After the New Hampshire recount, Hillary Clinton was still the winner. After the recount Hillary’s New Hampshire victory was undisputed. The Hillary Haters had to admit Hillary had beaten them. Our immediate reaction to applaud the recount and demand accountability from our public officials, even if it hurt Hillary Clinton, was the right decision.
We recall those days in New Hampshire because Big Media continues to protect Obama and Obama’s refusals to provide documentation and answers and instead provides mockery and self-righteous defenses. In our first, and possibly only article, discussing the Obama Birth Certificate issue we called for documentation and proof in the same way we supported satisfaction of proof with a recount in New Hampshire:
In that dishonest report Politico once again acts dumb by pretending they do not understand the difference between a Birth Certificate and a Certificate of Live Birth. Thus far no Birth Certificate has been produced for Barack Obama and that is what is fueling suspicion and anger.
Instead of asking why no Birth Certificate has been produced by Obama (remember he made all those promises to be “transparent”) Big Media prefers to act dumb and deceive news consumers.
Again, Big Media is acting dumb, pretending not to understand the arguments made by those demanding to see the actual Obama Birth Certificate. Lou Dobbs tried to explain the issue in the best way we have thus far seen, but Obama lover Roland Martin went nuts (as the youtube demonstrates):
Lou Dobbs properly demanded answers and now he is gone from CNN. Dobbs questions regarding immigration and the birth certificate were aggravating factors for his dismissal.
If the Republicans take over the House or Senate next year, the Obama birth certificate will eventually be subpoenaed or a law will likely be passed requiring documentation that candidates for political office must file with elections officials proof the candidate complies with constitutional requirements.
It really is amazing that Barack could stop the speculation for good just by producing the birth certificate but that he refuses to.It would be very interesting to know how much hatred from his peers Lou Dobbs got just for asking questions?
I wouldn't be surprised if they were really outraged because he was doing what you're supposed to do if you're a reporter, play skeptic. And them?
They were playing fan club. And that's the way it goes in the press world.
For the record, I believe Barack was born in the US. But the question isn't 'nutty' or 'outrageous.' Any chance it had of being that passed long ago, around the time Barack refused to release the needed paperwork.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
| Thursday December 10, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces another death, Nouri finds a new group to scapegoat for violence in  Iraq, Nouri orders residents of Camp Ashraf 'relocated,' big oil circles  Baghdad, as does Defense Secretary Robert Gates on layover, and more. Today the US military announced: "BAGHDAD -- A  Multi-National Division–Baghdad Soldier died, Dec. 10, of non-combat related  injuries. The name of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of  next of kin and release by the Department of Defense. The names of service  members are announced through the U.S. Department of Defense official website at  http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/. The announcements are made on the Web site  no earlier than 24 hours after notification of the service member's primary next  of kin. The incident is under investigation." The announcement brings the number  of US service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war to 4368. Bombings? Jenan Hussein (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports a Mosul roadside bombing injured two Iraqi soldiers. Reuters notes another Mosul roadside bombing which  injured one person, a third Mosul roadside bombing which left five people  wounded (two were police officers) and a fourth Mosul roadside bombing which  injured three bodyguards for police Brig Gen Majed al-Bayati. Shootings? Jenan Hussein (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports the Baghdad assassination of 1 sheik. Meanwhile, this afternoon Iraqi journalist Riyadh Mohammed (New York Times' At War  Blog) explained, "Since the American invasion of Iraq in 2003, I had  kept a list of ever relative or friend killed in violence. As of late 2006, I  counted 124 deaths. Suddenly I stopped. No. 125 was my father. My father had  told me a few weeks prior to his tragic death that his phone book was filled  with telephone numbers of killed and missing people. He was soon to join my  list."  