Wednesday, April 08, 2020

The moon, self-healing flowers and early crops (Science)

Did you catch the Pink Moon yesterday?

Chelsea Gould (SPACE.COM) notes:



The full moon on Tuesday night (April 7) was the biggest "supermoon" of the year and skywatchers, at least those with clear skies to see it, are thrilled.
Dubbed the "Super Pink Moon," this full moon appeared larger and brighter than usual because the moon was at perigee, or the closest point to Earth in its elliptical orbit. With this ultra-close event, the moon was just 221,772 miles (356,907 kilometers) from Earth, compared to its average distance of 238,855 miles (384,400 km). The moon (while not actually pink) was at its absolute closest at 2:08 p.m. EDT (1808 GMT), about 8.5 hours before it became officially full, at 10:35 p.m. EDT (0235 GMT on April 8).

Now use that link and you can see photos of moon. Another science story I found interesting was by Matt McGrath (BBC NEWS):


Some flowers can recover with remarkable speed after a major accident, such as being walked upon by humans.
Scientists found that species including orchid and sweet pea could re-orient themselves in 10-48 hours after an injury
These plants are able to bend, twist and reposition their stems to ensure that they reproduce.
But others such as buttercups fail to bounce back after damage.

At PHYS.ORG, the University of Portsmouth notes this ability some flowers have and adds:



Professor of Ecology and Evolution Scott Armbruster, at the University of Portsmouth, published his findings in New Phytologist.

He said: "Mechanical accidents happen to plants fairly often and can, in some cases, stop the plant from being able to attract pollinating insects and so, make seeds. Making seeds and propagating is a flower's main purpose, so injuries which threaten that pose a huge problem."
The study found that bilaterally symmetrical flowers—those in which the left and right sides mirror each other, such as snapdragon, orchid, and sweet pea—can almost always restore their 'correct' orientation by moving individual flower stems or even moving the stalk that supports a cluster of flowers.
In some cases, bilaterally symmetrical flowers can accurately re-position their stigma—a sexual organ—after injury.
Plants' movement after an injury isn't only about making seeds; these plants were seen to bend or twist to make sure their leaves were again facing the Sun, necessary for photosynthesis, the process by which a plant produces its food.
Radially symmetrical flowers, star-shaped flowers, such as petunia, buttercup, and wild rose—lacked this ability and their stems rarely recovered after an injury.
Nearly all (95 per cent) of bilaterally symmetrical flowers examined moved after injury to restore the plant's ability to attract pollinators, while just four per cent of radially symmetrical flowers examined had moved post-injury. This is probably because floral orientation is usually more important for the efficient pollination of bilaterally symmetrical flowers than radially symmetrical ones.
"This little-known aspect of plant evolution is fascinating and tells us much more than we previously knew about how plants behaviourally adapt to changes in their environment, including mechanical accidents," Professor Armbruster said.

I like flowers. I have orchids in my bedroom. Not cut, an orchid plant. I love non-flowering plants as well. And I love cut flowers. They all make wonderful accents and brighten up a room. And, of course, my daughter with the green thumb loves plants and is already started on her vegetable garden. Gardening has been around for years -- though my daughter might not believe it, gardening is older than I am. However, it's interesting to realize how far it may actually go back. And we're going back to Matt McGrath and BBC NEWS for this story:

Far from being a pristine wilderness, some regions of the Amazon have been profoundly altered by humans dating back 10,000 years, say researchers.
An international team found that during this period, crops were being cultivated in a remote location in what is now northern Bolivia.
The scientists believe that the humans who lived here were planting squash, cassava and maize.
The inhabitants also created thousands of artificial islands in the forest.
The end of the last ice age, around 12,000 years ago, saw a sustained rise in global temperatures that initiated many changes around the world.
Perhaps the most important of these was that early civilisations began to move away from living as hunter-gatherers and started to cultivate crops for food.

That's pretty incredible. I knew maize, and love it, and squash. But cassava is something I had to look up: "the starchy tuberous root of a tropical tree, used as food in tropical countries but requiring careful preparation to remove traces of cyanide from the flesh." I love corn. My favorite is corn on the cob. But I like corn anyway -- frozen, canned, you name it. But I love squash. My parents plant squash and it grows and grows and grows. So I grew up on yellow squash. We had it every way you can think of including pickled. My favorite thing to do when I'm homesick is to grab two yellow squash, cut them into small circles and grill them after spreading some minced garlic on the tops. I don't know what my favorite vegetable is. I grew up eating them all.

I think this would be my favorites in order -- I'll just do ten.

1) Squash
2) Black eyed peas
3) Tomatoes (I know it's a fruit, whatever)
4) Corn
5) Bell peppers
6) Cucumbers
7) Celery
8) Avocados
9) Okra
10) Artichokes



"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Wednesday, April 8, 2020.  The hypocrite that is Alyssa Milano, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo talks Iraq, and more.



Starting in the United States with the allegations against Joe Biden.  Baby Jane Hudson herself, Alyssa Milano, stuck her nose in it to defend Joe Biden and no one believes her.  She is the portrait of hypocrisy.  And people are noticing it.




Farron Cousins (RING OF FIRE).





Krystal Ball.




Some are surprised that Alyssa Milano is rushing to attack Tara Reade -- that was an attack -- and claiming that she (Alyssa) and Times Up engaged in a smear campaign against Tara -- that's what she's saying.  Why be surprised?

Whore's gotta whore, right?  That's all she is and all she ever was.

Rose McGowan has long called Alyssa out.  We've long called her out here.  Yes, I know Illeana Douglas.  But I wouldn't have been silent regardless.  Alyssa was.  She didn't want to speak out against Leslie Moonves because, at the time, she was trying to get her pilot sold to THE CW.  It didn't get sold.  And she never spoke out against Leslie Moonves.  Just like she stayed silent on Harvey Weinstein and then, after he was disgraced, she was offering defenses of his wife.  Remember that?  Maybe not.

Do you remember Lucy Flores?  She went public in April about Joe's inappropriate actions.  Did Alyssa call Joe out then?  Nope.  She rushed to defend Joe.  That's not the Joe she knows.  We called her nonsense out in the April 2, 2019 snapshot.

Whore's gotta whore and that's all you need to know about Alyssa Milano.


Robby Soave (REASON) observes:

Milano also explained that she would be remaining quiet about the accusation in part because "the mainstream media would be jumping all over this…if they found more evidence." The implication being that the failure of mainstream media to do reporting on the Reade allegation means that it ought to be doubted and dismissed.
This speaks to the power of silence: The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, MSNBC, and other media outlets generally trusted by moderates and liberals have all refused to cover Reade's story. Indeed, thus far they have essentially pretended that it does not exist, declining to acknowledge Reade in the most basic way and refusing to question Biden about it, even in interviews with the candidate. This mainstream media blackout has evidently provided cover to people like Milano, allowing them to ignore an inconvenient political development.
Yet it's difficult to see the media's treatment of this story as anything other than blatant hypocrisy because there's nothing novel about the Biden accusation when compared to the Kavanaugh accusation. At the time of Milano's tweet in support of Ford, there was no evidence of Kavanaugh's guilt beyond what Ford had claimed in her statements (and little corroborating evidence of Ford's claims ever materialized, given how long ago the incident had unfolded). The Reade allegation is at exactly the same stage: She is speaking up about what happened to her, and asking to be believed. But this time, Milano—who attended an anti-Kavanaugh rally while draped in a banner that read, quite literally, "believe women"—thinks it's not enough.


At COMMON DREAMS, Anthony Zenkus takes on the hatchet job Amanda Racist Marcotte did last week:

Despite the veracity with which news outlets jumped on the Blasey-Ford allegations, the media has been slow to acknowledge Reade’s story. Amanda Marcotte, in her March 31 piece in Salon, tries to present a case for the media’s hesitation, but ends up using the excuses of Reade’s detractors to muddy the waters and lessen the impact these allegations should have. Marcotte subtly points out that Reade only worked for Biden “briefly,” as if that’s somehow a factor in likelihood or severity of an assault. She points out that there were no witnesses, which is true; perpetrators rarely violate victims in front of others, although Biden’s personal boundary issues are available in numerous instances for anyone to see. Marcotte claims Reade’s story has “changed over time.” It has not. Details have been included now that Reade wasn’t comfortable including in the past. 
Finally, Marcotte slams Reade for tweeting a post supportive of Russia. Why would this matter? Anyone can get raped, even people who like countries Marcotte and others find distasteful. Questioning from a place of understanding is one thing, feeding into rape-culture narrative is another. It is imperative to understand the difference. 
It is important to understand why the term rape applies here. According to the Department of Justice in their expanded definition of rape, penetration of the body by anything, including fingers or an object, meets the standard. This is what Joe Biden has been accused of. It is serious, and it is disturbing. 

