If you think issues matter in the Age of Fake you are an idiot. It’s all ploys and plots in the Age of Fake. Fake president, fake congress, fake Democrats, fake progressives, fake events, fake laws with fake names, fake media, fake news, fake issues - it’s all a fake.
Examine the fake drolleries in the U.S. Senate today. A Defense Department appropriations bill was supposed to be voted on in order to keep the Defense Department funded. Harry Reid, in a desperate battle to keep his senate seat away from Sharon Angle decided to play tricks. Reid threw into the appropriation bill two amendments in order to get him votes for reelection and gull voters into voting for the retrograde Obama Dimocratic Party.
The first amendment was the hallucinatory “Dream Act” which added immigration language and provisions to the military appropriations bill. This amendment was designed to help Reid and Obama Dimocrats convince Latinos that they were doing what they promised to do two years ago.
The second amendment was a fake “repeal” of the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” military policy which keeps Gay American from serving in the U.S. armed forces. This so-called “repeal” was a fake nod, without real effort behind it, to the Gay community in order to get votes from gullible Gays and liberals.
The Dream Act was an act, a political ploy designed to hide the reality that Obama and his band of Hopium fueled Dimocrats broke their promise on “comprehensive” immigration reform. The DADT provision was a handover of congressional authority to Obama and a few top military people to eventually decide the fate of Gay Americans who wish to serve in the armed forces.
"Fake." That's all Barack is. I keep thinking of the Alexander O'Neal song. ("Fake.") In fact.Your name was Barry
but now it's Barack
Boy,
you seem to change it every day.
Your hair was long
bu now it's short
You say: I got it cut
but I don't see no hair upon the floor.
Whenever I go out with you I find out something new
You're a fake
baby
You can't conceal it
Know how I know
'cause I can feel it.
You're a fake
baby
no rhyme or reason
'Cause in your mind it's lyin' season.
That's Barack for you, he's a fake.
And I'm wishing he were back on vacation just because he's so much easier to ignore then.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
| Wednesday, September 22, 2010. Chaos and violence continue, the political  stalemate continues, Anthony Shadid provides strong observations and insights on  the stalled process, some note the fallen, an Iraq War veteran dies in Iraq, and  more.  Yesterday  on PRI's The World (link has audio and  text), Lisa Mullins introduced a report from Iraq by Susannah George.  Excerpt: SUSANNAH GEORGE: Iraq's parliament has held  just one official session since the national elections in March. It lasted less  than 20 minutes. That was just enough time to play the Iraqi national anthem and  complete the swearing in. About 20 Iraqi legislators met yesterday in an  informal session. The lawmakers pledged to make decisions, not speeches. But the  only decision they made was to continue to meet this week. Still, Iraqi vice  president Adel Abdul Mahdi who was at the meeting, expressed hope that it could  yield results. ADEL ABDUL MAHDI: It will put the pressure  on the members of the House of Representatives individually and the blocs. I  think we accomplished a good step forward. GEORGE: But not all the Members of  Parliament share the vice president's optimism. They point out that while the  violence continues, there is still no government. MAHMOUD  OTHMAN: It is still in square one. The ongoing  political stalemate. March 7th, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board noted last  month, "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as a  success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that optimism  in a cold shower of reality." 163 seats are needed to form the executive  government (prime minister and council of ministers). When no single slate wins  163 seats (or possibly higher -- 163 is the number today but the Parliament  added seats this election and, in four more years, they may add more which could  increase the number of seats needed to form the executive government),  power-sharing coalitions must be formed with other slates, parties and/or  individual candidates. (Eight Parliament seats were awarded, for example, to  minority candidates who represent various religious minorities in Iraq.) Ayad  Allawi is the head of Iraqiya which won 91 seats in the Parliament making it the  biggest seat holder. Second place went to State Of Law which Nouri al-Maliki,  the current prime minister, heads. They won 89 seats. Nouri made a big show of  lodging complaints and issuing allegations to distract and delay the  certification of the initial results while he formed a power-sharing coalition  with third place winner Iraqi National Alliance -- this coalition still does not  give them 163 seats. They are claiming they have the right to form the  government. In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister. It's six  months and fifteen days with no government formed.  Terry  Gross: There's still no government that's formed in Iraq.  So do you think the  insurgents are exploiting that vacuum.  Anthony  Shadid: I think that's absolutely their-their intention. How successful they are  is another question.  But that is their intention.  