The Evening Blues - 8-9-18



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Robert Lockwood Jr.

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features delta blues guitarist Robert Lockwood Jr.. Enjoy!

Robert Lockwood Jr. - Steady Rollin' Man

"What a stupendous, what an incomprehensible machine is man! Who can endure toil, famine, stripes, imprisonment & death itself in vindication of his own liberty, and the next moment ... inflict on his fellow men a bondage, one hour of which is fraught with more misery than ages of that which he rose in rebellion to oppose."

-- Thomas Jefferson


News and Opinion

99-Year-Old Nuremberg Prosecutor Calls Trump's Detention of Children a 'Crime Against Humanity'

The last surviving prosecutor at the Nazi Nuremberg trials just offered harsh criticism for the Trump administration's family separation crisis resulting from its cruel immigration policies, calling it "a crime against humanity." Ninety-nine year old Ben Ferencz made the comments in a recent lengthy interview with United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, which was posted online Tuesday.

When he learned of the family separations, "it was very painful for me," Ferencz told Zeid. "I knew the Statue of Liberty. I came under the Statue of Liberty as an immigrant." Ferencz was a baby when his family came to the United States from Romania.

He referenced lines from Emma Lazarus's poem inscribed at the base of the monument, including its ending: "I lift my lamp beside the golden door!" But "the lamp went out when [Trump] said no immigrants allowed unless they meet the rules that we laid down," Ferencz said. "It was outrageous. I was furious that anybody would think that it's permissible to take young children—5, 4, 3 years of age—and take them away from their parents and say the parents go to another country and the children go to another country, and we'll get you together, maybe, at some later date."

"It's a crime against humanity. We list crimes against humanity in the Statute of the International Criminal Court. We have 'other inhumane acts designed to cause great suffering.' What could cause more great suffering than what they did in the name of immigration law? It's ridiculous. We have to change the law if it's the law," he said.

Giving Trump Carte Blanche for War

Have you ever heard of Senate Joint Resolution 59 (S.J.Res. 59)? Neither had I. A friend of mine saw a blurb about it on an obscure national security blog and brought it to my attention. At first glance it didn’t seem to be any big deal. It’s inelegantly named the “Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) of 2018.” It was introduced on April 16, 2018 by Senators Bob Corker (R-TN), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC), and Tim Kaine (D-VA). Officially, the bill would “Authorize the use of military force against the Taliban, al-Qaeda, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, and designated associated forces, and provide an updated, transparent, and sustainable statutory basis for counterterrorism operations.” ...

S.J.Res. 59 is bad for a number of reasons. First and most importantly, it would provide blanket permission for the president to launch a military attack of literally any size and intensity whenever he wants without specific congressional approval. That seems obviously unconstitutional to me, although I’m not a constitutional scholar. Still, the constitution says in Article I, Section 8 that only Congress shall have the authority to declare war, among other things military. It does not allow the president the ability to launch a war.

Second, according to Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at the Thomas Jefferson School of Law and former president of the National Lawyers Guild, it also would write the president a “blank check to lock up Americans who dissent against U.S. military policy.” That’s right. If you oppose U.S. military policy, the president would have the right to lock you up indefinitely without charge. Certainly, our government already does that. But we’re told that this happens to the worst of the worst—those terrorists who happen to be American, but who also have planned large-scale terrorist attacks against the country or its citizens or who have taken up arms against the United States. Think “dirty bomber” Jose Padilla or the a-yet-unnamed Saudi-American currently being held somewhere and being represented by the American Civil Liberties Union.

This is different. This would mean everybody would be at risk. It would mean you could be held in a gulag, incommunicado, if the White House doesn’t like your politics.

The reason this could come to pass is that, third, the bill is (probably unconstitutionally) broad. It says that the president may, “use all necessary and appropriate force” against Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Libya, Somalia, al-Qaeda, ISIS, the Taliban, and their “associated forces” anywhere in the world and without limitation. But it doesn’t define what “associated forces” means, nor does it define a “co-belligerent,” someone acting in support of one of these countries or groups. It allows the White House to do that for us. Fourth, unlike almost every other bill in Congress, this one doesn’t have a sunset clause, meaning it never expires. ...

This terrible bill is stuck in the muck of the congressional process right now. As the months tick by, there’s a greater and greater likelihood that it will simply die. But that doesn’t solve the problem. The problem is that Congress is generally made up of lemmings and cheerleaders for the military/industrial/intelligence complex. They do as they’re told, whether it’s by their leadership or whomever happens to be sitting in the White House.

That Time Trump’s Iran Advisor Threatened To Murder An Official’s Children To Start The Iraq War

President Trump’s National Security Advisor has been on a whirlwind media tour helping the imperial propaganda machine manufacture support for the latest round of crushing sanctions that have now gone into effect against the Islamic Republic. Bolton has been a busy little bee, smearing and deceiving and manipulating the narrative to ensure that we all know the unrest and violence that may be about to erupt in Tehran is totally, totally organic and not at all the result of the CIA covert operations that have been implemented there. ... Since we’re seeing so much John Bolton and so much talk of terrorists, I think this would be a good opportunity to remind everyone of the time John Bolton threatened to murder the children of an OPCW official in order to deceive the world into consenting to the Iraq war which killed a million people.

José Bustani was the director-general of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in early 2002, during which time The Intercept reports he came under fire for having too much success in diplomacy with the Iraqi government, which undermined the case for an invasion. So Bolton attempted to scare him off.

From The Intercept:

“Cheney wants you out,” Bustani recalled Bolton saying, referring to the then-vice president of the United States. “We can’t accept your management style.”

Bolton continued, according to Bustani’s recollections: “You have 24 hours to leave the organization, and if you don’t comply with this decision by Washington, we have ways to retaliate against you.”

There was a pause.

“We know where your kids live. You have two sons in New York.”

Bolton declined to comment on the story, his spokesperson instead referring The Intercept to a section from his 2008 memoir which in no way contradicted Bustani’s account of the interaction.

