Wednesday, January 06, 2021

Don't know who's worse: MINT NEWS PRESS or Zohreh Kharazmi

I read this garbage about garbage terrorist Soleamani at MINT NEW PRESS and can't figure out if the outlet is the garbage or the writer from Iran, Zohreh Kharazmi is the garbage -- maybe it's both.


But in the US, we need to stop salivating over people just because someone we don't like hates them.


Should the thug and terrorist have been murdered by a drone?


No.


He should have been put on trial.


But Donald Trump killing the man without a trial can be objected to without this garbage that tries to turn the terrorist into a saint.


Now I know the truth about the thug -- how he targeted Iraq's Sunnis, how he targeted the young Shi'ites who have been protesting for over a year.  I know that because C.I. covers Iraq.  Yes, she spent over a year discussing the truth about the thug but, equally true, we heard what he was doing in real time via THE COMMON ILLS.


If you're too stupid to trust C.I., here's Amnesty International's Donatella Rovera from earlier this week"


Over a million participated - that is most of #Iraq’s 40 millions didn’t - in 1st anniversary commemoration in #Baghdad’s Tahrir Square, where #Soleimani’s & #Muhandis’s militias murdered, wounded & abducted 100s & 100s of peaceful demonstrators
From

 

Donald Trump killing someone with no trial is wrong.

 

That does not make the terrorist Soeimani right nor does it make him a good person.

 

I am so sick of outlets like MINT NEWS PRESS pretending they care when in fact they don't know a damn thing except "Donald Trump bad so other guy must be good."  It's simplistic and it's bull.

 

"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

 Wednesday, January 6, 2021.  Michelle Goldberg's selective outrage gets called out as the issue of US troops in Iraq remains in the news.


Let's start with some common sense, Andrew Mitrovica (ALJAZEERA) explains:


The posh enablers of America’s empire have always required that the grunts do the maiming and murdering in pursuit of their disastrous geopolitical adventures.

The corollary to this, of course, is the same posh enablers rush for the exits when, occasionally, the grunts end up in the dock for all the maiming and murdering done to enforce America’s dominion over nations the posh enablers have insisted – with obdurate certainty – require emancipation.

For more prima facie evidence of this axiom, you need only digest the reaction among the posh enablers of the US destruction (sorry, emancipation) of Iraq to news of Donald Trump’s pardon of four mercenaries (aka grunts) convicted in connection with the murder of 17 Iraqis, including two children, in Baghdad’s Nisour Square in 2007.

One mortified New York Times columnist wrote that the pardons, while predictable, were conspicuous not only because of their “depravity” and “grotesqueness”, but are also proof that “the last days of Trump’s reign have been an orgy of impunity”.

That a Times scribe invoked the notion of “impunity” in a lengthy column denouncing the pardons of four killers liable for the massacre, while failing to acknowledge the newspaper’s irrefutable role in championing a “pre-emptive war” that ultimately facilitated the “orgy of violence” in Nisour Square and beyond is as predictable as it is a grotesque example of moral expediency and amnesia.


Mitrovica goes on to outline the paper's long history in ensuring the Iraq War started.  The author of the column he's quoting?  Michelle Goldberg.  Search for Michelle's column ahead of the start of the war calling out war on Iraq.  You won't find it.  You will find, in October of 2002, her attack on the peace movement for SALON, it's entitled "Peace Kooks."  Yes, while the country was marching to war on Iraq, Michelle took the time to . . . attack the peace movement.


There's a lot of blood on her hands.  TASNIM reports:


 Iraq filed a lawsuit against the US for bombing the Arab country with depleted uranium several times over the course of two decades.

On Tuesday, Iraq’s al-Maaloumah news website reported the initiation of the legal proceedings related to the bombing spats that plagued Iraq with rampant and deadly radioactive contamination.

The lawsuit was lodged by Hatif al-Rikabi, the Iraqi parliament’s legal advisor, with a Swedish court in Stockholm on December 26.

The suit demands compensation for the repercussions of the bombings that targeted the country’s former nuclear installations twice in the 1990s and once in the 2000s, said al-Rikabi, who is also a member of Baghdad’s negotiation team with the United Nations.


Michelle Goldberg likes to pretend a lot.  She's a columnist.  Where's her report on the birth defects in Iraq?  Or even on the US troops' children after a parent served in Iraq.  One New York paper did have a columnist who covered that story -- Juan Gonzalez before he retired from THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS.  Michelle pretends to be horrified by pardons of four Blackwater guards.




 From JUSTICE FOR THE BABIES OF FALLUJAH:

Another male born in FGH 2 days ago with multiple gross congenital anomalies in addition to CHD , he is the 1st baby to 2 young healthy couples with no previous history of any anomaly
Another male born in FGH with multiple gross congenital anomalies in addition to CHD , he is the 1st baby to 2 young healthy couples with no previous history of any anomaly




And . . .

"Findings suggest the enriched Uranium exposure is either a primary cause or related to the cause of the congenital anomaly and cancer increases," says a recent scientific report on the incidence of birth defects in Fallujah [Dr Samira Alani]

















 That's from ALJAZEERA.  Michelle Golberg wants to pretend to care about Iraqis but she's horrified by four Blackwater guards being sprung from prison early but not the babies above, not their families.  It she can use something for partisan gain, she is shocked, she is horrified.  If it requires actual thought, Michelle has nothing to say.  Let's note Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani's 2013 "What's delaying the WHO report on Iraqi birth defects?" (also from ALJAZEERA):



Iraq is poisoned. Thirty-five million Iraqis wake up every morning to a living nightmare of childhood cancers, adult cancers and birth defects. Familial cancers, cluster cancers and multiple cancers in the same individual have become frequent in Iraq.
Sterility, repeated miscarriages, stillbirths and severe birth defects - some never described in any medical books - are all around, in increasing numbers. Trapped in this hellish nightmare, millions of Iraqis struggle to survive, and they call for help.


2500 US troops will have left Iraq by January 15th per US President Donald Trump orders, as noted by Khazan Jangiz (RUDAW).  There are now said/guessed to be 2500 left.  This does not include Special Ops, this does not include the CIA -- which retains the largest base in Iraq -- the largest of any country other than the US.  But excluding those groups -- Special Ops and the CIA -- even excluding private contractors, we still don't know how many US troops are in Iraq -- there is no reliable count and hasn't been for years.  


XINHUA reports:


Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi said on Tuesday that only hundreds of U.S. troops would remain in Iraq after the withdrawal of half of them from the country.

Al-Kadhimi said, during a televised speech on the eve of the centenary of the Iraqi Army Day, the U.S. troops' withdrawal came due to "the ongoing strategic dialogue between Iraq and the United States that yield in the withdrawal of batches of U.S. troops during the past months. The withdrawal of more than half of them will complete in the coming days."


Will anything change with a new incoming president?  Pro-war Dr. Faleh Alhamrant (THE MEDIA LINE) offers:


American experts believe that President-elect Joe Biden will seek to reduce the American presence in Iraq due to long-term domestic political pressures, and shift the focus of foreign policy toward other arenas, such as China and Russia. This, in turn, will create opportunities for regional actors, especially Iran, to extend their influence in Iraq. On the other hand, the Biden Administration has the option of turning a new page in Iraq, and some experts suggest that the new president will decide to maintain boots on the ground. The Trump Administration helped Iraq complete its campaign to regain all the lands that were captured by the Islamic State. Unlike Trump, Biden will face a weak ISIS that no longer controls significant territory and doesn’t pose a grave threat to the stability of Iraq. But Biden already has made it clear that he plans on reducing military confrontation with Iranian-backed militias in Iraq as part of a broader policy he adopts, aimed at reducing the level of tension with Tehran. This American view of Iraq as a regional partner in combating terrorism means that he won’t withdraw US forces from the country completely. The Biden Administration understands the potential risks in the event of a final US withdrawal from Iraq, and will seek to avoid this by maintaining a limited military presence in the country. 