Yes, Tara Reade took decades to tell her whole story to the public. Yes, we are in the middle of a contentious primary season and a presidential election with much on the line. And, yes, allegations of sexual assault or rape against the current leader in the Democratic primaries are inconvenient. But rape is even more inconvenient. I have learned this from the courageous survivors I have known throughout my professional career and in my personal life. It happens when you least expect it. It is intrusive, disruptive and life altering. Survivors do not get to choose when they are violated, but they do get to choose when and how they come forward.


Over at THE AMERICAN PROSPECT, Alexander Sammon warns that while the corporate media may be happy to ignore the rape allegation, were Joe to be the party's nominee, you can be sure Donald Trump will not ignore the allegation:

[. . .] the current approach of the Biden camp and its Democratic operatives, to issue one statement and place the burden on the media to do their invalidating for them, is an extremely short-sighted and ill-advised approach. Whether the Biden campaign likes it or not, Reade’s allegation is certain to factor into the general election, where Trump is likely to harp on it repeatedly, muddying the waters and giving the media something else to fixate on besides his tragic pandemic preparation mistakes that led to the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans. The Biden campaign’s lack of a proactive or meaningful response could look like political malpractice in the not-too-distant future.

This was not Reade’s first public accusation regarding Biden’s conduct toward female colleagues. Last year, several women came forward publicly to say Joe Biden had kissed or touched them in ways that made them uncomfortable—Reade was among them. But the highest-profile accuser at that point was Lucy Flores, a former candidate for lieutenant governor of Nevada, who catalogued in a March 2019 essay for The Cut that Biden had behaved in a sexually inappropriate manner toward her at a campaign event in 2014. Biden eventually cut a video expressing a newfound appreciation for personal space (though Flores herself didn’t see it as an apology).


She didn't see it as an apology because it wasn't an apology.  See that April 4, 2019 snapshot:

In the two minute video, he speaks a lot about himself and offers a hell of a lot of justifications.

He does not, however, manage to utter the words "I'm sorry" or "I made a mistake and I apologize."

I find the video to be utter crap.  Joe needs a better team if they think that was gong to cut it.  It's not going to.


And what happened one day after his 'apology'?  He made it clear how fake it was.


 Apr 5



The message that Joe Biden’s comments sent women and girls today was that if you set boundaries and speak out when you’re uncomfortable, men will turn it into a joke.


Oh, it was all so funny.

Lucy didn't see it as an apology because it wasn't an apology.  He never apologized and then less than 24 hours later, he was on stage in front a group of mainly men and making jokes about it.




Turning to Iraq, Mina Aldroubi (THE NATIONAL) reports:

The US and Iraq will hold “strategic” talks in June to review their military and economic relations, as tensions escalate between Washington and Tehran.

The dialogue will centre on the future of US troops stationed in the country after a series of attacks by Iranian-backed armed groups on US troops in Iraq.





From US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's press briefing yesterday:

SECRETARY POMPEO: Finally, one announcement with respect to Iraq.
As a force for good in the nation and as Iraq’s closest friend, the United States has proposed a Strategic Dialogue with the Government of Iraq to be held in middle of June.
With the global COVID-19 pandemic ranging and plummeting all revenues, threatening an Iraqi economic collapse, it’s important that our two governments work together to stop any reversal of the gains we’ve made in our efforts to defeat ISIS and stabilize the country.

The Strategic Dialogue will be led by my Under Secretary for Political Affairs David Hale.  And all strategic issues between our two countries will be on the agenda, including the future presence of the United States forces in that country, and how best to support an independent and sovereign Iraq.

MS ORTAGUS:  Nadia, go ahead.

QUESTION:  Thank you.  Nadia Bilbassy with Al Arabiya Television.  Good morning, Mr. Secretary.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Hi, good to see you.

