The Evening Blues - 7-28-16



eb1pt12


Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features one of New Orleans' great piano players, James Booker. Enjoy!

James Booker - True

"We need more people speaking out. This country is not overrun with rebels and free thinkers. It’s overrun with sheep and conformists."

-- Bill Maher


News and Opinion

Leon Panetta shouted down by anti-war protesters at Democratic convention

The former defense secretary and CIA director was met with chants of ‘no more war’ as he extolled Hillary Clinton’s qualities to be commander-in-chief

Democratic delegates drowned out the former defense secretary Leon Panetta with a chant of “no more war” on Wednesday night, prompting convention organisers to turn the lights out in their section of the Wells Fargo arena and the protesters to light it themselves using cellphones.


The former CIA director was on stage to show his support for Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. “In this election, there is only one candidate for president who has the experience, temperament and judgment to be commander-in-chief, and that is Hillary Clinton,” he said. ...

But when Panetta referred to Trump’s call for a Russian hack on Clinton’s emails, he was interrupted by the chants, which were temporarily drowned out when Panetta said: “Donald Trump cannot become commander-in-chief.”

On Top of Emails, Leaked DNC Voicemails Show Money Buying Access

'Messages highlight the relationships between donors looking for favors and goodies, and the party officials trying to bring in money to their coffers'

Just before President Barack Obama delivered his speech to the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday night, new reporting on the so-called "DNC Leak" by WikiLeaks unearthed a large batch of voicemails contained in the files which give additional texture to a scandal that has loomed large at this week's event in Philadelphia.

Though many of the voicemails (see the complete list of audio files here) are rather innocuous in their content, CNN reports how other "messages highlight the relationships between donors looking for favors and goodies, and the party officials trying to bring in money to their coffers." ...

But as this news segment on ABC News from Wednesday helps show, the leaked emails—coupled with some of the more telling voicemails—reveal how big money and political favors help capture influence within the Democratic Party:

The Democrats just fell for Trump's Russian email-hack bait

Grand Theft Convention.

No, that's not a new video game. But it is what we just saw Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump do to the Democrats and Hillary Clinton, and the Democrats and Hillary Clinton are helping him do it!

During about an hour-long news conference earlier Wednesday, Trump was asked repeatedly about allegations that the Russian government is behind the hacked and leaked Democratic National Committee's emails that embarrassed the party on the eve of their national convention in Philadelphia. Trump quickly pivoted to also discussing Clinton's private email-server controversy and the 30,000-plus emails the former Secretary of State had deleted from her private server under questionable explanations and circumstances.

Advantage Trump.

Then came the money quote, or the bait, when he said: "Russia, if you're listening,I hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing; I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press."

That comment was sure to grab headlines all on its own, but then the Clinton campaign incredibly took the bait and had a top policy advisor respond with this statement: "This has to be the first time that a major presidential candidate has actively encouraged a foreign power to conduct espionage against his political opponent."

Advantage Trump.

Trump's ability to steal headlines with outrageous comments and survive the process is well-documented, but no one seems to have come up with an antidote for it. ... And guess what no one is talking about right now? All those "historic" stories about Clinton being the first woman to win a major party nomination are off the news sites now. Major lead-up stories to President Obama's big speech at the convention on Wednesday night are almost non-existent now. And no one is talking about Clinton running mate Tim Kaine's speech tonight at all. ...

So again, what we're witnessing here is a presidential candidate stealing the other party's thunder just when it needs your attention the most.

Donald Trump asks for Russia's help in locating Hillary Clinton's e-mails

Donald Trump to Russia: hack and publish Hillary Clinton's 'missing' emails

Donald Trump appeared to incite Russia to hack into and publish Hillary Clinton’s private emails, as her campaign sounded “alarm” at growing evidence of a foreign power “interfering in an American election”.

In the strongest US response yet to an alleged hacking of Democratic party computers, the Clinton campaign confirmed on Wednesday that she had been briefed by US intelligence officials who believe there is now a “weight of opinion” pointing to Moscow as the original source.

“She does not view this as a political issue; she views this as a national security issue,” Clinton’s foreign policy adviser, Jake Sullivan, said. “She believes that it is obviously something new to see them interfering in an American election, but this is part of a pattern of Russia interfering in the domestic affairs of other countries.”

Trump, meanwhile, speaking at a press conference in Florida, raised the stakes again, as he urged Russia to hack into and release Clinton’s emails from the personal server she used while she was secretary of state.

“Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing,” he said.

Blame It on the Russians

If there is any shock at the level of corruption within the Democratic National Committee (DNC) as revealed in recently released emails attributed to Wikileaks and the DNC’s automatic response to blame Russia, the fact that Debbie Wasserman-Schultz and her staff effectively sabotaged the Bernie Sanders campaign may seem secondary compared with how the Obama Administration has been constructing a false narrative to justify NATO preparations for war with Russia.

While the accusation that Russia is at the root of its email scandal adds titillating fodder for how Clinton defrauded Sanders out of the Democratic nomination, the US continues to pursue every opportunity to identify Russia as the culprit in a myriad of complaints is now using the DNC hacks as part of its geopolitical agenda to discredit Putin while its own house is less than pure. ...

For the US mainstream media, to use every insignificant, irrelevant piece of trivia to destroy Putin’s reputation so as to make it easier for the American public to accept future military action against Russia, proves that no amount of obfuscation, no distortion of the facts, nothing is beyond the pale. ...

Watching the Presidential nominating roll call vote on Tuesday afternoon raised the question of how many Democratic delegates had any awareness that the votes they cast for Hillary Clinton were tainted; the product of a flawed and discredited political process.

And so on Tuesday evening, Bernie, being the good soldier, sucked it up and took the DNC’s betrayal on the chin and delivered his votes to Clinton. Suppressing whatever was left of his self esteem, he reiterated his support for the very objectionable woman he opposed in the Democratic primaries and who had to have some level of knowledge, some awareness of what the DNC was doing on her behalf. Never answering the question of why he entered the primary in the first place if Hillary Clinton “must become President of the United States,” Bernie’s performances on Monday and Tuesday evenings, in effect, sanctioned DNC efforts to discredit his candidacy. So much for the ‘revolution’.