As the violence continues in Iraq and people are wounded and dying, it's  not all about oil, Ayla Jean Yackley (Reuters) helpfully explains, it's about  the "drilling rigs" which will need "thousands of tonnes of cement and steel,  many miles of pipeline and tens of thousands of trained and qualified workers."  PFC Energy's Raad Alkadiri crows, "Iraq will place a massive call on the service  sector. It will start to be a black hole, sucking a lot of the sector in from  the region and beyond." Hassan Hafidh and Guy Chazan (Wall St. Journal) report on the running of  the bores, foreign oil execs who "are flocking to Iraq" in the hopes of landing  some of the winning bids in the Friday and Saturday rounds of bidding. Remember, if  you're going to Baghdad Green Zone, be sure to wear the blood of many dead, if  you're going to Baghdad Green Zone . . . Sinan Salaheddin and Brian Murphy (AP) report 15 fields are up for bid and 44  companies are competing to be the big winner (the people of Iraq have already  been cast as the big losers in the continued filming of The Theft Of Iraqi Oil).  Reuter's Simon Webb has apparently been hired to do the soundtrack and performs  a modified Elvis classic "It's now or never . . for Big Oil in Iraq."  During a spoken rap at the bridge, Webb explains, "It is one of the largest  auctions ever held, with around the same reserves on offer as all the oil in  OPEC-member Libya." The Iraq War, the illegal war, is big business. Iran's Press TV today reports on the $2.4  billion, BILLION, weapons deal Iraq entered into with the Ukraine. If you're  missing the point, Bellamny Pailthorp (KPLU -- link has audio and text)  quotes Iraq Ambassador to the US sami Sumaida'ie in Seattle declaring, "Iraq  is open for business." On the visit, Chris Grygiel (Seattle Post-Intelligencer) adds: "The  purpose of Samir Sumaida'ie's two-day visit to the region was to meet  with Boeing, Microsoft and others as Iraq continues to rebuild after the Saddam  Hussein regime was toppled and the United States scales back its military  presence in the country." Scaling back the military presence?  Before the tag sale? Not hardly.  In  fact, some might consider the US Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, landing in  Baghdad today increasing the US military presence.  Kevin Baron (Stars and Stripes) reports  Gates met with President Jalal Talabani.  Remember the supposed 'improved'  'security' in Iraq?  Even now, nearly seven years after the Iraq War started  (March, 2003), Robert Gates still has to sneak into the country on what Baron  terms an "unannounced stop". Iran's Press TV terms it "a surprise visit" which sort  of makes you picture Gates arriving with a bag of presents. Gates may have wante  to be in and out on the same day; however, Nouri put him off and now Gates has a  layover as he waits for Nouri to find the time to meet with him.  Elisabeth Bumiller and Marc Santora (New York Times)  explain, "American defense officials insisted that Mr. Maliki had not  rebuffed the defense secretary, but it was not until late Thursday, hours after  Mr. Gates landed in Baghdad, that they said that Mr. Maliki had agreed to see  him on Friday morning. Mr. Gates' aides scrambled to rearrange his schedule." CNN adds that Gates "called off a planned news briefing as a  result" of the postponement. Nouri was busy with a number of things today including facing Parliament.   Mu Xuequan (Xinhua) quotes Nouri  insisting: "It is hard for us to appoint the chief of intelligence since each  political bloc demands that this man should be from their blocs."  Al Jazeera quotes from this melodramatic Nouri  moment: "All of the recent crime is because of political and sectarian  differences. I call on parliament to issue a decision to purify the security  services from anyone who belongs to any political party, including my party." BBC News explains that quotes from Nouri "were relayed to  reporters after the closed door-meeting on Thursday."  Which only makes it more  confusing because Nouri's talking out of every side of his mouth. Tuesday he did  what he always does, insist it's former Ba'athists in Syria.  David Kenner (Foreign Policy) notes  Nouri did that in August and October as well (on "Bloody Wednesday" and "Bloody  Sunday") and that, "Maliki raised eyebrows for previously pointing the finger at  Syria, when the released evidence looked less than definitive. However, the fact  that he is repeating his claims now shows he has on intention of backing down --  and is an important data point on where Iraq will stand on intra-Arab disputes  in the future.  