomatic notes.
But there's still only 5 of the 14 for which we actually have explicit title land use
agreements or leases.

 
Acting Chair Blake Farenthold: Alright so I'm not -- I'm not a diplomat. So what does
that mean? They say, "Oh, you can use it until we change our minds" -- is that
basically what those are? Or is there some force of law to those notes?

 
 
Michael Courts: Well the notes are definitely not the same thing as having an explicit agreement. And as a matter of fact, there's already been one case where the Iraqis
required us to reconfigure, downsize one of our sites. And that was at one of the
sites where we did not have a land use agreement and so obviously we're in a much
more vulnerable position when there's not an explicit agreement.
 
 
 
As Farenthold noted of the Baghdad Police College Annex, "It was intended to house the police department program -- a multi-billion dollar effort that's currently being downsized. And as a result of the State Dept's failure to secure land use rights, the entire facility is being turned over to the Iraqis at no cost. The GAO reports Mission Iraq has land use agreements or leases for only 5 out of all of the sites that it operates." That number has increased by only one since that hearing.
 
 
 
This is tax payer money being wasted at a time when the US government is supposedly in the midst of a fiscal crisis. These two facilities, worth approximately $206 million were turned over -- free of charge -- because the State Dept failed to secure land-lease agreements.
 
 
 
In other words, you could say: The US government built it, but it didn't own it.
 
 
Having wasted that amount of money, you might think the State Dept would stop trying to spend hundreds of millions in Iraq. And yet they want $149.6 million to spend in the next fiscal year just on Iraqi police.
 
 
And not a penny should be spent on this program. The Ministry of the Interior is over the police. But the Ministry has no minister. Adnan al-Asadi is the Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Interior. An actual minister would have certain rights and powers and that would give him or her independence. Adnan al-Asadi is an 'acting minister' -- a qualification that doesn't exist in the Iraqi Constitution.
 
 
 
The Constitution requires Ministers be nominated and that the Parliament vote in favor of confirming them. Once that happens, a person has their position until the term expires, they resign or the Parliament removes them. Nouri can't remove them.
 
 
So if al-Asadi were Minister of the Interior, that's who the US would be interacting with on this program. Instead, they're interacting with the 'acting' minister who has no job protection and is kicked to the curb the second he displeases Nouri al-Maliki. al-Asadi is a puppet allowing Nouri to control the Ministry of the Interior.
 
 
Back in July, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observed, "Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has struggled to forge a lasting power-sharing agreement and has yet to fill key Cabinet positions, including the ministers of defense, interior and national security, while his backers have also shown signs of wobbling support." He's refused to name nominees and have them go before Parliament. This is a power grab. By January 2011, Iraqiya (the political slate that came in first in the March 2010 parliamentary elections, ahead of Nouri's State of Law) was calling it a power grab but the (US and European) press was insisting that it was only a matter of weeks before Nouri named nominees. We're closing in 2013 and he's still never named nominees. It was a power grab. It is a continuing power grab. The Parliament declared last week that they would take up this new 'classification' of 'acting' ministers.
 
 
 
The State Dept wants to waste more US tax dollars training people who work for a ministry that Nouri refuses to find a head for. That is not a recipe for success. It has not been a recipe for success.
 
 
The State Dept needs to be called before the Senate to answer for exactly what they're doing. As the SIGIR has repeatedly noted, they refuse to inform the Inspector General what they are doing in Iraq. This is on Hillary. She's Secretary of State. No, she doesn't have any power over Iraq and if she wants to go public with that information I will gladly back her up on that point. But as long as she's keeping her mouth shut and serving as Secretary of State, this is on her. And when she departs, it needs to be noted that while she was Secretary of State, hundreds of millions were wasted in Iraq and the State Dept refused to submit to Congressionally mandated oversight. Congress created the SIGIR.
 
 
Not only has the State Dept ignored the SIGIR, they have refused to answer questions from the Congress -- in writing or in hearings -- and they've provided false information to Congress (also known as lying). That's under Hillary Clinton's leadership unless she wants to talk about how Barack assigned Iraq elsewhere. Unless she wants to get honest about that, she needs to face a storm of criticism over the lost hundreds of millions by the State Dept while she was serving as Secretary of State. I like Hillary but my liking her doesn't bring back that money or prevent the loss of further millions.
 
 
 
While US infrastructure crumbles and citizens are threatened with sequestration kicking in automatcially, grasp that page 6 of the report notes the US government has "obligated $27.19 billion" on security training, equipment and buildings.
 
 
 
We'll cover other aspects of the report throughout the week. But the money issue does matter. This isn't a hundred dollars wasted. This is hundreds of millions wasted. And the State Dept still refuses to submit to oversight but continues to argue that they deserve control of hundreds of millions of more tax payer dollars to do something with in Iraq -- something which they can't clearly define and something that, for some reason, can't stand up to transperancy and sunlight. If you're new to sequestration and the 'fiscal cliff," Diane Rehm devoted this hour of Monday's program -- The Diane Rehm Show (NPR) to explaining the issues and discussing them with guests Ruth Marcus (Washington Post), Alice Rivlin (Brookings) and David Wessel (Wall Street Journal) as well as taking calls from her audience. The link is audio but I'm told there is a transcript that will be going up.
 
 
 
 
 
The report doesn't paint a good picture of Nouri's Iraq.  Nor do other articles today.
 
 
At The Huffington Post, Wael al-Sallami offers his take on Iraq which includes:


 
The fact of the matter is that the militias were using the US troops as an excuse to perform acts of terrorism and have targeted Iraqi civilians instead on so many occasions. Therefore, the departure of the US troops didn't even reduce those acts, in fact, it has increased them simply for the lack of a strong military presence in the country. No, the Iraqi army does not qualify as "strong military presence."
 
 
 
 
 
 
By concentrating evermore power into his own hands, and reserving positions of responsibility in Baghdad exclusively for his loyalists, the prime minister is building up fierce resentments, and the results cannot be good.
The bitter truth is that such policies fail to even benefit Mr Al Maliki's own constituencies. The rash of shootings and bombings over the Eid weekend predominantly targeted Shia communities. Al Qaeda in Iraq, and other radical Sunni groups, appear to be resurgent. But the security forces that are now dominated by Shia loyalists cannot take the fight to the militants without turning it into a sectarian war - "justice" in such a struggle is a subjective value.
 