Russia beefs up military on southwestern flank as NATO approaches

Russia has strengthened its southwestern flank as NATO builds up its military presence and Ukraine remains unstable, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Wednesday in remarks the United States called contrary to efforts to lower tensions.

Moscow has deployed more air defense systems in the southwest and has also deployed a "self-sufficient" contingent of troops in Crimea, Shoigu told a meeting at the Defence Ministry broadcast on state television.

"Since 2013 ... we have formed four divisions, nine brigades and 22 regiments," he said. "They include two missile brigades armed with Iskander missile complexes, which has allowed to boost fire power to destroy the potential adversary."

FBI Chief: Defeating ISIS Would Lead to ‘Terrorist Diaspora’ in West

Speaking at a conference today, FBI Director James Comey warned that the “eventual defeat” of ISIS would be causing a major problem in and of itself, creating a large “terrorist diaspora” throughout the West because “not all of the Islamic State killers are going to die on the battlefield.”

This is a somewhat different presentation of a long-standing problem, and the term “diaspora” is a bit of a misnomer, since the ISIS fighters in question are in great measure from the West in the first place, which is why going back to their countries of origin is not just possible, but comparatively simple.

With Western recruits joining ISIS by the thousands, there has always been concern of what happens when those fighters return home with a bunch of new skills and ties to international terror. The trickle-back would be greatly accelerated, of course, by ISIS being defeated outright.

US board declines to release alleged '20th hijacker' from Guantanamo

Lawyers for prisoner Mohammed al-Qahtani asked the Periodic Review Board last month to send the prisoner to a rehabilitation center in Saudi Arabia for treatment of severe mental illness. The board, made up of representatives of six government agencies, turned down the request in a statement released Wednesday.

The board cited several reasons for its decision, including the fact that al-Qahtani "almost certainly" had been chosen by senior al-Qaida members to be the 20th hijacker in the Sept. 11 plot and his "refusal to respond to questions" about his past activities. ...

Al-Qahtani was captured in Afghanistan and in February 2002 taken to the U.S. base in Cuba, where he was subjected to brutal interrogation that a senior Pentagon legal official later said amounted to torture.

The U.S. charged al-Qahtani before a military tribunal along with five other prisoners with war crimes for the Sept. 11 attack. But the charges against him were withdrawn because of his treatment at Guantanamo. The case against the others has been proceeding slowly at the base but no trial date has been set.

Turkey's post-coup crackdown widens

Turkish generals resign as government prepares to overhaul armed forces

Two of Turkey’s highest-ranked generals resigned on Thursday as the prime minister prepared to meet military commanders over one of the most radical shake-ups in the armed forces’ history in the wake of a failed coup.

Generals İhsan Uyar and Kamil Başoğlu, who both orgeneral - Turkey’s highest rank for a general - stepped down ahead of the meeting, the private Dogan news agency reported. Their resignations follow the dishonourable discharge of 149 generals over the coup, which the Turkish government claims was masterminded by an exiled cleric.

The hastily convened meeting of the Supreme Military Council (YAS) in Ankara will bring together the prime minister, Binali Yıldırım, and the land, sea and air force commanders, still in post.

In a symbol of the military’s waning power, the meeting will be symbolically held at the Çankaya palace of the prime minister in Ankara and not, as is customary, at military headquarters.

Lower-ranking officers are expected to be fast-tracked to fill the gaps in the top positions.

In the wake of the coup the military has already lost control of the coastguard and gendarmerie, which will now be dependent on the interior ministry.


Turkey coup attempt: arrest warrants issued for former newspaper staff

Turkey’s prime minister has warned that the crackdown following a failed coup was not over, as authorities issued arrest warrants for dozens of former newspaper staff.

More than 15,000 people have been detained for suspected links to the coup and at least 8,000 remain in custody, according to the interior ministry. ...

The Turkish government has also issued arrest warrants for 47 former staff of the Zaman newspaper, which supported Gülen and is suspected of links to the cleric. One official said the swoop covered “executives and some staff, including columnists”, describing Zaman as the “flagship media organisation” of the Gülen-led movement.

The official said the arrest warrants were not related to what individual columnists had previously said or written. However, “prominent employees of Zaman are likely to have intimate knowledge of the Gülen network and as such could benefit the investigation”, he added.

Earlier this week Turkey issued another 42 arrest warrants for journalists – 16 of whom have been detained, according to Anadolu.

Turkey Shutters Over 100 Media Outlets

Turkish authorities on Wednesday announced the dismissal of more than 1,700 military personnel and the closure of more than 100 media outlets, official sources said Wednesday, in a widening crackdown following this month's failed coup attempt.

A total of 1,684 military personnel have been dishonorably discharged, a Turkish government official said, citing their role in the July 15-16 abortive putsch, where a faction of the military attempted to topple the government. In addition, three news agencies, 16 television channels, 45 daily newspapers, 15 journals and 23 radio stations have been ordered to be shut down, it said.

Among the newspapers ordered to shut down is the Zaman newspaper, Turkey's largest-circulated media outlet, which was seized by the government and reopened under the charge of government-appointed trustees in March.

In Secret Battle, Surveillance Court Reined in FBI Use of Information Obtained From Phone Calls

Beginning over a decade ago, the country’s surveillance court intervened to limit the FBI’s ability to act on some sensitive information that it collected while monitoring phone calls.

The wrangling between the FBI and the secret court is contained in previously undisclosed documents obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC. The documents, part of an ongoing Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, were shared with The Intercept.

The documents reveal that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) told the FBI several times between 2005 and 2007 that using some incidental information it collected while monitoring communications in an investigation — specifically, numbers people punch into their phones after they’ve placed a call — would require an explicit authorization from the court, even in an emergency. ...

The numbers people punch into the phone after making a call can reveal financial or personal information — like a credit card number, a social security number, a PIN, a prescription number, or any other type of response via automated telephone prompts. The “term of art” for this information is “post-cut-through dialed digits.” ...

