Tuesday, July 06, 2021

AMERICAN DAD

Toby e-mailed to complain that no one in the community covers AMERICAN DAD and he thinks it's one of the best shows on TV.  Actually, Kat covers it from time to time -- for example, see her "AMERICAN DAD" from last week.


I do like the show.


For me, these are the five best episodes of the series.

 

1) "The Dentist Wife."

 

Roger grows sad when he meets a dentist wife and feels she has the better life.  So he kidnaps her, puts her on a barge and tries to take over her life.

  

2) "Julia Rogerts"

 

Roger gets disappointed while trying to help Stan -- and wearing Chere's "If I Could Turn Back Time" outfit -- and he leaves for a small town . . . just like Julia Roberts in SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY.  He finds a boyfriend (voiced by Dermot Mulroney) and awaits Stan's visit to beg him to come back.


3) "Stan's Night Out"

 

One of the best episodes ever and solely because Roger and Hayley compete over a guy.  It's hilarious.  "No babies for Roger," Roger says as he shoves a lint brush up whatever 'gentials' he has.  

4) "Frannie 911"

 

Roger and Frannie stage his kidnapping in the hopes of proving Stan cares for him.

 

5) "Widow's Pique"

Frannie prepares herself for the possibility that Stan might die while Roger works on an advertising campaign for Dentine Ice.

 

"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):"

 

 Tuesday, July 6, 2021.


Yesterday, Rania Khalek appeared on THE KATIE HALPER SHOW and discussed, among other things, Iraq.



Over an hour into it, they'll get to Iraq. Disagree with Rania.  Certain groups did not "save" Iraq.  The groups she's referring to -- the militias -- have tortured and have done so for years.  I don't know why she feels the need to defend them.  We defend people here, we don't defend groups.  We certainly do not distort reality.  The militias torture and have long tortured.  You can't be in favor of, just to stay recently, protests and support the groups that attack the protesters.  That threaten their families.  That resort to violence to shut them up.  That assassinate them.


I realize we're dealing with a complex issue and that if the discussion in the video above had been more focused, Rania might have been able to make some points that are currently missing -- and needed.  I also think it's important that Iraq gets attention.  So we're including the video.


But I will never, ever support thugs who hunt down children to kill them because they might be gay.  When Rania wants to talk about that, she may have something really worth saying but, as it is, I don't think she's even aware of that period of recent Iraqi history.  


In any situation,  there's always a push to make someone the 'good guy' and I don't play that game.  Sometimes you have many actors and sometimes they're all harming.  


Talk to Sunnis in Anbar, for example, about the militias and you'll get a completely different reading than what's Rania's offering.  But then, no one -- not one media outlet -- talks to Sunnis in Anbar.  Sunnis have become the forgotten people of Iraq when it comes to the media.

And before some idiot trapped in duality attempts to shoot back, "Well Shi'ites have to love them!"?  No, they don't have to love them and many don't.  And I'm sorry that you're so stupid that you don't grasp that what we were discussing above, before we got to naming the Sunnis, was Shia v. Shia.  I'm sorry that you're too stupid to grasp that the protesters in The October Revolution are mainly Shi'ite.  That's who the militias are attacking.


And they're even attacking their own members.  Quick, prove you know anything about this situation by naming the Shi'ite referred to on social media as "the martyr."  Can't do it, can you?  US media didn't cover it so you're lost and left out.  But he chose to be part of the protests and he was also a newbie in an Iranian-linked militia in Iraq.  "Was" because he was assassinated by the militia he was a part of.  That's why he's referred to as "the martyr."  


US troops need to leave Iraq.  But even if they did so tomorrow -- and they should -- that would not make Iraq safe.  The US government has spent years ensuring that democracy and safety are missing from Iraq.  They overturned the 2010 election results because they didn't like what the voters did (kicked out Nouri al-Maliki).  They (the US government -- Samantha Power was one of the loudest voices) argued that Nouri was needed for Iraq.


Giving Nouri the second term was a disaster and led to the rise of ISIS.  


Time and again, the US government has backed thugs because they wanted control and control was more important than the well being of the Iraqi people.


The government in Iraq is a joke and doesn't represent the Iraqi people.


I'm glad Rania talked about Iraq but was surprised because she doesn't usually.  She talks about neighboring Syria very often.  And that's fine.  But Syria and Iraq are not the same thing.  And she doesn't appear to have specific knowledge of Iraq.  Even so, at least Iraq got a mention on a lefty program -- that's something that hardly ever happens these days.

Staying with the topic of Iraq where Robert Pether remains behind bars.  Peter Murtagh (IRISH TIMES) reports


The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has been asked to help secure the release of an Irish resident held without charge in Iraq since April 7th.

Robert Pether is an Australian citizen, but he lives in Elphin in Co Roscommon with his wife, Desree; two sons, Flynn (18) and Oscar (16); and eight-year-old daughter, Nala, who all hold Irish passports.

An engineer, he was arrested in April with his Egyptian colleague, Khalid Radwan, without explanation in the office of the governor of the Iraqi central bank in April, following a dispute over payments between the bank and building contractors.

Now, six French, Irish and British lawyers have petitioned the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, part of the office of the UNHCR, to become involved.

“This is a very, very egregious case. It is just blackmail,” according to one of the lawyers who have petitioned the UN, French arbitration lawyer Pierre Pic


Australian citizen Robert Pether has apparently been abandoned by his own country which does nothing to object to his imprisonment in Iraq.  (The Australian Embassy staff didn't even meet with Pether until May 3rd, 26 days after he was imprisoned.)   It's now been over forty days that he's been held in a prison with no charge (they say they are holding him for "questioning").  His appeal for bail was denied on May 11th.  He was told by his own government that it was safe to go to Baghdad for a meeting.  He showed up at the meeting but there was no meeting.  Instead, he was hauled off to an Iraqi prison.  DessyMac Tweets:


Day 90 since the entrapment, spectacular arrest & ARBITRARY DETENTION of #AUSTRALIAN #engineer Robert Pether. An employee used as leverage in a contract dispute . NO CHARGES! Iraq not safe to work. #freerobertpether #zahahadid


Last week, Christopher Knaus (GUARDIAN) reported:


No charge has been laid and his family says the Iraqi authorities have denied him proper access to a lawyer, held him for long periods in solitary confinement, and strictly controlled contact with the outside world.

Now, Pether’s lawyers have lodged a complaint with the United Nations working group on arbitrary detention, which has the ability to investigate cases of deprivation of liberty imposed arbitrarily or inconsistently with the international standards.

The Guardian has not seen a copy of the confidential complaint.

But it is understood the complaint urges the UN to urgently appeal to the government of Iraq. It says the pair are being detained as leverage in the business dispute between the bank and CME, and have not been informed of a criminal charge, despite more than two months of detention.


Peter Murtagh, in a second article, notes what it's been like behind bars for Robert:

However, Pether and his Egyptian colleague, Khalid Radwan, were arrested when they came back. Quickly, Iraqi security “took every piece of paper out of Robert’s bedroom and out of his office, took every file, every hard drive, his laptop and his phone”.

A request to be allowed to speak with the Australian embassy was refused. Soon they were taken to a detention centre called D6 where both were held in solitary for the first 12 days.

There he was held, his lawyer’s petition now claims, “in a 2sq m cell with the lights permanently on”, where he was “blindfolded, interrogated, screamed at, threatened, insulted and shown torture rooms”.

On April 12th, Pether was charged with “impersonating a company”, though this allegation was “quickly and easily disproved” and the charges were dropped, says the petition.

Soon after, Pether was transferred to the al-Muthanna, a military detention centre, but neither he nor Radwan have been charged with any offence. 


90 days held behind bars with no charges brought but threats made -- showing him torture rooms is a threat -- an action intended to intimidate -- and this is Iraq?  No one should want to do business with them and no foreign companies should send employees to Iraq.  This makes it very clear that there is no responsible government in charge.

This is an embarrassment to the Iraqi government and yet they continue to make the situation worse by holding Robert.  A functioning government would have long ago moved to kill this story by releasing Robert.  Instead, they're whining about wanting international investment and foreign businesses but this is what they're allowing to be done -- 90 days behind bars, no charges, denied medical assistance, shown torture rooms, etc.  


In other news, UNI-SPUTNIK report

Alarm sirens were turned on at the US embassy in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, the air defense system was activated over an "unknown object" in the sky above the embassy, Iraqi television channel Sl Sumaria reported citing a security source.  

:Alarm sirens went off at the US embassy, the C-RAM system was activated . . . due to the detection of an unknown object in the sky above the US embassy," the source said.


If alarms went off,  why did they go off?  AFP explains, "US forces shot down an armed drone above their embassy in Baghdad on Monday night, Iraqi security officials said, hours after a rocket attack on a base housing US soldiers in the west of the country."  It was one attack, there was another.  Seth J. Frantzmen (JERUSALEM POST) reports:


A day after rumors of an attack on US forces in Syria by pro-Iran militias, the militias made good on their threats with two rounds of attacks on the US in Iraq. During the afternoon, rockets targeted Al-Asad base and by the evening, drones were reported to have targeted an area near the US embassy. 

The attack on Al-Asad base occurred in the afternoon in a rare daylight attack. Pro-Iran militias have attacked US facilities increasingly since 2019, killing a contractor in December 2019 and several members of the US-led coalition in early 2020. The US has retaliated with airstrikes. So far this year there have been some 50 attacks on the US in Iraq, often targeting either Baghdad, Al-Asad base or Erbil. The pro-Iran militias, most linked to Kataib Hezbollah, have increasingly used drones. This is thought to be at least the 11th incident with drones used.


Though no one is boasting they carried out the Sunday attack, there are threats being made.  Qassim Abdul-Zahra (AP) explains:

The leader of an Iran-backed Iraqi militia has vowed to retaliate against America for the deaths of four of his men in a U.S. airstrike along the Iraq-Syria border last month, saying it will be a military operation everyone will talk about.

Abu Alaa al-Walae, commander of Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada, said in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press in Baghdad that the electoral victory of Iran’s hard-line judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi as president will strengthen Iran-backed militant groups throughout the Middle East for the next four years.

Al-Walae, who rarely gives interviews to foreign media organizations, spoke to the AP on Monday in an office in a Baghdad neighborhood along the Tigris River. 


This is the latest public threat.  Before Biden hit them in Iraq, they'd made many public statements proclaiming threats.  And somehow, it appears that many in the US were unaware.  I'm sure some were unaware, the US media doesn't do a good job of covering Iraq.  But some were playing willfully dumb and were aware of the public threats.


We were noting yesterday that Moqtada was no longer a movement leader and idiots and members f the Mooki fan club felt the need to e-mail and say that's not true.  He is a Shi'ite cleric.  He continues to have a large cult (though it has shrunk).  But he's not a movement leader.  The October Revoltuion has nothing to do with him, they kicked him aside.  And they, like most Iraqis, deplore corruption.


Moqtada is part of the corruption.  He's been a 'leader' for how long now and no improvement in Sadr City at all.  He's also a big part of the government as Adam Tooze notes:



Political movement of nationalist Shi’ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has quietly come to dominate apparatus of Iraqi state. Sadrists & allies have recently taken senior posts in Ministries accounting for 1/3-1/2 of Iraq’s $90 billion draft budget for 2021. reuters.com/investigates/s
Image

 

Corrupt Moqtada is in the news for more than just the above, he's also being talked of because of his latest bit of self-created drama. Mina Aldroubi (THE NATIONAL) explains:


Iraq’s populist cleric Moqtada Al Sadr told his followers on Monday he would be “killed”, words analysts said were to garner pre-election support and send a warning to Iran.

Mr Al Sadr has a huge following on the Iraqi street and has a history of making bombastic statements to shore up support against foreign intervention, specifically against US troops.

He also wields the power, through his family’s religious legacy, to encourage thousands of his followers to take to the streets.

“It seems that something will activate the Sadrist movement, which is my death or my killing. I will be a martyr and my death will revive something that has disappeared,” Mr Al Sadr told a group of clerics during a meeting.


Oh, that wacky Moqtada. Nahwi Saeed Tweets:


Muqtada Al-Sadr says that his death or martyrdom has approached. I think this is the fourth time he repeats the same thing to mobilize his supporters emotionally. He won't die, but rather he is going to win the forthcoming election in October and forms the next government soon.
Quote Tweet
قناة العلسيد مقتدى الصدر خلال لقاء جمعه مع قياديي التيار الصدري: ابشركم بقرب موتي او استشهادي







Saturday, July 03, 2021

24 years ago today

 Did you know that there is a Mars anniversary on July 4th (which is today in some parts of the US already).  24 years ago, the Mars Pathfinder landed.


Artist concept of the Mars Pathfinder mission.

Mars Pathfinder was launched December 4, 1996 and landed on Mars' Ares Vallis on July 4, 1997. It was designed as a technology demonstration of a new way to deliver an instrumented lander and the first-ever robotic rover to the surface of the red planet. Pathfinder not only accomplished this goal but also returned an unprecedented amount of data and outlived its primary design life.

Both the lander and the 23-pound (10.6 kilogram) rover carried instruments for scientific observations and to provide engineering data on the new technologies being demonstrated. Included were scientific instruments to analyze the Martian atmosphere, climate, geology and the composition of its rocks and soil. Mars Pathfinder used an innovative method of directly entering the Martian atmosphere, assisted by a parachute to slow its descent through the thin Martian atmosphere and a giant system of airbags to cushion the impact.

Pathfinder's Airbag Landing

From landing until the final data transmission on September 27, 1997, Mars Pathfinder returned 2.3 billion bits of information, including more than 16,500 images from the lander and 550 images from the rover, as well as more than 15 chemical analyses of rocks and soil and extensive data on winds and other weather factors. Findings from the investigations carried out by scientific instruments on both the lander and the rover suggest that Mars was at one time in its past warm and wet.

Rover Sojourner

Rover Sojourner
This 1997 image from NASA's Mars Pathfinder shows a close up of Sojourner as it placed its Alpha Proton X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS) upon the surface of the rock 'Yogi.'

The lander, formally named the Carl Sagan Memorial Station following its successful touchdown, and the rover, named Sojourner after American civil rights crusader Sojourner Truth, both outlived their design lives — the lander by nearly three times, and the rover by 12 times.

Mars Pathfinder Science Instruments

  • Alpha Proton X-ray Spectrometer: Determined the elemental composition of rocks and soils.
  • Three Cameras: provided images of the surrounding terrain for geological studies, and documented the performance and operating environment for Pathfinder mission technologies.
  • Atmospheric Structure Instrument/Meteorology Package: Measured the Martian atmosphere during Pathfinder's descent to the surface, and provided meteorological measurements at the lander.

Top Mars Pathfinder Science Findings

  • Rounded pebbles and cobbles at the landing site, and other observations, suggested conglomerates that formed in running water during a warmer past in which liquid water was stable.
  • Radio tracking of Mars Pathfinder provided a precise measure of the lander's location and Mars' pole of rotation. The measurements suggested that the radius of the planet's central metallic core is greater than 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) but less than roughly 1,250 miles (2,000 kilometers).
  • Airborne dust is magnetic, and its characteristics suggest the magnetic mineral is maghemite, a very magnetic form of iron oxide, which may have been freeze-dried on the particles as a stain or cement. An active water cycle in the past may have leached out the iron from materials in the crust.
  • Dust devils were seen and frequently measured by temperature, wind and pressure sensors. Observations suggested that these gusts are a mechanism for mixing dust into the atmosphere.
  • Early morning water ice clouds were seen in the lower atmosphere.
  • Abrupt temperature fluctuations were recorded in the morning, suggesting that the atmosphere is warmed by the planet's surface, with heat convected upward in small eddies.
NASA's Mars Pathfinder & Sojourner Rover (360 View): Explore the landing site of NASA's Pathfinder mission to Mars with your mouse or mobile device. This 360-degree panorama includes the lander's companion rover, Sojourner, and top science targets. NOTE: Not all browsers support viewing 360 videos/images. View & download at http://go.nasa.gov/1TcjxuN.
NASA at Mars: 20 years of 24/7 exploration



 

"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

 Friday, July 2, 2021.  Let's spend another day on Donald Rumsfeld because his War Crimes were immense.



TEEN VOGUE notes:


Accused war criminal and torture defender dead at 88

4:45 PM · Jun 30, 2021


Yes, Donald remains thankfully dead.  Before we get into the War Criminal, let's note a basic truth: If you've spent the last days with more attention on Bill Cosby than on Donald Rumsfeld, you really aren't much of an adult.


If Bill is guilty of what he was accused of, his crimes shrink in the scope of Donald's crimes -- unless you only care about American people and feel other people -- especially people in the Middle East -- don't matter at all.  I don't like Bill Cosby.  I've never liked him and I've never owed him a damn thing. But he rescued a lot of people's careers over the years and it was so sad/strange to watch those people play dumb in public.  I'm not talking about TV actors who worked with him.  I'm talking about people whose careers were over and who he helped restart their careers.  I'm talking about people like Cher who were a joke and who were over but Bill put his reputation behind Cher and Sonny to help their comeback.


I don't like Bill.  I never have.  I've encountered him many times.  (He doesn't like me either, it's mutual.)  But if he'd ever helped me in some way, I think I would at least state something publicly like, "That's not the Bill I knew.  I'm deeply saddened if the charges are true."  But we didn't get that.  And so many in Hollywood owe Bill.  That's why he was able to get so many people to make idiots of themselves by appearing in LEONARD PART 6.


Bill's not guilty because the conviction was overturned.  Legally, he's not guilty.  This wasn't a pardon.  This was the conviction was overturned.  "On a technicality!"  


Yes, and it's a hell of a technicality.


So much so that if you care about justice, you should be in agreement.  If a legal agreement is reached in 2004, the government can't overturn it a few years later because they don't like it.  


The 2004 agreement never should have been made but it was made.  Instead of building what appeared to be a strong case on real evidence, the prosecution went too far -- and the judge overseeing the case allowed them to go that far.  The government is not supposed to go unchecked.


Do I think Bill committed the crimes?  Yes, personally I do.  I also don't feel it was that difficult of a case to be built.  But the government chose to cut corners and to cut basic principles in our legal system.  That was outrageous.  They deserve to have their work disputed and spat upon.  


There is no conviction now.  I'm sorry if you were assaulted by Bill.  I hope you get whatever help a failing system can provide.  But this is our legal system and it is better that a guilty person go free than that the system is abused and destroyed so that many more suffer.  (Even when not abused, our system still suffers and that's evident by the huge number of people incarcerated throughout the US.)


The system doesn't guarantee you justice -- a fact that many don't appear to grasp.  It guarantees you -- or is supposed to -- a public say.  The government abused the system and a higher court rightly called that out and overturned the verdict.


Donald Rumsfeld was a War Criminal who is responsible for the deaths of millions.  He was in a position of trust -- not because he was an entertainer but because he was a public servant -- a role that comes with the expectation that the public can trust the person.  The public couldn't trust Donald and were wrong to have thought that they could.  He abused democracy, he advanced torture and he is responsible for the deaths of millions.


"Rape!"  Yes, rape is an important issue and I'm not saying it's not.  But if you're unaware of how many rapes have taken place in Iraq because of the illegal war (and let's include 'trial marriages' in that category as well as forced marriages where underage girls were married off to elderly men against their will), that's really on you.


Don't pretend to me that rape matters to you if you're unaware of, for example, Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi  who was gang-raped and murdered on March12, 2006 while Donald was still Secretary of Defense.  She'd be 29-years-old now but she instead she's dead.

Donald set the tone.  He had US troops torturing people -- in CIA black sites, at Guantanamo, in Abu Ghraib and many other places.  That's what send the message that US troops can get away with rape and murder.  

And US troops gang-raped and murdered Abeer.  While they were taking turns raping her, she could hear her five-year-old-sister and her mother and her father being shot dead in the next room.


The focus on Bill Cosby at the expense of Donald Rumsfeld?  It may be part of the refusal to own what our government has done.  It may be part of the natural gossipy nature of our society to focus on celebrities.  It may also have some elements of racism.  There was a glee with which Bill was taken down.  I don't like Bill.  I actually loathe him and that's been clear for years.  But I was sent reeling by the glee that surrounded this entire chapter.  


Rape is a serious issue.  If you're unhappy that Bill's not behind bars -- and is no longer guilty of rape (a verdict overturned means it no longer exists) -- you need to blame the government for how they argued the case and how, in arguing it, they abused the system.

[ADDED: 3:13 PM EST, 7/2/21 E-mails coming in have noted that Jonathan Turley weighed in earlier this week on Cosby's verdict being tossed aside:


In their 79-page opinion, the judges found that a “non-prosecution agreement” reached with Cosby should have barred the prosecution. In the earlier agreement, the prosecutor, Bruce Castor Jr., agreed not to charge Cosby in return for his civil deposition.  He proceeded to incriminate himself in what the Court said was a bait-and-switch.  The later prosecutor then just ignored the nonprosecution agreement. The trial was also undermined by the decision of the trial court to allow women to testify as witnesses on uncharged alleged crimes against Cosby.

It is clear that, absent the agreement, Cosby would never have agreed to the four depositions.  Free of the threat of prosecution, Cosby incriminated himself. Dolores Troiani., counsel for Andrea Constand, asked “When you got the Quaaludes, was it in your mind that you were going to use these Quaaludes for young women that you wanted to have sex with?” Cosby replied, “Yes.” That and other statements were used at his criminal trial.

Kevin Steele, the Montgomery County district attorney who convicted Cosby, issued a statement that was embarrassing in its evasion of responsibility. He dismissed the ruling as “a procedural issue that is irrelevant to the facts of the crime.” Obviously, it was quite relevant because Steele proved a crime by unconstitutional means. Yet, Steele seems entirely unwilling to acknowledge his errors and declared that

“My hope is that this decision will not dampen the reporting of sexual assaults by victims. Prosecutors in my office will continue to follow the evidence wherever and to whomever it leads. We still believe that no one is above the law — including those who are rich, famous and powerful.”

The statement is breathtaking. Of course it could undermine such reports since Steele engineered an unconstitutional verdict that led to Cosby prevailing. Moreover, Steele is right, “no one is above the law” including prosecutors who are not allowed to pursue convictions at any cost in popular high-profile cases.

Judge Steven T. O’Neill (who the defense sought to force off the case for bias) also has much to answer for in this wrongful conviction. O’Neill at trial seemed hellbent to try the case. He virtually mocked the defense arguments on the nonprosecution agreement: O’Neill, rejected that claim, saying, “There’s no other witness to the promise. The rabbit is in the hat and you want me at this point to assume: ‘Hey, the promise was made, judge. Accept that.’”


I didn't see that.  Rough week.  But we'll include it and add it into this snapshot before it gets reposted elsewhere.  As I've noted here before, I agree with Jonathan about 95% of the time -- a huge number for me -- and I think he has one of the best legal minds in the US -- why isn't he on the Supreme Court?  Thank you to Billie, Sabina, Ahmed and Lewis for pointing out Turley's opinion on the Cosby case.

While I'm adding, let's also add Katie Halper addressing the press treatment of Rumsfeld versus the way they treater the late Senator Mike Gravel.



That's from Krystal and Saagar's BREAKING POINTS which aired earlier today -- and is already up as an individual entry.]


Rumsfeld.


"Unlike the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, Afghans, and so many others killed in the wars he launched and in the torture cells he oversaw, Donald Rumsfeld died peacefully," Phyllis Bennis observes at THE NATION and from that basic truth she stumbles and falls flat on her fat ass.  By the time she's noting deaths and using what we now know is a US government backed website (Iraq Body Count) for her numbers, she's just an embarrassment.  Do we need Elaine to publicly shame her again to get her to use THE LANCET?  Bitch, I don't have time for your s**t and, quite honestly, the world can't afford it.


Phyllis just needs to shut her damn mouth and keep it shut on Iraq.  In the summer of 2006, the last day KNIGHT RIDDER existed, before it officially became MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS, Nancy A. Youssef published an important article about how the US government was, in fact, keeping track of Iraqi deaths despite their denials and repeatedly insisting that they didn't "do" body counts.  Weeks later, Phyllis goes on FAIR's COUNTERSPIN to bemaon the fact that there are no body counts being kept on the Iraqis being killed.  This was when Phyl was the Iraq expert and pretended she actually followed the subject and topic.  


And Elaine had to publicly slap the bitch for pimping undercounts of the dead in Iraq when many solid counts -- non US government counts -- existed.  Phyl was part of the fake ass United for Peace and Justice (aka the turnout the vote auxiliary of the Democratic Party) so she couldn't take the embarrassment and upped her count but now she's back and she's pimping IBC.  Because she's a liar?  Because she's a coward?


I have no idea.  She's a useless bitch and she's made that her life's role, take it up with her.  We can't afford her or her garbage.  She tells you no one wanted the war more than Donald Rumsfeld.


That's cute.


Bully Boy Bush is still alive but let's continue to give him a pass, right, Phyllis?  And I'm not sure Donald wanted it more than members of press that worked overtime to pimp and promote the war -- and to keep it going once it got started -- while shaming and bullying anyone who spoke out or questioned.


I'm not seeing any acknowledgement in Phyliss' garbage that the press turned Donald Rumsfeld and others into media heroes.  VANITY FAIR can act as woke as it wishes it were -- I don't really thingk that sexual harassment there is buried but, I'm sure Conde Naste hopes it is -- but the reality will always be that they did a glossy spread on Bully Boy Bush and his administration and Annie Leibovitz can lie all she wants but she didn't use that opportunity and her camera to serve up Diane Arbus type type portraits of the War Criminals for that issue but instead became the Leni Riefenstahl of still photography.


Phyllis, the 'expert' on Iraq, offers a lot of words that do very little.  She never addresses the press in any real detail.  The name "Thomas Friedman" is but one of many that fails to appear, for example. Or the hideous Tim Russert or . . .  And, again, step out of line and be shamed and bullied -- or worse.  If you were outside the US, there was much worse.


Henry Michaels at WSWS on April 9, 2003:

Journalists’ organizations have demanded investigations into two incidents in which US military forces killed three journalists in Baghdad on April 8, including Al-Jazeera correspondent Tariq Ayoub, and seriously wounded several others. The attacks came amid broadcasts showing some of the mounting slaughter being conducted by US troops throughout the Iraqi capital.

Ayoub, a 34-year-old Palestinian Jordanian, was killed in a direct missile strike on Al-Jazeera’s Baghdad offices. Surviving Al-Jazeera staff sought shelter in the nearby offices of rival satellite station Abu Dhabi TV, which then also came under US attack.

At one point, Abu Dhabi TV correspondent Shaker Hamed issued an emergency on-air call for help, saying “Twenty-five journalists and technicians belonging to Abu Dhabi television and Qatari satellite television channel Al-Jazeera are surrounded in the offices of Abu Dhabi TV in Baghdad.”

Hamed called on the International Committee of the Red Cross, the International Organization of Journalists, Reporters Sans Frontieres and the Arab Journalists Union “to intervene quickly to pull us out of this zone where missiles and shells are striking in an unbelievable way.”

Shortly after the Al-Jazeera strike, two cameramen died when a US tank fired on Baghdad’s Palestine Hotel, which houses more than 200 international correspondents—nearly all of the “non-embedded” journalists left in the besieged city. The victims were Reuters cameraman Taras Protsyuk, 35, a Ukrainian national, and Jose Couso, 37, who worked for the private Spanish television station Telecinco. Another three members of the media were injured.

The strike on Al-Jazeera’s broadcasting facilities was undoubtedly deliberate. Al-Jazeera had written to US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on February 23 giving the precise location of its office so as to avoid being targeted.

Both Ayoub and a cameraman, Zuheir Iraqi, who was wounded with shrapnel to his neck, were standing on the station’s roof in preparation for a live broadcast when the missiles hit the building, leaving Al-Jazeera’s bureau in ruins.

BBC reporter Rageh Omaar, who is stationed in the nearby Palestine Hotel, described the bombing as “suspect.” He said, “We were watching and filming the bombardment and it’s quite clearly a direct strike on the Al-Jazeera office. This was not just a stray round. It just seemed too specific.”


Where's that in your 'analysis' or 'commentary' or just vomitary of words?  It's no where to be found, Phyllis.


Here's a few examples of much better analysis than Phyllis offered.







Elaine's "POLITO lies again" went up a few minutes ago and the following sites also updated: