Click here and look at the photo of Lie Face Melissa Harris Lacewell-Perry. I'm counting four folds in her armpit. Is she not the ugliest thing you've ever seen?
Ava and C.I. first introduced the online world to the whorish lying Lie Face Melissa Harris Lacewell-Perry in "Democracy Sometimes?" where they explained what a liar the "b" was.
She's nothing but a trashy liar. And now NPR's reporting on her and treating her like a trusted voice. She's the c-word and the b-word, kids. That's all she'll ever be. She's a dirty, lying whore and she hates that this community exists. She has gone from begging for deletions to attacks on us. Because we're the ones who can chart her lies.
And it's cute to listen to her blather away about the hours that she spends flying to NYC each week to do her Saturday and Sunday show. It's just too important, she insists.
You can whore if you want, I really don't care. Except if you're trying to raise a child -- or pretending too.
So the bitch spent the bulk of 2007 and all of 2008 traipsing around the country to whore for Barack. And where was her daughter? You know, the prop she pretends to care about?
Now Lie Face wants sympathy for having to be on an airplane.
The question remains: Where is her daughter?
Lie Face is a cheap whore and has always been one.
She lied to America that she was Black -- and hit the roof when this community exposed her White mommy -- and she lies about everything. The little things, the big things. She can't stop lying.
That's what whores do.
I think it's fitting that she's now putting the "B" and the "C" into MSNBC. That channel's going down, if you haven't heard. It's causing too many problems for NBC News.
Here's Bob Somerby on some of Lie Face's lying:
On the other hand, it’s hard to know why the professor wastes our time with some of those data—for example, with the fact that Clinton’s vote among women rose by seven points. But please note: Amid that swirl of gorilla dust, there are no data concerning Clinton’s vote total among white liberals. Nor does she offer any data about Obama’s support from white liberals.
As far as we know, such data don’t exist. But there are certainly no such data in Harris-Perry’s column.
Indeed, Harris-Perry offers no data about white liberals at all. Nor does she seem to know that vote totalsapproval ratings. Are we supposed to compare Clinton’s rise in the white vote to Obama’s drop in white approvals?
Are we supposed to make that comparison? If so, why?
These professors today! Harris-Perry drops several bombs as she proceeds with her critique. And the bombs she drops are potent weapons; the R-bomb is plainly the most important bomb in the American arsenal. That said, we’ll close today with one of the questions with which we closed yesterday’s post:
How careful should a person be when she is dropping such powerful bombs? To that, we’ll add another question:
Did the professor understand that she had no relevant data? That she had no data which were actually relevant to her apparent claim? are a whole different critter from
Lie Face is mixed and she can't even tell the truth about that. If she really were Black, she'd know the film "Imitation of Life," rather infamous in the Black community, when the young woman who has passed as White learns her mother died (the one she denied) she rushes to the funeral. "I'm Living In Shame" Diana Ross & the Supremes sang exploring similar terrain. Lie Face is a failure as a daughter, as a mother, a political commentator and (give this latest marriage a few more weeks) as a wife.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
Friday,
 July 20, 2012 (and, yes, today is the 20th, not yesterday).  Chaos and 
violence continue, a document -- a secret document -- Nouri wrote in 
2009 just emerged, Ramadan starts Saturday Grand Ayatollah Ali 
al-Sistani declares, Iraqis struggle with obtaining basic food stuffs, 
we continue covering the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy Martin 
Kobler's report on Iraq, we wonder when he'll stop being so squirmy when
 it comes to LGBT issues, US Green Party presidential candidate Jill 
Stein's running a questionable and ineffective campiagn, and much more.
This
 morning there were many interesting articles about Martin Kobler's 
presentation on Iraq to the United Nation's Security Council yesterday. 
 Kobler is the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Iraq.  And the 
few articles this morning about the presentation were nothing like what 
Kobler delivered yesterday.  (This afternoon, UPI produced a report that
 demonstrated their correspondent saw the actual presentation.)  But the
 reports this morning were a lot like the press conference Kobler held 
after -- about an hour after -- the Security Council presentation.  You 
have to wonder how editorial boards ever pretend to have an ethical 
stature to call others out from when their reporters lie?  A press 
briefing is not the report Kobler presented to the UN Security Council. 
 
Kobler's report was interesting for what it 
said.  It was even more interesting for what it didn't say but you 
probably needed to hear the report to know that and you probably needed 
to have heard the April report to be able to offer context in July.  