Bolton still maintains that the disastrous and unforgivable Iraq invasion was a great idea and a resounding success. And he’s not lying. To him, it was a resounding success, because his goal was death and destruction. He is a psychopath and a lover of death. This is who is guiding this administration’s approach to Iran.

A Saudi coalition airstrike hit a bus of children in Yemen

A bus carrying Yemeni children was hit by airstrikes from the U.S.-backed Saudi coalition Thursday, according to reports citing the International Committee of the Red Cross. Many of the victims were reportedly under the age of 10. The airstrikes hit the busy Dahyan market in Sa’ada province, which borders Saudi Arabia. Ghani Nayeb, head of a health department in Sa’ada, told Reuters the death toll stood at 43 with 61 others wounded.

It is unclear how many of the dead are minors, but the ICRC said school children were on the bus, and that local hospitals had received "dozens" of dead and wounded. ...

The U.S. military provides logistical support to the coalition forces backed by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have been carrying out strikes on Yemen since March 2015. ... The war has ravaged the country, killing at least 10,000 — many of them civilians. The country is also in the grip of a devastating famine, with the World Health Organization warning 8.4 million people are living in pre-famine conditions. The U.N. has called Yemen the “worst humanitarian crisis in the world.”

73 Years After U.S. Dropped Atom Bomb on Nagasaki, Survivor Warns About Threat of Nuclear Warfare

Russia targets the U.S. space program after latest round of “draconian” sanctions

Despite all the acrimony between Russia and the U.S. over recent decades, one area where the two nations have always got along is in space — but the latest round of sanctions imposed by Washington could change all that. On Wednesday the White House announced it would be imposing fresh sanctions on Moscow over its role in the poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in the U.K. earlier this year. ...

The Kremlin has strenuously denied any involvement in the incident, and on Thursday morning Russian lawmakers fumed over the latest U.S. announcement, calling it “draconian” and “absurd.” One high-ranking Russian lawmaker then suggested hitting back at the U.S. where it hurts.

Sergey Ryabukhin, a senior Russian senator who is chairman of the Russian Federation Council’s Committee for International Affairs, said Moscow could restrict exports of RD-180 rocket engines to the U.S. RD-180 engines power the Atlas V rocket, which is used for military satellite launches, interplanetary missions and cargo runs to the International Space Station. The Atlas V has completed more than 75 launches with no major failures to date, and is key to the U.S. space program.

This isn’t the first time RD-180s have been caught in the middle of strained U.S.-Russian relations. Back in 2014, U.S. lawmakers opted to exempt the rocket engine from a ban on Russian military technology due to it importance to the U.S. space program. United Launch Alliance, a partnership between Lockheed Martin and Boeing, relies on the Russian-made engines to manufacture the Atlas V rocket, and any interruption of supply could impact U.S. military satellite launches.

Julian Assange 'seriously considering' request to meet US Senate committee

Lawyers for Julian Assange say they are “seriously considering” a request from a US Senate committee to interview the WikiLeaks founder as part of its investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US election. ...

WikiLeaks lawyer Jennifer Robinson, of Doughty Street Chambers, said: “The US Senate select committee request confirms their interest in hearing from Mr Assange. The inquiry has asked for him to appear in person at a mutually agreeable time and place. We are seriously considering the offer but must ensure Mr Assange’s protection is guaranteed.”

Trudeau defies Saudi Arabia and says Canada will stand up for human rights

Justin Trudeau has defied Saudi Arabia’s demand to withdraw Canada’s calls for the release of jailed civil rights activists and insisted that Canada will continue to defend human rights around the world, suggesting that the escalating diplomatic row between the two countries is set to continue. In his first public comments since the spat began, Canada’s prime minister said his government has been speaking directly to the kingdom in an effort to resolve what he called “a diplomatic difference of opinion”.

Trudeau said Canada’s foreign minister had held a long conversation with her Saudi counterpart on Tuesday, but offered no details as to what the pair had discussed. “We continue to engage diplomatically and politically with the government of Saudi Arabia,” Trudeau told reporters on Wednesday. “We have respect for their importance in the world and recognise that they have made progress on a number of important issues.”

He insisted, however, that his government would continue to press Saudi Arabia on its human rights record. “We will, at the same time, continue to speak clearly and firmly on issues of human rights at home and abroad wherever we see the need.”

Trudeau’s comments came hours after Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister described the row as a “matter of national security,” telling reporters that the kingdom was still considering additional measures against Canada. He did not elaborate on what these measures could entail.

The true Puerto Rico death toll has been revealed — and it’s staggering

The Puerto Rican government is now admitting that more than 1,400 people likely died from Hurricane Maria, a significant increase over the previous official death toll of 64.

“According to initial reports, 64 lives were lost. That estimate was later revised to 1,427,” concludes a draft report to Congress requesting billions of dollars in recovery aid, which the government of Puerto Rico scheduled for an official release on Thursday.

The new death count is still lower than the 4,645 deaths estimated by Harvard University researchers in a May study that integrated elements like interrupted health care, electricity and shuttered hospitals

The number could still rise. In February, months before the Harvard study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Puerto Rico’s governor commissioned a team at George Washington University to lead an in-depth review. In the report posted online Thursday, the authors noted that the GW study is still in progress, and that the official count will be updated once it is completed.

The island has been in a state of disrepair since the hurricane touched its shores last September. The government is in the process shutting down hundreds of schools, and in July, there were still 1,000 households without electricity after the hurricane knocked out the island’s aging power grid, according to The Guardian. More than 100,000 Puerto Ricans have fled to the mainland United States.

MSNBC Host Bravely Defends The Obscenely Wealthy

Giant shipload of soybeans circles off China, victim of trade war with US

A shipment of soybeans worth more than $20m (£15.5m) has been bobbing aimlessly in the Pacific Ocean for a month, a casualty of the escalating trade war between China and the US. Lingering uncertainty over the cargo’s fate offered a timely reminder of the fallout from a dispute that intensified on Wednesday, as the US president, Donald Trump, unveiled a second round of tariffs on $16bn of Chinese goods, prompting Beijing to respond in kind.

