Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Alicia Keys

 Kat's "Kat's Korner: Maria McKee and Bright Eyes both return" went up Sunday and is a must read.




I love Alicia Keys so I am thrilled that she's announced the release date for her long-delayed album ALICIA -- September 18th. Can't wait. I love so many of Alicia's songs. "In Common" is one I really love and feel like she sort of disowned it or something. It was an advance track for her last album but then the album came out and it wasn't even on it. It should have been. "In Common" smolders and cooks. It's a favorite of mine to this day.

Other songs I love by Alicia? My all time favorite is "Try Sleeping With A Broken Heart." I love that song and I love the "nobody ever broke it down like that" part.




After that? We all love "Fallin'," right? "A Woman's Worth," "If I Ain't Got You," "No One," "Another Way To Die," "Un-thinkable (I'm Ready)," "Girl On Fire," "Blended Family" . . . I love everything. I have both of her live albums -- UNPLUGGED and VH1 STORYTELLERS -- the latter is my favorite (UNPLUGGED loses because it doesn't have "Try Sleeping With A Broken Heart" on it).

I've seen her in concert three times. Alicia better be prepared for when she and I are both elderly women. She'll be out on stage with a walker and I'll be near the front in a wheel chair rasping, "Sing 'Try Sleeping With A Broken Heart'!" over and over. :D

Of the new album ALICIA, RAP UP notes

The 15-track set, her first in four years, has already spawned a series of tracks including “Love Looks Better” and the Khalid-assisted “So Done,” as well as the powerful “Perfect Way to Die,” “Good Job,” “Underdog,” “Time Machine,” and the Miguel-assisted “Show Me Love.” 

 



"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

 Monday, September 14, 2020.  Two liars -- one lying for Joe Biden, the other lying to keep US troops in Iraq -- spew lies but, if put together, you can squeeze a little truth out of them. 


Jimmy Dore calls out the idiot Krugman.



Whores like Paul have to whore.  I'm so glad he exposed himself on the anniversary of the execution of the Rosenbergs all those years ago -- as he used that day to praise the fifties in the US.  That's when we knew he was full of s**t and Bully Boy Bush still occupied the White House.  "He lies for the establishment," Jimmy notes.  

Fortunately, he's not alone in calling out the whore.  Algenon D'Ammassa (LAS CRUCES SUN NEWS) notes:


Memory fades after two decades, but that does not explain a bizarre statement made by New York Times columnist Paul Krugman on Friday. The Nobel-winning economist wrote a series of posts on Twitter in which he stated: “Overall, Americans took 9/11 pretty calmly. Notably, there wasn't a mass outbreak of anti-Muslim sentiment and violence, which could all too easily have happened. And while GW Bush was a terrible president, to his credit he tried to calm prejudice, not feed it.”

It was a maddening erasure of history and Krugman has been justly roasted for it. He also wrote that “home-grown white supremacists” pose a much greater threat, but it came too late. As of Saturday, he had not clarified or deleted his post.

Hate crimes targeting Muslims spiked immediately after 9/11, such that President George W. Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft made public speeches calling on Americans to knock it off. It wasn’t just Muslims but Sikhs, South Asians, anyone who looked like they might be Middle Eastern, or people with Arabic names.

Mosques were vandalized or burned. Hijabs and other coverings were knocked from people’s heads in our streets. Shopkeepers and laborers were denounced as terrorists, told to “go back” to some country they may never have seen.

My own brush with this harassment was farcical. A few weeks after the attacks, I was questioned and searched at Orlando International Airport because my carry-on luggage included a compact disk of the Nubian musician Hamza El Din from southern Egypt, and my first name sounded like it might be Arabic.


Brett Wilkins (COMMON DREAMS) notes:

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman faced withering criticism Friday after he claimed that there was no "mass outbreak of anti-Muslim sentiment and violence" following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. 

"Overall, Americans took 9/11 pretty calmly," Krugman tweeted on the 19th anniversary of the attacks that left nearly 3,000 people dead in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania, and led to U.S. wars of choice in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere in which at least hundreds of thousands—and perhaps as many as 2 million—people have died in predominantly Muslim countries. 

[. . .]


Krugman also claimed that President George W. Bush "tried to calm prejudice, not feed it." However, the Bush administration, taking advantage of the nation's collective fear following the attacks, proceeded to lock up thousands of foreign Muslims in "preventive detention" while requiring 80,000 mostly Muslim foreign nationals to register with federal authorities in the hopes that they might net some terrorists. They didn't catch a single one.


Krugman's a whore.  He's far from alone.

Having been part of the Iraq war debate and watched Biden’s role in it for 30 years, I believe it is considerably better than allowed by critics like Gates, or political foes like Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Arkansas. Iraq has a way of making almost anyone look bad if they stay in the conversation long enough. But Biden has also made positive contributions to the policy-making process that need to be weighed in any net assessment of his record.


That's Micheal O'Hanlon making a filthy mess at USA TODAY.  The American people should collectively roll up a newspaper, smack Michael over the nose with it and say, "Outside, O'Hanlon, outside!"

For those who have forgotten, O'Hanlon was one of those arm chair warriors who took to TV to insist upon war on Iraq.  Over and over.  Michael's defense of Joe sounds a lot like his defense of himself.  He's trash and he's a whore.