 
 
But the security forces non-stop arrests of Sunnis are already fueling another sectarian war. Alsumaria notes 17 were arrested for 'terrorism' just south of Baghdad.
 
 
Nussaibah Younis' "Time to Get Tough on Iraq" (New York Times) offers a number of important observations including:
 


 
Even apart from the Syrian crisis, the United States should be getting tough on the Maliki regime to prevent Iraq's descent into authoritarianism. Although Prime Minister Maliki's first term had its successes, including the "Charge of the Knights" attack against Shiite militias in Basra in 2008, Prime Minister Maliki has become increasingly consumed by his own dictatorial ambitions. And a number of his actions have heightened sectarian tensions in Iraq. He cut a deal with the extremist Shiite party led by Moktada al-Sadr. He reneged on a promise to meaningfully include the Sunni-dominated Iraqiya list in government. He presided over what's being seen as a witch hunt against leading Sunni politicians, culminating in the sentencing to death in absentia of Iraq's vice president, Tariq al-Hashemi.
In addition, Mr. Maliki's government is plagued by incompetence, corruption and a contempt for human rights; ordinary citizens are fast losing confidence in the power of the democratic system. Mr. Maliki has further undermined Iraq's independent institutions, such as the electoral commission and the Iraqi central bank, by bringing them under his direct custodianship. And, most dangerously of all, he is concentrating power over Iraq's entire security apparatus in his hands by refusing to appoint permanent ministers to lead the Ministry of Defense, Ministry of the Interior and National Security Council.
 
 
 
And power grabs are no longer enough for Nouri, apparently. As we noted yesterday, he wants a majority government -- just as US General Ray Odierno warned in 2010 but was dismissed and ignored because the White House thought they were better off listening to US Ambassador to Iraq and professional and willful idiot Chris Hill. A majority government is one that shuts out the other segments of Iraq. "White" Iraqiya -- I doubt they ever grapsed how racist that is -- made some stupid statements yesterday that some idiots repeated as though they were statements demanding Iraq be seen as an independent country.
 
 
 
If you're stupid and you love it, stay stupid. But stop inflicting it on the rest of us. White Iraqiya is a splinter group that did not get their way and specifically holds grudges against Saleh al-Mutlaq and Ayad Allawi who remain with Iraqiya. White Iraq is a tiny splinter group that makes a lot of noise but hasn't accomplished anything in two years of tantrums.  They have gotten closer to Nouri and they may be among the ones getting close to Nouri.   Ouday Hatem (Al-Monitor) reports:
 
 
 
Political sources told Al-Hayat that Maliki's coalition had reached a preliminary agreement with a number of blocs — some of which are included in the Iraqiya List — to form a majority government.
The sources revealed that "among these blocs is the Unity Alliance of Iraq, led by Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha, and some members of parliament from the Kirkuk, Mosul, Anbar and Saladin provinces."
The sources explained that "the blocs within the National Alliance — except for the Al-Ahrar bloc, which represents the Sadrist Movement in parliament — are supporting this political step."
The sources confirmed that "the prime minister seeks to divide the Iraqiya List and the Sunnis by including tribal leaders and former Baathists, and by re-enrolling all former army officers."

 
Let's move over to the US where Bob Munson disagrees with the Ventura County Star's decision to endorse Barack Obama's re-election bid:
 
 
 
Saying President Obama got us out of Iraq is like saying it stopped raining after superstorm Sandy moved on.
The death and destruction in Iraq for three years under Obama was unnecessary. The Iraqis hated us. Our last troops snuck out under the cover of darkness no different than the Nazis leaving Paris.
Obama could have quit Iraq the day after inauguration, and Iraq would have been no different today.
 
 
 
And that is so very true. Had he done that, he wouldn't have sent the message to the Iraqi people that democracy and voting don't matter. When you back Nouri, as the White House did in 2010, over the one who got the most votes, you're telling the Iraqi people -- who are experiencing what's being called "democracy" for the first time -- that voting and democracy don't matter and that elections can be overturned on a whim. That's not a message that any US service member should have died for. Shame on the White House.
 
 
Investor's Business Daily's editorial board has issues with Barack's actions regarding the September 11, 2012 attack on the Benghazi Consulate and on what happened after as well as questions for the media:
 
 
 

As the father of a former Navy SEAL slain at Benghazi wonders why our secretary of state lied to him, we wonder why our CIA director abetted a lie that contradicted counterterrorism officials and the FBI.
During the 2004 presidential campaign, a media eager to deny George W. Bush a second term made Cindy Sheehan, who lost a son in Iraq, a national heroine and reported virtually her every word and move.
"Cindy Sheehan," gushed NBC News, "is single-handedly bringing the Iraq debate to Mr. Bush's doorstep."
But nobody in a mainstream media eager to see President Obama get a second term is bringing the Benghazi debate to the White House doorstep.

 
 
 
First, we applauded Cindy then and we applaud her today. The media and, sadly, a large number of the left don't want to hear the words "Cindy Sheehan" because they can't stand the fact that this woman who is allergic to war (to put it mildly) won't fall silent so Barack can pursue his bloody wars in an environment where no one calls him out. Second, take up with the likes of Jude Nagurney Camwell and other 'enforcers' who lied online back then. We didn't lie here and we called out Jude and the other liars who kept saying 'she's not opposed to war, she just wants answers.' Those were lies. And we walked away from those liars.
 
 
 
But Cindy was falsely portrayed by the media -- not by herself -- as someone who didn't really want to speak on the war or anything like that, she was just a sad mother who wanted answers. That's not who Cindy was or who she is. And she never pretended that this media lie was her. But that is why she got the media attention. 'She's non-political!'
 
 
Tyrone Wood's was one of the four Americans killed in Benghazi Septemeber 11th (the other three were Glen Doherty, Sean Smith and Chris Stevens). The argument IBD's editorial board should be making is why does Chris Stevens' mother get to be everywhere and presented as a spokesperson for all four. She clearly does not represent Pat Smith (Sean's mother). She also doesn't represent Charles Woods (Tyrone's father). That's your argument if you want to be effective: You, the media, have allowed one woman to be the face of four Americans. Her views are not the only view and you have silenced and refused to hear the other parents involved. We do not have a class based society in the US and revolted against the British empire for many reasons including to reject a caste system. So why is the media pretending that Chris Stevens is somehow more important than the other three Americans because he was an ambassador?
 
 
Tyrone and Glen were veterans. They apparently were veterans who didn't just risk their lives to try to save lives on September 11th, they gave their lives to try to save lives on September 11th. How dare the media refuse to allow all the parents to speak and instead subject us to the pratteling -- yeah, I'm going there again -- ramblings of Chris Stevens' apethetic and uninformed mother and father.
 
 
Even when no other parents were speaking out publicly -- check our archives -- I made clear that the Stevens did not speak for all the parents. I also made clear that their call for this topic not to be discussed this way or that was b.s. because it was a terrorist attack. If Chris Stevens had taken his own life and his family said, "We just want him to be in peace"? Fine. That's a private matter.
 
 
 
This was a terrorist attack on Americans -- not people who happened to be Americans but on people because they were Americans. That makes it a national issue -- an international one. And the Stevens need to take their hurt and pain somewhere private if they don't like the way the deaths are discussed.
 
 
And the media needs to stop being so damn biased.
 
 
They are biased on this issue. There's no denying it. In fact, let me go to Ruth last night:
 
 
In addition to ignoring the details, the media has 2 other tricks they are playing right now.
1) Ridicule those asking questions.

2) Imply that only conservatives are demanding answers.

The second one bothers me the most.
And not just because I am too far left to be a centrist, let alone a conservative. The main reason it bothers me is that the media knows if they play that false card, half the readers will stop reading right away. They will have no interest in the topic. They will tell themselves, "Oh, this is just what conservatives are saying. This is a conservative talking point."
It is really amazing how those of us on the left who are asking questions are ignored in the media's attempt to clamp down on consumer interest in this story.
 
 
 
Ruth is 100% right.
 
 
 
That's part of the attempt to bury the story: To assert falsely that only the right-wing cares about it. That signals to people who aren't right-wing that they shouldn't care.
 
 
They should care. Four Americans are dead. Ruth's left-wing. I am left-wing.
 
 
This isn't about right or left -- although those who want to silence the discussion keep insisting otherwise. This is about an attack on four Americans. This is about an administration which refuses to answer questions.
 
 
Pretend for a moment that it's October 30, 2001 and it's the Bush administration refusing to call September 11, 2001 a terrorist attack.
 
 
We've dealt with what Barack said in the Rose Garden. He said in passing and it may not have referred to that day. Why was it in there? To cover his own ass. Which would indicate that a cover up is taking place. You don't do cover-your-own-ass from September 12th forward unless you have something to hide.
 
 
Questions are being asked and they need to be asked. Charles Wood has called out Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden. Charles Wood has every right to be heard and shame on anyone in the supposed news industry who won't report what Wood is saying. It doesn't require 'belief' or 'support.' It only requires that you are in the news business. If you are, the parent of an American killed in a terrorist attack now calling out the President of the United States is what is known as "news."
 
 
NewsBusters is a media watchdog from the right. They occassionally send things to the public account. If it has to do with what we're talking about, we will note them. Tom Blumer wrote about what Charles Wood was saying over the weekend:
 
 
"When he finally came over to where we were, I could tell that he was rather conflicted, a person who was not at peace with himself," Woods said. "Shaking hands with him, quite frankly, was like shaking hands with a dead fish. His face was pointed towards me but he would not look me in the eye, his eyes were over my shoulder."
"I could tell that he was not sorry," he added. "He had no remorse."
Beck said he wanted to give the president "the benefit of the doubt," and asked Woods how he could be sure that Obama wasn't just uncomfortable or nervous during their conversation. Woods said it was Obama's "demeanor."

 
 
The right-wing that's objecting to differing treatment for Cindy Sheehan and Charles Wood is missing the point that Cindy was presented as just a blank,not too smart, hurting mother who wanted answers and didn't know a thing about politics or have a thought about war. That's not Cindy, she's very smart. But that's what the media presented and why they kept going to her before they couldn't take the fact that she was anti-war and was not going to be silent about that fact. If anyone wants Charles Wood to get the media attention he deserves, the answer is to point out that the parents of Chris Stevens were presented by the media as the voice of the four. And that's not fair nor is it accurate. The media needs to fix their narrative and the way to do that is to include the other parents involved.
 
 
 
On other national issues, there is the US presidential election. Samantha Goldman (World Can't Wait) offers some hard truths in the midst of campaign spin season:
 
 
 
In reality however there is no option within the electoral process for women. Our basic rights to control our bodies, or not to be blamed and shamed is not up for a vote. Despite what Obama supporters would like us to believe, these past four years have been a horror and have shown a dangerous trajectory. It is only through this overall context of the War on Women that the impact of these comments becomes starkly clear. State legislation aimed at limiting birth control and abortion has been proposed and enacted at unprecedented rates. The legislation that has passed includes but is not limited to: state sanctioned rape through vaginal ultrasounds, anti-science mandatory counseling prior to abortion, increased waiting periods for abortion, and gestational limitations. An analysis by the Guttmacher Institute found that 2011 saw the most restrictions on abortions passed through state legislatures ever: 135 anti-women laws were enacted.

 
 
 
 

Monday, October 29, 2012

666 Park Avenue

Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Campaigning" went up last night.



Campaigning

That perfectly captures the Obama re-election effort.  'Haven't done what I should have for the last four years but give me four more anyway."  Barack doesn't deserve to be re-elected.


"Blue Skies For Romney As Sandy Slams Into Obama" (Hillary Is 44):
Let’s be crude and speculate on which candidate that storm/hurricane/depression called Sandy hurts the most. The question to ask is “Who needs to campaign the most this week in order to change the trajectory we are on headed to election day?
Barack Obama will posture and attempt to utilize Sandy to his advantage. Obama will stop golfing and ask for a book on how to at least appear presidential. No doubt the news that is breaking: Department of Labor might delay Friday jobs report until after the election is another attempt by Obama to bamboozle and distract American voters from the economy and jobs.
We don’t think Obama’s latest bamboozlements will flim-flam anyone. American voters are onto the Chicago game of smear, fear, distract, delay, defame, destroy, deny, deflect – and keep one step ahead of the cops banging on the door.
Trapped in the White House bunker, during these crucial last days, Obama has to be worried sick. According to the latest polls Mitt Romney is ahead in the states he needs to win. Critical must win states such as Florida, North Carolina, Virginia appear to be increasingly a lock for Romney. Obama needed to be able to campaign in these states but now for politically correct propriety Obama finds himself forced to take flights to Florida with no discernible purpose or campaign events on his golf/work schedule. A campaign appearance by Obama in super must win Green Bay, Wisconsin has also been cancelled.