QUESTION:  I have two questions.  On Iran first, despite your effort to dry up money that Iran is spending on its proxies, Hizballah emerged as the party in Lebanon now that provided services and helping people during this crisis with corona.  How do you counter this message?
And on Iraq, Kata’ib Hizballah threatened that they are not going to – they are going to veto, actually, any nominated prime minister of Iraq.  Do you take this threat seriously?  Do they have any weight on deciding who’s going to be the prime minister?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So all the voices in Iraq will have some weight on who will be the next prime minister.  I hope the most important voice there isn’t Kata’ib Hizballah, it isn’t AAH, it’s not terrorists.  I hope it’s the Iraqi people who have the ultimate say.  What we’ve said consistently about the Iraqi political process is very simple:  A leader who is put forward, who’s prepared to engage in the reforms, that will build out a sovereign, independent Iraq on behalf of the Iraqi people and move away from the old sectarian model that ended up with terror and corruption – any leader that’s put forward that will do that, the United States is happy to support.  And that’s the gold standard; it’s what we need.  It’s what, frankly, the Iraqi people need.  It’s why we want to have the strategic dialogue, is that we want to begin to engage, to take down violence, to take down risks, to take down the threat from a resurgence of terror there.
That’s the – when you talk about who will decide who the next leader is, our mission has been – is to make sure that that next leader is reflected in what it is you see the people who were protesting before the virus broke out, the people who were protesting all across Iraq, demanding – a different political path forward.  So I’m sure the Kata’ib Hizballah folks will try to have their say.  I am hopeful that it will be the Iraqi people who will ultimately decide who the next leader will be.

QUESTION:  On Iran, sir, and Hizballah?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Yeah.  We were in a big hole.  The previous administration gave the Iranians a whole lot of money, and we have done remarkable work to deny the regime the resources they need to continue to carry out their terror campaign.  You describe a situation in Lebanon, I think, or perhaps in Syria where Hizballah’s operating.  I can tell you this:  Hizballah has fewer dollars today to engage in nefarious activity than they did when President Trump took office, and they will continue to have fewer dollars tomorrow until they fundamentally get the Iranian regime to change its model, the model that says we’re going to use resources – resources that could right now be going for the Iranian people to help take care of them when they’re in a health crisis themself, right – we’re going to use those resources to take weaponry into Iraq, to underwrite Hizballah and Lebanon and threaten Israel, all of the things that the Iranians have engaged in for so long, even in this crisis the Iranian regime hasn’t ceased doing, that’s most unfortunate.  It’s unfortunate for the people of Lebanon, it’s unfortunate for the people of Syria, it’s unfortunate for the people of Iraq – you referred to Kata’ib Hizballah before this – and it’s really unfortunate for the people of Iran.

We hope that the people of Iran one day will get a regime with a change in outlook, a change which says, “No, we want to respect what the Iranian people truly want.”  And when they do that, that’ll be a fantastic thing, and we will reduce the threat that Iran will ever chase a nuclear weapon in the way that they were on a path toward chasing under the previous administration.




Jason Ditz (ANTIWAR.COM) observes, "That talks are being planned may suggest the US believes the current Iraqi interim government will not push the issue too much, though anti-government protesters have wanted all foreign troops out, particularly US and Iranian, and they’ll likely object if the talks don’t address this in a serious way."  Ditz would do well to stick to facts.  A "unanimous" vote in Parliament back in January?  The Kurds and Sunnis boycotted that session.  Just because the vote was what you wanted -- I want that too -- doesn't mean we pretend it was the vote of Parliament.  It was back in January, you need to provide context or just leave it out.






The following sites updated:








Tuesday, April 07, 2020

Reminder: Pink Moon tonight

The Pink Moon is tonight.  NASA notes:

A supermoon occurs when the moon’s orbit is closest (perigee) to Earth at the same time it is full. So what's so special about a supermoon? Turns out, it's a bit more subtle than it sounds—but for the interested observer, there's plenty to see and learn.

  • The Moon orbits Earth in an ellipse, an oval that brings it closer to and farther from Earth as it goes around.
  • The farthest point in this ellipse is called the apogee and is about 253,000 miles (405,500 kilometers) from Earth on average.
  • Its closest point is the perigee, which is an average distance of about 226,000 miles (363,300 kilometers) from Earth.
  • When a full moon appears at perigee it is slightly brighter and larger than a regular full moon—and that's where we get a "supermoon.


Make an attempt to catch it.  Chelsea Gohd (SPACE.COM) reports:

Tonight (April 7), the moon will be at its brightest and largest for the whole year during the "Super Pink Moon." 
This extraordinary astronomical event is surely not one to miss. Space.com spoke with NASA astronomer Michelle Thaller, the assistant director of science communications at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, about tonight's highly-anticipated skywatching event to get a better idea of what to expect and how people can best observe this special supermoon
"It's just kind of a fun astronomical thing," Thaller said about tonight's full moon. Supermoons, or full moons that appear bigger than usual, occur because our moon does not orbit in a perfect circle around Earth. Rather, it circles our planet in an elliptical-shaped orbit. This means that sometimes the moon is closer to Earth and sometimes it is farther away, causing it to appear bigger or smaller from our perspective on Earth. 

Laura Geggel (LIVE SCIENCE) adds:

You can see the moon rise in the sky this evening (in New York, that happens at 7:05 p.m. local time). But the moon won't appear full until 10:35 p.m. EDT (0235 GMT), according to NASA. If you miss it, fret not — the moon will appear full on Wednesday night, as well.
The pink moon is also a supermoon. It is about 0.1% closer to Earth than the March full moon was, making it the most super of the supermoons for 2020, NASA reported. Moreover, this pink supermoon will appear 7% larger than an average full moon.
The moon, however, will not actually look pink unless it's covered by an opaque pink cloud or haze. 
So, why does it get a pink moniker? It's named for the pink wildflower Phlox subulata, which blossoms in eastern North America in the early springtime, Space.com reported. If you're unfamiliar with its scientific name, perhaps you'll recognize it by the common names of wild ground phlox, the creeping phlox, moss phlox and the herb moss pink.
Today's moon has one other claim to fame — it's known as the "Paschal Moon" and helps set the date for Easter. The first Sunday after the Paschal Moon is Easter, which is why Easter falls on April 12 this year.
You can see a livestream of the pink supermoon at the Virtual Telescope Project today, or watch it here on Live Science.


Okay, let me take a moment for the best land rover in the universe -- Curiosity.  Here's a video from NASA explaining how Curiosity takes a selfie on Mars.



"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Tuesday, April 7, 2020.  Ryan Grim needs to investigate Alyssa Milano's claim that she and Times Up engaged in a whisper campaign against Tara Reade, Alyssa exposes herself as the ultimate hypocrite and much more.

Starting in the US where Tara Reade, a former staffer of Joe Biden's, has accused him of assault.  Katie Halper was the first to interview Tara in depth about the accusations for a broadcast.  Others have followed,  Below is from the interview Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez did for DEMOCRACY NOW!:


AMY GOODMAN: Can you give us the circumstances, how you ended up — what was the day, how you ended up alone with Joe Biden? Explain what happened that day.

TARA READE: I was approached by my supervisor. She handed me a gym bag and said, “Hurry, Joe wants this, so get it to him. He’ll meet you down towards the Capitol.” And I went down the stairs, and I don’t remember exactly where I was, because there’s connections between the Russell Building and all of that and the corridors, but we were in a semi-private location. It wasn’t a room. It wasn’t, you know, the Russell Office Building — I mean, in his office. It was down in the corridors. And I handed him the gym bag.

And then he — it was one, as I described, fluid moment. He was talking to me, and he said some things that I don’t recall. And I was up against the wall. And he — I remember the coldness of the wall. And I remember his hands underneath my blouse and underneath my skirt, and his fingers penetrating me as he was trying to kiss me and I was pulling away. And he pulled back, and he said, “Come on, man. I heard you liked me.” But he was angry. It was like a tight voice. And he tended to smile when he was angry. And he isn’t like the Uncle Joe like everybody talks about now. He was younger. He was my dad’s age at that time and very strong. And he looked insulted and angry. And I remember feeling like I had done something wrong when he said that statement. And then I was standing there when he said — he was still near me. He said — pointed his finger and said, “You’re nothing to me. You’re nothing.” And he walked away.