You know, it's hard to  overstate how anxious the moment in Iraq is right now. I think what you're  seeing emerge is a -- is a divorce between the people and this political class  -- a political class that was in some ways imposed on the country by the United  States in those early days of the occupation. There's a -- almost universal  disenchatment with these politicians.  And what-what's struck me the past couple  of months is that when you talk to people it's not criticism of the prime  minister or his main rival, Moqtada al-Sadr, for instance.  It's criticism of  that entire political class.  Now what does that lead to? It's hard to say. It  may not lead to anything. But I think it does show this kind of -- The people  themselves are calling into question the political system that's been set up.   And I think that does -- If it doesn't question the legitimacy of the system, it  maybe raises some concerns about the viability of that system over the long  term. Terry  Gross: So you're talking about disenchantment with a system that the US helped  set up and with candidates that the US helped  empower? Anthony  Shadid:  That's right and I think that's going to be one of the legacies of this  American occupation, is empowering politicians that have not succeeded  in building support among the population.  Terry  Gross: Is that because you think it would be hard for anyone to build support  right now in Iraq? Or is it a reflection of the candidates that the US helped  empower? Anthony  Shadid:  I think it's a little of both.  But, I mean, you do see a, I think the  only grassroots movement you see in Iraq right now is Moqtada al-Sadr -- Shi'ite  cleric whose followers fought the Americans several times in 2004 and  afterwards. He does have a grassroots movement. It's probably the only  grassroots movement. It's probably the only grassroots   -- Terry  Gross: He's the guy who hates us --  Anthony  Shadid: That's right  Terry  Gross: -- and is always attacking the US. Anthony  Shadid: That's right. And he is -- And I think it says something about Iraq  today that he is the one grassroots movement that plays a role in politics.  I'm  not talking about the Kurdish areas, I'm talking about the Arab areas of the  country.  The Sadrists, they are one of the largest Shi'ite blocs in Parliament  today.  They're going to have a say in the country's future. The politicians on  the other hand, the ones that were in some ways empowered by the Americans early  on?  You know, I think it's a mix of having been gone from the country for so  long. I think they often look at Iraq through kind of sepia tinted glasses.  I  mean, they see an older Iraq that just doesn't exist anymore in the rough and  tumble streets of Baghdad today.  They also have not either made the effort or  been able to make the effort to build any kind of constituency.  They're often  in the Green Zone, heavily guarded.  They have electricity which most people  don't. They have water which most people -- they have but it's not very clean.  They're living a life that is very divorced from the everyday reality of most  Iraqis.  Terry  Gross: There hasn't been a group that's been able to build a coalition so there  really isn't -- there isn't a prime minister yet.  There isn't leadership yet.   So, help me out here, who was it that said if this political void, this  inability to form a government continues for another six months, there's a risk  of a military takeover? Anthony  Shadid:  I think that was [US] vice president [Joe] Biden --   Terry  Gross: That's what I thought. Anthony  Shadid: -- that made that point. I don't think  it was.  Great interview with Shadid -- and there's much more to the interview  -- but I don't believe Joe Biden said that publicly.  As always, I could be  wrong (I often am).  Ned  Parker, Raheem Salman and Saad Fakrildeen (Los Angeles Times)  quoted former US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker last month stating, "If the  civilians continue to flail over the next three-four years, the chances of a  military coup are likely to go up.  That could bring with it something like the  1958 revolution." The British Ambassador to Iraq, John Jenkins, floated  the idea of a military coup before the Iraq Inquiry on January  8th of this year.  But September 1st, Joe  told Margaret Warner (PBS' The NewsHour -- link has text, audio and  video): MARGARET WARNER: Here's another thing we hear from Iraqis. They  blame this upsurge in violence on the politicians' failure, six months after  they all went to the polls to vote, the politicians' failure to form a  government. Do you think there is a connection?  JOSEPH BIDEN: Look, if I were an Iraqi, that's what I would think  as well.  MARGARET WARNER: But do you think it? JOSEPH BIDEN: The truth of the matter is, they're taking too long  to form this government. But the second piece of this is, the Iraqis went and  voted. But guess what? No clear -- not only no clear majority, barely a  plurality. So, in a parliamentary system, this is not unexpected. But I am  confident that they are now -- all have run the course of what other options  they have, and it's getting down to the point where, in the -- in the next  couple months, there's going to be a government.  The only thing I have said in the name of the president, and as it  relates to this government, the government has to reflect the outcome of the  election, which is another way of saying, all the four major entities that did  relatively well have to be included in the government. That's a difficult thing  to put together. Doesn't sound  like Joe's worried.  Anthony Shadid will go on to state that the remark was made  to a colleague of his at the paper.  That would be Michael R. Gordon.  A  transcript of an interview Gordon conducted with Biden  September 1st was posted online by the paper the night of September 9th.   Here's the section, Biden is speaking: But what happened is, the difference is that there is actually a  military that is able to function and provide security, notwithstanding the  government hasn't been formed yet. And so that is the reason why Odierno and  these guys have the confidence even though the government is not formed. Now if,  in fact, you could come up with a scenario where if six months from now it is  still not formed, then everything begins, then the worry I have in that  circumstance is not so much that you know Al Qaeda Iraq will be emboldened and  reconstituted. My worry will be that generals in the military will start saying:  "Wait a minute, which way is this going to go? Which way is this going to go?" I  worry then that it goes from right now everybody saying, "Salute Iraq" to "Whoa,  let's figure this out." And what is now a unified command, what is now an  integrated military, including some of the pesh merga, including some of the  Sons of Iraq. That's when I would begin to worry because then everybody might  start to say: "What's my calculus here? It looks like they are not going to pull  this together." Is Joe speaking  of a military coup?  That's not how I read it.  He's noting the pesh merga, for  example -- Kurdish forces -- who were being integrated (and the spin was  'successfully integrated') into the Iraqi military at that time.  He's noting  Sahwa whose issues and compliants Joe Biden was very aware of at the time of the  interview.  He appears to be saying that if a government isn't formed in six  months, the cohesion supposedly taking place in the Iraqi forces would fall  apart.  Would that mean coup? It might.  But  what Joe likely meant was that the Iraqi forces could fall apart and violence  could therefore increase.  The gains of 'unified command' would fall apart.  Is  a military coup possible?  I think it's a possibility if the stalemate continues  but I don't believe Joe Biden has raised that issue publicly.  I could be  wrong. Alsumaria  TV reports today that Iraqiya is officially denying rumors that they have  decided to forgot their first-rights to form a government (rights they won by  coming in first in the March elections). Yesterday, Khalid al-Ansary (Reuters) reports the State of Law  and the Iraqi National Alliance are giving "themselves five days to pick a  single candidate for prime minister, and one politician said the incumbent".  Today Alsumaria  TV reports that members will only be able to pick from two candidates:  either Nouri or Adel Abdul Mehdi (currently the Shi'ite Vice President of Iraq).  Waleed  Ibrahim (Reuters) offers, "A five-day deadline for Iraq's  Shi'ite-led political blocs to choose a candidate for prime minister may not be  enough and there is no guarantee incumbent Nuri al-Maliki will win a second  term, Iraqi politicians said." Meanwhile Sawsan  Abu-Husain (Ashar Alawsat Newspaper)  interviews Iraq's Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari about the  stalemate: Q) Has  the Arab League intervened to help remedy the stumbling of efforts to form an  Iraqi government?  A) There is no intervention, but contacts and consultations are  held through the league mission to support the political process. Q) It was recently reported that Syria would host a meeting between  the Iraqi political blocs to help the formation of a government, with the  assistance of the Arab League. It was meant to keep the plan secret, but the  dialogue suddenly stumbled. How true is this? A) The idea was in fact put forward, but it was mostly reported by  the media and no adequate preparations were made for it. The reason is that the  plan required the agreement of all the parties and this did not happen because,  an Iraqi government should be formed in Baghdad in our view, not abroad. I mean  not in Iran or Washington. This is an Iraqi decision and an Iraqi issue. Thus,  the idea was broached by the media, failed to produce anything, and came to an  end. Q) What was the aim of this idea on which the media  focused? A) One of the points was that the political leaders have failed to  form a government, and that it was interesting to look for a place for dialogue  and an equitable and fair side [to help]. Certain Iraqi sides have put forward  this alternative, but it did not materialize. Iraqi Democrats  Against Occupation's Sabah Jawad offers (at StopWar.org), "We can now see what has  been created in Iraq, because as a result of it, six months after the elections  that took place last March, Iraqi parties participating in the political process  are still unable even to agree on a Prime Minister. For the past six months  they've been fighting and threatening each-other. We've seen a new parliament  elected in March where the 335 members of parliament, the most highly paid MPs  in the entire world, have only had one meeting lasting 20 minutes in the past 6  months, and this was actually only to declare that they are going to leave this  session open indefinitely until the political parties and blocks reach an  agreement on who is going to be Prime Minister!" The New York Times' Anthony Shadid feels that Iraq has a circular  pattern and not a linear narrative.  He  explained that to Terry Gross (Fresh Air) today and noted, "What  you hear in 2010 is what you often heard in 2003.  There is no electricity, the  water's filthy, there's sewage in the street. That we're not sure what the  intnetions of the American and we're not sure of what Iraqi officials can do to  better our lives.  Those things were said in 2003, and they're still said  today.  So the lives of the Iraqis, is miserable too strong of a word?  I'm not  sure. It is incredibly difficult. And the city itself is a buried, deteriorating  capitol."   Reuters  notes a Baghdad roadside bombing injured three police officers, a Baghdad  mortar attack injured two people,  a Mosul roadside bombing injured one person,  a Mosul roadside bombing injured one child, 1 person shot dead in Mosul, and a  Jurf al-Sakhar assault on a Sahwa checkpoint resulted in 1 Sahwaand, dropping  back to Tuesday night,  a Madhatiyah home explosion claimed 3 lives and left  fifty injured. DPA reports a Hilla roadside bombing has  claimed 1 life and left at least fifty-six people injured. Meanwhile BBC News  reports that Iraq War veteran Karl Bowen died in Iraq September 14th while  the former UK soldier was "working as a bodyguard in Iraq".  The  Daily Echo adds, "The father-of-two was killed in the crash  alongside an Iraqi interpreter. An American colleague was critically injured."   Kelly  Miles (WalesOnline) informs, "Tributes have flooded in describing  Mr Bowen as a great father, a 'legend', and an outstanding friend and football  player who was the life and soul of the party and lived life to the extreme. A  father of two young girls, Elise, 11, and eight-year-old Lois, Mr Bowen had  returned to Iraq just days before the car he was driving suffered a double blow  out."  Mother Clare Bowen  tells the BBC: She said he returned to Iraq after a spell in civilian jobs,  because he wanted to return to work with former army colleagues.              "I think he always wanted to get back to the boys - because the  boys were his family," she said.                      "He loved the boys he worked with -- the  camaraderie."             Yes, the Iraq War continues.  Stephen  Farrell (New York Times) reports knick knacks sporting "Operation  New Dawn" flood the Green Zone. Jennifer  Bushaw (Atlantic Special) offers this take: Even after the recent drawdown of US combat  forces from Iraq and plans for a full withdrawal in the next year, many Middle  Easterners don't believe that American influence in Iraq will end. Steven Lee  Myers of the The New York Times supports this  theory by pointing out that in spite of the  withdrawal, US Special Operations have not changed in size or role. Middle  Easterners still see American interests pervading in Iraqi economic, political  and security concerns as efforts to continue to control the country.  Whether this is true or not, certain issues lend themselves to the United States maintaining a presence in Iraq. But the last thing it wants to do is look like oil jockeying cowboys of yesteryear. At  Liberal Dog, Charley echoes Myers,  "One should not presume that 'withdrawal' which we commonly understand to mean  complete withdrawal will occur. Don't be surprised if the agreement is  explicitly altered or re-interpreted to have a different meaning, one that will  allow a substantial number of troops to remain there after 2011. The remaining  force would continue to have an assist/support function to back up Iraqi  security forces who have not been able to this point to provide an adequate  level of security, and it may be a number of years before they can operate on  their own. And in an e-mail Charley writes, "While our  invasion of and continued stay in Iraq is one of my major grievances about our  foreign policy, nevertheless it does amus me when I hear 'Iraq' and  'sovereignty' in the same sentence. The most recent linkage of the two words was  made by acting Prime Minister Nuri al-Mlaiki on August 31. I'm sure  international lawyers would find that okay with their legalistic framework, but  to we non-lawyers, it is offensive because it is unsupported by crucial facts.   For nearly seven months the country has gone without a government based on the  March elections, they are unable to preserve their own security without the  continued use of our troops and, while they have a budget surpus, we must  continue to fund much of wht thaty do.  So where is the sovereignty?" For  further elaboration on this, the url is charley-liberaldog.blogspot.com."   In other Iraq news, Lion Paintings For Sale noted yesterday  that Tuesday marked exactly two years that US Army Spc Ahmed Kousay al-Taie had  been missing in Iraq." US Air Force Senior Airman Jimmy Hansen died serving in Iraq last week. Battle Creek Enquirer notes that the  25-year-old's funeral is scheduled for ten o'clock Saturday morning at St.  Philip Catholic Church. From the obituary posted at  Shaw Funeral Home: He was born May 24, 1985, the son of Richard and Emily Hansen, Sr. in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. James graduated from Athens High School in 2003, attended Kellogg Community College and Central Michigan University. He continued his education while in the Air Force through CMU's College of Extended Learning and was working toward his Bachelor's degree. He began his service in the U. S. Air Force in May 2008 and was Senior Airman specializing in air field management. He was stationed at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida and deployed to Iraq in 2010. James is survived by his parents, Richard and Emily Hansen, Sr. of Athens; brother, Richard A. Hansen, Jr. (Tara Roth) of Midland; his fiancée, Megan Bottomlee of Battle Creek; his grandmother, Dee Dee Aiello of Union City. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Arthur and Gloria Hansen; maternal grandfather, James Aiello; aunt, Angella Aiello and uncle, John Mastroianni. Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm's office issued the following statement today: LANSING - Governor Jennifer M. Granholm  today ordered United States flags throughout the state of Michigan and on  Michigan waters lowered for one day Friday, September 24, 2010, in honor of  Senior Airman James A. (Jimmy) Hansen of Athens, Michigan, who died September 15  at Joint Base Balad, Iraq, while supporting Operation New Dawn.  Flags should be  returned to full-staff Saturday, September 25.            Senior Airman Hansen, age 25, died from injuries suffered during a controlled detonation. He was assigned to the 46th Operations Support Squadron, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. Airman Hansen's family has requested that  flags be lowered Friday, September 24; visitation is Friday from 4-8 p.m. at the  Athens High School gymnasium.  The funeral service is scheduled for Saturday,  September 25, at St. Philip Catholic Church in Battle Creek, with burial at Fort  Custer National Cemetery in Augusta, Michigan.            Under Section 7 of Chapter 1 of Title 4 of the United States Code, 4 USC 7, Governor Granholm, in December 2003, issued a proclamation requiring United States flags lowered to half-staff throughout the state of Michigan and on Michigan waters to honor Michigan servicemen and servicewomen killed in the line of duty. Procedures for flag lowering were detailed by Governor Granholm in Executive Order 2006-10 and included in federal law under the Army Specialist Joseph P. Micks Federal Flag Code Amendment Act of 2007 (Public Law 110-41). When flown at half-staff or half-mast, the United States flag should be hoisted first to the peak for an instant and then lowered to the half-staff or half-mast position. The flag should again be raised to the peak before it is lowered for the day. When a member of the armed services from  Michigan is killed in action, the governor will issue a press release with  information about the individual(s) and the day that has been designated for  flags to be lowered in his or her honor.  The information will also be posted on  Governor Granholm's Website at www.michigan.gov/gov in the section  titled "Spotlight."  While I do like Jennifer, that's not why her statement is being noted. Generally, we noted governor's announcements in the morning entries and leave it at that. But a number of service members have died recently and, you may have noticed, we don't have governor's statements. And, if you're wondering, I've also checked their US Senators. Nothing. I find that really sad. I especially find it sad if you're a senator and if, for example, you make statements that some may see as grandstanding during the hearings but you never even note the passing of the fallen from your state. Let's also be clear that the group of people I'm talking about? They're also not attending funerals of the fallen. Governor Jennifer Granholm has noted every fallen service member in Michigan. It's a real shame that other governors can't even make the time. Turning to music,  Heart's  Red Velvet Car is the group's latest studio album, their latest hit  album.  Kat reviewed  the album by the band led by vocalist Ann Wilson and guitarist  Nancy Wilson.   And if you need a reason for good music to be noted in the  snapshot, check out Kat's  review of Ann's 2007 solo album Hope & Glory which found Ann  singing out about the things that matter when many of her peers seemed unaware  of the world around them.  The  Wilson sisters are interviewed by Mike Ragogna (Huffington Post)  and an album producer friend asked me to work in a plug for Ragogna's  interview.  If you haven't heard Red Velvet Car, you're cheating yourself out of  some of this most enjoyable music of the year. (Disclosure, I know Ann, Nancy  and Cameron Crowe.) Excerpt from the interview: MR: It's great to hear that we're talking with "Eco-friendly  Heart."     NW: Well, we're sisters, and we're women, and we've had our ear to  the ground, listening to Mother Earth for a long time as songwriters, and what  Mother Earth is going through right now is pretty drastic, and we're feeling it  too. We need the playground of Mother Earth and the bosom of Mother Earth to  still be around for our kids, and the kids of our kids, as beautifully as she  was there for is. So, we must be the custodians, harder than ever.             MR: That's really beautifully said.             NW: That's our mother! There's a lot of disrespect to our mother  going on.           MR: There really is. So, let's talk about another one of the songs  on this album, which comes to mind?          AW: I'd say "WTF," you know?              MR: Okay, "WTF" it is.   AW: The song is probably the son of "Barracuda," not on purpose  necessarily, but this song came out of a blast of feeling that happened from  looking in the mirror after making a series of repetitive, stupid mistakes.     MR: Like everyone, I guess.   AW: Like everyone, and expecting a different result, but not  getting it, and finally just looking and saying, "What...!!" There is a lot of  anger in the song, and frustration, but also a very clear message of hope to it  because you're talking to yourself.    | 
 
