The Evening Blues - 10-19-15



eb1pt12


Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features blues singer Lee "Shot" Williams. Enjoy!

Lee Shot Williams - You're welcome to the club

"The truth is that for reasons that have a lot to do with the U.S. government bureaucracy we settled on the one issue that everyone could agree on which was weapons of mass destruction as the core reason."

-- Paul Wolfowitz


News and Opinion

Well, actually, no, I am not tired of hearing about Hillary's damned emails just now. I hope that we hear a lot more about this one:

Smoking gun emails from Hillary Clinton's private server reveal Bush and Blair's deal on Iraq war was forged a year before the invasion

A bombshell White House memo has revealed for the first time details of the ‘deal in blood’ forged by Tony Blair and George Bush over the Iraq War.The sensational leak shows that Blair had given an unqualified pledge to sign up to the conflict a year before the invasion started. It flies in the face of the Prime Minister’s public claims at the time that he was seeking a diplomatic solution to the crisis. He told voters: ‘We’re not proposing military action’ – in direct contrast to what the secret email now reveals.

The classified document also discloses that Blair agreed to act as a glorified spin doctor for the President by presenting ‘public affairs lines’ to convince a sceptical public that Saddam had Weapons of Mass Destruction – when none existed.

The damning memo, from Secretary of State Colin Powell to President George Bush, was written on March 28, 2002, a week before Bush’s famous summit with Blair at his Crawford ranch in Texas.

In it, Powell tells Bush that Blair ‘will be with us’ on military action. Powell assures the President: ‘The UK will follow our lead’. ...

A second explosive memo from the same cache also reveals how Bush used ‘spies’ in the Labour Party to help him to manipulate British public opinion in favour of the war.

The documents, obtained by The Mail on Sunday, are part of a batch of secret emails held on the private server of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton which U.S. courts have forced her to reveal. ...

Powell says to Bush: ‘He will present to you the strategic, tactical and public affairs lines that he believes will strengthen global support for our common cause,’ adding that Blair has the presentational skills to ‘make a credible public case on current Iraqi threats to international peace’.

Five months after the summit, Downing Street produced the notorious ‘45 minutes from doom’ dossier on Saddam Hussein’s supposed Weapons of Mass Destruction. After Saddam was toppled, the dossier’s claims were exposed as bogus.

Nowhere in the memo is a diplomatic route suggested as the preferred option.

Instead, Powell says that Blair will also advise on how to ‘handle calls’ for the ‘blessing’ of the United Nations Security Council, and to ‘demonstrate that we have thought through “the day after” ’ – in other words, made adequate provision for a post-Saddam Iraq.

‘Cheerleader’: Leaked memo claims Blair supported Iraq invasion year before war

Chilcot report unlikely to be delayed by Colin Powell memo

The Chilcot inquiry is unlikely to delay further its report into the war in Iraq as a result of the emergence of a fresh memo from former US secretary of state Colin Powell, according to one of those who gave evidence to the hearing.

A spokesman for the inquiry said Sir John Chilcot will not be commenting on the memo so as not to prejudice or pre-empt the report. Chilcot informed David Cameron last week that he planned to provide a timetable for publication of the long-delayed report by 3 November. The spokesman declined to comment on whether the memo would create a further delay.

The report is likely to be published next year.

According to Powell’s memo, Blair indicated to then US president George W Bush in March 2002 that the UK would support military operations in Iraq if necessary, a full year before the invasion. Blair has said repeatedly he had not committed the UK to the war until 2003. ...

A witness – not one of those criticised – said Chilcot was unlikely to reopen the process at this late stage, not least because the substance of the Powell memo was “not a big revelation”.

It is now well-known that Blair had tilted towards war by March 2002, the witness said, and even if Chilcot had not seen this particular memo, he would have been told similar things by other witnesses or seen evidence in other documents.

MSF Hospital Was in US ‘Restricted’ Database Before Attack

Pentagon Confirms MSF Called Immediately When Attack Began

The Pentagon has reported “initial findings” in its internal investigation of this month’s attack on a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, a strike which killed 22 civilians and has fueled calls for an independent investigation into potential war crimes.

The Pentagon’s comments, reported to CNN, were largely in keeping with what MSF had already reported, affirming that the hospital was known and documented by the Pentagon, that Doctors Without Borders “did everything right” in informing the US of the location of the facility, and that MSF, as they reported the day of the incident, contacted the Pentagon immediately upon the first strike on the facility.

That’s where things get murky though. The Pentagon concedes the hospital was “restricted” – not to be attacked under any circumstances, and that they were informed early in the attack that they were hitting a hospital. Despite this, the attacks continued for a solid hour, and Pentagon officials say the call “was quickly put into our system. Beyond that I can’t say where it went.”

Today’s comments have US officials trying to disavow that narrative at any rate, saying it is “preposterous” to think that the US would “knowingly” attack a protected facility even if it knew there was a target within. Yet the US did attack the facility, and confirms it was protected, and so far there hasn’t been even a mediocre excuse for it.

Turkey --- Success Story Turns to Disaster

As Saddam Hussein predicted, George W. Bush’s invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq opened the gates of hell. Attempts by Washington to overthrow Syria’s Alawite regime – a natural US ally – have destroyed large parts of that once lovely nation and produced the worst human disaster since the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in the late 1940’s and 1967.

Washington’s bull-in-a-China-shop behavior in the fragile Mideast came just as the Turkish government of Recep Erdogan had presided over a decade of stunning economic growth for Turkey, pushed the intrusive armed forces back to their barracks, and achieved friendly relations with neighbors. No Turkish leader in modern history had achieved so much.

Equally important, the Erdogan government was on the verge of making a final accommodation with Turkey’s always restive Kurds – up to 20% of the population of 75 million – that would have recognized many new rights of the “people of the mountains.” ...

Thanks to patient diplomacy and difficult concessions, PM Erdogan’s Islamist –Lite AK Party managed to reach tentative peace accords with the PKK and its jailed leader, Abdullah Ocalan in spite of fierce resistance from Turkey’s generals, violent semi-fascist nationalist groups and equally dangerous leftist revolutionaries.

Peace with the Kurds went down the drain when the US intensified the war in Syria and began openly arming and financing Syria’s and Iraq’s Kurds. Various Kurdish groups became involved in the Syria fighting against the Assad regime in Damascus and against the Islamic State – which had been created by Saudi Arabia and the CIA to attack Shia regimes. Turkey struck back, and the war with the Kurds resumed. A decade of patient work kaput.

Oh my, it looks like we've located another zip code that the milkman of human kindness does not deliver to. It's a shame to see so many lactose decency intolerant people there are in America.

Strident Calls to Reject Syrian Refugees Fueled by Wealthy California Donor

While humanitarian groups and religious charities across the country are urging the U.S. to open its arms to refugees fleeing the bloody conflicts in Syria and Iraq, a number of bloggers and political pundits are beating the drums of intolerance, using conspiracy theories and anti-Muslim rhetoric to mobilize the American public against accepting migrants escaping war.

Several of the leading voices in this effort are sponsored by Robert Shillman, a wealthy donor to conservative causes who lives in Rancho Santa Fe, a suburb of San Diego. ...

Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at FrontPage Magazine, has argued that the only “genuine refugees” are “Christian and non-Muslim” and that the U.S. should not accept any Muslims from the conflict in Syria because those fleeing the region “are not victims, they are perpetrators.”

Greenfield, who has published over a dozen articles this year about the dangers of Syrian refugees, explained on an Internet news program in September that the Obama administration is “really eager to find new undocumented Democratic voters anywhere it can” and that religious charity groups assisting Syrian refugees are simply out to make money from the crisis. “If you’re a 90-year-old Haitian who is HIV-positive, they will roll out the red carpet for you,” Greenfield claimed, as he explained the Obama administration’s approach to immigration.

Raymond Ibrahim, another Shillman Fellow at FrontPage, has argued that Western nations “should only accept Christian refugees” because Muslim refugees are merely escaping “chaos created by the violent and supremacist teachings of their own religion, Islam.”

