Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Science post -- phytoplankton, Dracula and a hidden Biblical text?

If there's a major Supreme Court story today, I'm not seeing it.  So I'm doing a long overdue science post.  Jeremiah Budin (THE COOL DOWN) reports:

Human-driven pollution has had a major impact on ecosystems across the globe, causing extreme weather events and rising temperatures. Now a new study has found yet another previously unforeseen effect of that pollution: the color of the oceans is changing.

The study, titled “Global climate-change trends detected in indicators of ocean ecology” published in Nature, found that the changes to phytoplankton are largely responsible for the oceans’ shifting colors.

Phytoplankton are microscopic marine algae that are typically green (or greenish) in color because they contain chlorophyll, the compound that allows plants to convert sunlight into food. 

The abundance — or lack — of phytoplankton has a noticeable impact on the color of the ocean. In areas with a lot of phytoplankton, the water appears greener, whereas in areas with less phytoplankton, it is more blue.



I did not realize that was the reason.  We took one big summer trip when I was a kid.  We went from Atlanta to Canada and we saw some rural areas in Canada and I saw places where the water was green.  It was so pretty.  I always wondered about that and had no idea it was do to "phytoplankton."  In fact, I'm brand new to the word.  WIKIPEDIA notes:



Phytoplankton (/ˌftˈplæŋktən/) are the autotrophic (self-feeding) components of the plankton community and a key part of ocean and freshwater ecosystems. The name comes from the Greek words φυτόν (phyton), meaning 'plant', and πλαγκτός (planktos), meaning 'wanderer' or 'drifter'.[1][2][3]

Phytoplankton obtain their energy through photosynthesis, as do trees and other plants on land. This means phytoplankton must have light from the sun, so they live in the well-lit surface layers (euphotic zone) of oceans and lakes. In comparison with terrestrial plants, phytoplankton are distributed over a larger surface area, are exposed to less seasonal variation and have markedly faster turnover rates than trees (days versus decades). As a result, phytoplankton respond rapidly on a global scale to climate variations.

Phytoplankton form the base of marine and freshwater food webs and are key players in the global carbon cycle. They account for about half of global photosynthetic activity and at least half of the oxygen production, despite amounting to only about 1% of the global plant biomass. Phytoplankton are very diverse, varying from photosynthesizing bacteria to plant-like algae to armour-plated coccolithophores. Important groups of phytoplankton include the diatomscyanobacteria and dinoflagellates, although many other groups are represented.[2]

Most phytoplankton are too small to be individually seen with the unaided eye. However, when present in high enough numbers, some varieties may be noticeable as colored patches on the water surface due to the presence of chlorophyll within their cells and accessory pigments (such as phycobiliproteins or xanthophylls) in some species.

Phytoplankton are photosynthesizing microscopic protists and bacteria that inhabit the upper sunlit layer of marine and fresh water bodies of water on Earth. Paralleling plants on land, phytoplankton undertake primary production in water,[2] creating organic compounds from carbon dioxide dissolved in the water. Phytoplankton form the base of — and sustain — the aquatic food web,[4] and are crucial players in the Earth's carbon cycle.[5]

"Marine photosynthesis is dominated by microalgae, which together with cyanobacteria, are collectively called phytoplankton."[6] Phytoplankton are extremely diverse, varying from photosynthesizing bacteria (cyanobacteria), to plant-like diatoms, to armour-plated coccolithophores.[7][2]



Photosynthesis I can understand.  I had some great science teachers in school.  Now I had some bad science projects my first two years of science.  But in my third year, I really got it (I think that was seventh grade) and photosynthesis was the basis for the science project that year.  

Linda -- so sorry, I read your e-mail over a month ago -- asked if I stressed science to my kids?

Yes, I did.  All three.  And the reason being it's so important.  I would find children's science things we could do and we'd do one a week.  And you can do that with your kids too if you'd like.  The easiest way would probably be to go to YOUTUBE and type something like "science for kids" or "science experiments for kids" and go through the results.

Jason Collins (GIANT FREAKING ROBOT) has a report that notes the inspiration for the character Dracula: 

A chemical analysis of the letters written by the legendary historical figure Vlad Draculae, Voivode of Wallachia, who served as the inspiration for the fictional vampire Dracula, has revealed that the Prince of Darkness (no, not you, Ozzy) may have cried tears of blood. Now, before you bring out your garlic braids and holy water, the prince of Wallachia didn't cry blood for reasons unholy.

According to Science Alert, traces left behind on the paper by Draculae-we'll refer to him as Dracula from this point onward-suggest that he was afflicted by a medical condition known as Haemolacria (or Hemolacria). This was the first time any such research had been conducted, and it helped shed some light on the health of Vlad the Impaler, as certain conditions might've contributed to the birth of the myth of Dracula-besides Vlad's particular tastes when it comes to punishment and torture.

Haemolacria, for the medically uninitiated, is a rare condition that causes a person to produce tears tinged with or partially made of blood. It's a relatively harmless condition that has been attributed to a variety of causes, including hormone changes, menstruation (though we're quite sure that wasn't the case with Dracula), blocked tear ducts, and nose bleeds.




