The Evening Blues - 3-1-16



eb1pt12


Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features Los Angeles harmonica player and songwriter Harmonica Fats. Enjoy!

Harmonica Fats - I Get So Tired

"No matter how many times a privileged straight white male technology executive pronounces the death of privacy, Privacy Is Not Dead. People of all ages care deeply about privacy. And they care just as much about privacy online as they do offline."

-- danah boyd


News and Opinion

Apple Wins Major Court Victory Against FBI in a Case Similar to San Bernardino

Apple scored a major legal victory in its ongoing battle against the FBI on Monday when a federal magistrate judge in New York rejected the U.S. government’s request as part of a drug case to force the company to help it extract data from a locked iPhone. The ruling from U.S. Magistrate Judge James Orenstein was issued as part of the criminal case against Jun Feng, who pleaded guilty in October to drug charges. It is a significant boost to Apple’s well-publicized campaign to resist the FBI’s similar efforts in the case of the San Bernardino killers.

In the case that gave rise to Monday’s ruling, the Drug Enforcement Administration had seized — but, even after consultation with the FBI, claimed it was unable to access — Feng’s iPhone 5. The DEA and FBI said they could not overcome security measures embedded in Apple’s operating system. The government thus filed a motion seeking an order requiring “Apple to assist” the investigation “under the authority of the All Writs Act” — the same 1789 law the FBI is invoking in the San Bernardino case — by “help[ing] the government bypass the passcode security.” Apple objected, noting that there were nine other cases currently pending in which the government was seeking a similar order.

Judge Orenstein applied previous legal decisions interpreting the AWA and concluded that the law does not “justif[y] imposing on Apple the obligation to assist the government’s investigation against its will.” In a formulation extremely favorable to Apple, the judge wrote that the key question raised by the government’s request is whether the AWA allows a court “to compel Apple — a private party with no alleged involvement in Feng’s criminal activity — to perform work for the government against its will.”

The court ruled that the law permits no such result — both because relevant law contains limits on what companies like Apple are required to do, and because Congress never enacted any such obligations. Moreover, the judge said of the government’s arguments for how the AWA should be applied: “The implications of the government’s position are so far-reaching — both in terms of what it would allow today and what it implies about congressional intent in 1789 — as to produce impermissibly absurd results.”

Summoned to Capitol Hill, Apple Comes Armed With Questions for Congress

Bruce Sewell, Apple’s top lawyer and senior vice president, will testify before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday. In the prepared text of his opening statement, Sewell calls for public debate around three questions in particular.

“The American people deserve an honest conversation around the important questions stemming from the FBI’s current demand,” Sewell wrote.

“Do we want to put a limit on the technology that protects our data, and therefore our privacy and our safety, in the face of increasingly sophisticated cyberattacks?”

“Should the FBI be allowed to stop Apple, or any company, from offering the American people the safest and most secure product it can make?”

And: “Should the FBI have the right to compel a company to produce a product it doesn’t already make, to the FBI’s exact specifications and for the FBI’s use?”

California Courts Demand Total Access to Email and Social Media Accounts

[A] new law, the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act (CalECPA), requires law enforcement to obtain a warrant before searching a person’s cellphone, laptop, or any digital storage device. At issue is whether the law covers people on probation, parole, and other forms of supervised release who’ve agreed to what’s known as a “Fourth waiver,” a condition that allows law enforcement to search their person and property at any time.

CalECPA took effect on January 1, 2016. Three days later, San Diego County prosecutors and Superior Court judges began asking defendants who were eligible for probation to sign a form giving “specific consent” to county probation officers “and/or a law enforcement government entity” to collect information that would be otherwise protected under CalECPA.

The consent form described everything that could be searched and seized:

Call logs, text and voicemail messages, photographs, emails, and social media account contents contained on any device or cloud or internet connected storage owned, operated, or controlled by the defendant, including but not limited to mobile phones, computers, computer hard drives, laptops, gaming consoles, mobile devices, tablets, storage media devices, thumb drives, Micro SD cards, external hard drives, or any other electronic storage devices, by probation and/or a law enforcement entity seeking the information.

The defendant shall also disclose any and all passwords, passcodes, password patterns, fingerprints, or other information required to gain access into any of the aforementioned devices or social media accounts.

Defense attorneys immediately protested, arguing that the form had been drawn up without input from the defense bar and that the language was vague and overly broad.

“Folks on parole, probation, even supervised release, they have a reduced expectation of privacy while they’re under supervision,” said Margaret Dooley-Sammuli, criminal justice and drug policy director for the ACLU of California, “but that’s not the same as no right to privacy online or offline.”

Assange supporters condemn UK and Sweden in open letter

Supporters of the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange have published an open letter signed by 500 prominent artists, Nobel prize winners and human rights organisations accusing the UK and Sweden of undermining the UN. ...

Assange, who has sought asylum in the Ecuador embassy, is wanted in Sweden for questioning over rape and sexual assault allegations, which he denies. This month the UN working group on arbitrary detention (UNWGAD) formally found that he had been subject to arbitrary detention, partially on the grounds that Swedish prosecutors used disproportionate methods, including a European arrest warrant, rather than initially interviewing him in the UK. ...

The international letter declares: “We … condemn the reactions of the governments of Sweden and the United Kingdom to the finding by UNWGAD that Julian Assange is arbitrarily detained. The governments of Sweden and the United Kingdom are setting a dangerous precedent that undermines the United Nations human rights system as a whole.

“We urge Sweden and the United Kingdom to respect the binding nature of the human rights covenants on which the decision is based, including the international covenant on civil and political rights; as well as the independence, integrity and authority of the office of the high commissioner for human rights and the working group on arbitrary detention.” ...

The letter was presented to a session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday. The UK has said it will challenge the WGAD opinion.

Former Guantanamo Commander Ignores Summons From French Court Probing Torture

Retired U.S. Army General Geoffrey Miller, the former commander of the prison at Guantanamo Bay, did not appear for questioning before a French court on Tuesday, after being subpoenaed last month.

Miller was summoned to answer questions about his role in the detention and torture of two former Guantanamo detainees, French citizens Mourad Benchellali and Nizar Sassi. After being transferred to French custody, both were acquitted of terrorism-related charges in 2009.

Willaim Bourdon, Benchellali’s lawyer, confirmed to The Intercept that the plaintiffs will request an arrest warrant for Miller. It could only be enforced if he enters the country. ...

With Obama shielding U.S. officials from criminal and civil liability, former detainees are turning to international courts for justice – but the Obama administration is not cooperating. In 2012, the judge in Benchellali and Sassi’s case requested U.S. government documents related to the plaintiffs’ detentions, but got no response.

Cameron Talks Up ‘Brilliant’ Arms Sales to Saudis After EU Call to Stop

Visiting with employees of key arms-maker BAE Systems, British Prime Minister David Cameron bragged up growing British arms sales to Saudi Arabia, saying BAE and other nations were sending “brilliant” and advanced weapons like Typhoon warplanes to the Saudis. ...