ISIS is not weak.  That's no reason for US forces to stay in Iraq, ISIS is Iraq's issue to deal with -- and the best way would be to represent their citizens -- ISIS grew out of government persecution carried out by then-Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.  ISIS is not weak.  'They don't hold territory!'  That's not their aim.  They lucked into that.  Their aim, as terrorists, is violence and they carry that out daily in Iraq.  We've talked about what you use as your baseline before and how when you raise the bar higher than it should be you can pretend like there's been success.  There has been no success.  


Are they still engaged in violence in Iraq?  Yes, they are.  


US troops need to leave Iraq.


From PBS' NEWSHOUR (link has text, audio and video):


  • [Militia supporter] Hussein Ali (through translator):

    We want these decisions to be implemented. The people voted on the decision to remove the American forces. And we want to remove all American forces peacefully. But if they are not achieved by peaceful means, then the people will resist.

  • Jack Hewson:

    With 2,500 U.S. troops still in country, that resistance is made reality by continued attacks on convoys and lands in the form of rockets launched on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

    The U.S. reportedly threatened to evacuate its embassy here, among the largest in the world, last fall. The last attack was on December 20, as eight rockets were fired at the U.S. Embassy. Red tracers from the embassies defense system returned fire.

    No group has claimed responsibility, but government forces arrested members of a prominent pro-Iranian faction called Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, or AAH. In response to the arrests, masked men claiming to be members of AAH made threats against Iraqi prime minister, Mustafa Al-Kadhimi, posted on social media.

    AAH spokesperson Mahmoud al-Rubaie denied the group's involvement, either with the attack or the video threats, and said that one of their arrested associates had been forced to confess.


  • Halgurd Sherwani (KURDISTAN 24) reports: 


    Iraq’s defense minister, ahead of Army Day, warned that the country could be headed to a “civil war” if foreign diplomatic offices continue to be targeted by rogue groups.

    Iraqi Defense Minister Juma Anad’s remarks came on Tuesday in an interview with Al-Arabiyah TV ahead of the Iraqi military’s Army Day on Jan. 6, which marks 100 years of its establishment.

    “The continued attacks on the Green Zone and diplomatic representations will lead Iraq into a civil war,” the defense minister said, warning only “Iraqi citizens would be the victims” if that happens.



    Monday's snapshot noted the UK judge Vanessa Baraitser denied the US government's request to extradite WIKILEAKS publisher Julian Assange. This morning, Baraister denied a bail request for Julian.  Background, Julian is being persecuted for exposing War Crimes of the US government.  Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Chelsea  Manning and she stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took place in December. There was an Article 32 hearing and then a court-martial.  February 28, 2013, Chelsea admitted she leaked to WikiLeaks.  And why.



    Chelsea Manning:   In attempting to conduct counter-terrorism or CT and counter-insurgency COIN operations we became obsessed with capturing and killing human targets on lists and not being suspicious of and avoiding cooperation with our Host Nation partners, and ignoring the second and third order effects of accomplishing short-term goals and missions. I believe that if the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information contained within the CIDNE-I and CIDNE-A tables this could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general as [missed word] as it related to Iraq and Afghanistan.
    I also believed the detailed analysis of the data over a long period of time by different sectors of society might cause society to reevaluate the need or even the desire to even to engage in counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations that ignore the complex dynamics of the people living in the effected environment everyday.



