The Evening Blues - 11-12-18



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The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Robert Johnson

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features delta bluesman Robert Johnson. Enjoy!

Robert Johnson - Sweet Home Chicago

“We'll let our friends be the peacekeepers and the great country called America will be the pacemakers.”

-- George W. Bush


News and Opinion

The U.S. Will Stop Refueling Saudi-led Coalition Jets in Yemen, but Progressives in Congress Want More

On Friday, the Washington Post reported that the Trump administration would end mid-air refueling support to the Saudi- and UAE-led coalition that has been bombing Yemen, cutting off what is widely seen as the most significant pillar of American support for the brutal campaign. But progressives in Congress are pushing for more, aiming to cut off weapons sales and pass a measure in both chambers that would force the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Yemen. The measure, which was introduced by Rep. Ro Khanna (D.-Calif) in the House and by Senators Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), and Mike Lee (R.-Utah) in the Senate, relies on the legal theory that intelligence and logistical support amount to “hostilities” under the 1973 War Powers Act, and therefore must be authorized by Congress, which has not approved U.S. involvement in the war between the coalition and a rebel group known as the Houthis in Yemen.

In a phone interview on Friday, Khanna told The Intercept he was “cautiously optimistic” about the news, but wants to pass the measure to ensure the Trump administration follows through on its decision. “This is a major change. It could avert a humanitarian crisis,” Khanna said. “From everything that I’ve understood, from activists on the ground, from people who are briefed on policy, the war could not continue without the assistance of U.S. refueling.”

It is not clear whether that is the case, however. Citing anonymous sources, the Post reported that the administration’s decision “was prompted at least in part by the Saudi military’s increased aerial refueling capacity,” suggesting that the withdrawal of U.S. support may not have as much impact as Khanna and others hope.

Civilian Deaths in Yemen Increasing Despite U.S. Assurances

Airstrikes by Saudi Arabia and its allies in Yemen are on a pace to kill more civilians than last year, according to a database tracking violence in the country, despite the United States’ repeated claims that the coalition is taking precautions to prevent such bloodshed. The database gives an indication of the scope of the disaster wreaked in Yemen by nearly four years of civil war. At least 57,538 people — civilians and combatants — have been killed since the beginning of 2016, according to the data assembled by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, or ACLED.

That doesn’t include the first nine months of the war, in 2015, which the group is still analyzing. Those data are likely to raise the figure to 70,000 or 80,000, ACLED’s Yemen researcher Andrea Carboni told The Associated Press. The organization’s count is considered by many international agencies to be one of the most credible, although all caution it is likely an underestimate because of the difficulties in tracking deaths.

The numbers don’t include those who have died in the humanitarian disaster caused by the war, particularly starvation. Though there are no firm figures, the aid group Save the Children estimated hunger may have killed 50,000 children in 2017. That was based on a calculation that around 30 percent of severely malnourished children who didn’t receive proper treatment likely died. ...

Asked about the finding, the U.S. State Department said in an emailed reply, “Throughout this conflict, the United States has urged all parties to abide by the Law of Armed Conflict, work to prevent harm to civilians and civilian infrastructure, and thoroughly investigate and ensure accountability for any violations.”

How U.S. Will Start Iran War Revealed

Khashoggi murder: Pompeo tells crown prince the US will hold all involved accountable

US secretary of state Mike Pompeo has told Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that the US will hold accountable all involved in the killing of a dissident Saudi journalist in a wide-ranging telephone call that also took in the conflict in Yemen. ... “The secretary emphasised that the United States will hold all of those involved in the killing of Jamal Khashoggi accountable, and that Saudi Arabia must do the same,” spokeswoman Heather Nauert said in a statement. ...

British foreign minister Jeremy Hunt will visit Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on Monday to call on Saudi leaders to cooperate with an investigation into the murder of Khashoggi and press for an end to the war in Yemen. The foreign ministry said Hunt would meet Saudi Arabia’s King Salman, Prince Mohammed, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir, Yemeni Vice President Ali Mohsen and Foreign Minister Khaled Al Yamani.

Hunt, the first British minister to visit Saudi Arabia since the murder of Khashoggi a month ago, will also call on the Saudi authorities to do more to deliver justice and accountability for his family.

Germany, France, UK, US and Saudi Arabia 'have Khashoggi tapes'

Ankara has given recordings on the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi to Saudi Arabia, the US, Germany, France and Britain, Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said. ... Speaking as he left Turkey to attend first world war one commemorations in France, which are being attended by the US president and European leaders, Erdogan said for the first time that the three European Union states had heard the recordings.

“We gave the tapes. We gave them to Saudi Arabia, to the United States, Germans, French and British, all of them. They have listened to all the conversations in them. They know,” Erdogan said. ... Erdogan did not give details of the contents of the tapes on Saturday but two sources with knowledge of the issue have told Reuters that Turkey has several audio recordings. They include the killing itself and conversations pre-dating the operation that Turkey subsequently uncovered, the sources said. These had led Ankara to conclude from an early stage that the killing was premeditated, despite Saudi Arabia’s initial denials of any knowledge or involvement.

Trudeau says Canada has heard Turkish tape of Khashoggi murder

Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, has become the first western leader to confirm Turkish claims that an audio recording of Jamal Khashoggi’s murder exists and has been passed to intelligence agencies. ...

Speaking at a press conference in Paris, where he attended a peace forum after armistice ceremonies, Trudeau said Canadian intelligence had listened to the audio tape provided by Turkish intelligence, but he had not done so.

“Canada’s intelligence agencies have been working very closely on this issue with Turkish intelligence and Canada has been fully briefed on what Turkey had to share,” he said. ...

In contrast, the French foreign minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said recordings related to Khashoggi’s murder were not to his knowledge in France’s possession, directly contradicting Erdogan.

Crown Prince’s wings clipped as Khashoggi death rattles Riyadh

Six weeks after Jamal Khashoggi was murdered by Saudi agents, the decision-making process in Riyadh is slowly starting to change. Fallout from the assassination in Istanbul has wounded Mohammed bin Salman, the heir to the throne, and given a second wind to an old guard of elders, whose views are once more being heard. Publicly, the Kingdom’s leaders appear chastened and contrite in the wake of Khashoggi’s gruesome killing inside the Saudi consulate. In private though, senior members of the House of Saud, including the crown prince, are partly blaming Turkey for the global revulsion, which they say could have been contained if Ankara had played by “regional rules”.

Central to the resentment, according to sources close to the royal court in Riyadh, is a view that the Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan betrayed the Kingdom by disclosing details of the investigation and refusing all overtures from Saudi envoys, including an offer to pay “significant” compensation. “They say they were betrayed by the Turks,” a regional source said. “That’s where they are in their most private thoughts.”

The return to Riyadh earlier this month of Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, the sole surviving full brother of monarch, King Salman, has been widely interpreted as a first step in the restoration of an old order, in which decision making was made after extensive consultation among elders. Another senior figure, Khalid al-Faisal, led the Saudi delegation to meet Erdogan in October, and the King himself - who has taken more of a chairman role since appointing Prince Mohammed as his heir - has been more visible and vocal in meetings, a second senior source says. ...

In the days after Khashoggi was killed, as the official Saudi reaction shifted from outright denial that it had played a role, to a begrudging admission that Khashoggi had been killed in a fight, Prince Mohammed struggled to comprehend the scale of the reaction – and even the reason for it. “He was blaming the Americans for betraying him initially,” said the regional source. “He’d seen Abu Ghraib, renditions, death penalties, and he felt comforted by Trump. He could not understand why this was happening to him.”

Since then, western leaders’ once enthusiastic embrace of Prince Mohammed has been replaced by wariness and a view that some of the regional feuds launched in his name need to be brought to an end. ... There is little appetite in London or Washington for Prince Mohammed to be removed, and Ankara – which is strongly opposed to the Crown Prince, but not at odds with King Salman – is being lobbied heavily by Riyadh’s allies to accept the fact that Prince Mohammed will not be ousted.

A Century After End of WWI, Trump Snubs Peace Summit While Macron Warns of Growing Nationalism

US airstrikes fail to weaken al-Shabaab's grip on Somalia

An unprecedented number of US airstrikes against al-Shabaab in Somalia has caused significant casualties without seriously weakening the Islamic extremist group, research suggests. The US has conducted 29 airstrikes in Somalia against al-Shabaab this year. In 2017, the US conducted 27 strikes against the al-Qaida affiliate, which has fought for almost a decade to impose its rigorous version of Islamic law on the country. Four further strikes last year were directed at a small group of fighters loyal to Islamic State in the east African country.

Some strikes against al-Shabaab have inflicted considerable casualties, with at least 60 recruits dying in an attack on a training camp in Mudug province in the centre of the country last month. But research published last week has suggested that although the overall number of attacks by the extremists has declined slightly, al-Shabaab is adapting to the increasingly lethal air campaign.

Analysts at the Mogadishu-based Hiraal Institute found that the group is conducting fewer massed attacks on government bases but the numbers of strikes against government offices and businesses that refuse to pay its taxes has increased markedly. The Hiraal Institute report said: “There was a more than a twofold increase in bombings, suggesting that al-Shabaab made a conscious decision to switch to bombings as its primary source of targeting the Somali government and its allies as an efficient attack method that does not expose its men to attacks.”

Many experts say the struggle against the insurgency has reached a stalemate. Hussein Sheikh Ali, the executive director of the Hiraal Institute and a former national security adviser, said: “Al-Shabab are definitely not getting stronger but the government is not getting stronger either. “The US has been very active and hitting very serious targets but holding territory is very difficult.”

Emma Goldman, Eugene Debs, Jane Addams: Honoring Antiwar Resisters on the 100th Anniv. of WWI’s End

Half Million Killed by America's Global War on Terror 'Just Scratches the Surface' of Human Destruction

The United States' so-called War on Terror has killed about half a million people in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, according to a new estimate from the Costs of War Project at Brown University's Watson Institute. "This new body count signals that, far from diminishing, the war is only intensifying," Stephanie Savell, co-director of the project, pointed out in a piece for Axios. The overall death toll "is an increase of 113,000 over the last count, issued just two years ago."

The new report (pdf) estimates that since 2001, between 480,000 and 507,000 people have been killed because of war violence in those three nations—a tally that does not include "the more than 500,000 deaths from the war in Syria, raging since 2011, which the U.S. joined in August 2014," and "indirect deaths," or those killed by war's impact on public health, such as limiting access to food, water, hospitals, and electricity.


The "direct deaths" accounted for in the estimate include U.S. military, contractors, and Defense Department employees; national military and police as well as other allied troops; opposition fighters; civilians; journalists; and aid workers. About half of those killed were civilians—between 244,000 and 266,000 across Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Up to 204,000 of them were Iraqis. While the U.S. government has repeatedly underestimated the costs of waging war, since the project launched in 2011, its team has aimed to provide a full account of the "human, economic, and political costs" of post-9/11 U.S. military action in the Middle East, "and to foster better informed public policies." ...

Regardless of how Democrats in the House proceed, Neta C. Crawford, a Boston University political science professor who co-directs the Costs of War Project, argued in the report's conclusion that there is a need to keep the public more informed about the consequences of the seemingly endless wars in the Middle East in order to drive demands for improving U.S. foreign policy. "This update just scratches the surface of the human consequences of 17 years of war," Crawford wrote. "Too often, legislators, NGOs, and the news media that try to track the consequences of the wars are inhibited by governments determined to paint a rosy picture of perfect execution and progress."

George W. Bush Started an Immoral War. Now He's Getting the Liberty Medal

At least the timing is exquisite. Former President George W. Bush and his wife, Laura, are coming to Philadelphia on Sunday night to receive the National Constitution Center's much-ballyhooed Liberty Medal, which is supposed to be earmarked for leaders "who have strived to secure the blessings of liberty to people around the globe." This Veterans Day also marks the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I — the massive and utterly pointless global conflagration that killed tens of millions and alienated an entire generation for reasons that historians are still struggling to explain a century later. The immoral similarities between "The War to End All Wars" and George W. Bush's 2003 lie-and-propaganda-laden push to bring the "blessings of liberty" to Iraq at the tip of a Tomahawk missile are almost beyond parody. ...

It's a pretty safe bet that no one on the Constitution Center's panel that selected the Bushes for the now-tarnished Liberty Medal consulted with the Iraq-born novelist Sinan Antoon, who wrote in the New York Times in March that "Fifteen Years Ago, America Destroyed My Country" and noted that estimates of as many as one million dead mean the war "is often spoken of in the United States as a 'blunder,' or even a 'colossal mistake,' " but, he writes, "It was a crime." Nor did the panel likely investigate the "blessings" that America under Bush's leadership bestowed upon Lakhdar Boumediene, a Bosnian national scooped up in 2001 by U.S. intelligence on baseless allegations and flown to the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, where during nine years of imprisonment he said he was kept awake for days at a time, forced into uncomfortably painful positions, and brutally force-fed during a hunger strike. "These are things I do not want to write about," he wrote. "I want only to forget."

Apparently America only wants to forget the Bush years as well. (The Iraqi Antoon complained of our "mostly amnesiac citizenry" after watching Bush do a happy dance with liberal TV host Ellen DeGeneres.) The very different kind of awfulness of Donald Trump's presidency and the arrival of a new generation of voters make it important now to do something that wouldn't have been necessary just a decade ago — to remind everybody how the George W. Bush presidency wasn't just flawed but a moral low point in American history. ...

What we need to understand is that America's failure in not confronting the massive sins of the Bush years — powerful proof that there is zero accountability for elites in this country — is exactly what created the climate for Trump's warped presidency. A medal for George W. Bush means that nothing matters anymore — and that's a recipe for American autocracy. That a place calling itself the National Constitution Center rewards and enables all of this is infuriating.

Brennan and Clapper Should Not Escape Prosecution

Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley, the longtime chairman of the Judiciary Committee, made a dramatic announcement Nov. 1 that should lead to jail time for both former CIA Director John Brennan and former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. As reported, but widely overlooked amid the media focus on the midterm elections, Brennan ordered CIA hackers to intercept the emails of all potential or possible intelligence community whistleblowers who may have been trying to contact the congressional oversight committees, specifically to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Hacking the Senate’s computer system constitutes illegal use of a government computer, illegal espionage and wire fraud.

Brennan and Clapper, in 2014, ostensibly notified congressional overseers about this, but in a way that either tied senators’ hands or kept them in the dark. They classified the notifications. As a result, Grassley knew of the hacking but couldn’t say anything while senators on neither the Intelligence or Judiciary Committees didn’t know.

It’s a felony to classify a crime. It’s also a felony to classify something solely for the purpose of preventing embarrassment to the CIA.

For all of this—for the hacking in the first place, and then the classification of that criminal deed—both men belong in prison.

Oh my. The UK has dangerous lefty academics with impure thoughts.

University alerts students to danger of leftwing essay

An essay by a prominent leftwing academic that examines the ethics of socialist revolution has been targeted by a leading university using the government’s counter-terrorism strategy. Students at the University of Reading have been told to take care when reading an essay by the late Professor Norman Geras, in order to avoid falling foul of Prevent.

Third-year politics undergraduates have been warned not to access it on personal devices, to read it only in a secure setting, and not to leave it lying around where it might be spotted “inadvertently or otherwise, by those who are not prepared to view it”. The alert came after the text was flagged by the university as “sensitive” under the Prevent programme.

The essay, listed as “essential” reading for the university’s Justice and Injustice politics module last year, is titled Our Morals: The Ethics of Revolution. Geras was professor emeritus of government at the University of Manchester until his death in 2013. He rejected terrorism but argued that violence could be justified in the case of grave social injustices.

Waqas Tufail, a senior lecturer in criminology at Leeds Beckett University,, who wrote a report about Prevent last year, described the case at Reading as “hugely concerning”. Another Prevent expert, Fahid Qurashi of Staffordshire University, said the move showed how anti-terrorism legislation is “being applied far beyond its purview”.

Trump Whitaker pick may provoke constitutional crisis, Democrats say

Warning of an impending constitutional crisis if action is not taken to protect Robert Mueller, congressional Democrats demanded on Sunday that acting attorney general Matthew Whitaker recuse himself from overseeing the the special counsel’s investigation and warned of a showdown in Congress if Whitaker does not.

Top Democrats have written to the chief ethics officer of the justice department, asking for an official opinion on whether Whitaker, who has denied Russian interference in the 2016 election and described a strategy for derailing Mueller, should recuse himself from the Russia inquiry. Whitaker will be the first witness summoned by the House judiciary committee when Democrats take charge in January, incoming chairman Jerry Nadler said, calling Whitaker “a complete political lackey” and “a real threat to the integrity of that investigation”.

Donald Trump fired attorney general Jeff Sessions on Wednesday and appointed Whitaker, a former US attorney from Iowa and Sessions’ chief of staff, to be acting attorney general – a move Democrats called illegal. “We will certainly hold a hearing on that,” Nadler told CNN’s State of the Union. “We will summon or if necessary subpoena Mr Whitaker to ask him about his expressed hostility to the investigation – how he can possibly oversee it when he has come out and said that the investigation is invalid.”

Nadler said Whitaker held “ridiculous legal opinions” and concluded “he’s totally unqualified. The only qualifications seems to be that the president wants him to be a hatchet man to destroy Mueller’s investigation.” If Whitaker does not recuse himself, Senate Democrats plan to tie legislation protecting Mueller to a spending bill that must pass in order to prevent a government shutdown, minority leader Chuck Schumer told CNN.

White Republican Mississippi senator jokes about 'public hanging'

In the bleak history of lynchings in the deep south, Mississippi holds dubious pride of place. According to the Equal Justice Initiative, 654 lynchings of black people were carried out within its borders, dramatically more than any other state. It is within that context that a video posted on social media on Sunday and by Monday morning viewed almost 3m times landed with incendiary impact. It showed the appearance at a campaign stop earlier this month of Cindy Hyde-Smith, the white sitting US senator from Mississippi who is locked in a fight for the seat with a black Democrat, Mike Espy.


The senator scrambled to explain herself after the video went viral. She said it was an “exaggerated expression of regard” for the individual who had invited her to speak and “any attempt to turn this into a negative connotation is ridiculous”.

But talk of public hanging is rarely perceived as innocent in Mississippi, given the state’s sordid legacy. ...

Derrick Johnson, the national president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) who comes from Mississippi, denounced the remark of Hyde-Smith, who has been endorsed by Donald Trump, as “shameful”. He said it yet again proved “how Trump has created a climate that normalizes hateful, racist rhetoric from political candidates”.

An Illinois cop mistakenly shot and killed a black armed security guard

A cop mistakenly shot and killed an armed security guard while responding to a shooting at a club in a Chicago suburb early Sunday. Midlothian officials have released few details about the incident but confirmed that an armed security guard, 26-year-old Jemel Roberson, had been killed at Manny’s Blue Room Bar where at least four others had been shot. One of those four people is the suspected shooter. No other injuries are life-threatening.

"Everybody was screaming out, 'Security!' He was a security guard," witness Adam Harris told a local news station. "And they still did their job, and saw a black man with a gun, and basically killed him."

The police department said that the Illinois State Police Public Integrity Task Force will investigate the shooting.

Democrats Who Voted to Deregulate Wall Street Got Wiped Out in a Setback for Bank Lobbyists

The most high-profile bipartisan legislation of the Trump era turned out to be electoral poison — or at least, not a prophylactic — for the Senate Democrats who decided to support it, which could serve as a lesson for party leaders wishing to join with the president on other bills next year. The “Crapo bill,” a bank deregulation measure co-authored by Senate Banking Committee chair Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, and several centrist Democrats, passed Congress this spring with the help of 17 members of the Senate Democratic Caucus and 33 House Democrats.

In the 10 states where Donald Trump won in 2016 and a Democratic senator stood for re-election this year, the three who opposed the Crapo bill all won a greater share of votes in their states than the seven who voted for it. Senators voting “no” averaged 54.7 percent of the vote and won by 10 percentage points, while the “yes” votes averaged 48.1 percent and lost by 1.5 points. The only Republican who lost, Dean Heller of Nevada, also voted for the Crapo bill, and fell by 5 points to Jacky Rosen, who voted against the legislation in the House.

The Crapo bill rolled back a number of elements of the Dodd-Frank Act, including, in particular, stiffer regulations on banks that have between $50 billion and $250 billion in assets. A recent proposal from the Federal Reserve, using authority granted by the Crapo bill, expands that deregulation up to banks with as much as $700 billion in assets.

Senate Democratic supporters justified their votes by casting the legislation as a tweak to benefit community banks in small towns and rural areas, despite its greatest impact occurring well up the chain. In fact, the bill has already led to accelerated consolidation and further disappearance of community banks.

In reality, the Democrats’ rationale was likely more cynical: They thought supporting the bill would unlock campaign contributions from the financial industry. And they were right.



the horse race



Florida recount: Rick Scott accuses opponent Bill Nelson of voter fraud

Florida governor Rick Scott accused Bill Nelson, his opponent in a brutally tight US Senate race now subject to a recount, of trying to steal the seat by committing voter fraud. State elections and law enforcement officials say they have seen no evidence suggesting such allegations are true. Scott’s accusation appeared to be in keeping with a pattern of wild allegations about voter fraud used by Republicans, starting with Donald Trump, to contest election results they do not like.


Scott accused Nelson’s lawyers of trying to count ballots that have been thrown out and ballots cast by non-citizens. Lawyers for Nelson have gone to court to stop what they say is an effort by Republicans to stop some ballots being counted. ...

In Florida on Sunday, amid Republican claim and Democratic counter-claim, the Senate and governor’s race recounts ran into an early technical hiccup. In the state’s second most-populous county, the recount was delayed because of problems with the machines. Broward county was scheduled to begin counting about 700,000 ballots on Sunday morning, but a tested machine was not registering all ballots. Republican representatives asked that all machines be retested and county officials agreed.

The heavily Democratic county is one of two where Republicans have made allegations of possible ballot fraud, which appear to be unfounded.

Rick Scott wants cops to seize ballots and voting machines in the Florida recount

Florida Gov. Rick Scott filed lawsuits Sunday calling for voting machines to be impounded in two Democratic-leaning counties, after accusing his opponents of voter fraud. ... A machine recount was launched Saturday, as Scott’s lead shrunk to 12,500 votes, or 0.15 percent — below the threshold under which a recount is automatically triggered.

In the lawsuit filed Sunday, Scott called on a judge to issue an emergency injunction requiring sheriffs in Broward and Palm Beach counties to impound all voting machines and ballots whenever they’re not being used in the recount — until the end of the recount and any legal action relating to the closely fought race. ... A separate suit, filed late Saturday, asked that the judge order any ballots counted after noon on Saturday to be disregarded, alleging that votes in Broward County were counted after the noon deadline.

“Senator Nelson is clearly trying to commit fraud to try to win this election,” Scott said on Fox News Sunday. “That’s all this is.”

Nelson said the lawsuits represented a bid by Scott “to stop every legal vote from being counted,” and showed that his opponent was panicking. Scott had seen his slim lead shrink even further as mail-in and provisional ballots rolled in. “He's doing this for the same reason he's been making false and panicked claims about voter fraud: He's worried that when all the votes are counted, he'll lose this election,” Nelson said.

‘Moderation’ and the Midterms

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin (11/7/18) had some familiar-sounding advice for Democrats based on the results of the midterm elections:

  • “Be really wary of nominating a Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) type who is going to scare moderates.”
  • “In states where being ‘middle of the road’ is no insult, it’s a good idea to go with a moderate.”
  • “Moderates don’t have to be boring, and outside of deep-blue enclaves, it’s entirely logical to avoid overreaching.”

“Move to the right” is always corporate media’s advice for Democrats—win or lose. But did the 2018 midterms really demonstrate the virtues of moderation?

Well, the worst news for Democrats on Tuesday was the loss of three Senate seats held by incumbent Dems: North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp, Indiana’s Joe Donnelly and Missouri’s Claire McCaskill. As it happens, these are the Democrats who vote second-, third- and fifth-most often in line with Donald Trump’s preferences. Heitkamp ran an ad bragging that she “voted over half the time with President Trump.” A Donnelly spot featured Trump saying, “Sen. Donnelly, thank you very much.”  A McCaskill ad declared that she was “not one of those crazy Democrats.” They sound pretty “moderate,” right? Yet they not only lost, they lost big—by 11-, 7- and 6-point margins, respectively.



the evening greens


Fire chief: climate change helped make California wildfires more devastating

As fire officials from across Ventura and Los Angeles county gathered to speak to reporters on Sunday, beyond the charred and smoldering hills where the Woolsey fire burned through the weekend, the wind was already starting to pick up. As Los Angeles fire chief Daryl Osby took the podium, strong gusts swirled smoke, ash and dust through grey skies. Along with updates on progress in fighting the fire, he said this blaze signified a shift: fire crews are now facing the most erratic and challenging fight of their lives.

Climate change, Osby said, was undeniably a part of why the fires burning in northern and southern California were more devastating and destructive than in years past. ...

“The fact of the matter is if you look at the state of California, climate challenge is happening statewide,” Osby said, adding that “it is going to be here for the foreseeable future”. Drought conditions have increasingly affected the state over the past decade, causing erratic fire behavior and making efforts to contain the flames much more difficult. The Woolsey fire, which was only 10% contained on Sunday, has burned more than 87,000 acres in three days. More than 177 homes have been lost and officials said that number was expected to rise rapidly.

The fire season, which started in early summer, is poised to break records for a second year in a row. In July California’s outgoing governor, Jerry Brown, referred to megafires as the “new normal”. ...

According to Cal Fire chief Scott Jalbert, there was a window on Saturday when the winds died down and firefighters were able to make some progress. But with strong winds projected through the beginning of the new week, containing the fire will be more difficult.


The Zinke effect: how the US interior department became a tool of big business

Since his first day on the job, when he surrounded himself with a National Park Service police escort and rode through Washington DC on a white-nosed horse named Tonto, the US interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, has exhibited a flair for ostentation. Not long after taking office in March 2017, the new secretary started flying a special flag, adorned with the agency’s bison seal, above the interior department’s elegant New Deal-era headquarters. At a cost of more than $2,000, he also commissioned commemorative coins emblazoned with his name to hand out to visitors and staff. He replaced the doors in his office to the tune of more than $130,000, and installed a hunting-themed arcade game in the department’s cafeteria.

Yet to some longtime civil servants working at interior headquarters, this flashy behavior was merely a distraction from graver concerns. “There was a lot of eye-rolling and embarrassment about the flag and the horse and all of the ridiculousness,” said a former senior employee who left last year and requested anonymity for fear of retaliation. For some, the dominant emotional tenor at the time was “fear and anxiety” as Zinke and his team ushered in “dramatic change” at the interior department. “All the new administration was interested in was their checklist for dismantling regulations and weakening environmental and land use protections,” said the former staffer. “Instead of asking why a senator or lobbyist or CEO was asking for a special favor and whether or not it was allowed under the law, this administration wanted to know why the special favor wasn’t already done and which deep state employee was standing in the way.” ...

Zinke rapidly installed a slew of conservative operatives and industry sympathizers in key positions throughout the agency. Because these senior advisers, counselors and other appointees are rarely subject to Senate approval, few people know their names. They nevertheless wield immense power and are responsible for much of the day-to-day work at the interior department. Hundreds of pages of correspondence and calendars reviewed by the Guardian and Pacific Standard show how Zinke and his top aides have favored corporate and conservative calls to prioritize resource extraction at the expense of conservation, while consistently delivering on industry desires – despite sometimes running afoul of conflict of interest rules. ...

Zinke is now facing a swirl of misconduct allegations, and Trump has said he would make a decision on his future at the department as soon as this week. But whatever Zinke’s fate, he has stocked the department with a slate of committed conservative appointees who will continue to remake the agency in the image of the Trump administration. “They are undermining the department’s mission at every turn,” said one current high-level civil servant, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation. “I have been here a pretty long time and seen different administrations from both sides of the aisle,” the civil servant added, “but this is the worst I have ever seen.”

Troubled waters: pollution threatens world's largest lake


Also of Interest

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

Trump and Big Media: Clash or Collusion?

New Border Wall Will Destroy Butterfly Center, Historic Chapel, and Texas State Park

House Committee Leadership Is About to Get a Lot Less White. What That Means Remains to Be Seen.

The Best Way To Honor War Veterans Is To Stop Creating Them

Botched Israeli raid in Gaza sparks violent exchanges

Did Fossil Fuel Firms Completely Dominate Climate Change Issues on the 2018 Ballot?

The Horrors Humans Have Inflicted on the Planet’s Wilderness

How Texas’ oil fracking boom tore a “highway of death” through this tiny town


A Little Night Music

Robert Johnson - Come on in my Kitchen

Robert Johnson - Hellhound on my Trail

Robert Johnson - When You Got a Good Friend

Robert Johnson - Love In Vain

Robert Johnson - They're Red Hot

Robert Johnson - Honeymoon Blues

Robert Johnson - Phonograph Blues

Robert Johnson - If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day

Robert Johnson - I'm A Steady Rollin' Man


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divineorder's picture

Mountains east and west of SF both got some, we got several inches down here in town, and hopefully the reservoirs for drinking water will get a good drink from this.

===
Wondering if anyone had seen this:

Veterans: Honor vets, military by cutting military and nation's dependence on oil

Joe Tate is a Marine Corps veteran, Sarah Barbo is an Army veteran, and Tripp Adams is a Navy and Army veteran. They are members of Truman National Security Project. Views expressed are their own.

...

Heh.


Caitlin Johnstone Retweeted

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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.

joe shikspack's picture

@divineorder

it's nice that the military is using solar panels now to charge batteries. sadly, it's a drop in the bucket.

perhaps the best way that the u.s. military - the world's largest carbon polluter - could reduce it's use of oil would be for the u.s. government to cease its imperialist wars and learn to live like a citizen of the world rather than trying to dominate it.

not that you didn't know that, but, you know, just sayin' ...

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divineorder's picture

interesting.

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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.

Benny's picture

This was the first Robert Johnson song I heard...via Cream. But here's the original:

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One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will. To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.--Tennyson

Azazello's picture

@Benny
I'm getting old, my memory is foggy. I know it wasn't until a couple years later that one of my friends got that first Robert Johnson LP, was it on Columbia records? That might have been after the Stones released Love in Vain.
Keb Mo did a good job with that song.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ei23IyyKO8Q width:400 height:240]
Here's Keith Richards' best RJ imitation.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZK9dhN4zqgE width:400 height:240]

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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

@Benny

i heard a whole bunch of bluesmen before i discovered robert johnson, thanks to the folk music boom of the 60's. mississippi john hurt, skip james, bukka white, fred mcdowell, rev. gary davis, brownie and sonny and a bunch of others were all folks that i was listening to before somebody loaned me the "king of the delta blues singers" lp.

i was really pleased when the cleaned-up versions of johnson's music became available on cd and i was able to hear things that i'd never heard before.

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@gjohnsit link

A majority of Democrats believe Republicans are racist, bigoted and sexist, according to a new poll.

The Axios poll published Monday found that 61 percent of those who identified as Democrats responded that they think Republicans are "racist/bigoted/sexist," while 31 percent of Republicans surveyed said they feel the same way about Democrats.

Additionally, the poll found that 54 percent of Democrats surveyed said they see Republicans as "ignorant," 44 percent said they see them as "spiteful" and 21 percent said they think Republicans are "evil."

Of the Republicans surveyed, 49 percent said they think Democrats are "ignorant," 54 percent see Democrats as "spiteful" and 23 percent called Democrats "evil."

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@gjohnsit

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

joe shikspack's picture

@gjohnsit

if 20%+ of people who associate with either party describe each other as "evil," you have to wonder where these ideas are coming from. well, actually you don't have to wonder. just check out what's on the teevee and radio of the partisan media.

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joe shikspack's picture

@gjohnsit

pretty awful. i wonder how long it will be before southern california is virtually uninhabitable.

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@joe shikspack
I think it said that LA would become uninhabitable in the early 2030s. My guess is that it was optimistic.

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On to Biden since 1973

Most of the forest in California is Federally mismanaged by Trump's inept Administration.

There is no reason for these massive, deadly and costly forest fires in California except that forest management is so poor. Billions of dollars are given each year, with so many lives lost, all because of gross mismanagement of the forests. Remedy now, or no more Fed payments!

California owns something like 3% of the forest land, the rest is Federal and private property. It's going to be a long, awful 2 years.

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Beware the bullshit factories.

joe shikspack's picture

@Timmethy2.0

presumably, the preznit would tell you that those bad, bad librul environmentalists have been stopping the federal government from clearing the excess fuel vegetation with their lawsuits and their demands for environmental impact statements.

of course, the areas where housing exists are generally not within national forests or parks, so the problem of excess fuel causing losses of housing and infrastructure is largely a problem of the private sector.

heh, and the problem of climate change making these megafires more likely is also a largely a problem of the private sector and the failure of regulation (largely thanks to the private sector's ability to bribe government officials).

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Raggedy Ann's picture

Indeed ~ as DO reported ~ we got snow - about 4” at my house. I’m about 60 miles south of him. I got a snow day, yippee!

The rethugs are freaking out as they are losing elections. Fake vote! What a bunch of babies!

Staying warm and enjoying the moisture!

Have a beautiful evening, folks! Pleasantry

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

divineorder's picture

@Raggedy Ann
My wife jakkalbessie looked at her journal and said it snowed this time last year as well.

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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.

Raggedy Ann's picture

@divineorder
I just hope the snow continues. Last year we became so dry!
Have a good one! Wink

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

divineorder's picture

@Raggedy Ann

Hope this season will be different.

https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/ shows NM is still in serious drought especially the 4 corners area. Apparently maps will update on Tuesday.

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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.

Benny's picture

@divineorder We got snow last week and today in Central IL. It's a couple of weeks too early!

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One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will. To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.--Tennyson

divineorder's picture

@Benny

Glad you got some snow.

We are supposed to have record low temps tonight.

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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

@Raggedy Ann

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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.

joe shikspack's picture

@Raggedy Ann

yay! i'm glad that you guys are getting some water out there. we had our first hard frost over the weekend here and it has been raining a lot, the grass is still green.

enjoy the snow and have a good one!

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Bollox Ref's picture

meant to be the smiley face on the Saudi jackboot, isn't working out.

And to think that the more restrained Hashemites used to control the holy places within the Arabian peninsula.

(Edited)

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

joe shikspack's picture

@Bollox Ref

heh, yep, it looks like the "great reformer" image was pretty thin window dressing.

on the other hand, without the ambitious mr. erdogan, perhaps the window dressing would have worked. it's kind of funny watching the powers-that-be trying to calm down erdogan, letting him know that he isn't going to get the ottoman empire back this time.

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divineorder's picture

jb and I sold our house, put everything in storage and bought a one way ticket to Hong Kong.
We were fed up with the changes in education and thought we might teach 'over there' somewhere.

We rode the trans-manchurian/trans-siberian train as far as Irkutsk, Siberia. A doc we met on the train let us sleep on the floor of his hotel room since we had no reservations and didn't know where else to stay. We went to the hotel bar to see if there was anything to eat and saw a big blond Yeltsin looking guy with a gun holster on his hip sitting up at the bar. We decided not to hang around.

We had considered going out to Lake Baikal but back when we went there was not much tourist infrastructure and we felt it would probably be too expensive for our budget. We would have loved to have seen the Baikal seal! What an amazing treasure that lake is.

Was not aware that Lake Baikal had become such a destination, with all that trash as shown in your featured vid.

Interesting about the defunct paper mill, the toxic mess left behind, and the statement that the Russian gov had budgeted a lower end amount for it because sanctions left it stretched for cash.

Thanks for sharing that.

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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.

joe shikspack's picture

@divineorder

you guys have really had some interesting adventures. thanks for sharing!

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dystopian's picture

@divineorder @divineorder Yeah that Baikal Seal is really something special. How many freshwater seals are there endemic to one lake in the world? I hear they are in trouble too. Due to the pollution problem. From 8 to 80 hotels without treatment? What do they think it is the ocean?

The Baikal Teal is named after the lake/area, but migratory and not endemic. It is duck #1 according to taxonomists. All ducks stem from Baikal Teal. Of the living ducks it is actually in a whole 'nother world than all others. The seminal duck. Hybrid ducks of other species are known to occasional revert to the ancestral original recessive genes and display a face and head pattern very similar to that of the Baikal Teal. Fooling many a birder. Baikal Teal is one of the most beautiful ducks in the world. There are some U.S. records, most from Alaska and California, which are true wild Asian vagrants (unlike the NYC Mandarin lately).

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We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein

divineorder's picture

@dystopian

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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.

Lookout's picture

but we've gotten plenty of rain...over 2 inches today, and more rain for the next couple of days.

The legend has it Robert Johnson met the devil at the crossroads and sold his soul for his guitar skills. https://rolfpotts.com/robert-johnson-sold-his-soul-to-the-devil-in-rosed...

He sure had skill.

"A senior Russian diplomat said Monday that Moscow is trying to be an Afghan peace broker because it considers the U.S. has failed" https://www.yahoo.com/news/envoy-russia-plays-afghanistan-broker-due-us-...

Let's see 17 years there and what have we accomplished? Isn't it interesting how Al Qaeda morphed into the Taliban? Now we support Al Qaeda to fight against Assad?

Italy is holding peace talks about Libya too https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/nov/12/italy-summit-palermo-futur...

Wouldn't it be nice to give peace a chance?

Thanks for all the news and music joe, and a good evening to all.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

divineorder's picture

@Lookout

Wouldn't it be nice to give peace a chance?

Yes it would!

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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.

snoopydawg's picture

@Lookout

Just how much rain do you get every year? If you have had enough of it feel free to send some west.

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

Lookout's picture

@snoopydawg

I think Gulfgal gets 60+ in her corner of NC.

Wish we could send some rain out to you...& CA too. There is some thought that the five eyes are trying to manipulate weather. Marilyn thinks so too.
https://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/
Ends up, it doesn't look like a good thing. Seems like every time we try to manipulate the natural system, Mother Nature bites us in the ass.

I think we can plan on wild weather the rest of our lives...flood to drought, heat wave to freeze. We won't just leave it in the ground and it spells our demise.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

joe shikspack's picture

@Lookout

yep. robert johnson was a kid hanging around picking up licks from the older guys playing in the delta region. they say that he disappeared for a while and when he came back he was playing at a much more advanced level, with a fully-formed style of his own. whether he made a deal at the crossroads or went off to woodshed fanatically for a while is a matter of conjecture - his mastery of the delta blues is undeniable, though.

yep, there are a lot of nations now with some skin in the game that are ready to take up leadership in the peace process to end the war on terra that is dumping refugees on their doorsteps and endangering their countries. the u.s. empire has really dropped the ball.

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GreatLakeSailor's picture

“He’d seen Abu Ghraib, renditions, death penalties, and he felt comforted by Trump. He could not understand why this was happening to him.”

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Compensated Spokes Model for Big Poor.

joe shikspack's picture

@GreatLakeSailor

yeah, that line really jumped off the page at me, too. i guess it's one of those "do as i say not as i do, junior" moments for the empire and its satrapies.

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lotlizard's picture

@joe shikspack  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quod_licet_Iovi,_non_licet_bovi

MbS thought he was one of the gods alongside the U.S. and Israel, and doesn’t understand why he’s being shooed back to the “Not OK Corral.”

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divineorder's picture

turned right leaning. Go figure.

Kyrsten Sinema Declared Winner in Arizona Senate Race

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/12/us/kyrsten-sinema-arizona-senator.html

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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.

Azazello's picture

@divineorder
I'm overjoyed.

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

divineorder's picture

@Azazello

I'm overjoyed.

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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.

CS in AZ's picture

@Azazello

that you will be happy about I think; you’ve probably heard but at the moment and for the past two or three days, the despicable Rodney Glassman has fallen to third place for az corporation commission. If that trend continues to hold, he will lose again. It’s close and the top two get seats. And one of the democrats is now in the lead. If she wins I’m not confident this will keep my gas bill from going up, but I would still enjoy seeing Glassman lose. It will be funny if the republicans reject him too. What a loser.

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Azazello's picture

@CS in AZ
Ours did. The rate increase was approved awhile back and went into effect last month; less usage, higher bill. Your average voter doesn't understand the importance of the corporation commission. Maybe Rodney Glassman will switch parties again and the Dims will run him against Col. McMartha for senate.

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

CS in AZ's picture

@Azazello

Last month our gas bill from southwest gas was $14 and change; this month it was $17 and change. So yes it did by about three dollars. We did turn on the gas heater for the first time within that timeframe however, so it didn’t seem odd or excessive. And nope I didn’t notice it. Our gas and electric bills both fluctuate wildly with the seasons. Gas is about $12 at the trough, and can be up to $150 or more when it gets really cold. So honestly, relatively minor rate changes do fly mostly under the radar.

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joe shikspack's picture

@divineorder

assuming that a fake republican is better than a real one. or maybe she'll surprise us all and revert to her green ways. (pffffftttt!!!)

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CS in AZ's picture

@joe shikspack

I hear she even invoked McCain in her victory speech tonight. She will continue in his tradition of bucking her party and will end up voting with the republicans more often than not. She’s still better than Sally McMuffin. Now people are wondering if gov duchey will give McMuffin the senate seat currently being warmed by Jon Kyl. It would not surprise me if he does, given how close the race was.

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joe shikspack's picture

@CS in AZ

heh, instead of giving mcnuthin the seat, maybe douchey should give it to the green candidate (angela green) and wait for her to evolve. Smile

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Azazello's picture

@CS in AZ
to run against her.

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

snoopydawg's picture

Israel bombs TV station in Gaza

Heh, maybe Russia could put a few S-300's in Gaza to keep Israel from slaughtering civilians. Too bad that those brave Israeli troops can't fight in the wars this country commits for Israel.

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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

Heh, maybe Russia could put a few S-300's in Gaza to keep Israel from slaughtering civilians.

that's why israel has a couple of hundred nukes.

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dystopian's picture

Thanks for the Robert Johnson... what a pioneer he was.

Geo.W. Bush getting a Liberty Award??? Next you're going to tell me they gave Obama a Nobel Peace prize in hopes he would scale back extra-judicial killings and not bomb 7 countries. Didn't Hillary just get an award too? Was it for excellence in handling classified top secret data and rigging primaries maybe? Adleson's wife is getting some National award for all she has done for buying elections, er, uh, I mean for us. It was a just a teensie tiny bit out of my range, I think 100 mil donation in the mid-terms is the goin' rate now. Folks should have got in on Obama's special.

Finally someone, I don't care who, even if it is Grassley, calls out Brennan and Clapper. They are at the core of the Russiagate hoax, since they were the ones with the real legal
responsibility to shut the damn thing down out of the gate. Their politics got in their way, and knowing it all, that they would win.

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We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein

joe shikspack's picture

@dystopian

Geo.W. Bush getting a Liberty Award???

heh. yeah, it kind of makes you wonder what sort of award that the powers-that-be will be able to arrange for trump after he's out of office to normalize the carnage that he has caused.

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It must have been Debbie. No evidence my ass!

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On to Biden since 1973