I hope they're right.  This morning, I felt this sudden elation as I realized Barack might be out of office shortly.  Then I thought, "No, don't expect it.  If you expect it, it won't happen." 

But he needs to go and we need a real Democrat who will stand up to Wall Street and who will fight for the safety net, not gut it. 


"666 Park Avenue" airs Sundays on ABC during the last hour of prime time.  What a great episode.  This was the second great episode in a row and I really hope this is a sign that it's picking up the pace.

It was Halloween at the Drake, the creepy place they all live.  Olivia (Vanessa Williams) needs help decorating the lobby but Jane's off to see Henry tape a TV interview.  Olivia and Gavin own the building, are married and have a daughter who died.  Jane and Henry are an unmarried couple who are managers of the Drake. 

Walking outside, Gavin sees Olivia nearly run down by an SUV.  She can't believe someone could drive so recklessly (really? after her drive with Jane when she nearly ran into a concrete barrier the way her daughter did?).  As Gavin hugs her, he gets not one but two texts on his phone.  It's from the driver of the SUV.  It was no accident.  The person was aiming for Olivia. 

The other young couple in the building (Jane and Henry are the first) are Brian and Louise.  (Brian's the one my daughter has declared is her boyfriend.)  Brian walks in to find Todd Scott (Enrique Muciano in the character's first appearance) with his hands on Louise.  It's okay, he's Dr. Todd Scott.  And Louise has those rib pains.

From Alexis (who tells Brian she's going to stop coming on to him -- a sure sign that she's going to continue to try to snare him), Brian learns that Louise didn't just meet Todd. 

Gavin is in his penthouse and opening the safe.  He makes Tony (doorman) turn around while he opens it.  There's an ornate wooden box, it looks red.  That's the main thing Gavin's checking on.  He tells Tony he needs him to protect the most important thing to Gavin, Olivia.  Don't let her out of sight at the party.

Olivia's sent over costumes for Henry -- cowboy -- and Jane -- Tippi Hendren in "The Birds."  Jane wanted to go as a 'devil.'  That wasn't a devil costume.  It was that red dress I believe we've seen once before and a red mask -- mask like Robin of Batman and Robin with tassles.  Jane can kid herself but that wasn't a Halloween costume.  When Peter spills a drink on her, she runs upstairs to change into that 'bad' costume she wanted to wear to start with.

Alexis makes out with Todd.  On the stairwell, I think.  The main reason?  So she can steal his cell phone.  While they're making out, she lifts it without him noticing and drops it into her left pantyhose.  I'm not joking.

Louise is freaking out at the party.  Maybe because her costume makes her look really bad?  Meanwhile, Brian's dressed as a gladiator and it's hard not to take your eyes off his metal 'nipples.'  (Watch, you'll see what I mean.)  Todd tells Louise they'll go upstairs and he'll get her some more pills.  Brian sees this and is already worried (despite, when Louise jokes that she's had a hot affair with Todd and is now passing him off to Alexis, pretending he knows Louise would never cheat).

Remember Peter who bumped into Jane?  You better.

Jane changes and is ready to leave when the ghost girl appears.  Before she appears to Jane, we see ghost girl in a flashback.  Peter has killed a woman.  The woman drops to the floor, bleeding, by a bed.  The girl (not yet a ghost) is under it.  The woman is her mother.  She hands her a necklace and tells her to keep it in the family.

If she did, then she's Jane's grandmother.  This is the necklace Jane is always wearing.

So ghost girl tells Jane that she (Jane) let her father loose.  He was the thing in the suitcase. 

Jane opens the suitcase.  It's empty but there's a story about Peter and how he killed his family.

Then there's Peter.  Coming to kill her.

She runs out of the apartment screaming.

A man tries to help her.  Peter kills him with an axe.

Jane runs through floors of the Drake but doesn't go down to the bottom.  In fairness to her, the electricity has gone out.  That really doesn't excuse her not running full blast down the stairs.

With the lights out, Brian's more jealous.  Alexis feeds into it.  She waits until Brian leaves the party to go upstairs looking for Louise (who is trapped in an elevator with Scott).  Using Scott's phone, she texts Louise with a meet-me-upstairs message.

Henry is worried about Jane.  He and Samantha (the young teenager who was stealing things but returned them) go upstairs to look for her.  They find a scene of a struggle in Henry and Jane's apartment.  They go off in search of her.  Jane escapes Peter at one point in a Dumb Waiter. Why did she go up instead of lowering herself to the ground floor where the party and security was?

She's now on the 5th floor.  She calls Henry and asks him to save her.  He tells Samantha to call the cops and goes running off.

Peter somehow knows Jane's in that apartment.  He busts in and is about to kill her with the axe (she has tried to defend herself with a pair of scissors -- pointed the wrong way -- and a box cutter -- or she's held these objects as if holding them means she's trying to defend herself).  He slams the axe towards her but it hits the walls.  He's about to kill her when the birds come out of the wall.  They overwhelm and 'kill' him.  (Remember when Jane spent forever trying to get those birds killed by an exterminator because they were in the walls?  Bet she's glad they're in the walls now.)

Henry arrives after everything's calm.  He's like the police, isn't he?

The police can't find a dead body of Peter or the man who tried to help Jane.  (Both the axe and the man who tried to help are 'absorbed' into the carpeted floor.)

Brian did find Louise's phone in their apartment.  And sees a message from Todd Scott.

Gavin notices that Olivia's no where to be found.  Where is she?

He tells Tony to look upstairs for her.

Tony goes in and notices movement.  A man in a gas mask.

Gavin goes up and finds Tony nearly hanged to death.  He grabs a chair for Tony to stand on so they can take the knoose off.  I still don't understand how the gas mask man hanged Tony.  He's also taken the box from the safe.  Gavin will tell him on the phone that the theft hurts him (Gavin) and the theif.

Gavin sees Olivia at last.  He rushes to her.  She's been gassed by the man in the mask.  She's a little out of it but otherwise fine.

Here's the thing.  Gavin does love her.  And is worried.  I started wondering if that box has some sort of life force?  Like did it bring Olivia back to life or does it keep her alive?

I don't know.