The Peak Pegasus, a 229 metre bulk carrier weighing 43,000 tonnes, has become the reluctant symbol of the potential consequences of this tit-for-tat trade spat. The ship, owned by JP Morgan Asset Management, was scheduled to unload about 70,000 tonnes of American soybeans in the Chinese port of Dalian on 6 July, shortly after Trump imposed a first round of tariffs on $34bn-worth of goods.

As it rushed to shore in the hope of clearing customs before Beijing imposed retaliatory tariffs, the ship – and its protein-rich cargo – became an unlikely internet sensation on the Chinese social media platform Weibo. However, the vessel arrived just too late and has been sailing around in circles ever since while the cargo’s owners, understood to be the agricultural commodity trading house Louis Dreyfus, decide what to do.

The Amsterdam-based company is thought to be paying about $12,500 a day to continue chartering the ship, which is idling in the Yellow Sea off the coast of China, indicating extra costs so far of more than $400,000.

Keiser Report: Hierarchy of Needs

The Koch Brothers Commissioned a Survey of Americans and Found Most Like a $15 Minimum Wage, Free College, and Universal Health Care

During the month of July, the marketing and communications group In Pursuit Of — launched by the Koch brothers in 2017– conducted a survey of Americans on a range of issues.

The poll was later written up by RealClearPolitics, which spun the results as favorable to the Koch network. RealClearPolitics noted that on a set of vague values questions, Americans appeared to take the conservative or libertarian side of political arguments. For instance, RealClearPolitics noted that the survey found that 86 percent of Americans said the right to personal property is key to a free and just society. Okay, sure.

But mostly left out of the RealClearPolitics write-up is the fact that the poll also surveyed Americans in detail on a number of issues they felt would help them overcome social barriers, and found that Americans are quite favorable to a set of policies that the Koch network opposes. ...

For instance, the poll found that 66 percent of Americans would find “government-paid college tuition” as a “very effective” or “somewhat effective solution” to social barriers, with more than half of those lining up on the “very effective” side. ... A $15 minimum wage was almost as popular in the poll, with 35 percent saying it would be a very effective solution and a further 30 percent saying it would be a somewhat effective solution. ... A third of respondents believe that more regulation of Wall Street would be very effective, while 36 percent said it would be somewhat effective. Nearly seven in 10 respondents said increasing government assistance for child care would be a very or somewhat effective policy response to social barriers.

The top concern of those polled is the growing cost of health care, with 92 percent saying it is a problem. A combined 55 percent said a government-run health care system would be a very or somewhat effective policy response.

WV House committee approves 14 articles of impeachment against justices

The West Virginia House Judiciary Committee approved 14 articles of impeachment against the four sitting justices of the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals on Tuesday. The eighth day of the committee’s meetings regarding possible impeachment produced the first material results when 14 articles of impeachment were introduced at 9:25 a.m. By the time the committee adjourned at 6:15 p.m., its members had added two new articles to their draft and rejected two of the original proposed articles, advancing the possibility of impeachment for the majority of the elected officials in the Mountain State’s judicial branch of government. ...

Those articles will now advance to the full House of Delegates for consideration. Speaker Pro Tempore John Overington, R-Berkeley, said Tuesday he called for the House to reconvene at 10 a.m. Monday. ...

The articles of impeachment charge Chief Justice Margaret Workman and Justices Robin Davis, Allen Loughry and Beth Walker with maladministration, corruption, incompetency, neglect of duty and certain high crimes. In total, Loughry is the subject of eight articles of impeachment. Workman and Davis each are the subject of four and Walker is the subject of two.



the horse race



Carpenters, Steamfitters, and Other Trade Unions Coalesced Around Notorious Ferguson Prosecutor. Why?

St Louis County, Missouri, labor unions spent heavily in an effort to re-elect prosecutor Bob McCulloch [who never indicted a police officer for killing an unarmed civilian throughout his 27-year tenure, including the cop who shot Mike Brown - js], who was ousted on Tuesday by criminal justice reformer Wesley Bell, campaign finance reports reveal.

It’s common for police unions to support prosecutors, but the labor groups who backed McCulloch came from the trade union movement: steamfitters, carpenters, electrical workers, and others with no obvious connection to the criminal justice system. Their support came in the form of both endorsements and campaign funds. The unions pumped in at least $25,000 of the $237,000 McCulloch raised during the campaign, arguing that his longtime support of organized labor deserved loyalty.

The unions’ support for McCulloch is part of an emerging pattern. As a new Democratic insurgency has risen over the last year, unions have clung tightly to the old guard. In New York, they sided with Rep. Joe Crowley over Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and with Gov. Andrew Cuomo over Cynthia Nixon, even walking out of the Working Families Party on his orders. (In Missouri, the WFP supported Bell.) And the union backing is not limited to incumbents. Unions were firmly behind Gretchen Whitmer, who defeated Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan’s gubernatorial primary, for instance, and with Brad Ashford, a conservative Democrat who lost to insurgent Kara Eastman in an Omaha, Nebraska, congressional primary. ...

While the unions were giving money to McCulloch, they were also working to turn out the vote in an effort to beat back a “right-to-work” law [known as Proposition A] that would have crippled unions in the state. ... Kayla Reed, a lead organizer in the St. Louis area, said that as canvassers for Bell knocked on doors, they distributed literature urging a “no” vote on Proposition A. Reed, who got her start in activism in the aftermath of the Brown killing in Ferguson, said she wasn’t surprised that the trade unions all lined up with McCulloch. The union protesters on the side of the burgeoning Black Lives Matter movement, she explained, were typically young and affiliated with “Fight for $15,” a campaign affiliated with the Service Employees International Union pushing for a higher minimum wage. But trade unionists, she said, often stood with the counterprotesters.

“The main voices opposing us were white union members,” she said, noting an “ironic bedfellow situation with the black community and unions. Black people are not in leadership in those unions.” Reed said the trade unions aligned politically and ideologically with McCulloch’s prosecutorial zeal toward black defendants and his alliance with police forces, which helped make the St. Louis area heavily segregated. “They know Bob McCulloch, trust his law-and-order rhetoric, and believe that he’s going to keep people away from their areas,” she said.



the evening greens


An excellent piece worth reading in full:

Neoliberalism Drives Climate Breakdown, Not Human Nature

The idea that all humanity is equally and collectively responsible for climate change – or any other environmental or social problem – is extremely weak. In a basic and easily calculable way, not everyone is responsible for the same quantity of greenhouse gasses. People in the world’s poorest countries produce roughly one hundredth of the emissions of the richest people in the richest countries. Through the chance of our births, and the lifestyle we choose we are not all equally responsible for climate change. But we are not all equally responsible in a more fundamental way. Some people through the power they wield, have stood in the way of halting climate change. Not because they were stubborn or incompetent or failed to understand the seriousness. But because they acted in pursuit of a fundamental re-organising of our economies during the 1970s and 80s. And this shake-up militated against the kinds of policies and government intervention that might have halted – or at least slowed – climate change.

This is the point that is missed in ‘Losing Earth’, the New York Times’ 30,000 word feature on climate change. The piece charts the failure of the US government to act on climate change between 1979 and 1989. During this period we knew enough about the issue to act, but didn’t. The piece sets out to explain this failure. ‘Losing Earth’ presents the failure as one of political tragedy. Politicians and policy makers simply couldn’t agree. Not because of the undue influence of lobbyists, but because – as humans and politicians – they could not look far enough into the future. They could not take political risks now, in return for the long term safety of the planet. ... This failure to stop climate change was no one’s fault, ‘Losing Earth’ argues. It happened because we’re human, and because our electoral systems aren’t geared up for this kind of problem. ...

The reshaping of the US economy took place during the period covered by ‘Losing Earth’. It was during the decade – 1979 to 1989 – that neoliberalism truly entered the political mainstream. In order to address climate change the US (and other nations) needed to do things that were no longer politically possible. Fossil fuels needed to be taxed in order to reduce their consumption. Carbon emissions needed to be taxed, or capped. The government needed to invest heavily in renewable energy. Or it needed to force energy companies to do so through legislation. These things might have been possible in previous decades, when governments saw this kind of investment and legislation as their job. But in this new neoliberal era, these kind of interventions were impossible – especially for the US.

So the US government’s failure to act was not a political or human accident as ‘Losing Earth’ holds. Rather, the economy of the US had very deliberately been re-shaped. It had been re-shaped in order to return economic advantage to the very wealthiest people, who had been losing that advantage over several decades. However in doing this, the US government had stripped itself of the tools it needed to address climate change – regulation of polluting businesses, taxation of carbon emissions and state investment in energy alternatives. We did not lose the earth in the 1980s. Rather, the tools governments needed to act had be taken from them.

EPA ordered to ban pesticide linked to learning disabilities

A federal court has ordered the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ban a widely used pesticide linked to learning disabilities in children. The decision said the EPA must prohibit the use of the pesticide, known as chlorpyrifos, within 60 days.

Several environmental groups sued to force the ban, after the EPA under Donald Trump decided to allow farms to continue using the pesticide on food products. That was a reversal of the agency’s policy under Barack Obama, when it had begun the process of banning the chemical. Seven states and Washington DC also intervened in the case to back a ban. ...

The court found that studies showed children exposed before birth to low doses of the product, initially developed as a nerve gas during the second world war, had reduced IQ, attention deficit disorder and delayed motor development, yet the EPA “equivocated and delayed” over the years on banning it. “Over nearly two decades, the US Environmental Protection Agency has documented the likely adverse effects of foods containing the residue of the pesticide chlorpyrifos on the physical and mental development of American infants and children, often lasting into adulthood,” Judge Jed Rakoff wrote in the ruling. “In such circumstances, federal law commands that the EPA ban such a pesticide from use on food products.”

Continuing 'War on California' and Planet, Trump Makes First Move to Reopen State's Public Lands to Fracking

The Trump administration on Wednesday took the first step toward lifting a five-year moratorium on leasing federal lands in California to oil companies in a move that conservationists warn could open up more than a million acres to fracking.

"We desperately need to keep these dirty fossil fuels in the ground. But Trump is hell-bent on sacrificing our health, wildlife, and climate to profit big polluters," declared Clare Lakewood, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) issued a notice of intent in the Federal Register on Wednesday detailing plans to prepare a supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) analyzing the potential impact of fracking on federal lands in Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura counties.

BLM's filing follows a move by residents of San Luis Obispo to propose a ballot measure—to be voted on in November—that would ban fracking and new oil and gas wells county-wide. It also comes after a successful lawsuit by the Center for Biological Diversity and Los Padres ForestWatch—represented by Earthjustice—against BLM for a 2015 resource management plan that would have enabled oil and gas drilling and fracking on the state's public lands without first studying environmental impact. ... Lakewood asserted that "this step toward opening our beautiful public lands to fracking and drilling is part of the Trump administration's war on California."

Trump administration officials dismissed benefits of national monuments

In a quest to shrink national monuments last year, senior Interior Department officials dismissed evidence that these public sites boosted tourism and spurred archaeological discoveries, according to documents the department released this month and retracted a day later.

The thousands of pages of email correspondence chart how Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and his aides instead tailored their survey of protected sites to emphasize the value of logging, ranching and energy development that would be unlocked if they were not designated national monuments.

Comments the department’s Freedom of Information Act officers made in the documents show that they sought to keep some of the references out of the public eye because they were “revealing [the] strategy” behind the review.

Experts: If We Don’t Stop Climate Change, CA Fires “Will Seem Mild In Comparison to What’s Coming”

Exploiting Climate-Fueled Disasters on Behalf of Logging Industry, Zinke Pilloried for Blaming Wildfires on 'Radical Environmentalists'

Instead of addressing the root causes that scientists and experts say are fueling some of the unprecedented wildfires now ravaging communities in California and other western states, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is himself under fire on Wednesday after penning an op-ed that critics argue shows the top Trump official exploiting the ongoing infernos as a way to push the business interests of logging companies and other extractive industries.

"Radical environmentalists," he argued on USA Today's opinion page, are to blame for blazes like the Mendocino Complex Fire, which became the largest in the state's history this week, due to their calls to protect federal lands and national monuments instead of opening them up to loggers, ranchers, and the fossil fuel industry. "Every year we watch our forests burn, and every year there is a call for action," Zinke wrote. "Yet, when action comes, and we try to thin forests of dead and dying timber, or we try to sustainably harvest timber from dense and fire-prone areas, we are attacked with frivolous litigation from radical environmentalists who would rather see forests and communities burn than see a logger in the woods."

The former Montana congressman's op-ed was slammed by critics on social media—as was CNN's interpretation of Zinke's proposal. The cable network published its own article describing the Interior Secretary's aim to clear forests as a "proactive approach."

While containing wildfires and stopping them from forming may require multi-pronged efforts, Zinke's idea of "forest management"—which includes allowing logging companies to clear more forests—would do little to help, according to wildfire expert Michael Kodas. "A logging company would like to come in and remove the big, granddaddy trees that are really valuable as timber," Kodas told Wyoming Public Media on Tuesday. "Most of what needs to be removed from these forests are brush, scrub, small, spindly trees that have been sick that have almost no economic value.”

Reintroducing black rhinos into Chad


Also of Interest

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

Ten Things That Are More Selfish, Stupid And Privileged Than Voting Green Party

The Trllion-Dollar Fantasy at the Heart of the Global Economy

Buried in the Fine Print, Trump Rule Would Give $2.5 Billion Tax Cut to Big Bank Fat Cats

How American Life Became Unlivable

Why the days of 'stand your ground' self-defense laws may be numbered

Flotilla Passengers Released by Israel; Many Battered and Bruised; USS Liberty Survivor Held Six Days

Tribune scraps $3.9bn buyout by Sinclair and sues for breach of contract


A Little Night Music

Robert Lockwood Jr - Kindhearted Woman Blues

Robert Lockwood Jr - Terraplane Blues

Robert Lockwood Jr. - Take A Walk With Me

Little Walter w/Robert Lockwood Jr. - Shake Dancer

Robert Lockwood Jr. - Big legged woman

Robert Jr Lockwood - Jelly Roll

Robert Lockwood Jr. - Ramblin' On My Mind

Robert Lockwood, Jr. - King Biscuit Time

Robert Jr. Lockwood - I Believe I'll Dust My Broom

Robert Lockwood Jr. - Steady Groove


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JekyllnHyde's picture

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A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma

joe shikspack's picture

@JekyllnHyde

alternately, perhaps trump's tweets are a demonstration of his comedy genius.

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JekyllnHyde's picture

@joe shikspack

Others will empathize with you only if you reciprocate; otherwise, expect none in your hour of need.

A wretched soul, bruised with adversity,
We bid be quiet when we hear it cry;
But were we burdened with light weight of pain,
As much or more we should ourselves complain.

― William Shakespeare, The Comedy of Errors

Thanks, joe.

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A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma

shaharazade's picture

@joe shikspack He's so freaking crazy that he would not know a joke it bit him. Unfortunately we all seem to focus on his insane scary babble rather then what's going down, by-partisan wise. Let him rip seems to be the Democratic response to his scary clown routine. However if you look closely you will see that what he supports globally and domestically is a wet dream for the real powers that be.

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joe shikspack's picture

@shaharazade

oh, i absolutely agree with you. his twitter rants and outrageous behavior at rallies are distractions. in reality, his administration is doing enormous damage to an assortment of agencies that used to serve a purpose for the people. the corporate democrats don't give a damn about that, either.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

joe shikspack's picture

@The Aspie Corner

heh, if only the romans had thought of this... bread, circuses and... beer! why, their empire would still be with us.

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BrunoLatour the French polymath with recent tweets. The PNAS report is the recent study about a potential apocalypse

@BrunoLatourAIME Aug 8

Rich’s essay in NYT as well as Steffen et al. in PNAS points to the same conundrum: how to politicise the new climatic regime with a revolutionary action that should have been taken 30 years ago? If it’s too late, how do you expect people to react?

@BrunoLatourAIME Aug 6

Remember the old days when taking a vacation meant forgetting everything? Not a day passed without being remembered of the climate crisis because of the heat! And then you get the new Steffens et al. paper in PNAS “Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene”!

@BrunoLatourAIME Aug 3

Useful assessment by M. Klein of Rich’s piece Losing Earth in NYT

@BrunoLatourAIME Aug 1

Riches’ essay “Losing Earth” shows that when you lose earth you also lose sense: the more it is right, the more it has to be wrong. It’s not an ‘inconvenient’ truth: it’s more like family secret: because it’s true, it has to disappear. Denial is built in.

@BrunoLatourAIME Aug 1

The chronology of ‘Losing Earth’ essay by Rich in NYT misses & reveals the peculiar cognitive double bind of the climate question: “if it is true, it has to be wrong”. The 2 conclusions are drawn at once. This explains the feeling of hopelessness. It’s not a normal fact.

@BrunoLatourAIME Aug 1

The long essay in NYT on “Losing Earth* reveals a puzzling simultaneity in US discovering and covering up climate change at the same moment. That makes the subtitle “the decade we almost stopped climate change” very misleading. Stopping was never on the agenda.

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joe shikspack's picture

@DonMidwest

it's good to see a lot of folks calling out the ruling class on its bullshit that "we are all to blame" for the horrible things that they have done in order to satisfy their greed and lust for power.

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divineorder's picture

@DonMidwest during our recent camping in NorCal, Malawi, Zambia, South Africa.

RE:
“Remember the old days when taking a vacation meant forgetting everything? Not a day passed without being remembered of the climate crisis because of the heat! And then you get the new Steffens et al. paper in PNAS “Trajectories of the Earth System in the “

Wasn’t the heat in our case, but the rains coming at the wrong time of year and unpredictable floods followed by drought affecting locals we know in these areas.

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

Unabashed Liberal's picture

to say 'hello,' before I dash off to hound MSM new outlets some more! Wink

Seriously, I've only got until the 20th, when we're off again for treatment, so, I'm going to make the best of the next week-and-a-half regarding the breaking VA 'Shadow Ruler' story. We were in the midst of so much loss and turmoil during the last VA scandal--the nomination of Jackson--that I didn't get to involve myself in the discussion, at all.

BTW, I'm trying to get a retraction from NR or ProPublica regarding their 'conflicting' claims. Will let you know if I get anywhere, not that I expect to. As far as I can tell, the MSM corporatist media is accountable to no one--ever.

Now, gotta figure out if, as a matter of expediency, I should create a 'Blue' Twitter account, or just use one that I plan to retire. I'm having so much fun with this story, since a great deal of what's happened, has been brought on my the PtB, themselves.

Smile

Anyhoo, will let you Guys know how things shake out regarding the 'Rulers' story, and any Congressional hearings held as a result of PP's reporting. (The call was made for a hearing, yesterday, by retiring Dem/Ranking Member--Tim Walz.)

Everyone have a nice evening. Stay cool!

Bye

Mollie/Blue Onyx (reverting to former handle)

"Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong."~~W. R. Purche

"In a World where you can be anything--be kind."~~LCC Comfort Dogs


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

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

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

joe shikspack's picture

@Unabashed Liberal

i hope that mr. m is feeling well and making progress.

heh, nobody deserves your hounding more than msm news outlets. go get 'em! Smile

have a great evening.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

@joe shikspack

since I left a note for JB & DO, I've found a video (Fox Business Channel) of HHS Secretary/former Eli Lily executive, Alex Azar, talking about the Part B drug so-called 'reform.' (with the 'Money Honey') Think I'll make it part of my comment tomorrow evening.

In a minute, I'll correct my comment which misstated the date that the Medicare Part B drugs and Medicare Part D retail drug plan would be 'fully' merged/effective--it's 2020. Obviously, the 2018 was a typo. At the time, I thought the date was 2019.

Mollie/Blue Onyx (reverting to former handle)

"Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong."
~~W. R. Purche

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

divineorder's picture

@Unabashed Liberal on social security, medicare. Thanks for your work!

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

Unabashed Liberal's picture

@divineorder

gathered up a lot more info that I've come to the table with! Good

Looks like you were typing while I've been away. I found a video, but got a warning when I tested posting the HTML code. So, tomorrow, I'll just post the Fox News Channel 'link' to it (here). Talk about a worm! The Dude may be slick, but I don't think he'll be able to sell the 'BS' about merging the two plans being a benefit to Medicare enrollees--at least, not around here!

Here's an excerpt, and the link that I mentioned earlier.

Politics

Trump Forces Pharma to Face More Medicare Drug-Price Negotiation

By Anna Edney
August 7, 2018, 3:15 PM CDT

Insurers, PBMs will be able to negotiate prices for Part B
Outpatient treatments for cancer, arthritis affected by move

Drugmakers will be required to negotiate on prices for more medications paid for by Medicare, the latest step in the Trump administration’s campaign to rein in prescription costs.

Starting next year, private insurers that provide coverage to about 20 million seniors through Medicare Advantage will get new powers to bargain over drugs administered in doctor’s offices or hospitals, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Tuesday in an interview with Bloomberg.

Currently, such drugs are paid for at their cost, plus a percentage fee for doctors, under what’s known as Medicare Part B.

“For the first time ever, we’re going to unleash these plans, which are so good at negotiating, to try to get discounts on Part B drugs,” Azar said in the interview. “This is a very important change in terms of drug pricing as well as just in managing and modernizing how Medicare functions.”

The treatments subject to the change include infusions for rheumatoid arthritis, eye injections to treat certain conditions that cause vision loss as well as some cancer therapies. The government and consumers in the plans spent $25.7 billion on Part B drugs in 2015. . . .

What you've found is actually more informative.

Hope Everyone tries to watch the 5+ minute video that I'm posting tomorrow. It's downright frightening. According to Bartiromo, one of the drugs will be a cancer drug which currently costs $140,000 for a 6-month dose. What will happen with this life-saving drug is that Pharmaceutical Managers will 'Prior Authorize' and 'Step Therapy' it out of existence. Not to mention that there will likely be a gigantic cost shift to seniors. Just watch.

BTW, I think we've ended up in the same Twitter account. If you see a PM with a dog wearing a blue raincoat (hat)--it's me.

Pleasantry

Both you Guys have a good evening. (We may as well enjoy things now--looks like the PtB are gearing up to scr*w us over, big time.)

Mollie/Blue Onyx (reverting to former handle)

"Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong."
~~W. R. Purche

"In a World where you can be anything--be kind."~~LCC Comfort Dogs

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

show up this evening, I'll try to drop back by with a link regarding the 'reform' of Part B drugs--for folks enrolled in Medicare Advantage. Azar finalized rules on the changes, yesterday. They'll be effective 1 January 2018.

It may take a little doing, since the piece was bookmarked on a laptop that went down yesterday, and, I'll have to 'fish' for it. Which is okay, since it's a very important so-called reform. It will impose additional 'step therapy' for some Part B drugs, for folks enrolled in MA Plans. Apparently, it will take an act of Congress to include folks in Traditional Medicare, which Azar intends to do by 2020.

Have a good one!

Mollie/Blue Onyx (reverting to former handle)

"Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong."~~W. R. Purche

"In a World where you can be anything--be kind."~~LCC Comfort Dogs

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divineorder's picture

@Unabashed Liberal Jb’s father’s care center published a link on facebook page to an article why they preferred traditional medicare to MA. Much less choice, extra hoops and approvals.

When given the choice a few years ago we started on MA but change to trad Med.

Facing huge shortfall, after much lobbying from teachers last year TX leg kept our health benefit afloat. Instead of fixing like the one for state workers they only put some cash up, changed to require all to be enrolled in a special MA plan, raised deductibles and the monthly premium . When they come back for the next biennium the program will be further in the hole. Promise broken.

Is this related to what you found?

...

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

divineorder's picture

@Unabashed Liberal

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

Unabashed Liberal's picture

@divineorder

Mollie/Blue Onyx (reverting to former handle)

"In a World where you can be anything--be kind."
~~LCC Comfort Dogs

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snoopydawg's picture

been saying the things that got him banned for years? Too many people are okay that the 4 sites banned him, but they aren't realizing that they did more than just ban him. They censored him because they didn't agree with what he was saying. Who is going to be next? And for what reason?

Assange, Infowars and the Constitution

This morning I woke up, looked around me, and saw a world sinking into a quagmire of voluntary censorship, a world willing to let someone far away choose what it can and cannot see of itself, and about itself. A world that no longer appears to recognize, or care, that this goes directly against its founding principles of liberty, freedom of speech, freedom of the press.
....
Politicians and secret agents alike have long recognized the potential Big Tech offers for controlling their populations. Long before those populations themselves have recognized the danger embedded in this potential. The treatment of Julian Assange and Infowars, 180º different as they are, puts all this in very sharp perspective.

How are you going to be informed, and stay informed, of what’s happening in the world, of what your government does and plans, if your media, both old and new, conspire to let you know only what they want you to, and to present a version of the world, of reality, that they invented in order to safeguard their future and that of their sponsors? Who’s going to tell you what happens behind the infinite layers of curtains?

What is most important here is not who Alex Jones is, or what he’s done and said. What’s most important is that he stands up for Julian Assange as the media, across the board, is either silent or actively smearing Assange with impunity. So for once, go to Infowars and sign the petition to Trump to Free Assange.. If anyone can get through to Trump, it’s Alex Jones, and they’re trying to prevent him from doing just that.

You’re being sold out, your rights and freedoms are being sold out, while you’re busy looking at pictures of what your friends had for dinner last night. And if that’s your thing, fine, but not before and until you’ve checked what is happening to your life and liberty, and that of your children, while you’re watching the next photo of a creme brulée or some cute kitten 1000 miles away.We all know these things. And we’re all overloaded on info, so we’re all tired and developing headaches in echo chambers, and cute kittens are so much easier to deal with than petitions. But pretty soon, if you’re not careful, kittens will be the only thing you’re allowed to look at. Kittens and ‘news’ about evil Russians allegedly plotting to do to you exactly what your own governments already, and actually, do right now.

In one word: you’re being brainwashed. Brainwashed into handing over the liberties your ancestors fought very hard, and often lost their lives, to obtain and guarantee in your constitution. You can’t just give those things away, you have no right to. You owe it to them to protect what they fought for. If and when your government, your House and Senate, refuse to do that, then you will have to do it.

And that starts with protecting and standing up for Julian Assange. You don’t get to pick and choose which part of freedom you would like to protect, you either protect the entire concept or you do not. Freedom doesn’t mean you get to chop freedom into bits and pieces. And if you fail to stand up for the part you don’t like, you also fail to protect what you do like.

IMG_2206.JPG

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Big Al's picture

@snoopydawg are OK giving "him" more powers to ban "fake" news? Both sides of duopoly supporters for fucking crazy. That's what we who are pursuing a just world are up against, complete ignorance. That isn't going to change, it's gone on throughout history.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

@snoopydawg You only have freedom so long as you continue to genuflect to capitalism and empire. Jones and his boys did their job for both. Oh sure, he told the truth every now and then but the rest of it was far-right bullshit that makes even a grade school history book look truthful by comparison.

The pigs, Jones included, have kept us out of the conversation for years. Why should I shed one tear for Jones and his boys getting fucked by their own ideology? After all, it was his fellow cappie pigs who took him out, not their puppet gubmint.

As for that chickenshit Assange, if he has evidence so damning it would throw a wrench in the system, why not just release it? Because like all other players on the stage, he's out for himself.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

joe shikspack's picture

@The Aspie Corner

a world where the means of mass communication are controlled completely by private interests and there is no public square where people, no matter how wrong, cannot say stupid things, is a world where smart people are also probably barred from saying things that the private interests object to.

i think alex jones is an asshole, but kitty videos bore me.

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shaharazade's picture

@The Aspie Corner I don't think so. You may be confusing Assange the persona/celebrity with what Wikileaks has actually leaked in the years it's been around. So you don't want to know what's going down outside the gates of the mainstream so called press? He's a hacker turned journalist, who helped found a place where leakers/muckrakers/whistleblowers,truth tellers and such can get their stories published and out to the world at large. Sometimes it's better not to focus on the persona's and hype and maybe look at what a org. like Wikileaks has done to reveal the truth behind the political fictions. Don't like Assange? So what. Respect what Wikileaks does and support them as we need truth tellers and a place for humans to be able to go to with what they know and need to depart to the world.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

@shaharazade I certainly didn't. But I don't put too much faith in Wikileaks or QAnon because they both empower far-right dickheads as much as the pig media does, sometimes moreso. I'll give them credit where it's due for exposing 'Murican war crimes and the Gentricratic primary rigging, but they aren't looking to change the system as a whole any more than your run of the mill single party right-winger.

And besides, the capitalist pigs need Wikileaks in order to look like they have opposition when it's glaringly obvious they fuckin' don't. They may be greedy authoritarian pigs but they aren't entirely stupid.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

snoopydawg's picture

@The Aspie Corner

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shaharazade's picture

@The Aspie Corner @The Aspie Corner you @shaharazade . Tell me about the Wikileaks 'far right pigs'. lol. They seem to me to be equal opportunity leaker's. Are you referring to the DNC leaks or the Hillary leaks? What RW pigs? I don't think you can equate Wikileaks with Q Anon whatever that is. So me get this straight Wikileaks is an agent willing or not of the RW pigs? Man you need to get your head out of the paranoid sand and stop blaming the messenger and maybe back off of paranoid partisan politics. Ass backward.

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snoopydawg's picture

@The Aspie Corner

You should give a shit that social media is banning him because that means that they can ban anyone else. Especially websites that tell us the truth about what is happening. The government can't censor the internet, but it can get the social media sites to do it for them.

Did you read this part of my excerpt or the whole article?

You’re being sold out, your rights and freedoms are being sold out, while you’re busy looking at pictures of what your friends had for dinner last night.

Or this part?

In one word: you’re being brainwashed. Brainwashed into handing over the liberties your ancestors fought very hard, and often lost their lives, to obtain and guarantee in your constitution. You can’t just give those things away, you have no right to. You owe it to them to protect what they fought for. If and when your government, your House and Senate, refuse to do that, then you will have to do it.

You may not give a rat's ass about your freedoms, but I sure as hell care about mine.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

@snoopydawg that we've never had any freedoms. We've only ever had privileges that can be revoked by the capitalists at any point if they decide that our privileges cut into their profits. Our well-being has never mattered to the capitalist pigs and it never will. Their actions over the last decade alone should be enough to demonstrate that.

We have to fight for our own and we aren't even capable of doing that. We'd rather let 'saviors' pretend they'll do that instead while they laugh it up behind the scenes, whether it's God, Jesus, Julian Assange, Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Bernie Sanders...you get the picture.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

i'm sure that the powers-that-be can't wait for the entire internet to be focused entirely upon cats and not on those disturbing news stories that give us so much pause.

"The cat joined the Re-education Committee and was very active in it for some days. She was seen one day sitting on a roof and talking to some sparrows who were just out of her reach. She was telling them that all animals were now comrades and that any sparrow who chose could come and perch on her paw; but the sparrows kept their distance."

-- George Orwell

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snoopydawg's picture

Israel continues to commit crimes against humanity towards the Palestinians and anyone who tries to help them and the world leaders stay silent. Oh well. They are silent on the war crimes and crimes against humanity that the Saudis are committing too. This country can't say anything about this because it's just as complicit in committing them. History is not going to be kind when it looks back at the last century if humans survive long enough for it to be written.

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joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

perhaps that's why the conservative thinker class was so fixated on "the end of history," not so long ago.

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enhydra lutris's picture

Nuremberg is so old hat. It even said that it is a bad thing to start a war. Go figure! The US can't live by those outdated rules, they're as bad as all that Geneva shit.

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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 --

joe shikspack's picture

@enhydra lutris

yes indeedy, the un just hasn't fully realized yet that it is utterly superfluous now that the u.s. is the sole superpower. we are the world now.

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lotlizard's picture

@enhydra lutris  
in these seventy long years since he was in history’s spotlight, has apparently been okay with all the crimes against humanity governments of all stripes have committed, waiting all this time before being sought out to do what? Add his voice to one anti-Trump talking point?

What about policies of pre-emptive war being the supreme crime leading to and enabling all others? You’d think at some point along the line he would been offended enough to complain about that.

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joe shikspack's picture

@lotlizard

i remember him specifically speaking up about iraq as a war crime:

Could Bush Be Prosecuted for War Crimes?

Ferencz's biggest contribution to the war crimes field is his assertion that an unprovoked or "aggressive" war is the highest crime against mankind. It was the decision to invade Iraq in 2003 that made possible the horrors of Abu Ghraib, the destruction of Fallouja and Ramadi, the tens of thousands of Iraqi deaths, civilian massacres like Haditha, and on and on. Ferencz believes that a "prima facie case can be made that the United States is guilty of the supreme crime against humanity, that being an illegal war of aggression against a sovereign nation."

Nuremberg prosecutor questions bin Laden killing

A lawyer who served as a prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials after World War II says Osama bin Laden should have been put on trial.

American lawyer Benjamin Ferencz, now 91, has written a letter to the New York Times, questioning whether the death of the terrorist leader was justifiable self-defence or premeditated illegal assassination.

He says the Nuremberg trials earned worldwide respect by giving Hitler's worst henchmen a fair trial so that truth would be revealed and justice under law would prevail.

And 65 years later he says the US should again have supported a trial of the world's most wanted international criminal bin Laden.

"It's a right that we give to every mass murderer and always have," he told the BBC.

"This is what distinguishes us from the tyrants."

i'm pretty sure that these aren't the only times that he has spoken out.

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lotlizard's picture

@joe shikspack  
the fact remains that anything anti-Trump gets huge amounts of media and Democratic pol traction.

Whereas the idea of putting Bush 43 and the Project for the New American Century signatories on trial for crimes against humanity did not, and does not.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

Big Al's picture

@The Aspie Corner still hasn't really said anything except about himself. Can you condense his primary point, I don't have time to listen to the whole damn thing.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

@Big Al To make a long story short, the only reason people are making a big stink about Jones being de-platformed is because he has a large presence online. Smaller people get banned all the time for violating terms of service and nobody even bats an eye, or they even celebrate it in some cases...oh, and free market and capitalism good, socialism bad.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

Big Al's picture

@#9.11 "see, they're taking away our freedumbs!"

"Like, what freedumbs, you think you're free?"

That's the problem. The big picture always gets missed and people always think the next media red ball is something new. And what are they doing on facebook anyway?

What about the oligarchy? What about democracy? This ain't shit and it ain't new like you said.

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