April 10th was when he made his previous presentation and we covered that in the April 10th snapshot and the April 11th snapshot.  His Thursday report we covered yesterday
 and we'll continue that coverage now.  When we left off yesterday, he 
was talking about 12 acts of violence a day and over 1,300 
UN
 Special Envoy Martin Kobler:  Each victim is one victim too many.  The 
Iraqi authorities must continue to make every effort to identify the 
perpetrators of these acts of violence and bring them to justice.  These
 attacks are intended to ignite further violence.  Despite the 
sufferings, Iraqis from all walks of life and religious backgrounds must
 turn their backs on past divisions and unite for a peaceful future.  
Mr. President, human rights are a cornerstone of Iraq's democratic 
future and are at the core of United Nations mandate  in Iraq. To this 
end, UNAMI [United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq] continues to 
support activities of the Ministry of Human Rights in ensuring that Iraq
 meets its international humanitarian rights obligations.  As I informed
 the Council members last April, the Council of Representatives endorsed
 the appointment of the Commissioners of Iraq's first Independent High  
 Commission for Human Rights.  And I am pleased to further report the 
commissioners have now met and started their work.  UNAMI and UNDP 
[United Nations Development Programme]  are supporting the Commission in
 this process.  The findings of the 2011 United Nations report on the 
Human Rights Situation in Iraq published in May underlined the fragility
 of human rights situation in Iraq.  The report's conclusions largely 
coincided with the  Ministry of Human Rights own findings.  While it is 
recognized that the government of Iraq has made progress in implementing
 measures to protect and promote human rights, the impact on the overall
 human rights situation remains limited.  The UN is assisting the Iraqi 
authorities in strengthening the rule of law and boosting protections 
for human rights in Iraq to bring an end to abuses like arbitrary 
arrests and detentions.  The economic, culture and social rights of   
Iraqis are also a matter of real concern.  Poverty, high unemployment, 
economic stagnation, environmental degradation and a lack of basic 
services continue to effect large sections of the population.  It is 
vital that Iraqis -- in particular, vulnerable groups -- be provided 
with better access to basic services, social welfare and community 
development programs and opportunities for education.  Nothing less is 
required in order to provide for the success of future generations.  The
 rights of all Iraqis -- including minorities -- must be protected as 
stipulated in the Iraqi Contrib -- Iraqi Constitution.  Mr. President, 
Iraq retains the death penalty for a large number of crimes.  I 
therefore reiterate the call by the Secretary-General [Ban Ki-moon] and 
the High Commissioner of Human Rights for the government of Iraq to 
establish a moratorium on all executions with a view to their 
abolition.  I welcome that the   authorities of the Kurdistan Region 
continue to implement a moratorium on carrying out executions which has 
been in place since 2007.  
That's
 not the end of his report.  We'll continue noting from there in order 
but we're breaking parts up.  It was interesting how in both the written
 report (July 11th) and the oral report Kobler gave yesterday, the 
Russian bikers were ignored.  5 men threatened with the death penalty, 5
 men arrested and beaten.  An international incident and not a word on 
it.  But Kobler wasn't very interested in words.  There was time to 
whine about his budget taking a 20% cut next year but not time to note, 
as the written report did:
Journalists
 and media professionals in Iraq continue to face arbitrary arrest and 
detention and to suffer from intimidation and attacks as a result of 
their profession.  During the reporting period, UNESCO and UNOPS [United
 Nations Office for Project Services] trained 240 media professionals in
 Basra, Erbil and Baghdad on security, self-protection, risk management 
and trauma first aid to enable them to cope with existing professional 
threats and risks.
The 
issue so bothered Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that he raised it twice 
in the written report (the first time is quoted above).  When Kobler 
states he's repeating the Secretary-General's point about stopping death
 penalty, he's referring to the written report (it's the 72nd paragraph 
in the written report).  
Iraq being discussed
 before the UN.  That means what topic gets touched on that the US media
 usually ignores?  Chapter VII.  Iraq was placed in that status by the 
UN as a result of Iraq's war on Kuwait.  