If you're not getting how bad O'Hanlon lies, let's note this section:


Later, as vice president, Biden consulted frequently with Iraqi leaders of various stripes and attempted to rein in the increasingly sectarian ways of Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who was trying to ban numerous Sunni leaders from Iraqi politics and stack the government and military with his own lackeys. That Biden was ultimately unsuccessful was tragic, since it led to the rise of ISIS in Iraq in 2014 and other huge setbacks. In retrospect, the United States should have backed the moderate, Ayad Allawi, and his political party more strongly. But with President Barack Obama having decided that our forces would soon leave Iraq, Biden’s leverage was limited. 

So many lies.  Let's bring in another liar, Gabrielle Debinski (GZERO) is frantic that no US troops leave Iraq:


Some analysts fear that amid ongoing regional tumult, Iraq's fragile democracy might collapse without a sustained US presence there.

The US has played a key (albeit very flawed) role in propping up Iraq's democracy — broadly viewed as a kleptocracy — and some observers warn that a US troop drawdown will pave the way for hardline Shiite groups to take center stage within an already deeply divided and corrupt political system. Inevitably, this would also exacerbate sectarian tensions by sidelining minority Sunnis and Kurds.

Indeed, this was the case in 2011 when the US withdrew troops deployed for the 2003 invasion. Shiite domination and subsequent clashes over power-sharing arrangements poisoned Iraq's already troubled politics and helped set the stage for the Sunni-supported rise of the Islamic State in 2014. 


O'Hanlon's lying to cover for Joe, Debinski's lying to keep US troops on Iraqi soil.  And as they pursue their own objectives, they let just a little bit of truth out.  First, Debinksi with her statement about the 'fragile democracy' and how it might collapse.  For years now, we have told you that US troops remained in Iraq to prop up the government the US created.  That's the sole reason.  Barack Obama went into a panic in 2014 not when ISIS seized Mosul.  He went into a panic when there were reports that ISIS next planned to seize Baghdad and take control of the Green Zone.  She gets honest about that but she lies about what happened to Iraq.  The drawdown of US troops in 2011 followed the US putting Nouri al-Maliki in charge, giving him a second term.  In 2010, March of 2010, Iraqis went to the polls and voted.  They voted thug Nouri out as prime minister.  Per the results, Ayad Allawi should have been the prime minister-designate.  But Nouri refused to step down.

Oh, it was a surprise, no one could have guessed, lie, lie and more lies.


Gen Ray Odierno, then the top US commander in Iraq, saw that possibility in the months ahead of the election.  But Chrissy Hill (Pigpen Ambassador to Iraq -- famous for insulting the Iraqi people to his Iraqi staff and for taking his mid-day naps under his desk) said no, never happen.


Ray was right.

For eight months, Nouri refused to step down.  Had the US backed the Iraqi people, had they stood up for democracy, things would have been different.

Grasp this: Joe keeps tossing out that Donald Trump might not step down if he loses the election.  Yet not one reporter has the guts to point out to Joe that, in Iraq, Nouri refused to step down and Joe went along with it.

Some US troops leaving Iraq was not responsible for the rise of ISIS: Nouri was.  The US gave Nouri a second term via The Erbil Agreement (a pork contracts that gave various parties what they wanted so they'd go along with Nouri getting a second term).  And they knew Nouri was garbage, they knew he was running secret prisons and torture cells.  They knew he was persecuting his 'enemies' (the press, Sunnis, etc).  

Given a second term, Nouri got even worse.  

The rape of Iraqi girls and women in prisons -- picked up by forces for being related to some man they were searching for but couldn't find, the targeting of Sunni politicians (the brother of one politician was killed when Nouri staged a dawn military raid on the politician's home), on and on it went -- and we paid attention and called it out here.  Nouri's actions led to the rise of ISIS.  That's reality.  

B-b-b-but, O'Hanlan is honest sort of about it!!!!!

No, he's not.  Here's what he wrote:

Later, as vice president, Biden consulted frequently with Iraqi leaders of various stripes and attempted to rein in the increasingly sectarian ways of Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who was trying to ban numerous Sunni leaders from Iraqi politics and stack the government and military with his own lackeys. That Biden was ultimately unsuccessful was tragic, since it led to the rise of ISIS in Iraq in 2014 and other huge setbacks. In retrospect, the United States should have backed the moderate, Ayad Allawi, and his political party more strongly. But with President Barack Obama having decided that our forces would soon leave Iraq, Biden’s leverage was limited. 


That's such a lie.  "More strongly"?  They didn't back Ayad Allawi at all.  Ask him if you don't believe me.  He's been very public about that fact in recent years.  He was diplomatic in real time but he no longer feels that need (nor should he) in recent years and he's very clear about being betrayed -- and democracy being betrayed -- by Joe and Barack.

But more to the point, it was already known that Nouri was a thug.  Then-Senator Hillary Clinton called him that in a public hearing in April of 2008 -- and she was right.  In another hearing that same week, Joe Biden expressed concern about a proposed SOFA with Iraq declaring, "We've pledged we're not only going to consult when there is an outside threat, but also when there is an inside threat.  We've just witnessed when Mr. Maliki engaged in the use of force against another Shia group in the south, is this an inside threat?"

Go to the April 10, 2008 snapshot where we reported on that Senate Foreign Relations Committee -- it's the last third of the snapshot. It's very clear in there that Joe knows Nouri's a thug and that there's no real government there.  From the snapshot:

Biden noted the "internal threat" aspect being proposed and how these requires the US "to support the Iraqi government in its battle with all 'outlaw groups' -- that's a pretty expansive commitment."  He noted that it requires the US "to take sides in Iraq's civil war" and that "there is no Iraqi government that we know of that will be in place a year from now -- half the government has walked out." 
 

"Just understand my frustration," Biden explained.  "We want to normalize a government that really doesn't exist."  Senator Russ Feingold wanted to know if there were "any conditions that the Iraq government must meet?"  No, that thought never occurred to the White House.  "Given the fact that the Maliki government doesn't represent a true colation," Feingold asked, "won't this agreement [make it appear] we are taking sides in the civil war especially when most Iraqi Parliamentarians have called for the withdrawal of troops?"  The two witnesses didn't appear to have heard that fact before.  Feingold repeated and asked, "Are you not concerned at all that the majority of the Iraqi Parliament has called for withdrawal"  Satterfield feels the US and the agreement "will enjoy broad popular support" in Iraq.  Satterfield kept saying the agreement wasn't binding.  And Feingold pointed out, "The  agreement will not bind the Congress either, if the Congress were to" pass a law overriding it which seemed to confuse Satterfield requiring that Feingold again point that out and ask him if "Congress passed a clear law overriding the agreement, would the law override the agreement."  Satterfield felt the White House "would have to look carefully at it at the time" because "it would propose difficult questions for us."


He knew what Nouri was years before 2011.  O'Hanlan doesn't want to acknowledge that.  Maybe, O'Hanlan feels now, they should have backed Ayad Allawi.

Even that maybe misses the point.

It wasn't about backing Allawi.  It was about backing the Iraqi people.  It was about showing them that their votes did matter.  Grasp that they risked their lives to vote and saw their votes overturned by the US government.

Grasp that the Iraqi people, voting for Iraqiya, were voting for a national identity.  Imagine how much further along the country of Iraq would be today if democracy had been backed and a national identity fostered?


O'Hanlan doesn't want to deal with that reality, does he?  He does want to insist that, in 2011, Joe didn't have any power to force Nouri out because (some) US forces were leaving.  Hmmm.  That doesn't stand well with this section of the same O'Hanlan column:


Speaking of ISIS, despite earlier mistakes, the Obama-Biden team recovered smartly in 2014 — forcing Maliki out of power as a precondition for U.S. military support in an Iraq-led campaign against the caliphate. 


In 2010, they're powerless to stand up to Nouri but in 2014, they have the power to?  

In what world does that make sense?

They had more power in 2010 because they had the will of the Iraqi people wanting Nouri out of office.  

It's all garbage from garbage liars.

The US will leave Iraq at some point -- I hope during my lifetime.  And the Iraqi people will build their own government.  Until then?  A paternalistic approach that says we must remain in Iraq to protect it.  It's a bit like being scared Junior's going to get some girl or woman pregnant so, as parents, we go on every date Junior has -- every date from his teens to his 20s to his 30s . . . 

We're less than a month away for a full year of persecution of activists in Iraq.  The persecution continues.  They are tracked, they are hunted, they are attacked and they are killed.  By whom?  ALJAZEERA has a special set to air today on this topic:

On Monday, September 14 at 19:30 GMT:
Nearly a year has passed since a wave of popular protest began in Iraq, with people across the country voicing their frustration over issues such as poor public services, unemployment, and corruption. Regular demonstrations have continued, but a string of attacks against activists and analysts has highlighted the ever-present danger of speaking out. 

Two deadly attacks in Basra recently made headlines around the world. Reham Yacoub, a 30-year-old doctor and women's rights advocate, was shot dead by unidentified assailants in the southern port city on August 19. She was killed five days after Tahseen Osama, a father-of-four who regularly took part in anti-corruption protests, was shot dead by attackers who stormed the internet centre he owned. Two other activists in Basra were hurt in an apparent assassination attempt that same week.

News of the assaults was met with anger by Iraqis already on edge over the killing in July of Hisham al-Hashemi, an expert on armed groups who had received threats from Iran-backed militia organisations. Iraq's Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi has sacked Basra's police chief and says the killers of Yacoub and Osama will be brought to justice.

But security experts warn that Iraq's perennially weak government has little control over militia groups, particularly in southern Iraq. Meanwhile, protesters commonly face abuse, arbitrary arrest and assault by Iraqi security forces, according to a report (PDF) released by the United Nations in August. Iraq's government said on July 30 that at least 560 people - protesters and police - had died since October in protests and demonstrations.

The Stream will look at what spurred the attacks in Basra, the daily risks that pro-change voices in Iraq are facing, and what more the country's government can and should do to protect them. Join the conversation.

On this episode of The Stream, we are joined by:
Dorsa Jabbari, @DorsaJabbari
Correspondent, Al Jazeera English
aljazeera.com/profile/dorsa-jabbari

Hamzoz, @Hamzoz
Founder and CEO, Iraqi Network for Social Media

Ali Al Bayati, @aliakramalbayat
Member, Iraqi Independent High Commission for Human Rights

Read more:
Iraqis protest as hospitals overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients - Al Jazeera
Protesters set fire to Iraq parliament's regional office in Basra - Al Jazeera


In other news, at the end of July, Iraq's prime minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi declared that parliamentary elections would take place in June (June 6th).  Today?  Lawk Ghafuri (RUDAW) reports, "Iraq's three leaders, the president, prime minister, and parliament speaker, are united in their support for a statement from the highest Shiite authority in Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, backing early elections held with 'integrity and transparency'."  AP adds, "Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani’s comments came in a statement released by his office after a meeting with the U.N. envoy to Iraq, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert. A photo released by al-Sistani’s office showed the black-turbaned cleric meeting with the U.N. envoy and an interpreter." Mina Aldroubi (THE NATIONAL) reports:

It was his first public face-to-face meeting with a foreign official since the outbreak of coronavirus in Iraq.