A scientist found a lost portion of Biblical text about 1,500 years after it was initially written. All he needed was ultraviolet photography equipment and plenty of research know-how.

Announcing the discovery in a paper published in the journal New Testament Studies, medievalist Grigory Kessel of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (OeAW or Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften) found the hidden chapter underneath three layers of text—dubbed a double palimpsest—thanks to ultraviolet photography.

The new find represents one of the earliest translations of the Gospels.

The long-hidden chapter—an interpretation of Matthew chapter 12—was originally translated as part of what are known as the Old Syriac translations about 1,500 years ago. But thanks to the scarcity of parchment a couple of hundred years later in the region, that parchment was reused, mostly erasing the original translation of the Biblical New Testament. A document like this, where one layer of text hides the erased remains of another, is called a palimpsest. The Kessel find is a double palimpsest because the parchment was then used a third time.

"Until recently, only two manuscripts were known to contain the Old Syriac translation of the Gospels," Kessel says in a news release. One resides in London's British Library and the other was a palimpsest discovery at St. Catherine's Monastery at Mount Sinai. In what is known as the "Sinai Palimpsests Project," a third manuscript was recently unearthed. Kessel's find marks the fourth, a translation from the 3rd century text likely copied in the 6th century. The parchment was housed in the Vatican Library.



Sorry, I usually have some theme and some organization.  But it's been so long since I've done a science post -- or even looked at science articles, that I've ended up just noting the first three that caught my interest.  


 




"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

Tuesday, August 22, 2023.  Iraq's prime minister said only last week that Iraq didn't need foreign troops anymore, this week he signs a Memo of Understanding with the UK for . . . foreign troops, hate merchants in the US have blood on their hands, Jonathan Turley demonstrates his idea of 'balanced' and much more.



As the world grows hotter and blistering summer days become routine, the task of supplying electricity is becoming an increasingly intractable problem across the Middle East. Soaring demand for cooling — fans, air conditioners, fridges and freezers — is overtaxing electrical grids long beset by war damage, mismanagement or corruption.

And it’s set to get worse. Already, the heat index, which measures the combined effect of temperature and humidity, has reached 152 degrees in some parts of the region, near the limits of human tolerance. Scientists predict that by 2050 much of the Middle East will suffer extreme heat — defined as an average annual temperature of around 84 degrees. A recent study in the journal Lancet Planet Health looking four decades into the future found that for every 100,000 people in the region, 123 will suffer heat-related deaths each year — more than 60 times the current rate.

“People are hiding inside their homes from the heat,” said Saleh Ubaidi, a Baghdad-based chef who recently shut down his restaurant for the season because people were not venturing outside.

Even nations with the capacity to provide more power balk at the higher costs or have to contend with infrastructure that’s simply not designed to cope with the increased stress of working harder for longer under hotter conditions. But failing to supply electricity carries economic and political risks, especially for nations whose authoritarian regimes have governed according to a simple rule: cheap basic services in exchange for public quiescence. In recent years, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Syria have all seen protests ignite over issues of power provision.

“Part of the social contract with the government was services for the people, to silence them,” said Ahmed Tabaqchali, an Iraqi economic expert.

In this summer’s extraordinary heat, many Middle Eastern countries have instead resorted to mandatory work furloughs or power cuts, cannibalizing parts of their economies to save power — and money.


It's not going to be pretty and they are not getting the truth from their leaders -- especially not from Mohammed Shia al-Suandi who seems to specialize in lying to the Iraqi people these days.  Let's drop back to the August 15th snapshot:

Starting with Iraq, ASHARQ AL-ASWAT reports:


Iraq no longer required the presence of "foreign combat forces" on its territories to combat ISIS, announced Prime Minister and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces Mohammed Shia al-Sudani on Monday.

Sudani was speaking during a meeting with commanders of the Armed Forces and Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), members of the Ministries of Interior and Defense, and the military forces that took part in the war against the ISIS terrorist organization.


PRESS TV quotes him saying:

"Today, Iraq does not need foreign combat forces, and we are conducting advanced dialogues in order to determine the form of future relationship and cooperation with the international coalition," he said.

“The Iraqis have become, after the liberation battles, more united than ever before… All Iraqis fought in one trench from all nationalities, religions, sects and components."


What a load of garbage.  His remarks, the prime minister himself. 

Do they need foreign troops?  No, they don't.  But he's not calling for them to leave.  And it was just last week that Iraq's Minister of Defense Thabit Muhammad al-Abassi was in DC meeting with US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to discuss the new agreement as the DoD press release noted:


This meeting looks beyond the defeat of the Islamic State and is an outgrowth of a visit Austin made to Baghdad in March. "We are interested in an enduring defense relationship within a strategic partnership," said Dana Stroul, deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East, during an interview last week.

Many officials are calling this an agreement on establishing a "360-degree relationship" -- meaning it would be a whole-of-government strategic partnership for years.


For years.

Years.


Foreign troops not needed but US troops to continue "for years."

Iraq's prime minister was lying to the Iraqi people.


He said foreign troops weren't needed -- said to the Iraqi people -- and yet signs on with the US troops.  That was last week.  This week?  KURDISTAN 24 reports:

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia' al-Sudani on Monday received United Kingdom Minister of State for Security Affairs Tom Tugendhat and his accompanying delegation.

At the meeting, the two sides discussed bilateral relations between the two countries, improving cooperation in security and defense, as well as combating terrorism and corruption.

Al-Sudani thanked the United Kingdom for supporting Iraq in the fight against ISIS.

Moreover, al-Sudani stressed the importance of partnering with the UK to combat cross-border crimes, particularly those related to smuggling, human trafficking, and the illegal drug trade.


Still on Iraq, Sunday we noted:

In other news, look who US Ambassador to Iraq Alina L Romanowski met with last week.





Yes, former prime minister and forever thug Nouri al-Maliki.  


He's also still powerful.  A fact that the US media seemed woefully unaware of in 2021 and in 2022.  It's 2023 now and she's meeting with the thug.  Would seem to indicate that the US media might need to pay a little more attention to Nouri -- but then, so would the defeat of Moqtada al-Sadr.



Indicators from within the coalition led by former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki suggest that he is poised to engage in a pivotal battle in this year's end-of-year elections for the provincial councils.
His objective is to secure five governors in central and southern Iraq. Additionally, he plans to capture the Shiite voters’ support in Baghdad, which is anticipated to be a fiercely contested electoral battleground, as described by members of the State of Law Coalition.

For months, al-Maliki’s coalition has set two goals concerning provincial council elections.

Firstly, they adamantly oppose any postponement of the scheduled December deadline.

Secondly, they are shutting the door on forming alliances with other Shiite factions in Iraq’s Coordination Framework.


Let's turn to the US, Tom McLauglin (USA TODAY) reports on Ronald DeSantis' destruction of Florida:




Jean Siebenaler moved to Florida following her retirement to bask in the warmth of the Sunshine State.

"I finally thought I'd be sitting on the water with an umbrella drink in my hand," she said.

The Milton resident, a military veteran and retired physician, now says she wonders if Florida was where she needed to relocate after all. Having been politically active in her home state of Ohio, she finds beach time consumed by "steaming and stewing" over the state of the state and local politics.



"It's very upsetting, the direction we see Florida heading," she said. "Every day I wonder why I am living here."

For many, Florida has changed. What was once a proudly purple state has turned an angry red, they say. Gov. Ron DeSantis, with the dedicated backing of a Republican supermajority in the state legislature, is waging war on what he calls "wokeism" — a term he has loosely defined as "a form of cultural Marxism." But many — people of color, the LGBTQ+ community, immigrants, non-Christians, teachers, union members, students — feel it is a war against themselves, as they face ridicule, discrimination, and, potentially, violence.

The NAACP, Equity Florida and the League of United Latin American Citizens each issued travel advisories for Florida. The NAACP advisory states, in part, "Florida is openly hostile toward African Americans, people of color and LGBTQ individuals."

"Under the leadership of Gov. DeSantis, the state has become hostile to Black Americans and in direct conflict with the Democratic ideals that our union was founded upon," the advisory states.

There exist widespread reports of people abandoning the state because they no longer feel welcome here. Following her family's exodus to Pennsylvania in May, former Brevard County resident and Democratic Party activist Stacey Patel told FLORIDA TODAY, "It's like breathing, you know? After holding your breath for a really long time."

Nikki Fried, the state's former commissioner of agriculture and current Florida Democratic Party chair, predicted 800,000 immigrants had left the state after DeSantis signed SB 1718 into law. It imposes strict restrictions and penalties to deter the employment of undocumented workers in the state.

Democrats also count themselves among the groups feeling persecuted. Patel's family was vilified, she said, for its party affiliation.

Siebenaler, who has stepped into the position of legislative chair for the Democratic Women's Club of Florida, attended an early June meeting of the Santa Rosa County Commission to call out Commissioner James Calkins for labeling the Democratic Party as evil.

"I took an oath to defend against all enemies, foreign and domestic," she told the governing board. "And I must speak out against the hate speech that is emanating from the Santa Rosa County Commission dais."


Ronald wants to do to the US what he's done to Florida.  What's even scarier is that some -- fewer and fewer each week -- are all on board with letting him.
In her post last night, Ann noted Lauri Carleton's murder.  Lauri is survived by her husband of 28 years and their nine children.  She apparently was killed for flying a Pride flag.  This is the world the hate merchants have fostered.  And all of you pieces of garbage who've stayed silent should take your slice from the blame pie as well.  Katie Halper that includes you -- the 'lefty' who undiscovered the LGBTQ+ community just when they needed you.  Saleen Martin (USA TODAY) reports:
Mountain Provisions, a local food cooperative, honored Carleton in a Facebook post, calling her a “dear friend, mom to many, ally, organizer, entrepreneur, founding member and soul of our co-op.”

"If you knew Lauri you know she loved hard, laughed often, and nurtured and protected those she cared about," the post said. "She was a force, she loved to crack jokes and wanted to live as joyful of a life as possible."

The group said that Carleton and her husband organized the co-op, which offered free food and supplies for four months after a blizzard swept through the area.

“Lauri put her whole heart into keeping it going as long as we could,” the group said.

The group urged people to "pay an act of kindness forward in her honor" and encouraged people to fly Pride flags in her honor.

"Love will prevail," the post said. "We will continue to stand for the values she so selflessly stood for. Her death will not be in vain.”

 

















“It was only a matter of time.”

That was my first thought upon hearing of the callous and hateful murder of Laura Carleton, the owner of Mag Pi Clothing in Cedar Glen, California. A straight woman, Carleton was fatally shot by a man who confronted her over an LGBTQPride flag which was displayed at her shop. Her assailant was later killed by police.

This was not the first time someone had taken issue with Carleton’s Pride flag. As The Independent has previously reported, friends of Carleton say that the flag has been ripped down multiple times. Every time, she simply replaced the flag with another, refusing to cave in to the hateful bigots who vandalized her shop.

The inevitability of something like this happening was apparent to anyone paying attention. Following last year’s deadly homophobic shooting at a Colorado gay club, Scientific Americanreported on the link between rising anti-LGBTQ rhetoric on the right and violence against LGBTQ people. Around the same time, the UCLA Williams Institute released a startling statistic: LGBT people are nine times more likely to be a victim of a hate-crime than non-LGBT people. This was followed by a document from the Department of Homeland Security in May warning that violent threats against the LGBTQ community are increasing in both number and intensity.

In June, a joint report by the Anti-Defamation League and GLAAD found more than 350 anti-LGBTQ incidents across 46 states and the District of Columbia. These included acts of online harassment and vandalism, which Carleton’s murder – after multiple incidents of vandalism – shows can and do escalate into incidents of physical violence.

These incidents also do not exist in a vacuum. This year has seen a record number of anti-LGBTQ bills introduced in state legislatures; more than 500 were introduced, with over 75 of them becoming law. While we can and should debate public policy on its merits, what cannot be denied is that with these bills has come the normalization of some truly disgusting and hateful rhetoric.

For example, in April, a spokeswoman for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis tweeted that anyone who opposed the state’s notorious “Don’t Say Gay” law is “probably a groomer or at least you don’t denounce the grooming of 4-8 year old children.” This, after the Human Rights Campaign found that the anti-LGBTQ grooming narrative had increased on social media by 400% following the passage of the law, which prohibits teaching Florida students about sexual orientation or gender identity. This harassment is not limited to the internet, though; in April, The Independent interviewed three people who “had been harassed or attacked in public over the past two weeks by strangers who accused them, with no provocation or evidence, of ‘grooming’ children or being a ‘groomer.’”

This is not the first time the American right has been swept up in a moral panic over LGBTQ people and children. Nearly 50 years ago, Anita Bryant (the singer and orange juice spokeswoman) famously led the so-called Save Our Children campaign which sought to allow teachers in Florida – and later California, when she campaigned for the Briggs Initiative – to be fired for being gay. This led gay rights activists Jean O’Leary and Bruce Voeller to write in a 1977 New York Times op-ed that “gay women and men in this country have been required to join a conspiracy to pretend we don’t exist, so that other people can lie to their children.”

Make no mistake, that is what is happening: people are lying to their children, to themselves, and to the public. As the Poynter Institute’s PolitiFact reported last year, most child molesters are straight, “school employees who perpetrate child sexual abuse are most likely to be white, heterosexual, male adults…” and that actually, “gay, lesbian, bisexual and trans people are less likely than people who do not claim those labels to commit child sexual abuse in school settings.” There is also no evidence that teaching about LGBTQ people, sexual orientation, or gender identity leads to children becoming LGBTQ or increases incidents of child sexual abuse.



How's it feel Katie Halper, Aaron Mate, Max Blumenthal and your vile and disgusting (and physically repugnant) wife Mrs. Blumenthal?  How's it feel to know you are part of these attacks and that the blood is on your hands as well.  In fact, let's note that transphobe Anya Parampil -- aka fat gut and no breasts hateful wife of Maxi Blumenthal has an upcoming speaking gig . . . at . . . The Ron Paul Institute.  That's mighty Karen of her, isn't it.  She'll be there with other hate merchants such as Jonathan Turley.  

Here's a 2011 piece from THE NEW REPUBLIC about the racism Ron Paul promoted.  He's a long term racist and it's not in the past.  He always tries to lie his way out though, doesn't he?  Like in 2017, that racist cartoon, it wasn't him, it ended up on his Twitter feed, but it wasn't him!

This is who Georgetown wants to promote?  They're comfortable with their faculty interacting with The Ron Paul Institute?

 
We'll come back to Turley in a moment, Crystal wonders in an e-mail why "someone like Naomi Wolf would support Moms For Liberty -- she used to at least have common sense."  I don't know.  If you're needing me to guess, having failed at the opportunity to raise her own children (fortunately, they had a great dad and a wonderful step-mom), Naomi sees the hateful gals of Moms For Bigotry as her second chance to at least pretend she's a concerned parent.  



Meanwhile, let's return to the homophobic and transphobic, Federalist Society mascot Jonathan Turley (and no link to trash):


In the last few weeks, we have seen a disturbing uptick of reported threats against public figures, grand jurors, and judges. One of the most disturbing and disgraceful are threats against Judge Tanya S. Chutkan, who will be presiding in the trial of former president Donald Trump. Abigail Jo Shry, 43, of Alvin, Tex., allegedly left an Aug. 5 voice mail at Chutkan’s chambers in which she called her a racial slur and threatened her, saying, “If Trump doesn’t get elected in 2024, we are coming to kill you, so tread lightly, b—-.” That same week, there was also a sentencing in a prior case where the threat led to an attempt on the life of Trump. Pascale Cecile Veronique Ferrier, 56, has been sentenced to 262 months or roughly 22 years for mailing ricin to Trump. What makes her case even more striking is the defense raised by her lawyer.

Ferrier is a dual citizen of Canada and France. She pleaded guilty to sending  a letter containing ricin in 2020 to then-President Trump and others.


It goes on but that's more than enough.  



Nine paragraphs on non-US citizen Ferrier.  Shry?  You get that single sentence.  That's how Turley does 'balanced' when not castigating the media for their failure to be . . . balanced.

He doesn't even get the facts right.  Bob D'Angelo (COX MEDIA) reported:



A Texas woman is accused of threatening Tanya Chutkan, the federal district judge overseeing the criminal case in Washington, D.C., against former President Donald Trump, according to court records.

According to a filing in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas on Friday, Abigail Jo Shry, of Alvin, Texas, left a voicemail on Aug. 5 threatening to kill Chutkan and Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas.


Wait.  It gets even worse.  Remember Turley's a raging homophobe (as  his students have picked up on).  


The woman allegedly threatened to kill “anyone who went after Trump,” the filing stated. The list of potential victims also allegedly included “all Democrats in Washington D.C. and all people in the LGBTQ community,” investigators wrote.

“You are in our sights, we want to kill you,” Shry allegedly said in the message, according to Bloomberg. “If Trump doesn’t get elected in 2024, we are coming to kill you, so tread lightly, (expletive).

“You will be targeted personally, publically, your family, all of it.”



She needs to be locked away for a very long time.  Turley?  As I explain when asked, when I knew him I always wondered.  You know, how you wonder about a man a little too vested in other men.  You know the type, right?  Like Jules (Demi Moore) says in ST. ELMO'S FIRE, "He's just not ready to deal."  So I'll always assume -- right or wrongly -- he was struggling internally with same-sex attraction and just write off his most recent hatred of LGBTQ+ to his desperate attempts to run from who he truly is.  Probably a smart thing because gay men can be very image focused and . . .  well . . . look at Turley.  Especially the bags under those sliding eyes


At any rate, a woman threatens to kill a federal judge, a member of Congress, all the Democrats in DC and all LGBTQ+ people and Turley reduces her to a single sentence and her threats to just against a judge.

Typical Turley.  



New content at THIRD:




The following sites updated:

Monday, August 21, 2023

That illegitimate Supreme Court is set to do more harm

 Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Raging Trump



trump raging


I love it.  And I love Kat's "Kat's Korner: Joni (live) at Newport" so check that out too.


Okay, I'm getting tired of the White House dragging their feet.  The illegitimate Supreme Court is preparing another attack on We The People:


Republicans on the Supreme Court are, it appears, planning to gut most of America’s regulatory agencies, in what could be the most consequential re-write of the protective “deep state” since it was largely created during the New Deal in the 1930s.

If they pull it off, they could destroy the ability of:


— the EPA to regulate pollutants,

— the USDA to keep our food supply safe,

— the FDA to oversee drugs going onto the market,

— OSHA to protect workers,

— the CPSC to keep dangerous toys and consumer products off the market,

— the FTC to regulate monopolies,

— the DOT to come up with highway and automobile safety standards,

— the ATF to regulate guns,

— the Interior Department to regulate drilling and mining on federal lands,

— the Forest Service to protect our woodlands and rivers,

— and the Department of Labor to protect workers’ rights.

Among other things on the rightwing billionaire wish list: virtually the entirety of America’s ability to protect its citizens from corporate predation rests on what’s called the Chevron deference (more on that in a moment), which the Court appears prepared to overturn with a case they just accepted this year.




It is time to pack the Court.  If there aren't the votes to do that right now, Joe needs to make it part of his campaign and a reason for why we should be voting for the party in 2024.  It's time to move on this.  The corrupt Court is literally killing us.

"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

Monday, August 21, 2023.  Supporters of Julian Assange demonstrate against Merrick Garland, Bagdad is outraged by what pops up on their electronic billboards, two French soldiers die in Iraq, Moms For Bigotry continue their assault on democracy in the United States and much more.




Supporters of Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, gathered outside the home of Attorney General Merrick Garland in Maryland on Sunday. They held a vigil urging Garland to drop the charges against Assange for publishing classified U.S. military documents. The documents were leaked by whistleblower Chelsea Manning and exposed war crimes, torture, and rendition by the U.S. government. Some of the Assange supporters gave speeches, arguing that the charges against him are an attack on press freedom. Martha Allen, the director of the Women’s Institute for Freedom of the Press, emphasized the importance of independent media and freedom of the press. Assange is currently fighting extradition to the U.S., where he would face multiple charges under the Espionage Act. If extradited, he could face up to 175 years in prison. 

Julian is being persecuted for the 'crime' of journalism.  Julian Assange remains imprisoned and remains persecuted by US President Joe Biden who, as vice president, once called him "a high tech terrorist."  Julian's 'crime' was revealing the realities of Iraq -- Chelsea Manning was a whistle-blower who leaked the information to Julian.  WIKILEAKS then published the Iraq War Logs.  And many outlets used the publication to publish reports of their own.  For example, THE GUARDIAN published many articles based on The Iraq War Logs.  Jonathan Steele, David Leigh and Nick Davies offered, on October 22, 2012:



A grim picture of the US and Britain's legacy in Iraq has been revealed in a massive leak of American military documents that detail torture, summary executions and war crimes.
Almost 400,000 secret US army field reports have been passed to the Guardian and a number of other international media organisations via the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

The electronic archive is believed to emanate from the same dissident US army intelligence analyst who earlier this year is alleged to have leaked a smaller tranche of 90,000 logs chronicling bloody encounters and civilian killings in the Afghan war.
The new logs detail how:
US authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers whose conduct appears to be systematic and normally unpunished.

A US helicopter gunship involved in a notorious Baghdad incident had previously killed Iraqi insurgents after they tried to surrender.
More than 15,000 civilians died in previously unknown incidents. US and UK officials have insisted that no official record of civilian casualties exists but the logs record 66,081 non-combatant deaths out of a total of 109,000 fatalities.

The numerous reports of detainee abuse, often supported by medical evidence, describe prisoners shackled, blindfolded and hung by wrists or ankles, and subjected to whipping, punching, kicking or electric shocks. Six reports end with a detainee's apparent deat



The Biden administration has been saying all the right things lately about respecting a free and vigorous press, after four years of relentless media-bashing and legal assaults under Donald Trump.

The attorney general, Merrick Garland, has even put in place expanded protections for journalists this fall, saying that “a free and independent press is vital to the functioning of our democracy”.

But the biggest test of Biden’s commitment remains imprisoned in a jail cell in London, where WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been held since 2019 while facing prosecution in the United States under the Espionage Act, a century-old statute that has never been used before for publishing classified information.

Whether the US justice department continues to pursue the Trump-era charges against the notorious leaker, whose group put out secret information on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Guantánamo Bay, American diplomacy and internal Democratic politics before the 2016 election, will go a long way toward determining whether the current administration intends to make good on its pledges to protect the press.

Now Biden is facing a re-energized push, both inside the United States and overseas, to drop Assange’s protracted prosecution.


In recent days, there is talk of some sort of 'plea deal.'  This undefined and only hypothetical deal has already led to criticism from some parties who note that Julian Assange has broken no law.  Here, I'm not going to take a pro or anti position on a plea deal.  If one is offered and Julian decides to go for it, that's his business.  Last week, Paul Gregoire (Sydney Criminal Lawyers) noted:

US ambassador Caroline Kennedy told SMH on Monday that a plea deal could be on the cards in regard to Australian journalist Julian Assange, who’s been held in a UK maximum-security prison at the behest of the White House in prolonged isolation for more than four years now.

Kennedy said that as the US justice department is dealing with the case, “it’s not really a diplomatic issue” but “there absolutely could be a resolution”, although she did note US state secretary Anthony Blinken’s recent curt words as to the “very serious harm” the WikiLeaks founder had posed.

Townsville-born Assange published thousands of classified US military files regarding US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, leaked to him by US army soldier Chelsea Manning, in 2010. Having redacted these documents first, Assange then exposed the war crimes and lies of the US empire to the globe.

The potential deal has been likened to a “David Hicks-style plea bargain”. Hicks was an Australian man detained by the US at Guantanamo Bay detention camp for over five years ending in 2007, due to his having visited an al-Qaeda training camp, and our government did nothing to assist him.

Assange’s brother, Gabriel Shipton asserts that Kennedy’s flagging the deal reveals that the Biden administration want Julian’s case “off their plate”, and with an escape route laid out in the raising of the Hick’s solution, this development may bode well for the long-tortured Australian citizen.



Lara Giddings, who was Premier of Tasmania from January 2011 until March 2014 as well as being Attorney-General in that State from 2008 to 2011 also voiced her concerns about the treatment of Assange. “Regardless of what views people might have of Julian Assange, this man has had his freedom taken away from him for over eleven years. His on-going detention cannot be justified regardless of the rights or wrongs of his WikiLeaks exposé. He does not deserve to be left to the mercy of the United States legal system, where, if found guilty, he may well die in jail,” Ms Giddings said.

Tasmania’s first female Attorney-General Judy Jackson, who held the role from 2002 until 2006, also expressed disquiet about the plight of Assange.

“His treatment, as opposed to Australian journalists, is deeply troubling, given that in both cases the right of the public to know about war crimes, wherever and whenever they are committed, is crucial,” she said.

Former Queensland Attorney- General Rod Welford said that the indefinite jailing of Assange was unjust and had to be brought to an end.




Julian Assange recognises the harmful impact that his case will have on media freedom the world over, and is grateful for the support that journalists have given him since he was detained. He expressed concern that if the United States applies its domestic laws to prosecute an Australian journalist, publishing in Europe, nothing will stop China, or any other country, from doing the same.

Assange was speaking to Dominique Pradalié the president of the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), who visited him in prison earlier today (Tuesday 8 August). She was able to tell him that journalists, and many others, around the world are campaigning each day for his release and that his International Press Card has been renewed. Assange is a long-time member of the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (the Australian journalists’ union).

Pradalié said: “I visited as a friend of Julian’s wife, Stella. I am pleased to say that he was in good spirits and maintains a keen interest in world affairs”.

The International Federation of Journalists, which represents 600,000 journalists in more than 140 countries, has campaigned against Assange’s extradition since publication of the US charges.

Pradalié said: “The charges against Julian – finding a whistleblower and encouraging them to share evidence – are actions that any investigative journalist might take. If this prosecution is successful, it will pave the way for the US to pursue any reporter who is handed classified documents, as well as legitimising repressive regimes the world over when they try to make the lives of journalists difficult. It is also worth noting that the truth of Assange’s revelations has never been disputed.”

Assange reports that he has a caged window in his cell, and a radio that allows him to keep up with the world outside. He does, however, request, that he be granted a typewriter, so that he may efficiently record his thoughts. He has lodged a request with the prison authorities that he be allowed one, but to date one has not been forthcoming.

Pradalié undertook to press the issue of a typewriter, and promised to return to visit again in the near future.

For more information, please contact IFJ on +32 2 235 22 16

The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 146 countries




A French soldier has been killed in a tragic road accident in Iraq while actively engaged in a training mission for the Iraqi armed forces, President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday.

Sergeant Baptiste Gauchot “was very seriously wounded when his vehicle went off the road,” France’s armed forces ministry said, as AFP cited.

After receiving immediate medical attention at Arbil Hospital, the soldier, unfortunately, succumbed to his injuries despite undergoing emergency surgery. Meanwhile, the ministry said another soldier accompanying him during the incident is currently undergoing treatment at a military hospital in Baghdad.


AFP explains, "France has around 600 troops taking part in what it calls Operation Chammal in Iraq aimed at bolstering the Iraqi national forces and fighting against the Islamic State extremist group."

And while it was one dead, it is now two: Sergeant Baptiste Gauchot and Adjutant Nicolas Latourte have been identified as the fallen.

 



In Baghdad, advertising screens were banned on Sunday.  Why?  Mallika Soni (HINUDSTAN TIMES) explains:

Authorities in Iraq's capital Baghdad ordered the shutdown of LED advertisement screens installed across the city after a hacker showed a pornographic film on one of them, security forces said. The suspect has been arrested, officials said. “A person managed to hack into an advertising screen in Uqba bin Nafia Square” which is a major intersection at the centre of the city, AFP reported. The hacker "showed a pornographic film for several minutes before we cut the power cable," the report added quoting an official.




Sofia Geraghty (BANDT) adds:


The “immoral scenes” led to the authorities turning off all advertising screens in the capital while they reviewed their security measures. 

The interior minister also announced that a suspect had been arrested, but didn’t give details. 

Screens that usually show adverts for household goods and political candidates were also reportedly switched off on Sunday morning. 

Conservative Iraq announced in 2022 that it was banning p*rn websites, although many still remain available. 

The government has targeted many social media content makers in recent years, accusing them of sharing “indecent content”. 


CNN reports this morning, "Some, but not all, of the screens are now back in operation, CNN has confirmed."  



The Emtidad party formed by Tishreen (October) protestors on Monday announced they are withdrawing from the Iraqi provincial council elections scheduled for December, citing issues in electing new leadership. 

In a statement, the movement said that it “will not participate in the provincial council elections at its upcoming date due to the delay in convening its first general conference to elect a new leadership.” 

Iraq will hold provincial council elections on December 18, the first of their kind since 2013. The councils, created by the 2005 Iraqi constitution following the fall of Saddam Hussein, are powerful bodies that hold significant power in the country, including setting the budgets for several sectors such as education, health, and transport. 

The provincial elections will mark the return of the controversial Sainte-Laguë voting method, reverting back to the single-constituency per province system instead of the multiple-constituency system that was adopted for the 2021 parliamentary elections. 


Voting was one of the topics on Olayemi Olurin's show yesterday.




Meanwhile, Jordan Blumetti (GUARDIAN) reports on the hate group aligned with Ronald DeSantis, crackpot Naomi Wolf, Robert F. Kennedy Jr and many other hate merchants -- yes, we're talking Moms For Bigotry and how they're destroying Florida's libraries.  We'll note this from the conclusion:

The future of public school libraries in Florida seems to be imperiled in the debate over book challenges. Last year, Julie Miller purchased chairs instead of new books. And she has not been cleared to make any acquisitions for the approaching school year either. DeSantis’s new law does away with earmark percentages of school district funding for specific departments, allowing school boards to curtail or redirect library funds to different categories if they so choose.

All of this suggests it might be easier to defund libraries and winnow collections rather than venture the social and political risks associated with fighting a culture war with a governor who’s currently using the state legislature as his personal armory.

In a Clay county school board workshop meeting from last month, the chief academic officer Roger Dailey seemed to cast aspersions on the very utility of libraries, referring to them as glorified copy rooms, and admitting that his own teenage children have never checked a book out of their high school library because they “consume their literature in different formats, most of it digitally on their devices”, he says.

“I don’t even know if my own sons know where the library is in their school.”

Then maybe you shut up and back off because if you're children aren't using it -- as you brag -- then it's really not impacting your life.  Paul Rudnick Tweets:





With its purported membership of more than 120,000, Moms for Liberty is still a very new organization. When Tina Descovich, Tiffany Justice, and Bridget Ziegler launched the group in 2021, seizing on fights to stop schools from implementing Covid-19 mask and vaccine mandates, they positioned themselves as just ordinary moms, and their group as grassroots and nonpartisan. Of course, all three women have served on school boards, and Ziegler, who left the organization later that year, still does (her husband, Christian, is also the chairman of the Florida Republican Party). She had even worked on the Florida parental rights legislation that led to Governor Ron DeSantis’s “Don’t Say Gay” law. So when the Republican hopefuls came to Philadelphia to address the joyful warriors, it was a reflection of how much Moms for Liberty has transformed the GOP agenda into its own “parental rights” one—banning books and history curricula, excluding LGBTQ people, denying anti-Black racism, decrying anything and potentially anyone that does not belong in its God-fearing America. Such actions are just common sense, say Moms for Liberty members, and necessary to secure the future of their children.

Drafting more joyful warriors, as the summit was set up to do, involves its own indoctrination, a process that may feel more like being given secret knowledge about how things really work—including such vintage conspiracy-theory stuff as secret Communists recruiting in every schoolhouse. The more contemporary threat, according to Moms for Liberty, is that a “dangerous cult” is seeking to “trans” children. This is part of the ubiquitous ­anti-trans panic at the summit and on Moms for Liberty social media feeds. If you take up the group’s cause, you will be given a mission. As Tiffany Justice put it after the summit, Moms for Liberty is “redrawing the boundary between school and home.”

But whose home? And redrawn by which means? In her afternoon session at the summit, Hermann armed her audience with a version of the Constitution, one that maximally protects the preferences of—for instance—parents who deny their child is trans and want to force their child’s school to misgender them. There’s not much of a legal argument here, only marching orders: The Constitution is on their side, and what they want as moms represents the real America. Yet when one Texas mom of a queer child reached out to a Moms for Liberty chapter for guidance, members convinced her to deny him access to counseling from an LGBTQ youth support project, claiming the group wanted to make her son trans. When the child later attempted suicide, a Moms for Liberty member then advised the mother to sue the support project. “They were trying to indoctrinate me to be a foot soldier for their cause,” she later said.

Such maternalist recruitment, marketed as extending the domain of motherhood into the public square, has been an underrecognized yet persistent force in American politics for decades—back to the mid-century’s massive resistance to desegregation, and even earlier, in the temperance movement of the nineteenth century. Moms for Liberty operates in an updated version of this well-worn style, in which mothers and children are presented as fundamentally innocent, and mothers who flex political power are just doing what any mother wants: to decide what is best for their children. “Because no one is going to fight for a child like a parent,” Justice told an education reporter at the summit. “Love is an expertise.”

Moms for Liberty members can position themselves as just regular moms somehow outside politics because, as religion scholar Sara Moslener has argued, white womanhood and white Christian nationalism reinforce each other. The mothers’ moral authority is perceived to endow them with perpetual innocence, and the United States is perceived to inherit its moral authority from Christian founders—rendering both the mothers and the nation incapable of committing injustice. The several hundred protesters outside the summit, some of them mothers themselves who held signs about protecting free public libraries and celebrating trans kids, aren’t like these moms at all, co-founder Tiffany Justice told the closing-night gala dinner guests. Inside the convention hotel, “we’re having a great time,” she said, adding abruptly and ominously, “If you don’t stand now, what is the future for your children? It will be bleak, it will be dark, there will be death.”

This is the kind of political work—preparing themselves, much as a militia might, for a coming conflict between good and evil—for which Moms for Liberty was designated this year by the Southern Poverty Law Center as an “anti-government extremist” group. Descovich and Justice accused SPLC of “[n]ame-calling,” while Ziegler called it “a leftist attack.” But there have long been traceable links between Moms for Liberty and two of the groups that played a leading role in the January 6 insurrection. Some Moms for Liberty members maintain relationships with the Proud Boys. Moms for Liberty even invited a member of the Oath Keepers to speak at the Philadelphia summit.

That is the true face of Moms for Liberty. It’s not that white Christian nationalists are somehow using these “regular moms” for their own ends. That would absolve these women, who in fact share those ends. And they are working toward them, methodically and unapologetically, in far more public view. 




Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Raging Trump" went up Saturday night and Kat's "Kat's Korner: Joni (live) at Newport" went up Sunday.  The following sites updated: