The Common Ills


Thursday, February 05, 2009
I Hate The War

I Hate The War

Because it's an action that starts tomorrow and because it sets up the point of this entry, from today's snapshot:

Starting with an action that begins tomrrow and runs through Monday in the US.
Military Families Speak Out explains:

Come to Washington February 6-9 to demand "The Change WE Need"
President Elect Obama opposed the war in Iraq before it started, calling it a "dumb war." But he and his advisors have also said that they plan to spread the return of combat troops from that "dumb war" out over sixteen months and to keep
tens of thousands of other troops on the ground in Iraq indefinitely.
So from February 6-9, MFSO will be traveling to Washington to bring the new President and new Congress the message that it is long past time to bring all our troops home from Iraq. The four days of events will include:
* A
teach-in featuring the voices of military families, veterans, and Iraqis, explaining the need for an immediate and complete end to the war in Iraq -- and the human impacts of continuing the occupation. Friday, February 6 from Noon - 3:00 p.m. at Mott House, 122 Maryland Avenue.
* A solemn procession from Arlington National Cemetary to the White House beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 7. Meet at the front gate of the cemetery right outside the exit of the Arlington Metro stop. Please arrive early.
* A "Meet and Greet" and Legislative Briefing from 3:00 - 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, February 8 at the Mariott Metro Center.
* Lobbying members of Congress to end the war in Iraq. Meet in the cafeteria of the Rayburn House Office Building at 9:00 a.m. Monday, February 9.


Friday from noon to three p.m. will offer the teach-in at the Mott House (122 Maryland Ave, NE Washington, DC). Among those scheduled to participate are Joyce and Kevin Lucey, Elaine Johnson, Tim Kahlor, Stacy Bannerman, American Friends Service Committee
Raed Jarrar, IPS' Phyllis Bennis, Iraq Veterans Against the War's Kris Goldsmith and Ryan Deckard and Veterans for Peace's Mike Marceau. (An aspect of the previous sentence will be noted in tonight's entry. If you have a question about it, wait until tonight's entry.)

Questions? Community members held there questions (if they had them) (thank you). Visitors wondered why this or that didn't get a link. Why would it? The decision was made by me to link to organizations and then Raed Jarrar got a link instead of AFSC. Why? The friend I was dictating it too said, "Hold on." And then told me what was on the front page of AFSC a little take-web-action bulls**t of "Help Barack."

The stimulus is still be written (and Barack's taking yet another break). It takes some real stupidity to issue a call to support something that is still being written. But exactly why are Quakers doing web-actions for the White House -- in support of, no less -- to begin with. I worked with AFSC from time to time during Vietnam. I have nothing to do with it today and we note it in snapshots on a case-by-case basis. That's due to the fact that so much of what it does is useless in my opinion. It's not on our permalinks and it's never been.

In Feb. 2003, I started speaking out against the impending illegal war and thought AFSC would be a great resource. And then I checked it. And though I thought it would become a better once the illegal war started and as it continued, that never happened.

One of the few organizations that worked to get US troops out of Vietnam and it's still around and all it demonstrated is that having a history didn't help it much. Sorry, wish I had something wonderful to say about the organization. Don't. Elaine and several other friends from back in the day can do a wicked parody of today's AFSC and why it went right down the drain.

But to be really clear, militant Quakers back in the day didn't cheerlead LBJ or Nixon. They didn't cheerlead lesiglation before it was written. They didn't make fools out of themselves.

I'm not in the mood for promoting authoritarinism or authoritarian worship or any mindless activity that strips a person of their critical thought abilities or their rights.

And if anyone sees the above as rude to a religion, Quakers really aren't a religion in the US anymore. A religion doesn't take non-believers. A religion worships a god or gods. When you start bringing in people, as they have in the last decades, who don't believe, there's really no point in calling yourself a religion. [Click here, pay attention to figures eight and nine. You can also see Edward James' "Quaker Theology Without God?"] And you really better hope that there's not another draft because there's no way Quakers will get the exemption they once did automatically. Not when they've turned the congregation now includes agnostics and atheists. The exemption was based on religious teachings and practice. When you water that down by bringing in people who do not believe in your god, that means you're not a religion. You're a social club, but you're not a religion.

So if someone thinks I'm trashing religion, I couldn't trash the Quaker religion because they've already spent the last decades trashing it themselves.

As they've watered down their religion, they've watered down their beliefs. And it's no surprise to find them cheerleading legislation they haven't read (can't read what's not written) and trying to turn their church (social club) over to a politician.



It's over, I'm done writing songs about love
There's a war going on
So I'm holding my gun with a strap and a glove
And I'm writing a song about war
And it goes
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Oh oh oh oh
-- "I Hate The War" (written by Greg Goldberg, on The Ballet's Mattachine!)

Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 4236. Tonight? 4237. Just Foreign Policy lists 1,311,696 as the number. Finally they move it up from 1, 307,319 -- where it had been stuck since January 4th. Their current number is 1,311,696.

Meanwhile, Barbara Starr and Mike Mount (CNN) report, "The Army said 24 soldiers are believed to have committed suicide in January alone -- six times as many as killed themselves in January 2008, according to statistics released Thursday." Stephanie Gaskell (New York Daily News) observes, "In a rare move, the Army released monthly suicide data Thursday to highlight the growing problem. Last week, Army officials said its suicide rates were at their highest in nearly 30 years. Last year, 128 soldiers committed suicide and another 15 suspected cases are pending. Last month, Army officials believe that 24 soldiers killed themselves - compared with just four in January 2008."

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.






Posted at 09:17 pm by thecommonills
 

Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Thursday, February 5, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, the election results are not final but the press acts as if they are (and many seem to believe al-Maliki was a candidate), a war critic passes away, actions begin in DC tomorrow and more. 
 
 
Starting with an action that begins tomrrow and runs through Monday in the US.  Military Families Speak Out explains:
 
Come to Washington February 6-9 to demand "The Change WE Need"    
President Elect Obama opposed the war in Iraq before it started, calling it a "dumb war."  But he and his advisors have also said that they plan to spread the return of combat troops from that "dumb war" out over sixteen months and to keep tens of thousands of other troops on the ground in Iraq indefinitely.       
So from February 6-9, MFSO will be traveling to Washington to bring the new President and new Congress the message that it is long past time to bring all our troops home from Iraq.  The four days of events will include:  
* A teach-in featuring the voices of military families, veterans, and Iraqis, explaining the need for an immediate and complete end to the war in Iraq -- and the human impacts of continuing the occupation.  Friday, February 6 from Noon - 3:00 p.m. at Mott House, 122 Maryland Avenue.       
* A solemn procession from Arlington National Cemetary to the White House beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 7.  Meet at the front gate of the cemetery right outside the exit of the Arlington Metro stop.  Please arrive early.
* A "Meet and Greet" and Legislative Briefing from 3:00 - 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, February 8 at the Mariott Metro Center.      
* Lobbying members of Congress to end the war in Iraq.  Meet in the cafeteria of the Rayburn House Office Building at 9:00 a.m. Monday, February 9.        
 
Friday from noon to three p.m. will offer the teach-in at the Mott House (122 Maryland Ave, NE Washington, DC).  Among those scheduled to participate are Joyce and Kevin Lucey, Elaine Johnson, Tim Kahlor, Stacy Bannerman, American Friends Service Committee Raed Jarrar, IPS' Phyllis Bennis, Iraq Veterans Against the War's Kris Goldsmith and Ryan Deckard and Veterans for Peace's Mike Marceau.  (An aspect of the previous sentence will be noted in tonight's entry.  If you have a question about it, wait until tonight's entry.)
 
Deborah Haynes and Wail al-Obaidi (Times of London) observe, "Preliminary results, issued today, indicate a drastic shift in the political map nationwide, with Sunni Arabs also securing a better representation after boycotting the last polls four years ago in protest at the US-led occupation.  Final results are not due out for several weeks, but should show little change with 90 per cent of the ballots already counted."  Marc Lynch (Foreign Policy) offers these impressions: "Preliminary results from the Baghdad provincial council election have begun to filter out into the Iraqi press. The lead story will probably be that Maliki's Rule of Law list won more than half the seats. But the more important story may be that all of the Sunni lists combined evidently only won four or five seats between them. That, combined with the fiasco in Anbar, could put Sunni frustration firmly back into the center of Iraqi politics – risking alienation from politics, intensified intra-Sunni competition, and perhaps even a return of the insurgency."  UPI notes that 'secular' Nouri al-Maliki spent time in Najaf today . . . briefing Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani on the results. Mark Kukis (Time magazine) quotes Ayad Allawi (head of the Iraqi National Accord, CIA asset and one time prime minister of Iraq) whose party did well in the elections stating he wouldn't want to be prime minister again "in a sectarian regim.  I respect religion.  But religion needs to be de-politicized."  Please note, these are not final results.  Lebanon's Daily Star stresses, "The Iraqi regional elections held on Saturday are not expected to deliver a final result for a few weeks".  UPI also points out, "Though Maliki won big in Basra and Baghdad, the post-election political landscape suggests several parties may need to form coalitions in the provincial councils."  al-Maliki was NOT a candidate.  RTT gets the wording right, "Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Dawa party and its allies have dominated in the crucial provincial council elections, finishing first in nine out of the fourteen provinces in which elections were held, although reports suggested the bloc would still need to form coalitions in order to govern."  Aamer Madhani (USA Today) also grasps the difference between candidates and someone not even running and notes, "But throughout the country, voting went along sectarian lines, with predominantly Shiite provinces backing Shiite parties and Sunni-majority provinces choosing Sunni parties vying for 440 local government seats in 14 of the country's 18 provinces."  Jane Aarraf (Christian Science Monitor) states 90% of the vote was counted (she also hails al-Maliki for his 'win' -- so take that into account as well) and, "In Iraq's north the most dramatic results installed a new Sunni Arab party, al-Hadba, to take charge of the provincial council after winning almost 50 percent.  The council had previously been overwhelmingly dominated by Kurds, who have voewed not to work with the leader of al-Hadba, who is seen as anti-Kurdish."  Calling this al-Maliki's 'win' is a bit like congratulating George W. Bush on Kirsten Haglund's win last year.  The Kurdish Regional Government's President Masoud Barzani issued a statement Tuesday evening, "We respect the will of the people of Iraq.  We hope that this was an emphatic message from Kurds, Arabs, Turkomens, Chaldaens, Assyrians, Muslims, Christians and Yezidis of the Kurdish areas to voice what they really want. . . . I hope and I call on the Iraqi parliament, the federal Iraqi government, the United Nations, the United States, and all concerned parties to respect the will of the people of these areas and to stop avoiding the implementation of Article 140 of the Iraqi Constitution."  Mohammed A. Salih (IPS) explained Article 140 as follows, "Article 140 sketches a three-step plan to remove traces of the Arabisation policy of the regime of former president Saddam Hussein.  The constitution now provides for a census followed by a referendum on the facte of the province, after normalising the situation."  This is about whether or not oil-rich Kirkuk remains a part of the central government out of Baghdad or becomes part of the KRG.  Before the vote -- which would be residents of Kirkuk voting -- takes place, Article 140 outlines a length of measures that would allow Kurds to return.  Reality is that the KRG has done forced 'returns' to Kirkuk, expelling Kurds from the KRG and forcing them to live in Kirkuk.  Has this achieved de-Arabization?  Who knows?  And that would also depend upon who judges it.
 
Turning to Anbar Province.  As noted yesterday, Sheik Ahmed Buzaigh abu Risha has been threatening violence over the possibility that the Iraqi Islamic Party might have done better in the polls than his own party.  Mu Xuequan (Xinhua) observes, "In Anbar province, in western Iraq, tension between rival Sunni parties have been running high after leaders of the Awakening Council groups, or Sahwa militant groups who fought al-Qaida militants in their areas, accused the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP), headed by Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, of committing fraud to win majority of the 29-seat provincial council. IIP vehemently denied the accusation."  Sam Dagher (New York Times) reports "al-Maliki sent a deputy, Rafie al-Issawi, a Sunni who is an Anbar native" to speak with Shik Risha and that the meeting was also attended by the Iraqi military.  He threatens violence -- he continues to threaten violence -- and he gets his way. All the people who peacefully demonstrated against not being permitted to vote? They're ignored. But it's rush down to make nice with Sheik Risha when, if it was anyone else, the US military would be rushing down to arrest him. And al-Maliki can't stand Risha. The fact that the sheik is being catered to indicates just how little control al-Maliki still has.

Dahger speaks with another tribe leader from the area, Sheik Ali al-Hatem, who has (like many in Anbar) frequently been in conflict with Sheik Risha (al-Hatem has also had issues with the Iraqi Islamic Party)who notes that each tribe put up their own candidates so you had slates competing against each other as well as competing against IIP. He states that Risha is "sowing rifts among the tribes" and that the violence could become "intratribal": "Ahmed is playing with fire. We will confront him if he acts this way and divides the tribes." al-Hatem doesn't call on al-Maliki to reign in Risha, he calls on the US military to do so. (If that happens, it may take place during today's meet-up in Anbar.)  Sudarsan Raghavan (Washington Post) reports the US Marines are back in "Ramadi in observation roles, patrolling areas from which they had largely withdrawn."  Again, Risha stamps his feet and threatens violence and gets his way. All the people turned away from the polls and refused the right to vote? All Faraj al-Haidari has to offer them is this 'pithy' little comment, "It's not our fault that some people couldn't vote because they are lazy, because they didn't bother to ask where they should vote." Again, they should have ditched the peaceful protest and run around threatening violence -- that's the only way al-Haidari would have listened. Sheik Risha works the commission the way he wants to.

And you need to grasp how ludicrous the claims of Risha, et al are. Now ludicrous doesn't mean that they are false. I believe they are but I don't know that. But reporters do know and did report on the vast number of Iraqis in Baghdad, for example, being refused the right to vote. But that's not being investigated. Risha's drama leads to an investigation. Risha is unhappy that his slate of candidates appear (no vote counts are final yet) to have done poorly. He insists that his candidates should have done better and that voter fraud is responsible for them not doing better. Risha says the ballot boxes were stuffed. Don't worry about whether he's right about that or wrong for a second. Just grasp that is the basis of his assertions. Now note this from Monte Morin and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times): "Tribal sheiks and their followers here in Ramadi, the provincial capital, and in Fallouja charge that their political rivals gained control of local election offices and stuffed ballot boxes the day after the elections. Election officials reported that 40% of eligible Anbar voters cast ballots, but tribal candidates say the turnout was half that and that the additional votes are false." Less than 40% voted -- according to the people asserting voter fraud, only 20% of registered voters in Anbar bothered to vote.  Do you not see the conflict in the two positions? "We are popular and we should have won!" vs. "They cheated because really only 20% of the registered voters voted!"  If you're argument is that 80% of registered voters stayed home, you can't make the claim that you're popular with voters at the same time. The two positions are in conflict.

Today the commission that did nothing for the Iraqis who peacefully called for their rights appears to have fixed the Anbar results.   Back to Marc Lynch (Foreign Policy):  
 
 
The official results in Anbar are sharply different from the reports of the last few days.  The IHEC tally gave the victory to Saleh al-Mutlak's bloc, followed by Abu Risha's Awakenings Bloc, followed by the Islamic Party in third place. This is a surprise. The behavior of the Islamic Party and the Awakenings bloc over the last few days strongly suggests that they had the same information about the preliminary results-- that the Islamic Party had won. This "adjustment" -- if that's what happened -- for now appears to have defused the crisis over the alleged electoral fraud by the Islamic Party and the threats of violence by the Awakenings leaders by denying victory to either of the two main rivals (Abu Risha says that he's happy with the result).  This resolution is very, shall we say, convenient... and, perhaps, a clever solution to the escalating confrontation. I'm sure we'll be hearing more about this soon.. the Islamic Party's website is currently silent on this sudden change in their electoral fortunes.  Where's Nate Silver to analyze the exit poll data when you need him? 
 
 
What do the elections mean?  The Financial Times of London speaks with Ahmed Jihad of Salahaddin Province who explains what he's expecting, "Electricity, water and employment, these are the three main things.  We need a leader who is strong but fair at the same time. . . . We tried talking to the council about getting electricity but we can't afford the 15m diner [$13,000 US] for a connection because there are no employment opportunities here."  Whether that will happen or not no one knows.
 
Peter Graff, Waleed Ibrahim, Mohammed Abbas, Michael Christie and Charles Dick (Reuters) report "the bloodiest attck in Iraq in weeks," with at least 15 dead in Diyala Province from a suicide bomber. No word on the gender of the bomber, so it's most likely a male. Germany's Deutsche Welle explains, "The suicide bomber blew himself up in a popular restaurant in the Kurdish town of in Khanaqin on the border with the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region."  BBC says the wounded numbers at least fifteen and quotes eye witness Yahya Ibrahim stating, "I was at the back of the restaurant when suddenly the explosion happened at the entrance.  Everything around was destroyed."  Xiong Tong (Xinhua) quotes an unidentified police member stating, "A suicide bomber blew up his explosive vest inside Dilshad Restaurant in the town of Khanaqin, klling 15 people and wounding 15 others." 
 
And in the latest attack on the press in Iraq, McClatchy Newspapers' Sahar Issa reports, "Reporter Salam Arab Doski, was killed by a policeman during a fight, on his doorstep in Wadi Sakhr neighbourhood, western Mosul at 4 p.m. Thursday.  Police said it was a personal issue."
 
Let's stay with the press as the topic for another second to note that Samad Ali is doing a "weekday roundup of news from around the Middle East" at Wall St. Journal's Baghdad Life blog.  Now back to the day's violence . . .
 
Bombings?
 
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a Baghdad roadside bombing target Nihad al Juburi (Dept Eductation Minister), another Baghdad roadside bombing that targeted the US military (no known injuries or deaths), a Gatoun home bombing on Liqaa Party provincial candidate Salim al Zaidi (no one harmed, house destroyed), and a Mosul roadside bombing that wounded two people.  
 
Shootings?
 
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports Khadija Owaiyid's car was fired upon (a provincial election candidate with Party of the Constitution) and 1 police officer was shot dead in Mosul. Reuters notes Iraqi police shot dead Tariq Azab.
 
Corpses?
 
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports   8 corpses (headless) discovered in Baquba while 30 corpses were buried in Baquba today ("Unidentified bodies that are not claimed within two months are buried by the Morgue"). 
 
Dave Lindorff truly embarrassed himself in his support of Barack Obama.  Never more so than when declaring, during the Democratic Party primary race that Barack was "a black candidate who has risked jail by doing drugs".  Now a glimmer of light finally makes it through Lindorff's Pig Pen-like haze surrounding him leading him to write (CounterPunch) the following:
 
The problem with the new Obama administration is that it is turning out to be not about change at all, as he claimed during the campaign, but rather about more of the same--and these are not times that call for more of the same. Nor is more of the same the reason Obama won the election.
The economic team President Obama has put in place is composed of the same Wall Street hacks and conservative economic theologians who helped produce the current crisis, many of them as part of the Clinton administration, and some, like Timothy Geithner, actually as appointees of the thoroughly discredited Bush administration.
Obama's military team is essentially composed of holdovers from the Bush administration, starting at the top with Defense Secretary Robert Gates, and retreads from the Clinton administration.
Little wonder that the president's economic team is still talking about throwing more money at banks, with the only real tweak making this boondoggle different from the Bush administration's fall bailout that there will be some limits established on executive pay. Banks will still be able to use their taxpayer bailout cash to buy other banks. And there will still be no way to force them to lend money. Little wonder too that there is no real effort aimed at propping up the struggling public--no job sweeping job creation programs (except for expanding the military), no major income supplements for the poor, no expansion of welfare benefits, no mandatory mortgage renegotiations or mortgage payment holidays. And so far, no real effort to pass labor law reform to protect workers who try to form labor unions.
Little wonder too that Obama seems to be backing away from his key campaign promise to end the war in Iraq, and that the one area where he is moving rapidly is in expanding the war in Afghanistan and the tribal areas of western Pakistan.
 
 
Margaret Kimberley doesn't need to awaken because she never put her critical faculties on slumber.  At Black Agenda Report, she notes:
 
Easily fooled Americans were glued to the television watching the Obama inauguration while simultaneous ignoring their own worsening financial situation. Who can bother to look at the fine print on multi-billion dollar deals when HISTORY is being made? Now the same zombified population ignores presidential inaction on bankruptcy "cramdown" legislation that could save their homes, explicit threats to Social Security, and back-tracking on employee free choice for labor unions.
In their delusion and despair, the only reaction left to non class conscious Americans is to turn on themselves. Murders and suicides are too often the reaction to financial disaster instead of righteous indignation directed towards a failed political and economic system. Americans are losing their minds when they might alleviate their depression by taking to the streets or at the very least giving their elected leaders a piece of their minds.
Americans never had the tools to fully understand the system that is failing them so terribly. Now they are enthralled by a man who explicitly instructs them not to confront the people and institutions that have brought them to the brink. The economic meltdown will continue for a long time and so will the individual meltdowns and disasters for millions of people who will literally not know what hit them or where they ought to turn after the crash. 
 
 
Like Kimberley, John Pilger has no "awakening" to do.  Like Kimberley, John Pilger called it like it was when all around the left, idiots rushed to have their second adolescence.  Unlike some pathetic types (for example, Vincent Warren) trying to peddle hopium, Pilger (New Statesman) tells the truth regarding Barack and torture:
 
On 23 January, the Guardian's front page declared, "Obama shuts network of CIA 'ghost prisons'". The "wholesale deconstruction [sic] of George Bush's war on terror", said the report, had been ordered by the new president, who would be "shutting down the CIA's secret prison network, banning torture and rendition . . ."  
The bollocks quotient on this was so high that it read like the press release it was, citing "officials briefing reporters at the White House yesterday". Obama's orders, according to a group of 16 retired generals and admirals who attended a presidential signing ceremony, "would restore America's moral standing in the world". What moral standing? It never ceases to astonish that experienced reporters can transmit PR stunts like this, bearing in mind the moving belt of lies from the same source under only nominally different management.  
Far from "deconstructing the war on terror", Obama is clearly pursuing it with the same vigour, ideological backing and deception as the previous administration. George W Bush's first war, in Afghanistan, and last war, in Pakistan, are now Obama's wars - with thousands more US troops to be deployed, more bombing and more slaughter of civilians. Last month, on the day he described Afghanistan and Pakistan as "the central front in our enduring struggle against terrorism and extremism", 22 Afghan civilians died beneath Obama's bombs in a hamlet populated mainly by shepherds and which, by all accounts, had not laid eyes on the Taliban. Women and children were among the dead, which is normal.  
Far from "shutting down the CIA's secret prison network", Obama's executive orders actually give the CIA authority to carry out renditions, abductions and transfers of prisoners in secret without threat of legal obstruction. As the Los Angeles Times disclosed, "current and former US intelligence officials said that the rendition programme might be poised to play an expanded role". A semantic sleight of hand is that "long-term prisons" are changed to "short-term prisons"; and while Americans are now banned from directly torturing people, foreigners working for the US are not. This means that America's numerous "covert actions" will operate as they did under previous presidents, with proxy regimes, such as Augusto Pinochet's in Chile, doing the dirtiest work.  
Bush's open support for torture, and Donald Rumsfeld's extraordinary personal overseeing of certain torture techniques, upset many in America's "secret army" of subversive military and intelligence operators because it exposed how the system worked. Obama's newly confirmed director of national intelligence, Admiral Dennis Blair, has said the Army Field Manual may include new forms of "harsh interrogation" which will be kept secret.  
Obama has chosen not to stop any of this. Neither do his ballyhooed executive orders put an end to Bush's assault on constitutional and international law. He has retained Bush's "right" to imprison anyone, without trial or charge. No "ghost prisoners" are being released or are due to be tried before a civilian court. His nominee for attorney general, Eric Holder, has endorsed an extension of Bush's totalitarian USA Patriot Act, which allows federal agents to demand Americans' library and bookshop records. The man of "change" is changing little. That ought to be front-page news from Washington. 
 
And Chris Hedges is another who never lost his criticial thinking abilities (most recent example here). Hedges spoke today on KPFK's Uprising and here's a portion of his remarks: 
 
I think we have to walk out on the Democratic Party.  I didn't vote for Obama, I voted for Nader.  A lot of that had to do with the war.  I think the left has thorwn its -- has essentially rendered itself impotent by throwing in its lot with the Democratic Party that over and over and over betrays the interests of the working and, increasingly, the middle class in this country.  I mean, just look at the bailouts -- constitutent calls were running a hundred-to-one against the bailout and they passed it anyway.  Why did they pass it?  Because lobbyists and corporate powers wanted it passed.  The FISA reform act, which Barack Obama voted for, giant step towards fascism.  Why did it pass?  Because the telecommunications companies spent 15 to 20 million dollars in lobbying fees to make sure it got passed.  The government at its core -- forget the rhetoric, forget the propaganda, forget "Yes, We Can" -- serves the interests of corporations.  We are watching it right now with the financial bailout.  We are watching it with the absolute failure on the Democratic Party to challenge the rapacious canabalization of the country by the military-industrial-complex.
 
In other news CNN reports that Jeremy Roebuck has died (car accident outside Fort Bragg) and Roebuck was one of seven members of the military who wrote the August 19, 2007 New York Times column "The War As We Saw It."  CNN notes that he is the third soldier (of the seven) to die.  From the 2007 column:
 
In short, we operate in a bewildering context of determined enemies and questionable allies, one where the balance of forces on the ground remains entirely unclear. (In the course of writing this article, this fact became all too clear: one of us, Staff Sergeant Murphy, an Army Ranger and reconnaissance team leader, was shot in the head during a "time-sensitive target acquisition mission" on Aug. 12; he is expected to survive and is being flown to a military hospital in the United States.) While we have the will and the resources to fight in this context, we are effectively hamstrung because realities on the ground require measures we will always refuse -- namely, the widespread use of lethal and brutal force.
 
 
 
 

Posted at 03:37 pm by thecommonills
 

Suicide bomber kills at least 15 in Iraq

Suicide bomber kills at least 15 in Iraq

Peter Graff, Waleed Ibrahim, Mohammed Abbas, Michael Christie and Charles Dick (Reuters) report "the bloodiest attck in Iraq in weeks," at least 15 dead in Diyala Province from a suicide bomber. No word on the gender of the bomber, so it's most likely a male. Remember that, gender of the bomber is only 'news' when it's a woman. And then it's time to work overtime with lurid fantasies. If you thought the nonsense was bad Tuesday (see that day's snapshot for examples) or yesterday (see yesterday morning's second entry), you just didn't know where it was headed. The 'mastermind' recruiting those women to be suicide bombers? The women weren't just women, they were . . . rape victims! Germany's Welt Online offers the eye rolling "Mother of the Female Suicide Bombers' speaks out." Remember, when a woman's a suicide bomber, there's some sort of 'sickness' involved that must be studied. When it's a man, no one raises an eyebrow. As usual, when it's lurid, Family Security Matters is all over it! Rape! Bombs! Women! Death! You get the feeling they needed a whole pack of cigarettes after they came down.


Meanwhile Leo Shane III (Stars and Stripes) reports:

Ongoing combat operations overseas could cost the United States more than $860 billion over the next 10 years, further ballooning the defense budget, experts told Congress on Wednesday.
That total includes plans to dramatically draw down the number of troops in Iraq in the next few years, according to officials from the Congressional Budget Office.
Even with reducing the number of deployed combat troops to 75,000 worldwide, the CBO estimates that the Defense Department faces recurring personnel costs of at least $69 billion a year, coupled with other equipment repair costs.

And remember, as Senator Barbara Boxer noted in an April hearing, all the money spent, all the lives lost, and the best that can ever be said is 'fragile gains' were made.

Townhall II

QUESTION: Good afternoon, Madame Secretary. It's an honor to be working under your leadership, and I look forward to the challenges that you present. My name is Stephanie Ortoleva. I work in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.
I basically wanted to ask you a question about what do you think can be the role that we can play, which you've illuminated -- you've given us a little bit of illumination on that -- but also what role can our colleagues who work in women's rights organizations and disability rights organizations, what role can those colleagues play in supporting you in your efforts to advance the rights of women and the rights of people with disabilities as part of an integral part of United States foreign policy?

SECRETARY CLINTON: That's a wonderful question. I thank you for it. You know, I think it was 1997, I came to this auditorium, the Dean Acheson Auditorium, with Madeleine Albright, who was Secretary of State, and addressed a large crowd like this about the commitment that the Clinton Administration had to including women as an integral part of foreign policy, not as an afterthought, not as an adjunct, but in recognition of the fact that we know from a myriad of studies and research that the role of women is directly related to democracy and human rights. And I feel similarly about people with disabilities.
It's important to recognize that expanding the circle of opportunity and increasing the democratic potential of our own society, as well as those across the world, is a continuing process of inclusion. And I look forward to working on behalf of the rights of women and people with disabilities, and others as well, as we pursue our foreign policy. Because I think it sends a clear message about who we are as a people, the evolution that we have undergone.
I remember as First Lady traveling to many countries that had no recognition of the rights of people with disabilities. They were literally warehoused, often in the most horrific conditions. There were no laws. There were no requirements for education or access. And it struck me then and -- we've made some progress, but insufficient. It certainly is part of my feeling now that we have to always be hoping and working toward greater inclusion as a key part of what our values are and what we believe democracy represents. So I'm going to look to working with those of you in the Department and at USAID and with our allies and friends outside who have carried on this work over the years. And you can count on my commitment to you on that.

That's the opening exchange during yesterday's State Dept townhall that Sec of State Hillary Clinton held. That was a great opening issue to raise, Stephanie Ortoleva topic, so of course the New York Times skips it.

Mark Lander's "Clinton Tries to Reassure a State Dept. in Transition" is the usual garbage from the New York Times. What's especially cute is now they want to talk about problems in the State Dept -- now? They name Condi. Condi was not perfect to put it mildly but she was an improvement over Colin Powell whom the paper has refused to call out -- I'm referring to their role as Sec of State in terms of being the head of the department and responsible for those under them.

Condi didn't realize how badly Powell destroyed morale -- no surprise there, he was a military man who whored himself out to military desires while serving as Sec of State, it was very obvious to career diplomats that he had little respect for or interest in diplomacy. When this was repeatedly made clear to her, she did attempt to improve it but she was in her final year at that point (and I believe she was three months in when she finally registered the problem -- I could have the month wrong, I'd have to sit and reference her trips abroad to pin down that period and I don't have time to reflect on that this morning).

I have many friends at State -- career diplomats -- and we hit hard on that repeatedly for that reason. When Condi, for example, went to Baghdad and gave a speech to State Dept employees extolling the sacrifice being made by the US military and never acknowledging the sacrifices made by the State Dept staff in Iraq, it outraged to such a volume that even she had to register it.

Because she's a woman and because Colin Powell's always dished to the press (he is their favorite gossip, he trashes everyone and does so off the record and they repay him by praising him and, frequently, running praise of him . . . from him but uncredited) and been a press 'hero,' Condi will take the fall. I can't control that but I will make it clear here that Condi, as an administrator, was not the failure Colin Powell was. And had she grasped sooner the damage he'd done in his four years in the job, she might have been able to turn it around. As it was, people did notice a change in her final year. But they were treated like garbage under Powell. He was not suited for the job and he performed it poorly. Condi's biggest problem was not grasping the situation -- wow, imagine that, no-one-could-have-guessed Condi failing to grasp a situation! -- but once she finally did, she did make some small improvements. Colin destroyed morale and created one of the largest flights from the State Dept in decades. But the New York Times wants to tell you Condi's the problem? They've never called out Colin but they want to bring up Condi?

And let's not pretend we don't grasp that the paper is attempting to set up a cat fight -- similar to Scott Horton's piggish nonsense. Look, it's Fatal Attraction! How long before everyone starts chanting, "Kill the b**ch! Kill the b**ch!"?

Marcia's written about the State Dept issues in "Hillary's First Day as Secretary of State."

You can read the transcript of the townhall here. And we'll note this section on Iraq:

QUESTION: Madame Secretary, I'm Steve Kashkett, representing the American Foreign Service Association. As you know, over the past six years, thousands of our colleagues have volunteered to serve in the two war zones of Iraq and Afghanistan – Iraq in particular, where we've created the largest U.S. diplomatic mission in history. But the cost of doing this has been to take people away from all of our other diplomatic missions around the world, which have been left understaffed and with staffing gaps.
So my question to you is two parts. How do you assess the prospect of getting Congress to authorize the positions we need to fill all those staffing gaps around the world? And secondly, have you had any discussions yet about reducing the size of our diplomatic mission in Iraq down to that of a normal diplomatic mission?

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Steve, I am fully in favor of increasing our diplomatic numbers, and we’re going to work very hard to achieve that. We are facing, unfortunately, some very difficult budgetary restraints. But I have made the enhancement of State operations, including Foreign Service and Civil Service positions, the highest priority. We cannot do the work we are expected to do in the absence of the people and the support systems that enable us to do the work. And I intend to make that argument every time I speak to anyone, and I have been making that argument. And it's too early to tell exactly where we're going to end up on the numbers and the dollars that we’re going to need. But it is an incredibly critical priority. I know that during his campaign, President Obama talked about this and I know how strongly supportive he is.
We are just beginning the discussions about Iraq. You know we have the Strategic Framework that was part of the agreements reached along with the Status of Forces Agreement that will, to some extent, guide us. We have elections in Iraq. We did the provincial, we'll have national elections. Much of it's going to depend, in terms of the numbers that we have remaining in Iraq on the civilian side, what the expectations of the Iraqi Government and the Iraqi people are. You know, they are a sovereign nation. We have certainly put forth in the Strategic Framework, and in the conversations that I've had with Iraqi leaders since arriving, a willingness to work on a range of issues on the civilian side. But we're just at the very beginning of that process.

And we'll note this which the Times also ignored:

QUESTION: Thank you, Madame Secretary, and thank you for coming to address us today. My name is Ralan Hill. I'm a Foreign Service officer. I am here in Washington on TDY, going to Paraguay. I have a same-sex partner, who's been recognized as a member of household by the Department of State. Because of that, the Department actively discriminates against me and my family in a number of areas by limiting our access to benefits routinely and customarily provided to other families here in the Department. As one example, if I were assigned overseas to a post that came under a mandatory evacuation order, I would be required to leave, although the Department is under no legal obligation to do anything to help my partner. He could be left literally to fend for himself in a war zone.
While I hope you find the current situation unacceptable, my question is what can you do to eliminate this discrimination, and what timeline do you see for making such changes? Thank you.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, thank you for raising that. (Applause.) You know, this is an issue of real concern to me. And even though, as you pointed out, all of our personnel share the same service requirements, the partners in same-sex relationships are not offered the same training, the same benefits, and the same protections that other family members receive when you serve abroad. So I view this as an issue of workplace fairness, employee retention, and the safety and effectiveness of our embassy communities worldwide.
So I have asked for a staff review of current policies, especially those that are set forth in State Department regulations, and recommendations and a strategy for making effective changes. This is on a -- it's on a fast timeline, but we've begun that process. We are reviewing what would need to be changed, what we can legally change. A lot of things we cannot legally change by a decision in the State Department. But let's see what we can determine is within our realm of responsibility, and we are moving on that expeditiously.

There's a lot more in the transcript but when you're mission is to trash Hillary and to set up a catfight between two women (Hillary and Condi), you really don't have time to report so things that readers would actually be interested in, things they would be able to relate to get ditched to make more room for slurs and whispers.

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.











Posted at 07:02 am by thecommonills
 

Sheik Risha stomps his feet and threatens

Sheik Risha stomps his feet and threatens

When you don't like the results of an election, stomp your feet and threaten violence. As was done in Floria (2000, when the GOP shut down the recounts), so attempts the "Awakening"s in Anbar. From yesterday's snapshot and we'll italicize Sheik Risha sections:

Alissa J. Rubin and Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) quote one-time "Awakening" Council leader Sheik Hammid al-Hayes who is unhappy with the early (and unofficial) results thus far in Anbar, "If the results aren't acceptable, then we'll bring back the old days. We will use rifles again, and we will eliminate the Islamic Party." When the US military keeps you and your underlings on the US tax payer dime ($300 a month per "Awakening" member), you'd think the monthly stipend might require a few civics lessons. Now "Awakening" free, al-Hayes demonstrates yet again exactly the type of person the US was paying off . They scream, they yell, they threaten violence and . . . they get their way. Ned Parker, Caesar Ahmed and Saif Hameed (Los Angeles Times) quote Sheik Ahmed Buzaigh abu Risha vowing, "If the percentage is true, then we will transfer our entity from a political to a military one, to fight the Islamic Party and the commission." If the Iraqi Islamic Party is declared the winner in Anbar, the "Awakenings" say they will begin a slaughter. And instead of being called out, they're getting catered to. Ernesto Londono (Washington Post) reports, "A coalition of parties that competed against the Iraqi Islamic Party in Anbar submitted complaints that the commission considers grave, commission chief Faraj al-Haidari said, 'We will deal with it seriously because it might change the result of the election in this province,' he said."
Al Arabiya News Channel notes Anbar is "under curfew for a night". Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) observes how "quickly" the officials go into motion for the ones making threats in Anbar, "The Independent High Electoral Commission sent a committee from Baghdad Wednesday to recount ballot boxes from some polling stations in the province after tribal leaders accused the Iraqi Islamic Party, IIP, which currently controls the provincial council, of rigging the vote. The accusations of vote rigging came from an especially important source, Ahmed Abu Risha, the head of the province's Awakening Council, which is widely credited with bringing calm to Anbar." Oh, yes, that voice of peace Sheik Risha. And what did LAT quote him saying? "If the percentage is true, then we will transfer our entity from a political to a military one, to fight the Islamic Party and the commission." Andrew England and Ernesto Londono (Financial Times of London) note, "The IIP is one of the few Sunni Arab groups that took part in 2005 elections, which were boycotted by Sunni Arabs. It has been the community's main political force and had run the council in Anbar" and they quote the Iraqi Islamic Party's Omar Abdul Sattar stating that these threats of violence by people unhappy with the preliminary results are "unacceptable and totally rejected." UPI explains, "The Awakening Councils had looked to secure seats on the provincial councils as reparation for their role in routing al-Qaida militans from Anbar as part of the U.S.-led counterinsurgency strategy known as the surge." These are preliminary results -- unofficial ones. That needs to be remembered. And if al-Maliki wasn't attempting to spin the results and the press wasn't so eager to help him (we're ignoring the installment in today's news cycle on that), we'd follow Thomas E. Ricks' example (which, as noted Tuesday morning, was the plan). But since we can't, we'll note an obvious fact. "Awakening" Councils members were collaborators with the US in the occupation of Iraq. Anbar especially rejected the illegal war and occupation on and of Iraq. While "Awakenings" turned when a buck or two was popped in their g-strings, that doesn't mean the people did. If the results hold, you may see the people -- and we made this point when NYT did their ridiculous "Everything is beautiful in the province and the people are so happy" 2007 article -- really didn't want anything to do with US collaborators. If so, that's not surprising. When France was occupied, the French loudly rejected the collaborators. And continued to make known what they thought of them -- to this day. Those who go to work for the enemy -- and a foreign force occupying any country is that country's natural enemy -- are collaborators and, no, they are not popular with the home-grown population. And Monte Morin and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) quote the menacing Sheik Risha promsing, "There will be very harsh consequences if this false election stands. We won't let them form a government."

That's some performance from Sheik Risha. The sort that would land many in jail. Instead Confessions of an Aging Drama Queen ends up the center of attention with people rushing to listen to his moans. Sam Dagher (New York Times) reports:

Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki sent a deputy, Rafie al-Issawi, a Sunni who is an Anbar native, to the provincial capital, Ramadi, to meet with Sheik Ahmed Abu Risha, the head of one of the main tribal slates that ran in the elections last weekend. Sheik Risha -- who transformed the American-backed Awakening movement, which helped quell the insurgency in Anbar, into a political party -- has threatened to take up arms against the Iraqi Islamic Party, which he has accused of cheating.
Top Iraqi military officials, including the commander of ground forces, Lt. Gen. Ali Ghaidan Majid, attended Wednesday's meeting in Ramadi, according to Sheik Aifan al-Issawi, one of Sheik Risha's allies and a candidate on his slate. He said it was agreed that a number of ballot boxes from several polling stations would be recounted or excluded from the final count because of the allegations of fraud.

He threatens violence -- he continues to threaten violence -- and he gets his way. All the people who peacefully demonstrated against not being permitted to vote? They're ignored. But it's rush down to make nice with Sheik Risha when, if it was anyone else, the US military would be rushing down to arrest him. And al-Maliki can't stand Risha. The fact that the sheik is being catered to indicates just how little control al-Maliki still has.

Dahger speaks with another tribe leader from the area, Sheik Ali al-Hatem, who has (like many in Anbar) frequently been in conflict with Sheik Risha (al-Hatem has also had issues with the Iraqi Islamic Party)who notes that each tribe put up their own candidates so you had slates competing against each other as well as competing against IIP. He states that Risha is "sowing rifts among the tribes" and that the violence could become "intratribal": "Ahmed is playing with fire. We will confront him if he acts this way and divides the tribes." al-Hatem doesn't call on al-Maliki to reign in Risha, he calls on the US military to do so. (If that happens, it may take place during today's meet-up in Anbar.)


"We will form the government of Anbar anyway," Sudarsan Raghavan (Washington Post) quotes Risha swearing. Raghavan observes:

Here, in the cradle of the Sunni insurgency, tribal leaders nurtured and empowered by the United States appear ready to take control the old-fashioned way -- with guns and money -- if their political ambitions are frustrated.
Abu Risha and other leaders of the Awakening, the U.S.-backed Sunni sheiks who rose up to quell the insurgency, charge that Sunni politicians of the Iraqi Islamic Party have committed electoral fraud, which party officials deny. The allegations, coupled with threats to use arms, have prompted provincewide curfews and strict security measures. Although the United States handed responsibility for the security of Anbar to the Iraqi government in September, U.S. Marines this week returned to Ramadi in observation roles, patrolling areas from which they had largely withdrawn.
Iraqi election monitoring officials have found the allegations serious enough to investigate, and election commission chief Faraj al-Haidari said initial assessments could be released as early as Thursday. But he also suggested that the allegations might have been driven more by the struggle for power than by evidence, saying there would be no need to hold new elections in the province.

Again, Risha stamps his feet and threatens violence and gets his way. All the people turned away from the polls and refused the right to vote? All Faraj al-Haidari has to offer them is this 'pithy' little comment, "It's not our fault that some people couldn't vote because they are lazy, because they didn't bother to ask where they should vote." Again, they should have ditched the peaceful protest and run around threatening violence -- that's the only way al-Haidari would have listened. Sheik Risha works the commission the way he wants to.

And you need to grasp how ludicrous the claims of Risha, et al are. Now ludicrous doesn't mean that they are false. I believe they are but I don't know that. But reporters do know and did report on the vast number of Iraqis in Baghdad, for example, being refused the right to vote. But that's not being investigated. Risha's drama leads to an investigation. Risha is unhappy that his slate of candidates appear (no vote counts are final yet) to have done poorly. He insists that his candidates should have done better and that voter fraud is responsible for them not doing better. Risha says the ballot boxes were stuffed. Don't worry about whether he's right about that or wrong for a second. Just grasp that is the basis of his assertions. Now note this from Monte Morin and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times): "Tribal sheiks and their followers here in Ramadi, the provincial capital, and in Fallouja charge that their political rivals gained control of local election offices and stuffed ballot boxes the day after the elections. Election officials reported that 40% of eligible Anbar voters cast ballots, but tribal candidates say the turnout was half that and that the additional votes are false." Less than 40% voted -- according to the people asserting voter fraud, only 20% of registered voters in Anbar bothered to vote.

Do you not see the conflict in the two positions? "We are popular and we should have won!" vs. "They cheated because really only 20% of the registered voters voted!"
If you're argument is that 80% of registered voters stayed home, you can't make the claim that you're popular with voters at the same time. The two positions are in conflict.

For those who need to believe the Risha -- and ignore the conflict in his argument -- you can click here for Leila Fadel's co-written nonsense -- remember McClatchy has repeatedly defended and supported the "Awakening" Councils -- some have called what McClatchy's done "cheerleading" for "Awakening." (And before little McClatchy gets its itty-bitty feelings hurt again and feels the need to whine, most outlets have a bias. McClatchy's has always been to the "Awakenings," other outlets have noticed that the Los Angeles Times, for example, is overly cozy with the KRG.)

The following community sites update last night:

Cedric and Wally did their humor posts while the others wrote on the theme of magazines.

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.



monte morin



thomas friedman is a great man





oh boy it never ends

Posted at 07:00 am by thecommonills
 

Wednesday, February 04, 2009
Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

February 4, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, a DC peace event looms, results from the provincial elections have still not been sorted out but that hasn't stopped thugs from making threats, what happens to your finger after the purple dye, and more?
 
Starting with an action that begins this week in the US.  Military Families Speak Out explains:
 
Come to Washington February 6-9 to demand "The Change WE Need"  
President Elect Obama opposed the war in Iraq before it started, calling it a "dumb war."  But he and his advisors have also said that they plan to spread the return of combat troops from that "dumb war" out over sixteen months and to keep tens of thousands of other troops on the ground in Iraq indefinitely.     
So from February 6-9, MFSO will be traveling to Washington to bring the new President and new Congress the message that it is long past time to bring all our troops home from Iraq.  The four days of events will include:
* A teach-in featuring the voices of military families, veterans, and Iraqis, explaining the need for an immediate and complete end to the war in Iraq -- and the human impacts of continuing the occupation.  Friday, February 6 from Noon - 3:00 p.m. at Mott House, 122 Maryland Avenue.   
* A solemn procession from Arlington National Cemetary to the White House beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 7.  Meet at the front gate of the cemetery right outside the exit of the Arlington Metro stop.  Please arrive early.
* A "Meet and Greet" and Legislative Briefing from 3:00 - 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, February 8 at the Mariott Metro Center.   
* Lobbying members of Congress to end the war in Iraq.  Meet in the cafeteria of the Rayburn House Office Building at 9:00 a.m. Monday, February 9.
 
 
 
The November 27th snapshot noted Iraq War veteran Andre Shepherd who self-checked out of the US military while in Germany and held a press conference to explain: "When I read and heard about people being ripped to shreds from machine guns or being blown to bits by the Hellfire missiles I began to feel ashamed about what I was doing.  I could not in good conscience continue to serve. . . . Here in Germany it was established that everyone, even a soldier, must take responsibility for his or her actions, no matter how many superiors are giving orders."   The December 2nd snapshot quoted the following from James Ewinger's Cleveland Plain Dealer article:

Shepherd said he grew up on East 94th Street in Cleveland, attended Lakewood High School and studied computer science at Kent State University until he ran out of money.
He enlisted in 2004 with the hope of flying the Apaches, but was urged to become a mechanic first.
Scharf said he doubts that Shepherd's expected order to return to Iraq would, by itself, constitute an unlawful order.
"His best argument would be that Apaches are used to kill civilians," Scharf said, but he still viewed it as a weak case.
 
Andre is seeking aslyum in Germany and has been working with the Military Counseling Network and attorneys on that effort.  Today AP's Patrick McGroarty reports that Andre is one of 71 US soldiers who has self-checked out from "European bases in 2008" (actually, he shouldn't be, he self-checked out in 2007) and his case was scheduled to take place before the Germany's Federal Office for Migration and Refugees today where Andre would be stressing "a 2004 European Union directive that established basic guidelines for refugee status within the 27-nation bloc. Soldiers who face punishment for refusing to commit a war crime or serve in an unlawful conflict are to be granted that status, the directive says."
 
Andre Shepherd: When I speak to the other asylum seekers in the asylum camp and I explain to them my story, they completely understand it however this doesn't make me any better or any worse than anyone else that's there.  We're all there because we can't go home.
 
Samantha Haque: As an asylum seeker he is currently in a camp in Germany with people from places like Afghanistan, Somalia and Iraq. All in a similar position to him.  The difference is that Andre Shepherd is a US citizen.  And an Iraq War deserter.  For security reasons, we were not allowed to film in the camp.  Shepherd has a friend, a peace activist, who lives within the restricted boundary he's allowed to move in.  He took us there.
 
Andre Shepherd: I was working on the Apache helicopter.  Those Apaches won't fly unless we take care of them.  The Apache helicopter is a deadly weapon a lot of people call it a flying tank.  What started my doubts was when I saw the Iraqi people, when they would come and help us, the looks that they gave us weren't the looks of heroes or people that you know were bringing freedom. We looked like conquerors and oppressors.  That really bothered me a lot.  So I started to look into the reasons why we were actually there in Iraq. I thought that what we were doing was a great thing and a positive thing.  That we were actually bringing freedom to people and making them happy but what I found out instead was that we completely destroyed an entire country on a pack of lies.  It started to weigh very heavily to the point where my actions when I was a soldier were starting to deteriorate so as this was going on I came to the conclusion that I wasn't going to back to Iraq.
 
Samantha Haque: None of the criteria that the US military offered for discharge were availble to Mr. Shepherd.  To be a conscientious objector in the US means to be against all wars, something he was not.  While in Germany, he was faced with a second mission to Iraq.  On April 11, 2007 he went absent without leave.  Unable to apply for German residency without official military discharge papers, he decided that applying for asylum was the only way forward.
 
MCN's Tim Huber: Andre contacted us about a year and a half ago and he asked about asylum  He wasn't the first to ask about asylum but our answer was always the same, we don't know what would happen if you tried aslyum.  We went over the pros and cons of trying it. We noted that we were quite pessimistic that it would actually work, but we said it's an option.
 
Samantha Haque: His lawyer on the other hand is confident that he will have his application accepted.
 
Reinhard Marx: It's a specific European law, the so-called directive on qualification of refugees and in this directive it is ruled that deserters of an army who refer to international reasons, refer that the war is conducted in a way which infringes the national law then he has a right to be accepted as a refugee. 
 
Samantha Haque: His lawyer cites the case of Florian Pfaff, a German officer demoted after refusing to work on a computer program for the US Army in Iraq in 2005.  A federal court overturned his demotion because the Iraq War contravened international law.  But although Germany opposed the war in Iraq and said no to the US resolution backing it, it still allowed its territory to be used as a base for military operations in Iraq.  Here in Heidelberg is the US Army's headquarters in Europe.  There are currently around 51,000 US military service men in Germany If Mr. Shepherd's application for aslyum is accepted, there could be implications for US-German military relations. 
 
Gas Bag: It would mean that any US soldier in Germany who disagrees with military operations being conducted can basically step out of the base and seek asylum in Germany and that would probably be a situation that would be unacceptable to the US military. 
 
Samantha Haque: The US is already looking at shrinking its military presence in Germany and possibly moving bases to Europe.
 
Gas Bag: There is a 60-year tradition, there's many Germans who cherish having the Americans here.  There's also an economic factor, the US bases, particularly in the German southwest provide a lot of jobs.
 
Samantha Haque: Shepherd is something of a darling for the anti-war movement.  Here at the Miltary Counseling Network, an American center where conscientios objectors go for help, letters of support come in from all over the world.
 
Tim Huber: He joined for the American dream.  He joined for life, liberty and the pursuit of justice. Suddenly he finds that his pursuit of life, liberty and, most importantly, justice causes him to take a 180 degree turn and walk away from the military.
 
Samantha Haque: Do you think that there's a danger that Andre's case trivializes the term asylum seeker? 
 
Tim Huber: Not at all.  I think, if anything, it's causing people to look at the term asylum and put it in a 21st century defenition
 
Samantha Haque: The US army said that it was aware of the case but that the matter was completely in German hands.  As for Mr. Shepherd it will be some months before he finds out the results of next week's hearing and whether he faces jail in America or exile abroad. 
 
Andre Shepherd: Not being able to go back?  At this point, that's just something I have to live with if I can make my consc clear then fine that's just a sacrifice I have to make.
 
Russia Today notes the Pentagon claims 5,000 US Army soldiers "are missing from duty" presently and quotes Andre explaining, "When the CIA report came and they said that there were no weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq, that really made me angry.  I wondered if there are no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and the CIA obvioulsy the Bush administration knew about this, then why did we just destroy Fallujah, completely wiped out the entire city?"
 
Meanwhile Dahr Jamail (MidEast Dispatches) has returned to Iraq for the first time in four years and has heard the much hyped "security" hype: 
 
I myself was lulled into a false sense of security upon my arrival a week ago. Indeed, security is "better," compared to my last trip here, when the number of attacks per month against the occupation forces and Iraqi collaborators used to be around 6,000. Today, we barely have one American soldier being killed every other day and only a score injured weekly. Casualties among Iraqi security forces are just ten times that number.   
But yes, one could say security is better if one is clear that it is better in comparison not to downtown Houston but to Fallujah 2004.   
Compared to days of multiple car bomb explosions, Baghdad today is better. 
Is it safer? Is it more secure? 
Difficult to say in a place when the capital city of the country is essentially in lock-down and prevailing conditions are indicative of a police state. We have a state in Iraq where the government is exercising rigid and repressive controls over social life (no unpermitted demonstrations, curfews, concrete walls around the capital city), economic (read - the 100 Bremer Orders that were passed under the Coalition Provisional Authority - all of the key laws over economic control still in place), and political life of the citizenry.   
By definition, a police state exhibits elements of totalitarianism and social control, and in today's Iraq, we have plenty examples of both.
 
Iraq held provincial elections in 14 of the 18 provinces last Saturday.  Thomas E. Ricks (Foreign Policy) announces he is waiting to weigh in: "The two key questions, he [an American official] said, were whether those who lost power would give it up and those who gained power would be able to execute it well.  Why wait?  Because, unlike my former colleagues in the newspaper racket, I can." While he waits, the battle of the spin continues with threats of violence mixed in.  Alissa J. Rubin and Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) quote one-time "Awakening" Council leader Sheik Hammid al-Hayes who is unhappy with the early (and unofficial) results thus far in Anbar, "If the results aren't acceptable, then we'll bring back the old days.  We will use rifles again, and we will eliminate the Islamic Party." When the US military keeps you and your underlings on the US tax payer dime ($300 a month per "Awakening" member), you'd think the monthly stipend might require a few civics lessons.  Now "Awakening" free, al-Hayes demonstrates yet again exactly the type of person the US was paying off .  They scream, they yell, they threaten violence and . . . they get their way.  Ned Parker, Caesar Ahmed and Saif Hameed (Los Angeles Times) quote Sheik Ahmed Buzaigh abu Risha vowing, "If the percentage is true, then we will transfer our entity from a political to a military one, to fight the Islamic Party and the commission."  If the Iraqi Islamic Party is declared the winner in Anbar, the "Awakenings" say they will begin a slaughter.  And instead of being called out, they're getting catered to.  Ernesto Londono (Washington Post) reports, "A coalition of parties that competed against the Iraqi Islamic Party in Anbar submitted complaints that the commission considers grave, commission chief Faraj al-Haidari said, 'We will deal with it seriously because it might change the result of the election in this province,' he said."
Al Arabiya News Channel notes Anbar is "under curfew for a night".  Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) observes how "quickly" the officials go into motion for the ones making threats in Anbar, "The Independent High Electoral Commission sent a committee from Baghdad Wednesday to recount ballot boxes from some polling stations in the province after tribal leaders accused the Iraqi Islamic Party, IIP, which currently controls the provincial council, of rigging the vote.  The accusations of vote rigging came from an especially important source, Ahmed Abu Risha, the head of the province's Awakening Council, which is widely credited with bringing calm to Anbar."  Oh, yes, that voice of peace Sheik Risha.  And what did LAT quote him saying? "If the percentage is true, then we will transfer our entity from a political to a military one, to fight the Islamic Party and the commission."   Andrew England and Ernesto Londono (Financial Times of London) note, "The IIP is one of the few Sunni Arab groups that took part in 2005 elections, which were boycotted by Sunni Arabs. It has been the community's main political force and had run the council in Anbar" and they quote the Iraqi Islamic Party's Omar Abdul Sattar stating that these threats of violence by people unhappy with the preliminary results are "unacceptable and totally rejected."  UPI explains, "The Awakening Councils had looked to secure seats on the provincial councils as reparation for their role in routing al-Qaida militans from Anbar as part of the U.S.-led counterinsurgency strategy known as the surge."  These are preliminary results -- unofficial ones.  That needs to be remembered.  And if al-Maliki wasn't attempting to spin the results and the press wasn't so eager to help him (we're ignoring the installment in today's news cycle on that), we'd follow Thomas E. Ricks' example (which, as noted Tuesday morning, was the plan).  But since we can't, we'll note an obvious fact.  "Awakening" Councils members were collaborators with the US in the occupation of Iraq.  Anbar especially rejected the illegal war and occupation on and of Iraq.  While "Awakenings" turned when a buck or two was popped in their g-strings, that doesn't mean the people did.  If the results hold, you may see the people -- and we made this point when NYT did their ridiculous "Everything is beautiful in the province and the people are so happy" 2007 article -- really didn't want anything to do with US collaborators.  If so, that's not surprising.  When France was occupied, the French loudly rejected the collaborators.  And continued to make known what they thought of them -- to this day.  Those who go to work for the enemy -- and a foreign force occupying any country is that country's natural enemy -- are collaborators and, no, they are not popular with the home-grown population.   And Monte Morin and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) quote the menacing Sheik Risha promsing, "There will be very harsh consequences if this false election stands.  We won't let them form a government."
 
"There will be very harsh consequences if this false election stands. We won't let them form a government."
 
The same thugs the US paid off so they'd stop attacking US military personnel and equipment -- as US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker and Gen David Petraeus told Congress repeatedly last April -- scream and whine and moan about the potential results and everyone rushes to make the big babies feel better. They whine and make threats and that gets a reaction from the elections commission chair? The same pompous ass who declared Sunday, "It's not our fault that some people couldn't vote because they are lazy, because they didn't bother to ask where they should vote"? Well apparently "lazy" is mitigated when you threaten violence so possibly all those who were not allowed to vote, who were repeatedly turned away at polling stations should start threatening to 'set it off' and maybe the elections commission chair would suddenly take an interest in their issues?   Of the commission, Deborah Haynes (Times of London) points out, "Iraq's electoral commission insisted that it was pleased with the turnout on Saturday, with about 7.5 million Iraqis, or 51 per cent of those eligible to vote, casting a ballot. Mr al-Maliki had forecast participation of up to 80 per cent after to an improvement in security and a decision by Sunni Arabs to participate, after boycotting past ballots in protest at the occupation."     In the meantime Trenton Daniel and Mahdi al Dulaymi (McClatchy Newspapers) observe, "Thousands of Iraqis, however, couldn't vote because their names were missing from registration lists; in Hawsa, just west of Baghdad, thousands demonstrated over their exclusion."  No, don't demonstrate, threaten.  It works so very well in Anbar.  The response to demonstrations and massive voter suppression?  "Election officials said that they have no plans to address the grievances, saying that displaced voters missed their opportunity to register."  
 
In New York at the United Nations yesterday, Staffan de Mistura, UN Secretary-General's Special Representative for Iraq, spun like crazy trying to find the 'good' in an election process that, he admitted, saw five candidates assassinated "and the explosion of two mortar shells on Election Day" -- he side-stepped the other violence taking place Saturday. [Even US Army Lt Gen Lloyd J. Austin III admits to "11 attacks" on election day.]  He offered a figure of 42% for Sunni participation (42% of registered voters) which, if it holds, will only further underscore how many people stayed home (Sunnis boycotted the vote in 2005's provincial elections).
 
Meanwhile Deborah Haynes (Times of London) notes an interesting bit of trivia regarding the election process:
 
Iraq commentators go misty-eyed when they talk of the symbolic purple finger brandished by Iraqis after casting a ballot. But no one ever mentions the smelly orange nail. 
Had such an abominable side-effect been better public knowledge, then I would never have enthusiastically jammed by right index finger into a pot of indelible ink at a polling station in Baghdad on election day.
[. . .]
"What the hell is happening to my nail?" I asked my interpreter. 
"Oh it turns orange," he said, casually. "It is because of all the chemicals in the ink." 
Four days and hours of scrubbing later, the purple ink on my finger has almost gone but the Orange Nail from Hell is still there, as colourful as the moment it first appeared. The nail has also started to smell rather foul, as if something nasty is rotting on the end of my finger.
 
"The latest is that nothing much has changed," AP's Kim Gamel explained yesterday on NPR's All Things Considered, "al-Zaidi has been in custody since Iraqi guards wrestled him to the ground."  Muntadar al-Zaidi, the Iraqi journalist who threw two shoes at George W. Bush December 14th and has been imprisoned since.  Gamel said he remains in a jail cell in the Green Zone and his attorney has had only one visit with him (back in December).  Asked about the alleged letter Nouri al-Maliki was touting linking the journalist to 'terrorists,' Gamel replied, "Maliki did say he received that letter and the family [of Muntadar] denied that" and she noted it's impossible to determine whether the claim is true or false at this point.
 
What a novel concept.  A journalist noting what can and cannot be verified.  That's certainly nothing Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) worries himself over today as he rushes to turn a suspect into a convict.  We addressed the topic in yesterday's snapshot.  Yes, it was obvious yesterday.  But Myers misses out as he rushes to tell you a criminal confessed!   Let's go to Tina Susman ( Los Angeles Times):

There was no way to independently verify the video's authenticity, but the use of female suicide bombers has soared in the last year. More than 30 women blew themselves up last year, compared with eight in 2007, according to U.S. military figures. U.S. and Iraqi officials say Sunni Arab insurgents have run short of male recruits and turned to women for the missions.
Suspected suicide bombers were among those rounded up in the sweep conducted in the 72 hours leading up to Saturday's elections, said Army Maj. Gen. Jeffery Hammond, commander of U.S. forces in Baghdad and the surrounding region.
Hammond said attacks in the his area of command had dropped 80% since June 2007, part of a nationwide decrease in violence that was highlighted by the peaceful voting for new governing councils in 14 provinces.

And that is what's known as reporting.  Suspected. Video could not be independently verified. All points Steven Lee Myers can't be bothered with. What a social hit he would have been in Salem back in 1692. No doubt he would be partying at Gallows Hill. Steven Lee Myers, the Cotton Mather of 2009.
 
Turning to some of today's reported violence . . .
 
Bombings?
 
Mohammed Al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a Baghdad roadside bombing that left two people wounded, a Baghdad sticking bombing aimed at an "Awakening" Council head that wounded the head and claimed the life of his son with three other people injured, a Baghdad roadside bombing that left four people wounded and a Mosul car bombing left four people wounded.  Reuters notes a Mosul roadside bombing that left two people injured and a Mosul grenade attack with no reports of wounded but the US military fired at the thrower.
 
Shootings?
 
Mohammed Al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers) reports one person shot in Kirkuk (wounded).
 
Corpses?
 
Reuters notes a 8 corpses discovered in Baquba.
 

Posted at 03:32 pm by thecommonills
 

Steven Lee Myers pleasures himself (if no one else) in print

Steven Lee Myers pleasures himself (if no one else) in print

Can someone please ask New York Times reporter Steven Lee Myers to write with both hands out of his pants? The thought of a woman and bombs creates such a frenzy, he forgets he's supposed to be a reporter throughout "Iraq Arrests Women Tied to Bombings."

Or maybe it's just continuing the paper's practice of trying cases in print. Robert F. Worth and Carolyn Marshall did that, remember? Told you all the US soldiers were innocent in the incident as their Article 32 hearing approached. Of course the Article 32 hearing begged to differ and they were all later convicted in court-martials. Possibly reporters should stick to journalism and not attempt to practice a profession they have no training in?

Myers threw out all the basics (well, he had only one thing in his hands and -- small, medium or big -- it kept him preoccupied) such as "innocent until proven guilty" for a legal justice system and such as skepticism being the hallmark of journalism. The Iraqi puppet government says a woman is guilty? Then she's guilty. No need for a trial.

She went by the code name "the mother of believers," Samira Ahmed Jassim al-Azzawi confessed. Ms. Jassim recruited women to join extremists in Diyala Province, escorting them to a farm for training and ultimately to their targets.
Speaking stiffly in a crude police video, Ms. Jassim recounted the fate of a woman she called only Um Huda, whom she had led to a neighborhood bank that served as her rendezvous point. "When I was talking to her, she was not answering or looking at me," Ms. Jassim said. "She was mumbling verses of the Koran."


Was she now!!!! Myers article offers the below photo of the 'confession'.

http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/salem/jacobstrial.jpg

What an idiot Steven Lee Myers is. What a disgrace to his profession.

I hope he did get a cheap thrill out of the topic because then at least he enjoyed it. No one else did. Justice didn't enjoy it. Journalism didn't. Here's Tina Susman's "Woman accused of recruiting female suicide bombers held in Iraq" ( Los Angeles Times):

There was no way to independently verify the video's authenticity, but the use of female suicide bombers has soared in the last year. More than 30 women blew themselves up last year, compared with eight in 2007, according to U.S. military figures. U.S. and Iraqi officials say Sunni Arab insurgents have run short of male recruits and turned to women for the missions.
Suspected suicide bombers were among those rounded up in the sweep conducted in the 72 hours leading up to Saturday's elections, said Army Maj. Gen. Jeffery Hammond, commander of U.S. forces in Baghdad and the surrounding region.
Hammond said attacks in the his area of command had dropped 80% since June 2007, part of a nationwide decrease in violence that was highlighted by the peaceful voting for new governing councils in 14 provinces.

Suspected. Video could not be independently verified. All points Steven Lee Myers can't be bothered with. What a social hit he would have been in Salem back in 1692. No doubt he would be partying at Gallows Hill. Steven Lee Myers, the Cotton Mather of 2009.


Andre Shepherd is in the news today. Dropping back to the November 27th snapshot to jog memories:

Meanwhile in Germany a US soldier is seeking aslyum. Andreas Buerger (Reuters) reports 31-year-old Iraq War veteran Andre Shepherd self-checked out of the military in 2007 and is now seeking sancturay in Germany where he held a press conference today and declared: "When I read and heard about people being ripped to shreds from machine guns or being blown to bits by the Hellfire missiles I began to feel ashamed about what I was doing. I could not in good conscience continue to serve. . . . Here in Germany it was established that everyone, even a soldier, must take responsibility for his or her actions, no matter how many superiors are giving orders."

The December 2nd snapshot quoted the following from James Ewinger's Cleveland Plain Dealer article:

Shepherd said he grew up on East 94th Street in Cleveland, attended Lakewood High School and studied computer science at Kent State University until he ran out of money.
He enlisted in 2004 with the hope of flying the Apaches, but was urged to become a mechanic first.
Scharf said he doubts that Shepherd's expected order to return to Iraq would, by itself, constitute an unlawful order.
"His best argument would be that Apaches are used to kill civilians," Scharf said, but he still viewed it as a weak case.


Today AP's Patrick McGroarty reports on Shepherd noting that he "was among 71 Army soldiers to desert European bases in 2008, but he is the first known to have sought asylum in Germany." McGroarty's case is heard today by Germany's Federal Office for Migration and Refugees and he will be stressing "a 2004 European Union directive that established basic guidelines for refugee status within the 27-nation bloc. Soldiers who face punishment for refusing to commit a war crime or serve in an unlawful conflict are to be granted that status, the directive says."

The Military Counseling Network blog notes this video:



Click here for MCN's website.


Meanwhile there's an attempt to tar and feather one of the researchers of the 2006 Lancet Study into Iraqi deaths. From Gary Langer's "Nondisclosure Cited in Iraq Casualties Study" (ABC News):

In a highly unusual rebuke, the American Association for Public Opinion Research said this morning that the author of a widely debated survey on "excess deaths" in Iraq had violated its code of professional ethics by refusing to disclose details of his work.

A rebuke? "Violated its code of professional ethics"? Langer appears to leave out a few details. From AP:

Tim Parsons, a spokesman for the school said: "We are disappointed AAPOR has chosen to find Dr. Burnham in violation of the organization's ethics code. However, neither Dr. Burnham nor the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health are members of AAPOR."

Neither he nor Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health are members of the organization 'rebuking' them, the organization that says Burnahm "violated its professional code of ethics". It's a bit difficult to vote a code of ethics you never took a pledge to because you do not belong to the organization.

It should further be noted that the 'rebuke' itself violates the organization's code of ethics which states, "We shall not cite our membership in the Association as evidence of professional competence, since the Association does not so certify any persons or organizations." So, to be clear, I rebuke the the American Association for Public Opinion Research and find them to be in violation of their own ethic guidelines.


Finally, Pru notes "Sexuality and the system" (Great Britain's Socialist Worker):

To mark the beginning of LGBT History Month, Colin Wilson explores the roots of gay oppression

It seems hard to imagine that people’s personal lives were different in the past. Family, friendship and sexuality seem deep-rooted and part of our personalities.

Yet they have changed over the centuries. Back in 1600, “family” could refer to the people who lived with you, whether you were related to them or not. In richer households that included servants.

Men who were close friends – at least, wealthy men – kissed and embraced each other.

They might share a bed, swear vows of friendship or even be buried together. None of this implied a sexual relationship.

No one believed that humanity was divided between gay, lesbian, bisexual and straight people. Sex between men – sodomy – was a terrible sin. But anyone might be tempted to commit it, just as anyone might commit murder or adultery.

Sodomy was harshly punished. Sodomites were hanged in England, and burned at the stake elsewhere in Europe. But this was rare – years passed without any prosecutions.

The sodomite was conceived of as a monstrous creature, a bogey-man. Sodomy was much more than a sexual crime. It was associated with treason, Catholicism, foreign countries – a general rejection of accepted English values.

This is all very different from today. Clearly family, friendship and sexuality differ between cultures and across times, rather than being fixed by human biology. Historians sometimes describe them as “socially constructed”.

This phrase is particularly associated with the French historian and writer Michel Foucault. It’s often assumed that Foucault was the first historian to trace historical changes in sexuality.

Yet Karl Marx’s collaborator Frederick Engels reached similar conclusions over 100 years ago. His book The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State was first published in 1884.

Engels’ book compared different societies – ancient Greece and Rome, and the Iroquois, a Native American people. He argued that what he called “modern individual sex love” did not exist in all historical periods.

He based his work on the earliest anthropological writings. These were cutting edge theories at the time, but they included mistakes so some details of Engels’ book are wrong.

However, his basic assertion is the same as the one made by Foucault – sexuality changes through history.

Engels goes further than this. He shows that changes in the family and sexuality are connected to the wider development of society.

For example, why are women condemned for having many sexual partners in a way that men are not?

Unfaithful

Engels finds that monogamy is historically connected to property. A man with wealth wants his children to inherit it.

If his wife is unfaithful and has a child by another man, that “illegitimate” child will take a share of property from its rightful heirs. Sexual morality results from the wider structure of society.

As the 18th century writer Samuel Johnson put it, “Consider what importance to society the chastity of women is. Upon that all the property in the world depends.

“We hang a thief for stealing a sheep, but the unchastity of a woman transfers sheep and farm and all from the right owner.”

Marxists today follow Engels’ example in linking changing attitudes towards sexuality to wider social developments. This explains the extraordinary changes in people’s sexual lives in the last 400 years.

Consider 17th century London. This was a city in rapid transformation from the medieval, feudal order to the modern, capitalist world. Thousands of young people migrated there from the countryside, escaping the traditional social controls of their villages.

In the city they worked for wages. They had a “private life” outside the working day, which for some included sexual adventures.

We start to find evidence of love and sex between men and between women. By about 1700 a subculture existed, at least for men.

They met at “molly houses”, which existed across London. Men sung and danced, kissed and had sex. Molly houses were not like gay clubs today. Many of the men impersonated women. Ceremonies were performed in which men pretended to give birth.

Some men began to justify their sexual desires. William Brown, a 43 year old furniture maker, told a court in 1726, while on trial for sodomy, that, “I did it because I thought I knew him, and I think there’s no crime in making what use I please of my own body.”

As capitalist society developed, its leading intellectuals rejected attacks on sodomites as part of medieval superstition. The French Revolution of 1789 abolished sodomy laws in 1791. The Napoleonic legal code of 1804 completely legalised sex between men and between women.

Capitalism and the Enlightenment promised a rational and tolerant approach to sexuality. Yet the 19th century was to see quite the opposite.

In England, industrialisation drove millions into immense new cities. Men, women and children all worked in mines and factories.

Economic upheavals sometimes left men at home to mind children while women went out to work. Several families might share a room.

Respectability

Middle class people valued respectability and sexual restraint. In their families men went out to work while women and children stayed at home. Some commentators looked with horror at the lives of the new industrial workers.

They associated open sexuality and a lack of respectability with social disorder in general – leading perhaps to revolution.

They also raised financial worries. The economy would suffer, for example, if many workers continued to die in their teens because of poor food and housing, or lack of care at home.

In the second half of the 19th century such arguments won over the ruling class. They imposed minimal restraints on capitalism, in the hope of ensuring the long-term survival of the system.

The family was a key part of this strategy. Women were excluded from some paid work – such as in mines – and children from most of it. The sick and the old were to be looked after in respectable, working class homes – without costing the state any money.

The Victorian promotion of the family involved attacks on any kind of sexuality outside of this norm.

Prostitution, which was common at this time, faced new legal sanctions. Doctors were obsessed with stopping children from masturbating.

Sex between men and between women also faced attacks. All sex between men was criminalised in Britain in 1885 – up until then only anal sex had been illegal.

A similar law covered all of Germany after 1871. Such laws received massive publicity when they were used to prosecute author Oscar Wilde in 1895.

Behaviours

But they also generated immediate opposition. As early as 1864, a German campaigner called Karl Heinrich Ulrichs opposed such laws.

He argued that men had sex with other men because they were part of a minority of human beings born that way. It was wrong, he argued, to punish them for doing something that was in their nature.

Such arguments were taken up by liberal doctors and psychiatrists. They classified many different sexual behaviours – “the homosexual” was one such category. Some doctors used this new idea in courts, giving evidence that prevented people from being jailed for their sexual behaviour.

Some doctors who wrote about homosexuality also received hundreds of letters from people who felt this idea explained their lives.

In this way the idea and the reality of homosexuality developed – first among middle class people with access to medical writings, then among workers as well. Heterosexuals and bisexuals were defined later.

How does this account relate to today’s world?

The family continues to be extremely important to capitalist society. Governments save billions of pounds each year because children, sick and elderly people are looked after for free within the family.

The family is also important ideologically – New Labour is just as keen on respectable “hard-working families” as its Victorian forebears.

But there have also been huge changes in the last 40 years. Women and LGBT people have fought for liberation, and made significant gains.

Only a few right wingers now hold the Victorian view that open sexuality always undermines the family.

Now the dominant idea is that sex should underpin the loving relationships on which families are based.

Sex, gay or straight, has become to some extent acceptable. LGBT people have gained formal legal equality, including civil partnerships.

Sex has entered the mainstream – pornography is big business, and “raunch” sells everything from magazines to cars.

But this is a limited and contradictory advance. Raunch is a money-making caricature of real sex between real human beings.

Many LGBT people don’t want to make the uphill struggle towards a “respectable” family life, which is always defined by Victorian norms.

And LGBT people continue to be oppressed – facing violence, abuse, bullying in school and under-representation in the media.

Nor is there any guarantee that things will continue to improve.

We need to continue fighting for LGBT freedom and a truly liberated sexuality.

We need a society where people can decide how they want to live – not struggle to hold a family together or else feel they are a failure.

Because LGBT oppression originates from capitalist society as a whole, it can only be eliminated by destroying capitalism. The links described by Engels over 100 years ago still exist today.



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 the los angeles times
 tina susman




 the los angeles times
 tina susman

Posted at 07:06 am by thecommonills
 

And the counting of ballots continues

And the counting of ballots continues

"If the results aren't acceptable, then we'll bring back the old days. We will use rifles again, and we will eliminate the Islamic Party." That's one time "Awakening" Council leader Sheik Hammid al-Hayes. Clearly all those years where the US tax payers footed the bill for him and his followers ($300 per person every month) did not have a requirement that you also take a few civics lesson in exchange for your monthly stipend. We get our way, the sheik appears to say, or out come the bullets and the guns.

He's quoted in Alissa J. Rubin and Steven Lee Myers' "As Votes Are Tallied, Former Iraqi Leader Re-emerges as Rival to Current One" (New York Times). The bulk of the article focuses on the vote counting -- which some say won't be completed until Saturday or Sunday though the paper says it will likely be Friday -- and how CIA asset Ayad Allawi has, if results hold, done very well in Salahuddin Province ("setting himself up as a potential rival to Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki" -- uh, I believe he's spent the last two years plus public setting up that rivalry). Allawi opposed Paul Bremer's institution of the White House okayed de-Baathification process (preventing members of the Baath party from holding positions in the puppet government)and he's seen as a seer as a result by many quoted in the article. (The world must be full of seers -- and Cassandras -- because a whole lot of us said de-Baathification would only increase the problems.) Over in Al Anbar Province, things aren't as cozy. That's where the sheik is among many threatening violence if the Iraqi Islamic Party comes out ahead in the elections.

In fairness to Allawi, whatever his other (many faults), he is a secularist. That comes through in the article but there seems to be an effort to paint al-Maliki as such in multiple articles recently. Secularists do not outlaw a New Year's Eve Party. Secularists do not then try to soften it by saying that you can gather at your home, but NO music. That wasn't about safety and his modifications to the order made that very clear. al-Maliki is not a secularist. His minions -- especially the Ministry of the Interior -- led the waves of ethnic 'cleansing' in Baghdad.

The Los Angeles Times has really been a hot streak of late and continues it this morning. Ned Parker, Caesar Ahmed and Saif Hameed's "Absent election results, Iraq parties stake claims" grasps what is taking place currently in Iraq: People are spinning the unofficial and incomplete results. From the article:

In the absence of results in Iraq, rumors swirl and parties, full of bluster and occasional bile, make competing claims of triumph as they grasp for victory in a land where politics can be a blood sport.
Faraj Haidari, head of the High Independent Electoral Commission, said on the U.S.-funded Al Hurra satellite news channel Tuesday that he did not expect a preliminary tally before Thursday afternoon at the earliest; some officials have said it could even be Friday. That hasn't stopped political leaders from declaring victory.
Anbar province's senior political leaders sounded a bit like action movie parodies as rumors spread that the Iraqi Islamic Party had won 43% of the provincial council seats.
The head of one of the most popular Sunni Arab tribal factions, Sheik Ahmed Buzaigh abu Risha, threatened to turn his guns on the electoral commission. "If the percentage is true, then we will transfer our entity from a political to a military one, to fight the Islamic Party and the commission," he warned.

Another sheik threatening violence. And that's how you get 'action.' Remember Florida? Remember the 'Florida' voters (shipped in non-residents of the state there to cause havoc) banging on the glass walls during the recounts? Helped shut down the recounts (which was the GOP plan). All these sheiks threatening violence? The thing to do is not reward their thuggish behavior but instead they're getting the action they want. From Ernesto Londono's "Iraq Probes Possible Voter Fraud" (Washington Post):

The head of Iraq's electoral commission said Tuesday that it is investigating "serious" allegations of electoral fraud in Anbar province that, if corroborated, could alter the outcome of Saturday's election, providing the clearest indication yet that voting irregularities occurred during provincial balloting.
A coalition of parties that competed against the Iraqi Islamic Party in Anbar submitted complaints that the commission considers grave, commission chief Faraj al-Haidari said. "We will deal with it seriously because it might change the result of the election in this province," he said.
As tensions sparked by the allegations of electoral fraud spread through Ramadi, the provincial capital, Iraqi law enforcement officials and U.S. Marines braced Tuesday for a possible outbreak of violence.

So the same thugs the US paid off so they'd stop attacking US military personnel and equipment -- as US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker and Gen David Petraeus told Congress repeatedly last April -- scream and whine and moan about the potential results and everyone rushes to make the big babies feel better. They whine and make threats and that gets a reaction from the elections commission chair? The same pompous ass who declared Sunday, "It's not our fault that some people couldn't vote because they are lazy, because they didn't bother to ask where they should vote"? Well apparently "lazy" is mitigated when you threaten violence so possibly all those who were not allowed to vote, who were repeatedly turned away at polling stations should start threatening to 'set it off' and maybe the elections commission chair would suddenly take an interest in their issues?

If you're not getting how disgusting it is, check out Trenton Daniel and Mahdi al Dulaymi's "Iraq voter turnout lower than expected in provincial vote" (McClatchy Newspapers) and grasp that the commission is making these insulting remarks while they're rushing to appease the thugs:


Some have hailed early reports on Iraq's provincial elections as evidence of a step forward in the country's halting advance to democratic rule after six years of bloodshed. Thousands of Iraqis, however, couldn't vote because their names were missing from registration lists; in Hawsa, just west of Baghdad, thousands demonstrated over their exclusion.
Too many voters didn't find their names on voter rolls, and, with a vehicle ban to prevent suicide bombers, many voters had to walk miles from their homes to get to their polling places, party officials said. The voting problems threaten to unleash violence in Anbar.
Election officials said that they have no plans to address the grievances, saying that displaced voters missed their opportunity to reregister.
"We spent 45 days advertising on TV, radio, and newspapers asking to make any chances, especially for displaced people," said Mohammed Saeed al Amjed, an IHEC spokesman. "The period was more than enough for the families to check or register their names, displaced or not."

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the new york times
alissa j. rubin
steven lee myers
the los angeles times
ned parker




mcclatchy newspapers





thomas friedman is a great man





oh boy it never ends

Posted at 07:04 am by thecommonills
 

Tuesday, February 03, 2009
Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Tuesday, February 3, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, peace actions are scheduled to take place in the US, the US rushes to release Iraqi prisoners, more stories emerge on the provincial elections, and more.
 
Starting with an action that begins this week in the US.  Military Families Speak Out explains:
 
Come to Washington February 6-9 to demand "The Change WE Need"  
President Elect Obama opposed the war in Iraq before it started, calling it a "dumb war."  But he and his advisors have also said that they plan to spread the return of combat troops from that "dumb war" out over sixteen months and to keep tens of thousands of other troops on the ground in Iraq indefinitely.     
So from February 6-9, MFSO will be traveling to Washgton to bring the new President and new Congress the message that it is long past time to bring all our troops home from Iraq.  The four days of events will include:
* A teach-in featuring the voices of military families, veterans, and Iraqis, explaining the need for an immediate and complete end to the war in Iraq -- and the human impacts of continuing the occupation.  Friday, February 6 from Noon - 3:00 p.m. at Mott House, 122 Maryland Avenue.   
* A solemn procession from Arlington National Cemetary to the White House beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 7.  Meet at the front gate of the cemetery right outside the exit of the Arlington Metro stop.  Please arrive early.
* A "Meet and Greet" and Legislative Briefing from 3:00 - 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, February 8 at the Mariott Metro Center.   
* Lobbying members of Congress to end the war in Iraq.  Meet in the cafeteria of the Rayburn House Office Building at 9:00 a.m. Monday, February 9.
 
Meanwhile A.N.S.W.E.R. explains:
 
We are organizing a Mass March on the Pentagon on Saturday, March 21, and it is important that you and your family, friends, co-workers and fellow students put on your marching shoes that day.  People are coming from all over the country.  Simultaneous demonstrations are taking place in San Francisco and Los Angeles.   
Why are we still marching even after the war criminal George W. Bush has left office?  Because the people must speak out for what is right.  More than 1 million Iraqis have died and tens of thousands of U.S. troops have been wounded or killed.   
The Iraq and Afghanistan war will drag on for years unless we act now.  The cost in lives and resources is criminal regardless of whether the Democrats or Republicans are in charge of the government. 
[. . .]
If Bush's war and occupation of Iraq was an illegal action of aggression -- and it was -- how can the new government say that it can only gradually end the war over a number of years?  The Iraqis don't want foreign military forces running their country.  No one would! 
The Pentagon has employed 200,000 foreign contractors (mercenaries) and 150,000 U.S. troops to maintain the occupation of Iraq.  They have no right to be there.  A few thousand are being brought out of Iraq only to be redeployed to occupy Afghanistan, and the fools in the media proclaim "the war is winding down."  That is not true.   
President Obama decided to keep the Pentagon just as it was under Bush.  He even selected Bush appointee Robert Gates to keep his position as chief of the Pentagon.  Gates announced that the new administration would double the number of troops sent to Afghanistan.  That is certainly not the "change" most people though was coming following the end of Bush's  tenure.   
 
Meanwhile United for Peace and Justice is reportedly planning something.  Soon.  Any day now.  If not action, maybe a series of glossy pin-up photos of Barack suitable for framing in the best fan-worshipping, Tiger Beat manner.  Remember, United for Peace and Justice may be sleeping on the job but they are dreaming -- very moist and wet dreams.  Someone change the sheets already.   Cindy Sheehan (World Can't Wait) calls it like it is:

Many anti-war activists are concentrated on insuring that Obama fulfills his campaign promises to withdraw "combat" troops from Iraq without having the integrity to demand complete withdrawal of all troops and a return to total sovereignty of the country to the people of Iraq, and are not questioning Obama's determination to double troop strength to Afghanistan.I think the US MIC empire needs to be destroyed, but I would prefer that we incorporate a voluntary reduction of empire, before the weight of The Empire® collapses like a house of cards on us; or on the innocents of Afghanistan.   
 
In Iraq, Nouri al-Maliki demonstrates  a puppet can be taught a few tricks.  Among them, how to seize control of the daily news cycle.  Sinan Salaheddin (AP) repeats what al-Maliki's government is saying -- repeats instead of reporting.   Samira Ahmed Jassim has confessed! There's a video of the woman allegedly also known as Umm al-Mumineen ("the mother of all believers") stating she is the one who has recruited over "80 female suicide bombers". The first sentence tells you she "has been arrested." You have to wade through many paragraphs to discover she was arrested January 21st. So the video confession is all the more doubtful and may have been produced under torture. (And bruises hide so much better when you're wearing "an all-ecompassing black Islamic robe".) If al-Mumineen is the or a recruiter, it really makes little difference. She's not a hypnotist -- if she is, that's the only allegation AP's forgotten to present as fact. At best, she provided an avenue to those already prepared to seek violence. It goes to the gender stereotypes of women to believe that they had to be 'corrupted.' The violent response on the part of some Iraqi women is a perfectly natural response to what they are living under. ("Natural" is not the same as "legal." But we're not addressing that. We are continuing to address the pathologizing of one gender.)  Jomana Karadsheh (CNN) manages to cover the same government issued spin but manages to lower the frentic tabloid nature.  But it's only Deborah Haynes (Times of London) who can use the term "suspect" in the first sentence of a report?  Why is it only Haynes can refer to the DVD played at the press conference as an "apparent confession"?
 
To be clear, Haynes has done her job as a journalist.  In any country, it is not the job of the press to take a government's claims and present them as fact.  In a country where justice is a joke, where human rights organizations and the United Nations have documented reports of tortured confessions -- including from female prisoners -- a press that simply repeats claims of the government as fact isn't offering news.  They are offering tabloid-style entertainment.  Haynes also notes, "At least 36 female suicide bombers attempted or successfully carried out 32 suicide attacks last year, compared with eight in 2007, according to US military data."  As we've noted before, there are many, many more male 'suicide bombers' than female.  But there's something about when it's a woman that tends to make the press minds go all mushy. Maybe it's a sexual response (akin to the way some are turned up by a woman holding a gun -- on screen, in photos or in real life) or maybe it's panic that a woman would think of death.  Oh goodness, it's also troubling and frightening -- apparently. 
 
It's not impossible that Samira Ahmed Jassim has recruited women to be bombers and it's not impossible that she hasn't.  She stands accused, she's not been tried.  And those with any short term memory at all will remember last month when Iraqi officials told the press someone had expressed regret and then his family finally got to see him and, turns out, he didn't say what the Iraqi officials were telling the press.  Whether Samira Ahmed Jassim is a recruiter for female bombers or not, the bombings will continue.   And while CNN may think acknowledging that women in Iraq have "always" been part of the resistance by "helping feed militants, hiding them in their homes and helping to sneak weapons around the country," the women have been far more active.  And note how passive that last phrase is.  Women didn't sneak weapons, according to CNN, they helped to. 
 
If Nouri's smart, he'll continue to play the press via women since he has so many willing cohorts in the press.  Willing cohorts in the press?  File it under "Not since Frank Pitcairn so desperately attacked the Trotskyites out of his love for Stalin has a professional journalist so disgraced himself,"  Patrick Cockburn found himself a true love: Nouri.  At the Independent of London, Patrick writes the kind of garbage that his own father (writing under the psuedonym Frank Pitcaim) would hold his nose at.  Patrick write a valentine to Nouri and Nouri's amazing powers and . . .  Patrick leaves out the part that he was out of Iraq for most of last month as he covered the assault on Gaza.  Patty's been playing pocket pool around Nouri for months now and let's hope he's racking up an impressive score with that because he's leaving his journalist reputation in tatters. 
 
Patty's thrilled with Nouri's awesome election 'power.' In the real world, Gina Chon (Wall St. Journal's Baghdad Life) noted that while driving through Sadr City on Saturday (the day provincial elections were held in 14 of Iraq's 18 provinces) appeared to have far fewer people on the streets "than other parts of the city" (Baghdad).  The paper's Jafar Jani reports, "Um Ali, 56, took her grandsons to the polling station on Saturday so they could dip their fingers in ink, which shows that people had voted, even though they were too young to cast a ballot. . . . Um Ali said she wanted her grandsons to remember this moment and feel the joy of voting in a free election."  McClatchy Newspapers' Iraqi correspondents surveyed West Baghdad on election day where 25-year-old Mohammed Allawi stated, "What optimism?? We are an occupied country.  I am voting only so that my vote will not be stolen by the corrupt people who are willing to do anything to remain firm on their seats.  But it seems I am not even considered an Iraqi citizen -- I can't find my name anywhere -- and my family has been in Ameriyah nearly forty hears."  Two women explain, "We couldn't vote!  We couldn't find our names.  We have been to two centres, and aim to go on looking until we find them or are too tired to go on."  Over and over, voices from West Baghdad reveal that they had trouble voting.  Hmm.  Could the puppet have learned from Florida 2000?  Could the puppet, knowing west Baghdad was always anti-Maliki, have pulled off purging voter rolls?  Who knows?  But with low voter turnout it's amazing that so many Iraqis -- throughout the country -- repeatedly tell that they had to visit more than one polling station over and over.  What -- however it happens -- appears to be a very serious problem results in this 'response' from election commission chair Faraj al-Haidari, "It's not our fault that some people couldn't vote because they are lazy, because they didn't bother to ask where they should vote."  The voters are lazy.  That's the problem.  Voters who went from polling station to polling station -- mainly on foot. They're lazy.  That's the problem.  That's what the story's going to be?
 
Apparently so -- if Sam Dagher and Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) are going to continue to suffer from Patrick Cockburn Disease. The two attempt to hail Basra as a victory for Nouri -- who was not running in the elections.  Despite the fact that Basra had an incredibly low turnout, they see the vote as an endorsement of Nouri.  The non-participation rate reads like a rejection of the so-called government on every level. And if you lived in Basra when it was under assault (March 2008) maybe you'd take the attitude of "I'm not voting" as well? Your local government didn't protect you when al-Maliki and thugs rolled into town. One level of government assaulted you and the other stood by. Why bother to vote?  Based on the preliminary turnout, what can be argued about Basra can be argued about the bulk of Iraq which is why turnout was so low. 26% more registered voters voted in 2005 than voted on Saturday.   Dahger and Myers declare, "In choosing Mr. Maliki, many in the south seemed willing to sacrifice more local considerations like patronage." A) Basra was assaulted and the local government did nothing to protect it. Yes, you will find some people who support the assault -- and you can even quote him as the paper does -- but the bulk of the people did not approve (as was obvious at the time and is obvious in the voter turnout). That's why they stayed home. As for 'patronage,' al-Maliki went around the country promising everything or are we supposed to forget his multiple attempts at bribery via promises regarding local services all the way up to 'The US is leaving Iraq in less than 16 months! It is so, it is true! Because I, al-Maliki, say it!'? al-Maliki didn't play the patronage game? Worse for the two reporters, Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) filed today:


The prime minister has sought to boost his party, which favors a strong central government, over another Shiite faction, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, which supports a semiautonomous Shiite Muslim region in the south. 
Maliki has named Issawi to head a local tribal body funded by his office, and appointed one of the sheik's sons to a job in Baghdad. He has summoned Issawi to conferences in the capital city, where he has listened to his ideas for the nation's future. Observers say that if Maliki wins a large share of provincial council seats in the oil-rich southern provinces, it is in large part because of his diligent wooing of men like Issawi.   

al-Maliki attempted that in every province. Note the last observation "Observers say that if Maliki wins a large share of provincial council seats in the oil-rich southern provinces, it is in large part because of his diligent wooing of men like Issawi." Basra recently attempted to become it's own federation, like the KRG in the north. The effort failed. Let's note CNN's first sentence when reporting on that, "A drive to boost the political and economic power of Iraq's oil-rich southern province of Basra has failed, Iraqi election officials said Wednesday." Oil-rich? Check. Southern province? Check. Ned Parker one more time, "Observers say that if Maliki wins a large share of provincial council seats in the oil-rich southern provinces, it is in large part because of his diligent wooing of men like Issawi."
 
The results are still not final and already there's a concentrated effort to spin the elections results in non-candidate Nouri's favor.  Reality, as Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) observes, "Voter turnout in Iraq's provincial elections Saturday was the lowest in the nation's short history as a new democracy despite a relative calm across the nation. Only about 7.5 million of more than 14 million registered voters went to the polls. Interviews suggest that the low voter turnout also is an indication of Iraqi disenchantment with a democracy that, so far, has brought them very little."
 
Meanwhile there is news on the Iraqi prisoner front.  AFP reports that 70 Iraqis imprisoned by the US military were released today and that the US military claims they will begin releasing approximately "50 a day."  That would mean 1,500 a month and, at the end of October, Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) noted the US had 17,000 Iraqis imprisoned.  In December, John Catalinotto (Workers World) estimated the US had 50,000 Iraqi prisoners in custody?  Regardless of the number, they were all supposed to be released or turned over to the Iraqis on January 1st per the treaty masquerading as a Status Of Forces Agreement.  That treaty went into effect January 1st.  It is February 3rd when this rush measure suddenly takes place. At 1,500 a month -- whether the total is 17,000 or 50,000 -- it's going to take some time for the US to release the prisoners -- a task they were supposed to have completed no later than January 1, 2009.  Remember that the next time someone starts insisting, "Well the SOFA says . . ."
 
Turning to some of today's reported violence . . .
 
Bombings?
 
Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports two Baquba roadside bombings in a ten minute span that wounded five people, 1 bomber blew himself up in Kirkuk, a Mosul roadside bombing left four people inured, and, dropping back to last night, a Kirkuk mortar attack but the mortar proved to be inert and there were no reported injuried.  Reuters notes six were wounded in the two Baquba roadside bombings and a Kirkuk roadside bombing that left two people injured.
 
Corpses?
 
Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 corpse discovered in Mosul.  Iraq Body Count notes two corpses were discovered yesterday in Makhmour. [Note: Iraq Body Count has a slideshow presentation online here.]
 
 
Meanwhile the Green Party has weighed in on the healthcare debate (this is a Green issue, they've weighed in many times already but this is the first since the presidential inauguration):
 
President Obama has a choice -- he can either work for universal health care or he can satisfy the demands of insurance industry lobbies for continued private profit, said Green Party leaders today.

Greens, in demanding a Single-Payer national health care program (also called Medicare For All), said that there was no possibility of guaranteed quality health care for every American under a market-based system. Rep. John Conyers' (D-Mich.) bill for Single-Payer (HR 676,
http://thomas.loc.gov/home/gpoxmlc110/h676_ih.xml) has strong Green Party support, although many Greens also hope to see complementary medicine brought under the Single-Payer umbrella.

"President Obama needs to follow his own campaign rhetoric and listen to the American people. In many of his own town hall meetings, the demand for Single-Payer has been so strong that [Secretary of Health and Human Services] Tom Daschle has asked to meet with Single-Payer groups. Single-Payer will make health care a human right -- one more important than the 'right' of insurance companies to make a profit off our need for health care," said said Mark Dunlea, New York Green, member of the Hunger Action Network of New York State, and author of "Can Incrementalism Be the Path to Universal Health Care?" (
http://www.hungeractionnys.org/increment.html)

Green Party leaders expressed special support for pro-Single-Payer organizations and coalitions that have shifted into high gear under the new presidential administration, including the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care, Healthcare-NOW, California Nurses Association, and Physicians for a National Health Program.

"President Obama's plan to have all medical records computerized within five years has made Single-Payer even more urgent. The plan will create an enormous risk for patients' privacy and security, as private health insurers try to weaken privacy safeguards and gain access to records in an effort to exclude people from coverage, or make coverage more expensive for clients they consider high-risk. HMOs and insurance firms make their profits by cherry-picking patients who are less costly to insure and by limiting treatment for those with coverage, so they use medical records to determine who will be a financial risk. The only way to guarantee both protection from predatory corporations and access to health care for all Americans is to enact a Single-Payer program," said Jill Bussiere, co-chair of the Green Party of the United States.

Greens have argued that enactment of a Single-Payer program would boost the ailing US economy and provide relief for businesses large and small, since it would cancel the high expense and administrative burden of employer-based health care benefits (
http://www.gp.org/press/pr-national.php?ID=158). Single-Payer would lower the cost of health care for all middle- and low-income Americans, since the amount of taxes necessary to sustain Single-Payer would be far less than the cost of private coverage and medical fees. No American will go bankrupt because of a medical emergency in a Single-Payer system.

President Obama, despite supporting Single-Payer earlier in his political career, now favors a health care plan that would maintain private insurance industry control over Americans' health care. Profit-making insurance, HMO, and pharmaceutical lobbies have a grip on most Democratic and Republican members of Congress because of campaign contributions and the influence of lobbyists.

Montana Senator Max Baucus, chair of the Senate Finance Committee, wants the Single-Payer option "off the table" in the discussion on health care reform and, along with other Democrats, has proposed a market-based plan that would achieve universal coverage by requiring Americans who lack health coverage to purchase insurance from a private company.

"There will be no meaningful improvement in our nation's health care system or any chance of universal care until Single-Payer is enacted and profit-making insurance companies no longer decree who gets care and what kind of care," said Jody Grage, treasurer of the Green Party of the United States. "Any 'mandate' reform plan that leaves private insurers in charge will either result in inadequate care or in huge taxpayer-funded subsidies to cover the loss of profits for HMOs and insurance companies compelled to cover people these companies would otherwise exclude. Single-Payer will cover all Americans regardless of age, income, or prior medical condition, and by eliminating the need for private insurers and the high profit rate they demand."

"Even state based Single-Payer initiatives are being undermined by the president's insurance-based proposal. Here in Pennsylvania we have a strong bill, with the funding included and a governor who has agreed to sign the legislation if passed (
http://www.healthcare4allpa.org). Yet the Healthcare for All Now campaign, which supports the Obama plan, is trying to give the illusion of change, while maintaining the inefficient, exploitative insurance model. It amounts to a waste of tax dollars to provide more government money to insurance companies," said Carl Romanelli, 2006 Pennsyvlania Green candidate for the US Senate.

Read "An International Perspective on Health Care Reform" by Connecticut Green Party member John R. Battista, MD (http://www.gp.org/first100/?p=119), published on the Green Party's web site as part of "The First 100 Days: What Would a Green Administration Look Like?" (http://www.gp.org/first100)

For a comparison of mandate plans and Single-Payer , see "Talking Points: Why the mandate plans won't work, and why Single-Payer 'Medicare for All' is what we need" by Len Rodberg, PhD, published by Physicians for a National Health Program (
http://www.pnhp.org/news/2008/december/talking_points_why_.php).

Green Party information page on Single-Payer:
http://www.gp.org/organize/sicko.html
 
 
One of the first underreported acts of President Obama was to sign an order continuing the drone airstrikes, resulting in at least 22 killed so far.  For the dead children of Afghanistan or Pakistan or Gaza, it doesn't matter to their parents if the bomb was dropped by Bush or Obama or the client state they support.  And President Obama has made it clear that the bombs will continue to drop; it is up to us--the people of the United States--to stop them.  That's why it was on my birthday, in front of the Pentagon in 2007, that I declared my independence from every bomb dropped, every child killed, every veteran maimed in the name of U.S. wars.  I said it, and I meant it, and I knew I was going to have to do something I'd never done before if I was ever going to have something I'd never had before.  So I left the Democratic Party.    
I don't regret my decision one minute.  I draw my strength from Dr. King, who in his own way, did the same thing when he refused to segregate his moral concerns.   
My neighborhood in Los Angeles, Watts and South Central, is already a police state.  Tonight, 25 to 30 young black men, standing handcuffed, outside the barber shop.  Every night, routine dehumanization is carried out in black and brown neighborhoods by LAPD.  I see it.  I never miss it.  It's all around me.              
Oscar Grant murdered in cold blood by law enforcement.  Robert Tolan, shot in cold blood by law enforcement, for driving his father's car, mistaken for stolen.
Filiberto Ojeda Rios assassinated by the U.S. government; I met his wife and heard the entire story of what happened as he was shot by the FBI and then bled to death.
Innocent black and brown and poor white men on death row.  How many Troy Davises and Mumia Abu Jamals will we allow to exist in our country?
Native Americans trying to survive despite genocide and ethnic cleansing, struggle against drug and alcohol abuse and poverty, and try to keep their culture alive.
And yet the likes of Harry Reid, Dick Durbin, Nancy Pelosi, and now Barack Obama say nothing about the pain I see on the mean streets and reservations across our country, and the miscarriages of justice that are its regular feature, but they allow Bush and company to get away with the highest of crimes, involving millions of deaths.

 

Posted at 03:13 pm by thecommonills
 

Alegre goes to her first feminist sell-out conference

Alegre goes to her first feminist sell-out conference

and Riverdaughter plays the fool.

Not in the mood for garbage. And not surprised by all the e-mails coming in complaining about Alegre and Riverdaughter.

First, the conference is garbage and it's a damn shame some of the participants don't have a little more knowledge.

Alegre plays the fool here. Alegre, some of the same women duping you pulled that little stunt in 1976 at the DNC convention. Know your history or you're doomed to repeat failure.

Knowing your history includes knowing your recent history. Riverdaughter means what by this:

Kim Gandy from NOW will be there. Ooohh, to be a fly on that wall. Go get'em, Alegre! Someone needs to ask these women what they got for their endorsement of Obama when a woman was running who would have met all of their needs. And if the answer was they were afraid she couldn’t win, then they need to have their feminism credentials stripped.

?????

Since Riverdaughter championed Hillary and did little for Cynthia McKinney (maybe a little more for Sarah Palin, but Palin -- like Rosa Clemente -- was running for v.p.), it most likely means that Hillary was the "woman [who] was running who would have met all of their needs". Operating under that belief, the question becomes, "Why the hell are you on Kim Gandy's case?"

Seriously. Call out Kim for many things -- she deserves to be called out for many things (and I know like and Kim) -- but know what the hell you're writing about.

Kim Gandy personally endorsed Hillary. Not only did Kim but so did NOW Pac. Eleanor Smeal? She endorsed Hillary as well. Gloria (not at the conference but another example of a woman who's been slammed for not endorsing Hillary in recent weeks) endorsed Hillary.

By all means hold Kim, et al, accountable for not calling out the sexism aimed at Sarah Palin and for frequently launching their own sexist attacks but know the public record: Kim Gandy endorsed Hillary. Kim Gandy campaigned for Hillary. During the most recent presidential primary, Kim Gandy supported Hillary.

The fact that someone could not know that indicates that their feminism is more 'topical' and than reality based and that would certainly explain why, with all the vast problems facing women in this country and around the world, certain 'feminist' bloggers can't cover any of the topics that matter beyond who posed in their underwear and is somone gaining weight?

'Topical' awareness may also explain this comment:


riverdaughter, on February 3rd, 2009 at 6:33 am Said:

I realize it’s kind of late to join in here but what was misogynistic about that analogy? The Wizard of Oz is about a mythical kingdom ruled by powerful women and one weak man who pretends to have power. The protagonist is also female.
If the story was all about females, and not a single male character, we would have just said that the battle between Glinda and the Wicked Witch of the West was just the typical battle between good and evil. And what’s wrong with that? It’s part of the collective Jungian archetye landscape.
Well, anyway, that’s the way I read it. I don’t think the people making this remark meant it in any other way. I guess they could have said Dumbledore vs Voldemort but it wouldn’t have been more of a forced analogy.

No, it is never acceptable for a PIG to call a woman a "witch" and it's a damn shame that Riverdaughter -- and the woman who wrote the post Riverdaughter's commenting on -- are so damn ignorant of Scott Horton's work or Haper's magazine. Find the female blogger at Harper's? She does not exist. Find the women regularly published by the magazine? She does not exist. Count the number of women listed on the masthead. By any measure -- topics, writers, etc. -- Harper's is one of the most sexist left magazines today. Long after the election, the publisher was STILL attacking Hillary in his Providence Journal columns. Considering the magazine's opinion of her, a blog post comparing Hillary to a witch -- good witch or bad witch -- is not ever going to be a good thing.


Explanation's for Riverdaughter's attack on undocumented workers? There is none and that's the sort of the right-wing strand running through PUMA that leads so many to see them as nothing but Republicans.

Alegre tells you of the conference:

[Kim] Gandy brought up the whole cock-up (not her words - mine) with the stimulus bill and Medicaid funding last week, and tried to explain in more detail what happened. So I saw that as the perfect opportunity to ask her (and everyone else) how we work with the new (and friendlier) administration but STILL challenge them when they fall short or let us down (or sell us out - though I didn't exactly say that bit). I noted that the language would still be in the package if it hadn't been for the request from the White House, and Henry Waxman cutting the language from the House bill in committee. Gandy went to Waxman and Pelosi's defense and said they couldn't exactly tell the WH to go to hell (my words - not hers) and that Pelosi's very committed to getting this passed as a bill in its own right. The bloggers on the panel though were very clear in their feelings about what happened - not happy.

The discussion got rolling and I stopped taking notes for the most part, but the main take-away is that the bloggers wanted the advocacy groups to use us as the bad cops. We can say things that NOW can't but if they get talking points to writers like us, we can push the envelope (or that all-important Overton Window). Now I know the advocacy groups try like hell to control the message, but as we get to know each other and trust that we're going to do right by one another, we may be able to get past that reluctance - at least that's my hope. As long as bloggers make it clear that we're speaking only for ourselves and that we're not connected with the groups working the phones and walking the halls on Capitol Hill, this might work.

"We can say things that NOW can't"? Excuse me? That's a bunch of bulls**t. The National Organization for Women was created to say just those things. The idea that they need someone to hide behind is crap. They are not some government source needing a journalist to feed info too. (NOW as Deep Throat? Who would ever have guessed!)

To suggest otherwise is to lie or be lied to.

What's actually going down was documented by Veronica Geng in "Requiem for the women's movement" (Harper's magazine, November 1976). The same group (I'm not referring to Riverdaughter or Alegre) are again attempting to tap down on feminist dissent. 1976 was actually damaging. 1972 left scars (DNC conventions), but 1976 left damage and those who cannot grasp why a vibrant movement shut down in so many ways (feminism never dies, even when its own leaders try to kill it) need to study what went down in 1976. The same self-appointed 'leaders' wanted women to know that they could only expect so much. The same message the b.s. crowd is again handing out today. Again, Veronica Geng charted all of this decades ago.

Knowledge is power.

Knowledge includes never praising -- pay attention, Alegre -- Ellie Smeal as a blogger. Ms. magazine has no online presence because of Ellie. Shegot rid of Christine and then she was going to be the big blogger. But blogging was hard and Ellie lost interest quickly. (Carol Leaf also briefly blogged following Ms. purging of Christine Cupaiuolo.) Ms. has no online presence. It once had message boards. It stopped those. And now Alegre wants to show up (either not knowing this history or ignoring it) and claim that maybe female bloggers can do the heavy lifting for NOW and the Feminist Majority Foundation?

Nonsense. They don't want to do the work and they don't want women leading the charge. It's very much top and down. If you doubt it, grasp that nothing prevents Kim from offering message boards at NOW.

We're supposed to be as taken as Alegre is and think, "Oh, these poor feminist leaders like Ellie and Kim. Having to go to DC and do that. How awful." Buy a damn clue. There's no place they'd rather be. You have a Democrat in the White House. DC is a party town. They get to feel important and special.

Ms. Pathetic

What there lies do is prove that Barack should never have made the cover of Ms. If Barack truly is a feminist (he's not), then NOW and Feminist Majority Foundation should be able to spend less time in DC and more time with the grassroots. Think about it, after 8 years of Bush, at last they can work with their membership because feminist Barack's in the Oval Office and we can all breathe a little easier, at least long enough for 'leadership' to reconnect with the base, right?

Please, it's bulls**t.

And Alegre bought into it.

Read the nonsense and it's 'Oh, they took our questions. Oh, they replied.' You're being bought off with access, buy a damn clue. Alegre writes, "The internet's tailor made for women - it allows us to find each other and share ideas without prejudice. Apparently, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony would have loved blogging for the freedom it allows women in this exchange of ideas and the advocacy it helps facilitate." If true (and I'd argue it is), that's only more reason for NOW and the Feminist Majority Foundation (Ms. magazine in most people's eyes) to have an online presence. They have none.

Alegre writes (without thinking -- she's on autopilot), "Glennda Testone works with the Women's Media Center and spoke about their training program for progressive women's voices. It helps women become spokespeople and get more women's voices out there into the mix by giving them the tools, practice, and confidence they need to go before the media and get their point across effectively and forcefully. It takes women's involvement to a whole new level. We can't ignore the traditional media - but we have got to use the new outlets as they emerge and develop." "Into the mix"? "More women's voices"? Into the mix?

So they can say the same exact damn thing? That's what (Democratic) Women's Media Center promotes and lives by. Only when a number of us repeatedly called them out on their silence regarding Cynthia McKinney's campaign (yes, "Women's" Media Center ignored Cynthia's run) loudly and repeatedly did they manage to write about Cynthia right before the election. Ignored her over and over and over and over while filing one article after another on Barack.

So why do we need more voices at WMC if they're all going to say the exact same thing? We don't. Greens are part of the left and a so-called 'progressive' outlet for women should damn well recognize that and should damn well follow the only all-women ticket in the presidential race -- Cynthia and Rosa -- and do so without prompting.

The conference was garbage on the 'top'. They want to control and that's what the conference was about for NOW and Feminist Majority Foundation and others. And shame on any woman -- after all that went down in 2008 and the stabs in the backs from 'leaders' -- who allows her space online to become a way for Kim Gandy and crew to funnel talking points they're too pathetic and chicken to voice themselves.

It's not just the 'leaders' that need to grow the hell up, it's some of the ones in the ranks as well. (And crack a book while you're at it.)

The 'leaders' that showed did so out of fear of New Agenda and other emerging organizations. They were present in an attempt to co-op. The lack of awareness on that -- the refusal to even entertain it as a possibility -- goes a long way towards explaining why we keep re-inventing the wheel, generation after generation.

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. (And this was a dictated entry.)












Posted at 09:07 am by thecommonills
 

The human toll in Iraq?

The human toll in Iraq?

We are now able to estimate the number of Iraqis who have died in the war instigated by the Bush administration. Looking at the empirical evidence of Bush's war legacy will put his claims of victory in perspective. Of course, even by his standards -- "stability" -- the jury is out. Most independent analysts would say it's too soon to judge the political outcome. Nearly six years after the invasion, the country remains riven by sectarian politics and major unresolved issues, like the status of Kirkuk.
We have a better grasp of the human costs of the war. For example, the United Nations estimates that there are about 4.5 million displaced Iraqis -- more than half of them refugees -- or about one in every six citizens. Only 5 percent have chosen to return to their homes over the past year, a period of reduced violence from the high levels of 2005-07. The availability of healthcare, clean water, functioning schools, jobs and so forth remains elusive. According to Unicef, many provinces report that less than 40 percent of households have access to clean water. More than 40 percent of children in Basra, and more than 70 percent in Baghdad, cannot attend school.


The above is from John Tirman's "Iraq's Shocking Human Toll: About 1 Million Killed, 4.5 Million Displaced, 1-2 Million Widows, 5 Million Orphans" (The Nation via Information Clearing House)

Oh, that is funny. First off, the toll exceeded one million some time ago so Tirman might want to finger point at himself. But the idea that anyone's going to be honest about the numbers of Iraqis who have died? Where's Tirman expecting that to come from?

Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

That's Just Foreign Policy above, our alleged 'friend' in the battle to end the illegal war. And that's today's count and has been the count, 1,307,319, since at least January 4th. No Iraqis have died in over 30 days? Honesty? No. Covering and lying because ending the illegal war does not matter but covering Barack's ass does -- that's what it appears to be. From Cindy Sheehan's "The Audacity of Empire" (World Can't Wait):

Many anti-war activists are concentrated on insuring that Obama fulfills his campaign promises to withdraw "combat" troops from Iraq without having the integrity to demand complete withdrawal of all troops and a return to total sovereignty of the country to the people of Iraq, and are not questioning Obama's determination to double troop strength to Afghanistan.I think the US MIC empire needs to be destroyed, but I would prefer that we incorporate a voluntary reduction of empire, before the weight of The Empire® collapses like a house of cards on us; or on the innocents of Afghanistan.


Reuters notes a Baquba roadside bombing that left six injured, a Mosul roadside bombing that left four injured and a Kirkuk roadside bombing that left two injured. Don't expect Just Foreign Policy to include those deaths in their count either.

Dropping back to the provincial elections, Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) observes, "Voter turnout in Iraq's provincial elections Saturday was the lowest in the nation's short history as a new democracy despite a relative calm across the nation. Only about 7.5 million of more than 14 million registered voters went to the polls. Interviews suggest that the low voter turnout also is an indication of Iraqi disenchantment with a democracy that, so far, has brought them very little."

"Elections 1: Ameriyah" (Inside Iraq, McClatchy Newspapers) opens:

Our plan is to go to areas in west Baghdad, areas that had mostly boycotted the last elections.
Areas that became hotbeds of insurgency.
And al Qaeda.
We drove on, one of our drivers, S, and myself alone in the car. Our car the only moving vehicle in sight.
Past Qadisiyah. Past Yarmouk. Past Jamiaa and Khadraa, we were stopped every 300 m by checkpoints, sometimes searching us and sometimes just checking our vehicle sticker permit and waving us on our way – We reach the checkpoint of Ameriyah.
We turn left and six Iraqi Army soldiers take aim – at us.
We stop.
"Where do you think you're going? There's curfew – no cars allowed on the streets!"
He walks up to us.
"We are journalists" S shouts, "We are here to speak to voters."
"Journalists???" Surprised faces – raised eye brows.
"Why? Are we the first journalists who have come here?"
"Yes."
After searching the car three times, searching my handbag six times, asking to check our non-existing cameras six times, three military vehicles drive up in respond to the checkpoint's call.


The Iraqi correspondents then go on to offer a cross-section of opinions from Iraqis.

Meanwhile AP's Sinan Salaheddin files a report that hopefully will contain more notes of skepticism as the story goes through multiple drafts today. Samira Ahmed Jassim has confessed! There's a video of the woman allegedly also known as Umm al-Mumineen ("the mother of all believers") stating she is the one who has recruited over "80 female suicide bombers". The first sentence tells you she "has been arrested." You have to wade through many paragraphs to discover she was arrested January 21st. So the video confession is all the more doubtful and may have been produced under torture. (And bruises hide so much better when you're wearing "an all-ecompassing black Islamic robe".) If al-Mumineen is the or a recruiter, it really makes little difference. She's not a hypnotist -- if she is, that's the only allegation AP's forgotten to present as fact. At best, she provided an avenue to those already prepared to seek violence. It goes to the gender stereotypes of women to believe that they had to be 'corrupted.' The violent response on the part of some Iraqi women is a perfectly natural response to what they are living under. ("Natural" is not the same as "legal." But we're not addressing that. We are continuing to address the pathologizing of one gender.)

Iraq's Foreign Ministry notes:



2 February, 2009

Foreign Minister Meets Japan's Prime Minister in Davos

Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari met on 31/1/2009, with Mr. Taro Aso Prime Minister of Japan on the sidelines of the annual conference of the World Economic Forum in Davos.

During the meeting Mr. Aso praised the improved security situation in Iraq and the increased confidence of the world in dealing with Iraq and wished the success of the provincial elections and expressed his joy for the progress of the democracy process in Iraq in addition to the successful completion of the withdrawal of troops agreement and organizing their presence in Iraq, stressing the keenness of the Japanese government to support Iraq politically and economically.



As US Senators Bob Casey Jr. and Byron Dorgan continue to attempt to get to the bottom of KBR's propensity to 'complete' electrical work in Iraq that leads to soldiers being shocked and, in some cases, shocked to death, Bob Von Sternberg files "Zimmerman medic was electrocuted in Iraq" (Minneapolis Star Tribune):

When a Navy medic from Zimmerman, Minn., nearing the end of his tour of duty in Iraq died on Sept. 11, 2004, family members were told he died of natural causes.
They now know differently: Petty Officer 3rd Class David A. Cedergren, 25, was electrocuted while showering, the third U.S. service member to suffer that fate in Iraq.
And the deaths are now part of a wider criminal investigation, part of a probe that's looking into a total of 18 electrocutions that have occurred in Iraq, in a variety of circumstances.
"Obviously it brings some closure to what we all originally thought had happened to David," said Cedergren's brother, Barry. "But the hard thing is you start to heal knowing one thing, and then the wounds reopen and you have to look at things in a different way."

On the rush to have a tag-sale on Iraqi assets, (PDF format warning) Iraq's Oil Ministry announces:

Extension of Pre-qualification Process Period.
Further to our Announcement on 4th January, 2009 on the Ministry of Oil website, Petroleum Contracts and Licensing Directorate of Ministry of Oil is pleased to announce the extension of Pre-qualification process period of the Second Bidding Round up to 15th February, 2009.
Therefore, the new Deadline will be the 15th February, 2009 instead of 1st February, 2009 in order to give the opportunity to the International Oil Companies, that could not submit their documents in due time, to pay the Processing Fee and submit the required documents as per our original Announcement.
Director General
Petroleum Contracts and Licensing Directorate


And Melissa notes this from Chris Hedges' "It's Not Going to Be OK" (Information Clearing House):

At no period in American history has our democracy been in such peril or has the possibility of totalitarianism been as real. Our way of life is over. Our profligate consumption is finished. Our children will never have the standard of living we had. And poverty and despair will sweep across the landscape like a plague. This is the bleak future. There is nothing President Obama can do to stop it. It has been decades in the making. It cannot be undone with a trillion or two trillion dollars in bailout money. Our empire is dying. Our economy has collapsed.
How will we cope with our decline? Will we cling to the absurd dreams of a superpower and a glorious tomorrow or will we responsibly face our stark new limitations? Will we heed those who are sober and rational, those who speak of a new simplicity and humility, or will we follow the demagogues and charlatans who rise up out of the slime in moments of crisis to offer fantastic visions? Will we radically transform our system to one that protects the ordinary citizen and fosters the common good, that defies the corporate state, or will we employ the brutality and technology of our internal security and surveillance apparatus to crush all dissent? We won't have to wait long to find out.
There are a few isolated individuals who saw it coming. The political philosophers Sheldon S. Wolin, John Ralston Saul and Andrew Bacevich, as well as writers such as Noam Chomsky, Chalmers Johnson, David Korten and Naomi Klein, along with activists such as Bill McKibben and Ralph Nader, rang the alarm bells. They were largely ignored or ridiculed. Our corporate media and corporate universities proved, when we needed them most, intellectually and morally useless.
Wolin, who taught political philosophy at the University of California in Berkeley and at Princeton, in his book "Democracy Incorporated" uses the phrase inverted totalitarianism to describe our system of power. Inverted totalitarianism, unlike classical totalitarianism, does not revolve around a demagogue or charismatic leader. It finds its expression in the anonymity of the corporate state. It purports to cherish democracy, patriotism and the Constitution while cynically manipulating internal levers to subvert and thwart democratic institutions. Political candidates are elected in popular votes by citizens, but they must raise staggering amounts of corporate funds to compete. They are beholden to armies of corporate lobbyists in Washington or state capitals who write the legislation. A corporate media controls nearly everything we read, watch or hear and imposes a bland uniformity of opinion or diverts us with trivia and celebrity gossip. In classical totalitarian regimes, such as Nazi fascism or Soviet communism, economics was subordinate to politics. "Under inverted totalitarianism the reverse is true," Wolin writes. "Economics dominates politics-and with that domination comes different forms of ruthlessness."

And, again, it's surprising Naomi Klein's not sounding alarms because the shock doctrine -- in existence decades prior to her book -- includes physical and economic violence. Melissa notes we pointed that out last in the January 14th snapshot -- days before it became popular at the imitation-is-the-sincerest-form-of-flattery site (you know the one Melissa means). Of course, recycling us nearly word for word is probably also a way to reduce the greenhouse effect -- less brain power means less energy expanded?

On websites, Jess notes this from Pundit Mom's "At This Rate, Soon We'll All Be Tracy Flick:"

Remember Tracy Flick from the movie Election? The over-achieving, uber-ambitious, won't-let-anything-get-in-my-way gal running for class President? If she didn't before this week, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is now very familiar with Tracy, who some are saying is Gillibrand's alter ego.
If Tracy Flick was a real person she'd be 28 -- old enough to have run and won a seat in Congress (you KNOW she would have). But she would NOT be happy that yet another, successful, high-profile woman politician is getting compared with Tracy's less attractive characteristics.
In the span of less than a year, Gillibrand is the third major woman candidate to endure this ever-more-common comparison. The media had a field day comparing Hillary Clinton to a ruthless Tracy. Then the MSM voices chimed in with the same for Sarah Palin, describing her as "ferocious overachiever Tracy." Now, Gillibrand is the latest to be tagged with the Tracy Flick persona.

And you can see what Pundit Mom's calling out, a perfect example of it, on the front page of this morning's New York Times, Michael Powell's nonsense under the headline "Political Lessons Taken on the Fly by Gillibrand." Example of what Pundit Mom's calling out, Powell writes, "She talks of her progress as an honors student might of acing a forthcoming exam." Tracy Flick. And also a sign that Michael Powell needs to grow the hell up and stop trolling schools at his age. It really says more about Powell than Gillibrand that, striving to make an example, he has to drop back to school days. Has he had no life since high school? Has he been unable to navigate the social terrain since? Poor, poor pitiful Powell.

Example of just poorly written? Here's a paragraph (in full) from Powell's article:

Representatives Jerrold L. Nadler, Nydia M. Velázquez, Jose E. Serrano and Anthony D. Weiner: some were said to desire appointment to that Senate seat and all heard from her, an aide said. She talks of her progress as an honors student might of acing a forthcoming exam.

When you write like that (note the first sentence), you probably can't engage with your journalistic peers, they're too busy snickering at you. Maybe that's why Powell's stuck in high school?


ADDED: The following community sites updated yesterday:

"Tom Daschle and his greed" is Ruth's post.

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.












Posted at 07:20 am by thecommonills
 


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