    Caitlin Johnstone notes the judge's ruling and what's needed next:


    In the end, though, Baraitser ruled against extradition. Not because the US government has no business extraditing an Australian journalist from the UK for exposing its war crimes. Not because allowing the extradition and prosecution of journalists under the Espionage Act poses a direct threat to press freedoms worldwide. Not to prevent a global chilling effect on natsec investigative journalism into the behaviors of the largest power structures on our planet. No, Baraitser ultimately ruled against extradition because Assange would be too high a suicide risk in America’s draconian prison system.

    Assange is still not free, and he is not out of the woods. The US government has said it will appeal the decision, and Baraitser has the legal authority to keep Assange locked in Belmarsh Prison until that appeals process has been carried through all the way to its end. Discussions on bail and release will resume on Wednesday, and Assange will remain imprisoned in Belmarsh at least until that time. Due to Assange’s bail offense which resulted from taking political asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy in 2012, it’s very possible that bail will be denied and he will remain imprisoned throughout the US government appeal.

    The Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA), the Australian trade union to which Assange belongs as a journalist, has released a statement on the ruling which outlines the situation nicely.

    “Today’s court ruling is a huge relief for Julian, his partner and family, his legal team and his supporters around the world,” said MEAA Media Federal President Marcus Strom. “Julian has suffered a 10-year ordeal for trying to bring information of public interest to the light of day, and it has had an immense impact on his mental and physical health.”

    “But we are dismayed that the judge showed no concern for press freedom in any of her comments today, and effectively accepted the US arguments that journalists can be prosecuted for exposing war crimes and other government secrets, and for protecting their sources,” Strom added. “The stories for which he was being prosecuted were published by WikiLeaks a decade ago and revealed war crimes and other shameful actions by the United States government. They were clearly in the public interest. The case against Assange has always been politically motivated with the intent of curtailing free speech, criminalising journalism and sending a clear message to future whistleblowers and publishers that they too will be punished if they step out of line.”

    Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released US military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh.  In addition, October 22, 2010, WikiLeaks released 391,832 US military documents on the Iraq War. The documents -- US military field reports -- reveal torture and abuse and the ignoring of both. They reveal ongoing policies passed from the Bush administration onto the Obama one. They reveal that both administrations ignored and ignore international laws and conventions on torture. They reveal a much higher civilian death toll than was ever admitted to. Calls are coming in from officials in many countries for an investigation -- including from the UK, Norway and Israel -- and from the United Nations High Commissoner for Human Rights and the United Nations' Special Rapporteur on Torture. 


    This morning, Kevin Gosztola reviewed a new development in the case on SHADOW PROOF regarding the bail decision.



    Now let's try to deal quickly with several issues related to Medicare For All.  The country needs Medicare For All -- this isn't a want, it's a need.  And it's needed only more so in the pandemic.  A lot of e-mails to the public account are asking about this or that.  First, I don't live in front of computer. I can't follow every back in forth that nonsense like Ana, Cenk, Kyle and others do.  

    One e-mailer wanted to know why Ana Kasparian needs to be fired, according to me, but Jimmy Dore doesn't need to be fired for what he said.


    You are confused about many things.  First of all, Jimmy Dore hosts THE JIMMY DORE SHOW.  He can say whatever he wants.  Second, I didn't call for Ana to be fired from THE YOUNG TURKS -- she belongs in that cess pool.  I did call for her to be fired from the weekend program JACOBIN does.  She and Cenk can say whatever they want on TYT -- Cenk can endorse sex with animals -- as he has -- or flaunt his hatred for women -- as he has -- or deny the Armenian genocide -- as he has -- and Ana can stay right next to him being the useless idiot that she is.  (Which we may come back to in a second.)  But when she does a program for JACOBIN, she's representing JACOBIN.  JACOBIN does not need to be pulled into this personal conflict.  Their readers don't need it.  When has Ana talked -- she doesn't report, she just yacks -- about Iraq?  Not on the JACOBIN program.  But she can make time to launch an attack on Katie Halper and Briahana Joy Gray?  And do so on JACOBIN's program?


    No.