But I do know that in the elevator, Todd confronted Louise and she confessed she was a "club kid" and had a drug problem.  He argues it's still ongoing (that's why she wants the pills -- she doesn't have rib pain).  I do know that Todd, after that, begins trying to make out with Louise in the elevator.  She can't believe he's kissed her and tells him off.

They emerge from the now working elevator.  Brian sees them and punches out Todd.  Louise tries to talk to him as he walks off but Alexis lies and says he's drunk and she should just let him go.

It was a brilliant episode.  Even Jane's dopey damsel in distress worked.


"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):

Monday, October 29, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Dan Murphy uses Iraqi children to focus on himself, the Islamic State of Iraq claims credit for the wave of violence that hit Iraq over the weekend, the political stalemate continues, Law & Disorder Radio addresses torture, and more.
 
Dan Murphy (Christian Science Monitor) has a ridiculous article.  Let's start there.  Murphy's never really sure if he's a reporter or a columnist -- so imagine the reader's confusion.  In his latest nonsense (yes, he's topped last week already), he reveals just how lame his kind is.  He's finally discovered the Falluja issue.   If, like him, you're late to the party, dropping back to October 14th:
 
 
The big story for Iraq today is the birth defects.  A new study by the Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology is getting attention from the press.  The war -- specifically the weapons -- contaminated Iraq and led to a skyrocketing in the number of birth defects.  Press TV explains:

Between 2007 and 2010 in F[a]llujah, over half of all the surveyed babies were born with birth defects. Before the US-led invasion of Iraq, the figure was one in 10.In Basrah's Maternity Hospital, over 20 babies out of 1000 were born with defects in 2003, which makes the figure 17 times higher than it was in the previous decade.
 
 
There's more and the October 15th snapshot goes through some of the weapons used to turn Falluja into a toxic dump.  Along with Press TV, others covering it back then included
Al Arabiya, RT, and  Sarah Morrison (Independent of London) notes: -- and RT's story was carried by a number out outlets and Morrison's report was carried by even more including a major paper in every European country.
 
So the first problem is Dan Murphy wants to inform, "As David Issenberg, whose post earlier this month brought the study to my attention, summarizes: [. . .]"  This is what Dan Murphy meant to link to and Isenberg wrote it October 22nd.  (And I would normally be nicer about this link issue but I'm not in the damn mood and I'll explain why shortly -- but let's point it out, Murphy can't even do a link correctly?).  October 22nd?  Eight days after the foreign press has started covering the latest findings? 
 
Again, what is Dan Murphy?  Is he reporter, is he columnist?  He certainly has a lot of opinions for someone allegedly reporting.  Biased opinions one could accurately argue that should lead to other people being assigned to topics.  For example, when you say there's nothing to see here about an ongoing investgiation, your ass needs to be pulled from any coverage of that assignment. Readers no longer suspect you're slanting coverage, they now know you are.  Murphy wrote a ridiculous report or column or whatever the hell it was on Friday. 
 
But this tops it because Murphy's supposed to be 'foreign coverage' of the non-freelance set at the Christian Science Monitor.  If you're covering foreign countries for the Monitor and doing it from the United States, I think most people would assume you'd follow foreign coverage.  But while the Falluja and Basra birth defect story was getting massive foreign press coverage from outlets in England, Iran, Iraq, Russia, Ireland, Australia, Austria, Japan and France, the story never popped up on Murphy's radar.  It took a US site called Public Intelligence Blog writing about it eight days after the world press had given it saturation coverage for Dan Murphy to become aware of it.
 
That's sad and that's disturbing.
 
On Thursday, he insisted there was nothing to see in the Benghazi attack.  So I guess Senator Dianne Feinstein can call off her Committee's November 15th closed hearing?  That was the stupidest comment to make because he's covered the topic for the Monitor.  He can't cover it now.  His bias was clear in that article which basically read: "Republicans are crazy! I love Barack."  That's why the Christian Science Monitor is on it's last legs, by the way.  The fact that this attitude, this bias, was evident for four years now.  That's not how the Monitor made its name.  But it is how the Monitor digs its grave.
 
 
Before we can get to the news of the children, we have to wade through garbage from Murphy.  Does he (wrongly) think that he's the most important element of the story?  Or that people give a damn about him?  Instead of a focus on the children of Iraq, we get self-focused crap like this:
 
As a reporter, perhaps to my shame, I pushed aside pursuit of stories about cancer clusters or surges in childhood illness, since the reality of people's suspicions was unknowable, absent scientific study.
 
 
You're an idiot, Dan Murphy, you always were.  You've repeatedly failed to be a reporter and show skepticism instead grabbing onto anything that a White House would feed you.  Let's remember, it was Knight Ridder Newspapers, not the Christiain Science Monitor, that offered reports debunking the White House claims about Iraq in 2002 and 2003.  There's a reason for that.  Today Dan Murphy worships Barack.  Prior to that, he worshipped Bush.  (Even today, Murphy can't admit that Bush lied about Iraq.  This despite Ambassador Joseph Wilson's disproving the Niger yellow cake assertion before it ever made it out of Bush's lips publicly -- this despite the witch hunt against Wilson's wife, CIA agent Valerie Plame).  Reporters shouldn't worship any politician.  Or, if they prefer, reporters shouldn't worship any office.
 
Murphy can get up-close-and-personal about himself but where in his writing are Iraqi children ever anything but a statistic?  And not even illuminating statistics at that. 
 
October 14th, we were covering the latest findings.  15 days later, Dan Murphy finally finds the story and has not one damn thing to offer other than statements about himself?
 
 
We offered:
 
The study finds that, of central nervous system defects, the most common since the start of the Iraq War has been anencephaly. The Center for Disease Control explains, "Anencephaly is a serious birth defect in which a baby is born without parts of the brain and skull. It is a type of neural tube defect (NTD). These are birth defects that happen during the first month of pregnancy, usually before a woman knows she is pregnant. As the neural tube forms and closes, it helps form the baby's brain and skull (upper part of the neural tube), spinal cord, and back bones (lower part of the neural tube). Anencephaly happens if the upper part of the neural tube does not close all the way. This often results in a baby being born without the front part of the brain (forebrain) and the thinking and coordinating part of the brain (cerebrum). The remaining parts of the brain are often not covered by bone or skin. Unfortunately, almost all babies born with anencephaly will die shortly after birth." It is also known as an ONTD -- Open Neural Tube defect. St. Jude's Medical Center provides this means of reference, "Anencephaly and spina bifida are the most common types of ONTD, while encephalocele (in which there is a protrusion of the brain or its covering through the skull) is much rarer. Anencephaly occurs when the neural tube failes to close at the base of the skull, while spina bifida occurs when the neural tube fails to close somewhere along the spine."
 