Saudi Arabia, for example, has remained intensely skeptical of  the Shia-dominated government, and has so far refused to send an ambassador to  Baghdad." Meanwhile Lara Jakes (AP) explores Rabiya, on the  border Iraq and Syira share, and finds little to support a claims of Syrian  foreign fighters or Ba'athists entering from Syira and "Iraqi and American  security forces alike [. . .] say they've neither seen nore heard of Baathists  illegally crossing the border in recent months."  In Syria, Andrew England (Financial Times of London)  speaks with former Ba'athists, "Syria has rejected all those claims. Mr  [Abdul Nasser al-] Jenabi, who represents a Sunni insurgent group aligned with  Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, a Baathist who served as deputy head of Saddam Hussein's  Revolutionary Command Council, said his group did not target Iraqis and had no  role in the bombings. He said that he and others like him in Syria were involved  in media relations and political issues. Some observers also say Mr Maliki may  have decided to point the finger of blame because of the damage the attacks have  caused to his own credibility."  Credibility?  Nouri?  Tuesday, Dar Al Hayat reported (translation is  mine and my Arabic is very poor) that there is a possiblity Sahwa ("Awakenings,"  "Sons Of Iraq") will stop receiving payment from the Iraqi government at the end  of December and that this comes as Sahwas continue to be targeted (gives an  example of recent violence that claimed 6 lives). The article notes that  the Sahwa were supposed to have been incorporated into Iraqi jobs by the end of  this year "according to an agreement between US forces and the Iraqi  government".  A Sahwa leader (from western Baghdad), Naji, speaks of concerns  about a security vacuum should Sahwa be taken off the payrolls and he notes the  possiblity that they could return to their older ways (the US military paid them  off originally so they would stop attacking US military personnel and equipment)  -- he terms this "a big problem." He speaks of announcements by the National  Reconciliation Commission (a body in Parliament headed by Zuhair al-Jalabi) that  they will be closing out the Sahwa at the end of the year.  A Diyala Province  Sahwa leader, Sheikh Hussam, issued a call on the Iraqi government to live up to  the promises it made to Sahwa and refers to the need for the government to  compensate the families and children of Sahwa who have been killed. Again,  that's my translation and it's very poor.   Nouri's credibility? Today wasn't all melodrama, Nouri also played bully.   Iran's Al-Alam News reports that he stated (at his  website) that the Mujahedin-e Khlaq Organization (MKO -- also known as the MEK)  would be "quarantined in a far-fetched region south of Iraq before leaving the  country."  The residents of Camp Ashraf are Iranian dissidents who were welcomed  into Iraq by Saddam Hussein.  When the US invaded in 2003, they took over the  protection of Camp Ashraf.  An agreement was reached between Nouri and the  previous administration at the end of last year whereby Nouri promised not to  attack or harm the residents.  Nouri never lived up to that promise and -- pay  attention, KRG -- the US didn't do a damn thing.  Not a damn thing.  [Pay  attention, KRG?  The KRG's been promised a lengthy list of items by the Obama  administration.  A great many of those things will require the consent of Nouri  or the next prime minister.  And if they don't consent?  The US government  doesn't exactly have  a record they can point to.]  July 28th, Nouri ordered an assault on Camp  Ashraf, at least 11 residents were killed. Nouri's announcement today of moving  them (possibly as soon as next Tuesday) is certainly beneficial . . . for him.   Sarah Cosgrove (Edgware Times) reports  British "MPs and Peers from across the political spectrum have welcomed a  Spanish court's deicison to investigate claims Iraqi troops killed refugees at  Camp Ashraf." Since the attack, Nouri's barred most journalists and aid  organizations from visiting Camp Ashraf.  Now, as Spain's going to investigate,  he wants to ship all the residents to "a far-fetched region"?  The  Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance on Iran states Nouri is taking  orders from Iran and: The Iranian Resistance denounced remarks by Iraqi Prime Minister  Nouri al-Maliki, concerning "Transfer of Camp Ashraf residents to Nuqrat  al-Salman" which was described by him as a "step towards expelling them (from  Iraq)," as unlawful and disgraceful kowtowing to orders of the religious fascism  ruling Iran in the midst of nationwide uprising in Iran. The Iranian regime has  set the suppression of Ashraf residents in Iraq as a precondition to its support  for al-Maliki in the upcoming parliamentary elections in Iraq.     