The Evening Blues - 3-23-16
Hey! Good Evening!
This evening's music features r&b and doo wop singer, Ben E. King. Enjoy!
Ben E. King - Stand By Me
“With every mistake, we must surely be learning.”-- George Harrison
News and Opinion
Your daily irony supplement. A heaping helping today:
With Obama in Cuba, Pro-Torture Pundits Suddenly Concerned With Human Rights
While American human-rights hypocrisy is nothing new, a string of Bush-era, pro-torture, pro-Guantánamo pundits expressing indignation at Cuba’s human rights failings was still remarkable. ...
As a former Bush speechwriter, Marc Thiessen helped shape the messaging around “enhanced interrogation” that provided the Orwellian phraseology the administration hid behind while torturing hundreds of detainees. ...
Today, however, in the Washington Post opinion section, Thiessen suddenly discovered his inner human rights advocate, quoting an “activist” saying of Obama’s trip:
This will prolong the life of the dictatorship, is worsening the human rights situation there, marginalizing the democratic opposition and compromising US national security.
...
Rich Lowry. The National Review editor was another Bush-era torture advocate; The National Review’s contempt for basic human rights and legal norms continues, with the non-ironic article “Guantánamo Bay Detainees: Why Not Shoot Them?” published just last month. But Lowry has considerable concern for oppressed people in Cuba who aren’t on a US military base:
Obama’s Che Moment: President Obama’s Cuba Visit Ignores Continued Human Rights Abuses
[Click the link above for details about torture-supporting assholes Jonathan Alter, John Bolton and Bill O'Reilly and their sudden discovery of human rights concerns. - js]
Trump: Torture Could Have Prevented Brussels Attacks
In an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer today, Republican front-runner Donald Trump said it was possible that today’s terror attacks in Belgium could’ve been prevented with a sufficient amount of torture, saying he believes they could’ve made captured ISIS suspect Saleh Abdesalam “talk a lot faster” by torturing him.
“If he would’ve talked you might not have had the blow up,” Trump insisted, saying the US needs to “change our laws” to a “almost equal basis” with what ISIS does to its own detainees, saying he wants waterboarding as a “minimum form of torture” and also advocates “far worse.”
Frank Barat in Belgium: More War is Not the Answer to Brussels Bombings
In Argentina, mothers of 'disappeared' protest Obama's marking of 1976 coup
Argentina’s main human rights groups have announced they will boycott Barack Obama’s visit to the country, which coincides with the 40th anniversary of a military coup that led to the deaths of thousands of people.
Martial law was imposed on 24 March 1976, ushering in seven years of military rule during which Argentina’s generals made their victims disappear by throwing them alive from helicopters into the freezing waters of the Atlantic. ...
Former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger gave thinly veiled approval to Argentina’s military for the use of violence against leftwing activists. At a 1976 meeting with Argentina’s Admiral César Guzzetti, Kissinger advised the regime that “the quicker you succeed, the better” – words which the junta took as a green light for a campaign of state terrorism. ...
Both the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo and the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo, who continue to search for missing victims and babies born to their imprisoned daughters, have announced they will not be present at the ceremony.
Aware of the anti-US sentiment in Argentina, Obama is expected to announce the opening of US military and intelligence files related to the dictatorship, which will be added to the approximately 4,000 pages of diplomatic files already declassified by former US president Bill Clinton. ... But the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo are not convinced. “I don’t believe there will be anything in those documents – they always black out the names and the important parts,” said Nora Cortiñas of the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo.
Amid West's Silence, Groups Call for Saudi Arms Embargo to Stem Carnage in Yemen
Human rights groups and others call for arms embargo, accuse US, UK, France, and Canada of complicity in war crimes
The flow of weapons to Saudi Arabia over the past year has "facilitated appalling crimes," according to leading international human rights groups, which argue that the United States and other western nations are thus complicit in the killing of thousands of Yemeni civilians.
To mark the nearly one year since the Saudi-led coalition began bombing Yemen, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are renewing the call for an international arms embargo on Saudi Arabia, while singling out the U.S., the United Kingdom, and France for their "complicity in the unlawful airstrikes."
Since March 25, 2015, when the Arab state coalition began its air assault, Amnesty estimates that more than 3,000 civilians including 700 children have been killed and at least 2.5 million people have been displaced from their homes. The United Nations puts the death toll much higher, estimating as many as 6,200 civilians killed by the coalition fighting.
The anniversary of the bombing campaign falls less than two weeks after perhaps the deadliest attack yet, during which fighter jets bombed a market in Yemen’s northern province of Hajjah, killing about 120 people including more than 20 children.
As Intercept journalist Mohammed Ali Kalfood wrote on Tuesday, after a series of bombings killed roughly 30 people in Brussels, Belgium: "While the horrific terrorist attacks against civilians in Europe receive extensive media coverage, the U.S.-supported bombings of civilians in Yemen get scant attention."
James Lynch, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Amnesty International, declared in a statement, "the international community’s response to the conflict in Yemen has been deeply cynical and utterly shameful." ...
"The irresponsible and unlawful flow of arms to the warring parties in Yemen has directly contributed to civilian suffering on a mass scale," Lynch continued. "It’s time for world leaders to stop putting their economic interests first, and for the UN Security Council to impose a full, comprehensive embargo on transfers of arms for use in Yemen."
Massive US airstrike in Yemen kills 'dozens' of people, Pentagon says
A massive US airstrike in Yemen has killed what the Pentagon estimates is “dozens” of people, the second such mass-casualty strike the US military has undertaken this month.
The two strikes, killing more than 200 people at what the Pentagon described as terrorist training camps, diverged so sharply from the previous years’ worth of relatively low-casualty strikes that observers speculated US policy might have quietly changed.
Peter Cook, the Pentagon spokesman, announced late Tuesday that the US had bombed a mountain redoubt in Yemen used by al-Qaida’s local affiliate, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). He said it was a “training camp” used by “more than 70 AQAP terrorists”.
An independent assessment of the actual impact of the strike, to include a full casualty total and civilian impact, was not immediately available. The Pentagon did not provide further detail of where in Yemen the alleged camp was located.
Reporting (or Not) the Ties Between US-Armed Syrian Rebels and Al Qaeda’s Affiliate
A crucial problem in news media coverage of the Syrian civil war has been how to characterize the relationship between the so-called “moderate” opposition forces armed by the CIA, on one hand, and the Al Qaeda franchise Al Nusra Front (and its close ally Ahrar al Sham), on the other. But it is a politically sensitive issue for US policy, which seeks to overthrow Syria’s government without seeming to make common cause with the movement responsible for 9/11, and the system of news production has worked effectively to prevent the news media from reporting it fully and accurately.
The Obama administration has long portrayed the opposition groups it has been arming with anti-tank weapons as independent of Nusra Front. In reality, the administration has been relying on the close cooperation of these “moderate” groups with Nusra Front to put pressure on the Syrian government. The United States and its allies–especially Saudi Arabia and Turkey–want the civil war to end with the dissolution of the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is backed by US rivals like Russia and Iran.
Reflecting the fact that Nusra Front was created by Al Qaeda and has confirmed its loyalty to it, the administration designated Nusra as a terrorist organization in 2013. But the US has carried out very few airstrikes against it since then, in contrast to the other offspring of Al Qaeda, the Islamic State or ISIS (Daesh), which has been the subject of intense air attacks from the US and its European allies. The US has remained silent about Nusra Front’s leading role in the military effort against Assad, concealing the fact that Nusra’s success in northwest Syria has been a key element in Secretary of State John Kerry’s diplomatic strategy for Syria. ...
But a review of the coverage of the targeting of Russian airstrikes and the role of U.S.-supported armed groups in the war during the first few weeks in the three most influential US newspapers with the most resources for reporting accurately on the issue—the New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal–reveals a pattern of stories that tilted strongly in the direction desired by the Obama administration, either ignoring the subordination of the “moderate” groups to Nusra Front entirely or giving it only the slightest mention.
[See article for extensive review of media coverage and slant. - js]
Preferred Jihadists and the Crisis in Syria
This is an excellent article, here's a teaser to get you started...
America's Post-Democratic Military
In the decades since the draft ended in 1973, a strange new military has emerged in the United States. Think of it, if you will, as a post-democratic force that prides itself on its warrior ethos rather than the old-fashioned citizen-soldier ideal. As such, it’s a military increasingly divorced from the people, with a way of life ever more foreign to most Americans (adulatory as they may feel toward its troops). Abroad, it’s now regularly put to purposes foreign to any traditional idea of national defense. In Washington, it has become a force unto itself, following its own priorities, pursuing its own agendas, increasingly unaccountable to either the president or Congress.
Three areas highlight the post-democratic transformation of this military with striking clarity: the blending of military professionals with privatized mercenaries in prosecuting unending “limited” wars; the way senior military commanders are cashing in on retirement; and finally the emergence of U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) as a quasi-missionary imperial force with a presence in at least 135 countries a year (and counting). ...
Events since Desert Storm in 1991 suggest that the all-volunteer military has been more curse than blessing. Partially to blame: a new dynamic in modern American history, the creation of a massive military force that is not of the people, by the people, or for the people. It is, of course, a dynamic hardly new to history. Writing in the eighteenth century about the decline and fall of Rome, the historian Edward Gibbon noted that:
“In the purer ages of the commonwealth [of Rome], the use of arms was reserved for those ranks of citizens who had a country to love, a property to defend, and some share in enacting those laws, which it was their interest, as well as duty, to maintain. But in proportion as the public freedom was lost in extent of conquest, war was gradually improved into an art, and degraded into a trade.”
As the U.S. has become more authoritarian and more expansive, its military has come to serve the needs of others, among them elites driven by dreams of profit and power. Some will argue that this is nothing new. I’ve read my Smedley Butler and I’m well aware that historically the U.S. military was often used in un-democratic ways to protect and advance various business interests. In General Butler’s day, however, that military was a small quasi-professional force with a limited reach. Today’s version is enormous, garrisoning roughly 800 foreign bases across the globe, capable of sending its Hellfire missile-armed drones on killing missions into country after country across the Greater Middle East and Africa, and possessing a vision of what it likes to call “full-spectrum dominance” meant to facilitate “global reach, global power.” In sum, the U.S. military is far more powerful, far less accountable -- and far more dangerous.
Iran: US Not Following Through on Sanctions Relief
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei complained that the US is not following through with promised sanctions relief, saying many of the sanctions were only removed “on paper,” and that the US banking sanctions are still creating huge obstacles.
US banks are still largely forbidden from doing business with Iran, which wouldn’t in and of itself be a big deal since Iran’s deals are mostly with European and Asian companies anyhow, but international banks not based in the US are still fearing US punishment for processing the deals.
Gideon Levy: Americans "Are Supporting the First Signs of Fascism in Israel"
Probe launched into Pentagon handling of NSA whistleblower evidence
A federal watchdog has concluded that the Pentagon inspector general’s office may have improperly destroyed evidence during the high-profile leak prosecution of former National Security Agency official Thomas Drake.
The Office of Special Counsel, which is charged with protecting federal employees who provide information on government wrongdoing, said its review of the handling of the Drake case had determined that there is “substantial likelihood” that there had been “possible violations of laws, rules or regulations” in the destruction of the evidence. ...
The Office of Special Counsel’s review reached the conclusion there was enough evidence to investigate that allegation.
The likely outcome of the Justice Department inspector general inquiry is unclear. The expected probe of top Pentagon inspector general officials was described as administrative, a process that could lead to reprimands, security clearances suspensions or firings, said people familiar with the inquiry. They asked to remain anonymous because the probe has not been made public.
The referral renews broader questions about the federal government’s dedication to protecting intelligence community or Defense Department employees who blow the whistle on wrongdoing.
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said allegations of poor treatment of whistleblowers “might be just the tip of the iceberg.”
Government keeping its method to crack San Bernardino iPhone 'classified'
A new method to crack open locked iPhones is so promising that US government officials have classified it, the Guardian has learned.
The Justice Department made headlines on Monday when it postponed a federal court hearing in California. It had been due to confront Apple over an order that would have forced it to write software that would make it easier for investigators to guess the passcode for an iPhone used by San Bernardino gunman Syed Farook.
The government now says it may have figured out a way to get into the phone without Apple’s help. But it wants that discovery to remain secret, in an effort to prevent criminals, security researchers and even Apple itself from reengineering smartphones so that the tactic would no longer work.
Currently, the Justice Department is still testing to make sure the method doesn’t damage or erase data stored on devices before using it on Farook’s phone. The technique does successfully allow the government to get inside locked iPhones, the Guardian has confirmed.
Fired Texas trooper pleads not guilty to perjury charge in Sandra Bland's death
A fired Texas trooper pleaded not guilty to a charge of misdemeanor perjury stemming from his arrest last summer of Sandra Bland, a black woman who was later found dead in a county jail.
Brian Encinia entered his plea on Tuesday during a brief appearance before a Waller County judge as protesters gathered outside the courthouse in Hempstead, about 50 miles north-west of Houston. ... Encinia’s attorney, Larkin Eakin, said after Tuesday’s arraignment that the perjury charge “represents a fundamental misunderstanding of law enforcement procedures”. He said Encinia acted properly during the July 2015 traffic stop and subsequent arrest of Bland.
A county grand jury indicted Encinia in January on the perjury charge for saying in an affidavit that he removed a combative Bland from her car after stopping her near Houston for a minor traffic violation so he could conduct a safer traffic investigation.
Video of the stop shows Encinia drawing his stun gun and telling Bland, “I will light you up!”
The People of Puerto Rico vs. the Hedge Funds Goes to the Supreme Court
Puerto Rico Appeals to US Supreme Court for Help Digging Out of Debt
Puerto Rico asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday for permission to restructure the debt of its financially struggling public utilities under a court-supervised regime similar to Chapter 9 bankruptcy laws used by U.S. cities such as Detroit and Stockton, California.
In addition to potentially giving the commonwealth a better chance at repaying some of its $70 billion debt, the case "tests, at a fundamental level, how much authority the island of more than 3.5 million people has to manage its own governmental affairs," Lyle Denniston wrote at SCOTUSblog last week.
What's more, the case could chip away at hedge funds' stranglehold on the island. As journalist David Dayen wrote for the Winter 2016 issue of The American Prospect: "Puerto Rico is just the latest battlefield for a phalanx of hedge funds called 'vultures,' which pick at the withered sinews of troubled governments. In Greece, Argentina, Detroit, and now Puerto Rico, vultures have bought distressed debt on the cheap, and then used coercion, threats, and legal action to secure a massive windfall, compounding the effects on millions of citizens." ...
Jubilee USA has described the situation in Puerto Rico as a "humanitarian crisis" and opposes further austerity or cuts to help pay down the territory's debt. To that end, thousands of college students from the University of Puerto Rico approved a three-day, full-campus shutdown last week to protest recent austerity measures.
Why the U.S. isn’t prepared for the next recession
Are we ready for the next recession? ...
Ben Spielberg, a research analyst with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, put it bluntly: “The short answer is no, we’re not.” The long answer, Spielberg continued, “is still no. But we can be if we take the right lessons from our historical experience and start to prepare for it now.”
But that’s a very big “if.”
In fact, Spielberg on Monday released a paper co-authored with economist Jared Bernstein arguing for a stronger set of automatic stabilizers, the programs like unemployment insurance and food stamps that kick in when economic conditions pressure incomes downward.
Spielberg and Bernstein also propose stronger, more direct government action in the next downturn, such as job creation programs that would subsidize hiring or help states offset the price of their own initiatives, or directly create and fund national service jobs. ...
That’s a tall order from a federal government that’s so far [from] being able to govern wisely that it had to build deep cuts into a budget in order to force itself to take action to avoid them — and still failed.
Snapshot of a broken system: How a profitable company justifies laying off 1,400 people & moved their jobs to Mexico
A viral video of 1,400 workers at a unionized Carrier air conditioner factory in Indianapolis being told their jobs would be outsourced to Mexico has become a searing example of the destructive power of globalization. Both Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump have highlighted the video, which surfaced earlier this year, and vowed to fight these corporate practices. But what most people didn’t understand until a New York Times article this weekend is that Carrier’s air conditioning business has, in fact, been quite profitable.
Last year, Carrier produced a significant chunk of total profits for its parent company, United Technologies. Of $7.6 billion in earnings in 2015, $2.9 billion came from the Climate, Controls & Security division, where Carrier resides. Profits from this division have expanded steadily in recent years, which is not what you’d expect from a unit desperate to cut labor costs. ...
So why would a profitable, growing business need to ship jobs to Mexico? Because their shareholders demanded it.
United Technologies hides behind statements about remaining globally competitive and maintaining its market position. But the truth is that the company felt pressure to boost the stock price, a key measure of executive performance. “Wall Street is looking for United Technologies to post a 17 percent increase in earnings per share over the next two years, even though sales are expected to rise only 8 percent,” according to the Times story. Moving jobs from Indiana, where workers get $20 an hour, to Monterrey, Mexico, where they get $2-$3, is a way to grow earnings per share.
Two-out-of-Three Tuesday as Sanders Revolution Proves Resilient Strength
Bernie Sanders proved that his call for political revolution does, in fact, have strength in the western states by winning two out of three contests on Tuesday.
While rival Hillary Clinton met expectations in Arizona's closed primary where she bested Sanders by a margin of 58 to 40 percentage points, Sanders walloped the national frontrunner in open caucuses in both Utah and Idaho with huge margins of nearly 60 percentage points in both states.
According to CNN's figures early Wednesday morning, Sanders won Idaho with 78 percent of the vote compared to Clinton's 21 percent. In Utah, the gap was even larger, with Sanders holding 80 percent of the vote to Clinton's 20 percent.
Clinton claim on small donors is ‘mostly false,’ PolitiFact finds
Following victories in Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Illinois, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton thanked her supporters — especially those who have given small amounts of money to her campaign.
“Keep contributing at hillaryclinton.com. Please, please join the 950,000 supporters who already have contributed, most less than $100, because our campaign depends on small donations for the majority of our support,” Clinton said. ...
If one defines “the majority of our support” as dollars, then Clinton is wrong — small donations accounted for 17 percent of all of her individual donations, which is well short of a majority. In fact, the Campaign Finance Institute calculated that a clear majority of the funds Clinton had raised through Jan. 31 from individuals came from donors giving $2,700 — the legal maximum that anyone can give.
On the other hand, the campaign could be right if they define “the majority of our support” as the number of donors. But this calculation isn’t transparent to outside analysis.
“Whenever a politician makes a claim about their average contribution or total number of donors, it’s impossible to independently verify,” said Michael Beckel, a reporter with the Center for Public Integrity.
Clinton said, “Our campaign depends on small donations for the majority of our support.”
The campaign’s best evidence for this isn’t independently verifiable. Otherwise, Clinton is wrong — small donors account for only 17 percent of the dollar amount her campaign has collected from individuals through Jan. 31.
Thomas Frank on the State of the Democratic Party
Bernie Sanders Spoke Up for Suffering Palestinians, but Few in Broadcast Media Covered It
As leading presidential candidates spoke at the Washington gathering of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), promising support and a crackdown on boycotts of Israel, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders made a dissenting speech in Salt Lake City, where he spoke up for suffering Palestinians. It received little broadcast media attention.
As Sanders trails Clinton in delegate count, his campaign has effectively been discounted by major media. ...
A query using the TV Eyes broadcast media search engine found that the text of the speech was mentioned only in a handful of outlets. Unlike the addresses by Clinton and Trump, no major broadcast outlet carried it live. CNN International read a section of Sanders’s prepared remarks in a segment with writer Peter Beinart, a frequent critic of Israeli settlements; Al Jazeera America read a portion of Sanders’s remarks in commentary on the speeches at AIPAC. BBC World played a portion of Sanders’ speech dealing with the need to be friends to both Israel and the Palestinians. Although MSNBC did not cover the speech or its content, Hardball with Chris Matthews featured former U.S. ambassador Marc Ginsberg to explain Sanders’s absence at AIPAC by saying, “Mr. Sanders … has never really extolled his jewishness, much less any support for Israel.”
Something Is Going Seriously Wrong at Arizona Polls Today
Arizona’s primaries aren’t even done yet, and there’s already legal action being taken as a result of incompetence or possibly even intentional sabotage.
Leaders from the Arizona branch of the Democratic Party have confirmed that its lawyers are officially making an inquiry after multiple Democratic voters showed up to the polls only to find that they were listed as independents, Republicans, or had no party affiliation at all. ...
No word has been given as to whether there was a pattern as to which kind of demographics were experiencing this kind of treatment, and no explanation has been given regarding what caused this bizarre error.
“We’ve been getting calls all day from lifelong Democrats who have been registered as independents,” Enrique Gutierrez, communications director for the Arizona Democratic Party, told US Uncut. “One woman even said she’d been registered as a Libertarian.”
Heh, we're working up to the possibility of an election contest between the two most universally reviled candidates ever. Woohoo!
CBS Poll: Trump and Clinton Have Historic Unfavorable Ratings Among Voters
According to a CBS News/New York Times poll conducted between March 17-20, 2016 among a random sample of adults nationwide, 85 percent of which were registered voters, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have the highest unfavorable ratings (57 percent and 52 percent respectively) since CBS first began asking the question in its polls more than three decades ago. ...
A Quinnipiac University poll conducted this past December also found a majority of Americans, 59 percent, do not believe Clinton is “honest and trustworthy.”
The lack of Americans’ confidence in Clinton’s honesty runs far deeper than her suggestion that it stems from some vast right wing conspiracy. ...
America is still struggling to overcome the greatest economic downturn since the Great Depression, caused by the 2008 Wall Street crash. The country can ill afford a President who does not command the trust and confidence of a majority of its citizens.
Feds defend fracking rule against judicial hold
The Obama administration is fighting in federal court to defend its hydraulic fracturing (fracking) rule, saying a lower court committed a “legal error” when it put the regulation on hold.
Lawyers representing the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) are asking the Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit in Denver to overturn a Wyoming-based court’s decision last year to halt the rule and allow regulators to enforce it.
That judicial injunction stemmed from the arguments from various states and the oil and natural gas industry that Congress has expressly prohibited the federal government from regulating fracking, even on federal and American Indian land, as the BLM did early last year.
“The district court held that Congress has ‘directly spoken to the issue and precluded federal agency authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing not involving the use of diesel fuels.’ That was legal error,” lawyers wrote late Monday in their opening brief in their appeal of the injunction.
A Tale of Two Leaks: Fixed in California, Ignored in Alabama
EIGHT MILE, Ala.—Willa Vassar is convinced her skin is reacting to air pollution from a chemical spill about a half-mile from her home, in a small community outside Mobile. ... The chemical in the spill is tert-butyl mercaptan, an odorant mixed with natural gas to help in the detection of leaks. A class of chemicals, mercaptans made national news after a natural gas storage well in Los Angeles started leaking last October, prompting the evacuation of nearly 6,000 households after people complained of the odor and health issues.
The complaints in California echo those of the residents of Eight Mile: respiratory problems, headaches, nausea, rashes and nosebleeds. Further, Sempra Energy is now the parent corporation to the two companies responsible for the California and Alabama accidents, SoCal Gas and Mobile Gas. They are the most prominent examples of long-term residential exposure to mercaptan. But the similarities end there.
In California, federal, state and local authorities responded vigorously to the leak at the Aliso Canyon facility. The national media has covered the disaster extensively. The governor declared a state of emergency, and California is suing SoCal Gas. Los Angeles County has opened an assistance center for affected residents, offering help with everything from financial reimbursement to counseling services, and it has called for regular monitoring of public health. SoCal Gas has already paid more than $50 million to temporarily relocate people who lived near the leak. State and Congressional representatives have demanded investigations. Federal regulators have indicated they are mulling new rules to regulate gas storage wells like Aliso Canyon, whose leak was recently plugged.
In Alabama, mercaptan leaked from a storage tank into groundwater, after company officials say the tank was hit by lightning. It drew a far milder response. The leak occurred in 2008, but Mobile Gas failed to report its severity to state authorities, according to the news site AL.com. No one was evacuated despite the odor persisting for years and Eight Mile residents reporting continuing health problems. It remains unclear how much mercaptan was released from the leak, and the groundwater and public health in the area are no longer monitored.
The Environmental Protection Agency has deferred to the state of Alabama, because mercaptan is not considered a hazardous material, and the state has said it is satisfied with the remediation Mobile Gas has carried out. ...
To Eight Mile residents and the scientists, lawyers and community organizers who have worked with them, the responses in California and Alabama differ because of who got hurt in each community. The neighborhoods around Aliso Canyon are affluent and largely white, the million-dollar homes belonging to politicians and doctors. The affected area of Eight Mile is mostly black and working class, its trim brick ramblers home to many retirees and people making less than $25,000 a year. Eight Mile residents within a couple of miles of the leak site say they still smell the mercaptan eight years later, and like Vassar, suffer its effects.
People's Water Summit: Women and Girls "Bear Brunt" of Global Crisis
As a new report shows an estimated 650 million of the world's poorest people still lack access to water that is safe to consume and 2.5 billion people lack basic sanitation, warriors from the frontlines of this global crisis—many of them women and girls—are gathering in New York on Tuesday to affirm that water is a human right.
The World Water Day event is being billed as an alternative "People's Summit" to the invite-only White House Water Summit also taking place Tuesday, and will "ensure the voices of those directly impacted and working on the ground as advocates on the human rights to water and sanitation are heard," according to organizers. Scheduled to coincide with the the 60th Session of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, sponsors of the panel include Food & Water Watch, the U.S. Human Rights Network (USHRN), Alabama Center for Rural Enterprise, and WaterAid.
The latter group, an international non-profit headquartered in New York, released a report Tuesday entitled, Water: At What Cost? The State of the World's Water 2016. It finds that in 16 countries, more than 40 percent of the population does not even have access to a basic water facility like a protected well.
In turn, "[p]eople from impoverished, marginalized communities have no choice but to collect dirty water from open ponds and rivers," the report reads, "or spend large chunks of their income buying water from vendors"—in some cases, more than half their family's daily income.
"The price paid by these communities—in wasted income, ill-health, and lost productivity—is extremely high, and has a devastating impact from the family to the national level," WaterAid declares.
Also of Interest
Here are some articles of interest, some which defied fair-use abstraction.
A World War has Begun: Break the Silence
WikiLeaks: Hillary Clinton Pushed Mexico's Oil Privatization
AIPAC attendees slam Netanyahu’s racism when they think it’s Trump’s
Government Showdown With Apple Delayed
Ukraine Has Become a Problem Case for the European Union
A Little Night Music
Ben E King - Spanish Harlem
Ben E. King and The Drifters - There Goes My Baby
Ben E. King - That's when it hurts
Ben E King - Young Boy Blues
Ben E. King and The Drifters - I Count The Tears
Ben E. King - I Can't Break The News To Myself
Ben E. King - Save The Last Dance For Me
Comments
evening folks...
i'm going to be scarce tonight. josh fox is coming to town with his new movie, "how to let go of the world and all of the things that climate can't change," and i'm going to go check out the movie and the q&a afterwards probably, too.
so, i'll catch up with you all when i can. enjoy the news and the tunes!
Great digest of the news and more
Thanks for all your efforts.
evening cb...
thanks!
Careful Bob. There's alchemy involved in Joe's selections.
He gets real sneaky with his themes, and after a while you begin to think he's reading your mind. For sure, you become convinced there's a secret message in the pacing and juxtapositions. Then, you realize he's messing with your intellect in devious ways.
I don't know. It seemed innocent enough at the beginning. A little news. A little blues.
The next thing you know, Google News just won't do.
He's good. Too good….
thanks, pluto!
Recession relief
The 2009 ARRA contained a Tea-GOP provision that prohibited the federal government from hiring any additional people or directly creating one single job. In exchange for crippling the legislation, the Obama administration got three (3) Tea-GOP votes in the Senate and no votes in the House.
During a recession, tax revenues go down - forcing state and local governments to lay off employees because they can't engage in deficit spending. Only the federal government can step in and prevent a downward spiral of unemployment.
"We've done the impossible, and that makes us mighty."
evening rmw...
obama really showed his neoliberal intentions with that half-assed stimulus package.
Hi Joe! Canada's getting a stimulus,
Also money for Indigenous people, every reserve will be renovated. $90. million for low income/homeless housing in my city.
Stephen Harper starved government for 8 years, financially starved important agencies.
To thine own self be true.
Hi Marilyn
That's great news. You must be happy!
afternoon marilyn...
wow! that's a big turn-around from the harper austerity years. things are looking up!
Ben E. King!
I've lost count of how many different acts were the Drifters. There was the original with Bill Pinkney, they added Clyde McPhatter ("Money Honey", "White Christmas", then Clyde went solo, the group was replaced by the King ensemble ("There Goes My Baby", "Save the Last Dance for Me", then he went solo, another group got renamed the Drifters ("Under the Boardwalk"). I bet there's still some group calling themselves by that name.
Anyway, "There Goes My Baby" sure was thrilling when it came out.
evening shahryar...
the cool thing about the many drifters incarnations is that i don't think that i've heard a bad version of the band.
A Path To Citizenship At Last
Native American Council offers amnesty to 220 million undocumented whites
Please help the Resilience Resource Library grow by adding your links.
First Nations News
Any word on the Blood Quantum...
that will be allowed to be considered for being actively considered a member of an immigrant "Tribe"?
I may have to apply for several various groups, unless they're going with the US policy of naming us after whatever...
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
evening martha...
a pretty generous offer, all things considered.
Good evening, good people
Good to see everyone. Hey joe, sounds like a fun night.
I was up way too late last night, watching that dumpster fire of an election in Arizona. Pretty upset about the cheating going on in these Dem primaries and frankly I suspect there's a lot more that we don't even know about. Voter suppression is sleazy. Doesn't make me very likely to vote for a candidate who resorts to rotten tactics when she already had every possible advantage and an opponent who has held back about 99% of what he could have used against her.
Good Evening Joanne
The Mad Bomber does not know any other way but to cheat, deceive, lie, and go about scorching the earth in everything she does.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
I'm getting the impression
that a lot of the AZ mess is GOP setting things up on a county level to screw over the Dems in a General e.g. woeful lack of polling stations in non-white areas. Unfortunately this hurt Sanders as this is where is support would be expected to be highest. Of course I'm not suggesting for a moment that Team Clinton would not be only to happy to take advantage of the situation.
Apparently AZ has always been a cesspit with regard to the sanctity of the vote.
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.” -Voltaire
I just feel like
there is so much wrong with these primaries. I had thought about the consequences of things like this in the general election too. I wonder if they ended up screwing themselves now though, with the massive outcry, petitions, a call for a DOJ investigation by the mayor of Phoenix, etc. Since one of my sons is now in Phoenix and I visited recently, I've taken more of an interest in that area.
It has to do with Repub state and county gov in AZ.
Democrats only turn out in Presidential years so this is what we get. There's a pretty good explanation here, if you want to hold your nose and go read it. TOP
We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.
to which I say why would I care - see my sig
that's the only thing one can say in response. Why the heck do the American people accept all of it?
https://www.euronews.com/live
I should not have conflated
the voter suppression with the Clinton campaign. I realize this is a pattern in states where Republicans control the gears. I should have made it more clear that I think there are other ways in which this campaign has used rotten tactics. And overall, the suppression benefits the candidates the establishment wants to win. Although it would not surprise me at all if there was more to it. What made me most angry was that not only did they reduce the number of polling places, the media, also a tool of the establishment, started calling the election while thousands of people were still in line and no doubt they all knew the race had been called as you can see people with phones standing in line in the photos.
Oh yea! Joanne
Such a long time from TOP and missing every minute. I guess I should thank Kos for upending the apple cart and moving me over here.
evening joanne...
sorry i missed you. yes, i've seen a bunch of things that suggest that the arizona primaries were pretty sleazy, but i guess you have to expect that sort of thing in a rethug-dominated state. perhaps there will be some more revelations about voter suppression due to the uproar.
Evening Joe~
I put this in yesterday's by mistake, bad migraine and my brain is on the fritz. Anyways, knockout punch by Jacob Applebaum, going off on The Guardian, and so much more, well worth a watch. NSFW
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJValv4YQcY]
I shave my legs with Occam's Razor~
He is awesome!
Thank you for sharing this, and I will as well!
How do I get the link to this video? thanks.
NVM. I got it!
Kaye
One of my regular contributors
shared it to my Snowden Group, telling me that if I thought it was inappropriate, I could remove it, lol. I thanked him and told him I would be sharing it instead.
I shave my legs with Occam's Razor~
Wow that was brutal
and absolutely essential viewing. Didn't realize he was such an entertaining speaker.
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.” -Voltaire
I confess I don't know Jacob Appelbaum.
I find his brazen defiance refreshing, even if I don't understand (no background) everything he is talking about.
Kaye
He's currently another man who cannot come home.
Or perhaps I should say chooses not to for fear he would be detained, he was one of the originators of the TOR project, he's worked with Glenn Greenwald and Edward Snowden, and still does with Freedom of the Press Foundation.
I shave my legs with Occam's Razor~
evening triv...
thanks for the video! sorry to hear about the migraine, i hope you feel better soon.
This is a must watch video!
Thank you for sharing it with us.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
Great work!
I was saddened, but not surprised to see the Alabama pollution story toward the end. I knew this sort of thing has been happening near New Orleans for years, but didn't know about this situation at the opposite end of my state. Thanks for all your work to pull this together!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
evening lookout...
the alabama story is pretty sad, yet another tale (like flint) where government at all levels fails to keep deep-pocketed corporations from practicing environmental racism and classism.
Win or Lose, Bernie Sanders Has Changed America
Please help the Resilience Resource Library grow by adding your links.
First Nations News
Great clip
Thanks for the link. I'm going to spread this one around.
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
I know this is true
but I'm not ready for that kind of message yet. I feel like that is one of the techniques that will be used to try to bring Bernie voters back into the fold, so I avoid them I know that's probably petty but that's how I react to them.
Love that song!
This is currently my favorite version:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiPzU75P9FA]
Kaye
Oh I have always loved
this version of that song...thanks for sharing it!
Please help the Resilience Resource Library grow by adding your links.
First Nations News
Funny, this version is the first thing I thought of. eom.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
Wonderful
"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change." Stephen Hawking
NEW: http://www.twitter.com/trueblueinwdc
Whoah! Wonderful tune & artists--thank you Kaye! ;-) EOM
Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.
So many great articles you have posted!
But, damn it's hard to stay upbeat after reading them.
Thanks!
Kaye
evening kaye...
that's what the music is for.
thanks Joe, the best thing of the day is
reading the Evening Blues, and as KayCeSF says above, it's really hard to not be discouraged and down to read them. Two articles from counterpunch in the "Also of Interest" Section especially, "A World War has Begun: Break the Silence" and "Ukraine Has Become a Problem Case for the European Union". Lately everything goes bad.
We certainly need to "Stand by us". Thanks for the music. And no, I don't agree with the quote. We certainly don't learn by our many mistakes.
https://www.euronews.com/live
I finally tossed back a Dramamine and read
Clinton's AIPAC speech. And I...really have no words. No wonder Kissinger is her BFF. If she's our next President (Dear FSM, let it not be so), I fear global thermonuclear war (and not the simulated kind from Wargames) cannot be far behind. She really wants to show off her warmongering street cred, doesn't she?
Oh, and evening Joe! Thanks for what is now becoming my nightly fix!
You should read the article Joe provided
At the bottom. It's the one about world war. They are developing a mini nuke so that they won't be hesitant to use nuclear weapons.
And he's surrounding Russia by putting troops in countries around it. I have no idea what his goal is by doing that, but that PNAC's goals were to take out Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Syria and one other I don't remember and then Iran, Russia and China. Then US hegemony will be complete.
Then add in the TPP, and the corporate coup will also be completed.
One ring to rule them all.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
evening jiordan...
dramamine, eh?
you certainly have more intestinal fortitude than i in sitting through hillary's horrible "humanitarian" rantings.
Here is some good news...
or at least interesting...
Embattled Sheriff Glenn Palmer, Linked to Oregon Occupiers, Under Scrutiny
Please help the Resilience Resource Library grow by adding your links.
First Nations News
thanks for the link!
Two articles that may be of interest
Came across them in my travels today, and they fit the melancholy mood of the blues this evening:
Europe's refugee crisis: a taste of things to come. (3/23) Which briefly discusses environmental and political factors that have been driving displacement and exasperating civil conflicts. "When you look to the root causes of migration, more often than not environmental change or mismanagement is in there somewhere."
What pushes young people to extremism? (3/18) A quote from which: "Exclusion, injustice, poor governance, and unemployment create fertile ground for violent extremism. It is not mere coincidence that the most deprived regions produce a disproportionate number of recruits."
"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change." Stephen Hawking
NEW: http://www.twitter.com/trueblueinwdc
thanks!
Those are some sobering images
of the refugee crisis. Thank you for the link.
RE: Europe's refugee crisis: a taste of things to come.
The Syrian crisis can be traced right back to the effect of Climate Change...
What is the role of climate change in the conflict in Syria?
September 03, 2015
This comic shows how drought may have been an unhinging factor for Syria in 2011, and what happened over the following year.
Please help the Resilience Resource Library grow by adding your links.
First Nations News
It's amazing, isn't it?
During WW2 the US fought the Nazis and now they have helped install the Nazi regime in Ukraine after ANOTHER overthrow of an elected government.
During the Iraq war starting in 2003, the US fought against Al Quada and now they are fighting alongside them in Syria to help overthrow Assad.
I can't keep track of who the enemies are anymore, can any one else?
And then there is Trump calling for the US to go against international law and commit war crimes by torturing detainees (not that we haven't been doing this for a long time anyway) but he also wants to kill all the terrorists and their families too.
So if it is okay for the US to bomb and kill everyone in a training camp, why wouldn't it be okay for them to bomb and kill everyone at a US military base in their country? Is it only self defense when the US and its allies kill innocent civilians?
The terrorists who bombed both Paris and Brussels said that it was in retaliation for those countries bombing and killing innocent civilians in their countries. Why is it okay for one country to bomb another one, but not the other way around? Terrorism/self defense. Seems like a very fine line.
Good article about the world war close to being started. Russia and China both being surrounded by the US military is playing a very dangerous game. I have no idea what the goal is. Except for US hegemony.
It's a good thing that Obama was awarded the Nobel peace prize. Just imagine what he would have done if he didn't have that.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
Here is an interesting website
It shows the real time costs of the wars in the various countries that the military is is as well as the total cost of of the war on terror.
It costs $100 in less then 6-7 seconds.
Just imagine if that money was spent here instead.
We would be able to have decent health care , free college and all the other nice things that other countries have.
But the corporations have too solid of a grip on the whores in congress that have sold us and themselves out.
https://www.nationalpriorities.org/cost-of/
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
That is a good website, Thanks snoopydawg
And growing by the second n/t
World hegemony, New World Order.
The obstacles put up by China and Russia the last ten years and the last 4-5 in particular haven't seemed to deter these crazy fucks. They are playing a dangerous game and it's become ridiculous. This isn't reality, these people are living in a mindset of centuries past, Obama very included.
I can't stress enough, even though some think I do, that we have to stop them. The human race cannot continue this way. And not only that, we don't have a say in the matter unless we enough of us can band together, completely outside this foolish representative system, to force them down.
Very dangerous game indeed!
I agree that we have to stop them before any nukes start being used, but I have no idea what we can do.
Every peaceful protest is brutally broken up by the militarized fascist cops while more than half of the people in this country cheers.
I think that is the reason that the cops were militarized. It's a way to get around Posse Comitatus. They are equipped as well as the military. But I think there was a military unit created by Bush that will have permission to use military force in this country.
And the article about world war says that they have created mini nukes so they aren't afraid of using them because they won't do as much damage.
Joe included the link to the article at the bottom in case any one wants to read it.
And in an earlier comment I asked what was the difference between the US and NATO killing innocent civilians and the terrorists groups doing the same thing to the people whose country's leaders are bombing
This article asks that question but doesn't go far enough. It's mainly speaking about why no one cares that ISIS killed more people last week then were killed in Brussels. What needs to be asked is why no one cares when NATO forces kill innocent civilians just because they are in the same area as the terrorists?
It's the same question many of us asked when Israel was killing Palestinians in Gaza.
It seems that some people's lives are more important than others.
I'm against killing innocent civilians regardless who is doing the killing.
The US has killed between 20-40 million people since WW2.
As MLK said, " The US is the greatest purveyors of violence".
Here's the link to the article. At least it talks about the number of innocent civilians that Saudi Arabia has killed with the weapons that the US and Hillary's state department sold them. Including cluster bombs that Hillary voted against banning.
http://www.salon.com/2016/03/23/the_obscene_moral_hypocrisy_of_brussels_...
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
That's the thing to me now,
that U.S. imperialism is killing innocent people, children, right now. It's happening every day. Worrying about a nuke war is one thing and something we should worry about and take action to prevent, but we're collectively ignoring the murders happening every day in our names. If that was happening in this country, there would be a completely different reaction than the complete apathy Americans have over U.S. imperialist murders.
Speaking of Saudi Arabia, they bombed a marketplace last week that killed something like over 30 kids. Not only with U.S. supplied weapons but a war that the U.S. is highly involved in.
Thanks for the link. The hypocrisy is too much, but I suppose it goes with the territory we're in.
People in this country can't grasp what you are saying
You are right, if people in this country were being killed there would be a different reaction. That is what I write in my comments on other websites when people say that 'we should nuke them and get it over with' that is the reason why the terrorists attack is and other countries. Because we and them have been killing their people for decades.
They can't grasp the concept of why we were 'attacked' on 9/11 or why the terrorists attacked Paris, Brussels or any other country.
During the Paris and Brussels attacks the terrorists told them WHY they attacked them, but people don't get it.
The US has a long history of invading countries, overthrowing their elected governments and training troops at the school of the americas to torture and murder their citizens after the US has installed a brutal puppet dictator that as long as he does what the US tells him to do and let's corporations steal their resources.
I didn't read all of that article. It does mention that the US has killed innocent civilians either with direct invasions or sanctions that kill innocent people. And those that put those sanctions on countries know damned well that it's not just that the leaders can't access their money, but drugs and medical equipment aren't allowed in the country and it is the civilians that are suffering.
If you haven't read the article yet, this is what it says about the US:
"This is not even to mention the victims of Western policies in Iraq in the past three decades, who number in the millions. It is precisely these policies that birthed the extremism that ravages the region, but it is these policies that are ignored at moments like this, when it is most important to highlight them.
After the U.S. prolonged the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s — arming both sides in the longest conventional war in the 20th century, one that led to the deaths of more than 1 million people — the United Nations, under pressure from the administration of President Bill Clinton, imposed sanctions on the oil-rich Middle Eastern nation, which, by the U.N.’s own admittance, led to the deaths of another 570,000 children.
Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright infamously defended the half a million deaths, and U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq Denis Halliday resigned, calling the program “genocidal.” This genocidal program was subsequently followed by President George W. Bush’s invasion, which the U.N. had made clear was illegal."
Albright, who has endorsed serial war criminal Hillary Clinton said that the sanctions that killed those 570 children was worth it. Worth what? What did those deaths accomplish?
I know you know these things. We are in agreement. It's how do we get other people to understand what this fucking circle jerk war on terror is about? We certainly aren't fighting them over there so that we don't have to fight them here. We are fighting and creating the terrorists so that the corporations can steal those country's resources. As almost every war has been about.
And still young people join the military just to be cannon fodder as Kissinger said.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
that's a good antidote to being without hope, my dream ...
Tshering Tobgay: This country isn't just carbon neutral -- it's carbon negative.
[video:https://youtu.be/xCLZT5m6jaA]
Yes, and let me be a dreamer right now, if you have something negative to say about the WWF, for the moment I don't want to hear that. And may be some things that is said in this video, US could think about to copy cat.
https://www.euronews.com/live
I feel blue.
Just got home to an empty house. I had to euthanize my dog Riley tonight. I feel very alone.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
So sorry to hear about your puppy
It's been a little over 8 months for our old dog. It was awful, even the cat mourned for months. I just met you, but sending hugs your way.
"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change." Stephen Hawking
NEW: http://www.twitter.com/trueblueinwdc
Oh riverlover
I'm so sorry to hear about your pain at losing your friend. I know that there are no words that will take away your pain, but you are in my thoughts and heart tonight.
Take care my friend. I'm sure that many people are here for you if you want to talk.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
my condolences riverlover...
i'm really sorry to hear of your loss.
I am so sorry riverlover,
that you had to say goodbye to such a beloved companion. He will always be with you, like the loyal friend he always was.
Riverlover
So very sorry.
I believe in sky faeries.
I'm so sorry.
There is nothing harder than having to say goodbye to an old friend. My belief is that Riley's energy is still alive and well, and very much with you. Energy can never be destroyed, only changed.
Be well, riverlover.
bern baby bern disco inberno
I am so sorry for your loss riverlover
The Rainbow Bridge
By the edge of a woods, at the foot of a hill,
Is a lush, green meadow where time stands still.
Where the friends of man and woman do run,
When their time on earth is over and done.
For here, between this world and the next,
Is a place where each beloved creature finds rest.
On this golden land, they wait and they play,
Till the Rainbow Bridge they cross over one day.
No more do they suffer, in pain or in sadness,
For here they are whole, their lives filled with gladness.
Their limbs are restored, their health renewed,
Their bodies have healed, with strength imbued.
They romp through the grass, without even a care,
Until one day they start, and sniff at the air.
All ears prick forward, eyes dart front and back,
Then all of a sudden, one breaks from the pack.
For just at that instant, their eyes have met;
Together again, both person and pet.
So they run to each other, these friends from long past,
The time of their parting is over at last.
The sadness they felt while they were apart,
Has turned into joy once more in each heart.
They embrace with a love that will last forever,
And then, side-by-side, they cross over… together.
Please help the Resilience Resource Library grow by adding your links.
First Nations News
My heartfelt condolences, riverlover. Hope this poem
gives you some comfort.
[My italics]
Kossack Ekaterin kindly shared this poem with me when I posted a tribute in honor of our dear terrier-mix, 'Murphee.'
Also, we received a sympathy card from the staff of her Kennel with the very apt axiom,
Best,
Mollie
(Music City) Mollie, C99P and DKos
"Every time I lose a dog, he takes a piece of my heart. Every new dog gifts me with a piece of his. Someday, my heart will be total dog, and maybe then I will be just as generous, loving, and forgiving."--Author Unknown
Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.
That's a beautiful poem, Molly
Thanks for sharing it.
The other saying is also beautiful.
I'm worried about how much more time I'm going to have with Abby. But she is still enjoying her walks each day.
I try to always have two dogs because I can't imagine coming home to an empty house.
I tried to upload a photo of Abby but it keeps loading one I did yesterday.
There were problems with running a campaign of Joy while committing a genocide? Who could have guessed?
Harris is unburdened of speaking going forward.
Thanks, SD--you're welcome. It was Ekaterin
(and I really didn't even know her/him) who shared it with me. Brought tears to my eyes--sometimes, still does.
This is the only time that we've only had 'just one.' Usually, three--for most of our married life. We chose to have more than one, partly for us, and partly for the sake of the dog(s)--so they wouldn't be 'alone' while we were gone. After all, they are pack animals. I think too much solitude weighs pretty heavily on dogs.
Of course, 'Mister B' can't be left alone (due to severe separation anxiety)--so, guess it's sorta a moot point, in his case.
Like an American Express card, "we don't leave home, without him." He has to be left with a sitter or Day Care, when we're taking care of business, doctor appointments, etc.
Hope you can get Abby's photo uploaded. I don't know 'why' it would want to upload yesterday's photo. If you keep having trouble, JtC or Joe might be able to help you with that.
Have a good one!
(Music City) Mollie, C99P & DKos
elinkarlsson@WordPress
"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers
Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.
Thank you all, many of us have been through petloss
more than once but it is never easy.He was my best companion, especially after my husband's death nearly 6 years ago. They both exited around a significant date in my life.
The house seems empty. This is a standard witching hour for me, but the first without his trailing me down the stairs to just sleep closer to me.
I try to rest the cremains in one or more significant (for each) location. It came to me where the rest of him will go.
It will free me from my nursing duties, that is not a comfort except for cost. He was my metronome.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
this brings back some pain for me
Tragically, over a month ago, at 6:45am , Thurs 11 Feb. to be exact, my Yorkie terrier
was run over and killed by a young inattentive driver next to my house, in front of my
neighbor's driveway. An ordinary residential street, not a busy highway. For an innocent,
defenseless animal, now lifeless and gone forever, it is a tragedy which rarely makes the news.
I still have nightmares and sudden pangs of anger and hurt.
It was all like a dream. I was on the side of the road, waving my arms and yelling for her to
stop, and seconds later the late-model white VW runs over my little
dog, without braking or slowing, and I had to jump out of the way at
the last second to avoid becoming its second victim.
The young girl pulls over after that, and apologizes. It was not
dark, light enough to drive without lights. On her way to school, most likely.
She offers no explanation on why she didn't see the me or my dog. I can only pray
for these young drivers who likely are texting while driving on residential roads. And
for their responsible parents.
Believe me, the police don't care if someone runs over an animal, it's just road kill to them.
As long as it's not a human, it doesn't count for them.
That poor little body is buried under my bird feeder now, At least I can look at something living now,
the little birds are often too numerous to count. Yet the pain will not go away so easily.
That is awful. Viscerally painful to me.
I lived in fear of my animals getting killed in such a way. I am sorry.
Many of my dogs have been terriers, including Riley. My grandpups are a Yorkie and a Yorkie. I appreciate their fire. I appreciate your anger and despair. Peace be to them and us.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Evening joe and everyone
Thank you for the news and blues, and I hope your evening was interesting.
I am settling down to a calmer evening after clearing the mess of a heavy wind and rain storm. Autumn is approaching, even though it's still unusually warm. This is either Auckland's 'indian summer' or a changing climate. Now I have to go google why it's called 'indian summer'.
It seems that there are many interpretations
I liked this one -
afternoon janis...
the evening turned out pretty well. i wasn't as impressed by this movie as i was by his previous "gasland" movies, but i had a great time, ran into some friends and overall had a good time.
sorry to hear about the mess left by the heavy weather. i hope you're having a restful day after.
Thunder Snow
this night. Quite breathtaking. Now I patiently await the snownado. It has been a mild March here in northeastern Iowa. I gather we are making up for that in the next ten hours.
I believe in sky faeries.
afternoon moira...
heh, over here in maryland last weekend we had some snain.