I didn't realize that just typing "birth defect" would suffice.  That's what Dan Murphy must believe judging by his bad piece.  Today I was introduced to a woman who is a former Christian
Science Monitor-er by a friend (male) who is always good about calling out sexism.  And she explained how awful her time at the paper was.  How there was no interest in 'soft' stories and 'soft' was anything to do with women.  She spoke at length about the hypocrisy of the paper's attempts this year to run with the 'war on women' Obama campaign spin considering how women and issues directly effecting women were treated. 
 
And I'm not at all surprised.  In 2006, I had a friend working for the paper and I said, "You are infantalizing Jill Carroll, you are destroying her.  You need to stop this."  Did they?  Hell no.  Jill Carroll, for those who don't know, was a reporter in Iraq, un-embedded, who was kidnapped.  That the Christian Science Monitor worked towards her release (which does mean cash changed hands) did not mean they owned Jill.  I have never before or since seen a news publication attempt to turn a reporter into "poor, pathetic, sad case."  But that's what the Monitor did to Jill.  Anthony Shadid gets kidnapped in Libya.  He survives it and it's seen as a badge of honor.  The Monitor turns Jill Carroll into "the naiton's most neediest cause."  It was embarrassing and it was humiliating.  It's no wonder she quit journalism after the way the Monitor portrayed her and the stories they made her co-write about her kidnapping.  Co-write.  She wasn't even 'strong' enough to write them by herself, in the paper's opinion.
 
In reality, not one damn word should have been written by her.  She'd just been released.  There was no reason -- other than to use her for circulation -- for her byline to be appearing.  They took a reporter who was kidnapped and held for months and portrayed her as a tragic figure and made her co-write the stories.  That's not healthy.  It did not help her in the least.
 
But it flew because they wanted to sell papers and because that's how they see women.
 
Dan Murphy probably thinks he did something wonderful today, he mentioned "birth defects."  He didn't report on them, he didn't detail them.  He didn't accomplish anything.  The takeaway from the column or report or whatever the hell that was is all about him.
 
Not once does he detail a birth defect.  In this country, there are support groups for NTD and ONTD babies.  They don't live a long childhood, the children born with these conditions.  But there are support groups and many mothers and fathers talk about these children as a blessing and how the months they had with these children have meaning and tremendous value.  I'm sure Iraqi parents feel the same about their children.  But they also have a decaying health care system -- over 100 nurses were brought in from India in the last weeks alone because they have a nursing shortage in Iraq as a result of the "brain drain" which saw doctors, nurses and other professionals leave the country in high numbers.  And they are still a country in the midst of a war.  A special needs child is a blessing but it is a lot easier to have a special needs child when you have access to basic health care.  Though Iraqis have a health care system that is supposed to guarantee care for all, the reality is that the wars and the US sanctions and the brain drain has left Iraq without the needed professionals, the needed equipment and the needed medical supplies.
 
You have a baby you hold in your arms whose skull has not formed and whose skull will never form.  Your concern is making sure that your precious child's limited days are days of comfort and that's not going to be easy or maybe even possible in a country with an ongoing war and a medical system barely held together by band aids and tape.
 
Dan Murphy makes sure you know about him.  He's just not so good about letting you know about the Iraqi children who were born with these birth defects or the parents they're born to.
 
I'm confused, what was the story he was supposed to be writing about -- Dan Murphy or Iraqi children?
 
But hey, the story broke October 14th.  He's only had 15 days to come up with something worth writing, right?
 
Yesterday, Truthout ran Julia Kallas article for IPS about the same topic Dan Murphy covers -- well about the Iraqi children, not about Dan Muphy's own thoughts and writing about himself.  And Kallas interviewed the University of Michigan's School of Public Health's Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, an environmental toxicologist and the lead author of the latest findings.  Excerpt.
 
Q: How is the local health care system coping with an emergency like this? And how can contamination management and medical care procedures be provided in these areas?
 
A: I know that the hospitals in the two cities that we studied are overstretched and as far as that is a concern there are ways to help these hospitals. We need to organise doctors, scientists and people who are professionals in this area to help clean up. Organise them, bring them to these two cities and get them to start working. However, all of that requires financial and other kinds of support. Financial and political support together will help to make that happen.
 
 
Somehow she managed to talk about needs without ever once exploring Dan Murphy's need to interject himself into the story, to put the spotlight on himself.  It's a way of providing coverage that Murphy might want to try emulating.  David Kenner (Foreign Policy) explains today:
 
These figures are wildly out of proportion to the prevalence of birth defects elsewhere in the world. Hydrocephalus, a build up of fluid in the brain, is reported in 0.6 infants per 1,000 live births in California. In Basra, reported cases of hydrocephalus occurred six times more frequently. Neural tube defects (NTDs), brain and spinal cord conditions, are reported in one infant per 1,000 live births in the United States. In Basra, it is 12 per 1,000 live births, "the highest ever reported."
 
Again, I know it's amazing, but Kenner manages to focus on the Iraqi children.  Again, Dan Murphy should attempt to emulate this manner of providing coverage.
 
 
 
Turning to violence, Prensa Latina observes, "With Monday's sunrise, Iraqis viewed the desolate landscape left by the weekend bombing that killed 61 people, according to official reports." 
Fars News Agency reports, "Al-Qaeda's front group in Iraq claimed responsibility on Monday for a series of shootings and bombings over the Eid al-Adha holiday that killed dozens of people nationwide." It's the Islamic State of Iraq.   July 22nd, the Islamic State of Iraq released an audio recording announcing a new campaign of violence entitled Breaking The Walls which would include prison breaks and killing "judges and investigators and their guards." Since they made their July announcement there have been minor and major attacks throughout Iraq.  Ashley Fantz (CNN) adds, "In the statement, the ISI claims that the Shiite Rafidi government have conducted a series of arrests that targeted Sunni women in order to pressure their relatives to surrender to authorities or to blackmail their relatives. Attacking during Eid was intended to deliver a message: You are not safe, even during a holiday built around peace."
 
So what are they claiming credit for? 
 