Simultaneous with the nationwide uprising during the past few days  that people have been chanting "Down with Khamenei" and "Down with the principle  of velayat-e faqih (absolute rule of clergy)" that has sounded the death knell  of the regime;    While the international community has condemned suppression of  uprising in the strongest terms and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights  stressed that "The suppression of protests is escalating, it is much more  serious," and has been "calling for respect for the right to protest that is  also a fundamental freedom," and Amnesty International described "Human rights  violations in Iran are now as bad as at any time in the past 20  years"; Turning to London where the Iraq Inquiry continues. John Chilcot is the  chair of the five member commission -- six if you count Margaret Aldred.  Mark Tran (Guardian) gives an overview of  the commission. Today's witness was M16 head John Sawyers  (link has video and  transcript) which is England's Secret Intelligence Service. Sawyers is the third  head of M16 since the start of the Iraq War.  Before the war broke out Richard  Dearlove headed M16.  In 2004, he was replaced by John Scarlett (who offered  testimony yesterday) and Sawyers took over in 2009. Prior to that he held many  jobs but the one pertaining to Iraq would be the UK Special Representative in  Baghdad (2003). Prior to that -- we're including this because a friend in  England's telling me that several press accounts are getting it wrong -- prior  to be the UK Special Representative in Baghdad, he was the British Ambassador to  Cairo and held that position from 2001 until 2003.  There appears to be some  confusion about when he was an advisor to Tony Blair (his title was "Foreign  Policy Advisor to Prime Minister) that was 1999 to 2001 and not, as some are  reporting, from 2001 to 2003).  We'll pick up with Sawyers complaint today about  the US military: Yes, General Mike Jackson, who was then the newly appointed chief  of general staff, visited Baghdad in my first few days there and and I talked  with a small company of paras who were there to help protect our -- I think they  were a platoon actually to protect our embassy, which was outside the Green  Zone, and in discussion it became clear that part of the problem was the posture  of the US army. They were in their tanks, in their Darth Vader kit, with  wraparound sunglasses and helmets and flack jackets and everything else, and  there was no real rapport between the US army and the ordinary citizens of the  capital, and Mike Jackson -- and I have to say I have some sympathy with this --  thought there was a case of bringing a large contingent of paras, not just the  20 or so in the platoon, but a battlion of paras up to work with the Americans  to demonstrate a different way of the army deploying in urban areas, and this  was all part of what we had learnt in other places, in Northern Ireleand and so  on. I reported this as one option backt o London, after I discussed it with  Mike, but it was clearly a military matter -- Mike Jackson. There were  differences of views between the Chiefs of Staff on this. He had strong criticism for ORHA (Office for Reconstruction and  Humanitarian Assistance -- later becomes the CPA in Baghdad -- Coalition  Provisional Authority) as well: But ORHA, as an organisation, did not have a clear strategy and was  not well managed or coordinated and didn't have very many resources. Living  conditions were pretty appalling. I had certainly not experienced the sorts of  conditions that we had to live under, the heat. For the first time in my life I  was sleeping in a dormitory with a lot of other people. There were no doors to  the bathrooms. There was itnermittent water and electricity. It was pretty grim.  So the US civilians were unable to [get] their own act together, let alone the  act for the rest of Iraq. Sawyers also spoke of problems the British were having in 2003, including  in getting reliable information back to London (he did not feel the media  reports were reliable -- he didn't say whether they were overly bleak or overly  optimistic in his opinion).  This led Committee Member Roderic Lyne to raise the  point Hilary Synnott did earlier this week, about having no equipment to  communicate with London on and the US military giving him a computer and his  using Yahoo to send messages. Sawyers said that when the British embassy staff  finally arrived in May, "they then had access to Foreign Office communications.  But it didn't last very long because the place where the embassy was located,  which was outside the Green Zone, was very soon determined to be unsafe for us  to occupy."  The illegal war never should have been started.  After it was, more  bad decisions were made (that's what happens when you build onto an illegal  framework).  Two of the most cited poor decisions are the de-Ba'athification  program and the disbanding of the Iraqi military.  On the first, the  de-Ba'athification referred to removing Ba'athists from various positions.  The  Ba'ath Party was Saddam Hussein's political party.  He was overthrown (and  executed).  A purge of all Ba'athists followed.  This caused huge problems and,  despite repeated promises from Nouri, it has still not been addressed and  continues to fester in Iraq.  No de-de-Ba'athification program has been  implemented.  The issue of de-Ba'athifcation was touched on at length  today. Committee Member Roderic Lyne: You arrived on 8 May, [head of CPA,  the US' L. Paul] Bremer on the 12th, and within Bremer's first two weeks he had  promulgated two extremely important decisions on de-Ba'athification and on  dissolving the former Iraqi army. Can we look at those two decisions? To what  extent were they Bremer's decisions or -- how had they been pre-cooked in  Washington? I see you have got the Rand Report there, and the Rand Report  suggests there had been a certain interagnecy process in Washington leading to  these decisions, albeit Rand is quite critical of that process. And, very  importantly for us, was the United Kingdom consulted about these crucial  decisions?  Was the Prime Minister consulted? Were you consulted? It is pretty  late in the day be then for you to have changed them.  Can you take us through  that story. John Sawyers: Can I separate them and deal with de-Ba'athification  first. Committee Member Roderic Lyne: Yes. John Sawyers: When I arrived in Baghdad on 8 May, one of the  problems that ORHA were facing was that they had been undiscriminating in their  Iraqi partners. They had taken, as their partners, the most senior figures in  the military, in -- not in the military, sorry, in the ministries, in the  police, in institutions like Baghdad University, who happened to be there. And  in several of these instances, Baghdad University was one, the trade ministry  was another, the health ministry, the foreign ministry, the Baghdad police --  the working level were in uproar because they were being obliged to work for the  same Ba'athist masters who had tyrannised them under the Saddam regime, and tehy  were refusing to cooperate on that basis. So I said, in my first significant  report back to London, which I sent on the Sunday night, the day before Bremer  came back, that there were a number of big issues that needed to be addressed. I  listed five and one of those five was we needed a policy on which Ba'athists  should be allowed to stay in their jobs and which should not. And there was  already a debate going on among Iraqi political leaders about where the line  should be drawn. So I flagged it up on the Sunday evening in my first report,  which arrived on desks on Monday morning, on 11 May. When Bremer arrived late  that evening, he and I had a first discussion, and one of the first things he  said to me was that he needed to give clarity on de-Ba'athification. And he had  some clear ideas on this and he would want to discuss it. So I reported again  early the following monring that this was high on the Bremer's mind and I needed  a steer as to what our policy was. I felt that there was, indeed, an important  need for a policy on de-Ba'athifciation and that, of the various options that  were being considered, some I felt, were more far-reaching than was necessary  but I wasn't an expert on the Iraqi Ba'ath Party and I needed some guidance on  this. I received some guidance the following day, which was helpful, and I used  that as the basis for my discussion with Bremer -- I can't remember if it was  the Wednesday or the Thursday that week but we had a meeting of -- Bremer and  myself and our political teams, where this was discussed, and there was very  strong support among the Iraqi political parties for quite a far-reaching  de-Ba'athification policy.  At the meeting itself, I had concerted beforehand  with Ryan Crocker, who was the senior American political adviser, and I said to  him that my guidance was that we should limit the scope of de-Ba'athification to  the top three levels of the Ba'ath Party, which included about 5,000 people, and  that we thought going to the fourth level was a step too far, and it would  involve another 25,000 or so Iraqis, which wasn't necessary.  