Speical
 Envoy Martin Kobler:  Let me now turn to some of the regional and 
international developments pertaining to Iraq.  As you know, Prime 
Minister Maliki's visit to Kuwait in March was followed by the historic 
visit of the Emir of Kuwait [Sabah al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah] to 
Baghdad to attend the Arab League Summit.  These two visits have 
markedly improved bi-later relations between Kuwait and Iraq and 
facilitated the resumption of the meetings of the Joint Ministerial 
Committee. Iraq has also taken decisive steps to finalize the 
Iraqi-Kuwait border maintenance project in accordance with Resolution 
833.  At the request of both parties, the United Nations is preparing 
now for maintenance work to start by 31st of October provided that key 
prerequisites -- like the removal of obstacles on the borders -- are met
 bringing all Chapter VII obligations pertaining to Kuwait to a 
satisfactory close will boost   prospects for bilateral trade, 
investment, promote regional cooperation and lead to the restoration of 
Iraq's rightful standing within the international community.  In this 
regard, I would also like to take the opportunity to welcome the 
adoption of on 28th of June by the Council of Representatives of a law 
ratifying the additional protocol to the Comprehensive Safeguards 
Agreement of the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] and encourage
 the government of Iraq to take the remaining steps to ensure its entry 
into force as soon as possible.   Mr. President, the intensity and 
frequency of sand and dust storms mainly generated from inside Iraq has 
increased in recent years.  They have significant impact on public 
health in Iraq and in the wider region --  especially for the most 
vulnerable --  and they effect transport and trade. During my visit to 
Kuwait in June and following an offer by the Emir of Kuwait to invest   a
 portion of Iraq's outstanding war compensation funds back into Iraq, I 
proposed an environmental fund to combat sand and dust storms.  If Iraq 
and Kuwait agree, the fund could be used to undertake activities to 
reduce this health hazard which is impeding daily life in the region.  
Such activities might include improving water resource management, anti 
desertification, re-forestification and agricultural projects.  Mr. 
President, needless to say that the ongoing violence in Syria is a 
source of deep concern given the potential for the spread of instability
 and violence, humanitarian fall out and political repercussions.  The 
UN system in Iraq is putting in place contingency plans for possible 
humanitarian emergency.  In this connection, I recently visited a 
refugee camp in the Kurdistan Region for those displaced by the conflict
 in Syria.  So far, with 7,000 refugees, their number are manageable.  
On 10th of   July, the United Nations and League of Arab States 
Joint-Special Envoy for Syria, Mr. Kofi Anan, visited Iraq and met with 
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.  The government of Iraq was very clear 
on the policy of a political transition that is Syrian-led and 
Syrian-owned and ensures that the legitimate and democratic aspirations 
of the Syrian people are fully realized. 
So
 there's a refugee camp in the KRG.  And the KRG has a moratorium on the
 death penalty.  Wonder how much bleaker the state of Iraq would be 
reported to the Security Council as being if the Special Envoy didn't 
keep including the semi-autonomous KRG region?
As he continues, he'll note some basic numbers.
Special
 Envoy Martin Kobler:  Mr. President, the United Nations in Iraq also 
continues to support the development of effective, accountable and 
transparent state institutions.  My new deputy and resident humanitarian
 coordinator for Iraq, Ms. Jacqueline Babcock, took up her duties on 
13th of May.  She has already shown her determination and leadership in 
coordinating the UN country team to deliver as one.  I have asked her to
 ensure that the country team  strengthens its presence and activities 
across the country.  This is taking shape in Basra. There, the UN funds 
and programs can assist in bringing the quality of life in this oil rich
 province to those levels found in other oil rich countries in the 
region.  Mr. President, let me briefly highlight two of the priority 
areas with important political, security and development implications 
where the UN system in Iraq is working together.  Iraq is one of   the 
most youthful countries  in the world with 50% of the population under 
the age of 18.  At the same time, the unemployment rate for youth is 
more than double the domestic average with 23%.  The UN system is 
supporting programs aimed at increasing youth participation in social, 
political and economic spheres.  Building on the International Year of 
Youth 2011, the UN is supporting civil-society groups to strengthen 
their role in ensuring democratic spaces and freedom.  The third UNDP 
National Development Report focuses on youth and will be published later
 this year.  As with youth, women are important actors in Iraq's 
development. Yet the illiteracy rate among Iraqi women is more than 
double that of Iraqi men.  In my meetings with the Iraqi governmental 
interloculators, as well as women's civil-society organizations, I 
advocate for the adoption and implementation of the proposed National 
Strategy on the   Advancement of Women.  The UN family is working to 
support women take up their role also in political and economic life.  
The UN is also continuing to implement Security Council Resolution 1322 
and to encourage the government to fulfill its committment in this 
regard.  
Now we're 
getting to Camp Ashraf.  Camp Ashraf were approximately 3,500 residents 
who were Iranian dissidents.  They came to Iraq in the 80s and had 
protection up to the Iraq War.  When the US-launched war toppled the 
government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, the US government -- 
largely via US military officers -- began a dialogue with the residents 
which resulted in their surrendering their arms and becoming protected 
persons under the Geneva Agreement and international law.  Though never 
legally revoked, that protection would be ignored once Barack Obama was 
sworn in as US president.  Nouri would twice attack the camp resulting 
in multiple deaths and a large number of wounded.  Humanitarian 
organizations -- Amnesty, for example -- would decry the attacks but the
 US government would remain silent.  When you read over Kobler's remarks
 in a second, focus on what's really harming Camp Ashraf right   now.
UN
 Special Envoy Martin Kobler:  Finally, Mr. President, I still remain 
very concerned by the lack of progress in resolving the issue of Camp 
Ashraf. 2,000 residents of Camp Ashraf have relocated to Camp Hurriyah 
[Liberty] in the last months.  Approximately 1,200 remain in Camp 
Ashraf.  The several deadlines set by the government of Iraq have been 
extended. I thank the government of Iraq for their flexibility in this 
regard and I appeal to the Iraqi authorities to continue the process to 
resolve the relocation peacefully. Our committment is strictly 
humanitarian, to facilitate a voluntary, temporary relocation of 
residents to Camp Hurriyah as the first step of resettlement to 
countries outside of Iraq; however, the success of a facilitator depends
 at least on good will. Their can be no facilitation without 
constructive and practical dialogue.  We are faced with three main 
challenges.  First, recent weeks have   witnessed difficulties in 
maintaining dialogue between UNAMI and the residents and between the 
residents and the government of Iraq reinforcing a perception that the 
residents lack genuine will to participate in the process faciliated by 
UNAMI.  Second, responsiblity also falls on the many international 
supporters.  It is of great importance that they contribute to 
positively influence the residents' position.  And third, to  date 
almost no memeber-state has stepped forward to offer resettlement to 
eligible, former Ashraf residents.  There must be a way out of Hurriyah 
in the foreseeable future.  Without prospect for resettlement, the 
ongoing process runs the risk of collapsing.  The tempoary transit 
location at Camp Hurriyah has the capacity to accomodate the remaining 
1,200 residents and meets acceptable humanitarian standards.  Both UNAMI
 and UNHCR [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees] have   
devoted substantial energy and resources to resolving this issue.  More 
than 100 staff are dedicated to the project in the meantime.  I appeal 
to the government of Iraq to be generous -- particularly in terms of 
humanitarian needs like water and electricity and to avoid violence 
under any circumstances.  I also appeal to camp residents to abide by 
Iraqi laws and avoid provocation and violence.  Time is running out to 
find a sustainable solution.  The government's patience is wearing thin.
 I would therefore like to echo the Secretary-General and urge Camp 
Ashraf residents to cooperate with the Iraqi authorities and to relocate
 from Camp Ashraf to Camp Hurriyah.  It is also imperative that third 
countries step forward to accept eligible residents for resettlement as 
soon as possible without which there can be no durable solution.  
The residents have stopped moving to Camp Liberty.  They want to take items such as generators.  Why?  
Nouri doesn't want them to take items such as generators.  Why?
Because both sides don't believe that the Camp Ashraf residents will soon leave Camp Liberty.  Why don't they believe it?
Because
 no one's left so far and that's because other countries aren't willing 
to take them in.  In Nouri al-Maliki's view, Camp Liberty is just a 
place to store Camp Ashraf residents for another lengthy period.  In his
 view, he's being conned and then in a year or two, he'll be told 
they'll be moved somewhere else in Iraq.  It's a view Camp Ashraf 
residents can share.  Because both they and Nouri have seen 1200 moved 
and not resettled anywhere.  They're just remaining in Camp Liberty, the
 same way they remained in Camp Ashraf.   If Nouri (or the government in
 Tehran) is to believe that the residents are being resettled, they're 
going to have to see some resettled.  It's not that complicated.
Why
 are so many nations so reluctant to take them?  Because the US 
government refuses to do their job.  Camp Ashraf residents are part of 
the MEK.  The MEK is considered a terrorist group by the US government 
-- the Clinton administration put them on that list in the late 90s in 
an effort to make an overture to the government of Iran.  Though ordered
 by a federal court to resolve the MEK status quickly, the State Dept 
refused and now has until October to do so or the court will impose a 
punishment.  (Whether Barack Obama is re-elected president or not, 
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has already stated she will not serve
 a second term in her post.  An October deadline from the court is a 
joke because the administration will treat it as such -- either because 
they will quickly become a lameduck one or because they will be looking 
for a new Secretary of State.)   Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and 
those   under them have repeatedly and falsely equated MEK and Camp 
Ashraf residents as one grouping.
The US 
government does not recognize the MEK as protected persons.  The US 
government does recognize Camp Ashraf residents as protected persons.  
This issue should have been resolved a long time ago, the US government 
made promises and needs to keep them.  The easiest way is to create an 
excpetion for the Camp Ashraf residents.  That's 3,200 people 
currently.  They are all in Iraq.  Those in Iraq transferring out would 
not be considered "terrorists."  This is due to where they were located,
 due to the stationary aspect of their location and due to the fact that
 the US government already gave them protected persons status.  That 
status expires only when they are out of Iraq so it is in the US 
government's best interests to get them out of Iraq quickly.  The State 
Dept could easily create a subgrouping of those residents in Iraq to 
allow other countries to take them in.
The 
refusal to do so means the Barack Obama administration will likely have 
blood on their hands because one side will likely explode in a very 
short time.  This has been going on too long and neither Nouri nor the 
residents are seeing any progress.  If the US government can not 
seriously assist the Camp Ashraf residents by creating a 
subgrouping/classification for them and violence takes place, those 
deaths -- Iraqis or Ashraf residents -- will be the responsibility of 
the US White House.
There was a lot mentioned 
in the report.  A lot overlooked as well.  As he winds down, Kobler 
makes the decision that UNAMI itself -- and its budget -- is more 
important than any Iraqi topic that he could include in the final 
moments.
Special Envoy 
Martin Kolber:  Mr. President, in my introduction, I posed the question 
of whether the people of Iraq still need UNAMI?  I am convinced that 
UNAMI is needed more than ever to help Iraq complete its transition to a
 stable and prosperous democracy.  UNAMI has the legitimacy and the 
standing to represent the international community in Iraq.  Iraqis from 
all communities look to UNAMI to protect their aspirations and to ensure
 their needs are met.  With Security Council support, UNAMI will 
continue its efforts to address the many outstanding issues crucial to 
securing Iraq's future.  The substantial cut of 20% of UNAMI's budget in
 2013  requires that we do more with less.  In this context, the mission
 may need to reconsider some areas of operation.  Mr. President, I 
should like to sincerely thank the members of the council for their 
continued support, the government of Iraq and the   wider membership of 
the United Nations as well as the staff of UNAMI for their unrelenting 
commitment and dedication to implement our mandate.  Thank you very 
much.
And that was 
it.  Last April, in his presentation to the UN Security-Council, he 
refused to note the targeting of Iraq's LGBT community.  In the written 
report (written in March), there was a passing reference ("perception of
 their sexual orientation") with the promise that the UN was in the 
process of corroborating the reported deaths and would address it when 
they had.  It's months later, presumably the UN has been able to 
corroborate those reports in some fashion by now.  So why can't Martin 
Kobler talk about it?  It's not even in the written report (which was 
published July 11th).  There is no mention made of it.  If Martin Kobler
 wishes to represent Iraqis, he needs to represent all Iraqis.  He needs
 to find it in his comfort zone to use the terms "gay" and "lesbian."  
If that's too much work for him, if it's too much of a stretch, he needs
 to find a new position.  The United Nations was   silent as young 
Iraqis were targeted -- males and females -- because they were believed 
to be gay or to be Emo or both.  Rolling Stone and NME covered it.  But 
the United Nations stayed silent.  The US State Dept covered it in their
 own human rights report.  But the United Nations stayed silent.  That's
 unacceptable.
It's especially unacceptable considering the United Nations' supposed position on this issue.  As we noted when Kobler gave his last report to the Security Council: 
Last month, Igor Volsky (Think Progress) noted
 (March 7, 2012), "Earlier today, the UN Human Rights Council held the 
first hearing 'to discuss discrimination and violence against LGBT 
people."  UN Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon issued a special message to 
the council, decrying violence against the LGBT community as a 
'monumental tragedy' that is a 'stain on our collective conscience' and a
 'violation of international law' [. . .]" and he quotes UN 
Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon stating, "To those who are gay, lesbian, 
bisexual or transgender, let me say -- you are not along. Your struggle 
for an end to violence and discrimination is a shared struggle.  Any 
attack on you is an attack on the universal   values the United Nations 
and I have sworn to uphold."
Is Kobler not part of the UN?  Has he sworn to do the same.
We
 got a little talk about women in this presenation.  That is new.  
Previous presentations to the Security Council by the Special Envoy to 
Iraq frequently left women out.  But apparently, something more "gross" 
and "disgusting" than women has been found by the office of Special 
Envoy: Iraq's LGBTs.
It was really 
disgusting to hear Kobler prattle on about violence and minorities and 
never once note the attacks on Iraq's LGBT community.  It was 
disgusting.
You may remember that 
Kobler silence on LGBT was an issue that continued past the two 
snapshots on the April report.  You may remember my noting UN friends 
swore he'd include it when the figures were verified.  The figures were 
verified -- I've 'verified' that with UN friends this morning.  And 
still Kobler said nothing.  There was time for budget and shout-outs, 
but no time for Martin Kobler to find his comfort level with gays and 
lesbians.
Martin Kobler better start 
representing all of Iraq or become the leading face of homophobia in the
 United Nations.  On that last possibility, he's already well on his 
way.
As the Washington Post notes, the holy day of Ramadan is arriving. Alsumaria reports that Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani has declared Saturday to be the first day of Ramadan.   Al Mada carries a Ramadan greeting congratulating
 all Iraqis and asking for their blessing in the coming year with God 
Almighty strengthening   their path to justice, freedom and security.   Kitabat notes
 that there are calls for the government to grant leave for employees on
 days when the temperature reaches 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees 
Fahrenheit).  While the sun is up, those observing the Muslim holiday 
are supposed to fast.  Before sunrise and after sunset, those observing 
the holiday can eat.  However, food prices are rising in Iraq.  Alsumaria is the latest this week to report
 on the sharp increase in prices for basic items such as lentils.  The 
Ministry of Commerce is insisting that they got materials to the stores 
in time so any increase in prices is not their fault.  The article also 
notes that the high prices might make Ramadan slowly disappear as a part
 of Iraqi life -- as other habits have been forgotten in Iraq.  It seems
 unlikely that Ramadan could disappear from Iraq but then come reports 
about how hard it is for some to observe it.   
Al Mada notes
 that unemployment is also a huge issue during the holy month and only 
more so when the food prices increase.  They speak with Hani Rseg who is
 a construction worker and tells the paper that he didn't get any wages 
for four months because contractors rarely get paid on time and when 
money did come in, there was electricity, gasoline, water and other 
things to pay for and only now is he able to shop for Ramadan.  Police 
officer Ahmed Radhi al-Hleaj states that he's paying a car loan and 
wouldn't be able to afford Ramadan except that he's taken on a second 
job working as a taxi driver.
Rahim Ruhayem (BBC News -- link is video) reports on Iraq's ration systems.
Rahim Ruhayem (BBC News -- link is video) reports on Iraq's ration systems.
Rahim
 Ruhayem:  In distribution centers, few complain about waste or 
abundance.  Dawood is a construction worker in central Baghdad and he's 
come to collect his monthly share.  He told me the distribution system 
is gradually fading away.  
Dawood:
 It's getting less and less, year by year, month by month.  And there is
 no variety.  We get cooking oil.  Sometimes rice, flour.  No tea, no 
washing powder, no salt.  Many things have been scrapped.  And they will
 probably cancel the rest too.  The whole thing will be finished soon.  
We better get used to it.  
Rahim
 Ruhayem:  The government insists it has no plans to end the system, it 
only talks of reform over the coming years. At a cost of about five 
billion dollars a year, the Iraqi state hands out food to its people. 
But some of these people need it a lot more than others.  23% of Iraqis 
live below the poverty line.  If the government wants to reform the 
system, it has a delicate balance to strike between encouraging 
productivity and less reliance on the state on one hand while making 
sure on the other not to jeopardize the food security of those most in 
need.  Rahim Ruhayem, BBC News, Baghdad.
Census numbers might change the ration-card numbers but, as Al Mada points out, Iraq has not had a census since 1997 and both the 2007 and 2009 censuses were postponed (by Nouri).  Today, Al Mada reports,
 a member of Parliament's Finance Committee told the paper that the 
government does not know the actual population in Iraq and depends upon a
 random and inaccurate figure based on indicators and that their is a 
wide difference between the Ministry of FInance's figure and the ration 
card number and between the Ministry of Plannin's figure and the ration 
car number.  
Earlier this week, as continued unemployment was met with soaring food prices,  Al Mada reported
 that there are accusations in Hilla that food merchants are 
intentionally introducing small amounts of food to the markets in order 
to artifically pump up the prices by creating scarcity.  This comes as 
Babylon Province sees less and less items for sale that can be purchased
 with ration cards.  True or false, the federal government should be 
addressing this item though they will most likely ignore it.  If it 
isn't true, the rumors will still take root because food prices are 
increasing, ration items are becoming scarce and hunger isn't something 
people can overlook the way they might endure electricity outages.  So 
as the hunger and anger builds, even if the rumors are false,  a need to
 hold someone accountable can   build and, if it does, it could leave 
food merchants targeted.  If the rumors are true, the federal government
 needs to deal with it (a) to show that it can deal with something, (b) 
the economy cannot take higher prices (unless Nouri intends to expand 
the ration card system) and (c) the federal government still has the 
power to set controls on various aspects of retail within the 
country. In addition, Nasiriyah reported
 that in an effort to try to reach 12 hours of electricity a day for the
 holy month of Ramadan, Iraqi is increasing energy imports from Iran. 
Alsumaria notes that Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani is calling on Iraqi Muslims to watch the crescent moon this evening to determine whether Ramadan is starting.
Yesterday,
 Nouri al-Maliki attempted to seize control of the news cycle but, as is
 so often the case with Nouri, lost instead.  He insisted that the White
 House had conveyed, in a letter, their support for his attempts to 
cancel the October contract the Kurdistan Regional Government signed 
with ExxonMobil.  No such thing happened.  But some outlets live to be 
sucker-punched.  Let's note one of the few who realized that journalism 
involves skepticism of official statements.  Here's Kristin Deasy (Global Post) on those claims:
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki claimed late Thursday to have received a message from US President Barack Obama indicating that the US sided with Baghdad in its deepening row with Kurdistan over the management of the northern region's oil resources, reported Reuters.
The message from Baghdad -- which did not quote the alleged Obama letter directly or provide any copy of it -- welcomed the "positive" US position on the matter, which it said was "in the same manner as the Iraqi government is seeking," said Reuters.
To repeat, in the United States, there is no state control over oil companies. In Iraq, Nouri's lies can fly somewhat because that country has a history of nationalized oil companies. As a result, a casual news consumer would hear of Nouri's claim and think nothing of it. But in the US, where it's far more likely that a multi-national oil company will control the government than the goverment ever control an oil company, that claims is laughable on its face.
In October, ExxonMobil and the KRG signed their contract. Nouri's Baghdad-based government played angry, spurned lover sending one letter after another to ExxonMobil, each basically screeching, "How could you! After all we've been through!"
As Iraq's Minister of Oil confirmed in early 2012, ExxonMobil elected to ignore those letters and not respond. And Nouri had nothing else to offer. So last month he began making noise that the US government -- specifically the White House (Nouri has always been hugely unpopular in the US Congress) -- should break ExxonMobil's contract.
Which again demonstrates how stupid and not ready to be prime minister Nouri actually is. The White House has no control over ExxonMobil. And this was conveyed to Nouri -- as the Iraqi press noted. But with US Vice President Joe Biden's National Security Adviser Antony Blinken in Iraq, Nouri decided to spin the visit. It would have been laughable on any day but it was especially laughable yesterday when another major multi-national oil corporation elected to bypass Baghdad and sign with the KRG. David R. Baker (Fuel Fix) notes:
Chevron Corp. will hunt for oil in northern Iraq's Kurdish region — the company's first major effort in the volatile country since the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.
The deal, made public Thursday, lands Chevron squarely in the midst of post-war Iraq's bitter oil politics, with rival regions and ethnic groups fighting over how to develop the country's vast petroleum reserves. Chevron faces significant risk, and the potential of great reward.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki claimed late Thursday to have received a message from US President Barack Obama indicating that the US sided with Baghdad in its deepening row with Kurdistan over the management of the northern region's oil resources, reported Reuters.
The message from Baghdad -- which did not quote the alleged Obama letter directly or provide any copy of it -- welcomed the "positive" US position on the matter, which it said was "in the same manner as the Iraqi government is seeking," said Reuters.
To repeat, in the United States, there is no state control over oil companies. In Iraq, Nouri's lies can fly somewhat because that country has a history of nationalized oil companies. As a result, a casual news consumer would hear of Nouri's claim and think nothing of it. But in the US, where it's far more likely that a multi-national oil company will control the government than the goverment ever control an oil company, that claims is laughable on its face.
In October, ExxonMobil and the KRG signed their contract. Nouri's Baghdad-based government played angry, spurned lover sending one letter after another to ExxonMobil, each basically screeching, "How could you! After all we've been through!"
As Iraq's Minister of Oil confirmed in early 2012, ExxonMobil elected to ignore those letters and not respond. And Nouri had nothing else to offer. So last month he began making noise that the US government -- specifically the White House (Nouri has always been hugely unpopular in the US Congress) -- should break ExxonMobil's contract.
Which again demonstrates how stupid and not ready to be prime minister Nouri actually is. The White House has no control over ExxonMobil. And this was conveyed to Nouri -- as the Iraqi press noted. But with US Vice President Joe Biden's National Security Adviser Antony Blinken in Iraq, Nouri decided to spin the visit. It would have been laughable on any day but it was especially laughable yesterday when another major multi-national oil corporation elected to bypass Baghdad and sign with the KRG. David R. Baker (Fuel Fix) notes:
Chevron Corp. will hunt for oil in northern Iraq's Kurdish region — the company's first major effort in the volatile country since the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.
The deal, made public Thursday, lands Chevron squarely in the midst of post-war Iraq's bitter oil politics, with rival regions and ethnic groups fighting over how to develop the country's vast petroleum reserves. Chevron faces significant risk, and the potential of great reward.
In Iraq where safety has never been secured, Alsumaria reports
 a Yezidi girl was burned alive in her Mosul home -- some are saying it 
is suicide, no finding has been established yet.  Alsumaria notes that 
2011 saw 6 confirmed cases of murder and ten case of confirmed suicides 
by burning -- in addition there were 85 who were injured by burning.  
Yesterday NINA reported 1 Peshmerga died in a Kirkuk sticky bombing and two more were injured.
No emergence of security, no end to the political stalemate.   Al Mada reports
 the National Alliance (again) discussed their Reform Committee paper.  
They've discussed it so much that they must know it by heart.  NINA reports
 that Iraqiya's Hani Ashur has declared "the reforms paper prepared by 
the National Alliance on its way to failure, where there is no agreement
 upon [it] even within the National Alliance and it became a mean to buy
 time and not for the reforms, it will not see the light or [be] put on 
the table of dialogue.  The reform paper is not more than an attempt to 
melt the crisis and the government is not serious in dealing with it, 
and the crisis may [be] back to the first square." 
In what may end up being the most explosive political news out of Iraq this week, Al Mada reports
 the existence of a document signed by Nouri from October 2009 in which 
he secretly asked then-House Speaker Ayad al-Samarri not to question 
Hussain al-Shahristani.  al-Shahristani is currently Iraq's Deputy Prime
 Minister for Energy.  Starting in the spring of 2006 (with Nouri's 
becoming prime minister), al-Shahristani became the Minister of Oil.  
Despite enjoying a great deal of soft press -- from The National Newspaper, Iraq Oil Report
 and pretty much everyone else -- al-Shahristani has no major successes 
to point to and Nouri conveyed in the letter that asking al-Sharistani 
about corruption or violence would be harmful to the government's 
interests.  (al-Sharistani is a member of Nouri's State of Law   
political slate.) 
Kim Kelly (The Atlantic) focuses more on the present [art scene] and the emergence of what is thought to be a musical first in Iraq:
She
 says her name is Anahita, the 28-years-old voice and vitriol behind 
Janaza, which is believed to be Iraq's very first female-fronted, 
black-metal band. Allow that notion --Iraq's very first female-fronted, 
black-metal band -- to sink in for a moment. Her first recording, Burn the Pages of Quran,
 boasts five distorted, primitive tracks that altogether run just shy of
 an unlucky 13 minutes. She, along with a handful of other acts hailing 
from the Middle East, are repurposing black metal's historically 
anti-Christian ferocity to rail against Islam. In doing so, these bands 
are serving up another example of how art and dissent can intersect in a region where dissent can sometimes have deadly consequences.
Saturday Anna Breslaw (Jezebel) reports that The Atlantic article might be a hoax and that the photos accompanying it have been used in publications previously for other metal bands. I meant to include that Monday (we noted it Saturday) but kept running out of space.
I'd
 also hoped to cover Jill Stein's campaign this week and, at the very 
least, run a press release from it.  Not doing it. Not interested in the
 pretense of Bain and how it just can't be understood!  That's b.s. and 
Bob Somerby's rightly called it out (Somerby most recently called out 
the nonsense today). 
 If Jill and her campaign think repeating those rumors qualifies as 
running for office, they're kidding themselves.  And if they think 
spending three paragraphs on this rumor and then tossing in one 
paragraph on Barack is going to make people think they'll hold both 
accountable, consider it again.  We already saw 2008 when Rosa Clemente 
-- Cynthia McKinney's running mate -- was trashing Hillary Clinton with 
lies long after she was out of the race but Rosa never could find the 
courage or strength to call out   Barack.  We're not in the mood for 
it.  If the Green Party thinks inflating their criticism of Barack a 
tiny bit after three and half years of non-stop failures by Barack 
qualifies as 'strong,' they're crazier than they think the voters are.  
Run a real campaign or get out of the damn race.  
Mitt
 Romney as president is a question mark.  Barack Obama is not.  If Dr. 
Jill can't call out -- on a daily basis -- the treatement of Bradley 
Manning, assissinating American citizens, killing due process and 
Barack's war on whistle blowers and the Constitution, she's not fit for 
office or, for that matter, for the campaign trail.  Green Party needs 
to beef up their game and Jill's campaign?  It's been 7 days since she 
gave the speech in Baltimore.  Her campaign is still unable to post 
video or a transcript of that speech to her website?  Someone's not 
looking like a real candidate.
 
