The Evening Blues - 8-13-18



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Johnny Clyde Copeland

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features soul and blues singer Johnny Clyde Copeland. Enjoy!

Johnny Copeland - Mama Told Me

"Fascism is not defined by the number of its victims, but by the way it kills them."

-- Jean-Paul Sartre


News and Opinion

UN human rights chief: Trump's attacks on press 'close to incitement of violence'

Donald Trump’s anti-press rhetoric is “very close to incitement to violence” that would lead to journalists censoring themselves or being attacked, the outgoing UN human rights commissioner has said.

Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, a Jordanian prince and diplomat, is stepping down this month as UN high commissioner for human rights after deciding not to stand for a second four-year term, in the face of a waning commitment among world powers to fighting abuses.

Zeid said the Trump administration’s lack of concern about human rights marked a distinct break with previous administrations, and that Trump’s own rhetoric aimed at minorities and at the press was redolent of two of the worst eras of the 20th century, the run-up to the two world wars.

In an interview with the Guardian, he singled out the US president’s repeated designation of the press as “the enemy of the people”. “We began to see a campaign against the media … that could have potentially, and still can, set in motion a chain of events which could quite easily lead to harm being inflicted on journalists just going about their work and potentially some self-censorship,” Zeid said. “And in that context, it’s getting very close to incitement to violence.”

He said it would be up to a court but determine whether Trump was actually guilty of incitement depending on the circumstances, if say, a journalist was stabbed while covering a rally. He said Trump’s example was already being followed elsewhere, giving license to authoritarian leaders to crack down on the media in ways they had not previously dared to. Zeid pointed to the Cambodian leader, Hun Sen, who he said had used similar language when he closed down independent media organisations.

The war of Wikileaks, Assange and other outlets exposing the inner workings of power

Facebook exec: media firms that don't work with us will end up 'in hospice'

A senior Facebook executive told Australian media companies that if they didn’t cooperate with the social network, their businesses would die. According to a report by The Australian, Campbell Brown, Facebook’s head of news partnerships, told a group of more than 20 broadcasters and publishers that she wanted to help media companies develop sustainable business models through the platform.

“We will help you revitalise journalism … in a few years the ­reverse looks like I’ll be holding your hands with your dying ­business like in a hospice,” she said, in comments corroborated by five people who attended the meeting in Sydney on Tuesday.

The Australian also reported that Brown said that Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, “doesn’t care about publishers but is giving me a lot of leeway and concessions to make these changes”, although both Facebook and Brown vehemently deny this comment was made, referring to a transcript they have from the meeting.

Facebook would not release the transcript from the meeting

During the four-hour meeting, Brown also talked about the company’s decision to prioritise personal posts from family and friends over journalistic content within the news feed. The move has hit some publishers who rely heavily on referrals from Facebook hard. “We are not interested in talking to you about your traffic and referrals anymore. That is the old world and there is no going back – Mark wouldn’t agree to this,” said Brown.

Google Censorship Plan Is “Not Right” and “Stupid,” Says Former Google Head of Free Expression

Google's former head f free expression issues in Asia has slammed the internet giant’s plan to launch a censored search engine in China, calling it a “stupid move” that would violate widely held human rights principles.

As The Intercept first reported last week, Google has been quietly developing a search platform for China that would remove content that China’s authoritarian government views as sensitive, such as information about political opponents, free speech, democracy, human rights, and peaceful protest. It w>ould “blacklist sensitive queries” so that “no results will be shown” at all when people enter certain words or phrases, according to internal Google documents.

Lokman Tsui, Google’s head of free expression for Asia and the Pacific between 2011 and 2014, read the leaked censorship plans and said he was disturbed by the details. “This is just a really bad idea, a stupid, stupid move,” he told The Intercept in an interview. “I feel compelled to speak out and say that this is not right.” ...

“In these past few years things have been deteriorating so badly in China – you cannot be there without compromising yourself,” Tsui said. Google launching a censored search engine in the country “would be a moral victory for Beijing,” he added. “Beijing has nothing to lose. So if Google wants to go back, it would be under the terms and conditions that Beijing would lay out for them. I can’t see how Google would be able to negotiate any kind of a deal that would be positive. I can’t see a way to operate Google search in China without violating widely held international human rights standards.” ...

Google has upped its presence in the country in recent years. Under the leadership of its current CEO Sundar Pichai, Google has launched translate and file management apps in China. The company has also opened an artificial intelligence research center in Beijing, and invested $550 million in the online Chinese retailer JD.com. These were baby steps, however, in comparison to the planned return of the search engine, which would be a massive strategic move for Google, with broad political implications. When Google pulled its search engine out of the country in 2010, it was a major rebuke to the Chinese government and its policies. Returning to China and embracing the censorship would send the opposite message, according to Tsui.

Google records your location even when you tell it not to

Google wants to know where you go so badly that it records your movements even when you explicitly tell it not to.

An Associated Press investigation found that many Google services on Android devices and iPhones store your location data even if you've used a privacy setting that says it will prevent Google from doing so. Computer science researchers at Princeton confirmed these findings at the AP's request.

For the most part, Google is upfront about asking permission to use your location information. An app like Google Maps will remind you to allow access to location if you use it for navigating. If you agree to let it record your location over time, Google Maps will display that history for you in a “timeline” that maps out your daily movements.

Storing your minute-by-minute travels carries privacy risks and has been used by police to determine the location of suspects. So the company will let you “pause” a setting called “location history”. Google says that will prevent the company from remembering where you've been. Google's support page on the subject states: “You can turn off Location History at any time. With Location History off, the places you go are no longer stored.” That isn't true. Even with “location history” paused, some Google apps automatically store time-stamped location data without asking.

For example, Google stores a snapshot of where you are when you merely open its Maps app. Automatic daily weather updates on Android phones pinpoint roughly where you are. And some searches that have nothing to do with location, such as “chocolate chip cookies” or “kids science kits”, pinpoint your precise latitude and longitude accurate to the square foot and save it to your Google account. The privacy issue affects about 2 billion users of devices that run Google's Android operating software and hundreds of millions of worldwide iPhone users who rely on Google for maps or search.

Former Iranian Ambassador: Trump’s Re-imposed Sanctions Against Iran Are an Act of Warfare

The U.S. is trying to bully Britain to side with Trump on Iran

Britain should back the United States in its dispute over the Iran nuclear deal, the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. warned ­Sunday — threatening British companies with “serious consequences” if they continued to trade with Tehran.

Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, U.S. ambassador Woody Johnson said Britain should break rank with its European neighbours, who are working to keep the 2015 accord alive, and align itself with President Donald Trump. The White House pulled the U.S. out of the landmark deal in May, resulting in the first tranche of U.S. sanctions on Iran being reimposed last week.

In the article, Johnson urged the British government to rethink its position on the deal, under which the signatories agreed to lift sanctions on Iran in return for limits on its nuclear programme. He called for a “united front” among Western signatories to force Tehran to change its disruptive behaviour, and issued a stark ultimatum to British businesses, telling then to cease trading with Iran or face “serious consequences” for their dealings with America. ...

Johnson’s ultimatum ratchets up the tensions between the allies over Iran, in the first test of the relationship since Trump’s visit to the U.K. last month.

Yemen: Thousands mourn children killed in Saudi air strike

MSNBC Covers Saudi Massacre Of Yemen Children

Taliban hails 'helpful' US talks as boost to Afghan peace process

Fresh hope has been injected into the Afghan peace process after Taliban officials said groundbreaking preliminary talks with the US last month were “very helpful” and that another round will take place in Doha in September.

Four Taliban members met Alice Wells, a senior US state department official, at a hotel in the Qatari capital on 23 July for the first face-to-face talks in seven years. The diplomacy follows the White House’s decision to drop its opposition to bilateral talks with the Islamist insurgency it has failed to uproot in 17 years of war.

On Sunday fighting continued for the third consecutive day between the Taliban and Afghan security forces in the eastern city of Ghazni.

The US previously said it would sit on the sidelines of an “Afghan-led, Afghan-owned” peace process. The Trump administration changed tack, however, in recognition of the Taliban’s refusal to enter negotiations with the Afghan government without first discussing the removal of foreign troops in the US. The first round of basic contacts “were very helpful”, a senior member of the Taliban’s Quetta Shura told the Guardian. They requested anonymity as only the movement’s spokesperson is authorised to speak in public. ...

A sense of cautious optimism has spread through Washington after the unprecedented ceasefire during the Eid holiday in June, during which 20,000 unarmed Taliban fighters flooded city centres, posting selfies and dancing with soldiers and civilians.

South Korea is still being super nice to Kim — and it could undermine U.S. pressure

The leaders of North and South Korea agreed Monday to meet for a third summit in less than six months — as negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington hit an impasse. Another sit-down between Kim Jong Un and Moon Jae In is scheduled for September — this time to be held in the North Korean capital. However, the joint statement released by both Koreas came as tensions between Washington and Pyongyang over denuclearization continue to simmer.

There is no set date for the summit, but it could coincide with North Korea’s celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the state’s foundation on Sept. 9, with Kim inviting a number of international dignitaries to Pyongyang for the event.

Moon has worked tirelessly over the last year to foster closer social and economic ties with Pyongyang, and the fact he is willing to travel to the North Korean capital is a sign of how much he wants his diplomatic efforts to succeed.

“Another inter-Korean summit is essential now. If left to the U.S. and North Korea alone, there’s unlikely to be any meaningful progress,” an editorial in the South Korean newspaper Hankyoreh said Monday. “When the planned North Korea-U.S. summit fell into crisis, we need to remember that it was the second inter-Korean summit at Panmunjom that broke the ice and allowed the historic Singapore talks to take place.”

Secret Israeli Report Reveals Armed Drone Killed Four Boys Playing on Gaza Beach in 2014

A confidential report by Israeli military police investigators seen by The Intercept explains how a tragic series of mistakes by air force, naval, and intelligence officers led to an airstrike in which four Palestinian boys playing on a beach in Gaza in 2014 were killed by missiles launched from an armed drone. Testimony from the officers involved in the attack, which has been concealed from the public until now, confirms for the first time that the children — four cousins ages 10 and 11 — were pursued and killed by drone operators who somehow mistook them, in broad daylight, for Hamas militants.

The testimony raises new questions about whether the attack, which unfolded in front of dozens of journalists and triggered global outrage, was carried out with reckless disregard for civilian life and without proper authorization. After killing the first boy, the drone operators told investigators, they had sought clarification from their superiors as to how far along the beach, used by civilians, they could pursue the fleeing survivors. Less than a minute later, as the boys ran for their lives, the drone operators decided to launch a second missile, killing three more children, despite never getting an answer to their question.

Suhad Bishara, a lawyer representing the families of the victims, told The Intercept that Israel’s use of armed drones to kill Palestinians poses “many questions concerning human judgment, ethics, and compliance with international humanitarian law.” Remotely piloted bombers “alter the process of human decision-making,” Bishara said, and the use of the technology in the 2014 beach attack “expands the circle of people responsible for the actual killing of the Bakr children." ...

According to the testimony of one naval officer involved in the strikes, the mission was initially considered “a great success,” because the strike team believed, wrongly, that they had killed four Hamas militants preparing to launch an attack on Israeli forces. Within minutes of the two strikes, however, a group of international journalists who had witnessed the attack from nearby hotels reported that the victims torn apart by the missiles were not adult militants but four small boys, cousins who were 10 and 11 years old. Another four boys from the same family survived the attack, but were left with shrapnel wounds and deep emotional scars.

Virginia detention center strapped migrant children to chairs, report finds

A state review into the treatment of immigrant teens held at a Virginia detention center confirms the facility uses restraint techniques that can include strapping children to chairs and placing mesh bags over their heads. But investigators concluded the harsh treatment described by detainees at the Shenandoah Valley juvenile center did not meet the state’s legal threshold of abuse or neglect, according to a copy of the findings issued on Monday by the Virginia department of juvenile justice and obtained by the Associated Press. ...

Virginia’s governor, Ralph Northam, ordered the review in June hours after first-person accounts by children as young as 14, who said they were handcuffed, shackled and beaten at the facility, were published by the news agency. They also described being stripped of their clothes and locked in solitary confinement, sometimes strapped to chairs with bags over their heads at the facility near Staunton, 150 miles south-west of Washington DC.

The state investigators said they were unable to interview the teens directly alleging abuse. Those who made the initial complaints as part of a federal class-action lawsuit filed in November 2017 were subsequently transferred or deported back to their home countries after the resolution of their cases. ...