    She was a problem before that and she was diluting JACOBIN's brand and what it represents and is supposed to represent.  Now she's used their space to launch her personal attack -- an attack that drags the magazine into this.


    She needs to go from JACOBIN.  And that's before you get to her getting kissy-kissy with War Criminal Mad Maddie Albright.


    Her role on TYT?  I don't respect it.  I think you're a bit of whore when you do that.  I felt that way about the actress on HOME IMPROVEMNT that played the wife and mother -- don't remember her name, don't want to.  No career after the show and good for that.  A dumb idiot who existed to say, "Oh, Tim, oh, boys . . ."  I don't respect it when Mika does that on MORNING JOE and I don't respect it when Ana does it on TYT.  Out of control men are coddled by women who exist solely for that purpose.  


    [Added 10:39, HOME IMPROVEMENT -- not LAST MAN STANDING.  Nancy Travis is a strong actress and she does not play a coddler -- in the paragraph above it says HOME IMPROVEMENT but some people are wrongly running with Nancy Travis.  Nancy is a real actress.  Martha & Shirley are seeing some e-mails thinking the above refers to Nancy and it does not.  She is playing a real character that she has fully developed.  Nancy is a strong actress on the set as well and would never allow herself or a  character she played to be a doormat unless it was a critique of doormats.]


    Find your own voice and your own reason for being, stop being so embarrassing.


    There's another aspect I hoped to address this morning but there's not time.  I'll try to grab it tomorrow.  


    The following sites updated:






    Tuesday, January 05, 2021

    What happened?

    Benjamin Mateus has an interesting article at WSWS.  It opens:

     

    Not only does the Times accept, without providing any evidence, that the attending physician, Dr. Eric Bannec, is racist, but it implies that he is only part of a health care system that is pervaded with racism.

    Going even further than the Times, an opinion piece in the Washington Post compared Dr. Moore’s death to that of George Floyd, who was murdered by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in May. “Say her name: Dr. Susan Moore,” read the headline, echoing a chant in this year’s protests against police violence.

     

    Not only does the Times accept, without providing any evidence, that the attending physician, Dr. Eric Bannec, is racist, but it implies that he is only part of a health care system that is pervaded with racism.

    Going even further than the Times, an opinion piece in the Washington Post compared Dr. Moore’s death to that of George Floyd, who was murdered by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in May. “Say her name: Dr. Susan Moore,” read the headline, echoing a chant in this year’s protests against police violence.

    “No matter how well-intentioned our health-care system is,” the authors write, “it has not rooted out the false idea of a hierarchy of human valuation based on skin color and the falser idea that, if there were such a hierarchy, ‘White’ people would be at the top.”

    Officer Derek Chauvin deliberately strangled George Floyd by keeping his knee on his neck for nine minutes as bystanders begged him to stop. To compare the doctors showing up to work day after day to save lives in a yearlong mass casualty event to the actions of murderous police officials is so absurd as to hardly merit a rebuttal.

    The Times’ story and other comments in the media are based entirely on the recorded statement of Dr. Moore published on social media. “I put forth and I maintain if I were white, I wouldn’t have to go through that,” she said. “This is how black people get killed, when you send them home, and they don’t know how to fight for themselves.”

    Dr. Moore may have believed that her treatment was influenced by racism. But the record of her case provides no medical evidence that she was the victim of malpractice, or that her treatment was influenced by the alleged racism of her physician.

     

     So what's your take?

    "Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

    Tuesday, January 5, 2021. A grab bag of topics as a report that an attack took place on a convoy in Iraq, as the corruption in Iraq becomes more dire, as MOTHER JONES and Kevin Drum can't stay under their rock, etc.


    Starting with violence, MRN is reporting the following:


    Another US coalition logistics convoy was targeted by a roadside bomb on Tuesday morning in Saladin province.

    No further details have been published about the possible casualties, Saberin News reported, adding that no group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

    Last night, a US coalition convoy was targeted on the road to the city of Ad Dujayl and the Qasim al-Jabbarin group claimed responsibility.