 
Saturday  AFP counted "at least 40 people" dead throughout the country from violence and many more injured.  Deutsche Welle reported, "A sticky bomb' underneath a bus carrying Iranian Shiite pilgrims was detonated on Saturday, killing at least five passengers and wounding at least 19, according to Iraqi officials. Medics also confirmed the death toll. The passengers were reportedly travelling to a Shiite shrine in Baghdad for the Muslim holiday Eid al-Adha."  It was part of what the UK Express described as  "a string of bombings and other attacks primarily targeting the country's Shiite community on Saturday, leaving at least 40 dead in a challenge to government efforts to promote a sense of stability by preventing attacks during a major Muslim holiday."   BBC News noted, "Twin bomb attacks in Baghdad's mainly Shia neighbourhood of Sadr City on Saturday evening killed at least 13.  Hours earlier, a bomb near a playground in the Bawiya neighbourhood of the capital killed several people, including at least three children." Kitabat counted 23 dead and 32 injured in the two Sadr City car bombings.   Press TV noted Mosul attacks "a total of seven people were killed and 10 others sustained injuries in three attacks, security and medical officials said. Al Jazeera explained the target of the Mosul attacks were the Shabacks: "The Shabak community numbers about 30,000 people living in 35 villages in Nineveh, and many want to become part of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq."

In addition, All Iraq News noted bombings in southwest Baghdad which claimed the life of 1 police officer and left six more injured.  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) provided further detail on the southwest Baghdad bombings, "On Saturday evening, a roadside bomb exploded on a busy road in the al-Jihad neighborhood of western Baghdad, wounding four people. When police arrived to investigate and to evacuate the casualties, another roadside bomb detonated, killing one policeman and wounding two others, police said."   Alsumaria added a Mosul home invasion killed a husband and wife and injured four of their children, 3 male suspects were arrested at a Mosul checkpoint (they were dressed as women), the Peshmerga stopped a bombing of the shrine of Imam Ali Ibn Musa Reza in Tess village,  1 car dealer was shot dead outside his Baquba home, a Tikrit car bombing injured eight people as it targeted a government building, and the home of the brother of a Turkman official was bombing in Tuz Khurmatu.
 
 
And all of that was Saturday.  Sunday was violent as well.   Xinhua reported, "A car bomb was detonated in Baghdad's northern district of Kadimiya" leaving 13 people dead and another twenty-eight injured.  AFP adds, "Earlier in the day, two bombings in the town of Madain, just southeast of the capital, killed two people and wounded 10."  In addition, Alsumaria noted 2 police officers were killed and three more injured in Diyala Province, two people were injured in an Abu Vine mortar attack, and 2 people were killed and four left injured in a roadside bombing south of Baghdad. That's 19 people dead and 47 left injured.  
 
That's what they'e claiming credit for.  Now let's look at their statement again.  IANS quotes them saying that Nouri's government "carried out recently a series of immoral and cowardly acts to arrest Sunni women to force their wanted relatives to turn themselves in, or blackmail their parents by fabricating charges against them.  Such acts have increased recently, including arresting women from certain clans in south of Baghdad."
 
With that in mind, let's drop back to Wednesday's snapshot which noted Iraqi journalist Zia Medhi was murdred Monday in Baghdad.  She started the day researching a story on Iraq's LGBT community.  From the snapshot:

Iraq's Journalistic Freedoms Observatory notes the investigative journalist was in Baghdad's Tahrir Square at ten a.m. Monday morning conducting meetings and interviews and she was also working on a story about prostitution and brothels in Iraq.  She went to a police station to interview some of the 180 women arrested but a police officer prevented her from entering and he denied that there were any prostitutes among the arrested.  He left and then moments later re-appeared telling her she could enter but without her colleagues.  Zia Mehdi didn't feel comfortable with that offer and instead returned to Tahrir Square to continue her LGBT interviews.  Later she was discovered dead, stabbed to death, still in her jacket that noted she was a journalist.
 
180 women held in Baghdad for prostitution.  180?  Throughout the war, brothels have operated in and around Baghdad.  But it's been low-key to avoid attention and the arrests that can come with attention.  Doesn't 180 strike anyone as an extreme number for a city that every six months is attempting to stop the sale of alcohol?  It struck Zia Mehdi as worth investigating.  Maybe that's why she was stabbed to death last week.
 
Today Alsumaria reports that residential areas to the south of Tikrit were targeted with mortar attacks. All Iraq News reports that Balad also saw a mortar attack.  Al Rafidayn notes a Mosul armed attack which left 1 police officer dead and two more injured.  Alsumaria reports an Anbar Province roadside bombing left two Iraqi soldiers injured and a Ramadi home invasion resulted in the death of one tribal chief.
 
 
The Khaleej Times editorial board offers this assessment, "The rising incidence of bomb attacks in Iraq has paralleled the rising political rifts in the fragile democratic government. The ineptness of the fractious Iraqi government is clear; it has failed to exercise its control violence and exercise its writ. There's a real danger that Iraq will become the ungovernable in the future, as local forces continue to squabble and compete in the power vacuum left by the exit of the coalition troops."
 
And the political crisis continues.  When Nouri al-Maliki created an eight-month political stalemate following the March 2010 elections because his State of Law came in second meaning no second term as prime minister for Nouri, the US ended the stalemate by brokering the contract known as the Erbil Agreement which was various concessions by Nouri in exchange for his getting a second term as prime minister.  He used the contract to grab a second term and then he trashed the contract, refusing to honor it.  This is what has created the ongoing political stalemtate.
 
With that in mind, it's ridiculous that, as All Iraq News reports, State of Law is telling the Kurdistan Alliance that either the blocs 'come on board,' or Nouri will attempt to form a majority government.  A majority governmnent would shut out non-Shias.  In other words, State of Law's Salman al-Moussawi is stating either you drop your demand that we honor this contract or we will move towards forming a majority government.  Possibly these threats from State of Law are why MP Hussein Mansouri of Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc states that a national conference alone will not solve the political crisis.
 