Iraq has been hit hard by the pandemic, recording more than 290,000 confirmed cases and more than 8,000 deaths.

Mr Al Sistani does not make public appearances and typically issues a weekly Friday sermon through a representative.

He is Iraq’s most influential Shiite cleric and has given significant support to the country’s protest movement.


UNAMI Tweets:

SRSG Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert was received today in Sulaymaniyah by the President of the Republic of #Iraq, Barham Salih. They discussed the current political and security situation in the country, including preparations for the forthcoming early elections.
Image
 



REUTERS notes:

 A debate within Iraq over whether it should ask to be exempt from Opec+ oil supply cuts has resurfaced as low prices squeeze its finances, challenging a government struggling to tackle the destruction of years of war and rampant corruption.
Opec’s second-biggest producer, Iraq has failed in the past to fully comply with Opec+ oil output reductions, pumping above its production targets since the pact was first signed in 2016 between Opec and its allies led by Russia.
“Iraq always believed they were not properly treated in December 2016 when they were not exempted. As the economy continues to reel from low prices this issue keeps resurfacing,” said an Opec source.
Iraq’s economy and oil sector were battered by years of wars, sanctions and a stubborn insurgency triggered by the US invasion.
Baghdad complained it had struggled to revive its stagnating oil industry, at a time where other Opec members benefited and boosted their market share.
Iraq relies on oil to fund 97% of its state budget.


In a bit of good economic news for Iraq, BLOOMBERG MARKETS notes, "Iraq will offer barley for export for the first time after ample rains and price incentives spurred farmers to grow a surplus of the grain. The government plans to start auctioning 700,000 tons of the grain next week and anticipates interest from Gulf Arab states, Jordan and countries in North Africa, agriculture ministry spokesman Hameed Al-Nayef said by phone. It’s setting a minimum price of $125 per ton."

Kat's "Kat's Korner: Maria McKee and Bright Eyes both return" went up yesterday.





Friday, September 11, 2020

Solar storms

 Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Crazy Lady"


crazy lady


I love that comic and I don't give a damn about E. Jean Carroll, sorry.  Once she went on Anderson Cooper 360 and proclaimed rape "sexy," she lost my sympathy.  She's on her own.  


Solar storms.  This is new to me.  Sean Martin (EXPRESS) reports, "Astronomers are on alert after they noticed a 'canyon-sized' hole spewing solar particles into the solar system. The solar winds could arrive Monday, September 14, after making their way across the 150 million kilometre journey across the cosmos."  Is that new to you?  It really is to me.

NASA issued the following:

NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) will discuss predictions for the upcoming solar cycle during a media teleconference at 1 p.m. EDT Tuesday, Sept. 15. Tracking the solar cycle is a key part of better understanding the Sun and mitigating its impacts on human technology and infrastructure.

During the teleconference, experts on the Solar Cycle 25 Prediction Panel will discuss recent updates in solar cycle progress, and the forecast for the upcoming cycle, Solar Cycle 25.

The Sun goes through regular cycles of activity lasting approximately 11 years. During the most active part of the cycle, known as solar maximum, the Sun can unleash immense explosions of light, energy, and solar radiation – all of which create conditions known as space weather. Space weather can affect satellites and astronauts in space, as well as communications systems – such as radio and GPS – and power grids on Earth. When the Sun is most active, space weather events become more frequent.

The teleconference audio will stream live at:

http://www.nasa.gov/live

Participants in the call will be:

  • Doug Biesecker, solar physicist at NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center and co-chair, Solar Cycle 25 Prediction Panel
  • Jake Bleacher, chief exploration scientist in NASA’s Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate
  • Lika Guhathakurta, program scientist in NASA’s Heliophysics Division
  • Elsayed Talaat, director of the Office of Projects, Planning, and Analysis for NOAA Satellites  
  • Lisa Upton, solar scientist with the Space Systems Research Corporation and co-chair of the Solar Cycle 25 Prediction Panel

To participate in the media teleconference, media must provide their name and affiliation to Lina Tran at lina.tran@nasa.gov by noon Tuesday, Sept. 15.

The media event will be followed at 3 p.m. by a special episode of NASA Science Live about the announcement and the science of the solar cycle. The program will air on NASA Television, the agency’s website, Facebook Live, YouTube, and Periscope. The public can send questions during the event using #AskNASA on Twitter or by leaving a comment in the chat section on Facebook.

NASA also will host a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15, featuring several experts discussing the announcement and science of the solar cycle. Questions can be submitted to the event when it begins. 

NASA and NOAA, along with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other federal agencies, are working together on the National Space Weather Strategy and Action Plan to enhance space weather preparedness and protect the nation from space weather hazards. Improving our understanding of solar variability, and thereby space weather prediction techniques and models, will also protect spacecraft and astronauts in the Artemis program and are core aspects of this collaboration.

