Evening Blues Preview 4-28-15

This evening's music features Piedmont bluesman Pink Anderson.

Here are some stories from tonight's post:

A Sea of Blood - John Kiriakou

The Justice Department Just Declared That the War in Afghanistan Is Not Over

The war in Afghanistan is not ending, US government attorneys said in court documents unsealed Friday, undercutting statements President Barack Obama made last December and in his State of the Union address a few weeks later when he formally declared that "the longest war in American history is coming to a responsible conclusion."

But Obama didn't really mean that the war was over, the government now argues.

"Simply put, the President's statements signify a transition in United States military operations, not a cessation …" Andrew Warden, a Justice Department attorney, wrote. "Although the United States has ended its combat mission in Afghanistan, the fighting there certainly has not stopped."

Warden made the argument in a 34-page motion filed in US District Court for the District of Columbia in response to a legal challenge by Guantanamo detainee Mukhtar Yahi Naji al-Warafi. The detainee asked a federal court to grant his writ of habeas corpus and set him free because Obama said the war in Afghanistan is over and the legal authorization the US has relied upon to hold him for the past 13 years is no longer valid.

"The government's position is incoherent," David Remes, al-Warafi's Washington, DC-based attorney, told VICE News. "The president says the war is over. The brief says the war isn't over and will never be over. And the government says they are being consistent with what the president said. They are twisting the president's own words. Obama was clearly making the point that the war was over, that hostilities have ended."

Greenwald: Writers Withdraw From PEN Gala to Protest Award to Charlie Hebdo

Under the guise of the “War on Terror,” there has indeed been a systematic assault on free speech: though it’s been one waged by Western governments primarily against their Muslim citizens. For that reason, it has provoked almost no objections from those who dressed up as free speech crusaders that week. That’s because, as I wrote in the aftermath of that rally, the incident was used to manipulatively exploit, not celebrate and protect, free expression. Celebrating Charlie Hebdo was largely about glorifying anti-Muslim sentiment; free expression was the pretext.

This is all quite redolent of how the U.S. government and its acolytes quite adeptly exploit social issues to advance imperial aims. U.S. officials, for instance, gin up anger toward Putin or Iran by highlighting the maltreatment of those countries’ LGBT citizens — as though that’s why the U.S. government is hostile — while at the same time showering arms and money on allied regimes in Saudi Arabia and Egypt whose treatment of gays is at least as bad (while LGBT groups in the U.S. say nothing because those are Obama’s policies). Or American and British officials will denounce free press attacks by governments they want to demonize while cozying up to regimes that allow no press freedoms at all. It’s also similar to how neocons tried to persuade feminists to support the war in Afghanistan because the Taliban is heinous to women or justified the invasions of Iraq because Saddam violated human rights — at the very same time that the regimes neocons love the most are at least as bad if not worse on those issues (to say nothing of the human rights records of neocons themselves and the U.S. government).

This is now a common, and quite potent, tactic: inducing support for highly illiberal Western government policy by dressing it up as support for liberal principles. And it highlights the fraud of pretending that celebrations of Charlie Hebdo cartoonists are independent of the fact that the particular group they most prominently mock are Muslims, a marginalized, targeted, and largely powerless group in France and the West generally.

Baltimore’s Disgrace Is History of Police Violence

After Saturday’s full day of peaceful protests in Baltimore calling for justice for Freddie Gray — the 25-year-old who recently died of a spinal injury suffered while in police custody — some protesters opted Saturday evening and Sunday to pursue more hands-on expressions of frustration. On Monday, the day of Gray’s memorial service, public tensions led to rioting in West Baltimore that continued into the evening.

The media also ran riot. As of Saturday night, the protests were said to have turned “violent” and “destructive.” ABC News initially reported that protesters had simply “become rowdy” but quickly amended the headline to incorporate the V-word. Conservative news site Breitbart.com took full advantage of its lack of editorial constraints to proclaim, “War zone: Baltimore erupts into violence, chaos as #BlackLivesMatter riots rage.”

When crowds turned to rioting on Monday, CNN legal analyst and New Yorker contributor Jeffrey Toobin took the opportunity on Anderson Cooper 360 to denounce the city. “Protest is an honorable thing; looting and criminality are not,” he said. “Baltimore disgraced itself today.” For Toobin, it’s as if nothing disgraceful or criminal happened before Monday, as if the city’s long history of racist police violence weren’t disgrace enough to be worth comment. On the receiving end of that violence have been teenagers, pregnant women, and octogenarian grandmothers.

Finally, the media found, the protesters were behaving according to the script — the one that casts black communities in America as powder kegs that can be contained only by the cops. Never mind that chucking hot dog buns and condiments at police and smashing up police vehicles and store windows is inherently less destructive, at least in terms of human life, than fatally severing a person’s spinal cord or shooting an unarmed man multiple times in the back. The latter two operations were performed under the sanction of U.S. law enforcement, whose behavior, no matter how outrageous, is still defended from public outrage by media and politicians alike.

Obama Compares Progressive Opposition to Trade Deal to ‘Death Panels’ as the Left Ramps Up Opposition

At a speech to a summit hosted by Organizing for Action, the organization created out of Obama's presidential campaigns to advocate for his policies and train organizers, Obama said he wanted to address the controversy surrounding his trade policy. ...

"If you were watching MSNBC and all this stuff, and you're thinking, 'Oh, man, I love Obama but what's going on here?'" the president joked, trying to reframe the deal as part of his push for what he calls "middle-class economics," which he said was "the idea that this country does best when everybody gets their fair shot, everybody does their fair share, everybody plays by the same set of rules."

Obama also called the deal "the most progressive trade agreement in our history," adding that it has labor and environmental enforcements. Obama compared the liberal complaints to the rumors of "death panels" during the Obamacare debate.

But the line was seen as a slap in the face to some progressives.

"It's shameful to see President Obama compare Democrats who oppose fast-tracking the TPP through Congress to Sarah Palin and the delusional 'death panels' rhetoric," said Charles Chamberlain, executive director of Democracy for America, in a statement. "Frankly, it's beneath this president to resort to such name-calling."

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Keeping a good thought.
http://www.tmz.com/2015/04/28/joni-mitchell-coma-conservatorship-health-...

Joni Mitchell is unconscious in a hospital, unable to respond to anyone, with no immediate prospects for getting better.

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joe shikspack's picture

thanks for the news. sounds like it's time to wish her well.

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shaharazade's picture

Joni Mitchell is a great artist and a song writer unparalleled. I love her music and her songs. I'm so sorry such a voice and songwriter, with such a humanistic spirit is apparently failing and surcomming to serious illness. I wish her well and thank her for her contributions to both my life and the worlds at large. Hope she rallies and shakes off the disease whatever it is and rejoins life. Her contributions to both painting and music are invaluable so Joni get well and God bless.

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mimi's picture

he can't get over himself to say that Dick Cheney might have on purpose allowed the attack to happen.

KIRIAKOU: I'm no fan of Dick Cheney. I never was. I think he's a malignant force in the history of our country. But I just can't believe that someone who is charged with running our country would be so psychopathic as to encourage a massive attack. I mean, it just doesn't make any kind of logical sense to me.

I can tell you that at the CIA we were never told to stand down. While we certainly needed a greater counterterrorism budget, we were doing everything humanly possible to try to infiltrate al-Qaeda in 2001 and to try to disrupt this attack that we knew was coming.

JAY: But you had good information.

KIRIAKOU: We had some information. We're getting it in bits and pieces, and the analysts put it together and decided that bin Laden was determined to attack the United States.

JAY: Don't you think you had enough to tell immigration to be extra strict? Don't you think you had enough to maybe take a closer look at Saudi immigration? Don't you think you the Federal Aviation Administration should have--

KIRIAKOU: Sure, but you're talking about--

JAY: [crosstalk] the security threat level at the airports?

KIRIAKOU: --but you're talking about policy changes. And, you know, it's a fact of life in the United States: we're a big, lumbering bureaucracy, and policy changes can take months or years.

JAY: But this goes back to this belief of yours that you cannot believe that a leader of the United States would allow something like this to happen.

KIRIAKOU: But I also don't think that he had the power to do something like that. The bureaucracy is just simply too vast.

JAY: It [crosstalk]

KIRIAKOU: And Cheney was powerful, but he wasn't powerful enough to single-handedly stopped the wheels of the intelligence community and allow al-Qaeda into the country to launch an attack.

JAY: Can you give me another explanation how Susan Rice doesn't listen--

KIRIAKOU: Condoleezza Rice.

JAY: Condoleezza Rice--I'm very sorry--Condoleezza Rice doesn't listen when the CIA says something massive is coming?

KIRIAKOU: Maybe Condoleezza Rice was an incompetent boob. I mean, there's that school of thought, too.

JAY: Because you can't believe--it all goes to the question of faith underlying it.

KIRIAKOU: Sure. I admit that.

That to me is amazing. He has almost a boyish kind of faith. Or how do you understand that? Is that just smart of him to save his skin? I mean you can't say anything against his faith, do you?

Here is the transcript
Paul Ray has actually quite some Chutzsbah to address Cheney straight into the camera. They didn't transcribe that part...:-).

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joe shikspack's picture

i think kiriakou is one of those guys who really do have a kind of childish faith in people that is hard to shake even when they meet the devil incarnate (cheney) and are somewhat radicalized by the horrible things that an organization like our government does.

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mimi's picture

to make him change his mind, but then I don't want to do that. He is such a decent guy.

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gulfgal98's picture

And I suspect a lot of folks who work for the government are that way. Many of us who worked for government were idealists and in a way, still are. I have been there and done that. And even at my age, I am still am an idealist.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mimi's picture

an idealist, what's left to believe in. Beats depression every way you look at ti.

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gulfgal98's picture

doing horrible things, but I really do believe in the good of most people. It is what keeps me going in life. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Unabashed Liberal's picture

for me, about the ONLY people I don't think this of, are politicians--especially on the federal level.

Again, that is a generalization. I definitely knew folks whose character was stellar during my federal career. So, I definitely don't mean to imply that all federal politicians/employees are corrupt.

Unfortunately, like a fish, the federal system tends to "rot from the head down"--in some agencies/installations/branches/departments, etc.

For this reason, many [not all] federal employees follow the path of least resistance--"Do as you're told, and look the other way."

Believe me, it would be hard to find anyone who led a more sheltered life than I did, before I began my federal career.

What an experience is was--I can't overstate it.

And, without a doubt, one of the most difficult things that I ever had to do was to learn to stand my ground.

I do believe that most the folks are well-meaning when they enter federal service. The problem is the intimidation factor of the vast federal bureaucracy.

I was challenged very early in my career, and stood up, and won.

Or, I may have wound up being like those employees who were pressured by their superiors to meet impossible metrics, as they did at the Arizona VA--not inherently evil people, just people who could not stand up to unreasonable pressures and demands.

IOW, they were just too intimidated to buck the system when it was warranted, and/or the moral thing to do.

My federal career also taught me how to 'pick my fights,' and to not grieve over every thing that I do not have the power/authority to change.

Sometimes you just have to let go, or you'll burn out.

Hey, "rationalizing" is definitely easier--but no one can fool themselves, forever.

Biggrin

Mollie

P.S. There is a major difference between working in the civilian and military federal bureaucracy. When I was working at a federal civilian agency on a university campus--it was like a completely different world.

The pressures within the military system are far more intense. I'm talking as a Civil Servant, not as a military member, of course.

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.