The Evening Blues - 10-28-15



eb1pt12


Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features soul singer and songwriter Curtis Mayfield. Enjoy!

Curtis Mayfield - We Got to Have Peace

“In a society run by terror, no statements whatsoever can be taken seriously. They are all forced, and it is the duty of every honest man to ignore them.”

-- Milan Kundera


News and Opinion

South China Sea: Beijing 'not frightened to fight a war' after US move

State-run media in belligerent mood after USS Lassen challenges Beijing’s territorial claims in disputed Spratly archipelago

China is not afraid of fighting a war against the United States in the South China Sea, a state-run newspaper with links to the Communist party has claimed.

Twenty-four hours after Washington challenged Beijing’s territorial claims in the region by deploying a warship to waters around the disputed Spratly archipelago, the notoriously nationalistic Global Times accused the Pentagon of provoking China.

“In [the] face of the US harassment, Beijing should deal with Washington tactfully and prepare for the worst,” the newspaper argued in an editorial on Wednesday.

“This can convince the White House that China, despite its unwillingness, is not frightened to fight a war with the US in the region, and is determined to safeguard its national interests and dignity.”

The People’s Liberation Army Daily, China’s leading military newspaper, used a front-page editorial to accuse the US of sowing chaos in countries such as Afghanistan and Iraq.

“Cast-iron facts show that time and again the United States recklessly uses force and starts wars, stirring things up where once there was stability, causing the bitterest of harm to those countries directly involved,” the newspaper said, according to Reuters.

US Threatens to Send More Ships Near Chinese Island After Criticism

After months of hyping the incident, the Pentagon finally sent the USS Lassen to 22 km off the Spratly archipelago in the South China Sea, a move that they’d been promising would show China that US ships can sail wherever they please, and over any foreign objection.

Having a US warship go through the area for an actual reason would likely be non-controversial, and the Pentagon’s leadership seemed to be committed to weeks of preamble to make sure this was the international incident it was meant to be. Following this, US officials are threatening to send more ships through.

Details on these new ships going through the area are still scant, and it might not be surprising if the US either doesn’t do it at all, or only does so again after several more months of making hay about today’s crossing. The risk of sending ships through the area too often is that they simply won’t get the publicity they crave.

Boots on Ground? US considering ‘direct action’ against ISIS

US mulls direct ground raids in fight against Isis in Syria and Iraq

The US military will intensify airstrikes and may carry out unilateral ground raids as it steps up efforts against Islamic State militants after a failed attempt to train Syrian rebels, according to the defence secretary, Ash Carter.

Speaking to the Senate armed services committee days after a US soldier was killed participating in a Kurdish-led mission to rescue Isis hostages, Carter said similar missions were likely as US forces adapted to the fight in Syria and Iraq.

“We won’t hold back from supporting capable partners in opportunistic attacks against Isil [Isis] or conducting such missions directly, whether by strikes from the air or direct action on the ground,” Carter said.

He did not say under what circumstances the US might conduct more ground action, but added: “Once we locate them, no target is beyond our reach.”

Separately, reports in Iran say that the foreign minister, Mohammed Javad Zarif, and his deputies will attend talks in Vienna on Friday over Syria’s future. If confirmed, it will be the first time Tehran, the main regional backer of Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, has attended an international summit on the war.

Iraq: We Didn't Ask for U.S. Ground Operations

The Iraqi government said Wednesday it didn't ask for — and doesn't need — the "direct action on the ground" promised by the Pentagon.

The revelation came a day after Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said the U.S. may carry out more unilateral ground raids — like last week's rescue operation to free hostages — in Iraq to target ISIS militants.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's spokesman told NBC News that any military involvement in the country must be cleared through the Iraqi government just as U.S.-led airstrikes are.

"This is an Iraqi affair and the government did not ask the U.S. Department of Defense to be involved in direct operations," spokesman Sa'ad al-Hadithi told NBC News. "We have enough soldiers on the ground." ...

The Pentagon has said that the recent raid was in response to a request from the Kurdish regional government — a semi-autonomous body that governs in northern Iraq — which had learned the hostages faced imminent execution.

Turkey Confirms Attacking Kurdish YPG Forces in Syria

Following yesterday’s reports of the incident by Kurdish forces on the ground, Turkey’s government has confirmed that they attacked Kurdish YPG targets across the Syrian border, the first time Turkey has admitted to attacking them, amid an ongoing war against Kurdish forces in both Turkey and Iraq.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu confirmed the incident, but offered little insight, saying only that Turkey had warned the Kurds would never be allowed to go west of the Euphrates and that Turkey would hit them the moment they did.

The YPG are seeking control over Jarabulus, an ISIS-held border town just West of the Euphrates, though interestingly the cross-border gunfire incidents happened nowhere near Jarabulus – rather they were well further east at Tel Abyad, in the Raqqa Province.

Simply delusional. How do these people get elected?

GOP senator: Guantanamo a 'top-rate' facility

Three Republican senators reiterated their stance on Tuesday against closing the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base following a visit last week that they said showed the “professionalism” at the “top-rate” facility.

“I’m very proud of the work done by our men and women in uniform who serve there,” said Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.). “Their professionalism and the way that they conduct themselves made all of us proud. This is a top-rate detention facility that is being conducted in a humane, legal and under-the-law-of-war detention.” ...

Ayotte said Obama should not continue to oppose the NDAA over Guantanamo language that is similar to what it has been in the past. Obama’s other issue with the NDAA — budget allocations — appears to be addressed in the budget deal announced Monday.

“The administration has always — even when Democrats were in charge and Republicans were in charge — has always complained about the provisions in the defense authorization about Guantanamo,” she said.

“I would hope that Guantanamo doesn’t become a barrier given that the bill that was passed by overwhelming votes in the Senate and a very large vote margin in the House really reflects, I think, what the viewpoint is here on Guantanamo.”

‘I Would Have Refused Such An Order’ – Former RAF Pilot Gives His View Of US Bombing Of MSF Hospital In Kunduz

In response to our alert, we were contacted by a former RAF pilot with twenty years' military experience in several countries, including Afghanistan. He had discovered our alert by following a link in a comment posted underneath a recent Guardian piece mentioning the attack.