For more information on NASA programs and activities, visit:

https://www.nasa.gov

-end-

Grey Hautaluoma / Karen Fox
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0668 / 301-286-6284
grey.hautaluoma@nasa.gov / karen.fox@nasa.gov

Maureen O’Leary
NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center, Silver Spring, Md.
301-427-9000
maureen.oleary@noaa.gov

John Leslie
NOAA Satellites, Silver Spring, Md.
301-713-0214
john.leslie@noaa.gov


Though the topic is new to me, it's not new.  There's an opinion column that went up at THE HILL yesterday arguing for Congressional action on this:

The COVID-19 pandemic has left us more dependent than ever on advanced information and communication technologies, with many businesses and schools relying on a range of remote services. In this environment, building resilience to potential threats that can disrupt society's essential daily activities is critical.

For this reason, it is heartening to see Congress advancing legislation to better protect the nation from solar storms that spew millions of tons of charged matter toward Earth. Such space weather events can distort GPS signals, scramble satellite operations, and disable communications and power systems, with serious consequences for our economy and armed services — a particularly major concern as the Pentagon prepares for future space-based conflicts.

Significant space weather events occur every decade or so with far-reaching and destructive consequences. A powerful solar storm in 1989 cut off power to millions of Canadians, and major storms in 2003 affected more than half of Earth-orbiting spacecraft. Just three years ago, solar flares caused radio blackouts for hours during critical emergency response efforts to approaching hurricanes in the Caribbean and nearby regions.

A solar superstorm poses even greater risks. The so-called Carrington Event in 1859, which ignited fires in telegraph offices, would have catastrophic impacts on today's society, potentially resulting in widespread damage to power grids, communication networks, and other technologies that would take weeks, months, or even years to repair. Even before COVID-19 led to an increased reliance on e-based technologies, the National Academy of Sciences estimated that such an event could result in as much as $2 trillion in damages — or more than 10 times the costs of Hurricane Katrina.


So there you go.

"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

 Friday, September 11, 2020.  An opinion journal makes the call for US troops to come home (it's not THE NATION) and we look at the non-duopoly presidential campaigns.


"Bring Them Home."  A column by Michael Brendan Dougherty.  It runs at THE NATION?  Nope.  At the conservative NATIONAL REVIEW.  Over at THE NATION, they continue to flounder and wallow in a cesspool.  We've got British Jew Sasha Abramsky explaining the US to Americans because, gosh, isn't that what everyone needs?  Elie Mystal frets over 'poor' E. Jean Carroll.  She was the topic of Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Crazy Lady" that went up last night.  You may remember Carroll, she was elevated to hero status for claiming that Donald Trump raped her -- in some year, she's not sure of which year it was, but it was a department store, she knows that.  As the latest in a long of questionable characters was embraced by the faux resistance, they realized that they had another character issue on their hands like with Michael Avenatti.  Of course, it took Carroll going on CNN live with Anderson Cooper for them to realize there was a problem with Carroll.  While an open mouthed Anderson stared in shock, Carroll went on to 'educate' the American public that rape was (her exact word) "sexy."


Anderson quickly cut to commercial   It was too late to save Carroll. 

Rape is not "sexy" and once someone makes a statement like that on live TV, I don't really think they can be defamed at that point.  She's a lunatic and she was always seen that way in the industry.  She never had her head on straight and she had no real support from her peers.  She floundered from one job to another, burning bridges repeatedly.

Can someone like that be raped?  Absolutely.  Anyone can be raped.

But there are survivors out there who can use our help and someone who claims she was raped and also wants the world to know that she finds rape "sexy"?  That's someone who needs to fight her own battles.  She clearly has issues that go beyond whatever did or did not happen to her in a department store and she's not allowed to insult the survivors of rape and also expect us to all rally around her at the same time.  She's on her own as far as most of us are concerned.

But that desperate, in-bred group which calls itself the 'resistance' won't let her case die because they've got no real issues to address.  Either they lack the mental abilities to do so or they just don't see the world around them.

Which goes a long way towards explaining why the week that it's announced 2,200 US troops will be leaving Iraq (only 3,000 remaining -- CORRECTION, this sentence has been fixed to note 3,000 remaining -- at least 3,000), THE NATION has nothing to offer on its front page about that.  

Grasp that they have three articles about Vietnam.  Babyboomers are aging and apparently the WWII trough has been gone to one time too many so THE NATION is ready to pivot to . . . Vietnam.

There was a time when THE NATION announced -- in an editorial that ran on the cover of the magazine -- that they could not support anyone who voted for the Iraq War.  That was so long ago that many have forgotten and most never knew about it.  The tiny number of people who continue to read THE NATION may have no idea that US troops are in Iraq.  The rag certainly doesn't encourage them to acknowledge it.

War and peace?  Not a concern for THE NATION.  In fact, it stopped being a concern the minute Democrats were no longer the minority party in the House and the Senate.  It's a rag of misfits who can't be employed anywhere else.  That's why SALON and MSNBC reject Joan Walsh writes (badly) there currently.  