In semi-related news, Steve LeVine (Quartz) reports on ExxonMobil's oil and gas deal with the Kurdistan Regional Government and observes, "Because of its size and history, when ExxonMobil makes a move, it tends to speak louder and create more ripples than its peers (in Quartz's geopolitical energy indicators, ExxonMobil is one of the Mountains). It was news a year ago when it was leaked that the company signed with Kurdistan. But now, by pulling away from Iraq, it deals a harder blow to Baghdad's prestige, while conferring more legitimacy on Kurdistan. Could this give the province a further nudge towards independence?"  On economis, the troubled Greek economy was made worse for the people as various punishments were inflicted in the last years.  Pan Plyas (AP) reports that an annual survey has found that "[o]nly Iran and Iraq are considered more risky than Greece [for investments] today, which also struggles to convince its international creditors that it deserves bailout loans to avoid bankruptcy and a possible euro exit."
 
And -- pay attention, Nouri -- you do not reassure the international business community by demanding that your current vice president be executed (as Nouri has done with Tareq al-Hashemi) nor by issuing an arrest warrant for the governor of your central bank (as Nouri's done with Sinan al-Shabibi).
 
On this week's Law and Disorder Radio,  an hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights) topics addressed include Dick Cheney and qualified immunity, NYPD's forcing Mosque Crawler to become an informant, professor Al McCoy on the Bully Boy Bush and Barack administrations use of torture and the NLG's Urszula Masny-Latos on police spying in Boston.  The segment with professor Al McCoy is a must listen.  (You can also read his book Torture and Impunity, now at in paperback, currently on sale for $16.47 as Amazon, Kindle edition $9.99.)  Excerpt.
 
Al McCoy:  Let me address, first of all, the critical element of the normalization of torture.  Most Americans are aware that vaguely, after 9-11, there were shows like 24, there were movies like Casino Royale and The Passion of the Christ that sort of had torture.  But what they don't realize is that through the invisble tendrils that tie mass media to the state in any modern society -- Okay, the administration, the Bush administration, kind of signaled very directly to the American mass media -- just as they once signaled 'we're going all fight drugs' under [President] Ronald Reagan and back in the nineties now, 'torture is okay.'  And so suddenly, intuitively, torture became omnipresent on screens large and small across America.  The Parents Television Council said that, in the four years prior to 9-11, there were about 20 incidents a year of torture on broadcast television in the United States.  In the five years after 9-11, there were about 150 incidents a year shown on broadcast television in the United States.  And the context changed. Before 9-11, the people that tortured were bad guys like Nazis and Gestapo, okay?  After 9-11, they were heroic federal agents like Jack Bauer on the show 24 who are using torture to defend America and save American lives.  The show 24, which became enormously popular, with 12 to 15 million viewers per incident -- The show 24 had 57  portrayals of torture in the first five seasons it was broadcast.  And in every case, what would happen is the heroic fictional agent Jack Bauer would be in some crisis situation, there would be a ticking time bomb about to go off, a nuclear bomb about to detonate in Los Angeles, he would torture some malfactor, extract the information and stop the atrocity.  And then, the highest grossing of the 21 Bond films, Casino Royale, has a lurid, sexual torture scene with the actor Daniel Craig playing James Bond stripped naked and beaten about the genitalia in a really homo-erotic scene that while it's brutal is also darkly, sexually inticing.  And then The World of Warcraft, when it came out in 2008, it had a neural needle to torture us, an evil sorcerer in the game.  That game sold 3 million copies in the first days of it's release, you know?  So onscreens large and small, torture was normalized for Americans and the results are very clear.  Recent surveys show that approval for the most harsh of American torture techniques -- naked and chaining and water boarding -- doubled from 2005 to the present.
 
24 is no more.  It lives on in syndication.  But it's not filming new episodes.  The awful Homeland is still in production.  July 15th, Ava and I took a look at a variety of media platforms and observed:

But reality will be lost by those who stream even a few moments of Prisoners of War.
That's because the series isn't entertainment, it's propaganda.
In the early sixties, when liberal artists felt shunned by the mainstream, they used films like Dr. Strangelove to convey messages.  In this decade, it's conservatives who felt shunned and they've resorted to shows like 24 and Homeland.  While the earlier group used humor to show what could go on, the newer group has only fear to offer.
So Homeland tells American audiences that the US Marine who is finally back home, he may actually be a sleeper for Muslim terrorists.  The X-Files warned you to "Trust no one," but really meant, "Don't trust the government."  Howard Gordon worked on The X-Files and 24 and copied (though he prefers "created") Homeland.  And with each new series, Gordon gets closer to the ugliness inside him that he wants to pretend is inside the United States.
In Israel, Prisoners of War was an immediate hit and is now considered an Israeli-TV classic.  That's not at all surprising for a country whose people are encouraged to hate and/or fear neighbors.  Gordon apparently wants to do something similar within the US.  It's not really working.  Americans with Showtime have looked at Homeland and found it wanting.
21 million people legally have Showtime and yet the average Homeland episode couldn't even break 1.5 million in viewers -- despite repeat showings.  And despite the usual idiots of the Water Cooler Set praising Claire Danes' bad performance which is all eye make up and grunts -- it's like sitting through The Mod Squad yet again.  And that's good.  It's good that the Howard Gordons haven't yet figured out how to sell hate and fear to a mass market.

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That piece of crap swept up awards and applause at the recent Emmys.  It needs to be called out.  Earlier this month, it was.  The Independent of London noted:
Former hostage John McCarthy has questioned the violent scenes in US drama
Homeland and branded part of the show's plot "ridiculous".
In an interview with the Radio Times, McCarthy said the scenes showing US marine Nicholas Brody being questioned by the CIA after his transfer from Iraq were "an unrealistic portrayal of somebody re-entering society".

Independent.ie also covered the news:

McCarthy told Radio Times: "Watching someone being beaten to death, even in the
fairly snippety bits I've seen - it is absolutely grotesque and makes your stomach
churn.
"I do fear we're not really appreciating the absolute horror of what someone's going through there. Anybody who has been severely beaten wouldn't see that as entertainment."
 
 
We need to be calling out this kind of 'entertainment.'  By the same token, Olivia's repulsion on Fringe (very well played by Anna Torv) as she saw her daughter Etta (Georgina Haig) resort to torture to extract information and Olivia's success using empathetic interrogation instead deserves applause.  (This was the second episode of Fringe this year, "In Absentia," written by J.H. Wyman and David Fury.  Fringe is in its final season on Fox and airs Fridays during the second hour of prime time.) We need to call out the shows that promote torture and make those applauding them be ashamed.  By the same token, when a show makes a point to call out torture, to refuse to treat it as the norm, we need to applaud it.
 
 
 
 
 
 
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