And I thought  Crocker was broadly sympathetic to that approach but at the meeting itself  Bremer set out a strong case for including all four levels, ie the top 30,000  Ba'athists should be removed from their jobs, but there should be a policy in  place for exemptions. I argued the alternative. Actually, unhelpfully, from my  point of view, Ryan Crocker came in in strong support of the Bremer proposal,  and I think he probably smelled the coffee and realised that this was a policy  that had actually already been decided in Washington and there was no point  getting on the wrong side of it. I was not aware of that at that stage and, in  fact, it was only when I subsequently read the very thorough account by the Rand  Corporation of these issues that I realised there had been an extensive exchange  in -- between agencies in Washington.  Commitee Member Roderic Lyne: Just to pause on that, this crucial  decision, not just to take the top 5,000, which probably was not a matter of  argument, but to add 25,000, sweeping up a lot of professionals, teachers,  doctors people like that, who had been obliged to become members of the Ba'ath  parties, had been stiched up between agencies in Washington but without any  consultation with the number 1 coalition partner, Britain, who were going to be  vitally affected by that? John Sawyer: I cannot vouch for that because I wasn't in London, I  wasn't involved in those exchanges.  Commitee Member Roderic Lyne: But you would have been aware of if  we'd been (inaudible), somebody would have told you.  John Sawyers: When I was doing my calls in London on the previous  week, this was not an issue that had been raised with me. So I don't know in the  embassy in Washington or people in Whitehall were plugged into the debate. I  would just say, though, Sir Roderic, that we do need to keep this in context,  that a lot of parallels are drawn about Iraq in 2003 with Germany in 1945, and I  have to say that was the intellectual mindset that Bremer brought with him,  there was a parallel with the reconstruction of Germany in 1945. In 1945, the  Allies excluded 2.5 per cent of the German population from jobs because of their  links with the Naxi party. What Bremer was proposing was excluding 0.1 per cent  of the Iraqi population, ie 25 times fewer, proportionately, than was the case  in Germany. And in that context he was looking for a policy of -- a scope for  giving exemptions. Now let's skip way ahead.  They weren't listening to the British.  Who was  the US listening to on this decision?  Sawyers said, "Why London wasn't involved  in it you will have to ask others because I wasn't in London at the time. But it  had clearly been thought through in Washington and they were, to some extent,  under the influence of people like Ahmed Chalabi, who took a very hard line on  this issue." Sawyers testified that, as with the de-Ba'athification program, Bremer told  him at their first meeting that he wanted to disband the Iraq army and that DC  had agreed to this and issued "a decree".  Sawyers stated, "This, again, was a  new issue for me."  The Inquiry does not hear from any witness tomorrow.  They resume public  testimony on Monday with five witnesses scheduled, Lt Gen John Kiszely, Lt Gen  Robin Brims, Lt Gen Jonathon Riley and Gen Peter Wall.  Independent journalist  John Pilger  weighs in on the Inquiry with "Normalising the Crime of the Century" (Information Clearing House): More than anyone, it was Sir Jeremy who tried every trick to find a UN cover for the bloodbath to come. Indeed, this was his boast to the Chilcot enquiry on 27 November, where he described the invasion as "legal but of questionable legitimacy". How clever. In the picture he wore a smirk. Under international law, "questionable legitimacy" does not exist. An attack on a sovereign state is a crime. This was made clear by Britain's chief law officer, Attorney General Peter Goldsmith, before his arm was twisted, and by the Foreign Office's own legal advisers and subsequently by the secretary-general of the United Nations. The invasion is the crime of the 21st century. During 17 years of assault on a defenceless civilian population, veiled with weasel monikers like "sanctions" and "no fly zones" and "building democracy", more people have died in Iraq than during the peak years of the slave trade. Set that against Sir Jeremy's skin-saving revisionism about American "noises" that were "decidedly unhelpful to what I was trying to do [at the UN] in New York". Moreover, "I myself warned the Foreign Office … that I might have to consider my own position ...". It wasn't me, guv. The purpose of the Chilcot inquiry is to normalise an epic crime by providing enough of a theatre of guilt to satisfy the media so that the only issue that matters, that of prosecution, is never raised. When he appears in January, Blair will play this part to odious perfection, dutifully absorbing the hisses and boos. All "inquiries" into state crimes are neutered in this way. In 1996, Lord Justice Scott's arms-to-Iraq report obfuscated