Rants, Muses, Books & Music (and Some Cooking Too).

It's good to see you. Come on in, leave your shoes in the hallway, we've got fire on the stove preparing lunch for later. In the meantime, browse the bookshelves and plunk down on the sofa with one, or pick out some tunes from the music library or come in to the kitchen to help with the cooking. Our special blend of tea is steeping and will be right up.

Make yourself at home...

I have to admit, when the weather finally makes a turn for the better with cooler temps, one of the first things I still think of, thanks to my American male conditioning, is football. And although I've rejected pro sports for years now and probably won't watch much of the NFL again at all this year, I will be taking more than a mild interest in a few individuals or teams who have shown courage to stand against systemic racism and police brutality. Most owners are raving RW oligarchs in fascist collusion with the military who give nary a fuck about police brutality, imperialism, healthcare for all or economic inequality. So it's important to recognize what those courageous young men are up against.

And there seems to be more and more brave young athletes coming out lately. For instance, check out the Cleveland Browns and "How the youngest team in the NFL staged its largest national anthem protest."

Twelve Browns players knelt in a circle and prayed, while five others, including McCourty, stood with a hand resting on a kneeling player’s shoulder before Monday night’s preseason contest against the New York Giants. Seventeen players in all participated in the demonstration to call attention to racial injustice in the United States.

The Browns’ protest stood in contrast to the scenes this preseason on many sidelines, where anthem displays have been confined to a modest group of players on just a handful of teams. Although many more players share a simmering unhappiness with team owners about Kaepernick’s continued unemployment and about issues such as police brutality and mistreatment of blacks and minorities, they’ve chosen to remain largely silent.

I'm enamored of star quarterback Colin Kaepernick's courageous stand, which has led to this current expansion upon his protest of kneeling during the national anthem last year. Just this last week there was a long overdue public showing of support for him, on the thrust of him being blacklisted from the NFL (all rumors of signing with the Jacksonville Jaguars aside), which has brought out and together many folks from all walks, including a big protest in front of the NFL's headquarters in Manhattan. Even members of the NYPD showed up, with the great One Honest Cop, Frank Serpico joining them. Hank Aaron has also made public comments to say #ImWithKap too.

At the same time the bigots crawl out of their holes in times like these, as evidenced by Drumpf's ignorant and reckless deep-seated bigotry and racism. But it's always a little creepy, at least initially, when we the true colors come out of people you'd expect would at least try to hide it professionally a little more than the imbecilic buffoon who snake-oiled into the White House (Thanks $hillary, and the collusion of the Dem Party!).

But there has been a noteworthy amount of criticism of the Browns’ action on social media for disrespecting the flag and the military. It included Justice William M. O’Neill of the Ohio Supreme Court, who posted on Facebook he will “NEVER attend a sporting event where the draft dodging millionaire athletes disrespect the veterans who earned them the right to be on that field.”

It's really no surprise there are still these kinds of racist clowns occupying the highest levels of the judiciary, poisoned by a lifetime of RW propaganda to spout outdated, erroneous dog-whistle racism. "Draft-dodging" and "veterans who earned them the right..."? There hasn't been a draft in at least over 40 years, you low-grade moron. Maybe he's still a little stung over all those dirty fucking hippies and that uppity Mohammed Ali. And not one fucking veteran earned them a right to play football; they earned every cent of that with their own ability and have every right not only to be on the field but to use their freedom of speech/expression as they see fit, you fascist fuck. The collusion of the NFL and the Armed Services is one of the most toxic developments in American society.

What I'm trying to say is I think the fight against these racists is really important. They've endorsed and contributed to constructing a society of wink-and-a-nod injustice to outright unapologetic brutality and murder of black Americans.

How many thousands more will be murdered in cold-blood by Boys in Blue, with complete immunity? Our history is littered with the most gruesome snuffing out of black lives through institutional racism.

I lay in bed for several minutes trying to hear what they were talking about. The talking continued and I got up and pulled back the window shade slightly at the south window overlooking the alleyway, and peeped out to see what was going on. I saw several policemen, about four of them with a colored boy. The policemen had the boy standing up against the brick wall of the hotel with both hands raised above his head. I heard them ask him, "What in the hell are you doing out this time of the morning?" He says, "I am looking for my wife." They said, "You are telling a goddamn lie. We tried to catch you last night, but you got away. We are going to fix you tonight." He says, "Mr. Officer, if I have did anything, please ride me to the police station." They said, "We are going to give you a ride. It is going to be a damn long ride. The first one is going to be to the undertaker and the next ride will be to the goddam cemetery."

....

They beat him so they broke his neck—I tell you his neck was really broke—they took him back in the alley, hit him over the head several times; his neck shook like a chickens neck when you break it. He wasn't saying anything because they told him, "You better not holler you son-of-a-bitch." He was handcuffed all this time. They took him back in the alley just a few feet from the Third Street sidewalk and commenced shooting him while he was down. His body was on the right side. His face was turned south and his hands still handcuffed, and he was near the hotel wall. There were four or five shots fired into his body while he was down handcuffed and after his neck was broken. The boy was unable to say anything. Before they put the handcuffs on him he cried and begged them not to kill him, but after beating him over the head with their billies and breaking his neck he said nothing more and didn't cry anymore. When the police shot him they were standing over him in the alleyway. I saw three or four flashlights. There were four shots in rapid succession. Several pistols were firing.

There were at least four officers. I did not know the names of any of the officers and would not know them if I saw them. Everyone had on uniforms. After they had fired four times he was lying there breathing heavily in death. One of the officers flashed his light on him to see his condition and said, "Why that son-of-a-bitch ain't dead yet," and pulled his pistol out and shot him again in the left side of his head and the bullet came out on the other side of his head and was found in the alleyway. I saw the bullet Saturday morning. I also [saw] his blood and brains which had oozed out on the pavement. There was a drizzling rain Saturday and [it] washed the blood down the sidewalk into the gutter.

Fanny Henderson
STATE OF TENNESSEE, COUNTY OF SHELBY
[A deposition made to the NAACP, c. February 1933]

Read the deeply heart-wrenching account of Kalief Browder, a Bronx teenager who spent three years on Rikers Island without being convicted of a crime, and when finally was released, struggling with mental health exacerbated greatly by the constant trauma of beatings in jail, hung himself out of the 2nd floor window of his mother's home.

Such a system (almost one million NYC black and brown citizens were detained as part of the racist Stop & Frisk policy) is allowed to remain in place because, in my opinion, not enough white folks will ever have to get even a whiff of just how heinous it is for our black brothers and sisters, and therefore not concern themselves adequately enough about how serious the situation remains. Here's a description of the legal labyrinth that ensnared and ultimately killed Browder as it has many millions across centuries.

Read the brutal accounts of the ocean-crossing ships carrying slaves bound in iron chains, stacked like sardines on planks below, stewing in their own vomit and defecation, fed like animals and made to dance for the entertainment of the crew during their few moments of fresh air on deck.

A sordid psychological, emotional, physical and spiritual damage has reverberated through the centuries. And every next humiliation, injustice, harassment, beating, unjust imprisonment and murder by cops rings the bell afresh for all with darker skin in America.

American legal history is just rife with scandalous, horrifyingly racist outcomes. How may "investigations" in Southern small towns end up with nothing/how many routinely trials acquit cold-blooded murderers/how many black men are executed on the flimsiest of evidence? In the North, how many in the law enforcement apparatus, from cops to detectives to prosecutors to district attorneys to judges conspire to force plea bargains, imprison, beat and murder young black men with impunity? (read the New Yorker piece on the Injustice System).

The long, horrifying legacy of racism and police brutality continues to plague the American experience, yet one can still hear well-meaning white supporters call for better strategy, or more focus on the fundamental issues, etc. While that may bear some consideration it fails to acknowledge just how deep those the public representationsof that systematic rot, symbolic or not, cut to the bone. Sometimes I think we here on C99 haven't been fully capable of dwelling on how deep it really goes. As almost entirely white folks here (as far as I know, including myself) we can't ever expect to truly understand what it must feel like to have to brace one's self every single day upon leaving one's home, to be accosted in ways large and small by a society still very much conditioned by media and propaganda to see black folks solely as otherness at the very least or to be feared and subjugated at worst.

To have one's personal space invaded out of the blue by randomly being called a "nigger" for no other reason than that of having darker skin, to be followed around a store by security for no other reason than one's skin color, to be stopped by police and viewed with suspicion for no other reason than one's skin color. To show up for a job interview or to rent an apartment that sounded on the phone or by email to be all but confirmed, only to be declined in person. To languish in jail for trumped up charges, preyed upon by a racist and overly punitive justice and penal system, or to finally be exterminated by police who "feared for their lives."

That's the history to which Kaepernick, who is an activist schooled in radical black history, and the young black athletes reclaiming the dignity of their people, are calling on for white America to face more squarely.

What we as white folks can do best to help in these situations is to listen. Just listen.

Martin Luther King reached this point not halfway through 1963, in his Letter from Birmingham Jail:

First, I must confess that over the last few years, I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in the stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Council-er or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate who is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says ‘I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I can’t agree with your methods of direct action;’ who paternalistically feels he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by the myth of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait until a ‘more convenient season.’

What's most important now, to me, is that there's a bubbling sense right now among its black players (and some white teammate supporters) that there is an untapped power among them, of which foisted upon them or not, can not go unignored anymore.

Perhaps nothing speaks more to the potential power of black athlete solidarity than this. The Mizzou football, after a series of racial offenses disregarded by the university president, joined together in solidarity to refuse to play their game that Sunday. College football is big money, and it was estimated the school would lose $1 million if the team didn't play. A couple of days later the president was forced to step down. It's one of those really powerful stories that, in my opinion, hasn't gotten nearly the traction it deserves because it fundamentally challenges one of the seats of power in this country.

Concerned Student 1950 movement

It's always the right time for white allies to stand up and speak out. That's really the only way things are ever going to change.

When black athletes sense their growing power and a chance to confront racism head-on, I stand with them. Taking those wretched Confederate statues that are reminders of this long, brutal history must happen. It is just a start.

So, whats going on with you?

Back in the kitchen we're listening to:

Reading/Browsing List:
"Slavery By Another Name" Douglas Blackmom
"King of The World" David Remnick
"Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass"
"The Fire Next Time" James Baldwin

End of the Summer Spaghetti

sauté sliced onions, mushrooms, chopped green beans into bite-sized bits, sun-dried tomatoes, a couple of anchovies and crumbled walnuts. Add spinach leaves before serving over pasta.

Lemongrass Chai Blend

heaping scoop of dried Thai lemongrass
shards of cinnamon bark
a few cardamom pods
a few black peppercorns
A few cloves
fresh chopped ginger

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Mark from Queens's picture

Baby is energetic and tiring me out.

Will check in when I can.

Just started reading Shaun King's latest for Medium.com. It's sobering and angering. Taibbi's "The Divide" devoted some chapters to this too. But as NYers we know very clearly that institutional racism is the dominant strain of the NYPD:

"Soul Snatchers: How the NYPD’s 42nd Precinct, the Bronx DA’s Office, and the City of New York Conspired to Destroy Black and Brown Lives (Part 1)"

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

@Mark from Queens of sometime in the 60s when I was a young'un (born the tail end of '56). Wasn't there two city blocks of a black section razed in NYC because of civil unrest?
Now for the soapbox (and I hope I can keep the thoughts unjumbled pecking out on a kindle with gorilla fingers). I live in a very red part of Ks. When I hear the anti-black sentiment from relatives and coworkers I point out that if they can't compete, with all the advantages of being white, against blacks with all their disadvantages, the problem lies with you, not the blacks. I'm secure enough in my whiteness to admit that.
And to further piss them off I point out that since a small percentage of the world doesn't have dark hair, dark eyes, and dark skin, it can only be concluded that "whiteness" is a mutation, an aberration, (and used against the extremely religious) an abomination to the Lord.

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There is no such thing as TMI. It can always be held in reserve for extortion.

mhagle's picture

#IMWITHKAP

White people can't understand. We just are not in the same shoes. One of my older sisters was bullied very badly in high school. I suppose that holds some similarities.

Harvey gave us here further north, cooler wetter weather . . . beautiful. While Houston and surrounding areas are receiving more rain and are now under a tropical storm warning. My heart is heavy for all of those folks. Everything I watch and read about it is frightening.

Naomi Klein has an excellent article in the Intercept. https://theintercept.com/2017/08/28/harvey-didnt-come-out-of-the-blue-no...

Hope you are OK, Deja!

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

Mark from Queens's picture

@mhagle
I think we (white people) have to make a much more concerted effort toward understanding what it's like to be in their (black people) shoes.

That is the essence of empathy I believe.
Self-preservation is easy; that's the first instinct of human beings. It's 101. Self-interest, too.

But empathy is the higher consciousness. It's the ability to reason that laid the ground work for society, community and government. To be a true ally one must be empathetic first and foremost.

Glad you've been spared the disaster, Marilyn, and are far enough away to enjoy some of the residual storm. "Climate change," just some damn scientists goin' on 'bout nuthin'.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

mhagle's picture

@Mark from Queens

But empathy is the higher consciousness. It's the ability to reason that laid the ground work for society, community and government. To be a true ally one must be empathetic first and foremost.

Well said. Thanks!

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

orlbucfan's picture

and Cowboys didn't donate to hairballed brains? Not to mention the NBA ownership--UGH! Good OT, Music Mark. I'm melancholy cos of Houston. Sad Enjoy the tune.

Rec'd!!

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.

Mark from Queens's picture

@orlbucfan
but it's pretty safe to assume they're probably all inveterate RW oligarch extremists who spread their ill-gotten boondoggle to ensure more tax cuts, military spectacles, monopoly ownership and that the 99% stay debt slaves.

I'm pretty sure I remember that Woody Johnson, the owner of the Jets, donated heavily to McCain and Romney, just like a good ole boy fascist in the Big Club. Not that it really matters. The Duopoly is their playground, and we're the disposable toys to be broken at will. But I am glad that I started my own boycott a few years ago and never gave another penny to that team after many years as a season ticket holder.

Funny, all those years with Testaverde breaking college records and then signing with the Bucs, only to find out later that he was actually colorblind. He was a hometown favorite on LI where we both grew up. Was happy to see him on the Jets and to have some amazing seasons (including an AFC Championship appearance) under Parcells.

#BoycottNFL #ImWithKap

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

orlbucfan's picture

starts, I'll listen to the games via streaming. I used to sit down during the national anthem as a protest when I went to a game. Been there, done that, getting old. LOL. @Mark from Queens

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.

NFL censored reports about all the brain damage to their players, too.

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

@dkmich (your avatar). Gave me a giggle.

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There is no such thing as TMI. It can always be held in reserve for extortion.

enhydra lutris's picture

We're getting a warming pulse right now. Only up to 73 today, but 100 by the weekend.

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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 --

@enhydra lutris a few points south of 58. Near chilly!

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riverlover's picture

@enhydra lutris Depression Season begins for real. My olive tree needs to be relocated to the house. I have developed a chronic cough. I think it's due to ragweed dehiscence. Time to close the window opened first in late spring. The goldenrod bloom begins. Queen Anns' Lace also. I need to whack down the growth in the front yard so I can rake fallen leaves 4-5X. Or not. Woodland does fine with no raking.

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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.

@riverlover is out of corners and along fence line. The mower mulches them.

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There is no such thing as TMI. It can always be held in reserve for extortion.

riverlover's picture

@ghotiphaze Limited to a battery-powered weed whacker and a manual one. Oh, and I have heard the pump cycle on for radiant floor heat. 2 PM and up to 62.

Just watched a CDC stream about TBIs. Mostly about worries with kids in contact sports. But I have had enough bangs to head to be in a TBI state. I need to rest my brain. Even reading may be too stressful. (at least for kids). I am too old for school, no IED required. And I still have a headache. I persist.

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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.

Meteor Man's picture

Especially owners of sports teams. I was going to City Council meetings in the 90's to speak against a taxpayer welfare hike for tech billionaire John Moores.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2017/jan/16/tic...

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.reddit.com/r/MLS/comments/48b1v3/john_m...

It still didn't pass:

Ballot Measure C in San Diego asked voters whether they wanted to effectively increase the city’s hotel room tax rate from 12.5% to 16.5%, with the proceeds helping fund a new $1.8 billion stadium and convention center. The tax increase was to repay $1.15 billion in bonds, leaving the Chargers and NFL to pay the remaining $650 million.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/chargers/2016/11/09/san-diego-...

Though further specifics were omitted, those familiar with the U-T's rapidly gathering PR storm say that the Texan in question is Houstonian John Moores, the ex-Padres owner and mega-million-dollar tax-subsidized baseball stadium beneficiary whose brush with the law in the 2001 Valerie Stallings influence-peddling case has since kept him and his multitude of local real estate activities largely out of public view.

The bastards should pay every penny themselves. Why should taxpayers subsidize the profits of a plutocrat who buys a sports team? Let em support their own hobby habit.

They are gonna move to a better market anyway:

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/sports/aztecs/sd-sp-mlsexpansion-201...

Fuk em all.

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Meteor Man's picture

Miserly Scumbag Moores and his minions - Measure D and muddy waters

There. Fixed it for them

The political water was muddied when the Chargers decided to pursue their own ballot measure, hiking hotel taxes by 16.5 percent and giving them total control of the downtown stadium development game. That scrambled the political calculus for the complicated Moores initiative, casting a shadow of confusion over Prop D’s prospects.

There's more:

But Briggs appears not entirely ready to surrender, coming up with $49,458 in cash from his law firm, along with a personal donation of $541 on October 4, according to city campaign disclosure filings. That compares to the nearly $5 million that the wealthy Spanos family of Stockton has put up for the Chargers initiative, Measure C.

Did I say fuck em all yet?

https://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2016/oct/12/radar-miserly-moores-and...

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Just ate two really good peaches, and we also bought: cantaloupe, watermelon, tomato, basil. Tomorrow we are going back for fresh picked corn. Now, I can feel a touch better that summer is almost over.

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

Not that kind, the kind you eat ;). Diced chickpeas and zucchini, with basil. Neighbor gave me another batch of some purple I added to the basil bouquet on my desk. It is gorgeous and delicious. Floor wax and dessert topping! Plus it smells good, so three helpful things from its presence. Aromatherapy helps.

Second pot of homemade chickpeas, I am really happy they are sooo good. Once I worked gathering information on BPA, I stopped eating canned food after that. My neighbor did give me a can of salmon the other day though, ate that in a delicious cucumber salad thingy, she is growing great cucumbers too. First batch of beans I ate chilled right out of the bowl, with salt and lemon. I gave a jar to my neighbor, she seemed to like 'em too.

I'm with Garbanzo
---
Nazi graffiti on Cloverdale car

Cloverdale’s Longo family had a shock Saturday morning; a frightening symbol of hatred and genocide was smeared onto the hood of a family car overnight.

“It was my daughter’s car,” said Christel Longo, a Cloverdale resident. “She and her boyfriend left the house Saturday morning to get coffee and found it. We were shocked and taken aback.”

Longo’s husband is half-Japanese and her husband’s father is Jewish. Her daughter shares her father’s Asian ancestry and is dating an Iranian man.

A twenty-something Antifa clown made front page news here too, that is how the local coverage rolls. Doug Bosco LOL you never get rid of these people, they just keep revolving for effing-ever. I think NY is the same way, maybe it is everywhere. "Forget it Jake, it's Chinatown." I used to be such a true blue Dem, now I sound like a Republican! The thing is, I haven't changed. It's not me it's them. heh

I am making every effort toward peace, as much as possible. Some days you're the windshield, some days you're the bug.

good luck

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MarilynW's picture

39 days without rain where I live. Brown lawns and hungry bears.

Trump in Texas. Don't forget he repealed the flood protection in his Infrastructure plan. Too much time and money would be wasted on his pet projects. Will he re-think this after he returns from campaigning in flood-stricken Texas?

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To thine own self be true.

lotlizard's picture

How the CIA made Google

Inside the secret network behind mass surveillance, endless war, and Skynet
(part 1)

(found via ZeroHedge, which reposted the article in full with a different intro)

Why Google Made The NSA

"The origins trace back to a secret Pentagon-sponsored group, that for the last two decades has functioned as a bridge between the US government and elites...The results have been catastrophic: NSA mass surveillance, a permanent state of global war, and a new initiative to transform the US military into Skynet."

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