The former pilot gave us his name but, for obvious reasons, wishes to remain anonymous. He told us that he has experience of flying fast jets and multi-engine aircraft, and that he served operationally in the Balkans, Kosovo, Afghanistan and elsewhere. As far as we can tell, he appears to be genuine. He wrote to us in a series of emails (October 21-24):

'It has been my firm opinion from the very beginning that Kunduz hospital was indeed deliberately targeted. I slightly digress from the Lindorff article in that the C-130 Gunship is a pinpoint platform with a choice of munitions. The fact that the hospital was targeted on five separate occasions with unerring accuracy simply underlines how deliberate this attack was. The Gunship itself is a revered weapon on the battlefield, manned by elite crews who are very highly trained. I was involved in the Afghan campaign almost from the beginning when things were pretty hairy. The aircraft of choice for UK Special Forces on the ground was the Gunship and they lobbied for a UK version. It is expensive and due to the side-mounted howitzer limited to one role and so their requests were denied. The Gunship gives unsurpassed support to troops on the ground because of its multi-hour endurance and loiter capability and the accuracy of its smaller calibre cannon and capability of its enormous 105mm howitzer.'

'I do not accept that the target could have been mistakenly targeted. The crew and command centre would have been fully aware they were attacking a hospital. I followed one of your links suggesting that the C130 crew challenged their orders to target the hospital. This is the very least that I'd have expected to happen. I have extensive operational experience flying in Afghanistan. I am struggling to comprehend in what circumstance I would blindly follow an order to attack a fully manned civilian hospital. If the description provided by MSF's director-general is accurate I can say without hesitancy that I would have refused such an order for it is an obvious war crime. During the Kosovo war it was fairly routine for RAF Harrier pilots to return home with bombs still loaded because they had been unable to confirm visual acquisition of targets. RAF pilots are probably more inclined to think for themselves than American crews who are extremely tightly controlled. American military personnel give up many rights when they join up, but I am still disappointed that this crew did not appear to do more to challenge their orders. Back in the UK, we lost crown immunity many years ago and it is essential to challenge every questionable act carried out on the battlefield (our emphasis).

Industry Giant Northrop Grumman Wins Big, Fat Contract For Big, Fat US Air Force Bomber

Tuesday, the Pentagon has announced Christmas will come a little early for Northrop Grumman, in the form of a gigantic contract for the US Air Force's new and evocatively-named Long Range Strike Bomber, also known as LRS-B. Northrop Grumman beat out a joint bid from Lockheed Martin and Boeing.

Because nothing costing tens of billions of dollars is ever simple, the costs for this plane have some qualifiers. But, if you take all the engineering, the manufacturing, and all that, and assume that they'll spread the cost out over the planned 100 aircraft, the total comes to $72.5 billion dollars (in 2010 dollars). The first planes are expected to be deployed and ready for use is 2025.

‘Strategic depopulation’ of Syria likely cause of EU refugee crisis – Assange

The flooding of Europe by countless waves of refugees may be the result of the “strategic depopulation” of Syria carried out by opponents of the country’s government, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has suggested.

Transparency organization WikiLeaks has looked through its diplomatic cables and unearthed “an interesting speculation about the refugee movement,” Assange said in an interview with Geek news site, ThePressProject.

“So, the speculation was this: Occasionally opponents of a country would engage in strategic depopulation, which is to decrease the fighting capacity of a government,” he explained.

The whistleblower pointed out that “it’s predominantly the middle class that is fleeing” Syria on account of having “language skills, money, some connections.” Engineers, managers and civil servants are “precisely, the classes that ...[are] needed to keep the government functioning,” he said.


Syrian people are encouraged to flee their country “by Germany saying they’ll accept many-many refugees, and by Turkey taking nearly three million refugees, thus significantly weakening the Syrian government,” Assange stressed. ...

The intercepted documents, already published by WikiLeaks, revealed that the US had been plotting to overthrow the Syrian government since around 2006, Assange stressed.

“It was trying to make the Syrian government ‘paranoid’ trying to get it to ‘overreact’ by instilling that fear and paranoia; trying to make it worried about coups; trying to stir up sectarian tensions between Sunnis and Shias … trying to stop foreign investment in Syria and secretly funding a variety of NGOs in Syria also to make trouble, using the Saudis and Egypt to help push that along,” he said.

Video Shows Turkish Police Storming Opposition Media Offices Days Before Election

Turkish police on Wednesday stormed the offices of an opposition media company, days before an election, in a crackdown on companies linked to a United States-based cleric and foe of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, live footage showed. ...

The media groups are owned by Koza Ipek Holding, which has links to Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen. The authorities on Tuesday took over 22 companies owned by Koza Ipek in an investigation of alleged financial irregularities, including whether it funded Gulen. The company denies wrongdoing.

Erdogan has clamped down on commercial interests belonging to once-influential followers of Gulen, his former ally, after police and prosecutors considered sympathetic to the cleric opened a corruption investigation of Erdogan's inner circle in 2013.

Legal action against more opposition newspapers, including the nationalist Sozcu newspaper, is planned for after the vote, said Aydin Unal, a lawmaker in the ruling AK Party.

"After November 1, we will hold them accountable. Sozcu newspaper insults us every day," Unal, a former Erdogan adviser, told A Haber channel on Tuesday. "There is a lot of pressure on Turkey. If we say something, the world accuses us of interfering with the press, so we're not in a comfortable position now, but after November 1 we will settle up with all of them."

Anti-Israel Activism Criminalized in the Land of Charlie Hebdo and “Free Speech“

The post-Charlie Hebdo “free speech” march in Paris was a fraud for multiple reasons, as I wrote at the time. It was led by dozens of world leaders, many of whom imprison or even kill people for expressing prohibited views. It was cheered by many Westerners who feign upset only when free speech abridgments are perpetrated by Muslims, but not — as is far more common — by their own governments against Muslims. ...

The absurdity of France’s celebrating itself for free expression was vividly highlighted by this week’s decision from that nation’s highest court, one that is a direct assault on basic free speech rights. The French high court upheld the criminal conviction of 12 political activists for the “crime” of advocating sanctions and a boycott against Israel as a means of ending the decades-long military occupation of Palestine. What did these French criminals do? This:

The individuals arrived at the supermarket wearing shirts emblazoned with the words: “Long live Palestine, boycott Israel.” They also handed out fliers that said that “buying Israeli products means legitimizing crimes in Gaza.”

In France — self-proclaimed Land of Liberté — doing that makes you a criminal. As The Forward reported, the court “cited the French republic’s law on Freedom of the Press, which prescribes imprisonment or a fine of up to $50,000 for parties that ‘provoke discrimination, hatred or violence toward a person or group of people on grounds of their origin, their belonging or their not belonging to an ethnic group, a nation, a race or a certain religion.'” Because BDS is inherently “discriminatory,” said the court, it is a crime to advocate it.

The French court ruling is part of a worldwide trend. As more and more people around the world recognize the criminal and brutal nature of the Israeli government, its loyalists have been increasingly trying literally to criminalize activism against the Israeli occupation.  ...