the crimes his investigations and voluminous evidence had revealed. TV notes. Friday on most PBS stations (check local listings), NOW on PBS asks: "Why are we sending thousands of military  personnel to Guam?" Over the next five years, as many as 30,000 servicemembers and their families will descend on the small island of Guam, nearly tripling its presence there. It's part of a larger agreement that the U.S. signed with Japan to realign American forces in the Pacific, but how will this multi-billion dollar move impact the lives and lifestyle of Guam's nearly 180,000 residents? On Friday, December 11 at 8:30 pm (check local listings), NOW on PBS travels to the U.S. territory of Guam to find out whether their environment and infrastructure can support such a large and quick infusion of people, and why the buildup is vital to our national security. This Sunday the History Channel airs The People Speak, Anthony Arnove notes it's "the long awaited documentary film inspired by Howard Zinn's books A People's History of the United States and Voices of a People's History of the United States." It airs Sunday, December 13th at 8:00pm EST and 7:00 Central (8:00pm Pacific as well): Using dramatic and musical performances of the letters, diaries and  speeches of everyday Americans, the documentary feature film THE PEOPLE  SPEAK gives voice to those who spoke up for social change throughout U.S.  history, forging a nation from  the bottom up with their insistence on equality and justice. Narrated by acclaimed historian Howard Zinn and based on his best-selling books, A People's History of the United States and, with Anthony Arnove, Voices of a People's History, THE PEOPLE SPEAK illustrates the relevance of these passionate historical moments to our society today and reminds us never to take liberty for granted. THE PEOPLE SPEAK is produced by Matt Damon, Josh Brolin, Chris Moore, Anthony Arnove, and Howard Zinn, co-directed by Moore, Arnove and Zinn, and features dramatic and musical performances by Allison Moorer, Benjamin Bratt, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Chris Robinson, Christina Kirk, Danny Glover, Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, David Strathairn, Don Cheadle, Eddie Vedder, Harris Yulin, Jasmine Guy, John Legend, Josh Brolin, Kathleen Chalfant, Kerry Washington, Lupe Fiasco, Marisa Tomei, Martín Espada, Matt Damon, Michael Ealy, Mike O'Malley, Morgan Freeman, Q'orianka Kilcher, Reg E. Cathey, Rich Robinson, Rosario Dawson, Sandra Oh, Staceyann Chin, and Viggo Mortensen. And finishing up TV notes, Monday December 14th, ABC airs Jennifer Hudson: I'll Be Home for  Christmas (8:00 to 9:00 pm EST, first hour of prime time). Academy  Award and Grammy winner Jennifer Hudson's guest for her special is Michael  Buble. In other news, Princess Tiny Meat had another big day. Mr.  Vanity accepted the Nobel 'Peace' Prize while most Americans were asleep. They  missed nothing but the continued display of Barry O's enormous ego. In an  attempt to sound humble, he declared, "I have no doubt that there are others who  may be more deserving." Apparently, he didn't study English in this country. "I  have no doubt" "there may be" do not go together. The wording is, "I have no  doubt that there are other who are more deserving." When he says that "there may  be"? That indicates doubt. As per usual, Barry O's ego trumped grammar. See who  catches it and watch how many look the other way. Last night, Cedric's "He's not winning them over" and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! THE REVIEWS WERE BRUTAL!"  (joint-post for Cedric and Wally) and Ann's "Didn't they have diplomacy and manners in  Chicago?" addressed the topic of Barry O's latest award. And earlier this  week, World Can't Wait noted "Barack Obama Deserves the Nobel War = Peace  Prize!:" The U.S. organization "The World Can't Wait," having organized weeks of protest against President Barack Obama's escalation of troops to Afghanistan, announced today that it accepts the wisdom of the Nobel Committee's choice of Obama as winner of its most famous prize. We find no irony in December 10 being International Human Rights Day. We hope the Nobel Committee is satisfied that Barack Obama's increase of US troops to occupy Afghanistan is enough to merit the prize. The speech he delivered at West Point on December 1 echoed 8 successful years of George Bush justifications, and Obama's commitment to "win" certainly should have removed any reservation that he deserves the prize. His speech rested on the notion that war brings peace, that the military is  an instrument of peace.  Strange because though basic training teaches many,  many things, conflict resolution really isn't one of them.   | 
 