Germany looks toward Turkey for help on growing refugee crisis

Germany Offers Turkey a Deal: Support For EU Bid In Return For Migration Crisis Help

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has done something of a U-turn and offered Turkey a deal: support for faster progress with its bid to join the European Union in return for more cooperation with stemming the flow of migrants and refugees, and reaccepting those who have been rejected by Europe.

Speaking in Istanbul at a joint news conference with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday, Merkel said Germany would be willing to help accelerate the path to visa-free travel to the EU for Turks and push forward Ankara's protracted EU membership talks.

In return, she expects Turkey to agree more quickly to take in migrants sent back by the EU, so-called "readmission agreements" that Davutoglu has said he will sign up to only if there is progress on liberalizing the visa regime for Turks.

The German chancellor reiterated her opposition to Turkey joining the EU just 10 days ago, with her and her party previously saying they were strongly against Turkey entering the EU because of its poor human rights record.

But now she needs Turkey's help that position has apparently changed.

Iraqi Kurdish civilians bear the brunt of Turkish airstrikes

Turkey continues to conduct airstrikes against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in spite of the unilateral ceasefire brought forth by the PKK. As the bombings go on, Turkey has scheduled critical elections less than three weeks away.

The announcement of the PKK’s ceasefire offer came immediately after the largest attack in Turkey’s modern history. On 10 October, two suicide bombers blew themselves up at a peace rally in Ankara, only five days after Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan met EU leaders in Brussels to discuss the situation of Syria's refugees. In return for keeping Syrian refugees from reaching Europe, Erdoğan is asking the EU to support his war on the PKK.

Civilians, however, have borne the brunt in this war. Most of the casualties have been non-combatants, and a significant portion of those killed never took up arms against Turkey, but instead fought the Islamic State (IS) group in Syria and Iraq. ...

“I had been saving money for three years to build this house, and we had only just moved in here”, Nabi Hassan says. Hassan has not been taking up arms against Turkey; he is a sergeant of the Kurdish Peshmerga forces that are fighting IS in Iraq.

The front door of his home has remained intact. Inside his house, however, a child’s bike with a crooked wheel lies on the ground and the glass of the shattered windows is scattered everywhere. A clock is lying on the floor, pointing at 4:10 am, the time when the first missiles landed on this little country village. ...

Hassan explains how a drone flew over and an aircraft fired another missile at the crowd of people who were searching for survivors beneath the ruins. “I saw mutilated bodies. Of civilians, our villagers. If you are looking for the PKK, they are hiding in the mountains. Saddam bombed the Kurds as well. He was a dictator. But Turkey pretends to be a democratic state that wants to become a member of the European Union.”

Does the US Have a Plan in Afghanistan?

Yes, the U.S. can leave Afghanistan

"The narrative that we're leaving Afghanistan is self-defeating," Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter announced last week, in justifying the latest course change in U.S. policy toward that country. "We're not, we can't, and to do so would not be to take advantage of the success we've had to date." ...

Americans should wonder how it is that the United States today acts from an absence of choice, as Carter acknowledges in his revealing remark. Why is it that we "can't" leave?

Answering that question requires appreciating the fix in which the United States finds itself, not only in Afghanistan but also in Iraq, where a war once said to have ended has resumed with a vengeance. In both countries, U.S. military policy has met with profound failure. After overthrowing the established order, U.S. forces attempted in each to restore stability while vowing to create a flourishing new order advertised as both humane and democratic. Yet in Afghanistan and Iraq alike, despite vast expenditures and very considerable sacrifice, those efforts never came close to fruition, even as they exhausted the willingness of the American people to do more.

Even today, however, few in Washington will own up to the magnitude and implications of those twin failures. The fact that senior officials from both parties, along with a succession of high-ranking military officers, share in responsibility for the various misjudgments and miscalculations made along the way helps to sustain an atmosphere of collective denial. Members of the national security establishment to which Carter belongs — he is the fifth Defense secretary to have presided over these ongoing conflicts — have a common interest in diverting attention from just how badly they have screwed up.

So the decision to retain 9,800 U.S. troops in Afghanistan beyond the Obama administration's previously announced deadline for withdrawal qualifies less as a noteworthy shift in policy than as an attempt to conceal the utter absence of any policy worthy of the name. Does anyone seriously think that what President Obama describes as a "modest but meaningful extension of our presence" will bring hostilities in Afghanistan to a favorable conclusion, when years of effort by a much larger contingent could not accomplish that goal?

What we have here is temporizing dressed up in policy drag. It is a gesture designed to convey an appearance of purposefulness to an enterprise whose actual purpose has long since vanished in the mists of time.

Pentagon claims to kill Al-Qaeda financier a second time in Syria airstrike

In a new statement today, the Pentagon claimed to have killed Sanafi al-Nasr, a long-sought al-Qaeda financial from Saudi Arabia, in an airstrike against northwest Syria. He was said to have been slain on Thursday. ... The Pentagon has most recently claimed he was a figure in [a group the Pentagon pulled out of its, um, imagination,] "Khorasan."

This is the second time Nasr has been reported killed, and many Pentagon claims of slain militants haven’t panned out. ... The US didn’t specify the site of the airstrike, though interestingly a conflicting story has emerged claiming Nasr was actually killed by a Russian airstrike, just west of the city of Aleppo. With the US heavily emphasizing that their focus, unlike Russia’s, is exclusively on ISIS, it is noteworthy that their only recent named killing was of a non-ISIS target.

Who Are the Targets of Russian Airstrikes in Syria?

Russia blocks Israeli jets over Lebanon

Russian forces warned Israel over IAF flights in Russian controlled airspace near the Syrian–Lebanese border area after Israeli jets were detected nearby, according to a report Friday in the Lebanese media outlet As Safir.

The report comes a mere day after Russia announced that it had established a "hotline" with Israel in order to coordinate aerial activity over Lebanon and Syria.

As Safir quoted Lebanese diplomatic officials who were "in the know," as saying that the warning was issued after Russian radar identified Israeli aircraft approaching Russian-controlled airspace two weeks ago.

"Russian aircraft immediately blocked the Israeli jets' path while they flew above the Akkar region in northern Lebanon. The Russians immediately sent a clear warning to the Israelis that entering Syrian airspace would be a pretext for opening fire," the source said.

Israel-Palestine: As Stabbings, Shootings Kill Dozens, Endless Occupation Fuels Vengeful Resistance

US Officials: Iran Complying Too Fast With Nuclear Deal

While everyone expected Iran to move quickly on implementing the P5+1 nuclear deal, US officials are alarmed at the alacrity of their compliance, saying they have “unreasonable expectations” that the West will implement their own side of the deal in a timely fashion. ...

The overall attitude from US officials, and that some are already accusing Iran of “cutting corner” by moving so quickly, suggests that Western nations, and the US in particular, were expecting to be able to drag out their end of the bargain on the P5+1 nuclear deal.

That may not be realistic, however, as Iran seems to be quickly implementing the pact, and some of the EU nations, particularly Germany, have substantial business deals on the line with Iran, which would be threatened if they drag out implementation.

US to clean up Spanish radioactive site 49 years after plane crash

Nearly 50 years after a US air force B-52 bomber carrying nuclear weapons crashed in Palomares in south-east Spain, Washington has finally agreed to clean up the radioactive contamination that resulted from the crash.

The US secretary of state, John Kerry, and the Spanish foreign minister, José Manuel García-Margallo, signed an agreement in Madrid on Monday to clean up the site and “store the contaminated earth at a suitable location in the United States”.

The Palomares crash was the worst nuclear accident of its time. On 17 January 1966, at the height of the cold war, the B-52 bomber collided with a KC-135 tanker plane during mid-air refuelling off the coast of Almería, Spain, killing seven of the 11 crew members.

The B-52 was carrying four hydrogen bombs more powerful than those dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Two were recovered intact from the sea but the others leaked radiation into the surrounding countryside when their plutonium-filled detonators went off, strewing 3kg of highly radioactive plutonium 239 around Palomares. ...

The Palomares clean-up deal is seen by many as a sweetener in exchange for Spain agreeing to Washington ramping up its military presence in the country. ... Talks with Spain’s rightwing government over the military build-up have intensified in recent months amid fears that a government less sympathetic to Washington’s strategic aims may be elected in December. Barack Obama said during the King of Spain’s visit to Washington in September that a change of government might harm bilateral relations.