Yesterday, the voice of no one finally spoke.  Aging hagtress Alyssa Milano spoke in defense of Joe Biden.  I have noted her silence last week and this week.  Last night an e-mail came into the public account saying that Alyssa was defending her friend and I'd do the same.

A) Joe Biden is not her friend.  B) I would not do the same.

For years, US House Rep Bob Filner was someone I was close to.  I respected him, I liked him (I still have love for Bob, I am sorry for the women he hurt and my heart breaks for them).  When the media stopped whispering and began covering allegations that women were making against Bob, who had left the Congress and become the Mayor of San Diego?  We covered it.  This is from the July 29, 2013 snapshot:


Starting with Bob Filner.  The former US House Representative didn't seek re-election in 2012, choosing instead to run in San Diego's mayoral race.  He won.  He is currently Mayor Bob Filner.  How likely that is to last is probably best left to a betting pool.

I know Bob Filner.  I like Bob Filner.  Bob did many great things in Congress.  He has done many strong things as Mayor.  He may or may not be able to continue in that role.  He stands accused of sexual harassment and misconduct for actions since he has been mayor.


Is he guilty of what he's currently accused?  I have no idea.  He's never been anything but friendly to me and I've never seen him harass anyone.  That doesn't mean he's innocent, that does mean that's all I can speak to personally on the allegations.

I wouldn't be discussing this today were it not for Lila Garrett.  On today's Connect the Dots with Lila Garrett (KPFK) she gave a sermon -- she's gotten so fond of those -- that was full of 'facts,' (She falsely claimed that Monica Lewinsky has never been able to get a job since the exposure of her sexual relationship with Bill Clinton -- there has been her tacky handbags, her time as a spokesperson for Jenny Craig, etc -- Lila wanted to slime Bill Clinton so facts got replaced with 'facts').

Bob Filner, she insisted, was "politically correct" (her term) because he's installed solar panels.  And he was taking on big oil, she insisted.  The allegations, which she accepted as true, were not about him as a politician, they were about his "personal behavior," she maintained.



To be really clear to Lila, a man or woman who harasses those working under him/her is not displaying "personal behavior."  It is a crime (which Lila at least realized) but it's not "personal behavior" (which she did not realize).

She also saw harassment in some novel ways.  It was, she explained, stemmed from an individual (man, she used repeatedly) feeling powerful and proud and so you want to celebrate and have the applause, she insisted, but it's not there and so you look to a woman, any woman, Lila insisted, and want to celebrate with her.

That's certainly a novel way to look at it.  But the reality is that sexual harassment in the work place is generally about control and the inner psyche of the harasser is not 'I am so wonderful! Give me  applause!'  There are two major arguments regarding the profile of sexual harassers and Garrett's managed to avoid both while presenting an entirely new argument.  (The psyche and feminist argument is that it's about power; the conservative argument -- which tries to use examples of early humans -- is that it's about selection and desire.  Those have been the two dominant arguments society has had on the profile of the harasser.)

Lila goes on to conclude that Bob Filner must resign as mayor.

Lila Garrett broadcasts on KPFK.  Where does she live?

Not in San Diego.

Nor do I.  It is not my choice whether or not Filner resigns, I have no say in the matter.  Only the people of San Diego can make that call.  It's the same as with the NYC mayor's race.  From the eighth Congressional district of California, I have no business endorsing any candidate in a race I can't vote in or calling for someone in a race I can't vote in to step down.

There have been e-mails noting the Filner scandal and insisting I have said nothing on it.  There's no reason to say anything.  An Iraq War veteran raped his daughter.  That's a news story.  It's not one I'm interested in covering.  We cover feminist issues here and have covered rape and have covered sexual harassment and abuse.  We will continue to do so.  But we do not cover every single story.

As for ignoring it, July 12th, Rebecca posted "What the hell?" where she includes Bob's statement acknowledging something (what is being acknowledged in that statement is not clear to me).  She then asks a series of questions and I provide my take in response.  I note, as I have above, that this is matter (a) for the voters of San Diego and (if harassment occurred) for law enforcement (sexual harassment is a crime).