    I see no other coverage to verify that an attack took place.  More may come later in the day or this may be misreporting but we've noted it at the top.


    Now let's move over to  Jimmy Dore detailing The Fraud Squad.



    As Susan Sarandon says in THELMA & LOUISE, "You get what you settle for."  And if you're fine with getting nothing -- no Medicare For All, no serious work on climate change, etc -- then keep settling and defending The Fraud Squad and all the other fake asses and sell outs in Congress who are supposed to represent We The People but do not do so.


    Next topic, Shirley slid over an e-mail insisting I am avoiding "even mentioning Tara Reade."  Huh?

    From Friday's "2020: The Year Long Walk Of Shame:" 


    Tara Reade came forward with credible allegations that then-Senator Joe Biden assaulted her while she was an intern in 1992.  The press ignored the allegations forever and a day.  


    Then PBS' NEWSHOUR ridiculously 'investigated' by speaking to a list of people that Joe Biden's campaign provided.  Then there were all the attacks that were printed, whispers from the Biden campaign that the press didn't feel the need to disclose.  


    The repugnant Michael Tracey felt the need to weigh in.  Tara Reade could not have been raped, he explained, because of her money problems and some people who knew her once and didn't like her. Michael Tracey feels he knows better than anyone -- including those who've studied assault -- and possibly that's because he's an expert on the actions of a rapist?  Don't know but I do know that no rapist first asks his victim for a credit report.


    Hunter Biden has no ethics and may have broken laws.  But we never got to have that conversation in the press.  The Hunter story played out the same as the Tara Reade story -- the press refused to investigate and instead spent their time explaining how the story was wrong and shouldn't even be discussed.


    October 16th, THE NEW YORK POST published a story and this was followed by Twitter and Facebook censoring the nation's oldest newspaper still in business, it was followed not by newspapers and networks showing an interest in the computer and e-mails or demanding that Joe Biden answer (he still hasn't) on the record whether or not this laptop was Hunter Biden's, it was instead followed by attacking THE POST, its reporters and its sources.


    And this is not a momentary defect.  This is now what journalism resorts to: If they don't like the story, they're going to censor it.  NPR's ombudsperson Kelly McBride quoted NPR's Managing Editor for 'News,' Terence Samuel, declaring of the laptop story, "We don't want to waste our time on stories that are not really stories, and we don't want to waste the listeners' and readers' time on stories that are just pure distraction."  For more on that garbage, see Ava and my "Media: NPR doesn't trust its listeners" at THIRD.  But the most important point?  Hunter Biden is under federal investigation -- and we only learned that after the election.  Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Hunter Biden Finally Gets A Little Press Attention." 



    After the election, after weeks of being told 'nothing to see here,' turns out there was something to see there.  As Jonathan Turley pointed out:



    “Hunter is stuck on the roof.” That is what the transition team for Joe Biden should have said this week, instead of declaring that Hunter Biden is under federal investigation. The surprise was a lot to handle for many who have been insulated from real news about the case for weeks. The Biden team evidently never heard the old joke about the man who calls home during a trip to speak with his brother who was house sitting.

    When asked how things are going, the brother blurts out, “Fluffy is dead.” The man is shocked and yells that is not how you tell someone their cat died. Instead, he claims, you build up to it and say the cat is stuck on the roof, and then call back to say she fell. After the brother apologizes, the man asks how their mother is doing, and the brother pauses before replying, “Mom is stuck on the roof.”

    The problem is that Americans were assured that Hunter Biden was nowhere near the figurative roof. Before the election, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff said the story involving the laptop was a “smear” from Russia. Some 50 former intelligence officials also insisted the laptop story was likely the work of Russian intelligence. Cable hosts and journalists laughed at the laptop story as fake news, and there was a virtual blackout on further coverage, until that loud thump after the election.