Inside Allan Dulles' Reign as CIA Director, from '54 Guatemala Coup to Plotting Castro's Overthrow, A CIA Tie to JFK Assassination?

Marines are warned not to read leaked 'drone files'

Curious Marines, be warned: Reading this could get you in a whole lot of trouble. "The Drone Papers," published on Thursday by The Intercept, contain classified files explaining the ins and outs of how the U.S. drone program is run. Though the information is now easily accessible, it's still technically classified — which means that service members, civilian employees, and government contractors put their security clearance at risk just by taking a peek, the Jacksonville Daily News reports.

Drone Papers 'No Surprise to Yemenis,' Says Man Who Lost Family

One man who lost family members to the covert U.S. drone war in Yemen responded Friday to The Intercept's explosive new exposé of the American "assassination complex" by proclaiming he is not surprised but now more hopeful "the whole truth will come out."

"I read that the Americans have very little knowledge of the innocent civilians they are killing in Yemen," said Faisal bin Ali Jaber, a Yemeni engineer whose nephew Waleed bin Ali Jaber and brother-in-law Salem bin Ali Jaber were killed in a 2012 U.S. drone strike attack on their village of Khashamir.

"This is no surprise to Yemenis," he continued. "For years, we have been confused by the sharp contrast between what we see with our own eyes and what the U.S. government tells the world. Slowly, the whole truth will come out."

Snowden Says Hillary Clinton’s Bogus Statements Show a “Lack of Political Courage”

Hillary Clinton twice this week has insisted, contrary to the facts, that former NSA contractor Edward Snowden could have accomplished his goals and avoided punishment if he’d raised his concerns through the proper channels.

Clinton first made that assertion at Tuesday night’s Democratic presidential debate, and again at a town hall meeting in New Hampshire on Friday. ...

Snowden was asked about Clinton’s comments in an appearance, by videolink from Moscow, at a Bard College privacy symposium Friday afternoon.

Snowden said her statement was “false” and he decried “a lack of political courage.”

“Truth should matter in politics, and courage should matter in politics,” he said.

During Tuesday’s debate, Clinton said Snowden “could have been a whistleblower. He could have gotten all of the protections of being a whistleblower. He could have raised all the issues that he has raised. And I think there would have been a positive response to that.” (She also inacurately claimed that the Snowden files had “fallen into a lot of the wrong hands.”)

But media outlets and advocates quickly noted that Snowden was not in fact entitled to whistleblower protections, which do not apply to contractors.

Victim of state spying? Facebook will tell you

The social network will now explicitly warn users it fears are being targeted by state-sponsored hackers

Users whose accounts are targeted or compromised by state-sponsored hackers will now receive a notification upon login, warning them that “we believe your Facebook account and your other online accounts may be the target of attacks from state-sponsored actors”.

The user is then prompted to turn on Facebook’s “login approvals”, a form of two-factor authorisation which texts a login code to the user when they (or anyone else) tries to access the app using their phone.

Is UN Planning to Call for Global Decriminalization of All Drugs?

Business titan Richard Branson claimed on Monday that the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has prepared an unreleased document calling on "governments around the world to decriminalise drug use and possession for personal consumption for all drugs."

"It's exciting that the UNODC has now unequivocally stated that criminalization is harmful, unnecessary and disproportionate, echoing concerns about the immense human and economic costs of current drug policies voiced earlier by UNAIDS, the World Health Organization, UNDP, The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, UN Women, Kofi Annan and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon," wrote Branson, who founded the business conglomerate Virgin Group and sits on the Global Commission on Drug Policy. ...

"But as I'm writing this," Branson added, "I am hearing that at least one government is putting an inordinate amount of pressure on the UNODC. Let us hope the UNODC, a global organization that is part of the UN and supposed to do what is right for the people of the world, does not do a remarkable volte-face at the last possible moment and bow to pressure by not going ahead with this important move."

Chicago police 'disappeared' 7,000 people

Police “disappeared” more than 7,000 people at an off-the-books interrogation warehouse in Chicago, nearly twice as many detentions as previously disclosed, the Guardian can now reveal.

From August 2004 to June 2015, nearly 6,000 of those held at the facility were black, which represents more than twice the proportion of the city’s population. But only 68 of those held were allowed access to attorneys or a public notice of their whereabouts, internal police records show. ...

According to an analysis of data disclosed to the Guardian in late September, police allowed lawyers access to Homan Square for only 0.94% of the 7,185 arrests logged over nearly 11 years. That percentage aligns with Chicago police’s broader practice of providing minimal access to attorneys during the crucial early interrogation stage, when an arrestee’s constitutional rights against self-incrimination are most vulnerable. ...

The narcotics, vice and anti-gang units operating out of Homan Square, on Chicago’s west side, take arrestees to the nondescript warehouse from all over the city: police data obtained by the Guardian and mapped against the city grid show that 53% of disclosed arrestees come from more than 2.5 miles away from the warehouse. No contemporaneous public record of someone’s presence at Homan Square is known to exist.

Nor are any booking records generated at Homan Square, as confirmed by a sworn deposition of a police researcher in late September, further preventing relatives or attorneys from finding someone taken there.

“The reality is, no one knows where that person is at Homan Square,” said Craig Futterman, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School who studies policing. “They’re disappeared at that point.”

Holder Defends Record of Not Prosecuting Financial Fraud

Former attorney general Eric Holder was the honored guest at a Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press reception on Wednesday (leading investigative reporter Murray Waas to reasonably wonder: How’s that again?). ...

After Holder stepped down from his [AG] post in April, he went back to his job at Covington & Burling, the gigantic D.C. law firm whose clients have included many of the big banks which Holder chose not to prosecute. ... Holder bristled at my suggestion that there might be a connection between his current employer and his conduct at Justice, saying that many top prosecutors at Justice had pursued cases as best they could. “We were simply unable to do it under the existing statutes that we had, and given the ways the decision-making worked at those institutions,” he said.

However, Holder had all the statutory authority he needed to prosecute straightforward crimes such as robosigning fraud, perjury in front of Congress by Goldman Sachs executives, or for that matter, HSBC’s money laundering for Mexican drug cartels. He simply chose not to. (In response to another questioner, he denied that any of his decisions not to prosecute were based on the massive legal teams that were fielded against the government.) Moreover, he actively waved off offers of additional help such as the suggestion from Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, that Congress give him more staff for his Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Working Group, or extend the statute of limitations on some crimes. ...

Holder’s comment was only the most recent in a series of pronouncements from formerly powerful government officials that they were in fact powerless — while talking tough once they no longer have the ability to do anything about it.

This is a really excellent article worth reading in full, here's a taste to get your appetite whetted:

Exclusive Federal Reserve Videos and the Glass-Steagall Media Conspiracy

A funny thing happened in 2012 after Andrew Ross Sorkin, a financial writer at the New York Times, wrote his spectacularly false narrative telling readers that the repeal of Glass-Steagall Act had nothing to do with the crash because problem firms like Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch and AIG didn’t own insured commercial banks — which would have been prohibited under the Glass Steagall Act, had it not been repealed in 1999. In fact, all three of the firms did, indeed, own banks insured by the FDIC at the time of the crash.

We figured that Sorkin had just made an error, or, well, three monster errors, so we wrote to his editor. We heard nothing. We wrote to the New York Times public editor who is supposed to uphold the integrity of the paper. Nothing. We wrote to the publisher. Nothing. To this very day, the errors remain in the Sorkin article. When the so-called paper of record allows three outrageously wrong errors to persist as fact, it doesn’t look like sloppy journalism, it looks like a conspiracy to deny the public an honest narrative.

Sorkin’s lie has since been regurgitated by two other writers at the New York Times: Paul Krugman and William Cohan. The lie has also spread to President Obama and Presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton, as a cover for why they won’t buck Wall Street and work to reinstate this critically needed legislation as Senators Elizabeth Warren, John McCain, Bernie Sanders and dozens of others in Congress are demanding. Marcy Kaptur’s legislation in the House of Representatives to restore the Glass-Steagall Act has 67 cosponsors.



the horse race


Final Election Poll Shows Canada’s Liberal Party Could Win a Majority

With Canadians just hours away from heading to the voting booth, a new poll provided in advance to VICE News predicts the Liberal Party is on track for a big win on Monday evening.

