The Evening Blues - 12-2-16
Hey! Good Evening!
This evening's music features Chicago West Side soul and bluesman Magic Sam. Enjoy!
Magic Sam - All Your Love, Lookin' Good
"We’re going to have to rebuild, within this Wild, Wild West of information flow, some sort of curating function that people agree to.
I use the analogy in politics — it used to be there were three television stations and Walter Cronkite is on there and not everybody agreed, and there were always outliers who thought that it was all propaganda, and we didn’t really land on the Moon, and Elvis is still alive, and so forth. (Laughter.) But, generally, that was in the papers that you bought at the supermarket right as you were checking out. And generally, people trusted a basic body of information. ...
But there has to be, I think, some sort of way in which we can sort through information that passes some basic truthiness tests and those that we have to discard because they just don’t have any basis in anything that’s actually happening in the world."
-- Barack Obama
News and Opinion
This article is well worth reading in full. There are a lot of important details in it that can't be fairly excerpted.
The Orwellian War on Skepticism
Under the cover of battling “fake news,” the mainstream U.S. news media and officialdom are taking aim at journalistic skepticism when it is directed at the pronouncements of the U.S. government and its allies. ... The idea of questioning the claims by the West’s officialdom now brings calumny down upon the heads of those who dare do it. “Truth” is being redefined as whatever the U.S. government, NATO and other Western interests say is true. Disagreement with the West’s “group thinks,” no matter how fact-based the dissent is, becomes “fake news.” So, we have the case of Washington Post columnist David Ignatius having a starry-eyed interview with Richard Stengel, the State Department’s Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy, the principal arm of U.S. government propaganda.
Entitled “The truth is losing,” the column laments that the official narratives as deigned by the State Department and The Washington Post are losing traction with Americans and the world’s public. Stengel, a former managing editor at Time magazine, seems to take aim at Russia’s RT network’s slogan, “question more,” as some sinister message seeking to inject cynicism toward the West’s official narratives. ...
Typical of these recent mainstream tirades about this vague Russian menace, Ignatius’s column doesn’t provide any specifics regarding how RT and other Russian media outlets are carrying out this assault on the purity of Western information. It’s enough to just toss around pejorative phrases supporting an Orwellian solution, which is to stamp out or marginalize alternative and independent journalism, not just Russian. ...
What Stengel and various mainstream media outlets appear to be arguing for is the creation of a “Ministry of Truth” managed by mainstream U.S. media outlets and enforced by Google, Facebook and other technology platforms. ... And then there’s the possibility of more direct (and old-fashioned) government enforcement by launching FBI investigations into media outlets that won’t toe the official line. (All of these “solutions” have been advocated in recent weeks.) On the other hand, if you do toe the official line that comes from Stengel’s public diplomacy shop, you stand to get rewarded with government financial support. Stengel disclosed in his interview with Ignatius that his office funds “investigative” journalism projects.
U.S. Journalists and Professors Appearing on RT America Get Blacklisted
Some independent journalists and university professors in the United States who have appeared on RT television to criticize either runaway corruption on Wall Street or in Washington, have landed on two newly created blacklists. RT is a Russian state-financed news network formerly known as Russia Today. Its English-language RT America unit broadcasts from Washington, D.C.
A shadowy group called PropOrNot, that has not disclosed either its funders or its principals, has created a blacklist of 200 independent media web sites that it is calling tools of Russia. ... Equally disturbing, 200 university and college professors have been placed on a new Professor Watchlist being operated by Turning Point USA, a right-wing nonprofit run by 23-year old Charlie Kirk who spoke this year at the Republican National Convention. Kirk has raised well over $1 million from conservatives to spread the “free markets/small government” mantra at high school and university campuses (never mind that Wall Street’s “free markets” are just as corrupt today as they were heading into the 2008 epic financial crash).
In 2012, Kirk wrote an opinion piece for Breitbart News suggesting that Paul Krugman’s ideas should be replaced in high school classrooms by those of the Cato Institute – a nonprofit secretly owned in part by the Koch brothers for decades. ...
The long-tenured and widely respected Professor of Media, Culture and Communication at New York University, Mark Crispin Miller, has landed on the Professor Watchlist. In this RT interview, Miller called U.S. media a “disgrace,” adding that the quality of journalistic material is “embarrassingly low.” Miller went on to characterize U.S. media as a “cartel,” stating that “we have a system that’s owned and dominated by a handful of huge corporations.”
There is something in the water, I tell you - and it probably ain't flouride...
The Return of HUAC?
On January 20, 2017, Donald Trump and Mike Pence will be inaugurated as President and Vice President, respectively. Recent comments by ideologues associated within the Trump circle suggest that after the new administration takes office there might be a move by Congressional conservatives to resurrect a 21st century version of the long-dead House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC).
Recently, right-wing radio host Michael Savage called for Trump to restore HUAC or a similar committee to focus on “hunting down subversives.” “We need a new HUAC but you can’t call it HUAC,” he declared, “but we have to unmask the traitors within because we’re facing grave danger from these traitors.” Among the groups he identified as “subversive” and needed to be investigated are People for the American Way, the American Civil Liberties Union, MoveOn, Center for American Progress, Black Lives Matter, Media Matters and the National Council of Churches.
He even proposed leading the inquiry.
Savage picked up on a similar chant made earlier by Newt Gingrich. “We originally created HUAC to after Nazis,” Gingrich said. “We passed several laws in 1938 and 1939 to go after Nazis and we made it illegal to help the Nazis. We’re going to presently have to go take the similar steps here.” ...
Now, as a threats of a reestablished HUAC, Muslim registration lists and a blacklist are renewed, it’s going to a long next four years.
Can Gen. James Mattis Teach a Draft-Dodging Tax Cheat About War?
President-elect Donald J. Trump has chosen retired Marine Gen. James Mattis to be his secretary of defense. His decision percolated out late Thursday afternoon through anonymous sources close to the transition, who spoke with the Washington Post, and will likely be formally announced next week.
Last week, Trump called Mattis “the real deal.” He told the New York Times that while Mattis shares his love of “winning,” the two men disagree about waterboarding and other forms of torture. Mattis, Trump said, has never found torture to be useful. His preferred tools for getting answers are “a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers.”
It isn’t clear whether Mattis, the former head of U.S. Central Command, actually succeeded in changing Trump’s mind regarding torture. Trump insisted that he hadn’t, and that if the American people wanted more torture, he would deliver it. But Mattis did manage to draw a line between his own thinking and that of his prospective boss, far more so than Gen. Michael Flynn, Steve Bannon, and others who have managed to hitch their sputtering careers to Trump’s butterscotch locomotive.
“Gen. Mattis made a practical argument, not a moral argument,” says retired Col. Mark Cancian, a senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “That proved to be convincing.”
It isn’t easy to convince Trump of anything. His flirtation with a Mattis appointment suggests that he could be developing a capacity to hear voices that are not echoes of his own.
Trump’s casual phone calls are freaking diplomats out
Trump’s unfiltered and candid way of talking was a large reason why people voted for him. Now that he’s president-elect, Trump is adopting that same style when making calls to world leaders — and the casual chit-chat is worrying some diplomats, the New York Times reported. ...
“By taking such a cavalier attitude to these calls, he’s encouraging people not to take him seriously,” Daniel F. Feldman, a former State Department representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, told the New York Times. “He’s made himself not only a bull in a china shop, but a bull in a nuclear china shop.”
UN: Iraq Troop Deaths Soar With Mosul Invasion
The first full month of Iraq’s Mosul offensive saw a precipitous rise in the already high monthly death tolls for combatants that have plagued Iraq in recent years, with the UN figures showing 1,959 Iraqi troops killed in the fighting, along with countless more wounded.
Between Iraq’s military, militias, and the Kurdish Peshmerga, some 50,000 troops invaded the area around Mosul. The Peshmerga is reporting that they lost a large chunk of fighters by themselves, with 1,600 killed and some 10,000 wounded since late October.
That of course is only a fraction of the overall death toll for the month of November, as some 2,227 ISIS fighters were also killed. Among civilians, the UN only counted 926 killed, but the figure is actually several hundred higher, with the UN continuing to exclude deaths in Anbar from their official figure.
Syria: Intense fighting in Aleppo as regime troops cut the rebels' northern sector
Pentagon Again Under-Reports Civilians Killed in Iraq, Syria Airstrikes
The latest in the occasional Pentagon statements on civilian deaths in the air war in Iraq and Syria has claimed 54 civilians slain between March 31 and October 22, continuing the trend of official figures being massively lower than those reported in the media.
This puts the official death toll at 173 civilians for the entire air war, which is far short of estimates from most groups, which put the death toll far higher over the course of the conflict. Amnesty International put the figure at around 300, and others have suggested it was in excess of 500. The Pentagon often declines to investigate reports of civilian deaths, arguing that they are “not credible.”
ISIS Urges Members to Stop Using Messaging Apps
A new article in ISIS’ weekly newspaper has ordered the group’s forces to stop using messaging apps on smartphones, singling out WhatsApp and Telegram as applications to avoid on the grounds that the US may be using information from these apps to track them and kill their commanders.
It is unclear ... whether the US is actually able to use information from smartphones using this app, or potentially using the fact that a smartphone is sending information at all, as a way to track people for future killing in air strikes. It may simply reflect growing ISIS paranoia about potential vulnerabilities.
Senate Unanimously Extends Iran Sanctions Act Another 10 Years
While there was a lot of talk of President Obama vetoing the extension of the Iran Sanctions Act on the grounds that it is no longer necessary, today’s Senate vote appears to have ended that possibility, with a 99-0 vote following the overwhelming support for the House version last month, with Rep. Thomas Massie (R – KY) the lone no vote.
The unanimous vote would set the stage for a veto override, and the White House now says President Obama intends to sign the bill. The final version was a “clean” version of the bill, after some in the Senate has discussed a move to add a bunch of new sanctions to the bill.
The bill doesn’t immediately impose any new sanctions on Iran, so while Iran had warned any such move would necessarily lead to retaliatory moves, it doesn’t necessarily look like there’s a reason for Iran or anyone else to react as though this move is a threat to the P5+1 deal.
Mahmoud Abbas Proposes Palestinian Unity Government With Hamas
Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority that operates in the West Bank, proposed on Wednesday the creation of a temporary unity government along with Hamas, the militant rival faction that controls the Gaza Strip.
In a three-hour address at a conference of his Fatah party, Mr. Abbas sought to push forward long-stalled efforts to reconcile the two major competing Palestinian factions, and to present an image of unity amid wide discord outside the hall where he spoke.