Cameron’s comments come after months of human rights groups blasting arms exports to the Saudis, but were even more ill-timed coming just a day after the European Parliament voted 359-212 on a non-binding motion calling for all EU nations to impose an arms embargo on the Saudis.

The Saudis have faced widespread international condemnation for the massive number of civilians killed in their airstrikes against Yemen, with a UN report concluding the practice was deliberate and amounted to a war crime.

Pentagon Proposes Further Expansion of Role in Iraq War

Always on the look out to escalate their involvement in the war against ISIS, Defense Secretary Ash Carter today told reporters that the Pentagon is planning a series of proposals for the Obama Administration to approve more activities for the thousands of US troops on the ground in Iraq.

“We’re talking about more of the things that we did in Ramadi, but we are talking about additional things of the kind that we’ve offered previously,” Carter insisted. Though that seems deliberately vague, he is known to have pushed the idea of US attack helicopters and embedded US troops in Iraqi combat units previously, and those are likely among the proposals.

‘Turkish military actions on Syrian border could lead to truce disruption’

Syrian Troops Fight al-Qaeda, Seize Key Area Near Damascus

As the Syrian ceasefire continued to hold among the parties involved, the Syrian military pushed an offensive against al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front, which is not a party to the ceasefire, seizing territory from them just east of Damascus.

The land is in Eastern Ghouta, and located in an important area between a pair of neighborhoods in the mostly rebel-dominated Damascus suburbs. The rebels, as usual, were none too happy, insisting it amounted to a “nullification” of the ceasefire.

Yet the ceasefire explicitly excluded Nusra Front, as well as ISIS, so the fact that the Syrian military is still fighting those two factions, while galling for the rebels, isn’t a violation of the terms of the ceasefire. Rather, it was exactly what was intended, as the US and Russia hoped the ceasefire would shift everyone’s focus to the Islamist groups.

Syria ceasefire holds in its fourth day despite accusations of violations

Justice at last for Guatemalan women as military officers jailed for sexual slavery

As the packed supreme court in Guatemala City cheered the historic guilty verdicts against two military officers in a precedent-setting sexual slavery case, the surviving Mayan Q’eqchi’ victims simply raised their right arms in unison to acknowledge justice had finally been served.

After 20 days of dramatic testimony, a retired army officer and a former paramilitary were convicted on Friday of sexually enslaving 15 indigenous women during the country’s civil war. ...

On Tuesday, the women will be awarded compensation for the long-term physical, psychological and economic harm suffered as a consequence of being systematically raped and forced into bondage for up to six years.

But after more than 30 years of shame, the women had perhaps already received a form of justice when the court declared: “We believe you … it wasn’t your fault … the army terrorised you in order to destroy your community.”

Throughout Guatemala’s 36-year civil war, rape was widely used as a weapon, according to human rights groups. But last week’s ruling marked the first time, anyone had faced justice for sexual violence during the conflict – and the first time anywhere in the world that sexual slavery perpetrated during an armed conflict had been prosecuted in the country where the crimes took place.

And while the plight of Filipino and Korean “comfort women” forced into sexual slavery by Japanese troops during the second world war remains the subject of high-level diplomatic disputes, similar crimes committed by the US’s cold war allies in Central America have until now gone unpunished.

Utilities Cautioned About Potential for a Cyberattack After Ukraine’s

The Obama administration has warned the nation’s power companies, water suppliers and transportation networks that sophisticated cyberattack techniques used to bring down part of Ukraine’s power grid two months ago could easily be turned on them.

After an extensive inquiry, American investigators concluded that the attack in Ukraine on Dec. 23 may well have been the first power blackout triggered by a cyberattack — a circumstance many have long predicted. Working remotely, the attackers conducted “extensive reconnaissance” of the power system’s networks, stole the credentials of system operators and learned how to switch off the breakers, plunging more than 225,000 Ukrainians into darkness. ...

Officials have found it intriguing that the attack did not appear designed to shut down the entire country. “This appears to be message-sending,” said one senior administration official with access to the intelligence, who requested anonymity to discuss the ongoing inquiry.

Equally interesting to investigators was the technique used: The malware designed for the Ukrainian power grid was directed at “industrial control systems,” systems that act as the intermediary between computers and the switches that distribute electricity and guide trains as they speed down the track, the valves that control water supplies, and the machinery that mixes chemicals at factories.

The most famous such attack was the Stuxnet worm, which destroyed the centrifuges that enriched uranium at the Natanz nuclear site in Iran. But that is not an example often cited by American officials — largely because the attack was conducted by the United States and Israel, a fact American officials have never publicly acknowledged.

What could possibly go wrong with this?

Guns now allowed in Texas’ state-run psychiatric hospitals

Licensed gun owners can now bring their firearms into Texas’ 10 state psychiatric hospitals.

Until this year, guns were banned at the state-run facilities, which house people with serious mental illnesses. No one — visitors, delivery people and the like — could bring firearms anywhere on the hospitals’ campuses. Even local law enforcement officers, who were allowed to bring their weapons into the facilities, regularly lock up their guns before entering Austin State Hospital out of an abundance of caution. That isn’t expected to change.

But state officials say two new laws made it clear to them that they can’t keep guns off the hospitals’ campuses. The open carry law allows gun license holders to openly carry their firearms. A second law fines state agencies for wrongly hanging “no guns” signs.

New Study Confirms: Private 'Trade' Courts Serve the Ultra-Wealthy

A new study confirms what many activists have suspected for a long time: The private courts set up by international “trade” deals heavily favor billionaires and giant corporations, and they do so at the expense of governments and people.

Smaller companies and less-wealthy individuals don’t benefit nearly as much from these private courts as the extremely rich and powerful do. Other interested parties – whether they’re governments, children, working people, or the planet itself – are unable to benefit from these private courts at all. ...

Activists have been arguing for a long time that this process is unfairly skewed toward powerful corporations and ultra-wealthy individuals. Now there is data to back up that opinion. A new study published by York University’s Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto has concluded that “the beneficiaries of ISDS … have overwhelmingly been companies with more than $1 billion per year in annual revenue – especially extra-large companies with more than $10 billion – and individuals with more than $100 million in net wealth.”

Report authors Gus Van Harten and Pavel Malysheuski point out that the “legitimacy” of the ISDS concept “appears to depend in part on an expectation that it benefits smaller businesses, not just large multinationals and the super wealthy.”

But that doesn’t appear to be the case. Virtually all of the financial benefits of the ISDS have gone to the rich and powerful. Nearly 95 percent of all award money went to giant corporations or extremely wealthy individuals.

Some Real Costs of the Trans-Pacific Partnership: Nearly Half a Million Jobs Lost in the US Alone

The Trans-Pacifc Partnership (TPP) Agreement, recently agreed to by twelve Pacifc Rim countries led by the United States, promises to ease many restrictions on cross-border transactions and harmonize regulations. Proponents of the agreement have claimed significant economic benefits, citing modest overall net GDP gains, ranging from half of one percent in the United States to 13 percent in Vietnam after fifteen years. Their claims, however, rely on many unjustified assumptions, including full employment in every country and no resulting impacts on working people’s incomes, with more than 90 percent of overall growth gains due to ‘non-trade measures’ with varying impacts.

A recent GDAE Working Paper finds that with more realistic methodological assumptions, critics of the TPP indeed have reason to be concerned. Using the trade projections for the most optimistic growth forecasts, we find that the TPP is more likely to lead to net employment losses in many countries (771,000 jobs lost overall, with 448,000 in the United States alone) and higher inequality in all country groupings. Declining worker purchasing power would weaken aggregate demand, slowing economic growth. The United States (-0.5 percent) and Japan (-0.1 percent) are projected to suffer small net income losses, not gains, from the TPP.

Optimistic claims about the TPP’s economic impacts are largely based on economic modeling projections published by the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics.

[The Peterson Institute is known for both its hostility to the interests of the 99% and for cooked research. - js]

Oil Giant Cuts Budget By 80 Percent And Suspends Fracking

Whiting Petroleum Corp. (NYSE:WLL), the largest oil producer in North Dakota, has announced that it will suspend all fracking in the state and cut its budget for this year by 80 percent in a move that sent its shares up 9 percent on Wednesday, back down to a record low on Thursday, and $4.02 Friday morning.

Across the E&P patch, it’s a volatile game of craps right now that has investors torn between responding positively to spending cuts to weather the oil price downturn, and negatively to the notion that all these companies are doing is narrowly avoiding bankruptcy.

As of 1 April, Whiting will halt all fracking and stop completing its wells at 20 Bakken and three Forks sites. By this summer it will cut spending to $160 million for the rest of year to fund maintenance.

These are some of the biggest spending cuts in the industry so far, and investors have responded positively to Whiting’s strategy for waiting out low oil prices.

“We believe this conservative strategy should help us to maintain our liquidity position and leave us well positioned to capitalize on a rebound in oil prices,” Whiting Chief Executive Jim Volker said in a statement carried by Reuters.

The news comes along with Whiting’s fourth-quarter results, which posted a net loss of $0.80 per share and revenues of $2.05 billion compared with 2014 EPS of $4.15 and revenues of $3.09 billion.

Corporate defaults expected to rise 30% in 2016, says Moody’s

The default rate for all corporate issuers rated by Moody’s Investors Service is expected to rise more than 30% in 2016 to its highest rate since the 2008-09 crisis.

Moody’s is expecting the rate to climb to 2.1% from 1.7% in 2015. That implies 138 defaults in the year, which would be almost a third more than in 2015.

World's 20 richest people are $70bn poorer, says Forbes

More than $70bn (£50bn) has been wiped off the wealth of the world’s 20 richest people following a slump on global financial markets, according to the latest annual ranking of billionaires by Forbes.

The combined wealth of the top 20 has fallen from $899bn last year to $827bn. The Forbes report also shows that the number of billionaires has fallen from a record 1,826 in 2015 to 1,810.

The list continues to be dominated by men. Out of 1,810 billionaires, just 190 are women, a fall from 197 in 2015.

The biggest loser was Carlos Slim, the Mexican telecoms tycoon, who has seen his fortune drop from $77.1bn to $50bn in a year.

Bill Gates has been crowned the richest man in the world for the third year in a row, although the Microsoft founder’s fortune also dipped from $79.2bn to $75bn.

The biggest gainer was Mark Zuckerberg, the boss of Facebook, whose wealth grew by $11.2bn to give him a total net worth of $44.6bn.

While I would argue with some of the peculiar historical notions in this article (well, actually, pretty much reject them out of hand) - there is this, fairly good observation:

Why are there suddenly millions of socialists in America?

Why, then, this embrace of a socialist identity by millions of Americans who in earlier times might have been content to call themselves liberal? Sanders’s campaign, for one, has doubtless removed some of socialism’s stigma. The collapse of Soviet communism has allowed younger Americans to identify socialism with the social democratic nations of Western Europe, all of which suffer from less economic inequality and its attendant woes than the United States.

But the prime mover of millions of Americans into the socialist column has been the near complete dysfunctionality of contemporary American capitalism. Where once the regulated, unionized and semi-socialized capitalism of the mid-20th century produced a vibrant middle class majority, the deregulated, deunionized and financialized capitalism of the past 35 years has produced record levels of inequality, a shrinking middle class, and scant economic opportunities (along with record economic burdens) for the young.

Holy shit! Right-wing economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin has had an epiphany - right in the middle of a Bloomberg(!?!!) article about angry working class people!!!

Angry Americans: How the 2008 Crash Fueled a Political Rebellion

The one story about the U.S. economy that has virtually no traction among American voters right now is that it’s doing OK.

Anyone inclined to tell that story, as President Barack Obama did in his final State of the Union address in January, can find headline data to back it up. But primary-season revolts -- the Donald Trump mutiny against the Republican establishment, and the fiercer-than-expected challenge from Bernie Sanders against a Democratic frontrunner with all the advantages -- are driven by fed-up Americans saying it isn’t so. And looking behind the headlines, the numbers might be on their side.

["might be on their side?" wake up and smell your own bullshit numbers bloomies! - js]

Unemployment at an eight-year low? Yes, but by most measures of the labor force, participation is down. More than six years of almost uninterrupted growth? Better than much of the industrialized world, for sure, but at a pace that won’t see the economy closing its output gap until 2026 at the earliest. Wage growth finally edging higher? Maybe so, in the aggregate, but not by much -- and anyway, whose wages? ...

[There's a chart demonstrating that only the wages of the top 10% have increased since 2006 embedded in the article. - js]

“For families who are hearing everyone say, ‘The recession is over, we’ve recovered, it’s all good,’ they’re like, ‘Wait a minute, I haven’t recovered at all -- in fact it’s gotten worse’,” said Doug Holtz-Eakin, president of the center-right American Action Forum and a former director of the Congressional Budget Office. “That’s a big inconsistency between what they’re seeing in their day-to-day lives and what they’re hearing. That’s the kind of thing that makes people angry.”

Thank you Bill and Hillary Clinton for "the end of welfare as we know it." Your kindness and caring are just overwhelming.

In One Month We Will Begin Intentionally Starving Poor People

At the end of March, 22 states will begin imposing work requirements on people who want food stamps. Hundreds of thousands of people will likely lose their food aid.

The Wall Street Journal reports that starting on April 1, all of those states plan to reinstate a rule that had been set aside after the financial crisis led to mass unemployment: that adults with no dependents or disabilities are limited to “three months of food stamps in any three-year period—unless they work at least 80 hours a month, or meet education and training or volunteer benchmarks.” ...

So now, hundreds of thousands of people will go hungry, so that some other, smaller number of better-off people can believe that they are not being ripped off by people they do not know and will never see.

More Than 500,000 Adults Will Lose SNAP Benefits in 2016 as Waivers Expire

Affected Unemployed Childless Individuals Are Very Poor; Few Qualify for Other Help

More than 500,000 and as many as 1 million of the nation’s poorest people will be cut off SNAP (formerly known as the Food Stamp Program) over the course of 2016, due to the return in many areas of a three-month limit on SNAP benefits for unemployed adults aged 18-49 who aren’t disabled or raising minor children. These individuals will lose their food assistance benefits after three months regardless of how hard they are looking for work. The impact will be felt in the 23 states that must or are choosing to reimpose the time limit in 2016. ...

The indigent individuals at risk are diverse. More than 40 percent are women. Close to one-third are over age 40. Among those who report their race, about half are white, a third are African American, and a tenth are Hispanic. Half have only a high school diploma or GED, and one-quarter have not completed high school. They live in all areas of the country, and among those for whom data on metropolitan status are available, close to 40 percent live in urban areas, 40 percent in suburban areas, and over 20 percent in rural areas.

Many in this population, which generally has limited education and skills and limited job prospects, struggle to find employment even in normal economic times. And although the overall unemployment rate is slowly falling, other labor market data indicate that many people who want to work still cannot find jobs, while others who want to work full-time can find only part-time employment. Cutting off food assistance to poor unemployed and underemployed workers doesn’t enable them to find employment or secure more hours of work.



the horse race



Brokered Conventions and Party Breaks Ups Would Make Tuesday Truly Super

The Clintons and Wall Street: 24 Years of Enriching Each Other

For twenty four years the Clintons have orchestrated a conjugal relationship with Wall Street, to the immense financial benefit of both parties. They have accepted from the New York banks $68.72 million in campaign contributions for their six political races, and $8.85 million more in speaking fees. The banks have earned hundreds of billions of dollars in practices that were once prohibited—until the Clinton Administration legalized them. ...

Wall Street’s gratitude [to the Clinton's for Bill Clinton's many favors to the industry while in office] quickly found expression. When the Clintons left the White House, they bought a 7-bedroom house near Embassy Row in Washington, with a $1.995 million mortgage. It must have been the prototype “subprime,” because the Clintons “…were not only dead broke, but in debt,” as Ms. Clinton later recalled. Robert Rubin, however, had moved on from the Treasury Department to Citigroup, where the nearly $2 million in credit was quickly extended

The Clintons did manage the mortgage payments. Sixteen days after leaving the White House, Mr. Clinton delivered a speech to the Wall Street firm of Morgan Stanley, for which he was paid $125,000. That was the first of many speeches he presented to Wall Street banks in following years. By May of 2015, Mr. Clinton had earned $1,550,000 from Goldman Sachs, $1,690,000 from UBS, $1,075,000 from Bank of America, $770,000 from Deutsche Bank,, and $700,000 from Citigroup. In total, $5,910,000. ...

The Clinton Administration, with a Treasury Secretary from Wall Street, passed laws enabling the banks to launch a financial skyrocket. The Bush Administration, with a Treasury Secretary from Wall Street, covered their losses with taxpayers’ money when the rocket fell to earth. The Obama Administration, with a Treasury Secretary from Wall Street and a Wall Street Attorney General as well, granted vast financial favors to the banks and absolved them of criminal behavior.

During all of those years the Clintons benefited immensely from Wall Street’s political contributions: $11.17 million for Bill’s 1992 campaign; $28.37 million for his 1996 re-election; $2.13 million for Hillary’s 2000 run for the Senate; $6.02 million for her 2006 re-election; and $14.61 million for her first presidential campaign. And they’ve been paid $8.85 million by the financial industry in speaking fees.

The intimate interplay of ambition and greed between the Clintons and Wall Street has continued for nearly a quarter century. It is a tawdry history, ignored or trivialized by the Clintons, anxious to obscure it.

Pro-Clinton union threatens labor official to back out of Sanders event

A union supporting Hillary Clinton reportedly pressured a labor official to back out of speaking at an event held by Bernie Sanders, the former secretary of State's rival in the Democratic presidential race.

Jeff Johnson, the head of the Washington State Labor Council, was scheduled to speak in Seattle during a "Labor for Bernie" rally, the Huffington Post reported Tuesday. But an international labor union threatened to take away funding from Johnson's group if he spoke at the event, an emcee told the audience at the event. ...

Sources told the Huffington Post that the the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) — a member of the AFL-CIO that has endorsed Clinton — pressured Johnson. The AFSCME was not named during the rally.

Melissa Harris-Perry and the Fall of the "Negro Whisperers

The Final 1,700 Hillary Clinton Emails Were Just Released — And One Was Not

The State Department completed its release of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's emails Monday, posting the final 3,800 pages to its website just hours before Super Tuesday, when voters in 12 states will vote for a potential presidential candidate.

State Department spokesman John Kirby told reporters Monday that one email was being withheld at the request of an unnamed law enforcement agency, but that no other emails were classified Top Secret. He noted that one email, previously classified Top Secret by the Intelligence Community Inspector General, was downgraded to Secret. The July 2009 email pertains to North Korea's nuclear program. ...

But Kirby said 261 other emails released Monday were marked Secret and "confidential," bringing the total to 2,115 emails that contain classified information. Twenty-two of Clinton's emails were previously classified Top Secret, meaning the correspondence contains information that would cause "exceptionally grave damage" to national security if disclosed.

Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich on Endorsing Bernie Sanders

Bernie Sanders campaign facing stern test on Super Tuesday

The Bernie Sanders campaign is bracing for a difficult national debut across the 11 states that vote for a Democratic presidential nominee on Tuesday, despite a record-breaking haul of small donations that could give it the money to keep fighting against Hillary Clinton regardless of the result. ...

“It’s a rough map for us,” conceded the senator’s wife, Jane Sanders, as the campaign team returned to their home in Burlington, Vermont, on Monday night from a 6,200-mile trip to eight states in three days. “I wish 11 states weren’t up tomorrow. I wish there were 48 hours in the day.”

“The national media didn’t really start covering Bernie that much until the beginning of 2016, so they are not as familiar with him in the south,” Jane Sanders added. “Time has been against us. We have had two months for people to be familiar with Bernie’s message.”

The senator himself appeared less daunted by expected heavy losses in places like Georgia and Virginia, and vowed to continue running until the Democratic national convention this July in the hope that more favourable states such as California and New York will eventually come into play.

“At the end of tomorrow I think 15 states will have spoken,” Senator Sanders said after landing for a final rally in Boston. “Last I heard, we have a lot more than 15 states in the United States of America. I think it is more than appropriate to give all of those states and the people in them a chance to vote for the candidate of their choice.”

Neoconservatives Declare War on Donald Trump

Donald Trump’s runaway success in the GOP primaries so far is setting off alarm bells among neoconservatives who are worried he will not pursue the same bellicose foreign policy that has dominated Republican thinking for decades.

Neoconservative historian Robert Kagan — one of the prime intellectual backers of the Iraq War and an advocate for Syrian intervention — announced in the Washington Post last week that if Trump secures the nomination, “the only choice will be to vote for Hillary Clinton.”

Max Boot, an unrepentant supporter of the Iraq War, wrote in the Weekly Standard that a “Trump presidency would represent the death knell of America as a great power,” citing, among other things, Trump’s objection to a large American troop presence in South Korea.

Trump has done much to trigger the scorn of neocon pundits. He denounced the Iraq War as a mistake based on Bush administration lies, just prior to scoring a sizable victory in the South Carolina GOP primary. In last week’s contentious GOP presidential debate, he defended the concept of neutrality in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is utterly taboo on the neocon right. ...

With Trump’s ascendancy, it’s possible that the parties will reorient their views on war and peace, with Trump moving the GOP to a more dovish direction and Clinton moving the Democrats towards greater support for war.

Donald Trump Wants to Commit War Crimes and Neocons Still Think He's Too Moderate

The 1% media screams for more Donald!

CBS CEO: “For Us, Economically, Donald’s Place in This Election Is a Good Thing”

Les Moonves, the chief executive of CBS, celebrated Donald Trump’s candidacy for the second time on Monday, calling it “good for us economically.” Moonves, speaking at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media, and Telecom Conference at the Park Hotel in San Francisco, described the “circus” of a presidential campaign and the flow of political advertising dollars, and stated that it “may not be good for America, but it’s damn good for CBS, that’s all I got to say.”

“So what can I say? The money’s rolling in, this is fun,” Moonves continued, observing that the debates had attracted record audiences.

The CBS media executive also riffed briefly about the type of campaign advertising spending produced by such a negative presidential campaign. “They’re not even talking about issues. They’re throwing bombs at each other and I think the advertising reflects that.” Moonves added, “I’ve never seen anything like this and this is going to be a very good year for us. … It’s a terrible thing to say, but bring it on, Donald, go ahead, keep going.”



the evening greens


Sanders Hits Rivals on Climate, Declares Opposition to Enbridge Pipelines

During a campaign stop in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Monday, Bernie Sanders took decisive aim at the fossil fuel industry and his Republican colleagues who deny the science of climate change, telling the crowd: "I do not know what [they] are smoking."

Sanders launched into his speech with the declaration: "Climate change is real, climate change is caused by human activity, and climate change is already doing devastating harm in our country and all over the world."

"Now," he continued, "I don't know what my Republican colleagues are smoking, but they go around the country and they say, 'Well climate change is a hoax. It is not real.' It is a very dangerous thing for a nation when you reject science. I will not reject science. What the scientific community found is that—as serious and dangerous as the situation is today—it will only get worse in the coming years if we do not get our act together and transform our energy system away from fossil fuels to energy efficiency."

In Minnesota, which is among the states holding a presidential primary on Super Tuesday, oil giant Enbridge is currently seeking to build two new pipelines, the Sandpiper and the Alberta Clipper, which together would transport over 1.4 million barrels of oil per day.

During the rally, which was held at the Minneapolis Convention Center, Sanders declared his opposition to those projects.

"President Obama said when his administration was reviewing Keystone XL that he wouldn’t grant approval if the project made climate change significantly worse," Sanders said. "A Sanders administration would direct the State Department to apply that same test to the Alberta Clipper and the Sandpiper, because we need to ensure corporations don’t keep wrecking our climate and environment for their own profit." ...

Last week, his campaign also released an email criticizing Clinton for her support of fracking, as well as for attending a fundraiser hosted by a major fracking investor. "[J]ust as I believe you can't take on Wall Street while taking their money, I don't believe you can take on climate change effectively while taking money from those who would profit off the destruction of the planet," the email stated.

Revealed: Big Oil's Backroom Lobby Blitz to Drill in Arctic...Again

After the very public failure of a number of Arctic drilling attempts last year, Big Oil companies are lobbying the government of Canada to extend their drilling licenses and relinquish hundreds of millions in security deposits, reporting on Monday revealed.

The National Observer's Mike De Souza reports that the Trudeau administration is proceeding with a review of Canada's Petroleum Resources Act, which "internal federal briefing notes show" was initiated by the government of former Prime Minister Stephen Harper—a notorious "climate villain"—at the behest of oil industry lobbyists.

According to De Souza, as the law currently stands, companies including "Imperial Oil, Exxon Mobil Corp., BP Plc., and Chevron Corp. would be forced in the coming years to walk away from their proposed projects since they have not been able to convince federal authorities that they can drill for oil in the Arctic—before their licenses expire—without causing an environmental disaster."

Not only do those oil giants want an extension on their contracts, they are seeking repayment on the collective $500 million in security deposits to obtain those licenses—after they give Arctic drilling another shot.

"The changes to the law proposed by the oil industry lobbyists would allow them to extend exploration licenses beyond a maximum nine-year term so that they can pursue their projects without paying any new security deposits," De Souza reports. "At the same time, an extension of the licenses could allow companies to get refunds on the hundreds of millions of dollars that they already paid to the government, once they begin to drill for oil."

Days of Revolt: Sacrifice Zones

Damning Flint Emails Show Snyder Could Have Called Emergency 'at Any Time'

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder could have declared a state of emergency in Flint over its water contamination crisis months earlier than he did, according to new emails released Sunday that contradict the governor's defense of his delayed actions.

Snyder, who declared a state of emergency in Flint and Genesee County on January 5—months after acknowledging there was lead in the region's public water supply—has repeatedly said he could not take action until local officials made a request, which Genesee County did on January 4.

However, a November 13 email sent to Snyder's office from Michigan State Police (MSP) Captain Chris Kelenske, who also serves as the deputy state director of emergency management and homeland security, reads, "As you know, the Governor can declare at any time, for any reason."

"The state will formally own the event if we put a Governor's Declaration in place," Kelenske wrote to Snyder's deputy legal counsel, Paul Smith. "This could be viewed as the state having owned up to how the water issue was caused."

Previously released communications suggest that Snyder told state officials to suppress lead testing results and that the governor knew the water was toxic as far back as October 2014.

PVC Maker Offers Free Replacement of Flint Water Pipes

The world’s largest plastic pipe supplier says it will replace all the lead pipes that contributed to the public health catastrophe in Flint.

Los Angeles-based JM Eagle CEO Walter Wang made his magnanimous offer to the Flint City Council Monday. The city can keep its money, he said, and his company will replace all of the lead lines supplying water to Flint houses free of charge.

The offer, which hasn’t been formalized, comes with a 50-year guarantee on the pipe, designed to last a century.


Also of Interest

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

Hillary Clinton’s foreign policy is pure fantasy

Elif Shafak on Turkey’s turmoil: ‘Intimidation and paranoia dominates the land’

End Times for the Caliphate?

Donald Trump’s Appeal to White Nationalism

The New York Times’ Strange Behavior in the Controversy Over Trump’s Off-The-Record Comments

FBI vs. Apple is Really About Snowden

Slave Masters, Company Town Bosses, and 21st Century U.S. Politics

Clarence Thomas shocks supreme court by ending 10-year oral argument silence

Could Cthulhu trump the other Super Tuesday contenders?


A Little Night Music

Harmonica Fats - Tore Up (Over You)

Harmonica Fats - My Baby Didn't Come Home

Harmonica Fats - How Low Is Low

Harmonica Fats - Mama, Mama, Talk To Your Daughter For Me

Harmonica Fats - Drive Way Blues

Harmonica Fats With Joe Kincaid & Soul Brother Band - Harmonica Symphony Stomp

Harmonica Fats + Bernie Pearl - You got your mouth stuck out

Harmonica Fats - Long cool (Summertime) & Top show



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buybacks.png

So how's that working out?

The companies losing money on these bets are down a collective $126 billion over the past three years, a decline of 15 percent.

Many corporations would have been better off investing that cash in an index fund instead of their own stock. The overall market rose 39 percent over the same period.

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recovery.png

Gaming the numbers

Even the billionaire oligarch crony capitalist Warren Buffett addressed this despicably flagrant flaunting of basic accounting principles to mislead shareholders in his annual letter last week:

It has become common for managers to tell their owners to ignore certain expense items that are all too real. “Stock-based compensation” is the most egregious example. The very name says it all: “compensation.” If compensation isn’t an expense, what is it? And, if real and recurring expenses don’t belong in the calculation of earnings, where in the world do they belong?

Wall Street analysts often play their part in this charade, too, parroting the phony, compensation-ignoring “earnings” figures fed them by managements. Maybe the offending analysts don’t know any better. Or maybe they fear losing “access” to management. Or maybe they are cynical, telling themselves that since everyone else is playing the game, why shouldn’t they go along with it. Whatever their reasoning, these analysts are guilty of propagating misleading numbers that can deceive investors…. When CEOs or investment bankers tout pre-depreciation figures such as EBITDA as a valuation guide, watch their noses lengthen while they speak.

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progdog's picture

Some of these companies are even taking new debt as they take net income hits because their perceived values are so critical to their narratives, actual results be damned.

Not that I can blame anyone - who wants to be the next Carly Fiorina?

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prog - weirdo | dog - woof

joe shikspack's picture

welcome to c99!

i think that it's likely that the people making these decisions about inflating their stocks with buybacks are not so much concerned about their narrative as their own personal short-term gains.

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joe shikspack's picture

it may not be working out so well for the companies, but the guys that get to sell off their shares that they got as compensation are probably making out a lot better than they might have otherwise in the short term.

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Many in this population, which generally has limited education and skills and limited job prospects, struggle to find employment even in normal economic times.

They often have no transportation including public and no family or friends to help with child care, sick child care or anything else. Clinton's welfare reform program is cruel and opened the door for the 37 red states to make it even worse.

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

joe shikspack's picture

sometimes pragmatism looks a lot like a cruel selling out of the less fortunate for partisan political gain. (not to mention big speaking fees and other rewards after leaving office.)

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Big Al's picture

biggest, baddest military this side of the U.S. of Imperialism by now considering they've bought about three trillion worth of little penis toys from the Military Industrial complex.

What is up with that? This does not look good for Sanders either who flatly stated Saudi Arabia should do more death and destruction in the MENA so the U.S. of Empire can focus on Russia and Venezuela. That was the bad Bernie overruling the good Bernie evidently.

Part of it is the MIC and supplying profits and wealth to the .01% but the problem is these little penis toys have to be used so they can sell more.
Personally I think we should start an antiwar movement, we might need it here real soon.

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joe shikspack's picture

well, it looks like the saudis have plenty of toys, but perhaps not enough well-trained strategists and soldiers to make use of them.

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Big Al's picture

in the desert to "loan" back to the U.S. Kind of like the oil/reserve currency deal.

Either way, it's amazing how matter of fact Cameron and our politicians are about this, and even more amazing how little pushback there is to this insanity.

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joe shikspack's picture

the saudis propped up our munitions industries in return for the understanding that we would protect their oilfields and their ruling class.

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Big Al's picture

Like a deal with the devil.

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lotlizard's picture

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Big Al's picture

"Pentagon proposes further expansion of role in Iraq war"

OMG. Shit, Madeleine Albright and Bill Clinton killed half a million children in Iraq in the 90's, then George W. Bush and the Neocons killed over a million people in the first decade of this century, then Obama took over and convinced his Jim Jones followers his resume should have "ended the Iraq war" written in gold, and now they're wanting to escalate the U.S. "ROLE"! What the hell. Truth is stranger than fiction man.

These are war crimes/crimes against humanity and flat out premeditated murder by our government happening right before our eyes. Course, slavery happened right before our eyes too. And Native American genocide. I guess American eyes are FUBAR.

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beathillary.PNG

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Big Al's picture

He's not going to be able to do anything Clinton wouldn't do too. What worries me are the people who will vote for Trump. I mean, how to put it? They are racists morons. If my 59 year old brother votes for Trump, I'm going to call him a racist moron too. Breaking it down, the racist things Trump has said have been so out of bounds that anyone who supports him has to be inferred as a racist also. They have to be called on that continually.

Secondly, the moron part is mostly because these people just have not been listening and if they have, they're dumber than a box of rocks to think anything Trump does is going to help the Serfs. But then again, I could say the same thing about Clinton and her supporters. They're all ignorant or of such low moral quality they would approve of the dropping nuclear bombs on brown people. That is danger territory.

You know what, we have got a battle on our hands. I hope I'm not being hypocritical by using that term, but there is a fight for what is right and what is wrong and right now, the wrong people are winning.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

Security benefits. He claims that increasing jobs and economic growth, and reducing (entitlement) waste, fraud and abuse is all that is needed. And, regarding free trade--he is a trade protectionist, even calling for tariffs.

(Or, so he says.)

So, nothing (major) that he has proposed, could possibly pass our neoliberal Congress.

But the Clinton Machine would surely have a field day. And I agree with Joe--what O doesn't cut, FSC will. (regarding Social Security)

Hey, have a good one!

Postscript: And, no--definitely not endorsing Trump. But we did watch (suffer through) all the Republican Debates. Wink I could be wrong, but I believe that these two stances are the main reason that he is garnering so many votes in the South and Rust Belt.

Thanks for tonight's EB, Joe. Have a nice evening, Bluesters.

Mollie
elinkarlsson@WordPress


"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers
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Pluto's Republic's picture

…much, much more that Bernie's or Hillary's. But, then, I choose anti-war over domestic policy.

The enemy of the Neocons is my best friend. An anti-Neocon in the White house would make the rest of the world a profoundly better and safer place for mankind. And that's my destination.

I look at the US domestic scene this way: Slashing the vast cost of US empire global chaos and destruction will flood the Federal government with excess money. That relieves the poor American Colonists from the terrible pressures of austerity. And that means they can save up and migrate to an advanced nation, if they wish to do so.

But sadly, I am a realist. It's brutal. Thus, I am well aware that Our Overlords will not allow Trump inside the White House — as toothless and powerless as the "Presidency" actually is. Trump's principle flaw disqualifies him: His first loyalty is not to Greater Israel.

So, don't give it another thought. My presidential prediction from 18 months ago is still solid.

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Big Al's picture

as Clinton, fully supports the fraudulent war OF terror, and is racist as hell. His version of "making America great again" will come on the backs and lives of many millions just as all Presidents, if he gets there. He's a conman who will continue the Empire.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

He has no interest in continuing the US international murder-sprees. He doesn't even want to guard the sea lanes, unless the rest of the world picks up the tab in full.

I've listened very carefully. So have America's Neocons. That's why they're going insane.

As for anything he pretends he's going to do domestically, I don't really care. My first priority is anti-war. What's yours?

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lotlizard's picture

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joe shikspack's picture

you can take control of the narrative at a significant discount price.

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snoopydawg's picture

First he let the war criminals not be prosecuted. Not only the ones who decided that 'enhanced interrogation' torture didn't apply to the 'terrorists" or the people who performed the torture.
He blocked Spain from bringing war crimes tribunal against Bush and Cheney,
Then he not only let the people who crashed the global economy off from prosecution, he put them in his cabinet.

For his hopefully last act he's passing the treasonous TPP that will allow foreign companies to over rule our own laws. And offshore what is left of the middle class jobs.

I'm worried about what he will do to social security before he leaves office. If he doesn't ruin it I think his successor will. After all didn't she say that she was going to expand on his legacy?
I didn't think there could have been a worse president than Bush, but Obama has invaded more countries then he did. He uses drones instead of ground troops. Except for the ones that are in Iraq now and the ones he will be sending there, Libya,Syria and some countries that surround Russia.
Yep, best president in my life time as so many people on kos state.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

joe shikspack's picture

I'm worried about what he will do to social security before he leaves office. If he doesn't ruin it I think his successor will.

my money would be on hillary to destroy social security herself. mr. hillary has been best buds with pete peterson for ages and has headlined his annual, "let's kill social security for the good of us all," spectacles for ages.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

mostly to come out of so-called entitlements.

The Presidential primary race provides a great deal of 'cover' for lawmakers as they fleece our Medicare and Social Security programs 'in regular order.'

On "Newsmakers," Rep Johnny Isakson (Chairperson of the Committee on Veterans Affairs) indicated that there is bipartisan agreement to further privatize the VA system, which was initiated in summer of 2014.

(I'll post on that bill, later.)

The same bill began the process of dismantling Civil Service protections for millions of federal civilian employees, as well.

I'm following the Twitter feed of the Congressional Reporter who spoke about these cuts about a week ago (on XM Radio).

It's a believable report, since this excerpt is straight from the House Appropriations Committee website, and she cited the same exact figure. See below.

Chairman Rogers Statement on the President’s Fiscal Year 2017 Budget Request

Washington, Feb 9

. . . “My Committee intends to produce bills that abide by the budget caps set into place by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 – a total of $1.070 trillion in discretionary spending.

But most importantly, they will be fiscally responsible, reflecting the needs of our federal government and the American people while protecting our financial future."

THAT means that he will 'offset' the $1.070 in 'discretionary' spending, with cuts to 'nondiscretionary' spending--just as the reporter stated.

I expect that 'if and when' Mr Rogers is successful--and we know that he has the Administration's support--we can pretty much kiss Medicare and Social Security, 'bye bye.'

(as we know it)

Whew!

BTW, thanks for tonight's EB, Joe.

Have a nice evening, Bluesters!

Mollie
elinkarlsson@WordPress


"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers
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Shahryar's picture

also he wanted to do things but the bad Repubs wouldn't let him.

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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.

joe shikspack's picture

i guess we'll start seeing some results pretty soon. on the google they only have about 2% of the returns from virginia so far, 1% for georgia and 0% for vermont, but they have called those states already.

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shaharazade's picture

not out about the outcome but because the Southern states seem stuck with horrendous RW Republican politics which must influence the Democratic voters Black and white and in between to accept the authoritarian bad ass lesser evil they believe has the only chance to win. What a farce. We live in a country where people willingly believe that the only battle available is between D's and R's. The war in these states is cultural and boils down to the belief that the Devil you know is better then the other side. Maybe not maybe the people of this region are more conservative and authoritarian. The black sell out NAACP style leaders and the church seem to have a large sway on the AA vote. I guess if you have Jeff Sessions or Lindsy Graham for your representative or Dem. Terry McAwful and Tim Kaine you might find the Clinton a reasonable choice. But man on a gut level I truly resent having the southern states being the arbitrators who decide the candidates we are locked into voting for. The culture wars carefully cultivated by both sides and fanned daily by the media has done real damage to the farce of our political discourse. Bernie's 'one issue' covers a multitude of sins. Stockholm Syndrome is alive and well everywhere but on super dupper Tuesday it's just sad.

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shaharazade's picture

by nobody I mean the voters and the non voters. I got the blues.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

to relatively, conservative Republican, any where else in the country.

Of course, many of these folks don't recognize this. After all, they look at their crazy 'John Bircher' Uncle, and (to some extent rightfully) consider themselves to be a liberal, or a progressive, in comparison.

Wink

Yes, it is sad.

BTW, Trump just won Virginia. Yuck!

Mollie
elinkarlsson@WordPress


"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers
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joe shikspack's picture

while the media continue to trumpet the two parties that are one as the limits of choice, i am somewhat heartened by the fact that there are more independents than either democrats or republicans - and the way things are going, the parties are starting to come apart at the seams. i'm not sure what will happen if by the time the election is over even fewer people want to be democrats and republicans, but it seems like it might be a great time to promote third parties.

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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.

shaharazade's picture

declared the winner in Oklahoma. Yikes how weird this. Just when you thought they would say nix.

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mimi's picture

I am looking for a chart for each of the states... not speeches.

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joe shikspack's picture

by googling presidential primary results the top of the page is an expandable graphic display that will give you the results AP reports as they update.

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mimi's picture

as Germans would say, which means "news from yesterday". I found it yesterday may be 10 minutes after I posted it. I hadn't followed anything for the whole day, neither online, nor TV, so I was impatient that I couldn't find the numbers right away. Thanks. Ok, updates, good. And delegate counts are "dead fish" for me for a while from now on. If Sanders loses the primaries, I am moving to Vermont and troll around there. Smile

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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.

Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

Crider's picture

In honor of National Trump Day (not-so super Tuesda) . . .

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joe shikspack's picture

president trump. well, it would be good for comedians.

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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 --

Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

mimi's picture

I am done. May be all this is fun for you. But not for me. I can't handle it.

Reading is enough. Talking is bad and walking would be great. But I feel too sickened.

Sorry, JtC, please erase my content. Thanks.

And thanks for the EB. It's great work and a great site. I will read only. Hope the movement and/or revolution will come around. Of course I don't believe it ever will.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

when you consider that (so far this evening) Bernie has won two states, to FSC's six states. I certainly hope that it had nothing to do with your exasperation.

In the proper context, it's really not a bad statistic (IMO). Hope you reconsider closing out your account.

(Maybe 'sleep on it,' as they say.)

Wink

Postscript: Rubio just took Florida for the Repubs.

And Bernie just won Colorado caucuses!!!!!! (According to CNN projections.)

Mollie
elinkarlsson@WordPress


"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers
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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

Unabashed Liberal's picture

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

detroitmechworks's picture

Constant refrains we can expect to hear over the next few days:

"If you win more states on Super Tuesday, You are ALWAYS the Candidate, No exceptions."

"Bill's activity in MA was perfectly reasonable, and only a conspiracy theorist would find anything wrong with it."

"Scary Trump. Scary Trump. Scary Trump."

"Hillary HAS to tack Right, otherwise she won't get the votes she needs. STFU and GOTV."

And exactly ZERO coverage of Bernie on the MSM from here out. (Course, that's not really a big change...)

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

Pluto's Republic's picture

…until all Americans have had a chance to "speak."

Following a big primary loss in South Carolina over the weekend, Bernie Sanders promised that he was in the race for the long haul—and then subsequently raised $6 million in one day to amass a total of $42 million in February alone. That’s the most any presidential candidate has raised in a single month in 2016, including Hillary Clinton, his chief rival for the nomination.

“At the end of tomorrow, I think 15 states will have spoken,” Sanders said Monday. “Last I heard, we have a lot more than 15 states in the United States of America, and I think it is more than appropriate to give all of those states and the people in those states a chance to vote for the candidate of their choice.”

Hillary will just have to suck it up and keep pretending she's a liberal.

I don't think any Republicans are leaving, either. They figure that one of them will replace Trump. I haven't given up on Jeb, yet.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

the 'play by play.'

Wink

Seriously, I believe that there's another state or two not yet reported, but we're traveling right now, and I'm absolutely pooped, so I'll check out for now. Hope to sign back in, at least in time for the next round of primary races.

I could be wrong, but I think that the Sanders Campaign would have to be quite happy with tonight's race results. CNN did say that FSC's Massachusetts victory was a very narrow win. Seems to me that Bernie won almost every state that he was seriously campaigning in.

Anyhoo, hope to see you Guys by next week's caucuses & primaries, as our travels allow. Thought tonight's results were pretty encouraging. It was definitely a lot of fun, and great to see so many new members!

Over and out . . .

Bye

Mollie
elinkarlsson@WordPress


"Happiness is the absence of the striving for happiness."--Zhuangzi
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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

Shahryar's picture

outside of the South Hillary has either won narrowly or been clobbered.

And she's running out of Southern states.

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mimi's picture

here at all - just lost my nerves. Even the fucking delegate counts didn't do anything to me. It's the whole internet technology that I despise.

I hate the internet so much, I don't want to use it anymore, but it's hopeless. I think those times are over, where anybody can still escape this terrible network technology and avoid to get caught in it. All I know is that fascism, exploitation, enslavement, hate incitement, surveillance, censorship is all done with the tools that the internet technology provides. They do everything for a private person to not be able to live and survive without ever using the internet and leaving their traces behind in there.

The real fight will come, and it's the fight against the technology and how it enslaves the citizens worldwide. And you can't fight an abusive technology, while at the same time being forced to use it for that fight. The same thing as you can't fight money in politics and at the same time having to take it from anyone.

The whole thing is utter bullshit.

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joe shikspack's picture

fascism, exploitation, enslavement, hate incitement, surveillance, censorship is all done with the tools that the internet technology provides

all of those nasty things pre-existed the internet. they are the product of human animal group dynamics.

if you enjoy and get a benefit from using technology, perhaps ceasing to use it because it allows humans to act like the animals that they are is cutting off your nose to spite your face.

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mimi's picture

"cutting off your nose to spite your face" ... thanks, that's a good one, I hope I will remember it. Smile

Of course all those nasty things existed before internet times. I doubt though that the surveillance and manipulation and exploitation were ever so intimate, direct, widespread and fast and all inclusive. And it didn't follow people's lives til their death. I could write a diary about it, based on what I see.

I also don't think I overreact, just see things others may not have that much opportunities to see and watch how it can destroy people. Well, yes, I had a very bad day in that regard and my anger got overboard. I have to spit out my fury some times, otherwise I get ulcers.

Thanks for your kind words, and of course, you knew I wouldn't be able to QUIT. At least I am not getting mocked for it. I start to despise some people on the gos. And they shouldn't have that much of a negative effect on my mental health. Fuck 'em.

Trying to find to do something that makes me happy.

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there was no way I was going to delete your account, I knew you were just having a bad day, we all do at one time or another.

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mimi's picture

thanatokephaloides's picture

Mimi, please allow me to add to the chorus of voices here asking you to please reconsider leaving us!

Our strength is perfected when we practice Solidarity with one another -- in good times and in the bad ones, too.

Smile

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

mimi's picture

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Big Al's picture

I've been in the military and worked as a civilian for the military dealing with full birds and generals and this one takes the cake. He's such a blatant fucking tool and liar it's like the evolution of liars has culminated in him. It's not only that, the media, 90% controlled by six rich fuckers, is the absolute servant of these warmonger imperialists.

"Refugees from the Middle East and north Africa are “masking the movement” of terrorists and criminals, Nato’s top commander told Congress on Tuesday, despite the protests of human rights groups who say that refugees overwhelmingly have no ulterior motive but escape.

In testimony to the Senate armed services committee, US general Philip Breedlove said that the Islamic State terror group is “spreading like a cancer” among refugees. The group’s members are “taking advantage of paths of least resistance, threatening European nations and our own”, he added.

Breedlove also blamed Russia’s bombing campaign in Syria, in support of autocratic leader Bashar al-Assad, for having “wildly exacerbated the problem”.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/nato-commander-isis-spreading-like-c...

Regardless the veracity of what he's saying, how could it be that people in the Middle East after having imperialists bomb the shit out of them, kill their children for over a century trying to steal their oil and land, not want to fight back? It reminds me of the Indian Wars, the first terrorists against America. Over and over it's the same thing. That's how humans are.

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Big Al's picture

this is what people read, and they believe it. It's infuriating. I've said it before, it is an existential problem we face.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

…I've seen in the active military. A very twisted kind of crazy, with zero grip on reality.

You live long enough, you see everything, I guess.

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