The Forum Research survey puts Justin Trudeau's Liberals at 40 percent — the highest result they've achieved thus far in the 78-day campaign — meaning the third-place party could be in a position to sweep into power with a majority government.

The poll puts the governing Conservatives at just 30 percent, and the official opposition New Democratic Party, who entered the campaign with a strong lead, in third place at 20 percent.

Why Americans should care about the Canadian election

The incumbent Conservatives, under Stephen Harper, have not been popular with the Obama administration, partly because they have lobbied the US hard to build the Keystone XL pipeline.

But with Liberal leader Justin Trudeau’s party predicted to win the most seats – if not an outright majority – experts say there is a chance of a thaw in relations between the two countries in time to facilitate real action on issues like climate change. ...

Canadian participation in the US-led coalition against Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq is also in question. Canada has six F-18 jets in Kuwait, flying sorties against Isis, and a special operations unit in Iraqi Kurdistan training Kurdish peshmerga forces. The Conservatives have campaigned to keep those missions going.

But the Liberals have indicated that they would end the air mission, and the NDP would remove all non-Nato Canadian military presence from the region. ...

Trudeau is leading in the polls, so it seems increasingly likely that he will be the prime minister for the final year of Obama’s presidency and the opening years of his successor’s. It is possible the US president will find in him a more willing partner in his attempt to leave a lasting environmental legacy.

If Donald Trump Wins, Please Don't Move To Canada

Egyptians Shun Long-Awaited Parliamentary Election

Egyptians appeared to be shunning the ballot box for a second day on Monday in what one newspaper called "an election without voters", highlighting growing disillusionment since the army seized power in 2013 and promised to restore democracy.

In 2012, millions of people across the country queued up outside polling stations to excitedly cast their vote in the first presidential election Egypt had ever held — a turnout of around 46 percent. In this parliamentary election, polling stations visited by Reuters correspondents pointed to a turnout of around 10 percent.

Younger Egyptians who make up the majority of the population were virtually absent, with many people dismissing it as a sham or expressing doubt that new lawmakers would change anything. The absence of opposition parties has also fuelled voter apathy.

While Sanders Scores Small Donors, Clinton and Bush Buoyed by Wall Street

While the 2016 U.S. presidential election fundraising numbers released Thursday by the Bernie Sanders campaign illustrate the power of a Main Street donor base, filings from Republican Jeb Bush and Democrat Hillary Clinton show their campaigns continue to be the darlings of Wall Street.

The Federal Election Commission (FEC) reports indicate that Bush and Clinton—both of whom are facing challenges from insurgent candidates—"continued to win with bankers, even as their fundraising slowed down last quarter," Politico reported Friday:

Bush collected more than $922,000 from people who said they work in finance, about even with his take from the industry in the previous quarter, and amounting to 7 percent of his total haul. Clinton trailed with some $682,000 from self-identified bankers and investors, well below the $2 million she drew from the financial industry in the second quarter, but tracking an overall decline in her take.

Wall Street remains a crucial money base for both candidates even as they try to avoid appearing too cozy with the institutions that many voters blame for crashing the economy. Marco Rubio is also making a play for finance dollars, but last quarter netted only $201,754. Ted Cruz got $255,676 from bankers and investors.

Meanwhile, Reuters zeroed in on big bank financiers, noting that Bush raked in $107,000 from employees of firms like Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and Bank of America. Clinton took in nearly $84,000 from employees of the same banks.



the evening greens


Indigenous Canadians take leading role in battle against tar sands pipeline

It is the country’s environmental battle of the decade, uniting a wide variety of citizens’ groups against the billions of dollars of investment by oil companies and millions in secret funding from the government. First proposed in 2004, the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline was planned for a 731-mile (1,177km) stretch from the center of Alberta to the coast of British Columbia.

The plan was to carry diluted bitumen from the tar sands, across hundreds of waterways, over two major mountain ranges and through some of the wildest country in North America. It was approved, with 209 conditions, in June of 2014.

Environmental groups, citizen activists and First Nations have used everything from lawsuits to old-fashioned civil disobedience to battle the project – and so far they have been successful. No mean feat, considering that Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper took office in 2006 pledging to make the country into an “energy superpower”. ...

Even as the political battles rage, the Northern Gateway is back in court for a new round that may prove decisive. A group of First Nations, environmental organizations and a labor union argued that the approval process for the pipeline was flawed, did not take environmental impact into account and violated the rights of First Nations. It was the longest case ever heard before the federal court of appeals, Canada’s second-highest federal court.

The Haisla are one of eight First Nations taking part in the case. When Gerald Amos, whose Haisla name is Gagamguist, was asked what the Conservative government could do to work better with First nations, he simply responded: “The best thing that can happen with the conservative government is to be un-elected.”

Rich Nations Failing to Meet Climate Obligations at Expense of Poor: Report

"If the deal that world leaders sign in Paris looks anything like the Bonn negotiating text, then world leaders will have wholly failed to respond to the urgency of climate science, let alone climate justice."

The U.S. and other wealthy nations are not pulling their weight in the climate change fight and may be setting the world on an even more devastating climate track, a new report published Monday reveals.

Globally, governments' pledges to limit greenhouse gas emissions are not adequate to stave off an average surface temperature warming of 2°C, the agreed threshold to prevent irreparable global warming and extreme weather events, according to the report (pdf), Fair Shares: A Civil Society Equity Review of Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs), crafted by 18 civil society groups.

The groups, which include Friends of the Earth International and Oxfam, analyzed the pledges put forth ahead of time in early negotiations in Bonn, Germany this week by about 150 United Nations (UN) member states taking part in this year's COP21 climate talks in Paris and determined that the "ambition of all major developed countries falls well short of their fair shares."

While there is no official method of determining a nation's climate obligations, the civil society groups weighed the pledges against individual countries' economic wealth and historical contribution to global warming.

Because the U.S. and the European Union (EU) can afford to switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy, and because they have benefited financially from burning coal, oil, and natural gas for centuries, their pledges amount to roughly a fifth of what they owe on climate action, the coalition said. Japan has pledged a tenth, according to the same metrics.

COP21 Pledge by Dirty Energy CEOs Called 'Meaningless'

As reporting on Friday suggested that some of the world's largest fossil fuel companies are trying to shed their "bad guy image" ahead of upcoming UN climate talks, a number of environmental and climate campaigners are issuing a quick retort: Do not trust them for a Parisian minute.

Though it contains no U.S. companies, an international group calling itself the  Oil and Gas Climate Initiative—which includes BG Group Plc, BP, Eni SpA, Pemex, Reliance Industries Ltd., Repsol SA, Saudi Aramco, Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Statoil AG and Total—held a press conference and issued a joint statement on Friday to declare its support for policies that would help world governments meet their agreed goal of keeping global temperatures from rising more than 2°C this century. ...

The Union of Concerned Scientists, meanwhile, says what the oil and gas giants have put on offer should be greeted with a very healthy dose of skepticism.  "We would certainly welcome serious climate policy proposals from the companies," said Alden Meyer, UCS's director of strategy and policy. "But we should be skeptical. Given their track record, the onus is on them to prove to both their shareholders and the public that they are truly serious."

Charlie Kronick, representing Greenpeace, was even less forgiving. According to Kronick, the fossil fuel industry's declaration on Friday "contains nothing meaningful" when it comes to fighting the global warming which their industry has been the chief culprit in creating.

"The oil companies behind this announcement have spent years lobbying to undermine effective climate action, each and every one of them has a business plan that would lead to dangerous global temperature rises, yet suddenly they expect us all to see them as the solution, not the problem," he said.


Also of Interest

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

'All We Could Find Were Body Parts': America's Role in Yemen's Civilian Carnage

The US Could End Saudi War Crimes in Yemen - It Just Doesn't Want To

Dealing With the Syrian Quagmire

NYPD has some scary-sounding x-ray vans – and it’s refusing to talk about them

The Democrats’ Presidential Debates: Underway and Underwhelming

Quantitative Easing Was a Bust; Let’s Try Higher Wages Instead

Chris Hedges: Death by Fracking

What a party! I wonder if it has a soul worth fighting for.

Corrupt Corporatists Steve Israel And Debbie Wasserman Schultz Declare Fratricidal War Against Progressives


A Little Night Music

Lee Shot Williams - I Hurt Myself

Lee Shot Williams - I'm Trying

Lee Shot Williams - Our Thing Is Through

Lee Shot Williams - I Found A Love

Lee Shot Williams - Hello Baby

Lee Shot Williams - I'm In Love

Lee 'Shot' Williams - Checking Out

Lee 'Shot' Williams - I Like Your Style

Lee Williams & the Cymbals - Peeping Through the Window

Lee 'Shot' Williams - The Love You Save

Arlene Brown and Lee "Shot" Williams" - Impeach Me Baby

Lee Shot Williams - I'm Tore Up

Lee Shot Williams - Mark My Words

Lee Shot Williams - When You Move You Lose

Lee Shot Williams - Get Some Order

Lee Shot Williams - The Millionaire

Lee Shot Williams - It Ain't Me No More

Lee Shot Williams - Love Now Pay Later

Lee Shot Williams - It's Friday



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lotlizard's picture

http://www.middleeasteye.net/in-depth/reviews/review-britain-and-bahrain...

In reality, London has long cultivated alliances more strategically important and more morally compromised than that now being developed with China. The most obvious examples are those with Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, who at various times have helped prop up the pound, ploughed their oil riches into the UK economy, and virtually bankrolled the British military industry with enormous arms purchases (to say nothing of their role in the supply of energy). One of the many commendable attributes of Bahrain’s Uprisings, an excellent new book edited by Ala’a Shehabi and Marc Owen Jones, is its examination of Britain’s alliance with one of these Gulf monarchies, and how London has helped to shield it from popular calls for democracy and civil rights.

During the tumultuous days of early 2011, Bahraini protestors poured onto the streets in vast numbers, only to be violently suppressed by the regime with the aid of a Saudi-led intervention force. Since then, the government in Manama has battled to keep a lid on dissent and maintain the status quo, while Britain has acted as its supportive adviser (and arms dealer) as well as a protective apologist on the international stage. Shehabi and Jones have brought together an impressively varied cast of dissidents, journalists, scholars and witnesses, from Bahrain and elsewhere, to cover the country’s situation and predicament from a range of important angles. The result is a book that will appeal to any journalists, scholars and members of the public interested in recent events under the rule of what Gulf expert Toby Jones describes as “one of the region’s most tyrannical states”.

Perhaps the book’s most striking chapter is a speech given to Bahrain’s appeal court by Ibrahim Sharif, a leading figure in the Bahraini opposition, a year after his arrest during the 2011 crackdown. Sharif pours scorn on the charge that he had plotted to install an Iranian-style theocracy, given the fact that he is both a Sunni and a renowned secular liberal, and extols the virtues of Gandhian non-violence both as a matter of principle and of strategic practicality. The reader’s wonder at the bravery required to express defiance in such strong and eloquent terms, even while completely at the mercy of the regime, is only enhanced by the details of his torture and sexual assault whilst in custody, included almost incidentally in a footnote. Together with the following chapter’s lyrical, personal account of life as a political prisoner from the Bahraini poet and writer Ali Al Jallawi, these testimonies deserve to take their place alongside those of figures such as Nelson Mandela in the historical record of extraordinary acts of personal courage in the name of freedom.

Also:
U.K. Ignores Barbaric Death & Torture to Become Saudi Arabia’s Largest Arms Supplier

As three young Saudis, Ali Mohammad al-Nimr, Abdullah al-Zaher, and Dawoud al-Marhoon face beheading and crucifixion — and another blogger, Raif Badawi, essentially receives a drawn-out death sentence of 1,000 lashes — the U.S. and U.K. governments have been barraged with criticism for continuing political relations. Perhaps inflaming the issue more, according to the Guardian, several of the “most important Saudi contracts” fell under the Overseas Security and Justice Assistance Policy (OSJA) — meant to establish U.K.’s security and justice dealings as “consistent with a foreign policy based on British values, including human rights.”

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn penned an openly critical letter to Prime Minister David Cameron in which he pled for an independent review of the OSJA process:

“By operating under a veil of secrecy, we risk making the OSJA process appear to be little more than a rubber-stamping exercise, enabling the U.K. to be complicit in gross human rights abuses,” he wrote.

But the U.K. has increased dealings with the kingdom, ignoring the pleas.

In fact, the U.K. is now Saudi Arabia’s largest arms dealer — supplying 36% of its imports.

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joe shikspack's picture

secretly admire these brutal thugs, or if it's just that the money is sooo damned good.

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hecate's picture

Colon Bowel memo also blows a hole in Bowel's revisionist portrayal of himself as something of a reluctant warrior in BushCo's jihad against Iraq.

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joe shikspack's picture

and was helpful in moving the pieces into place to make the plan work. it puts his performance at the un into the context of a series of actions aimed at very consciously selling the public on a war.

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enhydra lutris's picture

have bought his innocent act. His history is one of unflagging amoral and immoral devotion to carrying out the orders of the neocons and their predecessors.

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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 --

hecate's picture

figured out what is the fabled "Khorasan group."

It is a breakfast cereal.

One-Degree-Organic-Foods-Sprouted-Cereal-Khorasan-Honey-Os-675625356018.jpg

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joe shikspack's picture

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enhydra lutris's picture

Khorasan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Khorasan may refer to:

Greater Khorasan, a historic region which lies mostly in parts of modern-day Iran, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan. It was previously known as Parthia; later, during the Sassanid era, it was changed to Khorasan.
Khorasan Province, a pre-2004 province of Iran, subsequently divided into:
South Khorasan Province
North Khorasan Province
Razavi Khorasan Province
Khorasan, Kurdistan, a village in Kurdistan Province, Iran
Khorosan, alternate name of Sain Qaleh, Iran
Khorasan wheat, a wheat variety
Khorasan group, a group of senior al-Qaeda members who reportedly operate in Syria

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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 --

Pluto's Republic's picture

…surveying the entire Internet, every single page, and I want you to know you have the best nightly news line up in existence. Just sayin'

• The smoking gun from Hillary's server was a hoot. Of course, it does beg the questions: When did she know about the war crime? Did she know before she voted for the US murder spree in Iraq? Why didn't she tell the American public that their sons were being slaughtered in Iraq to make the war profiteers wealthy? Why did she conspire to maintain the secret of US war criminals?

(Of course, I regret to inform everyone that as things stand today, the 2016 race will still be Bush v Clinton. Clinton will win. Yet another war criminal. I'll let you know if that changes.)

• The Glass-Steagall conspiracy was great fun. The New York Times — renown CIA mouthpiece — plays their part perfectly. I guess that answers the question "Who's your Daddy?" It also explains why Sanders "Ain't Nothing but a Sheepdog." Especially when combined with your other news pick: "While Sanders Scores Small Donors, Clinton and Bush Buoyed by Wall Street."

(I don't mean that in a cynical way. Sanders is tilting people's awareness in an important way. Boy are they ever going to be disappointed when they discover they are still in bed with the Neocons in 2017.)

• But, for me, the story about Iran complying too fast with the Nuclear Agreement was the piece de resistance. That's because I am following along with all the business underway between Iran and so-called US allies. Hundreds of billions of dollars so far, much of it clears using CIPS, China's new SWIFT substitute, which ends US dollar hegemony and US-sanctions-acts-of-war, forever more. Anyway, to comply, all Iran has to do is pretend to stop what they are already not doing. That only takes about 30 seconds.

BTW, I thought Computer World did the best job of covering this story:

Stoner high school kid claims to have hacked CIA Director's email account

A teenage stoner claims to have taken control of CIA Director John Brennan's personal AOL email account where some government documents were stored. The same hacker allegedly took over Comcast accounts of the DHS Secretary and the White House Deputy National Security Advisor.

They provide links to the illegally stored classified documents.

PS: About those Syrian refugees, Americans should be reminded that Steve Jobs was a Syrian anchor baby in the US. You heard it here, first.

Thanks again for the news, Joe.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

super fast is frigging hilarious. Maybe "they" expected Iran to be like them - foot dragging, deceitful or wilfully violating agreements.

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Reg Steve Jobs, I saw this takedown of the hagiographic movie - for once, gotta give it to New Republic :

www.newrepublic.com/article/123071/steve-jobs-what-exactly-do-you-do

That this guy is considered as a genius shows Idiot Amureeka in all its glory.

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lotlizard's picture

Most scenes in Sorkin's movie — more iconoclastic than hagiographic — have little to do with reality.

Sorkin invented his version of Steve Jobs from whole cloth. The excuse Sorkin and his apologists give is that what he does, and what movies do, is fiction and entertainment and doesn't need to stick to the facts in order to reveal "greater truths."

Just a caveat that "the map is not the territory," as they used to say, and studio-produced imagery and scriptwriter-invented dialog is not reality.

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lotlizard's picture

I was a Sixties / Seventies "Whole Earth Catalog" type myself and went through all the travails of our generation's dreams failing and going unfulfilled — so Steve Jobs' 2005 commencement speech to Stanford graduates, harking back to the ideals of that era and affirming their truth and power even in the business world, did indeed touch me deeply in heart and mind.

Worth watching for those who haven't seen it. Certainly something to take into account before judging the man.

http://news.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html

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these idiots are going to "keep us safe". And I am waiting for Chinese/ Russian hackers to be mentioned in the "reporting" soon. Maybe the NSA backdoors these specimens so love are coming to bite their asses.

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joe shikspack's picture

good to see you and thanks for the kind words.

regarding hillary's emails, i'm wondering how that particular smoking gun happened to wind up being mailed (to or from?) hillary. it would be interesting to know the context in which hillary was reviewing or asking others to review those two docs.

regarding sanders, i think that (perhaps unintentionally) he is doing very important work extending a portion the agenda of the occupy movement and most importantly changing the perceptions of citizens about what it is that can be demanded of government - changing the social contract. with any luck, people will catch on that it might be possible to demand a great deal more.

what i find amusing about the iran story is that a whole cabal of people deployed by israel and the neocons from the money men and political arm-twisters to their flunkies in american politics still seem to think that america is a relevant force in this process and that it matters what america "thinks" and does.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

...that Hillary extracted that document from the State Department herself, but that theory seems wingnutty to me. On the other hand, it may be a freestanding document, without headers.

I'll never understand the whole Iraq attack vote, anyway. I knew the info was completely bogus before the vote, because French Intelligence told me so in no uncertain terms. The French also told the rest of the world that the Iraq WMD docs were totally fake, as did Joe Wilson and Valerie Plane. So, the Senate already knew that it was complete BS, just as I and the rest of the world did.

Either members of the Senate were co-conspirators in a war crime or they are criminally stupid.

On Sanders, I agree with you. But there will be bitter tears of disappointment after the next Neocon tool is inaugurated. The black-swan key, of course, is 9/11 and whether Americans get up the nerve to ask questions about the Sunni terrorists from Saudi Arabia who committed the crime. The Saudi King insists 9/11 was Mossad's idea, not theirs.

I too find the US Congress' delusion that they have a vote in Iran Agreement to be endlessly amusing. I just can't look away.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
Unabashed Liberal's picture

for the excellent roundup, as usual.

I also was not surprised to see the piece about FSC's email entanglements--for lack of a better description. Thanks for staying on top of this topic!

I agree that it is good for Senator Sanders to expand the 'agenda' in regard to social welfare programs, and I commend him for it.

However, I was a bit taken aback when Senator Sanders--when pushed for an answer by Stephanopoulos--invoked the closing of tax expenditures (loopholes) for the wealthy and corporations, in lieu of stating "how much he would raise their tax rates."

Here's a link to the interview, for now.

I'm too pushed to expound this evening, but when we get back from our trip, I plan to elaborate at some length on the topic of the Fiscal Commission's so-called 'tax reform' plan.

IMHO, it is really important for the Dem Party Base to push back on the Bowles and Simpson Fiscal Commission's tax reform proposal. (Section II, Page 28, of "The Moment Of Truth")

Remember,

the loophole closings are intended as "offsets" for drastically lowering the federal income tax rates--especially for the wealthy and for corporations. And, if by some remote possibility, lawmakers were to eliminate [or reduce] enough loopholes--it would be used for lowering the federal deficit, not funding social welfare programs.

And, no where in the Bowles-Simpson proposal is it stated that the intention of tax reform is to finance social welfare programs.

Also, when we return, I hope to touch on the amendment signed by PBO on October 7th--which will keep millions of citizens from having coverage under the ACA (It repeals the employer mandate for certain groups of employers, leaving millions more without health care coverage.)

Also, two more regulations which adversely affect 'employers' are slated to be repealed by bipartisan agreement.

(I'll mention them as they occur.)

Meanwhile, there's no talk of repealing the 'individual' mandate, even while more and more employers are being relieved of their obligation to pay any fines, taxes, etc., to actually fund the ACA Health Exchanges.

And if that isn't bad enough, the same week, when the NDAA passed the Senate (after having passed the House). I just happened to hear John Thune during Floor coverage talking about the marvelous military retirement 'reform' which was contained in the bill (prior to the vote, passing it).

Apparently, with bipartisan support, lawmakers have voted to destroy the excellent defined benefit plan of military members. As well as lower their pay, via their COLA adjustments. See below.

Discussion: The military retirement system has historically been viewed as a significant incentive in retaining a career military force and any changes are closely followed by active duty military and veteran’s groups.

The House and Senate versions of the FY2016 NDAA would change the existing system from a defined-benefit system that is vested at 20 years of qualifying service, to a blended defined-benefit, defined-contribution system with government matching contributions through the Thrift Savings Plan.

While the Senate version would stop government matching contributions at 20 years of qualifying service, the House version would allow matching contributions for the duration of service.

Both versions would reduce the multiplier for the defined benefit to 2.0% from 2.5% (a retirement annuity equal to 40% basic pay at 20 YOS rather than 50% of basic pay) and would authorize continuation pay at 12 years of service as a retention incentive.

The Senate version would also allow a lump-sum payment of the retired pay that the service member would be eligible to receive prior to becoming eligible for Social Security.

Existing service members and all those entering the military prior to October 1, 2017 in the House version or January 1, 2018 in the Senate version would be grandfathered into the current system, but would be given an opportunity to opt into the new system.

The Senate version would also give enhanced flexibility to DOD to modify the YOS requirement for particular occupational specialties with Congressional notification (1-year) prior to implementation.

Under the House version the retired pay Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) adjustments first enacted by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (P.L. 113-67 §403) would affect those who join the Armed Forces on or after October 1, 2017 (from the previous date of implementation, January 1, 2016), while the Senate version does not have a provision regarding the COLA reduction.

(Can't find anything saying that it has been signed, yet. But with this 'legacy' jewel, can't imagine that it won't be.)

IMO, this is yet another 'dress rehearsal' for Social Security reform.

BTW, the Civil Service retirement system was 'reformed,' as part of the Ryan-Murray so-called budget deal. It was not retroactive, so we weren't affected.

Aside from having heard Thune's floor remarks--I haven't heard a word about this.

Incredible!!!!!

Sorry not to have "Good News" this evening. I've been so busy, that I haven't been able to read my cell phone news feed. I like it, because it contains a section that has some very touching, endearing, or, sometimes, just funny stories.

Hey, Everyone have a great evening!

Bye

Postscript: This is a real scattered mess--sorry!

Mollie


"The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart."--Helen Keller
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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

I'm making a request for more info on -- "still in bed with the Neocons in 2017"! I hope you'll say more on this. TY! Always enjoy what you post!

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Pluto's Republic's picture

Both final candidates, Hillary and Bush, are owned by the Neocons.

They may differ on fluffy domestic matters, like gay wedding cakes. But, they are both absolutely wedded to international murder and mayhem, funded on the backs of the US poor and middle class.

US poverty has expanded year-over-year under both Bush and Obama. It's about to start accelerating, especially among the US elderly.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

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link

A leaked phone call between Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Paet and European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs Catherine Ashton, revealed that the protesters were shot by their own leaders – the radical nationalists who had military control of the Maiden.
...
the story was pretty much buried here in the US, with the exception of this space and a few other alternative news sources.

But in Europe, it was a different story: the German public television station ARD carried a report which threw the identity of the Maidan shooters into serious question. And more recently the BBC produced a documentary, “The Untold Story of the Maidan Massacre,” in which eyewitnesses assert that the Berkut were fired on from positions controlled by the ultra-nationalist Svoboda Party, which, along with the neo-Nazi “Right Sector” organization, ran Maidan security.

Still, the story was ignored in the US, but that may not be possible much longer, and the reason springs from an unlikely source: the current Ukrainian government of President Petro Poroshenko.

Last week Ukrainian police raided the homes of Svoboda Party leaders Oleksandr Sych, who served as Deputy Prime Minister in the post-Maidan government, and Ole Pankevich, whose 2013 appearance at a neo-Nazi memorial event provoked the ire of the World Jewish Congress. The Ukrainian prosecutor’s office confirmed that the raid was conducted as part of an investigation into the Maidan shootings:
...
Why this stunning turnaround?

Both Svoboda and Right Sector have declared war on the Poroshenko regime and are calling for a “national revolution” – one that would install them in power.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

I only wish it touched upon Nuland's role and the US funding underwriting the overthrow.

Between Ukraine and Syria, the US is getting its ass kicked as far as opinion and awareness goes throughout the world, from South America to Southeast Asia. Even the UK and Australia are recoiling from association with the US.

How funny that Americans have absolutely no idea what is going on.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
joe shikspack's picture

i remember reading stories with those details quite some time ago, but i really couldn't evaluate the sources. the shoe that i wonder about the possibility of it dropping are the details that i read about cia involvement in training and helping organize the extreme right-wing groups that were behind the shootings. all of the other details of the stories that i read back them have come to light now that the extreme right is struggling with the "official" (as opposed to legitimate) government.

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seem to "vet" their allies. Same old, same old story. So old, yet so new. Thanks for the link.

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install me because, well, you know...

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Joe, like the new Blues bar banner - super cool. And yet again, another superb roundup - from the headlines. Saving links for later reading.

Turkey is descending into chaos predictably it seems - for being anti-Israel.

Per Democracy Now headline, Sanders and Killary both support Obomba's Afghan "plan". I rarely see pipelinistan mentioned in analysis related to Afghanistan. Only Pepe Escobar mentioned it as far as I know. Wonder if he is wrong or...

And bourgeois liberal feminists strike again :

Seeing these things, I wonder if I should distance myself from the "feminist" label. Tell me what is the difference between these people and Bush the Lesser using the Afghan women as props for warmongering?

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joe shikspack's picture

turkish politics are very complicated with lots of contentious (and sometimes very well armed) factions ready to take advantage of any sort of crack in the armor of the ruling coalition. israel, no doubt has and will continue to impose reprisals against erdogan for having the nerve to complain about israel's murder of turkish nationals. prior to that incident turkey and israel had considerable military and economic cooperation.

heh, my guess is that war making is not a part of feminist ideology even though some powerful women who call themselves feminists are warmongers. if you can be a feminist and not be defined by the silly people who allow themselves to be co-opted by warmongers on the make, keep the label. if you are part of a feminist organization, perhaps it might be good to see if you can get your organization to call out the co-opted org(s).

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about their Western quisling ruling class. Now drone files confirm what people in Yemen etc already knew about US drone killings.

Only we Ugly Amreekans are a collectively ignorant bunch. I have seen chest thumbing at GOS about "enlightened, compassionate" liberals vs those "ignorant, murderous Fox News conservatives". What a shitpile of crap! If libruls are as compassionate, the Dem candidates should have been booed out in last week's debate reg their lies on Ukraine, Libya, Snowden etc. Instead, there was frothing about "substantial discussion of issues".

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joe shikspack's picture

of what the government does in their name. the gos proves that even a good part of the better informed public has a good idea but really doesn't give a damn. for example, if you look through the comment section of one of the articles i posted at the gos about the drone issue, you'll find people who think using drones as obama has is a great idea because american lives aren't put at risk on the battlefield among other rationalizations. to the extent that the gos represents liberals, "compassionate" is not an appropriate description for at least large numbers of the most vocal of them.

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MarilynW's picture

or that they are told "saves American lives" is a good thing, even atomic bombs.

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To thine own self be true.

lotlizard's picture

It needs a top-to-bottom exorcism.

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I want more of them. With incompetent media quislings putting up a spectacle of the freak show that is the 2016 non-election non-debates, the only way we get the truth will be thru hacks & leaks from courageous people.

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of people in Homen, drone killings all show utter disregard for selective group of human lives. It is a feature, not a bug. As long as there is no accountability for the murderers, the murders will continue.

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here is the kicker : Donald Rummy blurbed his book !

https://www.rt.com/usa/318819-fox-news-wayne-simmons-fraud/

NSA collaborator Amazon hasn't updated his page. Yet.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0312609329?keywords=wayne%20simmons&qid...

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Wonder if Facebook is covering its own ass due to bad PR from NSA colloboration... Or spouting from the mouth(bloviating about privvacy) and spouting from the ass (NSA quisling) at the same time?

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MarilynW's picture

to make my account more secure? Never. Also I don't put much personal facts on FB.

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To thine own self be true.

My profile is totally blank, and I gave them the wrong birthdate because they insisted on one. I've even deleted my last name. I have a second acct as dkmich that is even more devoid of identity. No names or pictures of family and friends. Does that make me a sock puppet?

Good evening all. Lots of good stories I will read tomorrow when I'm not on my phone. The print is so itty bitty even with glasses on. Neocon and neoliberal doesn't get any worse. New Canadian prime minister declared. Why are Americans so stupid. Enough peering, scrolling, double posts, and typing with my left thumb. Good night all.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

divineorder's picture

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

mimi's picture

because I don't get "the smoking gun" article from the Daily Mail in UK.

I pretty much remember very well, that my son told me in July, August of 2002 that they (the soldiers of his squadron) were trained and prepared for their deployment to Iraq. Of course he said that in "code" language, but it was clear he was shuffled from one undisclosed location to the next and "trained there" during late summer and fall of 2002.

How come this smoking gun revelation is something "nobody knew", if all the soldiers knew they had to "go"? It was even an issue for him, because he made his opinion (critical of the upcoming invasion) public on the base.

So, just saying I am getting old and forgetful, but some things are neither new nor a smoking gun, or I don't understand the article. Because they have found a proof on a piece of paper? Great. That does the trick. For the media.

Oh, yeah, and I agree with other posters, your EB is excellent. Now I have to get a laptop, because the only way to read it is through the night in bed on a laptop. What do I do with my monster of a heavy HP "server"? Can't believe I got it instead of a "heavy video-editing laptop" back then. Dummy me.

Trying to read some more. Good Night.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

Otherwise, why would they sign up to die pointless deaths in US war crimes. You are right about 2002.

Just the other day, for example:

Marines are warned not to read leaked 'drone files'

Curious Marines, be warned: Reading this could get you in a whole lot of trouble. "The Drone Papers," published on Thursday by The Intercept, contain classified files explaining the ins and outs of how the U.S. drone program is run. Though the information is now easily accessible, it's still technically classified — which means that service members, civilian employees, and government contractors put their security clearance at risk just by taking a peek

God forbid they should realize what an unholy piece of murderous shit the US is — and that they are participating in international war crimes.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
mimi's picture

bat shit crazy over it, because once signed up, there is no return. That doesn't mean they don't realize what's going on. I guess I am an outlier/liar. Ok, forgittaboutit.

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lotlizard's picture

And of course tracking what they do read…

We're better at this than the Stasi and the Stalinists ever were.

Besides, Stalin had to send an actual human being armed with an icepick to "find, fix, and finish" Trotsky.

Nowadays, Obama just sends a drone.

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joe shikspack's picture

to the public (as was bush, of course).

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mimi's picture

in black and white on paper. Ok. Why do people always have to have everything on paper to admit to lies they had known all along? So annoying./s

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link

around 75 percent of respondents agreed that Internet service providers should be allowed to surveil traffic as long they notified users and received consent.

Most respondents also agreed that employers should be able to monitor the encrypted Internet connections of employees even without notification or consent, especially when an employee used a company computer. There was less agreement when it came to employees using personal devices; approximately a third of respondents opposed surveillance in that case.

In other situations—using the Internet at schools, in libraries, and on public Wi-Fi—most respondents said that surveillance was fine as long as they were told that it was happening.

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mimi's picture

WTF

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lotlizard's picture

But I tend not to believe it either.

How free of authoritarian influence can anything conducted under the auspices of Brigham Young University be, given that BYU is the flagship educational institution of the Mormon church? Mormons are often preferred for secret government jobs. Their loyalty is considered especially reliable; the Church teaches that American exceptionalism is divinely ordained.

More generally:
An interesting question is, do respondents even believe that answers to such surveys can be kept truly anonymous anymore?

How many take part with the conscious or subconscious feeling that if they decline to answer, or say they disapprove of surveillance, it will get back to the government and current and potential future employers and become part of their permanent record?

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mimi's picture

but you can trust that people are too lazy to search through them to find YOU and that the technology's advances will make the records unreadable after a some twenty to forty years or so. That's what an archivist told me about digital archives. They aren't worth much in some eight to ten decades. Let's hope that's true.

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lotlizard's picture

The things that go on your permanent record affect that number, like a school grade or credit rating.

Sure, they store any detail that is specially flagged, plus (let's say) the most recent X years of ordinary unflagged stuff. But aside from that, all they need to store indefinitely (and keep updated) is that set of algorithmically computed numbers. Each number supposedly describes one facet of you, how you rate on some scale / criterion / characteristic.

After a while, it doesn't matter if they lose access to some original details beyond the X-year limit. Like a school or college transcript, your grades / your profile of ratings numbers is enough for their purposes and selection processes.

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mimi's picture

they dig through all the faces I have had and how they rate them. The whole technology is bullshit and I believe it will be throughly destroyed. Heh. Can't even waste more time on those thoughts. Let's just fight those surveillance suckers, who can't help themselves enabling those other suckers to do harm with their resulting records and making a buck out of that business.
No mercy.

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gulfgal98's picture

It's late and I have had a long day. Just wanted to drop by and say hello. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

joe shikspack's picture

now it's even later. Smile

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MarilynW's picture

fingers crossed. Royals are very strong.

Oh, yeah the Election. Liberals are sweeping the country but all the polls are not closed. My analysis is that the Conservatives who turned against Harper and there were many are voting Liberal. Also a lot of new voters and young voters like Justin Trudeau, leader of the Liberal Party. It is a corporate party just like the conservatives but anything is better than Harper.

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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 --

lotlizard's picture

http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2015/oct/15/mexico-droncit...

One danger is that governments may also start using graffiti spraying drones for their own politically manipulative purposes.

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lotlizard's picture

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/12/world/africa/moroccan-government-crack...

Morocco has been yet another tyrannical monarchy favored by the West. When the Arab Spring started, Morocco hastily faked some reforms, but it looks as if the hurried paint job is now peeling and flaking off.

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lotlizard's picture

http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/jerusalem-chaos-is-a-warning-of-things...

As a sidelight, I wouldn't have expected to find analysis by Jonathan Cook carried by a UAE (United Arab Emirates) news outfit.

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divineorder's picture

Got part way through the Blues News before had to put it on airplane mode in Mauritius. Jakkalabessie and I have 8 hour layover and are uploading stories and photos to our travel blog and switching back and forth to EB .

Overnight flight then we will be in Berlin, staying on a boat hostel near one of the remaining remnants of the Berlin Wall, testimony to the power of diplomacy! I probably will not be able to stop from crying at the Wall, thinking of all the years of pain and suffering and international fail after WWII.

Best to you all.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

joe shikspack's picture

heh, i have a little piece of the berlin wall that a friend of mine picked up for me right after the "wall fell" so to speak and people were taking turns bashing it with hammers and other implements of personal expression. i keep it in a box with a little piece of a pyramid that another well-travelled friend of mine picked up off the ground. i guess it's a box for fragments of things that oppressed, working class people were forced to make for the elites.

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mimi's picture

.. tourists who took pieces with them as "memorabilia" can't possibly have taken all of it, there were some people, who made a business of selling out the Wall, I think. I was not in Berlin, when the Wall came down. I had to watch it from TeeVee in the US through US media. Of course I was out of myself with joy and couldn't believe my eyes, but I regretted so much my whole life that I couldn't follow it in Berlin and on the German news streams.

In the late nineties I was for three days in Berlin. I lived in Berlin for 12 years in the late sixties and seventies. I was totally disoriented, because I couldn't orient myself anymore. The Wall was so missing. All you could see was a little small stripe out of stones or paint as a marker where once the Wall stood.
private-walking-tour-behind-the-iron-curtain-and-berlin-wall-in-berlin-165451.jpg
Oh, and that's how remember the Check Point Charlie:
27_01 bundesarchiv_bild_146-1997-016-31_berlin_checkpoint_charlie.jpg

And this is how it looked like if your were on the on the little platforms on the West side ...
6a00df351e888f883401287567240c970c-800wi.jpg
from where you got a glimpse over the the Wall into the East part: That's what you would see:
Berlin_Wall_death_strip,_1977.jpg
And then they left something for "entertaining purposes" for the tourists to look at and have some memories of Check Point Charlie. In here is an image of what it looks like today:

ADLON UBER ALLES

I have been staying at the Adlon Hotel overlooking Brandenberg Gate since the hotel re-opened in 1997. Although not bombed during World War II, the hotel caught fire in May of 1945 and had been closed until 12 years ago when it was recreated as its former self, the most famous hotel in Germany. It’s now officially the Adlon-Kempinkski, still hosting celebrities and presidents.

President Obama stayed here last summer, even before our elections. Fashion Week will take over the hotel next week, after its run in Paris.

Aside from its Grand Hotel style—and the rumor that it was the model for the movie Grand Hotel—the Adlon is favored because of its location next to the Brandenberg Gate at the beginning of Unden der Linden, a wide avenue that serves as the main drag of East Berlin. In the short time since re-unification and the building spree on the Spree, Unden der Linden has become very touristy with even a Dunkin’ Donuts and a Starbucks across the street from the Adlon.

There are perhaps a dozen TT’s (Tourist Traps) selling books, magnets, guides, and postcards—some embedded with a piece of the original Wall (ha). Among the most original, and authentic, of the local souvenirs is a green or red man symbol—made into everything from key chains to sponges.

It seems that when East Berlin was being absorbed into West Berlin to create one city, the pedestrian signals were being torn down so as to match the more traditional style throughout Europe. The citizens rebelled and the visual emblem of East Berlin is now in the shape of a green man with top hat or a red man with arms out-stretched.
suzy-at-checkpoint.jpg
Suzy at Checkpoint CharlieCHECKPOINT CHARLIE

So commercial has all this East-West divided Berlin business become that stores are clustered on all four sides of Checkpoint Charlie and a Starbucks stands one block away.

While there is a Museum of the Wall with a very good gift shops and numerous TTs that sell all sorts of items with the slogan “You are now leaving the American Sector,” the first real outrage is that you are asked to pay 1 euro (about $1.35) to some enterprising young dude who stands in front of Checkpoint Charlie with a flag in his hand. If you want to be photographed there, you have to pay up.

Not to be outdone, the guy across the street has a package deal in which he will sell you six visa stamps for five euros. He will not sell one; this is an all or nothing deal.

Jeez, I had to take a tour bus like a foreign tourist to "explore" my old hometown again. I so much should go back and spend time in that city. They massacred the city's history and did a lousy job to preserve it. It's a shame.

Now I spent too much time on memory lane.

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divineorder's picture

Got part way through the Blues News before had to put it on airplane mode in Mauritius. Jakkalabessie and I have 8 hour layover and are uploading stories and photos to our travel blog and switching back and forth to EB .

Overnight flight then we will be in Berlin, staying on a boat hostel near one of the remaining remnants of the Berlin Wall, testimony to the power of diplomacy! I probably will not be able to stop from crying at the Wall, thinking of all the years of pain and suffering and international fail after WWII.

Best to you all.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.