It was a success in terms of circulation and web views when they pretended to be interested in the Iraq War.  Even then, it made itself a joke.  Naomi Klein had a column there.  It also ran at THE GUARDIAN.  She did a two-part column on people profiting from the war and THE NATION gladly ran the one on Republican James Baker and gladly refused to run the one on Democrat Madeline Albright.  Things like that started to get attention.  Or rolypoly Katha Pollit who presents as a feminist but refused to write about one of the biggest US crimes in Iraq -- when a group of soliders plotted to leave base, break into the home of an Iraqi family, gang-rape the 15-year-old Abeer and kill her, her parents and her younger sister.  They then attempted to make it look as though 'rebels' had committed the crimes.  That is a horror all on its own.  And maybe if the ring-leader Steven D. Green hadn't been given the choice of going behind bars or going to Iraq, it wouldn't have happened.  An attack on US troops took place in response to this.  There were so many ways to cover it.

So THE NATION elected to ignore it.  And fat girl Katha chose to ignore it.  After months of being publicly rebuked, Katha put down the fork and spoon and wrote about Abeer -- she wrote a single sentence.  Thanks for the 'sisterhood,' Katha.

We covered it here.   We covered it the minute the news emerged.  We covered it the minute Green was arrested on US soil.  We covered the article 32 hearing for those who were still in Iraq.  We covered the civilian trial in the US for Green.  There were many, many times anyone could have picked up the ball and run with the story.

Katha didn't.  And Elie Mystal, so nervous today over 'poor' E. Jean Carroll, never gave two s**ts about an Iraqi girl who was gang-raped by US troops while she heard her sister and parents killed, an Iraq child who had to know that the gang-rape would also end with her own murder.

But, hey, privileged Carroll thinks that in some year -- she's not sure which -- she was raped by Donald and, golly, gee, rape is "sexy."

Die on that mountain, Elie -- but die quickly because we don't need you.

Hey, if Abeer had been a British Jew, would THE NATION have cared?  This is the magazine that's been repeatedly called out not just for its anti-Palestinian coverage but for its running of hate speech in the form of ads against the Palestinians.  Free speech claimed Katrina vanden Heuvel -- chief s**t stain at the magazine (are we surprised? her family money comes from stealing from Lena Horne and many other African-American entertainers).  It's a funny sort of defense -- free speech that only allows the Palestinians to be portrayed in an ugly light, one attack after another, either in columns or in advertisements.  

If you're late to the party, this is not: Why isn't THE NATION applauding Donald Trump!!!!

We've spent the week noting that this is a drawdown, not a withdrawal.  A withdrawal?  I'd applaud Donald for that.  Even I would applaud him for that.  But that's not what's taking place.  

It's a shame that THE NATIONAL REVIEW can weigh in on the news but THE NATION can't.  Don't worry, in 40 more years, Joan Walsh will write a bad column about what was on TV the week of 9/11/2020 -- and she'll bungle those facts too -- like she does in her latest.  No one fact checks at THE NATION.


The US is headed towards a November presidential election.  The press -- including THE NATION -- focuses on the duopoly refusing to educate or inform the public that there are other choices.  One such choice is Howie Hawkins, the Green Party presidential candidate.  His campaign issued the following:

Nineteen years after more than 3,000 people were killed on 9/11, there remains a bipartisan commitment to fight an endless “war on terrorism,” instigate regime change coups, increase military spending, enhance US nuclear weapons, deport undocumented residents, curtail civil liberties, and militarize the police.

The September 11, 2001 attacks on the US have obscured “The Other 9/11,” the US attack on Chilean democracy in the US-backed coup on September 11, 1973. The two 9/11s are connected by what the CIA calls “blowback.” The CIA first used the term in describing the unintended negative consequences of the US and UK sponsored coup against the democratically-elected government of Mohammed Mossadegh in Iran in 1953. The September 11, 2001 attacks were blowback from decades of US intervention in the Middle East. That doesn’t justify the terrorism, but it does explain it. If we want peace and security for our nation, we should respect the peace and security of other nations.

Contrary to Trump’s lies about ending the endless wars, his administration has escalated the “Long War” in the Middle East and North Africa with increased troop deploymentsdrone strikes, and Special Operations.

Trump is also morphing the War on Terror abroad into a war against dissent at home. He encourages and uses law enforcement to attack nonviolent protesters, calling them “thugs” and “antifa terrorists.” He encourages white racist vigilante militias that show up armed to menace Black Lives Matter demonstrators and to intimidate local and state governments in armed protests against climate action (Oregon) and COVID-19 public health measures (Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nevada, North Carolina, Wisconsin).

Trump encourages these actions with statements that amplify paranoid far-right fantasies that call climate change and COVID-19 hoaxes perpetrated by secret elite conspiracies. Trump has instructed the Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) and Border Patrol to violate immigration laws and subject immigrants and asylum seekers to unspeakable brutality, including separating children from their parents and internment in concentration camps where COVID-19 is running rampant. He stokes racial fears and civil strife to justify authoritarian rule. He calls the news media “fake,” the elections “rigged,” and promotes conspiracy fantasies on Twitter. Trump is sowing confusion and demoralization so people will not be able to resist repression by sections of law enforcement and the racist militias should Trump decide to resist a peaceful transfer of power. The ultimate blowback against US coups and wars abroad against democracy threatens to be a coup against democracy at home.

End the Wars on Terrorism Abroad and Dissent at Home

One of my first steps as President would be to end the wars on “terrorism” abroad and at home. Neither major party calls for ending the endless wars against “terror” abroad even though the top priority in the official National Security Strategy of the United States has changed to “Great Power Competition” with the goal of preventing the emergence of strong regional powers in Eurasia, namely China, Iran, and Russia. This New Cold War, like the War on Terrorism, is about the profits of US-based global corporations abroad, not the security of the people of the United States at home.