Hannah Lieberman, a lawyer at the Washington Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs, representing the Latino teens involved in the lawsuit, said the state report does not disprove the abuse allegations by her clients. She said the legal case against the facility will proceed.

Just blame Russia: One year after Charlottesville, US lawmaker says it was Moscow’s fault

Only about 2 dozen people showed up to the Unite the Right rally in D.C.

As hundreds of people poured in to Washington D.C. on Sunday to protest what some feared would be a large white nationalist rally, a red pickup truck pulled into a Target parking lot outside of Alexandria, Virginia. A man in a blue suit stepped out of the truck. It was Jason Kessler, the organizer of Sunday’s “White Civil Rights rally,” and one of the key figures behind last year’s violent Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. He’d arrived with Jovi Val, a far-right activist and a member of the Proud Boys, a far-right organization that was labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for the first time this year. Kessler is a white nationalist who has espoused to racist ideas, including that races can be ranked by their intelligence. ...

D.C. transit police escorted Kessler’s group, which included supporters of the internet conspiracy Q-Anon and people with Nazi symbols tattooed on their arms, down into the subway. There, they were relegated to their own subway car. When Kessler and his crew of just two dozen emerged at Foggy Bottom in Washington D.C., a large crowd of media and protesters were waiting.

Many of the most prominent participants in last year’s Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, which left one dead and dozens more injured, have since faced serious consequences for their actions, including costly lawsuits and potential jail time. Most groups swore off Kessler’s event entirely and even discouraged others to attend. Anti-fascist protesters, meanwhile, turned out in droves, traveling from across the country, including Florida, Ohio, and Tennessee, to rally against Kessler’s movement.

Kessler and his cohorts proceeded up Pennsylvania Avenue, flanked by police on motorcycles and protesters chanting “Nazis go home” they made their way towards Lafayette Park. Kessler had reserved the park for 100 to 400 people. But only some two dozen people showed up to participate in Kessler’s rally. They were vastly outnumbered by counter-protesters, many of whom had rallied in Freedom Plaza earlier in the day and then marched to Lafayette Square. Police carved out two distinct areas for Kessler’s group and for counter protesters, separated by about 1,000 feet.

White man who shot and killed black father over parking spot has been charged after all

The white man who shot and killed a black man over a parking space in Florida will be charged with manslaughter after all, despite the sheriff’s office previously declining to pursue any charges due to the state’s controversial “Stand Your Ground” law.

Michael Drejka, the 47-year-old who killed Markeis McGlockton after he parked in a disabled spot outside a Circle K convenience store and gas station in Clearwater in July, was charged with manslaughter Monday, according to ABC. Drejka started an argument with McGlockton’s girlfriend — with their two young children in the car — after he noticed the family park in the spot without a permit. ...

The state attorney for Pinellas County, Bernie McCabe, announced his office would file charges against Drejka after receiving investigative reports from the local sheriff’s office. The charges are “consistent with the decision-making process established under Florida law in this case,” McCabe said. Drejka’s bond was set at $100,000, according to ABC.

McGlockton, 28, was in the car with his young children and girlfriend Britany Jacobs, 25, before he was killed. He went into the store with his 5-year-old son when Drejka, upset about his use of a disabled parking spot, began circling the vehicle. Surveillance footage from outside the store showed Drejka talking to Jacobs before McGlockton ran out of the store, stood between them, and pushed Drejka to the ground. Drejka then shot McGlockton.

Aretha Franklin reportedly 'gravely ill'

Aretha Franklin is “gravely ill”, according to sources close to her family.


Franklin, 76, has faced bouts of ill-health since 2010, when she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, according to a family member who spoke to Detroit’s press. After an operation that year, she continued to undergo treatment, and told Us Weekly last year, following a hoax report of her death: “I’m doing well generally, all test have come back good. I’ve lost a lot of weight due to side effects of medicine, it affects your weight.” She cancelled two concert appearances in April on her doctor’s orders.

She announced a partial retirement in 2017, saying “I will be recording, but this will be my last year in concert”, before saying she planned occasional one-off performances: “I'll be pretty much satisfied, but I'm not going to go anywhere and just sit down and do nothing. That wouldn't be good either.” Her last previous performance was in November, at a gala event for the Elton John Aids Foundation; the same month she released her most recent album, A Brand New Me.



the horse race



The FBI just fired Peter Strzok, the agent who sent those anti-Trump texts

The Federal Bureau of Investigation fired agent Peter Strzok — the agent who sent text messages critical of Donald Trump — on Friday, according to the Washington Post.

Strzok, who assisted in leading the FBI’s investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election, exchanged the anti-Trump messages with another FBI official, his then-lover Lisa Page. The president had previously likened those texts to treason. Strzok was also integral to the investigation of Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.

However, Strzok’s lawyer, Aitan Goelman, told the Post that the firing was unusual, as Strzok was previously assigned a demotion and a 60-day suspension by the office that normally handles employee discipline. In the messages, Strzok had called Trump a “fucking idiot” and expressed disdain over his run for office. After the messages were discovered, Strzok was reassigned from the investigation in July 2017 to a role in human resources at the FBI.

Democrats and Millennials are losing faith in capitalism

The majority of Democrats feel positively about socialism, while less than half feel the same about capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll released Monday.

“The major change among Democrats has been a less upbeat attitude toward capitalism, dropping to 47 percent positive this year — lower than in any of the three previous measures,” Gallup wrote. In contrast, 57 percent of Democrats have a positive view of socialism, which is largely unchanged from Gallup’s previous polls in 2016, 2012, and 2010. The share of Democrats feeling positive about capitalism has never dipped below 50 percent in any the three previous surveys. The previous low-water mark for capitalism among Democrats came in 2010 in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis and Wall Street bailouts. ...

Asked about democratic socialism at a CNN town hall in 2017, Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi said, “Thank you for your question, but I have to say, we are capitalist.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, a potential candidate for president in 2020 and a frequent ally of Sanders, recently said at a town hall that she is a “capitalist to my bones” but that the current system is rigged in favor of the wealthy and powerful.



the evening greens


Democrats Backtrack On Taking Fossil Fuel Money

DNC Pretends Respect for Workers Requires It to Take Corporate PAC Money From Big Oil

As climate change-fueled wildfires ravage the West Coast, the Democratic National Committee voted 30-2 on Friday night in support of a proposal to “welcome the longstanding and generous contributions of workers, including those in energy and related industries, who organize and donate to Democratic candidates individually or through their unions’ or employers’ political action committees.” The move seemingly reversed a ban passed in June pledging that the body would stop taking contributions from corporate PACs connected to the fossil fuel industry.

The DNC resolution also references an “all-of-the-above” energy strategy that directly contradicts the party’s commitment to curbing global warming.

DNC spokesperson Xochitl Hinojosa said the decision was made after “hearing concerns from Labor that this was an attack on workers, this resolution acknowledges the generous contributions of workers, including those in energy, who organize and donate to Democratic candidates.” She told the Huffington Post that the change did not represent a reversal on the previous policy, and did not comment on which unions in particular had approached the DNC about the rule change.

Chuck Idelson, a spokesperson for National Nurses United — a union that has been outspoken about the need to confront climate change, and which also backed Bernie Sanders’s primary bid — called the proposal a “blatant appeal to contributions from the fossil fuel industry, which is gorged with profits that they make off destroying the planet and poisoning working people.” The language of the proposal, though — brought by DNC Chair Tom Perez — centers heavily on the party’s support for organized labor, casting the decision as a matter of protecting workers in the energy sector.

Interior Sec. Zinke Blames “Radical Environmentalists,” Not Climate Change, as 100+ Wildfires Rage


Also of Interest

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

A Palestinian Bedouin Village Braces for Forcible Transfer as Israel Seeks to Split the West Bank in Half

Gaius Publius: Why Is Thomas Frank Puzzled?

Empires, Past and Present

Trump reignited his war with California, but his tweet got burned

Deputy DNC chair Keith Ellison denies ugly domestic abuse claim coming days before his primary