I like Bob.  I will always praise his work on the House Veterans Affairs Committee.  He deserves praise for that.  I have never seen him exhibit the behavior he is currently accused of.  I would hope that means it is not true, however, I am aware it may very well be true.  As much as I like -- no, as much as I love Bob, it is not my job to run interference for him or to insist that he's innocent.  I hope he is.  I do not know he is.  These are serious charges.  Women who are making them have a right to be heard.   I am certainly not interested in attacking these women or in smearing them.

Again, I hope Bob Filner is innocent and that this is an awful misunderstanding. But neither my hopes for Bob nor my love for him trump any suffering of someone he caused.  If the accusations are true, he must suffer the consequences.  If the accusations are true, it will be a horrible mark on his public record; however, it will not be his [only] legacy.  His work for veterans will remain outstanding.  That work will not make it 'okay' that he harassed women (if the charges are true).  But they go to the fact that people can do very great things and also do very unethical and/or very criminal things.  Heroes largely exist in children's comic books and on IMAX screens in the summer.  Sometimes those that we make larger than life have the worst feet of clay.  That's not to justify harassment, abuse or rape.  It is to note that -- thinking of the sliming of two women that so many on the left (men and Naomi Wolf) took part in -- someone who has done something good can also be someone who's done something wrong or criminal. 




Where in there do I slam any woman who had come forward against Bob?  Where do I insist that they must be silent?  I don't.  Nor do I try to cast doubt on their assertions.  I say that I hope it's not true, I say these are serious charges and that the women who are making them have a right to be heard.




Actress and activist Alyssa Milano sparked backlash on Twitter when she defended Democratic candidate Joe Biden despite the fact that his former staffer Tara Reade came forward with assault allegations.
Milano had previously received criticism for her silence regarding Biden’s harassment allegations, so she explained on a radio interview with Andy Cohen that she was skeptical that Reade’s statements were credible.
“I’ve been very vocal for Biden and my support for him and I did do my due diligence because part of it was that Times Up decided not to take the case, and so…I did my work, and I spoke to Times Up and I just don’t feel comfortable throwing away a decent man that I’ve known for 15 years in this time of complete chaos without there being a thorough investigation,”  she told Cohen.


First off, is their whisper campaign going on?  Times Up has no right to discuss with Alyssa or anyone else a case they do not represent.  Tara spoke to them and now, according to Alyssa, Times Up is trashing Tara?

That's what hagtress is saying, "I spoke to Times Up and I just don't . . ."

Times Up has just violated every rule in the book.  It is not their job to have conversations with Alyssa Milano about Tara Reade.  They need to be sued.  They need to lose all funding.  And if they reform, they need to do without people like Anita Dunn who have helped predators like Harvey Weinstein.

Coming forward for any victim is difficult.  To know that the organization that is supposed to help you is launching a smear campaign against you, a whisper campaign with Alyssa Milano?

That bitch needs to issue a public apology to Tara Reade right now.

I don't know that the conversations she claims happened actually did happen.  But she is smearing Tara's name.

She does not know what happened, she was not there.

I love Bob to this day, but I did not try to silence women from telling their stories.  I did not discredit them.  I said their stories needed to be told.

That's how it is with Tara.  She needs to tell her story and Joe Biden needs to be put on the record responding.  And We The People can decide who we believe.

Joe's not a "decent man." And she doesn't know him.  I knew Bob in every sense but the biblical one.  And I didn't run interference for him.  He resigned in disgrace with an admission which he later tried to weasel out of.  I will praise him for his work on veterans issues, I will praise him for his youth activity in the Civil Rights era.  But, yes, he harassed women.  That's part of his legacy and that part is criminal.  It saddens me to this day.

But it is not my job to play favorites when someone is accused of harassment or rape.

Tara is not the person with power in this story.  She had no power when the alleged events took place -- he had all the power, he was a US senator and her boss.  She has no power today.  He can bumble around saying nonsense and have it reported as pearls of wisdom.  CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, THE WASHINGTON POST, etc have refused to cover her words.  She has no power.

The default position for any feminist is not to launch smears about her -- as Alyssa did -- or to offer a defense of Joe Biden.  The default position for any feminist is to say, "These are serious charges, the media needs to be covering it, the alleged attacker needs to issue a public response."