The nuclear modernization program initiated under Obama and continued under Trump with bipartisan support has destabilized the nuclear balance of terror and kicked off a new nuclear arms race. The nuclear threat, coupled with inaction by the great powers on the climate emergency and the proliferation of disinformation propagated by state actors on all sides that makes it difficult for publics to come to agreement on what to demand of their governments, has prompted the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists to move their Doomsday Clock the closest it has ever been to midnight.

I would end the saber rattling against Russia, China, and Iran in the Great Power Competition strategy and focus on diplomacy. We need to partner with other major powers to address our common problems, notably nuclear arms, climate, and cyberwar.

I would also end the bipartisan repression of dissent at home. With Trump’s encouragement, law enforcement is using militaristic tactics to suppress peaceful protests against police brutality and systemic racism. Both major parties are united in suppressing whistleblowers like Edward Snowden and publishers like Julian Assange, whose real crimes in the eyes of the National Security State is that they exposed its secret wrongdoings.

The US should speak out against violations of human rights and democracy wherever they occur, but that should not preclude also working with authoritarian governments to resolve life-or-death global issues like climate change and nuclear arms. War and threats of war are the most powerful destroyers of civil liberties, democracy, and human rights. Military threats, economic sanctions, and covert meddling in the politics of other countries only reinforces the nationalist rationalizations of authoritarian governments for repression at home in order to ward off threats from abroad.

The most powerful way to promote human rights is to set a good example. If the US wants its advocacy of human rights to be credible and effective, it must set the right example at home, where police killings of Black people are seen on social media around the world.  A country where there is mass incarceration in the largest prison system in the history of the world, and from where the US military is deployed in some 800 foreign military bases for its endless wars, making the US the nation that the world’s people consider the biggest threat to peace.

The Other 9/11: Chile

Thirty years before the United States’ 9/11, the CIA orchestrated the violent overthrow of the democratically-elected socialist government of Chile on September 11, 1973.

It is a tragic coincidence of the US bloody intervention history in Latin America that President Salvador Allende was overthrown and pushed to suicide on the same date that decades later would affect US soil by a terrorist attack. The same feelings that American felt of being violated by the first foreign attack since Pearl Harbor were felt in Chile that September 11 in 1973. The sin of Salvador Allende in the eyes of Nixon, Kissinger, and CIA Director Richard Helms was to advance deep socialist reforms that would create a more equal society, a just distribution of incomes, real freedom of expression, and a truly democratic framework that could allow, finally, the participation and voices of all sectors, specially the impoverished workers of Chile.

Sound familiar? These are exactly the challenges that the US faces today, problems that have riddled the US throughout its history and become worse in the Trump era – the authoritarian duopoly of Republicans and Democrats, voter suppression, third party suppression, deep inequality from coast to coast, and chronic poverty. It is the same kind of repression that Chile suffers today under the conservative millionaire Sebastián Piñera when people again advance the same reforms that Allende worked for and paid for with his life. It is the same social, economic, and political oppression that the two countries share on this anniversary of 9/11.

Aid, Not Arms – Make Friends, Not Enemies

In the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks in the United States, the Green Party of the United States warned against the danger that the two major parties and the corporate media would turn this horrific crime into a rationale for destructive wars abroad and political repression at home.

Instead of treating the 9/11 attackers as criminals to be brought to justice, the US used the attacks as a pretext for a long series of regime change wars in the Middle East and North Africa. The foreign policy leadership of the Bush administration had already written about the need for a “new Pearl Harbor” in order to provide the pretext for an invasion of Iraq to seize its oil fields. They wasted little time in getting started after 9/11.

The Authorization To Use Military Force (AUMF) against the perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks passed Congress on September 18 with only one dissenting vote. The US invasion of Afghanistan started on October 1. The AUMF legislation is still the legal basis for today’s endless wars.

The Patriot Act, which gave the federal government broad new intrusive surveillance and investigatory powers that weakened civil liberties, was overwhelmingly voted through Congress by October 25.

The Bush administration, joined by the Democratic amen corner led by Senator Joe Biden, lied about weapons of mass destruction and about Iraq’s alleged role in 9/11 to start a second war in Iraq by March 2003.

After 19 years, US combat troops are now engaged in 14 wars. At least 37 million people, and as many as 59 million people, have been displaced by these wars, creating the greatest refugee crisis since World War II.

The annual observation of 9/11 has been turned by politicians into a militaristic celebration of American power that is used to garner public support for US military spending and imperial aggression abroad. Right after 9/11, the world was united in its grief for our country. It was a moment that should have been used to build peace based on mutual cooperation and respect.

Let us remember 9/11 this year by demanding that the US withdraw from its endless wars, prioritize diplomacy to resolve conflicts, end arms sales to belligerents, and provide humanitarian aid for war refugees, including reopening immigration to the US from these countries.

Let’s turn the US into the world’s humanitarian superpower instead of its global military empire. Providing aid instead of arms is the best way to promote peace and security. It is time for the US to make friends instead of enemies.

This week, he and his running mate Angela Walker took questions.



Joseph Kishore is also running for president.  He represents the Socialist and Equality Party.  This week, he reTweeted David Vine's Tweet:


Very happy to see our estimate of 37 million displaced by the US Post-9/11 Wars picked up widely in the press. Thank you to everyone who is helping to remind people of the catastrophic damage caused by 19 years of war. We must demand the US repair the damage + end endless wars.


Jo Jorgensen is running for president on the Libertarian Party's ticket.


Earlier, her campaign issued the following:

GREENVILLE, S.C.; Sept. 5, 2020— Libertarian presidential nominee Dr. Jo Jorgensen today begins a four-city tour of Alaska to rally supporters, meet with local business owners, and take media interviews. She is resuming her duties as candidate following a respite to mourn the recent passing of her mother. 

Tonight campaign staff will kick off her Alaskan outreach with a meet-and-greet event in Anchorage. Speakers will include Jon Briggs Watts, chair of the Libertarian Party (LP) of Alaska, and two of Jorgensen’s down-ballot colleagues: Scott Kohlhaas, candidate for state house (Dist. 16), and Carolyn “Care” Clift, running for state senate (Dist. N).

Clift’s campaign includes a call for fair elections with more choices, and a demand that Alaskans be permitted to go back to their normal work. She appreciates Dr. Jorgensen’s pledge that “a Libertarian administration wouldn’t put everybody under house arrest, but instead would step aside and let private medical research flourish. Government bureaucrats and politicians have no place treating Americans as children with their intrusions such as quarantining healthy people.” 

Clift said, “While I support Alaska Gov. Dunleavy’s handling of the CoVid-19 crisis statewide—for example, encouraging the wearing of masks without mandating it—I feel that local mandates are costing precious tourism dollars, at the expense of Anchorage’s small businesses.”

Jorgensen has garnered support throughout her nationwide tour for her platform of creating a truly free market in health care—optimizing people’s chances against a virus during a pandemic—ending the war on drugs, recalling U.S. military men and women home to defend America’s own shores, and protecting the Second Amendment.

If elected, she plans to abolish the ATF: “I am dedicated to the unalienable right of individuals to keep and bear arms, and I will work to repeal every federal law passed in the last 100 years that infringes on this fundamental right.”

Dr. Jorgensen’s campaign stops in Alaska feature down-ticket candidates, include media availability, and are scheduled as follows (subject to change; times shown in local time zone):

Saturday, September 5; Anchorage
7:30–9 P.M.: Mixer & rally: 49th State Brewing, 717 W. 3rd Ave., Anchorage 
Sunday, September 6; Anchorage
4–5 P.M.: Private meet-and-greet (selected media availability by appointment), 
Sunday, September 6; Wasilla
6–7:30 P.M.: Meet & greet, rally: Iditapark (Green Pavilion),  500 W. Nelson, Wasilla
Monday, September 7; Ketchikan 
11:30–12:30 P.M.: Panel discussion with local business leaders: Stoney Moose, 127 Stedman St., Ketchikan
1–3 P.M.: Meet & greet: Bar Harbor Ale House, 55 Schoenbar Ct., Ketchikan
4:30–6:45 P.M.: Veterans’ barbecue and town hall: American Legion Post 3, 631 Park Ave., Ketchikan
Tuesday, September 8; Juneau 
1–2 P.M.: Pick-up hockey game with Jo: Treadwell Ice Arena, 105 Savikko Rd., Lena Beach, Juneau (Douglas)
6 P.M.: Meet & greet: Lena Beach (Lena Point Park Shelter), Juneau

Jorgensen’s vice-presidential running mate, Jeremy “Spike” Cohen, is in the Pacific northwest campaign on a bus tour, this Labor Day weekend. For a full list of the candidates’ upcoming campaign events, visit Jo20.com/events.

Media advisory: Rain or shine! The candidate will have media availability at most tour stops. A mult box will be available at the rallies, although no risers. Personal distancing protocols will be followed; hand sanitizer and masks will be provided.  

For questions or to schedule an interview with Dr. Jorgensen during her visits, contact: 

  • Sat., Sept. 5; Anchorage: Jess Mears, Jorgensen-Cohen 2020 deputy campaign manager, via e-mailat JessMears@Jo20.com or by phone at (727) 262-8061
  • Sun., Sept. 6; Anchorage & Wasilla: Jess Mears, Jorgensen-Cohen 2020 deputy campaign manager, via e-mailat JessMears@Jo20.com or by phone at (727) 262-8061
  • Mon., Sept. 7; Ketchikan: Paul Robbins, Jr., MPS, Alaska LP communications chair, via e-mailat AK@Jo20.com or by phone at (760) 586-8065
  • Tues., Sept. 8; Juneau: Jess Mears, Jorgensen-Cohen 2020 deputy campaign manager, via e-mailat JessMears@Jo20.com or by phone at (727) 262-8061


Gloria La Riva is running for president as well.  She represents the Party for Socialism and Liberation.



Earlier this week, Gloria Tweeted:


These are the people of Lake Charles, Louisiana, a city devastated by Hurricane Laura. We know that the government has plenty of resources because the working class produces all that wealth. Federal relief for Lake Charles NOW!


And the Minneapolis chapter of the PSL Tweets:


Thanks to the hard work of many committed organizers in the PSL, we've succeeded in getting Gloria La Riva on the ballot in Minnesota! #VoteSocialist! The need for a socialist transformation of society has never been more urgent!






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