A Little Night Music

Johnny Copeland - If Love Is Your Friend

Johnny Copeland - Ain't Nobody's Business

Johnny Copeland - You're Gonna Reap Just What You Sow

Johnny Copeland - Trying To Reach My Goal

Johnny Copeland - I Ain't Gonna Take It

Johnny Copeland - I Can Tell

Johnny Copeland - Every Dog Has His Day

Johnny Copeland - It's My Own Tears That's Being Wasted

Johnny Copeland - May the Best Man Win

Johnny Copeland - Rock & Roll Lily


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Wink's picture

(or more) what I expected, given that 'we' started organizing last Wed. night after we got wind that Chief windbag his self, the orange combover, was coming to town (today), and that the lack of response on FB was numbing. I expected 20, maybe 25 people. Looks like 'we' got closer to 70, 75. Better yet, it was "sponsored" by Local 1199 (hospital workers union) and a few other union reps showed up as well, as well as Veterans For Peace. We were there to "welcome" the Trumpster, of course, who is here in town (Fort Drum, actually) to sign his $717 Billion M.I.C. monstrosity. And now off to another protest, 45 mins. away, with another "Indivisible" crowd to support their effort.
[video:https://youtu.be/zSP59gc80dI]

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

joe shikspack's picture

@Wink

it's nice to see good turnout for a put the trumpster in a dumpster action. Smile

have a great evening!

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Wink's picture

Was great to see
@joe shikspack
the under 50 crowd at these events!
The one in Utica, 90 mins. south of my house and another stop for Air Force Orange, drew over 1,000 protesters (and 100 or so dRump supporters)! A good day in central NY!

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

Azazello's picture

Chomsky makes ... how much ? Arizona Daily Star

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

@Azazello

The highest-paid public employee in 39 US states is either a football or men's basketball coach
https://www.businessinsider.com/us-states-highest-paid-public-employee-c...

8. Arizona — Sean Miller, $4.95 million
Employer: University of Arizona

Position: men's basketball coach

Contract: Since being hired in 2009, Miller has received pay raises several times even though he has never asked for one, according to the school's athletic director. He was also given a share of a $4 million privately donated investment and has access to a charter jet.

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Azazello's picture

@MrWebster
Miller's basketball program is under investigation by the FBI and NCAA for paying recruits.

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

joe shikspack's picture

@Azazello

heh. they don't complain about corporate chieftains that make more money per hour than could possibly be justified by the labor they perform relative to the labor that creates value for the corporation - but they complain about some college professor who rakes in relative breadcrumbs.

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What is interesting is the tidbits that Brana gave out about trying to lobby the super delegates and the rich donors. I could tell there was a lot more dirty shit in the back rooms which he did not want to say in the spirit of keeping it positive.

This interview was the last piece that has convinced me that the democratic party cannot be taken over from within by progressives.

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joe shikspack's picture

@MrWebster

thanks for the video. yep, the structure of the dem party is pretty well insulated against change bubbling up from the bottom. i won't say that it can't happen, but i would rather imagine that it won't. it is easier for me to imagine the party becoming even more irrelevant due to a lack of rank and file membership and being surpassed by a third party than to imagine a wholesale reformation and recreation of the party by the rank and file.

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Azazello's picture

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nf_ubSj3aZA width:500 height:300]

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

joe shikspack's picture

@Azazello

it should be pretty plain by now that trump is not creative enough to invent his own scams and is merely extending the scams of his predecessors.

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lotlizard's picture

@Azazello  
and his former administration officials in a bad light or spotlight their complicity in criminality, the way it is standard with them to slam Trump.

It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that it’s not just demagoguery — ordinary Germans have good reason to call the European establishment media die Lügenpresse, the lying press.

Like their American counterparts, the E.U.’s comfy urban elites are corrupt, with media cronies aplenty to lie and cover for them.

I’m positive Jimmy Dore, if he were German, would agree.

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JekyllnHyde's picture

Here's an interesting story that Jean-Paul Sartre recounted during the 1940-44 Nazi occupation of France during World War II. I wrote about it in my two-part essay about the 1936-39 Spanish Civil War -- Fighting Fascism: "When Courage Goes Unrewarded" (Part II).


In this diary that I wrote many years ago (it is about artistic freedom and independence - Aristotle, Shakespeare, and Dickens Set Free in China), I described how through the brilliance of his words French philosopher and playwright Jean-Paul Sartre tricked his Nazi occupiers at the time .

Jean-Paul Sartre wrote Les Mouches (or as translated in English, The Flies) in 1944.  The play was essentially an 20th century adaptation of Sophocles' Greek mythological tale of Electra and was first enacted before a sold-out crowd in a fancy Paris theater during the Nazi occupation of France.  Seated in the front row were leading members of the German Army brass along with several SS officers.  Just as the dominant theme in Electra was revenge and restoring the family's honor, Sartre was imploring his countrymen to resist the Nazi occupation.  The play was a brilliant, subtle call-to-arms to his countrymen to re-evaluate their collaborationist tendencies and resist the German occupiers

Orestes: Electra, behind that door is the outside world.  A world of dawn.  Out there the sun is rising, lighting up the roads. Soon we shall leave this place, we shall walk those sunlit roads, and these hags of darkness will lose their power.  The sunbeams will cut through them like swords.
Electra: The sun...
First Fury: You will never see the sun again, Electra.  We shall mass between you and the sun like a swarm of locusts; you will carry darkness round your head wherever you go.
Electra: Oh, let me be!  Stop torturing me!


Jean-Paul Sartre, No Exit and Three Other Plays, p 111.

Sartre later wrote that while almost all of the French attendees in the audience understood the underlying message of his play, it completely eluded the Germans.

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A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma

joe shikspack's picture

@JekyllnHyde

yeah, getting one over on the man is one thing, but could sartre sing "edelweiss?" Smile

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snoopydawg's picture

New Mexico Cop Shatters Driver’s Car Window Over Seat Belt Violation

​According to 29-year-old Angela Fisher-Herrera, who was in the passenger seat of the car and behind the camera, a New Mexico State trooper, who identified himself as Officer Cabana, stopped the couple for a seat belt violation.

Cabana can be heard asking Page to "open [his] window," which is rolled down a few inches. When Page doesn't roll down his driver-side window further, the officer shatters it with his bare hands. The officer, along with two other state police officers, then opens the car door and pulls Page to the ground.
....
"You're under goddamn arrest!" a police officer shouts as Page is pulled to the ground.
....
"We were pulled over and accused of not wearing seatbelts. (We were wearing our seatbelts and dashcam footage proves it). We were arrested for resisting arrest. Our cases were dismissed, but the arresting officer refiled charges for this arrest. The court did not contact via the mailing address we gave directly to the judge, so we never received notice we had refiled charges. Thus, we missed the court date, so naturally, we have warrants for our arrest for failure to appear," the caption adds.

The two were arrested after the incident on charges of not wearing their seat belts, resisting or obstructing a police officer, concealing identity and making a false 911 call.

Oh well. At least they weren't shot during the video recording, but what is that cop reaching for just as the video stops? Taser? Why in hell would he need to taser that woman before she had a chance to comply?

Protect and Serve should be changed to "We are the Borg. Resistance may be deadly!"

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

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

perhaps the press is now more focused on police brutality and corruption than it used to be, but damn there seem to be an awful lot of stories about abusive cops these days.

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lotlizard's picture

@snoopydawg  
in East Jerusalem or the West Bank or someplace.

It’s the cops’ — the settlers’ and occupiers’ — world; we only live in it.

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snoopydawg's picture

@lotlizard

Cops have been sent to Israel for years to be trained by its military. Military troops don't see people as someone they should help, but as people to be on guard against. Add in the number of ex military that became cops and you get what was seen on the video and in countless others.

Changing the subject, but did you read the article on a private security company kidnapping some protesters before they were even charged by the police? I'd sue their asses for kidnapping to start with.

Anti-Pipeline Kayaktivists Hit With Felony Charges Under Louisiana's New ALEC-Inspired Law That Criminalizes Protest

Activists battling the pipeline project say the fossil fuel company's private security "abducted" the kayakers before they were charged by police.

Three kayaktivists who oppose construction of the Bayou Bridge Pipeline—the tail end of Energy Transfer Partner's Dakota Access Pipeline—are reportedly the first people to be charged with felonies under a new Louisiana law that, like a model bill crafted by the right-wing American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), criminalizes peaceful protests of fossil fuel projects.

The collective of activists fighting against the pipeline—who have created the L'eau Est La Vie (Water Is Life) floating resistance camp—said on Twitter Thursday that three kayakers were "abducted" by the pipeline company's private security while boating through public waterways, and then arrested

Our water protectors were breaking no laws as they were using their kayaks in navigable public waters, a protected right in Louisiana. Moreover, corporate private security should have not have the power to abduct and detain people," L'eau Est La Vie Camp declared on Facebook.

.

No shit! Turning security over to private corporations is a way for the country to get around the bill of rights in my oh so humble opinion. Besides. I don't understand how the legislation can be legal because it goes against the first amendment. Well, maybe not since they aren't protecting against the government, but still.

The Koch brothers, Bezos and a very long list of others are on my wishlist to exit this mortal coil ASAP! It probably won't change anything, but at least those assholes won't be around anymore to enjoy the things that their greed gave them!

h/t Joe's EBs I thought.

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

Thomas Drake is speaking at the conference. He was given the job of auditing what went wrong after 9/11 and found out that it could have been prevented. He was three from the top and his first day on the job 9/11 happened. He was charged under espionage act and threatened with life in jail. His attorney was Jesselyn Radack.

One of his discoveries was that an in-house built NSA system could have prevented 9/11 but for political reasons the system was side lined and a new billion dollar IT system was commissioned and it didn't work. Drake leaked this case of fraud, waste and abuse to the Baltimore Sun. W Bush didn't go after him, it was our old "hope and change" Obama on probable assumption that he gave the info to James Risen about NSA hacking Americans which could have changed the 2004 presidential election if the NY Times didn't do the ass kissing for the security state. The head of research, Binney, will also be at the conference.

As well as the staff member for the house who was probably one of the many people Drake blew the whistle to. I seem that he went all the way to the staff of the Supreme Court. Isn't is strange that all the records of his presentations got "lost."

The conference is being held at a place that I never thought I would go. The CATO institute.

The chance for attendance goes until Aug 21 and conference is on Sept 4 and it will be live streamed.

Featuring William Binney, Former Crypto-Mathematician, NSA; Kirk Wiebe, Former Senior Analyst, NSA; Edward Loomis, Former Computer Systems Analyst, NSA; Thomas Drake, Former Senior Executive Service Member, NSA; and Diane Roark, Former Professional Staff Member, House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence; moderated by Patrick Eddington, Policy Analyst in Homeland Security and Civil Liberties, Cato Institute.

Almost 17 years after al Qaeda’s attacks on America, many key questions remain unanswered. Chief among them: why did America’s National Security Agency (NSA) fail to detect and thwart the attacks? Has the NSA as an institution learned the right lessons from this national tragedy and changed accordingly? What has Congress done—or failed to do—since the attacks to improve intelligence collection while still protecting American’s constitutional rights? “The NSA and the Road to 9/11: Lessons Learned and Unlearned” brings together five former federal officials who were key players in the effort inside the NSA and on Capitol Hill to prevent the 9/11 disaster and to reform NSA’s approach to surveillance in the years after.

The NSA and the Road to 9/11: Lessons Learned and Unlearned

If you know anyone here on C99% or others in the area, you might want to let them know about the conference.

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joe shikspack's picture

@DonMidwest

thanks for posting this. heh, i would never have thought that i'd be interested in an event at cato, either, but it looks like it ought to be an interesting time.

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snoopydawg's picture

that is being rewritten.

The BLM movement is also being rewritten.

How Russian Facebook ads used race and religion to

Russian actors seem to have attempted to influence both sides of the Black Lives Matter movement. This ad from July 20, 2015, shows Michael Brown, Tamir Rice and Freddie Gray, all young black men who died at the hand of the police. It ran one month after the Charleston, S.C., church shooting, and also around the one-year anniversaries of the deaths of Eric Garner and Brown. It was targeted at users who lived in Atlanta; Maryland; Ferguson, Mo.; and Virginia, who had “liked” certain African American news sites.

IMG_2454_0.JPG

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

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

because nobody in 'merika has anything to grumble about and wouldn't if it weren't for those durned outside agitators.

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Good morning Evening Blues. I followed Blue Onxy EB tweets from the comments in Amanda's (WTF? This is it??...) essay. Great title, that. Thanks.
Prediction: Medicare (what's left) 4 All passes in 2020, it's a BFD! ... Next day all of USA USA says "WTF? This is it?!" lol I HOPE I'm wrong. Thanks Blue.

The Bloomberg article wraps it up nicely:

Trump had once pledged, to the chagrin of many Republicans, that the federal government would be doing the negotiating, using its enormous buying power to drive down prices. Instead the blueprint, and the plan announced Tuesday, expands the reach of insurers and pharmacy-benefit managers -- but not the government.

doh!
everything
it burns

Both parties are corrupt, Ds and Rs alike, that's what I think.

peace

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