“The newly obtained summaries are significant because they show the power that the [Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court] has to limit expansive FBI surveillance practices,” Alan Butler, an attorney for EPIC, wrote in an email to The Intercept.

Playing Pokemon while black...

Police body camera shows Pokemon Go player mistaken for bank robber

An Iowa State University football player was playing Pokemon Go in the park near his home when he turned around to see four police officers pointing their guns at him. The Iowa City Police Department released the body camera footage Wednesday, showing another case of a phenomenon that is not uncommon: Pokemon Go players having run-ins with police.

Faith Ekakitie, like millions of others, is pursuing the humble goal of catching them all. Unfortunately, he was in the wrong place at the wrong time, fitting the exact description of a bank robbery suspect police believed was in the vicinity. In a period where police violence against black people is on the rise, Ekakitie, who is black, said in a Facebook post he was thankful the situation did not end with him getting hurt.

"I am thankful to be alive, and I do now realize, that it very well could have been me, a friend of mine, my brother, your cousin, your nephew etc," Ekakitie wrote. "Misunderstandings happen all the time and just like that things can go south very quickly."

The Freddie Gray decision signals black people are to blame for their own deaths

Last night, I stood in a jam-packed arena as a multiracial crowd chanted “Black Lives Matter,” following an on-stage appearance by Mothers of the Movement at the Democratic national convention. Irrespective of political affiliation, no one can deny the power of these women, all mothers to the fallen sons and daughters who founded this movement for black lives and human dignity. To witness tens of thousands, from across the country, chant a phrase that unequivocally declares our humanity is a sight I can’t imagine having witnessed even a year ago.

And then, we awoke this morning to the news that another of those fallen sons, Freddie Gray, would receive no justice after losing his life in the back of a Baltimore police van. Following multiple acquittals, Baltimore prosecutors decided to drop all remaining charges against the officers. ...

In the wake of acquittal after acquittal, the message continues to be clear: not only do black lives, hearts and spines not matter to a system that continually kills us, but the only people who seem to be guilty of our deaths are ourselves.

As the conjecture about this case continues, the only thing I can hear is the resounding cry that we, as black people, are nearly always responsible for our own demise. It can’t possibly be the danger of black skin – no. When we die, our homicides are ruled suicides. When we die, there must have been some act, some moment, some single bad decision that caused it. When we die, we must have done something to deserve it.

I see this sentiment everywhere. In the victim-blaming that often follows the killing of one of our own. In the demand to know what happened before and after the video starts and stops because there must have been some action to inspire the officer’s ire. In the otherwise reasonable people on our social media feeds, who refuse to believe what stories and statistics continue to show true. In the courts who rarely charge, convict or punish our killers when they are in uniform.

Beyond #BlackLivesMatter: police reform must be bolstered by legal action

Something is missing from the debate over police reform. Though police killings of black men have sparked a nationwide movement to stop police violence, the police can fairly ask whether they deserve all of the blame.

That’s not because current levels of police violence are warranted (they aren’t), or because policing is race neutral (it isn’t). It’s because the chief architects of American policing are not police departments; they’re courts. The movement for police reform should be joined by an equally ambitious movement for court reform.

Courts have shaped American policing by defanging the fourth amendment’s prohibition on “unreasonable searches and seizures”. Because the term “unreasonable” is unclear, courts have had to decide which police intrusions, beyond the blatantly arbitrary, go too far. And the US supreme court’s consistent answer has been that scarcely anything goes too far.

[See article for analysis of case law that degrades the 4th amendment. -js]

So when a traffic stop results in tragedy, like the recent death of Philando Castile, court rulings lurk behind it like code in The Matrix. The https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/517/806/Whren case helps to explain why the police stopped Castile 46 times. The Garner case helps to explain why, when Mr. Castile reached for his wallet, an officer reached for his gun. It is no exaggeration to say that, but for regrettable Fourth Amendment case law, Philando Castile might still be alive. ...

This is why we must seek to tear down existing fourth amendment architecture and replace it with cases more capable of deterring police violence.

US and Mexico's mass deportations have fueled humanitarian crisis, report says

Mass deportations and inadequate asylum procedures in Mexico and the US have fueled a humanitarian crisis where desperate Central Americans seeking refuge from rampant violence are routinely preyed upon by criminal gangs and corrupt officials, according to a new report by the International Crisis Group (ICG).

The tide of people fleeing Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala – three of the five most dangerous countries in the world – continues apace despite beefed-up border control measures implemented after Barack Obama declared the 2014 surge in undocumented migrants a humanitarian crisis. Last year, Mexico deported 165,000 Central Americans, while the US expelled 75,000.

In order to avoid detection, vulnerable people – who include increasing numbers of women and unaccompanied children – are forced to pay higher fees to smugglers, crooked officials, and kidnappers, and use riskier, more isolated routes through Mexico, according to the Easy Prey: Criminal Violence and Central American Migration. Once deported, many simply try again rather than face hunger and violence at home, creating a revolving door of vulnerable migrants and refugees.

The report comes after the US, for the first time, recognised that the surge in people currently fleeing Central America includes potential refugees, not just economic migrants. The Obama administration on Tuesday announced a new scheme whereby Costa Rica will offer temporary protection to 200 eligible Central American refugees at a time before they are settled in the US or another country.

[200 at a time! It's just a drop in the bucket. -js]

Drug Industry Will Make Hospitals Obsolete, Biotech CEO Says on DNC Panel

The CEO of the world’s largest biotechnology trade group, Jim Greenwood, said at a panel discussion at the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday that Americans need to take more drugs “instead of going to the hospital.” ...

Speaking at an event put on by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation — a think tank funded by Google, IBM, Cisco, eBay, and other corporate underwriters — Greenwood argued that high prescription-drug prices are a boon to the economy and public health.

The U.S. already has the highest prices for drugs in the industrialized world, but Greenwood argued that prescription drugs, regardless of their price, lower overall health care costs.

“I hear that drugs are 15 percent of all health care spending,” Greenwood said. “I’d like it to be 100 percent. That would mean you could take a drug when you’re sick instead of going to the hospital.”



the horse race



Bernie Sanders Delegates Complain of “Disrespect” on Democratic Convention Floor

On Monday, Sen. Bernie Sanders reiterated his endorsement of Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party nominee. On Tuesday, it was made official during the roll call vote, when Sanders himself stood among his Vermont delegation and moved that Clinton be nominated by acclamation.

But on Wednesday, some delegates in the Sanders camp complained that Democratic Party officials who manage the convention had treated them as something less than their Clinton-pledged counterparts.

Michael Wilson, a Sanders-pledged delegate from California, told me that floor officials attempted to confiscate his delegation’s anti-TPP signs, and that he returned from a walkout by Sanders supporters on Tuesday evening to find that his seat had been taken by a nondelegate who refused to give it up.

“It’s a disrespect not to us, but to the people who voted for us, and that we’re representing. They want to have their voices heard. But apparently there are certain subjects that are not palatable to the party authorities.”

Former VT Delegate Who Joined Sanders at Roll Call: "How Do We Move Forward Without Compromise?"

Hillary Clinton needs to wake up. Trump is stealing the voters she takes for granted

The Republican party wants my liberal vote. This was the most shocking wave to wash over my brain last week as I sat in the convention center in Cleveland. It was more startling in its way than the storm of hate that I saw descend on former GOP hero Ted Cruz, stranger than the absence of almost all the party’s recent standard-bearers, weirder than the police-state atmosphere that hovered over the streets of the city.

The Republicans were trying to win the support of people like me! Not tactfully or convincingly or successfully, of course: they don’t know the language of liberalism and wouldn’t speak it if they did; and most of the liberals I know will never be swayed anyway. But they were trying nevertheless. ...

For years, Republican orthodoxy on trade made possible endless Democratic sell-outs of working people, with the two-party consensus protecting the D’s from any consequences. They could ram Nafta through Congress, they could do trade deals with China, they could negotiate the Trans Pacific Partnership, they could attend their conferences at Davos and congratulate themselves for being so global and so enlightened, secure in the belief that the people whose livelihoods they had just ruined had “nowhere else to go”.

In other words, it was only possible for our liberal leaders to be what they are – a tribe of sunny believers in globalization and its favored classes – as long as the Republicans held down their left flank for them. Democrats could only celebrate globalization’s winners and scold its uneducated losers so long as there was no possibility that they might face a serious challenge on the matter from the other party in the system.

Well, today all that has changed. The free-trade consensus lies in shards on the floor. The old Republican party has been smashed by this man Trump. It is a new political world out there. How will Democrats react to this altered state of affairs?

[It looks like the answer to this last question is that they will respond by joining with the neocons and the media spin machine in creating a red scare about Trump the likes of which haven't been seen since the days of Tailgunner Joe McCarthy. -js]

... Let’s see: trade agreements, outreach to hawks, “bipartisanship”, Wall Street. All that’s missing is a “Grand Bargain” otherwise it’s the exact same game plan as last time, and the time before that, and the time before that. Democrats seem to be endlessly beguiled by the prospect of campaign of national unity, a coming-together of all the quality people and all the affluent people and all the right-thinking, credentialed, high-achieving people. The middle class is crumbling, the country is seething with anger, and Hillary Clinton wants to chair a meeting of the executive committee of the righteous.

Protesters clash with police outside DNC as Obama praises Clinton as ‘most qualified’ candidate

As Clinton Readies for Nomination, Unions Hope It's Zero Hour for TPP

As Hillary Clinton prepares to accept the Democratic nomination for president on Thursday night, labor unions are ready to demand that she put an end to the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP)—a longstanding point of contention for her campaign.

Publicly shutting down the controversial 12-nation trade deal could keep lawmakers from introducing it to U.S. Congress in the lame duck session, which Clinton has said she opposes and which her former rival Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has said would be "going against the will of the people." Moreover, it would require breaking with President Barack Obama, who supports it.

And that's exactly what union leaders are looking for.

"I would like for her to finish this whole debate about TPP, that would be very important for us. I would like for her to articulate who she will be as president as the United States," Dennis Williams, president of United Auto Workers, told The Hill on Thursday.

The final push in the labor movement's anti-TPP campaign comes amid a week of controversy over Clinton's position on the trade deal. Although the former secretary of state has said she opposes the deal, her longtime ally Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe indicated several times that Clinton would support it if certain changes were made.

Danny Glover: Democratic Party Leadership in Damage Control

Jeffrey St. Clair sums up last night at the DNC convention

This was a night dominated by the hollow men of the Democratic Party: Panetta, Kaine, Biden and Obama. Men who knew better, but did worse. The theme was liberal virility, strength, and managerial efficiency. Missing was any empathy for the homeless and the hungry, the poor and the downtrodden. It was a frontal embrace of the neoliberal order, a demonstration that the Democrats have the competency and toughness to manage the imperial order in a time of severe internal and external stress.

The last three hours weren’t a full-throated repudiation of Sanderism, so much as a casual dismissal, as if the core concerns Bernie’s movement gave voice to regarding the ravages of economic inequality didn’t even merit their attention. And Bernie sat passively in the imperial box seats with Jane squirming at his side, watching it all unfold.



the evening greens


Oil and gas industry events 'polluting' Democratic convention, say activists

Environmentalists say panels sponsored by the main fossil fuel lobby group undermine the party platform’s stance on energy and climate change

A series of events sponsored by the oil and gas industry are “polluting” the Democratic national convention with climate denialism and should be boycotted by leading Democrats, according to environmentalists.

The American Petroleum Institute (API) has underwritten five events hosted in Philadelphia during the convention by media organizations Politico and the Atlantic.

The events, which promote API’s Vote4Energy campaign, provide delegates and other attendees with literature and signage extolling the benefits of oil and gas drilling.

While both Politico and the Atlantic said that API, the US’s leading fossil fuel lobby group, does not hold any sway over the content of the panel discussions, green groups claimed the events have allowed the denial of climate science to seep into the Democratic gathering.

“These polluting events have a complete disrespect for the scientific facts and we are very concerned about the influence that fossil fuels have here,” said Brad Johnson, executive director of Climate Hawks Vote, a political action group which has a 10,000-strong petition urging Democrats to boycott the events. ...

Several leading Democrats have agreed to appear at the API-sponsored events, with Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, appearing at an Atlantic event called Striking a Balance. On Wednesday, a Politico event featured Trevor Houser, Clinton’s top energy adviser, alongside John Hickenlooper and Jay Inslee, Democratic governors of Colorado and Washington, respectively.

Flint's mayor will bring the water crisis to prime time at the DNC

It's been six months since Hillary Clinton took a moment during a televised Democratic primary debate to highlight a growing public health crisis that was only just starting to grab national attention — the citywide lead contamination of the water system in Flint, Michigan.

Since then, public attention has shifted away from the crisis, which was sparked by the city's decision to switch away from Detroit's water system to use the Flint River instead. But Flint's mayor Karen Weaver will aim to bring her city back into the national spotlight on Wednesday, when she speaks at the Democratic National Convention as part of a prime-time lineup of speakers that includes President Barack Obama. She will use her time, she said, to remind Americans that the crisis in her city is not over.

"One of the things we want people to know is that we still have a water crisis going on in the city of Flint. Things are better but we're not where we need to be," she told VICE News ahead of her speech. "We're still on bottled and filtered water, and we're on year three."

Landmark Human Rights Complaint Lodged Against World's Worst Polluters

The world's 47 largest producers of greenhouse gases must respond within 45 days to an unprecedented legal complaint filed Wednesday by the Philippines, which alleges the fossil fuel behemoths have deprived millions of residents of the island nation of their human rights through catastrophic global warming.

The Commission on Human Rights of the Philippines (CHR), a governmental body, sent the multinational "carbon majors" a 60-page letter (pdf) accusing them of "breaching people"s fundamental rights to 'life, food, water, sanitation, adequate housing, and to self determination,'" the Guardian reports.

"The commission's actions are unprecedented. For the first time, a national human rights body is officially taking steps to address the impacts of climate change on human rights and the responsibility of private actors," Zelda Soriano, legal and political adviser for Greenpeace Southeast Asia, one of the groups that brought the complaint to the CHR, told the newspaper.

"This is an important building block in establishing the moral and legal 'precedent' that big polluters can be held responsible for current and threatened human rights infringements resulting from fossil fuel products," Soriano added.

The Philippines has been one of the countries hardest hit by the effects of climate change.


Also of Interest

Here are some articles of interest, some which defied fair-use abstraction.

Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin: Potential Partners – Not Allies or Even Friends

Attacking Trump for the Few Sensible Things He Says is Both Bad Politics and Bad Strategy

Can We Even Know Who Hacked the DNC Emails?

Corporate Democrats Have Always Hated the Left — Now They're Shocked to Learn That We Hate Them Back

Moving Beyond the Sanders Campaign

Elizabeth Warren Gets It Dead Wrong on Corporate Profits in Convention Speech

Pink Floyd to release rarity-packed 27-disc set of their early years


A Little Night Music

James Booker - Junco Partner

James Booker - Medley: Slow Down/Bony Maronie/Knock On Wood/Grapevine/Classified

James Booker - Ain't Nobody's Business

James Booker - Rockin' Pneumonia, Baby Won't You Please Come Home

James Booker - So Swell When You're Well

James Booker - Medley: Tico Tico/Papa Was A Rascal

James Booker @ Maple Leaf Bar 1983



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Thanks for the link, and Thomas Frank is right.

For the first time in living memory, the Republicans are outflanking the Democrats on the left. If they don’t rise to the challenge, they’ll be trounced.

I said this would happen. Four months ago. I guess partisan Dems just can't get it into their heads.

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"We've done the impossible, and that makes us mighty."

joe shikspack's picture

it's realignment time again. this time, i think that both major parties are interested in committing suicide.

get the popcorn.

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JekyllnHyde's picture

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A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma

Lookout's picture

But, but ,but RUSSIA!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

joe shikspack's picture

heh, that's pretty much it.

set the controls for the heart of the shut-up zone.

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Santa Susanna Kid's picture

I watched another clip of her last night, and was very impressed by the
way she explains things and her take on it. There are some amazing genuine,
and real Progressives out there, hopefully, waiting in the wings for an opportunity
to replace the Neocons of the Dem establishment. Thanks for posting this up, j s...

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joe shikspack's picture

yes, it's nice to see some new leaders emerging from the swamp of corruption, wiping off the slime and getting on with the business of the 99%.

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featheredsprite's picture

than they were of Trump. And Bernie's army of unwashed lumpenproletariat.

It has been amazing to watch.

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Life is strong. I'm weak, but Life is strong.

joe shikspack's picture

i am going to have to stock up on popcorn. Smile

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Lookout's picture

T-rump knows how to control the news cycle.

Putin rides T-rump.jpg

Somebody is loving the profits from this missile build up race with Russia! Plus endless war is better, if we defeat ISIS we'll have even bigger problems.

Turkey may be on to something too. Restructure the military to your liking and get rid of the media.

Finally a CEO I can agree with – take more drugs and don't go to the hospital. I thought the VT Sanders delegate had a good interview and was well spoken.

Thanks for the news Joe! Hope everyone has a good night wherever you are.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

joe shikspack's picture

i bet that the arms manufacturers are praying every night that hillary gets into the white house. they must be smelling huge profits ahead.

have a great evening!

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OLinda's picture

Thanks for the news and blues, joe.

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joe shikspack's picture

i think glenn's speculation is correct. the neocon wurlitzer is wound up and the whine is going to drown out anything that sounds like uncooked facts.

have a great evening!

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

OLinda's picture

If Bernie hadn't moved to "suspend the rules," what would have happened next? What is the procedure? Joe, or anyone know? The votes were in. Hillary apparently had reached the necessary threshold. So, what exactly did Bernie do by asking for an acclamation? Thank you.

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Lookout's picture

Seem like that's what I heard or read. The challenger defers their state till last and (falls on their sword)...well you saw the rest.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

on the radio from Obama's speech last night of him saying that Clinton was the "most qualified man or woman ... ever" to be president, my first thought was:

Thomas Jefferson???

First Secretary of the State, before that Vice President in John Adams administration, before that US Minister to France, and before all that there's that little bit of him drafting the founding documents of the nation.

But Obama says Clinton is more qualified to be president than he was. O-kay.

Evening, joe. Reading one of your news items just fired up this recollection. Thought I'd share it.

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Only connect. - E.M. Forster

Big Al's picture

"hey Obama, ever hear of Thomas Jefferson?"

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joe shikspack's picture

heh, that reminds me of this:

Ladies and gentlemen:

I want to welcome you to the White House. Mr. Lester Pearson informed me that a Canadian newspaperman said yesterday that this is the President's "Easter egghead roll on the White House lawn." I want to deny that!

I want to tell you how welcome you are to the White House. I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent, of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered together at the White House, with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone.

Someone once said that Thomas Jefferson was a gentleman of 32 who could calculate an eclipse, survey an estate, tie an artery, plan an edifice, try a cause, break a horse, and dance the minuet. Whatever he may have lacked, if he could have had his former colleague, Mr. Franklin, here we all would have been impressed.

In any case, I am delighted to welcome you here. We are delighted to have the Norwegian Ambassador and the Swedish Minister to represent their governments, and we are delighted to have the Nobel prize winners of the Western Hemisphere here at this dinner. ...

-- John F. Kennedy

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Big Al's picture

democrats support Barack Obama. That would be interesting to know. And I wonder why they didn't chant no more war at Bernie Sanders speeches, him being an imperialist and all who supports the fake war OF terror.
Sounds like the same selective outrage we've seen from democrats since Bush was in office. Then they changed when Obama got into office and have approved of his wars and imperialism to the tune of 80%.

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joe shikspack's picture

there are a lot of fine people, with the best of intentions that have been convinced to shut up so that some well-spoken, smart, charismatic warmonger can be elected rather than the monster behind door number 2.

i think that finally, that spell is broken for many people and we can move on to the next step.

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Big Al's picture

we're going to the next step all right, don't quite know what that is yet. I'm seeing some troubling signs relative to wanting to work within the system, supporting Bernie's role in that. Not going to work, not for what we need, and will take away from achieving major outside the system efforts. I still see the first reliance on electing more and better politicians.
Like with my questions about the "antiwar" delegates, I see a lot of contradictions that have to be worked out. Half in, half out makes for half ass revolutions.
Carnac.
(I'm taking my hat off now).

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mimi's picture

and thought it's good to have in the thread.

Inside the CIA’s Penal Colonies Declassified CIA documents reveal a deadly security state operating far outside the bounds of democratic control. - by Joseph Fronczak

Thank you for the EB as always. Have a good evening and don't fall asleep over the convention coverage. You might just miss the historical moment ... What would you tell your grandkids? That you haven't been listening and haven't been there? Nah, that wouldn't be good.

Is it possible that Trump will just resign and quit? Wouldn't that be a good idea? Bernie could go independent. We would annul the whole freaking primaries and conventions and have a do-over. Can't get enough of good parties, no?

Sorry. Good Night. I am already half asleep. I think they schedule HRC's speech on purpose very late, so that fewer people listen and get upset.

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joe shikspack's picture

thanks for the link. my eyes are worn out for the day, but i'll read it tomorrow.

so far i've managed to avoid the convention coverage tonight. i'm sure that my potential grandkids will allow me a night off. if not, no treats for the ingrates. Smile

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mimi's picture

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the other night that she and Mr. UL had listened to as much propaganda as they could bear and had switched over to listening to classical music.

I had to laugh. I had just earlier the same evening given up on listening to my public radio station broadcasting the PBS feed of the Dem convention and rediscovered the college radio station. These kids, with some very able "elderly" guidance, have one heck of a 24/7 FM music channel, almost all of it DJ'd by the kids themselves.

So long as we have music, we'll get through this.

Thanks again for the blues, joe.

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Only connect. - E.M. Forster

Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

The DNC Is One Big Corporate Bribe Drink up—it's on us! Then go protest the TPP to your heart’s content.

Dave Dayen is doing excellent work. In the article above

It’s hard to ferret out all the special interests at the DNC, because there’s no full public schedule. Invitations are doled out individually, and people whisper about this or that event. But enter any official hotel where a delegation is staying, or any Philadelphia landmark, and you’re likely to have a complimentary drink thrust into your hand.

As Politico’s Ben White reported on Monday, private equity firm Blackstone has a meet-and-greet on Thursday. Independence Blue Cross, the southeastern Pennsylvania arm of the large insurer, held a host-committee reception Tuesday; their chief executive is the finance chair of that host committee. The same day, Le Meridien hotel had a private event for Bloomberg LP, and the Logan Hotel hosted “Inspiring Women, a Luncheon Discussion.” The sponsors included Johnson & Johnson, Walgreens, AFLAC, the Financial Services Roundtable (the industry trade lobby), and New York Life. (How many people were they serving, given the number of corporations involved?)

and it goes on and on

And in a second article yesterday,

Democrats Lay Claim to Ronald Reagan’s Shining City But where does that leave the progressive base, much less working-class voters?

some people walked out the day before so

Wednesday night’s program was aimed directly at the seat-fillers. After a front-loaded display of progressive values to kick off the convention, Elizabeth Warren and Jeff Merkley and Bernie Sanders were out of the way, and Democrats pivoted from appealing to the progressives in the room, and more to a thin sliver of undecided voters watching at home. And it was a particular type of undecided voter, too.

Put it this way: When convention organizers realized they were running out of time—as it was, Barack Obama didn’t wrap up until 11:45 p.m, well out of the prime-time window—they had to search the rundown of speakers to find someone to bump. Michael Bloomberg, the independent former mayor of New York City, gave his speech. Sherrod Brown, the populist senator from Ohio, didn’t.

Brown’s remarks were handed out to the press beforehand. (The assumption is that he will give them tonight, though that’s not confirmed.) They were about manufacturing, and how to bring economic vibrancy back to middle America, and how to restore the middle class.

Wonder how Brown feels after kissing ass to Hillary.

And, on another topic, from the Right Wing which tracks these things and the democrats ignore them

State Department approved 215 Bill Clinton speeches, controversial consulting deal, worth $48m; Hillary Clinton's COS copied on all decisions

It is all about family...

Some of the speeches were delivered in global hotspots and were paid for by entities with business or policy interests in the U.S.

The documents also show that in June 2011, the State Department approved a consulting agreement between Bill Clinton and a controversial Clinton Foundation adviser, Doug Band.

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The consultancy with Band's Teneo Strategy ended eight months later following an uproar over Teneo's ties to the failed investment firm MF Global.

State Department legal advisers, serving as "designated agency ethics officials," approved Bill Clinton's speeches in China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Panama, Turkey, Taiwan, India, the Cayman Islands and other countries.

The memos approving Mr. Clinton's speeches were routinely copied to Cheryl Mills, Hillary Clinton's senior counsel and chief of staff.

Mills is a longtime Clinton troubleshooter who defended the president during his impeachment. In the Benghazi affair, Mills reportedly berated a high-ranking official at the U.S. embassy in Libya for talking to a Republican congressman.

Under State Department protocols, a "designated agency ethics official" is assigned to advise the secretary of state about "potential or actual conflicts of interest."

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joe shikspack's picture

heh, the conventions are like woodstock for monied interests. it's a festival of slimy corporate degenerates filling up all of the expensive real estate in philadelphia with crab imperial, martinis and cigar smoke it's also a great opportunity for them to ingratiate themselves to all levels of government flunkies and schmooze amongst themselves, too.

thanks for the links!

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snoopydawg's picture

is a must read. He takes apart the speakers in a funny way.

+ Trump is a carnival barker of bullshit. This morning at his press conference in Scranton he tweaked Clinton by calling on the Russian hackers to release her emails. The reaction was seismic. Trump is inviting a foreign nation to spy on the US! Trump is calling for an enemy of the US to interfere in the American election! Lions, tigers and bears, oh my!

+ The Democrats reacted with predictable hysterics, calling Trump’s remarks “treasonous,” which is ridiculous. What Trump actually said was that “if” Russia did in fact hack into Hillary’s email account then they should release the emails, especially the 30,000 emails that her lawyers deleted AFTER they were subpoenaed.

Here's another one

+ Tim,Kaine, the Jesuit Missionary, talked about witnessing the horrors of the Honduran dictatorship without mentioning that it and its death squads were entirely supported by the US government and that the same generals were put back into power in a coup supported by Hillary Clinton!

One more, but read the article because there are many more.

Jesse Jackson is a hollow shell of his former self. Once one of the most electrifying speakers of our time, he now is thoroughly pacified and house trained. He can’t really believe what he is saying about the woman who called black teenagers “super-predators”? What does he really mean when he says that you can “trust” the woman who pushed for the destruction of welfare that further impoverished the lives of poor black mothers and their children? “Hillary Time? Hope Time?” Jackson couldn’t even look at the camera when he wrenched out those tortured phrases. If Jackson wasn’t embarrassed for that speech, I was on his behalf. Once he was a rebel against the System. Now he is a hired gun for the elites.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

joe shikspack's picture

glad you enjoyed the article, it was the highlight of my reading today.

have a great evening!

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snoopydawg's picture

Yes it was a great article.
Counterpunch is one of my favorite websites because of the issues they cover.
And the writers don't pull any punches.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

I first learned about the issue of sovereignty in the "trade" deals a couple of years ago from Monbiot. He was talking about the TTIP but the same holds for TPP and others

Here he is with the new government in the UK after Brexit

Sovereignty? This government will sell us to the highest bidder: The past of the new international trade secretary, Liam Fox, as a corporate stooge is known. He promises post-EU freedom, but will hand control to big business

Looks like things even worse in the UK

What does it mean to love your country? What does it mean to defend its sovereignty? For some of the leaders of the Brexit campaign, it means reducing the United Kingdom to a franchise of corporate capital, governed from head offices overseas. They will take us out of Europe to deliver us into the arms of other powers.

No one embodies this contradiction as much as the man now charged with determining the scope of our sovereignty: the new international trade secretary, Liam Fox. He explained his enthusiasm for leaving Europe thus: “We’ll be able to make our own laws unhindered by anyone else, and our democratic parliament will not be overruled by a European court.” But of all the people Theresa May could have appointed to this post, he seems to me the most likely to ensure that our parliament and laws are overruled by foreign bodies.

Fox looks to me like a corporate sleeper cell implanted in government. In 2011, he resigned his post as defence secretary in disgrace after his extracurricular interests were exposed. He had set up an organisation called Atlantic Bridge, financed in large part by a hedge fund owner. It formed a partnership with a corporate lobbying group called the American Legislative Exchange Council, which is funded by tobacco, pharmaceutical and oil companies. Before it was struck off by the Charity Commission, it began assembling a transatlantic conclave of people who wished to see public services privatised and corporations released from regulation.

He allowed a lobbyist to attend his official meetings, without government clearance. He made misleading statements about these meetings, which were later disproved. It seems extraordinary to me that a man with such a past could have been brought back into government, let alone given such a crucial and sensitive role. Most newspapers have brushed his inconvenient history under the political carpet. He is, after all, their man.

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snoopydawg's picture

Besides this, there is much more that this guy will do to the UK if the trade agreements pass.
I wonder if there is a sleeper agent in our government too?
This shows how dangerous these trade agreements are to the countries that sign them!
You posted this,

But of all the people Theresa May could have appointed to this post, he seems to me the most likely to ensure that our parliament and laws are overruled by foreign bodies.

One of the legitimate complaints against the EU is its determination to drag us into treaties that claim to be about trade but are really about releasing multinational corporations from democratic control. Three of the agreements it is trying to impose – the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) and the Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA) – make a mockery of parliamentary sovereignty.

They threaten to reduce to the lowest common denominator the laws protecting us from predatory finance, the exploitation of workers, food adulteration, climate change and environmental destruction. They threaten to force the privatisation of public services. They would allow corporations to sue governments for compensation in offshore tribunals that, unlike the European court Fox professes to hate, are unaccountable, opaque and wildly imbalanced. The EU has no mandate to strike such agreements: a consultation on the offshore tribunals TTIP proposes attracted 150,000 responses, 97% of which were negative.

The trade agreements is the final nail in the corporate coup that will erase national borders for the corporations and I think that anyone in our government that votes in favor of passing them are committing treason and I'm not alone in thinking this.
The bots on LOF that continues to say that the ISDS isn't bad for our country are either government trolls or work in industries that will profit from them.
And the first black American president has legalized slavery in Malaysia by removing some of the restrictions against Malaysia so that it can be a partner in the TPP.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

snoopydawg's picture

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

Been upset recently as the coup continues and the democrats corruption is in full display.

Is it this bad?

At the annual BookExpo America conference in 2010, William Gibson gave a prescient address about the future of the future — or, rather, about the fact that the capital-F Future, the one he’d grown up dreaming about and reading about, didn’t exist anymore. Once, Gibson argued, the promise of the future was central to science fiction, which routinely depicted exhilarating visions of some better tomorrow. Yet “if you’re 15 or so today, I suspect that you inhabit a sort of endless digital Now,” he said. Current events — quantum teleportation, synthetic bacteria, not to mention all the commonplace technological leaps we absorb with a stifled yawn — are all so amazing and incomprehensible that we no longer need to dream about what tomorrow might bring.

As evidence, he cited his own novels: His first, Neuromancer, was written in the early 1980s and set in roughly the 2030s. Virtual Light, released in 1993, was set in 2006. Soon, he said, “I found the material of the actual 21st century richer, stranger, more multiplex, than any imaginary 21st century could ever have been.” So his ninth novel, Zero Hour, published in 2010, is set a year earlier in 2009. The job of the futurist is no longer speculating about what might come. It’s trying to comprehend what’s already here

Is the Present Worse Than Any Fictional, Futuristic Dystopia?

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mimi's picture

Horror, this man is a sociopath. Listen to the crowd. One day people will analyze the mass hysteria of the American delegates on these events. I mean he could as well asked if you "want the total war to defeat ISIS". He was very close to that.

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channel-flipping. Those Dems chanting "USA ... USA" chill me now more than the Reps chanting, "Lock her up" did last week.

Well, at least the rest of the world is watching what is transpiring here, do about it what they may.

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Only connect. - E.M. Forster

mimi's picture

if they get anything at all. I bet you none of the msm TV media outlets would show the speech of ret. General Allen. This guy makes my hair stand up. If Hillary is working with such people, never, ever will I support her as commander in chief.

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dervish's picture

I kept expecting some blonde kid to stand up and sing a rendition of "Tomorrow belongs to me"!

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

lotlizard's picture

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dervish's picture

The delegates were told to discard their signs, and use those provided in a packet. On cue they are supposed to pull them out one by one. There is "unity" all right, but it's forced. This doesn't bode well.

That video by Eden McFadden earlier was chilling too.

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

joe shikspack's picture

heh, nobody is going to ruin their script tonight. this is theatre, just like the primary election.

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dervish's picture

I can't get the Hunger Games out of my head. What district am in again?

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

to say 'thanks' for tonight's edition of EB.

It's been a strange and hectic day. I had hoped to post a piece and link that I thought would be fun--and a nice distraction. Think I'll shoot for tomorrow afternoon, instead.

After scorching heat for weeks, no matter which direction we've traveled, I thought we'd need an 'ark' today--whew!

Wink

Seriously, hope folks are staying safe in the heat wave. Maybe we'll get lucky, and June and July will be the hotter months (over August), like they were last summer. Fingers crossed . . .

Everyone have a nice evening!

Bye

Mollie


“I believe in the redemptive powers of a dog’s love. It is in recognition of each dog’s potential to lift the human spirit and therefore– to change society for the better, that I fight to make sure every street dog has its day.”
--Stasha Wong, Secretary, Save Our Street Dogs (SOSD)

The SOSD Fantastic Four

Available For Adoption, Save Our Street Dogs, SOSD

Cole - SOSD

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

mimi's picture

but it is remarkable how he sat there stone-faced, not smiling one bit and then wiggling in his chair uncomfortably.

I mean there must have been something done to him that we might never know, but it must have been very, very bad.

I won't forget it. This man has been treated like a piece of old furniture that they wanted to get rid off and placed out on the driveway to be picked up by the trash collectors to throw into the dumpster.

Listening to Hillary, I get very scared about the future. Can't help it. The lady is way too hawkish, way too sure of herself, way too convinced about "her America". I wonder, when it will ever happen that at least the political leaders in the United States will show humility and the American people will not need anymore cling on the idea of their country's exceptionalism to feel good about themselves.

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But it was really amazing to see. Bernie looked simultaneously furious and in pain. They probably forced him to be at the speech for that one moment. It was as though he knew that the cameras were panning to him and he purposely and defiantly refused to smile. Jane was smiling, but he wasn't. He's always been authentic and that one shot spoke volumes about what went on behind the scenes at this convention.

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mimi's picture

When did she start?

Well, what can I say, I hope for something better than I expect will happen.

Good Night.

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Shahryar's picture

did I believe her? Well, no. But if Bernie had read it we'd have a different reaction. I think he could have given that speech or one close to it. And I think that was her strategy, to get everyone back in line.

Here's something funny, as in "odd" funny...I suspect that if she wins she'll be a better President than Obama. Low bar, yeah.

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annieli's picture

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@eState4Column5

lotlizard's picture

who was not America’s or the world’s enemy but only an “enemy” by the propaganda put out by her personal circle of advisers and allies, is not a woman we can trust with nuclear weapons either.

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but do it on a televised news show for all to see her delight at him being sodomized by knife.

That woman seriously isn't wired right, which may just be a polite way saying she's an outright psychopath, complety devoid of the least amount of empathy.

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Only connect. - E.M. Forster

lotlizard's picture

after feeling disgusted and humiliated by some especially egregious escapade.

Perhaps Jeffrey Epstein’s “Lolita Express”?

Flight logs put Clinton, Dershowitz on pedophile billionaire’s sex jet

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