Ponder how pernicious this is. It is perfectly legal to advocate sanctions against Iran, or Russia, or Sudan, or virtually any other country. Indeed, sanctions and boycotts against those countries are not only frequently advocated in the West but are official policy. But it is illegal — criminal — to advocate boycotts and sanctions against one country: Israel.

Left Parties In Portugal Vow to Topple New Center-Right Government

EU Toughens Against TTIP as Top German Lawmaker Blasts Anti-Democratic Deal

Adding yet another voice to the growing chorus of European activists and government officials who oppose the TransAtlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the U.S. and EU, the president of the German Bundestag, or parliament, has threatened to vote against the so-called "trade" agreement due to its lack of transparency and democratic legitimacy.

"I see no chance that the Bundestag would ratify a trade agreement between the EU and the USA without involvement in how it came together or any say regarding alternatives," Norbert Lammert said in an interview with Germany's FUNKE Media Group on Wednesday.

Lammert agreed with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker that all the relevant documentation "must be available to the governments and parliaments of all members of the EU." He said he "will insist on that."

Currently German MPs can only see key TTIP negotiation documents by going personally to the U.S. Embassy in Berlin. The secrecy surrounding the mammoth trade deal has engendered scathing criticism as well as a €100,000 reward for the full text.

Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz on "Rewriting the Rules of the American Economy"

Two ACLU Defeats Highlight Judiciary’s Lopsided Deference to Executive Branch Secrecy

The American Civil Liberties Union suffered major defeats on Friday, when two of its cases involving clear violations of civil rights and civil liberties were dismissed, both undone by the judiciary’s deference to executive-branch secrecy.

A dramatically divided three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. circuit ruled in favor of Department of Justice lawyers who argued that Amir Meshal couldn’t sue for damages for his alleged torture at the hands of FBI agents in three African countries because it happened overseas and because the litigation would jeopardize “national security.” Meshal is a U.S. citizen who FBI agents suspected had ties to al Qaeda.

And a Maryland district court judge threw out a massive legal challenge to the National Security Agency and its “Upstream” surveillance program on behalf of Wikimedia, Amnesty International USA, The Nation magazine and six other groups, because they couldn’t prove that the NSA had specifically spied on them — despite the troves of publicly available information on how the mass-surveillance program works, primarily from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.

In both cases, the ACLU had appealed to the judicial branch for relief from the excesses of the executive branch. But both courts allowed the federal government to escape judicial oversight simply by insisting that national security matters should remain secret. ...

Hina Shamsi, the director of the ACLU’s National Security Project, despaired over the common thread between the two cases. “The Obama administration insistently invokes secrecy and ‘national security’ to prevent courts from hearing constitutional cases on the merits,” she wrote in an email to The Intercept. “In Meshal, it argued that national security considerations precluded a judicial remedy for FBI agents’ flagrantly unlawful detention and coercion of a U.S. citizen. The government has followed a similar playbook in Wikimedia and other surveillance cases, asserting that plaintiffs cannot show that they’ve been subjected to secret spying, and thus the court shouldn’t hear the merits of their claims.”

The Senate, ignorant on cybersecurity, just passed a bill about it anyway

This is the state of such legislation in this country, where lawmakers wanted to do something but, by passing Cisa, just decided to cede more power to the NSA

Under the vague guise of “cybersecurity”, the Senate voted on Tuesday to pass the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (Cisa), a spying bill that essentially carves a giant hole in all our privacy laws and allows tech and telecom companies to hand over all sorts of private information to intelligence agencies without any court process whatsoever. Make no mistake: Congress has passed a surveillance bill in disguise, with no evidence it’ll help our security.

All that is needed for companies to hand over huge swaths of information to the government is for it to contain “cyber threat indicators” – a vague phrase that can be interpreted to mean pretty much anything. Your personal information – which can include the content of emails – will be handed over to the Department of Homeland Security, the agency supposedly responsible for the nation’s cybersecurity. From there the information can be sent along to the NSA, which can add it to databases or use it to conduct even more warrantless searches on its internet backbone spying (which once again, a judge ruled last week could not be challenged in court because no one can prove the NSA is spying on them, since the agency inevitably keeps that information secret). ...

There were barely any actual cybersecurity experts who were for the bill. A large group of respected computer scientists and engineers were against it. So were cyberlaw professors. Civil liberties groups uniformly opposed (and were appalled by) the bill. So did consumer groups. So did the vast majority of giant tech companies. Yet it still sailed through the Senate, mostly because lawmakers – many of whom can barely operate their own email – know hardly anything about the technology that they’re crafting legislation about. ...

In an era of secret law, where the government has no problem completely re-interpreting laws in complete secrecy to allow mass spying on Americans, we now have another law on the books that carves a hole in our privacy laws, contains vague language that can be interpreted any which way, and that has provisions inserted into it specifically to prevent us from finding out how they’re using it.

Tech Companies and Civil Liberties Groups Force Obama To Weigh In On Encryption Debate

President Obama will now be forced to publicly describe the extent of his commitment to protecting strong encryption, after nearly 50 major technology companies, human rights groups, and civil liberties collectives—including Twitter, the ACLU, and Reddit — succeeded in getting over 100,000 signatures on a White House petition on Tuesday.

The government’s “We the People” platform, created in 2011, was designed as “a clear and easy way for the American people to petition their government.” Once a petition gains 100,000 signatures, it is guaranteed a response.

The savecrypto.org petition demands that Obama “publicly affirm your support for strong encryption” and “reject any law, policy, or mandate that would undermine our security.”

The FBI Director Says Cops Are 'Under Siege' From Viral Videos

FBI Director James Comey is faulting anti-police brutality activists and the explosion of police brutality video footage with discouraging cops from doing their jobs. It's an odd move for one of the nation's top law enforcement officials, especially since the White House is currently championing body cameras as a solution to police brutality.

Speaking to students at the University of Chicago, Comey said on Friday that the "era of viral videos" has put cops "under siege," pushing cops to stay in their cars and avoid walking their beats in rough neighborhoods. He doubled down on Monday in a speech to the International Association of Chiefs of Police, telling the group that those filming the police were driving a wedge between African-American communities and law enforcement. ...

David Couper, a celebrated former chief of police in Madison, Wisconsin, was in the audience on Sunday — he called Comey's remarks "strange" and "dangerous." ...

""The question is, are these kinds of things changing police behavior around the country?" said Comey. "The honest answer is I don't know for sure whether that's the case… but I do have a strong sense."

"The word "sense" rubbed Couper the wrong way.

"Is the FBI director going to start shooting from the hip on this without any real information?" he asked. "We don't want that."

Ummm, Mr. Comey, Who's "sieging" whom?

South Carolina parents criticize school board after police altercation

Parents say video that shows a sheriff’s deputy manhandling a teenage girl reveals race issues within school district and negligence on part of school board

Parents of students at the South Carolina school where a police officer threw a black teenage girl to the floor have spoken out against district’s school board, accusing them of negligence and saying the altercation reveals race issues.

A video that shows a sheriff’s deputy manhandling a student for refusing to leave her chair provoked the outrage, and prompted the Richland County sheriff Leon Lott to put the deputy, Ben Fields, on leave. Lott has called a press conference for noon on Wednesday to announce the results of his department’s internal investigation into the incident.

Columbia attorney Todd Rutherford told ABC’s Good Morning America on Wednesday that Fields should have been fired as soon as Sheriff Leon Lott saw the video recorded by several students at Spring Valley high school in Columbia.

“She now has a cast on her arm, she has neck and back injuries. She has a Band-Aid on her forehead where she suffered rug burn on her forehead,” Rutherford told the network.

Lott had said Tuesday that the girl was uninjured in the confrontation but “may have had a rug burn”.

Fields’ suspension was not nearly enough for one parent, who asked the school board on Tuesday night: “You’re beating up little girls in school and you’re thinking about firing him?”

When School Cops Go Bad: South Carolina Incident Highlights Growing Police Presence in Classrooms

Officer who killed teen avoids criminal charges

A police officer in South Carolina will not face criminal charges for shooting dead a young man who was driving away from a drug deal sting operation, prosecutors said on Tuesday, even as new video footage challenged his account of what happened.

Lieutenant Mark Tiller of Seneca police, who said he killed Zachary Hammond because the 19-year-old drove a car at the officer and his patrol vehicle, was cleared despite a dashboard recording showing that Hammond was shot from the side as he passed.

Tenth circuit solicitor Chrissy Adams said that while the video was “troublesome” and “raised questions”, evidence from an inquiry by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (Sled) supported Tiller’s claim that he believed he was about to be run over, meaning “deadly force was justified”.

“Zachary Hammond failed to comply with Lt Tiller’s orders and as a result he lost his life,” said Adams, in a letter to Sled investigators. “When Hammond made the conscious decision to flee a lawful stop he set in motion this tragic chain of events.”

The Department of Justice is reviewing the case for potential federal charges, which are not expected.

Bernie and the Big Banks

Retirement assets of 100 CEOs are worth more than the entire nest eggs of 41% of American families

The 100 largest CEO retirement accounts—which totaled $4.9 billion last year—would equal the total saved by 50 million U.S. families, according to a report that was jointly published by the Institute for Policy Studies and the Center for Effective Government.

Analyzing SEC documents, researchers found that your garden variety Fortune 500 CEO will have set aside $49.3 million by the end of their tenure, a piggy bank that would be enough to generate a $277,686 monthly retirement check for the rest of their lives. More than half of these are company-sponsored pension plans, and 73% of these firms have also set up tax-deferred compensation accounts that leave the retirement pot untouched by the IRS.

By contrast, the median retirement account balance is $2,500 for all working-age households and $14,500 for near-retirement households. ...

“The CEOs’ extraordinary nest eggs are not the result of extraordinary performance,” said Scott Klinger, director of Revenue and Spending Policies at the Center for Effective Government, in a statement. “They are the result of rules intentionally tipped to reward those already on the highest rungs of the ladder.”



the evening greens


'Yes, I Lied': Vindicating Villagers, Star Chevron Witness Busted for Perjury

'Chevron has taken the people of Ecuador and the U.S. court system on a ride, full of lies, deliberate delay, and obstruction of justice,' says Amazon Watch

In what is being called "a dramatic turn" in a protracted legal battle, documents publicized Monday reveal that the star witness in a case pitting rainforest villagers against a multinational oil giant has admitted to lying under oath in an effort to help Chevron avoid paying a $9.5 billion judgment for deliberate pollution of the Ecuadorian Amazon. 

"Yes sir, I lied there...I wasn't being truthful," ex-judge Alberto Guerra reportedly told an international arbitration tribunal earlier this year when asked about his claim that the plaintiffs' legal team offered him a $300,000 bribe to ghostwrite the ruling in their favor.

Guerra's claim, VICE News explains, provided the underpinnings for New York federal judge Lewis Kaplan's 2014 ruling that the $9.5 billion verdict was obtained by way of fraud and coercion—a victory for Chevron, which had refused to abide by the judgement.

In fact, transcripts (pdf) of the 2015 tribunal proceedings made public on Monday—obtained through a disclosure request by Courthouse News with support from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press—shine new light on the extent of Chevron's payments to Guerra for his false testimony, some $12,000 per month plus other perks which included a car, healthcare, and relocating him and his family to the United States.

"Chevron has now been busted by the lying testimony of its main witness," the plaintiffs' lawyer, Steven Donziger, told VICE. "The latest iteration of Guerra's testimony proves clearly that Chevron paid its star witness huge sums of money to present false evidence to frame the very people in Ecuador the company poisoned."

Massive Indonesian Plantation Fires Create Environmental Catastrophe Spewing Haze & Carbon Emissions

Poachers Just Killed Some More Elephants With Cyanide in Zimbabwe

With the discovery on Monday of 22 poisoned elephants in Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park, the number of elephants poached in the country during the month of October alone has risen to 62, according to the Associated Press.

Rangers found the carcasses in the north-central region of the park, the national park's spokeswoman Caroline Washaya-Moyo told the AP. She added that there were young elephants found among those killed.

Over the weekend, nearly 400 pounds of ivory — worth an estimated $43,000 — was seized at the international airport in the capital Harare. That bust and the 22 elephant deaths this week come on the heels of park rangers finding in early October a kilo of cyanide in the park and seizing an undisclosed amount of ivory from Hwange park officials at the airport. ...

Zimbabwe is considered one of the world's largest remaining reserves for elephants, with an estimated population of 100,000 in its territory. ... The Great Elephant Census, which surveyed all major elephant populations in Africa last year, found that Zimbabwe had lost 75 percent of its elephant population in the southern Zambezi Valley, and a 40 percent decrease in the middle part of the valley. The report also found that Zimbabwe formed part of a larger, regional decline. Tanzania lost 60 percent of its elephants between 2009 and 2014, while Mozambique lost approximately 50 percent of its population during the same period.


Also of Interest

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

The End of Communism in Russia Meant the End of Democracy in the West

George W. Bush Was AWOL, But What’s “Truth” Got to Do With It?

Learning while black: the latest offense that the police will get you for

Hillary Clinton Hasn’t Learned a Thing from Iraq

Seeing Syrian Crisis Through Russian Eyes


A Little Night Music

The Impressions - This Is My Country

Curtis Mayfield - People Get Ready

Curtis Mayfield - Get Down

Curtis Mayfield - Superfly

Curtis Mayfield - Diamond in the Back

Curtis Mayfield - Freddies Dead

Curtis Mayfield - We The People Who Are Darker Than Blue

Curtis Mayfield - Hard Times

The Impressions - Mighty Mighty (Spade & Whitey)

Curtis Mayfield - Pusherman

The Impressions - Gypsy Woman

The Impressions - Movin' On Up

The Impressions - Keep On Pushing

The Impressions - Its All Right

The Impressions - Talking About My Baby

Curtis Mayfield - Fool For You

Curtis Mayfield - New World Order



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about the China thing. Obama seems to be handling this extremely badly, and if it ever gets past the dick measuring stage, I don't think we'll fare as well as we think we will.

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They say that there's a broken light for every heart on Broadway
They say that life's a game and then they take the board away
They give you masks and costumes and an outline of the story
And leave you all to improvise their vicious cabaret-- A. Moore

So no one wants to talk about it

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they'll slap a trade embargo on us. We'll have to cancel the wars and close all the banks because we don't make anything we need for own national security. China has to be ROFLTAO.

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

Pluto's Republic's picture

But I'm impressed that you thought of it. That means the waves of probability are beginning to collapse.

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____________________

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

think of it as what happens when the imperial navy goes out trick-or-treating.

they've put on their scary mask, but it's early in the evening and the sun has still not set. they've said boo, so that their adoring family members will fawn over them and admire their costume. the question is that since they were not given a treat whether they will sneak back after dark and leave a flaming bag of dog shit on the porch.

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prisons and justice system

A recent investigation by NPR revealed that the practice of leaning on the poor to subsidize local government—effectively subsidizing tax breaks for the wealthy—is hardly unique to Ferguson or Biloxi. All across the country fines are being used to generate revenue. An analysis by NPR revealed that 41 states charged people “room and board” fees for imprisoning them, 43 states charged people for the use of a public defender, 44 states charged fees for probation, and 49 states charged for the use of ankle monitors. Since 2010 every state with the exception of Alaska and North Dakota increased these fees in order to generate more revenue. In a statement regarding the lawsuit filed against Biloxi ACLU attorney Nusrat Choudhury summed up the situation, “It’s essentially a jailhouse shakedown. Cities across the country, like Biloxi, are scrambling to generate revenue, and they’re doing it off the backs of poor people.”
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Unabashed Liberal's picture

(friendly) drive-by to repost a blurb which clarifies the much touted Medicare premium fix contained in the debt ceiling bill

I've finally ferreted out what they're doing with Medicare premiums in the current debt limit bill. I would like to read the actual bill, but haven't found a link, yet. However, this info is taken from MSM articles, and/or the CMS website about the 'hold harmless' debacle. (So, it should be accurate.)

What lawmakers tout, is not the total picture. Basically, lawmakers jumped in to spare Warren Buffet's crowd an increase in their Medicare Premiums for next year--putting in place, instead, a new 'surtax' on Medicare premiums (paid by everyone, including the poorest of seniors who pick up their own Medicare premiums) effective 2017.

Naturally, it will begin after the 2016 election cycle!

It is truly amazing that 'the so-called party of the people' continues to help strip the masses of a decent Social Safety Net--while protecting 'the wealthy.'

If you hear a sob story that the very poor 'dual eligibles' would have had their premiums increased considerably--allow me to remind folks, those folks don't even pay their own premiums.

Their Medicare premiums, along with other 'higher low income seniors' in one of several other Medicare premium assistance programs, are picked up out of Medicaid monies/funds. So these beneficiaries have absolutely no OOP expense--their Medicare premiums are picked up entirely by the federal government.

(That is not a typo, BTW--it is Medicaid funding that is tapped in the instances above.)

Anyhoo, our bipartisan crooks, (sorry, lawmakers) are once again 'using the poor' in their public presentation, in order to benefit the truly well-heeled, and/or flat-out wealthy.

Oh, at the same time that they are preparing to drastically drop the marginal tax rates for those same wealthy Americans [and for corporations].

*Sigh*

I'm really sorry that I'm so pushed that I haven't had the time to post a "Good News" story for balance, since much of what I've posted recently has not been particularly good news.

Anyhoo, have a nice evening, Bluesters!

Bye

Mollie


"Integrity and courage are powerful weapons. We have to learn how to use them. We have to stand up for what we believe in. And we have to accept the risks and even the ridicule that comes with this stance. We will not prevail any other way."

Chris Hedges, Journalist/Author/Activist, Truthdig, 9/20/2015

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

joe shikspack's picture

if you want to read the "Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015", um there's the link.

i haven't had time to look through it, there's a lot there.

thanks for the piece about medicare.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

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.

Unabashed Liberal's picture

which will result in more uninsured Americans.

(This is the second 'fix' in several weeks to benefit employers--relieving them from aspects of the employer mandate, that is.) Two more 'fixes' are in the making.

This one eliminates the requirement that large employers must 'auto enroll' employees in a group health insurance plan. Actually, I'm in favor of this, since overall, the ACA is toxic. (IMO)

However, it was not done to benefit the masses, or 'the little Guy.' It was done at the behest of large employers--to eliminate hassles and expenses for them.

It was also done because fewer employees in group plans should increase tax revenue, because group health plans have a tax expenditure aspect, shielding income from federal taxes.

IOW, it's okay for Americans to go uninsured, if 'wages reported' will increase the federal tax coffers.

Whew!

Wink

'M'

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

joe shikspack's picture

it has always been meant as a way to force the little people to support the insurance scam industry (a subsidiary of the wall street mafia) and limiting the leverage that a large, diverse pool of insured might otherwise have.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

— what smaller

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____________________

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

if the fight for 15 works out, imagine the screaming of those on the hook for higher wages plus a subsidy to the insurance industry in each employee's name.

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snoopydawg's picture

How shocking, but not surprising. He lied about so many things during his campaign.
Filibustering the FISA bill, vetoing any health care bill that didn't have the public option in it, closing the revolving door between lobbyists, CEOs into his cabinet, reworking nafta, and way too many other things to remember.
He also promised to end the Iraq war as soon as possible, yet tried to stay in after the SOFA was up.
Speaking of that, if Iraq doesn't want US troops in Iraq, then that's another war crime if he's going against their wishes and the SOFA.
It's too bad that there isn't any country willing to prosecute the U.S. government for going against the Nuremberg principle. But any country powerful enough to bring charges happen to be working with the U.S. on the bogus war of terror.

And the aca was basically another transfer of wealth to the insurance companies.
As gj showed us in the article he posted, people are paying more for their insurance than before the aca became law.
Too many people can hardly afford to pay for their premiums and then can't see a doctor because of their high deductibles.
I'd like to HR'd every comment that says either he's the best president ever or that they wish he could run for another term.
And IMO, Hillary will be worse than Obama on all of the issues especially the wars.
People rejected her last time because she was too hawkish and didn't seem genuine, but now they're going to vote for her over the candidates that the site was created for.
Electing better democrats.
I don't get them.
BTW, has anyone invited opol to the site?

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

OPOL has been a member since March 30, 2015. Check out the memberlist at the bottom of every page under the 99percent Buddha.

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mimi's picture

... why am I not surprised? I shouldn't say a word here either. Why can't I shut up? I need to reflect on that. Fool

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gulfgal98's picture

Just wanted to do a drive by and tell you I love Curtis Mayfield!

Thank you for all the hard work you do every day in putting this together. Good

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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

have a great drive! i hope that it's a nice curvy backcountry road with incredible scenery. Smile

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gulfgal98's picture

around here. I am very fortunate person.

Sadly, I am not a night owl, so I often miss EB in real time, but that does not mean I do not read it. 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

Who-Is-Buying.jpg

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Pluto's Republic's picture

…Great Recession, we can see how the wealth of the middle class was scooped out.

This chart ends where the one above begins.

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____________________

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

I read that link you left.

The End of Communism in Russia Meant the End of Democracy in the West

Sometimes you read something, and it becomes a "sticky" in your brain. This is one of those. The world since 1999 has unfolded in a somewhat different way, but there are big themes that nevertheless continue as predicted in this new environment. Much is clearer.

I denied it at first. It was easy to do if one focuses only on the contrasts between the world when it was written and the world now. But I am cursed with a reality bias.

______________________________________________________
If we've been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. --Carl Sagan

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____________________

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

Daddy Bush let the cat out of the bag when he spoke of the new world order. That was probably the time to have a revolt. I do not like the idea of a supra-society. "Today we live in a world dominated by one single force, one ideology and one pro-globalization party." TPP and giving up our sovereignty for global corporate courts are all just part of the plan. It all makes perfect sense. Yin and yang and all that stuff. Will the planet survive long enough for them to homogenize us into the future?

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

Pluto's Republic's picture

Global warming is a feature. Rapid global depopulation is a goal of the Neocons.

These Cities May Soon Be Uninhabitable Thanks to Climate Change

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____________________

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

I second the motion.

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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 -

Pluto's Republic's picture

Made me laugh.

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____________________

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

you're welcome.

there were some historical insights that i thought were quite interesting, like:

Without a successful Russian counter-revolution against the Soviet Union, the West could not have started the process of globalization.

and this, which precedes sheldon wolin's work on inverted totalitarianism and his excellent summation of our polity in "democracy incorporated":

Contrary to common belief, Soviet communism did not collapse because of internal reasons. Its collapse is certainly the greatest victory in the history of the West. An unheard of victory which, let me say it again, can establish a unitary power monopoly on a planetary scale. The end of communism also signalized the end of democracy. The modern epoch is not only post-communist, it is also post-democratic! Today we are witnessing the establishment of democratic totalitarianism, or, if you will, totalitarian democracy.

and then there is this, which i don't want to be true, but, having a passing familiarity with ricardo's work, i suspect that it is:

Totalitarianism is spreading everywhere because the supranational structure imposes its laws on individual states. This undemocratic superstructure gives orders, imposes sanctions, organizes embargos, drops bombs, causes hunger. Even Clinton obeys it. Financial totalitarianism has subjugated political power. Emotions and compassion are alien to cold financial totalitarianism. Compared with financial dictatorship, political dictatorship is humane. Resistance was possible inside the most brutal dictatorships. Rebellion against banks is impossible.

and then finally, this section really grabbed my attention:

The most influential Western thinkers and politicians believe that we have entered the post-ideological epoch. This is because by “ideology” they mean communism, fascism, nazism, etc. In reality, the ideology, the super-ideology of the Western world, developed over the last fifty years is much stronger than communism or national socialism. A western citizen is being brainwashed much more than a soviet citizen ever was during the era of communist propaganda. In ideology, the main thing is not the ideas, but rather the mechanisms of their distribution. The might of the Western media, for example, is incomparably greater than that of the propaganda mechanisms of the Vatican when it was at the zenith of its power. And it is not only the cinema, literature, philosophy - all the levers of influence and mechanisms used in the promulgation of culture, in its broadest sense, work in this direction. At the slightest impulse all who work in this area respond with such consistency that it is hard not to think that all orders come from a single source of power. ... Western ideology combines and mixes ideas based on its needs. One of these ideas is that Western values and lifestyle are the best in the world! Although for most people on the planet these values have disastrous consequences. Try to convince Americans that these values will destroy Russia. You will not be able to. They will continue to assert the thesis of universalism of Western values, therefore following one of the fundamental principles of ideological dogmatism. Theorists, politicians and media of the West are absolutely sure that their system is the best. That is why they impose it around the world without a doubt and with a clear conscience. Western man as the carrier of these highest values is therefore a new superman.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

And elegant, like an Occam's Razor dawning.

Some of my working conclusions, here.

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____________________

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

i found myself nodding along with them.

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mimi's picture

Today the socialists who are in power in most European countries are pursuing policies of dismantling the social security system, destroying everything that was socialist in the capitalist countries. There is no longer a political force in the West capable of protecting ordinary citizens. The existence of political parties is a mere formality. They will differ less and less as time goes on. The war in the Balkans was anything but democratic. Nevertheless, the war was perpetrated by the socialists who historically have been against these kinds of ventures. Environmentalists, who are in power in some countries, welcomed the environmental catastrophe caused by the NATO bombings. They even dared to claim that bombs containing depleted uranium are not dangerous for the environment, even though soldiers loading them wear special protective overalls. Thus, democracy is gradually disappearing from the social structure of the West. Totalitarianism is spreading everywhere because the supranational structure imposes its laws on individual states.

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Shahryar's picture

You can hear Curtis in your head on this, the same way you can hear Smokey on some of those Mary Wells records.

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joe shikspack's picture

i was struck by how much some of mayfield's early songwriting resembled smokey's:

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gulfgal98's picture

but, my eyes and ears perked up at the mention of Smokey Robinson. 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

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 -

NCTim's picture

Slidin' through

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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 -

joe shikspack's picture

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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 -

divineorder's picture

This was so good. Thanks. All us nerds loved that song.

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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.

NCTim's picture

The lunch counter is being preserved.

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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 -

cybrestrike's picture

If I were sitting in the State Department or in the Pentagon and was watching that Julian Assange interview, I'd mutter under my breath, "He's too smart." If I were sitting in Langley, I'd mutter under my breath, "How do we get rid of that guy?"

The US will eventually back off when it comes to China. They're not that stupid. Oh...nuts. They can be that stupid, and sometimes that's just enough.

Curtis Mayfield on a Wednesday night. That's a treat!

Tonight's plan? Take a walk and jump into a quick poker game at the local watering hole. Might be a madhouse out there, since it's opening night for the Orlando Magic and I live right on Church Street. Hm...maybe I'll end up on television if I try and photobomb the color commentary guys, Paul Kennedy and Nick Anderson, sitting outside.

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joe shikspack's picture

heh, i suspect that within the doj, state, defense and the covert agencies there is a split between those who would like to pop off assange and those that would like to have him in custody so that they could torture him for a while before terminating him.

have a great evening and good luck at the table.

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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 -

mimi's picture

More Than Half of U.S. Wage Earners Make Under $30,000 a Year, According to a Shocking New Report.

As the online publication Washington’s Blog notes, 51 percent of U.S. workers in 2014 made less than $2,500 a month before taxes—which is below the poverty line for a family of five. What’s worse is that as the numbers in the original report are parsed, other stunning facts become clear. For instance, the fact that nearly 40 percent of Americans aren’t even making $30,000 but rather are earning closer to $20,000. Or that 70 percent of workers made less than $50,000 in 2014.

I just don't know how a single person can live on a $10.00 hourly wage and live on his/her own without a roommate and afford a car. Take taxes of an $16.00 hourly wage, which is $33,000.00 a year minus 30% for taxes and benefits and you end up with $1,925 per month. You wouldn't be able to pay more than $600.00 rent. It's still not a real living wage.

$ 18.00 an hour is approaching a real living wage, imo. People are fighting over such hourly rates. And then look what percentage of hourly wage earners really have full-time jobs with those kind of wages.

And then they suck the money out of them for any kind of education and how many are there for whom the degree doesn't lead to jobs with higher wages and more security.

If Sanders would just miraculously really enforce a federal minimum wage of $15.00 plus tuition free education not only in public colleges, but all trade schools (are there even public ones?) that alone could be a winning ticket, if people really would know about it. Combine that with a strong anti-war, anti-DoD/NSA/FBI programs and controls, I can't imagine people wouldn't flock behind him and not vote. But I guess that's just me naive, who doesn't understand the American soul.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

…and terrorize the entire world at the same time.

All that goes on in Congress is really a tug of war between those two interests. So far US terrorism is winning, sucking up 55 cents of every dollar.

This is the truth:

No President can be elected who does not have the express backing of the Defense and Banking Cartels.

Hillary and Bush are the only two candidates who have been approved.

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____________________

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

All that goes on in Congress is really a tug of war between those two interests. So far US terrorism is winning, sucking up 55 cents of every dollar.

His plan came to fruition.

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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 -

joe shikspack's picture

i ran across that in my reading but forgot to grab it for eb. thanks for posting it!

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NCTim's picture

Amusing satire on Margret Spelling political hire for UNC Chancellor.

Margaret Spellings

Margaret Spellings won't begin her high-paying job as the president of the UNC system until March 1, 2016, which gives us five months to ponder one question that looms like a slow hurricane: What will she fuck up first? A champion of No Child Left Behind, gubernatorial adviser to Dubya just before he became president, the Secretary of Education during his second term, a board member of what's essentially the University of Phoenix and the leader of Bush's presidential library (which we presume to be populated only by annotated editions of My Pet Goat), Spellings seems tragicomically unprepared to lead a system of 17 campuses, nearly a quarter-million students and incalculable esteem.

To wit, while working for Dubya, she led a commission that seemed intent on turning America's universities into a network of vocational-training centers. The real worry is that she's going to do that here, too, turning students only into doers, not thinkers. She's not super into the gay "lifestyles," either, but apparently she's very into our state motto.

"I've worked for him for a long time," Spellings said of little Georgie during a press conference last week, her voice like the sound of curdling cheese. "I tell young people, 'When you find a good boss, stick with them,' and I certainly have done that." Then why, President-elect, would you desert him now, just as his family's political dynasty crumbles into the San Jacinto with Jeb's seemingly imminent defeat? Save us and stick with him.

Cut out mask. Poke holes for eyes. Turn a prestigious college into an air-conditioning-repair school. Then win the lottery, because that's a much more efficient and thrilling way to take money from the state's education system.

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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 -

joe shikspack's picture

what an awful fit for the job. i wonder who the people who hired her were trying to ingratiate themselves to.

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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 -

joe shikspack's picture

the pope will eventually be sorry if he destroys the place where the smart people are sent to be kept fed, dry and amused. if he thinks that they cause trouble when they have access to the limited toolset of academia, when returned to the wild they and following generations of those like them may find things to do that trouble the pope even more.

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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 -

joe shikspack's picture

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joe shikspack's picture

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LapsedLawyer's picture

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"Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we're being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I'm liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That's what's insane about it."
-- John Lennon

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 -

Pluto's Republic's picture

…I see Afghanistan. Or Iraq.

The American people haven't figured out yet that they are now being policed largely by the Formerly Deployed, arduously trained serial-killers, who regard them as enemy combatants.

This is America's little war bonus. Trigger-happy, PTSD-ridden murderers in positions of authority.

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____________________

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

Officer Slam was fired, but he should have been charged with assault and battery.

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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 -

and they're going to get the insurrection
they are trained to incite.

I guess that's the point of it.

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Only connect. - E.M. Forster

joe shikspack's picture

or are they just broken men trying to recreate the only environment that they feel comfortable in - a war zone?

the thing that you have to ask yourself is how any responsible adult can give these thugs a badge and a gun and turn them loose in a school to terrorize children. what sort of monster would do that?

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NCTim's picture

The girl was sassy! /

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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 -

mimi's picture

Did she always said it? Or is that new?
Hillary Clinton Comes Out Against Abolishing The Death Penalty

Oh well, rotten morals. Can't even get myself to excerpt or put in the other links. What for? She should switch over to the Republican Party, may be that helps to drive out those true lunatic on the right fringe over there. May be the Republican Party then would sound at least a bit saner, and may be the Democratic Party could think of moving to the left. I really start to regret that Sanders has to campaign with them.

Can you stomach your own parties? It seems everywhere the parties going down into the sewer. Everywhere corporate loving right-wing parties win. What's wrong with us people?

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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 --

mimi's picture

the day.... Did I say something stupid?

Just read this: If You’re Not Paranoid, You’re Crazy.

Well I am definitely not crazy, because I am paranoid. May be that explains it. I so don't like anything digital.
Good Night. May be I understand your comment by tomorrow. Smile

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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 --

link

In a 2014 study on political representation, political scientists Jan Rosset, Nathalie Giger and Julian Bernauer concluded, “In economically more unequal societies, the party system represents the preferences of relatively poor citizens worse than in more equal societies.” Similarly, political scientists Michael Donnelly and Zoe Lefkofridi found in a working paper that in Europe, “Changes in overall attitudes toward redistribution have very little effect on redistributive policies. Changes in socio-cultural policies are driven largely by change in the attitudes of the affluent, and only weakly (if at all) by the middle class or poor.” They find that when the people get what they want, it’s typically because their views correspond with the affluent, rather than policymakers directly responding to their concerns.

In another study of Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries, researcher Pablo Torija Jimenez looked at data in 24 countries over 30 years. He examined how different governmental structures influence happiness across income groups and found that today “politicians in OECD countries maximize the happiness of the economic elite.” However, it was not always that way: In the past, left parties represented the poor, the center and the middle class. Now all the parties benefit the richest 1 percent of earners, Jimenez reports.

In a recent working paper, political scientist Larry Bartels finds the effect of politicians’ bias toward the rich has reduced real social spending per capita by 28 percent on average. Studying 23 OECD countries, Bartels finds that the rich are more likely to oppose spending increases, support budget cuts and reject promoting the welfare state — the idea that the government should ensure a decent standard of living.
...
As I’ve argued previously, there is good reason to believe that increasing voter turnout among the poor and middle class will shift policy in their favor. For example, in a 2013 study, Loyola University’s Vincent Mahler found that voter turnout and class gaps both affect income redistribution.

Voter turnout, of course, will not entirely solve the problem of differential representation, but it can begin to alleviate it. When turnout is in the low 40s, as it is for many U.S. elections, politicians have no reason to fear losing their seat by only representing the donor class....Using American National Election Studies data, Syracuse University political scientist Spencer Piston ran a unique analysis for Al Jazeera America. His data show that in terms of median income, the median non-voter is far poorer than the median voter — $32,500 per year compared with $57,500.

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lotlizard's picture

Top military generals living in lavish villas and estates outfitted with professional chefs and gardeners that cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands a year

Dozens of top military generals are living like kings in government-supplied villas — many costing taxpayers more than $100,000 a year — while the rank-and-file in the military struggle through billions [of] spending cuts, a new report reveals.

A secret Pentagon report scrutinized 32 mansions owned or rented by the military for its top brass and found that many are too costly and too lavish — even by the generous standards of the Pentagon.

It is estimated that the Defense Department owns or rents hundreds more such homes for its top officers. Many of them are in exotic locales like Brussels, Belgium, and Naples, Italy, where its officers are posted.

Many of the mansions are outfitted with professional chefs and gardeners. All of them have costly security measures like armed guards, gates, blast walls and blast-proof windows.

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Wasn't it Brown Root that billed for monogrammed towels in Iraq? Good ol' Dick Cheney.

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

lotlizard's picture

Book review by David Swanson for Washington's Blog: Is War Beautiful?

“War Is Beautiful” is the ironic title of a beautiful new book of photographs. The subtitle is “The New York Times Pictorial Guide to the Glamour of Armed Conflict.” There’s an asterisk after those words, and it leads to these: “(In which the author explains why he no longer reads the New York Times).” The author never explains why he read the New York Times to begin with.

Also from Washington's Blog:

The 6 Reasons China and Russia Are Catching Up to the U.S. Military

1. Corruption and pork
2. Fighting the wrong wars
3. Never-ending war destroys the economy
4. [China can get] More bang for the buck
5. Theft [by foreign spies]
6. Geography

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LapsedLawyer's picture

Flashplayer goes berserk. (Still running WindowsXP as I'm not ready to junk a fully functional PC just to pick up the latest buggy version of Windows.)

Oh well.

Still, Curtis Mayfield! Yeah!

And, as this little nugget from the 25th anniversary edition shows, Superfly is simply the best soundtrack ever:

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFplPxQZkbE]

As for the rest, well, it's why I get the blues reading the Evening Blues. More and more it seems apparent: We're all fucked, and don't need the zombie apocalypse to complete the disaster.

(Which reminds me: Disaster captialism has a dual meaning, neither one of which is pretty.)

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"Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we're being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I'm liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That's what's insane about it."
-- John Lennon

gulfgal98's picture

Disaster captialism has a dual meaning, neither one of which is pretty.

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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

NCTim's picture

IE doesn't work for me. Chrome is OK, but evil Google.

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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 -

lotlizard's picture

Michel Chossudovsky of Global Research, for Washington's Blog:
Washington Accuses Putin. Russian Airstrikes are Targeting “Our Guys” in Syria:
CIA Operatives, Military Advisers, Mercenaries, Special Forces, … Instead of ISIS Terrorists

According to a US official in an interview with Fox News: “Putin is deliberately targeting our forces. Our guys are fighting for their lives. . . .”

The “Our Guys” category (“fighting for their lives”) not only includes bona fide “moderate terrorists” trained by the Western military alliance, it also includes countless Western military advisers, intelligence agents and mercenaries (often recruited by private security companies) operating on the ground inside Syria since March 2011.

In a bitter twist, by making these accusations directed against Moscow, the Obama Administration candidly acknowledges what has been known from the outset: the presence of Western forces inside Syria in support of Al Qaeda affiliated terrorists. Lest we forget, this constitutes an undeclared act of war against a sovereign country in violation of international law (Nuremberg).

Amply documented, from the outset of the Syrian insurgency, Western special forces and covert intelligence agents including British SAS, French Parachutistes, CIA, MI6 and Mossad have integrated rebel ranks. Their activities are not limited to training. They are routinely involved in overseeing the conduct of terrorist operations on the ground together with Turkish and Qatari special forces, as well [as] thousands of mercenaries recruited from Muslim countries: . . .

From the outset of the insurgency, Al Qaeda affiliated rebel forces including ISIS and Al Nusrah [have been] “infiltrated” by Western military and intelligence operatives. . . .

These foreign forces are also involved in intelligence and logistics as well as terror command operations directed against the government of Bashar Al Assad. They are in permanent communication and liaison through their satellite phones with US, NATO, Turkey and Israel military and intelligence. . . .

Covert support to the terrorists has been provided from the outset of the war in March 2011. The CIA is supporting terrorists as a means to triggering “regime change” in Syria, implying the conduct of covert intelligence operations within Syrian territory: . . .

Russian air strikes initiated in September are directed against terrorist units integrated by Western operatives and advisers.
Russia’s “smart bombs”, however, are not in a position to distinguish between the rank and file “jihadist” terrorists and the Western special forces and mercenaries which have integrated (“infiltrated”) rebel forces since March 2011.

(all bolding for emphasis is in the original source)

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