    Most striking about the media blackout is that, as with the Trump-Russia collusion story, the media was coaxed to buy into a false narrative. Reporters became so invested in the denial that they couldn’t afford to acknowledge growing evidence of possible wrongdoing. If Hunter Biden and his uncle did conduct a global influence peddling scheme, these reporters were at best dupes and at worst enablers of a coverup, so the story could not be true.

    The public shock was palpable because so many have been hermetically  and journalistically sealed off from any negative reports on the Bidens. The media was openly in the bag for candidate Biden, and he was left unchallenged in ridiculous claims like his often repeated line “no one has suggested my son did anything wrong.”

     

    Again, this is no longer a temporary defect, this is now a factory feature of journalism -- and that should bother everyone.


    That's Friday.  The e-mailer is upset that I "ignored" Tara all December -- check the archives and you'll see that's not the case.  The e-mailer points out a Kevin Drum aspect.  I didn't ignore that, I wasn't aware of it.  I wrote that on Friday.  Apparently the day before Kevin Drum attacked Tara at MOTHER JONES.


    Why would I know about that?  Do you know how long it takes to write the year-in-review?  That's a big piece and I don't get online to read anything after except Arabic social media.  More to the point, I have been calling out MOTHER JONES for nearly ten years now.  When they attacked a rape survivor, I believe I was the only one who defended her.  No one else called MOTHER JONES out or the two women who run/ruin the magazine.  Kevin Drum?  I didn't read that idiot when he was lying to get the Iraq War started, why would I read him now?


    I remember FAIR making a huge deal about these pro-war Iraq pundits who were wrong and the media rewarded them.  FAIR called out one media outlet after another . . . except MOTHER JONES.  MJ was supposed to be a left -- not a partisan, a left -- magazine.  And yet when it was time to hire a 'blogger,' they went with Kevin Give Me War On Iraq Drum.  And FAIR wouldn't call that out.  Because they're hypocrites.  The left right now needs to be fighting.  "We need to be able to name names," Briahna Joy Gray says in a clip in Jimmy's video above.  She's right.  But note that FAIR can't/won't name names.  Clean up your own yard before you go after others.


    Kevin Drum is human trash.  We've said that before.


    What the slime do?  He wrote a year-in-review piece entitled "Top Ten Lunatics of 2020" and for number seven, he offered this:


    Tara Reade. Remember her? She insisted that Joe Biden had sexually molested her in some way, but in the end it turned out to be just a fantasy made up by a habitual con artist.



    Kevin Drum is trash.   Here's a Tweet from Tara on this topic:


    The misogynistic roller coaster via what is painful as a survivor besides the name calling is the triggering of verbal abuse by that comes up from the past by a toxic males. Surviving abuse is hard and sharing it harder. But they will not take my dignity.
    Image
    Image
    Image


    Let me note again, MOTHER JONES is run/ruined by two women.  They have destroyed the magazine and note who they hire: David Corn (accused of harassment in the work place) and Kevin Drum (We have to have war on Iraq!).


    Some don't get why I've called out the hideous WONDER WOMAN 1984.  It's a very bad movie on every level but one of the main points is in Ava and my "TV: WONDER WOMAN 1984 is an awful film:"


    Cheetah's a secondary character in this film and she's defeated as Max is about to destroy the world.  She's a diversion to the plot -- can you imagine a director doing that with the Joker?  We can't either.  It's an insult to all the character stood for -- a character who's been around since 1943.  


    Equally true, she's the only other woman -- who's not an Amazon -- who gets more than ten lines of dialogue in the film besides Gal.  Why is that?  There are so many speaking parts for male actors and so many male characters -- even two homeless men who have more dialogue than the other women in the film.  How is this a feminist film?  How is this even a film by a feminist?


    Well it's not.  It's a film that director Patty wrote with two men.


