The Evening Blues - 4-12-19



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Debbie Davies

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features blues guitarist Debbie Davies. Enjoy!

Debbie Davies - Down At the Chicken Shack

"Successful crime is dignified with the name of virtue; the good become the slaves of the wicked; might makes right; fear silences the power of the law."

-- Seneca the Younger


News and Opinion

The Martyrdom of Julian Assange

The arrest Thursday of Julian Assange eviscerates all pretense of the rule of law and the rights of a free press. The illegalities, embraced by the Ecuadorian, British and U.S. governments, in the seizure of Assange are ominous. They presage a world where the internal workings, abuses, corruption, lies and crimes, especially war crimes, carried out by corporate states and the global ruling elite will be masked from the public. They presage a world where those with the courage and integrity to expose the misuse of power will be hunted down, tortured, subjected to sham trials and given lifetime prison terms in solitary confinement. They presage an Orwellian dystopia where news is replaced with propaganda, trivia and entertainment. The arrest of Assange, I fear, marks the official beginning of the corporate totalitarianism that will define our lives. ...

I am sure government attorneys are skillfully doing what has become de rigueur for the corporate state, using specious legal arguments to eviscerate enshrined rights by judicial fiat. This is how we have the right to privacy with no privacy. This is how we have “free” elections funded by corporate money, covered by a compliant corporate media and under iron corporate control. This is how we have a legislative process in which corporate lobbyists write the legislation and corporate-indentured politicians vote it into law. This is how we have the right to due process with no due process. This is how we have a government—whose fundamental responsibility is to protect citizens—that orders and carries out the assassination of its own citizens such as the radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and his 16-year-old son. This is how we have a press legally permitted to publish classified information and a publisher sitting in jail in Britain awaiting extradition to the United States and a whistleblower, Chelsea Manning, in a jail cell in the United States.

Britain will use as its legal cover for the arrest the extradition request from Washington based on conspiracy charges. This legal argument, in a functioning judiciary, would be thrown out of court. Unfortunately, we no longer have a functioning judiciary. We will soon know if Britain as well lacks one. ...

If Assange is extradited and tried, it will create a legal precedent that will terminate the ability of the press, which Trump repeatedly has called “the enemy of the people,” to hold power accountable. The crimes of war and finance, the persecution of dissidents, minorities and immigrants, the pillaging by corporations of the nation and the ecosystem and the ruthless impoverishment of working men and women to swell the bank accounts of the rich and consolidate the global oligarchs’ total grip on power will not only expand, but will no longer be part of public debate. First Assange. Then us.

Chomsky: Arrest of Assange Is “Scandalous” and Highlights Shocking Extraterritorial Reach of U.S.

How Julian Assange’s arrest could test the First Amendment

For years, press freedom advocates have feared that the U.S. government might prosecute Julian Assange for publishing classified information under a century-old law originally aimed at spies: the Espionage Act. But the Department of Justice threw a legal curveball on Thursday morning after the WikiLeaks founder was arrested in London. The indictment made public soon afterward tiptoed around Assange’s publication of leaked national security cables, instead charging him in a conspiracy to hack Pentagon computer systems.

The filing cast Assange as an active participant in then-Army intelligence officer Chelsea Manning’s 2010 theft of classified national security cables—rather than a passive recipient. While that will likely limit the direct impact of the case on other news organizations, media law experts told VICE News that it could be just the opening salvo in a longer-term legal strategy by federal prosecutors.

Allegations filed in federal court in Virginia claim that Assange went far beyond normal reporting methods. After Manning already leaked Assange hundreds of thousands of classified records, the indictment argues, he assisted her in attempting to crack a Pentagon computer network password in the hope of obtaining additional documents. ... The indictment makes several references to WikiLeaks’ publication of the classified cables. But it emphasizes Assange’s efforts to aid Manning, without explicitly stating whether they were successful. ...

Despite the limited scope of the charges, however, media law experts cautioned that the indictment could be the first step in a drawn-out legal battle. ... “We don’t know if any other shoes are going to drop,” said Jonathan Peters, a media law professor at the University of Georgia. “They could drop more indictments. “They could use this one to gather more evidence and put together more charges.” That would hold the potential to lead the legal battle into more dangerous territory for other media outlets. The indictment on Thursday pointed to how WikiLeaks “publicly solicited submissions of classified, censored, and other restricted material” and then “took measures to conceal Manning” as its source. They are textbook reporting practices.

“While the Trump administration has so far not attempted to explicitly declare the act of publishing illegal, a core part of its argument would criminalize many common journalist-source interactions that reporters rely on all the time,” Trevor Timm, executive director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, said in a statement. “Requesting more documents from a source, using an encrypted chat messenger, or trying to keep a source’s identity anonymous are not crimes; they are vital to the journalistic process.”

Here's the Interview With Glenn Greenwald About Julian Assange It Seems NPR Didn't Want You To Hear

After a "contentious" live on-air interview with journalist Glenn Greenwald during NPR's "Morning Edition" morning was apparently scrubbed from its online version of the show, several people uploaded the deleted portion to the web so that people could hear what it seemed the public radio broadcaster did not want people to hear. ...

Among those to post an upload was freelance journalist Dan Froomkin, founder of the White House Watch website. Listen:

Hillary Clinton: Assange must 'answer for what he has done' in wake of arrest

Hillary Clinton said the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, whose website published hacked emails from her 2016 presidential campaign, must “answer for what he has done” in the wake of his dramatic arrest on Thursday. ...

“I think it is clear from the indictment that came out it’s not about punishing journalism,” Clinton said at an event in New York.

Clinton said the issue was not one of press freedom, but “about assisting the hacking of a military computer to steal information from the United States government”.

Pilger: What got Assange into trouble was exposing the homicidal nature of American wars

The U.S. Government’s Indictment of Julian Assange Poses Grave Threats to Press Freedom

The indictment of Julian Assange unsealed today by the Trump Justice Department poses grave threats to press freedoms, not only in the U.S. but around the world. The charging document and accompanying extradition request from the U.S. government, used by the U.K. police to arrest Assange once Ecuador officially withdrew its asylum protection, seeks to criminalize numerous activities at the core of investigative journalism.

So much of what has been reported today about this indictment has been false. Two facts in particular have been utterly distorted by the DOJ and then misreported by numerous media organizations.

The first crucial fact about the indictment is that its key allegation — that Assange did not merely receive classified documents from Chelsea Manning but tried to help her crack a password in order to cover her tracks — is not new. It was long known by the Obama DOJ and was explicitly part of Manning’s trial, yet the Obama DOJ — not exactly renowned for being stalwart guardians of press freedoms — concluded that it could not and should not prosecute Assange because indicting him would pose serious threats to press freedom. In sum, today’s indictment contains no new evidence or facts about Assange’s actions; all of it has been known for years.

The other key fact being widely misreported is that the indictment accuses Assange of trying to help Manning obtain access to document databases to which she had no valid access: i.e., hacking rather than journalism. But the indictment alleges no such thing. Rather, it simply accuses Assange of trying to help Manning log into the Defense Department’s computers using a different username so that she could maintain her anonymity while downloading documents in the public interest and then furnish them to WikiLeaks to publish. In other words, the indictment seeks to criminalize what journalists are not only permitted but ethically required to do: take steps to help their sources maintain their anonymity.

That’s why the indictment poses such a grave threat to press freedom. It characterizes as a felony many actions that journalists are not just permitted but required to take in order to conduct sensitive reporting in the digital age. But because the DOJ issued a press release with a headline that claimed that Assange was accused of “hacking” crimes, media outlets mindlessly repeated this claim even though the indictment contains no such allegation. It merely accuses Assange of trying to help Manning avoid detection. That’s not “hacking.” That’s called a core obligation of journalism. ...

The indictment tries to cast itself as charging Assange not with journalistic activities but with criminal hacking. But it is a thinly disguised pretext for prosecuting Assange for publishing the U.S. government’s secret documents while pretending to make it about something else.

How You Can Be Certain That The US Charge Against Assange Is Fraudulent

An unsealed indictment from the Trump administration’s District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, accompanied by an extradition request, charges Assange with “conspiracy to commit computer intrusion for agreeing to break a password to a classified U.S. government computer” during Chelsea Manning’s 2010 leak of government documents exposing US war crimes. This charge is premised on a fraudulent and manipulative distortion of reality, and you may be one hundred percent certain of it. ...

The facts of the case have not changed, the information hasn’t changed, only the narrative has changed. In 2010 the United States opened a secret grand jury in Virginia to investigate whether Assange and WikiLeaks could be prosecuted for the publication of the Manning leaks, and then-Attorney General Eric Holder announced that the Obama administration was conducting “an active, ongoing criminal investigation” into the matter. The Trump administration has not turned up any new evidence that the Obama administration was unable to find in this active, ongoing criminal investigation (US government surveillance has surely acquired some new tricks since 2010, but time travel isn’t one of them), and indeed it does not claim to have turned up any new evidence.


This is all information that the Obama administration had access to (journalist Tim Shorrock observed that the alleged 2010 correspondence between Assange and Manning “looks like it came straight from NSA surveillance” of the two), yet it chose not to do what the Trump administration is currently doing because it would endanger press freedoms. This means that nothing has changed since that time besides (A) the fact that there is now a more overtly tyrannical administration in place, and (B) the fact that the public has been paced into accepting the prosecution of Assange by years of establishment propaganda. Nothing has changed since 2010 apart from a more thoroughly propagandized populace and a more depraved US government, which means that this new charge that the Trump administration issued in December 2017 is based on nothing other than a diminished respect for press freedoms and an increased willingness to crush them. This makes it fraudulent and illegitimate, and the precedent that is being set by it should be rejected and opposed by everyone in the world who claims to support the existence of a free press which is capable of holding power to account.

Pompeo flounders on why annexation is good for the Golan but not for Crimea

Under intense questioning about why the Israeli annexation of the Golan Heights was good but the Russian seizure of Crimea was bad, the US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, told senators that there was an “international law doctrine” which would be explained to them later.

It turned out there was no doctrine. The state department’s clarification of Pompeo’s remarks contained no reference to one, and experts on international law said that none exists.

Donald Trump’s decision last month to recognise Israeli sovereignty over the Golan, captured from Syria in 1967, took the state department by surprise, and it has been struggling to catch up since. ...

A state department tweet on Tuesday cited Pompeo as saying: “The Trump administration sees the world as it is, not as we wish it would be. Basing policy on reality, we recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital [and] Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights.” Such statements have raised fears that the Trump administration is planning to accept the end of international norms and usher in a might-makes-right contest between nation states. ...

In Senate hearings on Tuesday and Wednesday, Pompeo refused to say whether the US would recognise Israeli annexation of the West Bank.

Chomsky: Trump Radically Interfered with Israel’s Election to Help Re-elect Netanyahu

"International Justice" firms up its place in the Department of Cruel Hoaxes.

Following Trump Administration's Bullying, ICC Judges Reject Probe Into War Crimes in Afghanistan

The International Criminal Court announced Friday that it rejected a probe into possible war crimes and crimes against humanity in Afghanistan, including those committed by U.S. forces.

The decision is "a shocking abandonment of the victims which will weaken the court's already questionable credibility,” said Biraj Patnaik, South Asia director at Amnesty International.


Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda requested the investigation in 2017, a move which was praised by human rights organizations. At the time, Bensouda said there was a "reasonable basis to believe" that war crimes were committed by the Taliban, Afghan National Security Forces, U.S. armed forces, and the CIA.

In retaliation for Bensouda's action, the Trump administration last week revoked her entry visa. ...

"Coming so closely on the heels of a series of unhinged attacks by senior U.S. officials, and following long and unexplainable delays up to this point, the decision ultimately will be seen as a craven capitulation to Washington's bullying and threats," said Patnaik.

The U.S.-based Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) similarly found the court's decision appalling.

"With its decision today, the International Criminal Court sends a dangerous message: that bullying wins and that the powerful won't be held to account," said Katherine Gallagher, senior staff attorney at CCR, who filed victims-representations to support the probe.

UK stands down 6,000 no-deal Brexit staff - after spending £1.5bn

The government has stood down an army of 6,000 civil servants who had been preparing for a no-deal Brexit, at an estimated cost of £1.5bn. The civil servants who had been seconded from elsewhere will now return to their normal duties, but there is no clear role for an estimated 4,500 new recruits after article 50 was extended until Halloween. More than 16,000 civil servants in total have been working on Brexit.

The Labour party’s Hilary Benn said it was a “costly price” to pay for Theresa May’s belligerent insistence of keeping a no-deal on the table. “It was important to plan for all contingencies, but this is the huge cost of the prime minister repeatedly saying: ‘My deal or no deal’ when she knew that leaving without a deal was not in the national interest. This is one example of how Brexit is proving to be very costly for our country,” said Benn, chair of the influential Brexit select committee.

The Cabinet Office made the decision to reverse the no-deal plans at a meeting on Thursday morning.

Suspect arrested in connection with fires at black churches in Louisiana

A suspect has been arrested after three churches with majority African American congregations in central Louisiana were destroyed by fire in little more than a week. At a Thursday news conference, the suspect was identified as Holden Matthews, a 21-year-old white man, and the son of a sheriff’s deputy in the parish. He faces three counts of simple arson of a religious building. ...

Authorities said they had not yet made a determination as to whether the fires were inspired by racial bias or hate, and that any application of hate crime statutes would be left to FBI and other federal officials. ...

According to his arrest warrant, Matthews used his debit card and ID to purchase a gas can, a 10-pack of automotive shop towels and a lighter on or around 25 March. Investigators found the remains of the same brand of gas can at the scene of the 4 April fire at Mount Pleasant Baptist Church. ...

The Daily Beast reported that a Facebook page appearing to belong to Matthews showed he was “active in pagan and black metal pages, and that he commented on two memes about far-right former neo-Nazi metal musician Varg Vikernes, who served 15 years in prison for killing a fellow metal musician and burning churches in Norway”.

This is kind of amusing in a sad sort of way.

Rep. Katie Porter Uses Basic Budget Math to Expose Jamie Dimon on Starvation Wages at JPMorgan Chase


During a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Wednesday, Rep. Katie Porter used the financial struggles of one of her constituents to grill JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon over the vast worker-executive pay gap and low wages at his bank.

Porter, a Democrat from California, outlined the monthly expenses of her constituent, a single-mother working full-time as a JPMorgan Chase teller for $16.50 an hour.

After paying for rent on her one-bedroom apartment, food, utilities, child care for her daughter, and other basic needs, Porter estimated that her constituent has a $567 budget shortfall each month.

When Porter asked Dimon—who earns $31 million a year—how his employee should manage this shortfall while working 40 hours a week at his bank, the Wall Street CEO had no answer.

Keiser Report: Bad Capitalists and Their Malinvestments

Bolstered by Trump Tax Scam, Number of US Corporations Paying 'Not a Dime' in Federal Taxes Doubled in 2018

A new analysis out Thursday shows that tax policy under the Trump administration is benefitting large corporations to such a degree that twice as many large companies will pay nothing in federal taxes for 2018 compared to previous years.

The report by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, which comes less than a week before tax day in the United States on April 15, found that 60 companies—including Amazon, Netflix, Activision Blizzard, General Motors, and IBM—used "a diverse array of legal tax breaks" to bring their federal tax liability to zero.

"For years, corporations have manipulated the system to avoid paying taxes, and it's clear that the 2017 tax law did nothing to change this," said Matthew Gardner, a senior fellow at ITEP and lead author of the report.


Elizabeth Warren Has a Novel Idea: Tax Corporations on the Profits They Claim Publicly

Sen. Elizabeth Warren is unveiling a new way to tax corporations: Take them at their word. Due to the vagaries of American corporate accounting, companies routinely tell investors on conference calls that they made billions in profit over the previous quarter, then turn around and tell the IRS that, actually, they made no money at all, so they don’t owe any taxes. Warren’s plan would tax those companies on the profits they claim publicly.

The proposal, called the “Real Corporate Profits Tax,” would only apply to companies that report more than $100 million in worldwide profits, and every dollar above $100 million would be taxed at 7 percent.

Warren’s new corporate profits tax plan is the latest in a series of sweeping, detailed policy proposals. Her platform includes a plan to introduce universal child care, which would be paid for with a new tax on multimillionaires, breaking up big tech monopolies, and combating corruption in government, among other positions that have largely been adopted by Democratic contenders, such as Medicare for All.

In a Medium post outlining the plan, the lawmaker explained the reasoning behind creating a new marginal tax: Raising the corporate tax rate alone isn’t enough when the corporate tax code is “so littered” with loopholes. “We need corporate tax reform, but we also need to recognize that enormous companies with armies of lawyers and accountants will always try to exploit any deductions and exemptions that remain,” wrote Warren, a Democratic presidential candidate.

“To raise the revenue we need — and ensure every corporation pays their fair share — we need a new kind of tax that big companies can’t get around.” An estimated 1,200 public corporations would be subject to this tax, a move Warren said would neutralize the financial advantages of massive companies and give smaller businesses “a fighting chance.” Amazon, for example, would pay $698 million in taxes under the corporate profits tax instead of zero. And Occidental Petroleum, a summary of the proposal noted, would pay $280 million in taxes instead of zero.



the horse race



Obama’s former White House counsel just got caught up in the Mueller probe

Former Obama White House Counsel Greg Craig expects to be indicted on charges stemming from special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, Craig’s lawyers said in a statement distributed to media outlets late Wednesday.

The news marks the first indication that a high-ranking Democrat may be caught up in a case tied to Mueller, who spent 22 months examining President Trump’s ties to Russia and issued a final report in late March that remains secret. Before he wrapped up, Mueller referred some matters to other prosecutors — including the Craig case.

The potential charges against Craig appear to have nothing to do with his stint in the Obama White House during 2009-2010, or directly with the 2016 election. Rather, they seem to be tied to work he did during the years in-between as a private lawyer in connection with the Ukrainian government and President Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort.

Craig’s attorneys told The New York Times that they expect him to be indicted for making false statements about whether he was required to register as a foreign agent under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, known as FARA, for work he did in 2012.

Congressman Adam Schiff’s Russiagate Delusions Are Not Okay



the evening greens


'A walking conflict of interest': ex-oil lobbyist confirmed to lead US interior department

The Senate has voted to confirm David Bernhardt, a former a former oil and gas and water lobbyist, as secretary of the embattled interior department. Senators voted 56-41 to approve Bernhardt’s nomination to oversee more than 500m acres of public lands and other resources, including national parks, monuments and wildlife refuges.

Bernhardt, who was confirmed as deputy secretary in July 2017, has been acting secretary since Ryan Zinke – who was plagued by scandal – stepped down in December. Democrats have complained that the former oil and gas lobbyist has used his federal position to benefit former industry clients.

Before joining the administration, Bernhardt worked at a Washington law and lobbying firm on behalf of mining companies, oil and gas giants, a politically powerful western water agency and other groups that have business before the interior department.

“David Bernhardt is a walking conflict of interest who is selling out our public lands to his former clients in the fossil fuel industry,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. “Like Ryan Zinke before him, Bernhardt is clearly more interested in doing favors for his corporate polluting friends than in responsibly managing our shared public spaces."

Why Helsinki is tearing up its freeways

Global warming could create 'greater migratory pressure from Africa'

Europe can expect even greater migratory pressure from Africa unless action is taken to prevent global warming, Sir David Attenborough has said in a strongly worded warning to policymakers that time is running out to save the natural world from extinction.

Speaking at the spring meeting of the International Monetary Fund in Washington DC, the broadcaster and environmentalist said that on current trends parts of the world would soon become uninhabitable and populations would be be forced to move. Attenborough, 92, said it was vital that countries met their commitments made in the 2015 Paris climate agreement to reduce carbon emissions because time was fast running out for the planet.

Asked by the IMF managing director, Christine Lagarde, whether there was a link between migration and climate change, Attenborough said: “It is happening in Europe. People are coming from Africa because they can’t live where they are.” He said migration pressures would become more acute as temperatures continued to rise because more parts of the world would become uninhabitable.

Attenborough, who was publicising the Netflix series Our Planet, said: “I find it hard to exaggerate the peril. This is the new extinction and we are half way through it. We are in terrible, terrible trouble and the longer we wait to do something about it the worse it is going to get.”

Australia's Great Barrier Reef disappearing due to climate change

French court finds Monsanto guilty of poisoning farmer

A French appeals court has said US chemicals giant Monsanto was guilty of poisoning a farmer who said he suffered neurological damage after accidentally inhaling fumes from a weedkiller made by the company. Paul François, a cereal farmer, had already won previous lawsuits against Monsanto, which was bought by Germany’s Bayer last year, in 2012 and 2015.

He said he fell ill in 2004 after being exposed to Lasso, a weedkiller containing monochlorobenzene that was legal in France until 2007 but had already been banned in 1985 in Canada and in 1992 in Belgium and Britain. François argued that Monsanto was aware of Lasso’s dangers long before it was withdrawn from the French market and sought damages of more than €1m (£860,000) for chronic neurological damage that led to long hospital stays.

The court in Lyon rejected the company’s appeal on Tuesday but did not rule on how much Monsanto might have to pay, which will be determined in a separate ruling. It ordered the company to pay €50,000 immediately for François’s legal fees.


Also of Interest

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

Dictator: Media Code for ‘Government We Don’t Like’

The International Struggle Against the Fake News of the U.S. Empire: Remarks at the National Writers Union

Taibbi: Why the Assange Arrest Should Scare Reporters

Whatever happens next, the nationalist right has lost the battle for Brexit

OAS Sacrifices Its Charter for Trump’s Desperate Venezuelan Regime Change Bid

'We are hostages': indigenous Mapuche accuse Chile and Argentina of genocide

'Stop With This Recklessness': Allies Warn Right-Wing Attacks Could Get Congresswoman Ilhan Omar Killed

Insurance Industry Whistleblower Gives Glimpse of Effort to Crush Medicare for All

Ohio governor severely restricts abortion in move against Roe v Wade

Betsy DeVos Quietly Making It Easier for Dying For-Profit Schools to Rip Off a Few More Students on the Way Out


A Little Night Music

Chris Cain w/Debbie Davies - Cross Cut Saw

Debbie Davies - Takin' It All To Vegas

Debbie Davies - Blue And Lonesome

Debbie Davies - Better Off With The Blues

Debbie Davies - My Time After Awhile

Debbie Davies - Just Stepped In The Blues

Debbie Davies - Love The Game

Mick Taylor/Debbie Davies - Hard Road

Debbie Davies - I Want To Rock You Baby

Debbie Davies - Lovin' Cup


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not a good look

Just days after the United States’ government revoked the visa of the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor, judges at the ICC on Friday rejected her request to open an investigation into alleged atrocities in the war in Afghanistan, citing practical reasons.
The decision, which prosecutor Fatou Bensouda may appeal, angered human rights groups and means that the Taliban, the Afghan government and the United States will not face any investigation at the ICC for their alleged crimes, which dated mostly from 2003-04.
...
In an unusual ruling, the ICC judges said Bensouda’s case seemed to have met the court’s criteria for jurisdiction and admissibility, but given an array of practical considerations that made chances of success remote, it did not make sense to pursue it further.

They cited a failure to gather evidence at an early stage, a lack of cooperation from governments involved, and the likely costs as prohibitive.

So war crimes were committed, but prosecuting them would be too hard.
Sounds like Eric Holder's DOJ and Wall Street.

The decision “is insane and politically charged,” Karine Bonneau, director of international justice at the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), said in a tweet.

The ruling was “an affirmation of double standards. This situation was exactly why the court was created,” she added.

Kevin Jon Heller, associate professor of International Criminal law at Amsterdam University, said the decision appeared to impose significant hurdles on any case before the ICC in terms of the chances of a successful prosecution.

“If these are the criteria they are never going to open an investigation”, he said.

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joe shikspack's picture

@gjohnsit

i wonder if they got lessons in "looking forward" from obama.

if the icc is trying to convince the world that it is applying law universally as opposed to capriciously and only against africans, well, they just screwed up their optics.

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mimi's picture

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joe shikspack's picture

@mimi

yep. it's a comfort in an ugly world.

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Raggedy Ann's picture

Another week down and boy what a week! The shit-show continues. The American people continue in their slumber - shhhhhh, don't wake the sleeping masses.

I emailed NPR three times and sent them correct articles on Assange. I told them I am here to try and bring them back to honest reporting and I will be listening and emailing when I think they need direction. I'm sure the employees are cracking up while doing nothing.

Happy to have the weekend upon us. We are slated to get moisture this weekend - I hope, as always, it materializes. The desert is thirsty.

Have a beautiful evening and weekend, 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

joe shikspack's picture

@Raggedy Ann

this is certainly a week that was. i'm glad it's about over.

heh, correcting npr's errors could be a full time job. sometime back in the early 90's they started coming so thick, fast and malicious that i just dropped them a note telling them that checks would no longer be issued until they did something about it.

i've seen no improvement in npr's programming.

i hope that you get plenty of usable moisture, good luck and have a great weekend!

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detroitmechworks's picture

She's sending me my first blacksmith's hammer. Really awesome and I want to publicly thank her for it, because it means a lot to me. Got the Hammer AND anvil now. I'm stoked. Smile

Found what looks like a good source for steel today. More expensive than I'd like, but you'd be surprised how fast the scavengers around here grab up scrap metal. Nothing against them, hell if that was the only way I could make money, I'd be all over it, but it makes things harder for me. Smile (Scrapyards have started putting up razor wire in my neighborhood. Fairly recent development, and I hate to see it.)

As far as the rest of the news goes... ugh. I find it sad that the Golan Heights are now openly referred to as an annexation. They aren't even pretending it's just an occupation any more. That does seem to be the way of the US and its allies. Do it, claim that you're not doing it, and when somebody brings it up again, claim it was always yours, and anybody who complains is either racist or sexist, or a bizarre combination of both involving kids.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WziA88-n02k]

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

enhydra lutris's picture

@detroitmechworks

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

detroitmechworks's picture

@enhydra lutris Because it'll be fun to share my journey. Maybe actually start doing essays again. Smile

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

@detroitmechworks
hammers down -- have an assortment

2 x claws
ball peen
brass double flat face
rubber mallet
driller's hammer about 2 lbs.
small maul about 5 lbs, short handle
sledge with wedge
spike (narrow face)
and any rock I can pick up

pounding the world into some shape

have fun!

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detroitmechworks's picture

@QMS Which I really enjoyed using my first time out. Felt natural in my hand, and I really liked the way it moved the metal. (Rectangular face, so it was really nice for tool making, which was my project that day.)

Still looking for the forge, but so far the only one I found weighed 2 tons, and It wouldn't fit in my back yard. Smile (Was free, but... DAMN...)

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

@detroitmechworks both useful and artful, and not to shape horseshoes, IIRC.
Nonetheless, this reminds me: one of my former farriers was at the right place at the right time to pull out his anvil and hammer, put shoes on Secretariat. He said Secretariat "stood" (didn't kick, move around, or shy away) and he kept the shoes he removed, just in case the horse really was all that.
My horse was a grandson of Secretariat. He stood.

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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

detroitmechworks's picture

@on the cusp But it's a really cheap one made out of railroad track. Honestly, it's pretty rough, but we all have to start somewhere... Smile

Never worked with horses, but if somebody offered me lessons, I sure as hell wouldn't say no... knowledge is fun, and all.

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

@detroitmechworks Nowadays, farriers will walk away from a horse that won't stand. Health care costs have everything to do with that.
One of my clients is an artisan, is occasionally filmed making art out of metal stuff. Such as, making a sawed off shotgun into a door handle.
I think it is Discovery Channel, but it might be Netflix.
Now, if you are gorgeous and artistic and funny as hell, you, too, might get on cable tv!
Can't tell you how much fun it is to just walk into a courtroom with my supahstah client! lol!

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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

detroitmechworks's picture

@on the cusp

Rule one, No weapons. Ever. Since that seems to be the main draw for most people on smithing shows, you won't be seeing much of my work there. Tools only. Won't mind reclaiming the steel in some of the stuff if it falls into my lap, but there's more than enough people making blades these days.

I'm actually hoping to do some interesting experiments with my kids for their next year's science fair. Got some ideas that I've expressed before, and I hope they work out. Just gotta get some ice blocks. Smile

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

@detroitmechworks how does one make art out of a shot gun that has been run over by a truck and can't shoot?
Door handle!

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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

@detroitmechworks

yay, mom! Smile

sounds like you're making steady progress. i'm looking forward to hearing about your first project soon.

heh, i guess when the israelis have managed to drag out the "peacemaking" process (hmmm, maybe process should be in quotes, too) for many decades it's not a surprise that they would attempt to consolidate their illicit gains when the "honest broker" is off the clock.

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detroitmechworks's picture

@joe shikspack Still got 18 days till I can officially work with my right arm again. (Do NOT want to re-injure, and my Dojo is being awesome and letting me reschedule my promotion exam, which normally only happen twice a year. Smile )

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

ggersh's picture

I saw this comment elsewhere and if true explains
what the usa is all about

4 million people in the US with Top Clearance

I've said before, America has no secrets except from her citizens.

The people responsible for keep our secrets, by their actions, show they don't care that the Russians, the Chinese, the British, the Israelis, know everything. But they are tenacious about keeping those secrets from we citizens.

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

joe shikspack's picture

@ggersh

that seems intuitively obvious, especially when it comes to the spooks' overseas operations. the people that are attacked know what happened and who was behind it - but the people in whose name the dirty deeds are done (not so cheaply) don't get to know about it for 35 years (if ever).

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Mr. Joe. Can't say anything good about the news, but that's not new.
Knew a Debbie Davies once, but she doesn't resemble the jacket pix.
Life is but a dream.

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joe shikspack's picture

@QMS

the news is bad, the music is good. there you go.

have a great weekend!

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enhydra lutris's picture

running around my brain right now is how will they keep Tulsi from using the platform that their rules now allow her. They can't allow her to make and argue for many of her talking points, so what will be the game? It will be interesting to see what they do when the time comes.

Nothing to say about the Golan and Assange, those events are only technically news. They've been done deals waiting to happen, and now they've happened. Not good is about all that one can say.

Thanks for Ms Davis and have a great weekend.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

joe shikspack's picture

@enhydra lutris

my guess about the platform that gabbard is eligible for is that the debate will be set up to allow the democrats to isolate and ostracize her.

they will probably pack the stage with scads of candidates all at once - likely having so-called centrists outnumber the couple of (close to) progressives several to one.

so, they allow gabbard to espouse an antiwar sentiment (for example) and then the moderator follows up by allowing one centrist hawk after another attack and pile on. gabbard gets 60 seconds to make a point, then there's five minutes of attacks making it look to the benumbed american viewers like gabbard is some sort of lunatic fringe candidate.

presumably, the chattering classes will take up where the centrist war hawks left off, savaging gabbard for days, weeks or months afterwards - however long is necessary.

that's my guess. have a great weekend!

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mimi's picture

@enhydra lutris
drowning her in the mud and suffocate her voice with the majority of other voices on the panel.

She should bet one one one panel discussions, especially with with Sanders, Warren- But I hope they all would announce as a group to debate as a group against the rest of the bunch.

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Azazello's picture

on Golan and Crimea, here. The two "annexations" are not the same.
In Crimea, there was a referendum, a vote. "Rejoin" won. Most residents of Crimea speak Russian and identify as Russians, see here. I don't believe there was any such referendum in the Golan heights. That one was a naked land-grab.

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

enhydra lutris's picture

@Azazello
Meanwhile, Crimea was never even really part of the Ukraine ever.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

joe shikspack's picture

@Azazello

i absolutely agree with you.

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dystopian's picture

I like Debbie Davies, she is a great player, nice touch and feel, and a good sound.

Thanks for the great Assange roundup... one of the most despicable frightening things I have ever seen the American government do. Needless to say, that is saying a LOT. It is up there Iraq, Lybia, ad. infinitum unfortunately, or any other idiotic evil thing we have done, too many to enumerate here.

This Bernhardt is just another Zinke, Dept. of Interior is so screwed. From protection of endangered species, to protecting our National Parks, Monuments, and Wildlife Refuges, tons of the good biology (that sciencey stuff) produced, has all gone to shat. Literally set
back decades in a few years. Doesn't take the Bannon very long in the china shop.

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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

yep, davies is an excellent guitarist. in a field full of guitar wankers, she has the chops to compete, but she's also an excellent rhythm player and knows how to listen and participate in an ensemble - a much more rare skill than lead-shredding.

the assange situation bears close watching, not just because a man is being persecuted and needs relief, but also because it could be a tipping point. how this shakes out could have enormous repercussions for everyone's civil rights.

bernhardt is just another wrecker, part of a very large demolition crew that has been assembled to take apart the government and turn it against the people. it is going to take years that we don't have to recover from this.

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by a character in Gulliver's Travels:

The highest tax was upon men who are the greatest favourites of the other sex, and the assessments, according to the number and nature of the favours they have received; for which, they are allowed to be their own vouchers. Wit, valour, and politeness, were likewise proposed to be largely taxed, and collected in the same manner, by every person's giving his own word for the quantum of what he possessed.
...
The women were proposed to be taxed according to their beauty and skill in dressing, wherein they had the same privilege with the men, to be determined by their own judgment...

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

joe shikspack's picture

@UntimelyRippd

an interesting comparison.

heh, the libertarians i used to know always said that taxation was a disincentive plan aimed at whatever activity is taxed, so by their assessment, it looks like warren wants to cut down on corporate bragging.

i wonder if corporations won't just find another way of marketing their stocks.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@joe shikspack
called "Generally Accepted Accounting Principles" intended to generate quasi-uniform and vaguely truthful reporting to shareholders. Corporations generally more of less follow these (otherwise they get dinged in the stock market for material deviations) and generate financial statements in which they report their financial statement income to shareholders and potential investors.

Their tax return has a schedule called "Schedule M" that can summarize volumes of information identifying the differences between that "book income" and their taxable income are reported on their returns and upon which they are taxed. Usually the effect of these volumes of differences is a massive reduction, so that book income of millions simply vanishes leaving no taxable income.

If accounting principles remain mostly unchanged, which the stock market and shareholders pretty much demand. what she proposes is to tax book income, eliminating all of the freebies and loopholes. If they then try to finagle their book income down, their stocks go into the toilet, as does the stock based compensation and net worth of most of their officers and execs, who will also be sacked by angry directors and shareholders.

It is actually a fabulous idea that will never come into force.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

joe shikspack's picture

@enhydra lutris

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