Mr. Abbas invited Hamas to send representatives for negotiations to bridge the divide, and he thanked Khaled Meshal, the organization’s political chief, for offering a supportive message that Mr. Abbas passed along to the conference. A month after meeting with Mr. Meshal in Qatar, Mr. Abbas told his supporters that the two parties should form a joint government to be followed by presidential, legislative and other elections. ...
It is uncertain whether the two sides can follow through on a unification proposal, or would want to. Hamas stunned Fatah with its victory in legislative elections in the West Bank and Gaza in 2006, and then seized control of Gaza in 2007, driving its rival party out of the strip altogether. A half-dozen reconciliation agreements since then have fallen apart.
Holland targets the burqa
The Dutch parliament voted overwhelmingly Thursday in favor of a ban on women wearing face veils in public places. The vote passed with 132 of the 150 MPs in the Netherlands favoring the proposal, which would mean that women will no longer be able to wear the burqa or niqab in places such as government offices, schools, and on public transportation. The Dutch cabinet said it supported the move because of the “necessity to be able to interact face-to-face” in places where safety is paramount, like at airports. The bill will go now before the senate before it becomes law. ...
Far-right Dutch politician Geert Wilders welcomed the ruling, which his party (the PVV) supported. In fact, he thought it did not go far enough. ... The Netherlands will hold a general election in May, and the most recent polling puts Wilders and his party firmly ahead. Wilders has repeatedly spoken out against Islam, and is currently awaiting the verdict in a court case where he was charged with inciting hatred.
[Say, who does this remind you of? - js]
And after the Dutch elections on March 15, 2017
I Will Make The Netherlands Great Again!#MakeTheNetherlandsGreatAgain pic.twitter.com/rZXo1QpOy0
— Geert Wilders (@geertwilderspvv) November 6, 2016
Internet Archive Successfully Fends Off Secret FBI Order
A decade ago, the FBI sent Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive, a now-infamous type of subpoena known as a National Security Letter, demanding the name, address and activity record of a registered Internet Archive user. The letter came with an everlasting gag order, barring Kahle from discussing the order with anyone but his attorney — not even his wife could know.
But Kahle did eventually talk about it, calling the order “horrendous,” after challenging its constitutionality in a joint legal effort with the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union. As a result of their fight, the FBI folded, rescinding the NSL and unsealing associated court records rather than risk a ruling that their surveillance orders were illegal. “This is an unqualified success that will help other recipients understand that you can push back on these,” Kahle told reporters once the gag order was lifted. ...
Now, Kahle and the archive are notching another victory, one that underlines the progress their original fight helped set in motion. The archive, a nonprofit online library, has disclosed that it received another NSL in August, its first since the one it received and fought in 2007. Once again it pushed back, but this time events unfolded differently: The archive was able to challenge the NSL and gag order directly in a letter to the FBI, rather than through a secretive lawsuit. In November, the bureau again backed down and, without a protracted battle, has now allowed the archive to publish the NSL in redacted form.
The speedy and decisive resolution was enabled in part by the series of legal battles in prior years that have chipped away at rules restricting how recipients of NSLs can challenge them. ... Kahle told The Intercept that the incident should encourage others to challenge NSLs and gag orders in the interest of transparency.
Hollande says he will not seek re-election
France: All eyes on Valls after Hollande bows out of French presidential race
India discontinued 86 percent of its circulated currency — and the poor are in crisis
Millions of individuals and businesses across India are struggling to cope with the financial chaos unleashed three weeks ago when Prime Minister Narendra Modi made the shocking announcement: Starting immediately, the country’s 500- and 1,000-rupee notes, which represented 86 percent of the currency in circulation, would no longer be legal tender.
Anyone holding the notes, which Modi has removed from circulation in an attempt to cripple the country’s widespread corruption and counterfeit currency problem, now has to exchange them at banks for newly minted ones. And they have until Dec. 30 to do it.
Millions now find themselves waiting for hours in serpentine lines outside banks to exchange their defunct currency for the new government-approved notes. Businesses have been crippled, farmers have been unable to buy seeds to plant crops, and people have been denied basic services. ...
“It’s a typical case where the underprivileged are paying heavily for the financial misdeeds of the privileged class,” said Ashis Nandy, a renowned Indian political psychologist and sociologist. “They are facing massive inconvenience for the failings of a series of governments to curb black money and allowing corruption to become a way of life.” ...
Since the government’s new policy requires holders of old bills to deposit them in a bank, a huge burden has been placed on India’s poorest. In order to obtain food and other essential items, many are now relying on barter systems.
Whether it’s Brexit or Trump, populists are such sore winners
After the EU referendum, a curious thing happened. The winners were neither happy, nor triumphant. The victory announcement by Boris Johnson was funereal, almost resentful. It was almost as though the campaigners had practised and perfected their “outsiders against the establishment” lines during the campaign, and once on the winning side had no script. ...
The same bizarre sore-winner phenomenon is happening in the US after one of the most stunning victories in election history. Donald Trump is so vexed that, in response to calls for a recount in some states, he tweeted that the only reason he did not win the popular vote is because of illegal voting. Even in victory, even when he is the actual president-elect of the United States, he believes that he has been robbed. It is almost like he wanted to lose.
Similar to the petulant chippy vibe of the Brexit victory, the Trump triumph is peevish and cantankerous, seizing on any opportunity to reclaim the credentials of the besieged that propelled him to victory. But you see, in a way, he has been robbed. As Brexiters have been. They have been robbed of the ability to blame everything on others and not be accountable. They have been robbed of the virtue of the victim and the helpless underdog. ...
The forces that gave Brexit and Trump momentum coalesced around grievance rather than vision. There was no agenda, no genuinely thought-out project that the winners could soberly set about executing, just resentment. And the grievance narrative must be continued even in success because that is pretty much the whole energising principle.
Sanders Single Payer and Death by Democrat
Lori Kearns is the health policy advisor to Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont).
She’s been making the rounds in recent weeks telling single payer supporters that Senator Sanders will not introduce his single payer bill into the Senate next year.
Why not?
Because party unity is more important than single payer.
Sanders apparently believes that single payer will get in the way of electing a Democratic Senate in 2018. ...
One reason why Sanders soared during the primary was his constant refrain that we need to cover every American with a single payer health care system. ...
Why won’t Sanders re-introduce it in the upcoming session?
Because he is now in the Democratic leadership in the Senate — handpicked by Wall Street favorite incoming Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-New York.)
And if the Democrats say no, Sanders says no. ...
Goodbye single payer. Hello Chuck Schumer.
Privatization of Medicare and Social Security on the Trump Agenda
US jobs report: 178,000 new jobs added, making Fed rate hike likely
The final US jobs report of 2016 saw 178,000 new jobs added, very close to economists’ expectations of 180,000 for November.
A rate hike from the Federal Reserve later this month depended on numbers sticking close to those predictions; now, it is all but certain.
Hourly wages declined by 3 cents an hour to $25.89, and overall unemployment declined by 387,000 to 7.4 million, though retail jobs fell slightly from October to November – atypical for the Christmas shopping season. PNC analyst Augustine Faucher called the wage dip “a big soft spot”.
Still, he said, things were looking up – the analyst predicted improvement through 2017 and said little would stand in the way of the rate hike now. “The economy is close to full employment, and the [Federal Open Market Committee] FOMC wants to start gradually raising interest rates before the economy reaches full employment and wage pressures accelerate too much and spark much higher inflation.” PNC expects two interest rate increases in 2017 followed by three in 2018.
0:02 / 8:28
Trump's Deal That "Saved Jobs" at Carrier Based on a $7 Million Tax Break & Reduced Regulations
What just happened with Carrier is crazy
From 2011 to 2013, the city of Indianapolis and the state of Indiana gave Carrier and an affiliated company $1.7 million in grants and tax incentives, as an inducement to keep two manufacturing plants in the state and bring additional work in. It turned out not to be enough.
Earlier this year, Carrier said it would move those factories to Mexico, eliminating 2,000 jobs and saving $65 million. Indiana and its governor, Mike Pence, demanded most of the tax break money back, and got it. ...
Trump has persuaded Carrier to keep at least half of the 2,000 jobs it planned to outsource in Indiana, a remarkable instance of federal arm-twisting aimed at a single corporation. ... To reach the deal, Indiana reportedly offered the heating and air conditioning company $7 million in new tax incentives, more than 4 times the previous inducement. ... There’s no federal commitment — the money will supposedly come from Indiana, courtesy of Hoosier taxpayers. ...
The deal is obviously good news for the Carrier workers who get to keep their jobs, but Trump’s intervention in a public company’s business decisions springs all kinds of red flags. For one thing, tax incentives are generally a lousy way to keep jobs, even though many states offer them. One study found that states spent an average of $456,000 per job to lure or keep employers within their boundaries, an amount that raises the question—why not just give the money to workers directly? Another study pointed out that tax breaks are rarely targeted at the young, growing companies that create most new jobs, and instead tend to go to big, established companies that don’t do much new hiring.
A welfare check
Global Warming Research in Danger as Trump Appoints Climate Skeptic to NASA Team
Donald Trump’s first NASA transition team pick is Christopher Shank, a Hill staffer who has said he is unconvinced of a reality that is accepted by the vast majority of climate scientists: that humans are the primary driver of climate change. Shank previously worked for Rep. Lamar Smith, a Republican congressman who played a key role in dragging out debates on the basic nature of climate change at a time when the science is settled and action is urgent.
Shank has criticized the type of scientific data NASA regularly releases. As part of a panel in September 2015 at Arizona State University’s Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, he said, “The rhetoric that’s coming out, the hottest year in history, actually is not backed up by the science — or that the droughts, the fires, the hurricanes, etc., are caused by climate change, but it’s just weather.” ...
Shank’s appointment dovetails with threats from Trump’s advisors to scrap NASA’s research on climate change. In an October op-ed for Space News, Trump campaign advisors Robert Walker and Peter Navarro stated, “NASA should be focused primarily on deep space activities rather than Earth-centric work that is better handled by other agencies.” ...
David Titley, director of the Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk at Penn State, wrote in response, “We can measure the Earth as an entire system only from space.”
NASA works with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to measure climate changes. NASA’s role includes developing observational technologies.
“If they really shut down the satellites, we’d be driving in the dark, in the fog, with no headlights, on a mountain road,” Titley said in an interview. Analyzing the satellite data reveals inconvenient truths, he said. “What they will find is the vast scientific consensus is correct. The earth is warming. We know why it’s warming. And it will continue to warm as we add greenhouse gases into the system.”
“Even in the post-truth world, shouting and screaming in all caps at 3 in the morning is not going to change the physics,” he said.
Quitting UN climate change body could be Trump's quickest exit from Paris deal
The US should completely quit the United Nations forum to tackle climate change in order to quickly exit the Paris climate agreement, according to a conservative lawyer who is part of Donald Trump’s transition team.
Abandoning the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) would allow the US to back out of the international climate effort within a year, far sooner than the four-year period that would be required to ditch the Paris accord, which came into force in November. Such a move would probably prove a severe blow to global efforts to avoid dangerous warming.
Steven Groves, a lawyer at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said exiting the UNFCCC would be the “most practical” way for the US to drop its climate change commitments. Groves is part of the state department transition team for the president-elect, who has promised to “cancel” the Paris deal.
Joy as China shelves plans to dam 'angry river'
Environmentalists in China are celebrating after controversial plans to build a series of giant hydroelectric dams on the country’s last free-flowing river were shelved.
Activists have spent more than a decade campaigning to protect the Nujiang, or “angry river”, from a cascade of dams, fearing they would displace tens of thousands of people and irreparably damage one of China’s most spectacular and bio-diverse regions.
Since the start of this year, hopes had been building that Beijing would finally abandon plans to dam the 1,750-mile waterway, which snakes down from the Tibetan plateau through some of China’s most breathtaking scenery before entering Myanmar, Thailand and eventually flowing into the Andaman Sea.
On Friday, campaigners said that appears to have happened after China’s State Energy Administration published a policy roadmap for the next five years that contained no mention of building any hydroelectric dams on the Nu.
Stephanie Jensen-Cormier, the China programme director for International Rivers, said environmentalists were “very happy and very excited” at what was a rare piece of good news for China’s notoriously stressed waterways.
“The state of rivers in China is so dismal. Thirty years ago there were 50,000 rivers in China; today there are less than 23,000. Rivers have completely disappeared. They have become polluted, they have become overused for agriculture and manufacturing,” she said. “So it is so exciting when a major river – which is a major river for Asia – is protected, at least where it flows in China.”
Activists Around the World Take #NoDAPL Fight to the Banks
Activists in Tokyo, Seattle, San Francisco, and Minneapolis marched, demonstrated, and demanded that banks divest from the controversial Dakota Access Pipeline in simultaneous actions Thursday.
"These catastrophic projects can't continue, and as citizens of Planet Earth, we can't allow banks to use our money to fund them," said Barb Drake, an organizer of the Seattle action, which saw over 100 people calling on Wells Fargo to divest from the project.
"These are not normal times, and this is not normal business," Drake said. "We're encouraging everyone to close their accounts at the funders of DAPL, and we'll do the same for funders of other dirty energy projects, like tar sands development. The stakes are just too high."
Update:
Organizers report that after the series of demonstrations on Thursday, Wells Fargo—a Dakota Access Pipeline investor—has agreed to meet with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe:
After wave of #NoDAPL protests, including people closing their bank accounts, Wells Fargo agrees to meet with Standing Rock Sioux tribe. pic.twitter.com/tI2G9aYX6X
— Antonia Juhasz (@AntoniaJuhasz) December 1, 2016
Also of Interest
Here are some articles of interest, some which defied fair-use abstraction.
Stephen Hawking: This is the most dangerous time for our planet
Yes! Recommended:
Stop Groveling! How to Thwart Trump and Save the World
Bush’s Iraq Lies, Uncontested, Will Haunt Us Under Trump
The Intercept Brasil Welcomes Ana Maria Gonçalves as a Columnist on Race, Politics and Culture
Race and Class in Trump’s America
Roaming Charges: The CIA’s Plots to Kill Castro
Fires and drought cook Tennessee - a state represented by climate deniers
After 60 years, is nuclear fusion finally poised to deliver?
Chicago's new generation of bluesmen
A Little Night Music
Magic Sam - I Just Want a Little Bit
Magic Sam - Chi-Town Boogie
Magic Sam - Easy Baby
Magic Sam - I Don't Want No Woman
Magic Sam - Same Old Blues
Magic Sam - I Need You So Bad
Magic Sam - That's All I Need
Magic Sam - San-Ho-Zay
Magic Sam - Give me time
Comments
Good Day Sir
Magic Sam, one of my favorites tonight! The news sure is upsetting. I always knew the meek would not inherit the earth. I am too slow for flight, so I guess it is stand and fight.
Interesting Cato link.
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 -
Hi NCT, yup stand and fight for us as well.
A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.
Thanks for posting that, DO - I signed it Wednesday nite,
but didn't think to repost it here.
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 --
evening tim...
i've always figured that the meek will only inherit the earth when it's totally destroyed by the powerful and of no use to anyone. if the meek want to inherit something worth having they had better get busy with a strategy to defeat the powerful, corrupt bastards that run the place.
heh, i wonder if kos is still trying to drag the libertarians into his tent.
Sanders is now
part of the problem as fellow democrats are more important than the public at large.
I'm not surprised. Gotta be a good boy or he's out.
Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.
Now is the time for Medicare for All, with or without
Sanders.
http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/11/24/now-is-the-time-for-trump-to-move...
A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.
evening pricknick...
more and more it looks like sanders has either been slowly dragged into the swirling, sucking eddy of despair that is the democratic party or, alternately, the sheepdog argument seems to become more thinkable with passing time and actions.
even if bernie is the most clever interloper ever, the prize (the party apparatus such as it is) does not seem worth it.
Considering the number of
Considering the number of blatant lies/examples of gross misrepresentation amounting to the same thing which I've seen reported regarding Bernie and his supporters, I'll hold judgement until I hear Bernie on this subject.
Please bear in mind how imperative TPTB and their lackeys feel it to be to discredit Bernie and other progressives and most especially the notion that democratic government is supposed to be of, by and for the people, with equal rights, treatment and opportunity for all - since that's the only legitimate type of American government, oligarchy having been specifically rejected and fought by America's Founders and Americans generally. Nobody can legitimately be elected to head a democratic government and run it as a fascist operation - they've failed the job description as well as the oath they made in order to qualify to hold the public office in the first place.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
"Economy nearing full employment"
how these people convince themselves of these utter lies is just stunning. But hey, for them, the system works so no big deal.
Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur
Full employment is when each wage earner who wants a
job that pays well; offers a defined benefit retirement system(or SS is ramped up to provide a dignified retirement); and access to affordable and competent health care, can get one within a few weeks.
Full employment to capitalists is a large reserve of desperate people who will take virtually any job at any pay thus suppressing wages and benefits. The headline unemployment figure plus all those counted under other headings is still suitable to those who control our economy.
The situation throughout the world is much more grim: An estimate of over 1 Billion in the reserve army of labor.
"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"
Which is why there will be no wall, nor immigration reform
They want undocumented immigrants available for the labor force. Particularly food service, agriculture and construction.
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 -
The rate as calculated is 'Fake News' ?! /s
http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-nonfarm-payrolls-rose-178-000-in-novembe...
Snippet:
A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.
evening do...
it's at least "fake science."
Haha right joe.
What can I do about getting this crap changed? Stick my head in the sand, or take action?
FWIW Just got an email offer from Brand New Congress to help recruit candidates to run on small donor money. They encourage recruiters to give several a week. Still early days to see how BNC will develop...
Oops, take it back from the pugs and teadips, no mention of Corpacraps. But still these youngs they bear watching...
A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.
Heh.
A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.
evening lizzy...
the numbers are cooked. (duh)
here's proof:
ISIS
ISIS has a newsletter???
A new article in ISIS’ weekly newspaper has ordered the group’s forces to stop using messaging apps on smartphones, singling out WhatsApp and Telegram as applications to avoid on the grounds that the US may be using information from these apps to track them and kill their commanders.
evening olinda...
yeah, they have a newsletter, magazines and countless youtube videos, but do they have a bowling league?
And no baseball team? What is this world coming to?
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Trumps calls to world leaders.
Trump’s casual phone calls are freaking diplomats out
I read earlier, maybe in the NYT article linked in the essay that Trump talked to the Pakistan president and said roughly from memory "You're fantastic, Pakistan is fantastic, the Pakistani people are fantastic." Saying he would visit soon. There is something to be said for regular interaction (if you can try to call that regular) as opposed to State Dept. talking points, eh?
heh...
well, trump certainly has a solid grip on flattery, though his vocabulary could use an upgrade.
Thank You, Joe,
so many articles that are outstanding. The HUAC one especially. Horrifying to read what happened in the past and is about to happen again.
I just wonder if Cornel West didn't say it right:
Considering that Trump managed to use the word "fantastic" three times in a 12 word sentence in a telephone call with Pakistan Prime Minister Sharif, (Trump's Breezy Telephone calls), I think it proves all three points of Cornel West to be valid.
This repetition of words and phrases is strange. Many conservative Republicans in the House do it (Marsha Blackburn I remember like that and some other woman, whose name escapes me). They sound like specifically trained perroquets, but I think Trump is a special. He does it without training. I think he has no words, no clue what to say and very limited vocabulary and knowledge, combined with a huge ego and will and desire to be admired for his "strength".
I remember how relieved I was when Obama followed GWB just to have a President who could express himself more properly, and I believe, if Trump gets into office (still can't imagine it), I will dream of the day when Trump will leave the White House stage and a less narcissistic person will follow.
I mean, it's really frightening. One article today after the next just proved it. Your selection of article is excellent. I wouldn't want to miss reading the EB, even if I am already very tired, when it's posted. I guess I have to return to the East Coast...
https://www.euronews.com/live
He is in over his head this time, big time
and maybe he's starting to see it. I'm personally still not convinced he ever wanted or expected to win. It's going to be like watching the proverbial train wreck, although personally I hate rubberneckers who look for blood at things like that, but I won't be able to ignore the wreck of the Rump.
Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur
Fantastic!
Funny that your actual quote comes right after my rough quote from memory. Glad I got the 3 fantastics in there!
This is why TPTB let Trump win
He's going to be easier to control than Hillary would have even though she would do some of the same things Trump is doing.
Remember that Podesta chose Obama's cabinet, so there is someone picking Trump's.
Some people think that Pence is going to be more a powerful VP then Cheney was.
The elites started coming out of the shadows during Obama's two terms, now they are fully out.
They have been working for what a Trump presidency is going to be for decades.
Hang on, it's going to get very bumpy.
At the end of the article about Bernie and single payer, the journalists asked him why he voted for the ACA if he wanted single payer? Bernie said something rude to him and walked away.
Both him and Warren talk a great game but do they get much accomplished?
Yes Bernie got those health clinics, but what has Warren achieved?
Bueller?
evening mimi...
it looks like trump is quite shallow. i have never watched his television show or, in fact, paid much attention to him at all, but he appears to be shockingly inarticulate about things outside of the realm of his business dealings. it appears that he has little of the relevant experience to handle affairs of state and little aptitude for it.
under these sorts of circumstances, you would hope that someone of lesser abilities (imagine if dan quayle had suddenly been thrust into the presidency by some cruel twist of fate) would be surrounded by bright, experienced statesmen capable of advising him, but it appears that his advisors are mostly inadequate in various ways.
the phrase "ship of fools" comes to mind.
Good evening, one and all!
I cruised the Yangtze for 4 days. I saw women on the banks washing clothes.
I didn't see a single bird.
I am happy the Chinese kept those dams from ruining their environment further.
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981
evening otc...
one would hope that the chinese government has come to a point where it has recognized that climate change is not a hoax and that they need to do something to preserve their habitat. perhaps the much greater scale of the needs of their population and the much more dire problems that they have experienced with air quality, etc. have impressed a sense of urgency on them that is lacking in the us.
Maybe the fact of this being
Maybe the fact of this being China's last surviving actual river stirred up a few brain cells?
Something similar recently happened in El Salvadore, where an anonymous World Bank arbitrator actually allowed the country to keep their last supply of drinking water, after much public pressure.
Reposting the update I'd been sent some time ago in my inbox (bolding/emphasis mine):
Wouldn't it be cool if people got to keep their countries, self-government and domestic law in the first place?
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Mattis
From the essay:
President-elect Donald J. Trump has chosen retired Marine Gen. James Mattis to be his secretary of defense. His decision percolated out late Thursday afternoon through anonymous sources close to the transition, who spoke with the Washington Post, and will likely be formally announced next week.
I watched Trump's Thank You Tour rally in Ohio Thursday. He told his crowd not to tell anyone but that he had selected Mad Dog Mattis for Secy Defense. With tv cameras rolling, He had fun with it and reminded them, it's a secret, don't say anything. He would be announcing it next week.
Since that quote is from The Intercept I will give them the benefit of the doubt that they got their "anonymous sources" from the Post before the rally.
butterscotch
From an Intercept story in the essay:
...far more so than Gen. Michael Flynn, Steve Bannon, and others who have managed to hitch their sputtering careers to Trump’s butterscotch locomotive.
This is the 2nd time I've seen a reference to "butterscotch." Can anyone tell me what that is about?
Well, I didn't know, so I looked it up
Since this is a family site, I'll just point you to the 'butterscotch' entry in Urban Dictionary
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=butterscotch&defid=7067289
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYdI-m5OU70]
hmm. well, thanks, crider. nt
evening crider...
well now, that's certainly more colorful than my guess, which was that it referred to his skin tone or hair color.
Trade.
Ran across this link at Naked Capitalism and ended up reading a bit on a subject I don't know anything about - trade. I thought the following 2 pieces were interesting, so I'm sharing them here in case any one else thinks it's interesting. More reading at across the curve.
Guess Palin is not going to be
In Trump's cabinet after all. She's calling the Carrier deal the hallmark of corruption and socialism.
http://nypost.com/2016/12/02/its-a-hallmark-of-corruption-palin-slams-tr...
Mundus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur.
evening cachola...
yep, if she was looking for a cabinet position, given trump's alleged desire for loyalty, that probably wasn't a good move. though, it was very "mavericky."
O actually said this!?
So "truthiness" is the standard to which the top elected Dem aspires, not truth. Duh-fuck?
Compensated Spokes Model for Big Poor.
Fri, 12/02/2016 - 10:48pm —
Fri, 12/02/2016 - 10:48pm — GreatLakeSailor
Lol, I think we all knew that by now, and corporate lackeys blatantly admitting this sort of thing in public really shouldn't surprise us either. Somehow, it still does, though...
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
If the definition of...
If the definition of a political gaffe is accidentally telling the truth, then O's gaffe was of Biden-Proportions.
Compensated Spokes Model for Big Poor.
A whole segment of Americans are going through
real trauma right now. Actually many segments are but I am thinking of those on Medicare and Medicaid, poor people who are old or disabled. The discussion of privatizing these excellent programs must be putting them all on edge. How will they be able to go out in the market place and buy insurance?
As a low-income Canadian, I get Guaranteed Income Support and of course medicare. I can't imagine if these programs were threatened. I would not be able to sleep at night.
What a nightmare Don has unleashed on your country.
To thine own self be true.
The nghtmare already existed.
The nghtmare already existed. We've been living it for some time now. This election season and the impending Trump presidency have just brought it out into the open.
"Don't go back to sleep ... Don't go back to sleep ... Don't go back to sleep."
~Rumi
"If you want revolution, be it."
~Caitlin Johnstone
Fri, 12/02/2016 - 11:36pm —
Fri, 12/02/2016 - 11:36pm — MarilynW
The nightmare is entering all countries, or planning to. And Trump, appalling as he is, is only a cog in the machine. We are all in this together; us - the world - against a small fraction of the 1% and their dupes and lackeys.
If Trudeau betrays his country and people by signing the illegal and unconstitutional TPP and other US pre-Fast-Tracked corporate coups - as he just did in signing the also illegal and unconstitutional CETA - the Greeds will go after social programs, btw, as has already begun, with a private company's claim essentially that it's 'unconstitutional' to try to maintain equal access to health-care.
The Canadian health-care system has been systematically starved for privatization since the illegal and unconstitutional NAFTA agreement was enforced and a further cut recently was imposed, just as private providers start suing because 'why should the wealthier able to pay through the nose for our profits have to wait like you plebes for what your tax dollars have already purchased at a far better price' when the 'wait times' (medical 'austerity') were imposed via repeated budget cuts in order to create this situation as grounds for a Constitutional challenge for Medicare privatization and the same disastrous system as Americans have been bilked by.
But actual trade deals involve trade only and do not impinge in any manner on the rights - or steal/pollute the public properties/resources - of the citizens of involved countries. Anything that purportedly claims to 'agree to' anything of the sort is illegal and unconstitutional in placing hostile outsider's profiteering and abuses of citizens and the country within what's claimed to be 'law', domestic law actually pre-existing to protect the public interest from such predators, as does the government we, the public, pay.
This is real life at stake here - corrupt legal games used to subvert the intent of law and democracy cannot be allowed to con us into acceptance of our enslavement and destruction as 'legal and binding' upon the betrayed to-be-dispossessed and enchattled victims. (And if 'enchattled' isn't an accepted form, it ought to be.)
Law which has no respect for the concept of justice and democratic government with no respect for the concept of democracy can be neither functional nor legitimate and certainly merits no respect itself.
Remember that even existing 'trade deals' forced 'harmonization' with the appallingly hazardous and abusive American health, environmental and other standards on Canada, among other things and merely as an example, 'legalizing' the addition of hazardous waste (otherwise requiring the maintenance of hazardous waste sites to keep them isolated) directly to fertilizer sold and labelled only as 'nutrients' to be unwittingly used on lawns, gardens, parks, for food production in Canada as well, so that now we suffer many of the same health issues at similar rates as our neighbours have for so long.
If we are not useful to industry, we are useless eaters and even more disposable than the rest of the 99%, at the moment.
(From 1997, back before journalism was also poisoned by corporate control. And prior to the far more extreme killing spree now permitted Those Who Matter under various and increasingly public/ecology-sacrificing 'trade agreements')
http://www.maebrussell.com/Articles%20and%20Notes/Toxic%20Waste%20As%20F...
http://eweb.4j.lane.edu/article.php?-recid=144
And 'agricultural run-off' into water supplies wasn't even considered here...
If the corporate/billionaire stranglehold on Americans isn't somehow released prior to complete ecological and economic collapse already well into progress, there will be no place left for anyone - not even the billionaires to run to. I've no idea why any of them believe that a precarious, entirely tech-dependent existence off-planet would be 'safe', but then again, they're isolated, ignorant and stupid enough parasites to foul their only nest while killing off their hosts in the belief that once they have all of the money and property, they'll be able to buy another dwelling where one major accident or glitch could kill them all in myriad ways and where the environment outside is also death to them in any emergency loss of habitat.
Bush apparently believed that disposing of scientific evidence would enable corporations to accumulate enough profit to create that new personal 'reality' for the very wealthiest of the somehow-survivors.
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/24467/title/EPA-sh...
http://www.politico.com/story/2011/02/obama-epa-hit-for-bush-era-plan-04...
http://articles.latimes.com/2006/dec/08/nation/na-libraries8
http://articles.latimes.com/2006/dec/08/nation/na-libraries8/2
PEER seems to be gone as a publication? I finally got into archives, but...
There used to be tons of stuff I can't get on search, as I should be used to, by now - stuff regarding an EPA library finally re-opened, being now the size of a phone booth. documents dumped, some salvaged by staff/scientists, and the last I'd heard (some years back, before life intervened with a lot of... unfruitful fertilizer) was little-to-no progress on the digitization with what generally appeared to be the most telling evidence against polluters missing.
https://www.thenation.com/article/junk-science-george-w-bush/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Environmental_Protection_Agency
Same deal followed with Harper, the cheated-in Canadian corporate Con rep, the Alberta oil-spoil boy having the same sort of paymasters as oil rep Bush 2, specifically including the Koch brothers, they having had a 50-year presence in that province.
I love the Tyee, far as I recall, they were about the only publication making mention of something immediately occurring to me - and something only to be expected of Harper, following the same corporate/billionaire orders as did Bush 2 and everyone elected to top office in the US thereafter.
Unfortunately, very little was 're-opened' and much went missing, regarding the EPA libraries, so I dunno why the Tyee made it sound as though it was all restored...
http://www.thetyee.ca/News/2014/01/09/Harper-Science-Library-Closure/
Edit to add:
http://www.peer.org/news/news-releases/shuttered-epa-libraries-open-door...
If the mechanisms of corporate control (such as Trojan Horse 'trade deals) and the endless leaching of wealth, power and life by a relative few of the pathologically ignorant and greedy not eliminated at its initial source, the US corporate State, whatever happens there will happen all over the world, right down to the last drop of life-blood wrung from the last surviving organism. And in the case of the last surviving Greeds at that point, that'll be from each other.
Edited to add missed block-quotes. And again for a typo-ed letter.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.