    Really?  That's what we're going to get?  We scream and yell  for women to have the chance to direct and they choose to do a superhero movie about a woman and they choose to hire two men to help them write the script?  One of the men who came to Hollywood as a result of his reading of PENTHOUSE?


    This isn't feminism.


    And when you watch the sloppy and stupid WONDER WOMAN 1984, you grasp that it's not feminism either.


    Patty Jenkins was in charge of that film and she chose to work with . . . two men.  Not two women.  Not a man and a woman.  Two men.  Why are we breaking glass ceilings for Queen Bees who won't help other women?  (Queen Bee is a term popularized by Gloria Steinem in her book REVOLUTION FROM WITHIN about women who ensure their own success while doing nothing to help others.)  And that's why we called out THE NATION for their dismal record of publishing women when Katrina vanden Heuvel was in charge.  We see it at MOTHER JONES where two Queen Bees ensure that women are sidelined yet again.


    It's not feminism and when you keep a work place harasser (David Corn) on the payroll, you ensure that everyone in the work place knows that there are no rules which is how you get Kevin Drum's garbage published in the first place.


    Due to pushback, Kevin had to remove the number seven entry.  But even a large pushback didn't make them issue an apology.  Remember when David Corn -- trying to destroy Hillary Clinton -- lied about Bill Clinton.  Tons of people e-mailed and called MOTHER JONES.  When the lie was finally 'corrected,' they only corrected it on one piece -- David wrote three with the lie that Bill Clinton had pardoned a member of the Weather Underground -- and the 'correction' was half-assed with David saying basically, well he pardoned Marc Rich.  And that has hat to do with what?


    MOTHER JONES is garbage.


    Onto Iraq.  In THIRD's "Editorial: Iraq and the Dinar," we noted, "Things are about to get a lot worse for the Iraqi people."  At THE NEW YORK TIMES, Jane Arraf writes:


    Iraq is running out of money to pay its bills. That has created a financial crisis with the potential to destabilize the government — which was ousted a year ago after mass protests over corruption and unemployment — touch off fighting among armed groups, and empower Iraq’s neighbor and longtime rival, Iran.

    Iran in the past has taken the opportunity posed by a weak Iraqi central government to strengthen its political power and the role of its paramilitaries within Iraq.

    With its economy hammered by the pandemic and plunging oil and gas prices, which account for 90 percent of government revenue, Iraq was unable to pay government workers for months at a time last year.

    [. . .]

    That Iraq, one of the world’s largest oil producers, cannot reliably supply electricity to its citizens and has to import electricity is symptomatic of the dysfunction that led to antigovernment protests last year and brought down the previous government.


    A version of Jane's report also appears in print in today's NEW YORK TIMES and also at India's ECONOMIC TIMES.

    In related news, MIDDLE EAST MONITOR reports:


    An Iraqi parliamentary inquest has today revealed that an estimated $239.7 billion (some 350 trillion dinars) has left the country illegally since 2003.

    According to the Iraqi News Agency, one member of the Parliamentary Integrity Committee, Taha Al-Difai stated: "The amount was smuggled in the form of fake receipts and a lot of commissions were paid to officials."

    "Around $685 billion (1,000 trillion dinars) have been disbursed since 2003," he said, adding that this amount was "wasted in contracting and rampant corruption".

    According to Transparency International's 2019 Corruption Perceptions Index Iraq is ranked 162 out of 198 countries with corruption coupled with high youth unemployment being a frequent cause of anti-government protests.


    THE DAILY SABAH adds:


    Last year, Rahim al-Darraji, a former member of the Finance Committee in parliament, estimated the looted funds in Iraq at around $450 billion.

    Iraq is witnessing a fiscal deficit of 58 trillion dinars in the 2021 budget – almost 38.6% of the total budget of $102 billion, due to the decline in crude oil prices.


    Corruption has to be addressed in Iraq.  The people have suffered due to it and now they're about to suffer even more.


    The following sites updated: