Monday Morning Open Thread

I might not be here when this posts, but I'll get here eventually

Last week's instalment reminded me of a long deferred project to write a series at the GOS about "Power to the People". Not just a slogan, that was a real goal, and while a goal, also a means to an end, or to many ends, which, taken together, would attain power for the people, adhering in the people, and serving the people. Circular, but in a meaningful way.

Naturally, I planned on starting with the franchise. Hell, people died for it. That instalment would've focused on securing, restoring, guaranteeing and expanding the right to vote, both as a matter of law and as a matter of actual ability to go vote. It would also have to note that voting is a bit pointless if you simply choose between two oligarchs serving our masters. To make the vote meaningful, we have to seize control of the local party apparatus and the non-partisan positions, and then the state organizations, etc. There are obstacles, like entrenched party apparatuses (apparati?), meaning that organizing should start in the neighborhood, maybe groups of 5 to 10, and grow outward. (I know, we could call them cells.)

Of course, the problem with pointing out that we can and should work together to achieve our many various and sundry goals, whether using electoral politics or not, is enumerating them. So, while idly musing on this, I started doing what a good activist should, preparing a list of goals, or an agenda. Every good activist knows that this process involves an unsorted list. You can't prioritize it until its done. In addition, you have to go through the layering process, is X an independent item, or part of the process of achieving item A. Better yet, X might turn out to be critical to achieving multiple goals, giving it independent priority status on those grounds. So, there I was creating my list, to be added to by all and sundry participants movement members and the like, and it had reached this point:

Overall - Power to the people
End Racism ( and other bigotry) (make use of SPLC teaching tolerance materials)
Restore & Increase Civil Liberties (voting rights, speech, press, assembly, etc)
Police Reform (De-militarize police, stop over policing and police abuse)(XRF Racism)
Prison Reform
End Wars
End Imperialism, regime change, assassinations, meddling in internal affairs of others
Women's Equality (address dominionism,)(XRF Civil Liberties)
End "free trade" agreements & agenda
Economic fairness
Ending poverty
Revamp economy
Climate action (This has a natural priority as a crises)
Ungame the Market - transaction tax, etc.
Election Reform (Citizens United, etc.)
Separation of Church & State (& End blue laws)
End the war on drugs
End the war on terror
Abolish the death penalty

Start with non-prioritized list. Prioritize until it is complete but always remember that priority can take a back seat to opportunity as occasion arises.
Humans can multitask and we can break into separate cadres to attack different goals

******

This was the first page/entry in a journalling program named Penzu. Each item could then be promoted (or not) to its own separate page with the various actions and pre-requesites to bringing it about becoming line items in that page and so forth recursively.

Then the damn 'phone rang. "Hi, may I speak to Mr. enhydra lutris?" (This was accompanied by all the background ruckus of the typical boiler room.) Speaking, said I. "Good, I hope you're having a Nice day". What?, said I. Do I know you, Are you a friend? I must confess I proceeded to lose it at this point. The cheery hi how are ya familiarity schtick sosme of these asswipes pull infuriates me. They abuse my 'phone and then talk to me like an old friend?

Though on the "do not call list" we get called incessantly. Charities and political orgs get marginally polite abrupt language to the effect that we accept no calls from political or charitable organizations. Everybody else gets either short shrift or a harangue or a rant or I jerk them around. In mid rant it hit me. Fuck that list I had been writing up. My priority, right now, is to get my damned phone back. I want these useless leaches and scam artists and their war dialers gone from my life and everybody else's. I want the do not call list to be meaningful and to work, or I just want these damn calls outlawed, period. That is probably the best option.

So how trivial can I get, after all my agenda scribbling, but something else came to me. Something I know but had forgotten. Shit like telephone abuse, inadequate parking spaces, dangerous intersections and traffic jams are bread and butter issues. Those are quality of life issues that effect everybody and drive many people crazy. Imagine:
"Hey neighbor, what is more important, ending war, ending poverty, or fixing all the potholes on the main drag? Don't answer, just tell me which you will join up to accomplish, spending your time and money lobbying and such?"

You can win adherents and supporters for other issues, and for the overall process, by including some of those less idealistic quality of life issues. I want my damn 'phone back, damnit.

So, Monday Morning, it isn't a Stormy one, so I guess it's time for

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gulfgal98's picture

Perfect Monday Morning rant. Biggrin

I do not even waste my time letting them launch into their spiels. I say, "I am not interested, Thank you" and hangup before they have a chance to respond. It is almost guaranteed that if the call comes in between 5:30 and 6 pm, it is a solicitation.

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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

enhydra lutris's picture

and we were sort of anticipating a call. We get just enugh legit calls that we need to see who they are first. It's a habit that started when we were on call for a local wildlife rescue, rehab and education center.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

column published today at truthdig.com

it probably will be printed on commondreams.org today

here is link to my comment

http://www.dailykos.com/comments/1423364/57678569#c21

i use the BNR diary to post important things every day

don

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enhydra lutris's picture

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

MarilynW's picture

Thanks.

I notice a diary making fun of "He kept us safe."
And yet Obama is doing the same thing, he is "keeping us safe."

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To thine own self be true.

lotlizard's picture

Article on a site dedicated to keeping an eye on bias and blind spots in the Guardian:
http://off-guardian.org/2015/09/08/the-guardians-faux-progressiveness/

Note: the abbreviation "CIF" in that article refers to the Guardian's "Comment Is Free" section, under whose heading many opinion pieces, some extremely reactionary, appear.

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Here is a comment posted to the article you linked on the Guardian posted on Guardian web site

Well said. This is how advertising and propaganda were always designed to work–in concert. The advent of digital communications puts these capitalist bloodsuckers into our lives every minute of every day and the Guardian is just looking for their piece of the advertising pie.
I also think that advertising is driving the Guardian’s recent move to the right. Quite frankly, they are looking at the demographics and finding that the people with the more expendable incomes are generally right wing in their politics. Let’s face it: ex-hippies, crusty old liberals and true progressives who “challenge” the system don’t waste a lot of money on the types of things they are selling on the Guardian or any of these so-called liberal sites.
By removing most of the better writers from CIF, they will attract the type of people that the advertisers want–non thinking morons who swallow bullshit in gobs, would never vote for a guy like Jeremy Corbyn, think Putin is the anti-christ and have generally never had a cogent thought. They aren’t quite there yet, but they’re making a strong move for an American Audience and my country is full of dumbed-down morons ready to fill the void.

Here is a recent article from NYT about the corporate take over of the university, with the focus on Perdue

This orderliness is just a secondary symptom of a more pernicious trend: the creeping corporatism of the American university. I don’t mean the literal corporations that are taking over more and more of the physical space of universities — the Starbucks outpost, the Barnes & Noble as campus bookstore, the Visa card that you use to buy meals at the dining hall. Enrolling at a university today means setting yourself up in a vast array of for-profit systems that each take a little slice along the way: student loans distributed on fee-laden A.T.M. cards, college theater tickets sold to you by Ticketmaster, ludicrously expensive athletic apparel brought to you by Nike. Students are presented with a dazzling array of advertisements and offers: glasses at the campus for-profit vision center, car insurance through some giant financial company, spring break through a package deal offered by some multinational. This explicit corporate invasion is not exactly what I mean.

No, I’m talking about the way universities operate, every day, more and more like corporations. As Benjamin Ginsberg details in his 2011 book, ‘‘The Fall of the Faculty: The Rise of the All-Administrative University and Why It Matters,’’ a constantly expanding layer of university administrative jobs now exists at an increasing remove from the actual academic enterprise. It’s not unheard-of for colleges now to employ more senior administrators than professors. There are, of course, essential functions that many university administrators perform, but such an imbalance is absurd — try imagining a high school with more vice principals than teachers. This legion of bureaucrats enables a world of pitiless surveillance; no segment of campus life, no matter how small, does not have some administrator who worries about it. Piece by piece, every corner of the average campus is being slowly made congruent with a single, totalizing vision. The rise of endless brushed-metal-and-glass buildings at Purdue represents the aesthetic dimension of this ideology. Bent into place by a small army of apparatchiks, the contemporary American college is slowly becoming as meticulously art-directed and branded as a J. Crew catalog. Like Niketown or Disneyworld, your average college campus now leaves the distinct impression of a one-party state.

Why We Should Fear University, Inc. Against the corporate taming of the American college.

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MarilynW's picture

It's happening in Canada too, or it has happened. Industries and corporations have bought our universities.

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To thine own self be true.

lotlizard's picture

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/omer-aziz/wahhabism-saudi-arabia-an_b_8131...

Trump doesn't scare me. The morals of people who head institutions like Yale Law School and take blood-drenched hereditary dictators' money are quite scary enough.

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MarilynW's picture

I love that list.

About the phone calls. With my iPhone there is a little i beside each call on my "recent calls" list.
After an annoying unwanted call, I go to "recent calls" and click on the little i for the menu "Block this Caller"
After a few weeks of blocking I stopped getting calls. Some unwanted callers change their phone numbers and have
to be re-blocked.

Besides that, lovely morning here. So much to do. My new alarm clock is the construction two doors away. They are digging for
the eventual construction of a 17 story tower. Once they hit rock, there will be blasting and they always hit rock.

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To thine own self be true.

enhydra lutris's picture

don't disseminate our cell numbers very widely. I'll have to see if android has blocking, because we get a few - probably from rogue war dialers.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

lotlizard's picture

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Corbyn-victory-unmasks-Bri-by-Jonathan-...

On either side of the Atlantic, a familiar pattern of behavior every time a genuinely (small-d) democratic alternative emerges.

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triv33's picture

Has this been posted here?
Drug Goes From $13.50 a Tablet to $750, Overnight

Specialists in infectious disease are protesting a gigantic overnight increase in the price of a 62-year-old drug that is the standard of care for treating a life-threatening parasitic infection.

The drug, called Daraprim, was acquired in August by Turing Pharmaceuticals, a start-up run by a former hedge fund manager. Turing immediately raised the price to $750 a tablet from $13.50, bringing the annual cost of treatment for some patients to hundreds of thousands of dollars.

“What is it that they are doing differently that has led to this dramatic increase?” said Dr. Judith Aberg, the chief of the division of infectious diseases at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. She said the price increase could force hospitals to use “alternative therapies that may not have the same efficacy.”

America, fuck yeah.

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I shave my legs with Occam's Razor~

enhydra lutris's picture

“What is it that they are doing differently that has led to this dramatic increase?” said Dr. Judith Aberg, the chief of the division of infectious diseases at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

Icahn, of course, is a notorious corporate raider who doled out a portion of the ill gotten gains from precisely this type of business practice as charity, such as whatever grant resulted in that naming.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

triv33's picture

with disgusting little factoids, and I am equally sickened by what it reveals as by what they manage to not mention.

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I shave my legs with Occam's Razor~

Unabashed Liberal's picture

which seems to be conveniently left out of this piece.

Going by CBO's figures/projections for 2015, the ACA insured 19 million more individuals. Per Wikipedia, the number of US residents is 321,628,000. If my math if correct, that would mean that most of the positive changes (obtaining some kind of health insurance) have gone to approximately 0.05/0.06% of the population.

This same positive benefit could have been obtained by opening up the current well-subsidized Medicare Program (and without establishing an untested Medicare-type/like program), without slashing the benefits of many Americans health care plans--especially those who are members of Employer-Based Group Health Plans, and who've have/or will see the most dramatic (negative) changes.

Even if 'means testing' were to be widely incorporated into Medicare--and it will be, it's just a matter of time--Americans would have come out MUCH better, than they have/will in the ACA.

(By no means am I advocating that anyone who's gained insurance under the ACA be thrown off their plans--only that they be enrolled in our current Medicare system, where there is very low administrative costs.)

Hey, thanks for the post, Triv.

IMO, the ACA is simply another giveaway to the insurance and pharmaceutical industries. It, in some instances, also benefits Government public health programs/plans, and Employers, by "cost shifting" to the plan beneficiaries.

IOW, the astronomical pricing of what were (are) generic, or average costing drugs, allows health insurance plan administrators to assign a higher portion of the cost of these drugs to the plan beneficiaries by 'reclassifying a drug,' which in turn increases the plan beneficiaries' cost sharing.

IOW, what was a Tier 1 or Tier 2 drug, requiring a reasonable beneficiary co-pay, becomes a Tier 3 drug--usually requiring the beneficiary to bear a much larger percentage of the cost (with no cap in some RX plans).

How convenient!

So, now, when a drug costing $30 for a 90-day supply, shoots up to $5,000 for a 90-day supply, the insurer can simply reclassify it as a "Tier 3" drug, and demand that the beneficiary fork over a cool $1650 of the drug price, at least until the beneficiary reaches the plan OOP limit--often as much as $25,000 or more, in Health Exchange and other health care plans. (This is true of our Employer-Based insurance plan.)

Check out the screenshot below from a Medicare HMO Brochure.

Screenshot--Medicare RX Formulary.png
[Leon Medical Centers Health Plan Brochure, "Leon Cares" HMO]

Clearly, these skyrocketing RX prices allow Plan Administrators to reclassify all types of very common drugs. Obviously, in many instances, the lowest income individuals/seniors, will simply be forced to bypass taking many drugs, even if they are considered life-saving.

Gotta walk Mister B, but I'll be back to add my personal experience with a old generic drug that skyrocketed in 2013, about this time of the year.

Talk about sticker shock--we paid $30 for a 90-day supply in early July 2013, and when I called for a refill in September, I was informed (by Walgreens', who held the prescription, CVS, and Wal-Mart that a 90-day supply ran from $2400-2600 for the same 90-day supply.

That's an per pill increase from $0.333, to $28.888.

Whew!

BTW, this RX was for my avatar--"Mr B."

Wink

My apologies--looks like I got a bit redundant!

Mollie


"Every time I lose a dog, he takes a piece of my heart. Every new dog gifts me with a piece of his. Someday, my heart will be total dog, and maybe then I will be just as generous, loving, and forgiving."--Author Unknown

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

MarilynW's picture

from Canada, because Obama continued to block that.

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To thine own self be true.

enhydra lutris's picture

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

This war will never end

Shia militias backed by the Iraqi government deliberately destroyed hundreds of homes and shops in Tikrit after retaking the city from Islamic State (IS) militants in March and April of 2015, according to a report released Sunday by Human Rights Watch.
The 60-page report uses satellite imagery to document the damage done to Tikrit and several nearby towns. The destruction was carried out with no apparent military reason after IS withdrew from the area, Human Rights Watch said...
The Iraqi government relied on the Iranian-backed militias to liberate Tikrit, but, according to Human Rights Watch, the forces ultimately laid waste to entire swathes of the city. After IS fled, several pro-government Shia militias allegedly abducted more than 200 Sunni residents south of Tikrit near the city of al-Dur. At least 160 of the abductees remain unaccounted for.
For its report, Human Rights Watch analyzed a series of eight satellite images recorded from December 2014 to May 2015. The photos show at least 1,425 buildings that were likely destroyed, though the group says those figures likely underestimate the extent of the destruction. Much of the demolition occurred in al-Dur, a town of about 120,000 people 12 miles south of Tikrit.
"We burned and destroyed al-Dur, because [the residents] are ISIS and Baathists," one militia member reportedly said, using an alternate acronym for IS and the name of the party that ruled Iraq prior the US invasion in 2003.
This is not the first time a human rights group has accused Iraq's Shia militias of committing war crimes. In a separate report last year, researchers at Amnesty International said the militias kidnapped and murdered hundreds of people across Iraq, mostly Sunnis.

Meanwhile in a separate report...

Political disarray in Iraq appears to be undermining a critical offensive to retake Ramadi, a key city in Iraq’s Sunni heartland that was seized by Islamic State militants nearly four months ago.
Iraq’s government is relying on a patchwork of militias and government forces, some with competing loyalties, to conduct military operations, making it nearly impossible to achieve a unified effort, analysts and Iraqi officials said.
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MarilynW's picture

nothing can compare with the Highway of Death and the US bombing and strafing of mostly unarmed retreating Iraqis and their families.

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To thine own self be true.

In this one area I think he exceeded his father.

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MarilynW's picture

and the sinister name of the attack, yes Bush jr. could win after all.

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To thine own self be true.

NCTim's picture

He'll have to get a groove. Not an easy think when you do not have soul.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

link

This past week, two pieces—one in the New York Times detailing the “finger pointing” over Obama’s “failed” Syria policy, and a Vox “explainer” of the Syrian civil war—did one better: They didn’t just omit the fact that the CIA has been arming, training and funding rebels since 2012, they heavily implied they had never done so.
First, let’s establish what we do know. Based on multiple reports over the past three-and-a-half years, we know that the Central Intelligence Agency set up a secret program of arming, funding and training anti-Assad forces. This has been reported by major outlets, including the New York Times, The Guardian, Der Spiegel and, most recently, the Washington Post, which—partly thanks to the Snowden revelations—detailed a program that trained approximately 10,000 rebel fighters at a cost of $1 billion a year, or roughly 1/15th of the CIA’s official annual budget....

The New York Times wouldn’t be alone. Comcast-funded Vox would also ignore the CIA rebel training program in its almost 4,000-word overview of the Syrian civil war. Again, the Pentagon’s program would be the sole focus in regards to funding rebels, along with reports of Gulf states doing so as well. But the CIA funding, training and arming thousands of rebels since at least 2012? Nowhere to be found. Not mentioned or alluded to once.

Reuters and the Washington Post’s reports on the US’s Syrian strategy revamp, while they didn’t fudge history as bad as the Times and Vox, also ignored any attempts by the CIA to back Syrian opposition rebels. This crucial piece of history is routinely omitted from mainstream public discourse.

As the military build-up and posturing in Syria between Russia and the United States escalates, policy makers and influencers on this side of the Atlantic are urgently trying to portray the West’s involvement in Syria as either nonexistent or marked by good-faith incompetence. By whitewashing the West’s clandestine involvement in Syria, the media not only portrays Russia as the sole contributor to hostilities, it absolves Europe and the United States of their own guilt in helping create a refugee crisis and fuel a civil war that has devastated so many for so long.

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NCTim's picture

They neglected to mention since it didn't fit their story.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

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NCTim's picture

Known as food stamps and Medicaid. Why do we have to subsidize billionaire's businesses?

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

NCTim's picture

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

link

The number of U.S. households that spend at least half their income on rent—the "severely cost-burdened," in the lingo of housing experts—could increase 25 percent to 14.8 million over the next decade. More than 1 million households headed by Hispanics and more than 1 million headed by the elderly could pass into those ranks. Households shouldn't spend more than 30 percent of income on housing, by the general rule of thumb...
Even in the best case posited by the report, with wages growing a full percentage point per year faster than rents, the number of severely-cost burdened households will barely fall, from 11.8 million in 2015 to 11.6 million in 2025. In the baseline scenario, where rents and wages (and inflation) increase at 2 percent each year, the researchers expect the number to reach 13.1 million.
There were 11.2 million severely burdened renter households in 2013, competing for 7.3 million units affordable to them, the report said. If rents continue to rise faster than wages, the number of households spending more than half their income on rent will rise, too. Wages grew 0.2 percent in the second quarter of this year, the slowest pace since 1982.
“The economy alone is not going to solve this problem," said Andrew Jakabovics, senior director of research at Enterprise Community Partners, in a conference call to discuss the findings. "It brings us back to the need to expand affordable housing,”

rent.png

and in addition to this article, we have this

One lasting scar from the deepest recession since the 1930s is the phenomenon of young adults, facing their own financial challenges, forced to squeeze in the homes of their parents. And new data show the trend is getting worse, not better .
In 2015, 15.1 percent of 25 to 34 year olds were living with their parents, a fourth straight annual increase, according to an analysis of new Census Bureau data by the Population Reference Bureau in Washington. The proportion is the highest since at least 1960, according to demographer Mark Mather, associate vice president with PRB.
"It takes young people longer these days to find jobs with decent wages," Mather said. "Young adults need to spend more time getting the necessary education and skills before they can become self-sufficient. The recession likely exacerbated this trend."
Some of the delays may reflect changing social norms, as young people are delaying both marriage and having their own children, he said.

basement.png

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MarilynW's picture

rental market will be pushed into the streets, to join the growing ranks of the homeless.

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To thine own self be true.