Alyssa's a mental moron and everyone knows it.  She should know it as well and grasp that she's not REMINGTON STEELE's Laura Holt and she lacks the ability or training to do an investigation.

All she's done is attacked a woman for bringing a charge of harassment against one of her male friends, that's all Alyssa's done.  She's attacked her saying the woman isn't believable, she's attacked her by insisting that she (Alyssa) spoke with Times Up and that organization did not find her to be telling the truth.

That last part needs to be dealt with immediately.  Ryan Grimm covered this for THE INTERCEPT and Times Up did not tell him that.  Ryan should immediately pursue with the organization whether or not they have engaged in private conversations with Alyssa -- as she insists -- which have cast doubt and aspersions on Tara Reade.

There is nothing that guarantees Tara belief.

She does deserve to tell her story.  She deserves to have this serious charge aired in the media.

We can then decide whether we believe her or not.

But until the corporate media covers this story, the position -- a feminist position -- is that she gets to tell her story.

She is claiming assault and Alyssa's calling her a liar.  That's not a feminist position.

Alyssa is not a feminist and she's not a voice of anyone.  She's a racist who has repeatedly stolen credit for the work done by African-American women (such as Tarana Burke), a racist who has engaged in cultural appropriation, a racist who misportrays Native Americans using stereotypes and then tries to profit from it.  She's a dumb woman whose husband allegedly has a woman 20 years younger stashed away in a Century City condo.  She's someone who can't get bit parts -- INSATIABLE was cancelled by NETFLIX -- she was a supporting player on that show, not the "star" that the media let her call herself.  She's just trash, uneducated trash.  I've shared before what Katherine Helmond told me -- and shared it here while Katherine was alive.  She's a bored, rich housewife, with no real career who does things like brags about her two abortions to get attention.  She'll do anything to get attention because her career ended in 2006 -- 14 years ago.

She made a really stupid mistake yesterday because she's a really stupid idiot.

Is Tara telling the truth?  I have no idea.  She deserves to be heard, but I have no idea.

What I do know is that this is now a major issue for women.  Like most major issues, it will bubble for months.  It will be like Anita Hill where certain men and their whores think they got away with it.  But we won't let them.  We will remember this moment.  Alyssa stood on the wrong side and we won't forget it.

She came down on the wrong side and that will not be forgotten.

Juanita Broaddrick is someone who did not get to tell her story.  Whatever else Katha Pollitt's complicated history includes, Katha, in real time, spoke to the need for Juanita to speak.  She, Patricia Ireland and others deserve credit for that.  Those who attacked Juanita are seen as frauds for good reason.  And that's the fate that awaits Alyssa Milano.


By the way, here's what Juanita has to say about Alyssa:

Plain and simple. Alyssa Milano is an attention seeking FRAUD. She “Believes Women”........as long as it is politically convenient. Time to turn in your #MeToo
card, Alyssa.



We've noted several times that Rose McGowan is the real deal.  Here's her reply to Alyssa's latest nonsense:

You are a fraud. This is about holding the media accountable. You go after Trump & Kavanaugh saying Believe Victims, you are a lie. You have always been a lie. The corrupt DNC is in on the smear job of Tara Reade, so are you. SHAME



Alyssa is a fraud.  She refused to amplify the voice of Tara Reade despite pretending to care about survivors of assault.  She then made it worse by publicly attacking the woman.  She has smeared Tara and she has stated that private conversations Times Up had with her were whisper campaigns against Tara.

Repeating: Times Up needs to immediately answer as to whether or not they have engaged in conversations with Alyssa and whether or not they are privately smearing a woman who came to them for help.




Turning to Iraq, MEMO notes:

Iraq’s Prime Minister-designate Adnan Al-Zurfi announced on Saturday that he has formed his government ahead of the constitutional deadline of 17 April.
He also presented his proposed government programme to the Iraqi parliament.
According to Al-Zurfi, his cabinet is made up of “intellectuals from inside Iraq.” He added that he is now waiting for the parliament to schedule a date to debate his choice of cabinet colleagues.

He has not formed a government.  He has put together potential candidates.  To form a government, his proposed Cabinet must be voted on by the Parliament.  That's why he's still prime minister-designate and not prime minister.


We'll also note this video of Erbil on coronavirus lockdown.




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