The Evening Blues - 8-31-21



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Betty Everett

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features r&b singer Betty Everett. Enjoy!

Betty Everett - The Shoop Shoop Song

"Before you embark on a journey of revenge, dig two graves."

-- Confucius


News and Opinion

Worth a full read. Here's a snippet to get you started:

Hedges: The Empire Does Not Forgive

The Carthaginian general Hannibal, who came close to defeating the Roman Republic in the Second Punic War, committed suicide in 181 BC in exile as Roman soldiers closed in on his residence in the Bithynian village of Libyssa, now modern-day Turkey. It had been more than thirty years since he led his army across the alps and annihilated Roman legions at the Battle of Trebia, Lake Trasimene and Cannae, considered one of the most brilliant tactical victories in warfare which centuries later inspired the plans of the German Army Command in World War I when they invaded Belgium and France. Rome was only able to finally save itself from defeat by replicating Hannibal’s military tactics.

It did not matter in 181 BC that there had been over 20 Roman emperors since Hannibal’s invasion. It did not matter that Hannibal had been hunted for decades and forced to perpetually flee, always just beyond the reach of Roman authorities. He had humiliated Rome. He had punctured its myth of omnipotence. And he would pay. With his life. Years after Hannibal was gone, the Romans were still not satisfied. They finished their work of apocalyptic vengeance in 146 BC by razing Carthage to the ground and selling its remaining population into slavery. Cato the Censor summed up the sentiments of empire: Carthāgō dēlenda est (Carthage must be destroyed). Nothing about empire, from then until now, has changed.

Imperial powers do not forgive those who expose their weaknesses or make public the sordid and immoral inner workings of empire. Empires are fragile constructions. Their power is as much one of perception as of military strength. The virtues they claim to uphold and defend, usually in the name of their superior civilization, are a mask for pillage, the exploitation of cheap labor, indiscriminate violence, and state terror.

The current American empire, damaged and humiliated by the troves of internal documents published by WikiLeaks, will, for this reason, persecute Julian Assange for the rest of his life. It does not matter who is president or which political party is in power. Imperialists speak with one voice. The killing of thirteen U.S. troops by a suicide bomber at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on Thursday evoked from Joe Biden the full-throated cry of all imperialists: “To those who carried out this attack … we will not forgive, we will not forget, we will hunt you down and make you pay.” This was swiftly followed by two drone strikes in Kabul against suspected members of the Islamic State in Khorasan Province, ISKP (ISIS-K), which took credit for the suicide bombing that left some 170 dead, including 28 members of the Taliban.

The Taliban, which defeated U.S. and coalition forces in a 20-year war, is about to be confronted with the wrath of a wounded empire. The Cuban, Vietnamese, Iranian, Venezuelan and Haitian governments know what comes next. The ghosts of Toussaint Louverture, Emilio Aguinaldo, Mohammad Mossadegh, Jacobo Arbenz, Omar Torrijos, Gamal Abdul Nasser, Juan Velasco, Salvador Allende, Andreas Papandreou, Juan Bosh, Patrice Lumumba, and Hugo Chavez know what comes next. It isn’t pretty. It will be paid for by the poorest and most vulnerable Afghans. ...

Like Cato the Censor, the U.S. military and intelligence agencies are, if history is any guide, at this moment planning to destabilize Afghanistan by funding, arming, and backing any militia, warlord or terrorist organization willing to strike at the Taliban. The CIA, which should exclusively gather intelligence, is a rogue paramilitary organization that oversees secret kidnappings, interrogation at black sites, torture, manhunts, and targeted assassinations across the globe. It carried out commando raids in Afghanistan that killed a large number of Afghan civilians, which repeatedly sent enraged family members and villagers into the arms of the Taliban. It is, I expect, reaching out to Amrullah Saleh, who was Ashraf Ghani’s vice president and who has declared himself “the legitimate caretaker president” of Afghanistan. Saleh is holed up in the Panjashir Valley.  He, along with warlords Afgand Massoud, Mohammad Atta Noor and Abdul Rashid Dostum, are clamoring to be armed and supported to perpetuate conflict in Afghanistan. ...

All empires die. The end is usually unpleasant. The American empire, humiliated in Afghanistan, as it was in Syria, Iraq, and Libya, as it was at the Bay of Pigs and in Vietnam, is blind to its own declining strength, ineptitude, and savagery. Its entire economy, a “military Keynesianism,” revolves around the war industry. Military spending and war are the engine behind the nation’s economic survival and identity. It does not matter that with each new debacle the United States turns larger and larger parts of the globe against it and all it claims to represent. It has no mechanism to stop itself, despite its numerous defeats, fiascos, blunders and diminishing power, from striking out irrationally like a wounded animal. The mandarins who oversee our collective suicide, despite repeated failure, doggedly insist we can reshape the world in our own image. This myopia creates the very conditions that accelerate the empire’s demise.

The Completion Of The Afghanistan Withdrawal Is Nothing To Celebrate

The US has officially announced the completion of its military withdrawal from Afghanistan, minus of course the CIA ops which will continue in that country and the bombs that will likely continue to rain down in the name of fighting terrorism.

There are a lot of warmongers rending their garments over the termination of a decades-long military occupation which accomplished nothing besides making war profiteers wealthy and killing hundreds of thousands of people. Almost as ridiculous are the countless pundits and politicians hailing this as some kind of major accomplishment that Americans should be proud of.

Pride, praise and celebration are not the appropriate emotional response to the day. The appropriate response to a decades-overdue withdrawal from a war that should never have happened in the first place is rage. Unmitigated rage at an unforgivable atrocity which amassed a mountain of corpses for no legitimate reason, from which the region will probably not recover in our lifetime. Unmitigated rage at those responsible for starting and maintaining this horror all this time.

This is not something that Biden should be applauded for. Nobody deserves praise or credit for ending a twenty-year disaster, especially one they helped start. Nobody applauds the mass shooter for finally setting down the rifle.

Every single allied soldier who died in Afghanistan died in vain. They died fighting not for national security, freedom, or democracy, but for war industry profit margins and for the idiotic geostrategic agendas of globe-dominating imperialists. This is also the reason every Afghan soldier and Afghan civilian was killed during that time.

They all died in vain. We shouldn’t concoct sugary fairy tales about this, we should try to prevent it from happening again.

Who knows where Afghanistan would be if the US and its allies had stayed out of the nation two decades ago? Who knows where they’d have been had the US not begun arming the mujahideen against the Soviet Union four decades ago? We will never know what could have been for those people. The opportunity to find out was taken away from them. Stolen forever.

And of course no lessons were learned from this by anyone who will be making decisions about the actions that will be taken by the most powerful military force in history. America’s bloated military budget will continue to swell, and its arsenal and that of its allies will pivot toward new enemies.

The only sane response to all this is rage, and disgust. And a firm commitment to trying to end this madness.

Afghanistan Faces Future Under Taliban as U.S. Withdraws & Drone Strikes Continue to Kill Civilians

After 20 years, last US flight departs Kabul, leaving Afghanistan to its fate

America’s longest war came to an end just before midnight local time in Afghanistan, when the last evacuation flight flew out of Kabul airport.

A C-17 military transport plane took off carrying the US commander who oversaw the evacuation operation, Maj Gen Christopher Donahue of the 82nd Airborne Division, and the acting US ambassador, Ross Wilson, who were the last two Americans to step off the tarmac in Kabul, minutes before the 31 August deadline.

It brought to an end a US presence that lasted nearly 20 years, beginning just a few weeks after the September 11 attacks. The US gave up its last toehold in Kabul to the guerrilla group it ousted with initial ease in 2001, marking a defeat on the scale of Vietnam.

There was no fanfare or ceremony, and no handing over of flags to Kabul’s new masters. All remaining armoured vehicles and other military equipment items were destroyed or rendered useless and the Taliban were notified of the last flight.

US secretary of state Antony Blinken said later “a new chapter has begun”, with the military operation over and a diplomatic mission just starting. US diplomatic operations have now been moved from Kabul to Qatar, he said. More than 100 Americans remain in Afghanistan who wanted to leave but were unable to get on the last flights, he said, but that the State Department would keep working to get them out.

Peace Activist Kathy Kelly on Reparations for Afghanistan & What the U.S. Owes After Decades of War

International talks aim for consensus on Taliban government

Talks are under way in Doha and New York to try to reach an international consensus on the conditions for recognising the Taliban government in Afghanistan. There are signs of tensions between superpowers after Russia called on the US to release Afghan central bank reserves that Washington blocked after the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul earlier this month. “If our western colleagues are actually worried about the fate of the Afghan people, then we must not create additional problems for them by freezing gold and foreign exchange reserves,” said the Kremlin’s envoy to Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov.

He said the US must urgently unfreeze these assets, “to bolster the rate of the collapsing national currency”. ...

On Monday, António Guterres, the UN secretary general, will convene a meeting in New York of ambassadors from the five permanent members of the UN security council – Russia, China, the US, the UK, and France – to discuss a potential joint resolution on Afghanistan. The resolution has been under discussion over the weekend.

China urges nations to ‘actively guide’ Taliban government

China’s top diplomat has urged the international community to engage with Afghanistan’s new Taliban government and “guide it actively”, in a phone call with the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, according to the Chinese foreign ministry.

Wang Yi, Chinese state councillor and foreign minister, also said that Washington should work with the international community to help the new regime run governmental functions normally, according to a statement. He added that the US’s “hasty withdrawal” could allow terrorist groups to “regroup and come back stronger”.

A spokesperson for the US Department of State, Ned Price, said in a short statement that Blinken and Wang spoke about “the importance of the international community holding the Taliban accountable for the public commitments they have made regarding the safe passage and freedom to travel for Afghans and foreign nationals”.

The two foreign ministers also spoke of the bilateral relationship. Wang said Beijing would consider how to engage with the US “based on its attitude towards China”. But he also said: “Dialogue is better than confrontation, and cooperation is better than conflict.”

What a story to tell the world: Britain values dogs more than Afghan people

As the gates of hell closed on Kabul, they were among the last to make it out. They landed in the early hours of Sunday morning, to a hero’s welcome from some, and shamed silence from others. For this was a planeload not of human souls – those desperate Afghans who had huddled knee-deep in sewage for days outside the airport in hopes of being saved – but of cats and dogs.

The Ministry of Defence confirmed, through audibly gritted teeth, that the private plane chartered to bring back former soldier turned animal rescuer Paul “Pen” Farthing and his menagerie of strays had been “assisted” through the airport by British troops in the final shambolic hours of the retreat from Kabul – even as human beings who had put their trust in the western forces they worked alongside were being abandoned to their fate.

As Tom Tugendhat, the Tory MP and ex-serviceman who has been struggling to get his old army interpreter into the UK, put it: “We’ve just used a lot of troops to get in 200 dogs; meanwhile my interpreter’s family is likely to be killed. When one interpreter asked me a few days ago, ‘Why is my five-year-old worth less than a dog?’ I didn’t have an answer.”

What a story to tell the world about ourselves, amid the chaos of our leaving. What a gift to extremist movements across the Middle East and beyond, who draw their power from the idea that the west holds foreign lives contemptuously cheap; that cats of no conceivable interest to the Taliban can be airlifted out but not human beings at risk of being hunted down and executed. Even Farthing’s Afghan staff, whom he had insisted he would get out, were left behind in the end, after their paperwork was rejected at the airport.

UN atomic watchdog says North Korea appears to have restarted nuclear reactor

North Korea appears to have restarted a nuclear reactor that is widely believed to have produced plutonium for nuclear weapons, the UN atomic watchdog has said in an annual report. ...

“There were no indications of reactor operation from early December 2018 to the beginning of July 2021,” the IAEA report said of the 5-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon, a nuclear complex at the heart of North Korea’s nuclear programme.

“However, since early July 2021, there have been indications, including the discharge of cooling water, consistent with the operation of the reactor.“ ...

The IAEA said in June there were indications at Yongbyon of possible reprocessing work to separate plutonium from spent reactor fuel that could be used in nuclear weapons.

Friday’s report said the duration of that apparent work – five months, from mid-February to early July - suggested a full batch of spent fuel was handled, in contrast to the shorter time needed for waste treatment or maintenance.

Oregon counties request trucks for bodies as Covid overwhelms morgues

Two Oregon counties hit hard by Covid-19 are running out of space to hold bodies amid an intense surge in cases that is overwhelming the state’s healthcare system, forcing authorities to request refrigerated trucks to help handle the overflow.

In Josephine county, located in the state’s south-west, the local hospital is exceeding its body storage capacity and the area’s five funeral homes and three crematoriums are “at the edge of crisis capacity daily”, the county emergency manager told the state last week. Meanwhile, Tillamook county, on Oregon’s north-west coast, reported that its sole funeral home “is now consistently at or exceeding their capacity” of nine bodies.

Rising cases, mostly among the unvaccinated, have overwhelmed hospitals across the state. In south-west Oregon, cases are increasing faster than anywhere else in the country. Oregon has more people hospitalized than at any other point in the pandemic. Officials attribute the current surge to the hyper-contagious Delta variant and low vaccination rates in some regions, such as Josephine county, where just 40% of eligible residents are fully vaccinated. In Tillamook county, 54% of eligible residents are fully vaccinated.

“In the past two weeks, we have had more new positive cases than the first 10 months of the pandemic,” the Tillamook county board of commissioners said in a public statement. “The spread of Covid in Tillamook county has reached a critical phase.” The area, which has a population of 26,000, saw six deaths in six days.

Cases in the state are up 33% in the last two weeks, while deaths have risen 48% and hospitalizations are up 126%, according to New York Times data. More than 90% of the state’s ICU beds are full, and the vast majority of patients are unvaccinated.

Judge STRIPS CUSTODY From Mom For Not Being Vaccinated

US judge revokes mother’s right to visit son over her refusal to get Covid vaccine

A judge in Illinois revoked a mother’s right to visit her 11-year-old son because she refused to be vaccinated against the coronavirus.

In what is believed to be an unprecedented ruling, Cook county judge James Shapiro said Rebecca Firlit, 39, who shares custody of her son with her divorced husband, could not see the boy again until she had taken the shot.

“I was confused because it was just supposed to be about expenses and child support,” Firlit told the Chicago Sun-Times about the virtual court hearing, which took place earlier this month.

“I was confused because it was just supposed to be about expenses and child support,” Firlit told the Chicago Sun-Times about the virtual court hearing, which took place earlier this month.

“One of the first things he asked me when I got on the Zoom call was whether or not I was vaccinated, which threw me off because I asked him what it had to do with the hearing. “He said, ‘I am the judge, and I make the decisions for your case.’” Firlit’s lawyer, Annette Fernholz, said she had filed a legal challenge to the state appellate court, noting that the boy’s father had not been seeking such a ruling.

“The trial court clearly exceeded its authority in suspending the mother’s parenting time when the issue before the court was child support,” Fernholz said in a statement. “The mother did not know her parenting time was being discussed when she went to Zoom court. The judge deprived her of notice and a full hearing on the issue.”

Firlit, who has not said if she will get the vaccine, told the judge her decision not to take it was not political. “I’ve had adverse reactions to vaccines in the past and was advised not to get vaccinated by my doctor,” she said. “It poses a risk.”

Mass EVICTIONS BEGIN With 750K In Immediate Danger

Chicago to investigate officer who confronted Black woman walking dog

The Chicago police oversight agency is investigating a white officer’s struggle with a Black woman who was walking her dog in a lakefront park, an encounter the woman’s attorneys allege became violent and was “an obvious case of racial profiling”. The Civilian Office of Police Accountability (Copa) opened its investigation on Sunday. ...

A law office representing Nikkita Brown said in a statement she was near the lakefront with her dog at about 12.10am on Saturday when a Chicago police officer approached her for being in the area after the park was closed.

In the two-minute-long video recorded by a bystander, Brown and her dog appear to walk away from the officer as he follows closely. Brown turns around with her phone in her hand and stops. Moments later, the officer appears to reach for Brown’s phone and then grab Brown, who can be heard yelling, “Let go!” as she struggles to break free. Brown’s attorneys accused the officer of “violently” attacking their client “for absolutely no reason”.

“He attempts to tackle her, all while groping her body as she screams for help,” the attorneys said in the statement. “This unprovoked attack lasts for approximately two minutes, during this time Ms Brown’s phone is knocked from her hands and she is knocked out of her shoes.” When Brown is finally free, she can be seen picking up her phone before walking away with her dog. Her attorneys said she returned home, called 911 and filed a report with a sergeant. The attorneys said she had not received a copy of that report.



the horse race



Matt Taibbi Calls FOR THIRD PARTY To End Forever Wars



the evening greens


Residents clog roads fleeing South Lake Tahoe as Caldor fire advances quickly

Thousands of residents have been forced to evacuate the famous tourist town of South Lake Tahoe as the raging Caldor fire draws closer on Monday, prompting chaotic scenes and clogged roads as residents rushed to leave the area.

Ash rained down on long lines of cars gridlocked on the roads exiting the popular vacation city, which is home to more than 20,000. Cars inched along through the smoky haze, some piled high with belongings and others towing trailers with bikes and other recreation equipment. Occasionally, sirens rang out and red lights flashed into the distance. Anxiety mounted with each gusty breeze, strong enough to shake the trees, reminding evacuees that the inferno was heading their way.

By mid-afternoon many streets were silent and empty as evacuees cleared out, save for a few folks still feverishly loading cars, trucks and RVs with their things. But for some, that just wasn’t an option. Reel Duncan, a resident of more than 15 years, doesn’t have a vehicle. “It’s messed up, the evacuation for people who don’t have cars” she said, adding that she’d heard there were going to be shuttles for people but was told they’d stopped running earlier in the day.

“It is me and my fiancé and my cat,” Duncan said. “We are all packed up and ready to go, we just have to figure out a way to get out. And we have nowhere to go.” Her neighbor, longtime resident Ron Hartman, was also stuck without a car. “We are thinking about just riding our bikes down the highway with a sign on the back,” Duncan said. “Like, can anyone give us a ride?” ...

“Today’s been a rough day and there’s no bones about it,” Jeff Marsoleis, forest supervisor for El Dorado national forest, said on Sunday evening. A few days ago, he said, he thought crews could halt the Caldor fire’s eastern progress, but “today it let loose”. Crews are preparing for challenging days ahead, with gusty winds and critical fire weather conditions in the forecast for Monday and Tuesday.

After Ida's Destruction, Sunrise Movement Urges Biden to Declare Climate Emergency

With search and rescue efforts underway and widespread power outages in the wake of Hurricane Ida barreling into the Louisiana coast Sunday as a Category 4 storm, the youth-led Sunrise Movement on Monday urged President Joe Biden to declare a climate emergency.

"Today my heart aches for Louisiana and the Gulf Coast. On the 16th anniversary of Katrina, a storm that many still haven't recovered from, families are traumatized by yet another devastating climate catastrophe," said Varshini Prakash, the group's executive director, in a statement.

"Let's be clear: This was preventable," she continued. "It was preventable that New Orleans lost its power. It was preventable that people had to evacuate their homes. It was preventable that shelters face both a climate disaster and a Covid-19 surge. And it was preventable that people would lose their lives—especially poor people, and Black and Brown communities who don't all have the privilege of evacuating." ...

"What more do politicians need to realize that the climate crisis is here and killing us?" asked Prakash. "The time for incrementalism and watered down 'solutions' is over. While community members and aid groups provide support to victims of the storm, what is President Biden doing?"

"Biden must declare a climate emergency to mobilize the federal government towards addressing these climate disasters and tackling the climate crisis head on," she added. "We're done with thoughts and prayers and so are the communities of the Gulf South. We need action now."

After Hurricane Ida, a “Just & Fair Recovery” Must Address Ongoing Disasters of Poverty, Inequality

Hurricane Ida: up to 2 million without power as New Orleans assesses damage

Up to 2 million people remained without power in and around New Orleans on Monday as residents and authorities began to assess “catastrophic” damage from Hurricane Ida, a 150mph monster storm that was the most powerful ever to hit Louisiana. At least two people are known to have been killed, a motorist who drowned in New Orleans and a person hit by a falling tree outside Baton Rouge. The state’s governor, John Bel Edwards, and Joe Biden said they expected the death toll to rise.

Crews using airboats and helicopters were conducting search-and-rescue missions in several neighbourhoods, seeking people stranded in the attics or on roofs of flooded homes. Almost 5,000 national guard troops were activated, a number Edwards said would double by Tuesday.

The disaster has left scores of coastal Louisiana residents trapped by floodwaters and pleading to be rescued. Residents living amid the rivers and bayous along the state’s Gulf coast retreated to their attics or roofs and posted their addresses on social media with instructions for search-and-rescue teams on where to find them.

Residents woke to widespread devastation caused by the category 4 hurricane that made landfall on Sunday at Port Fourchon, then tore a path north towards New Orleans. The storm struck the city on the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which killed more than 1,800, mostly by flood. Roofs torn from buildings, fallen trees, utility poles and other storm debris blocked roads and hampered rescue workers. Downed power lines, many still live, created a dangerous situation for those emerging to assess the damage.

Spain’s Mar Menor: The lagoon becoming a fish cemetery


Also of Interest

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

Afghanistan collapse reveals Beltway media’s loyalty to permanent war state

Go back to Afghanistan? Men like McMaster and Panetta are addicted to war

Afghanistan collapsed because corruption had hollowed out the state

Demand for 'Moratorium on Drone Warfare' Follows Latest US Killing of Afghan Civilians

Afghan Crisis Must End America’s Empire of War, Corruption and Poverty

Living In Reality: Afghanistan Issue

Ukraine Shuts Down Opposition Media - U.S. Ambassador Applauds 'Daring Act', Calls For Support

GOP Candidate Calls for '20 Strong Men' to Force Out Pro-Mask School Board Members

After 25 Years, There’s a Reason MSNBC Can’t Look Back

House Democrats Demand Repeal of Fossil Fuel Subsidies in Reconciliation Bill

‘It’s not the cow, it’s the how’: why a long-time vegetarian became beef’s biggest champion

Afghan War Is OFFICIALLY OVER But Trump Demands Reinvasion?

Krystal Ball: Maddow Show is ENDING! Is MSNBC SCREWED?

Kim Iversen: Secret Big Tech Contracts With NSA, DOD Should SCARE You

Ryan Grim: The CIA Needs To Be PROSECUTED Now That The War In Afghanistan Is Over

Matt Stoller: McKinsey Class Has A TEMPER TANTRUM Over Biden Actually Ending War In Afghanistan

Rising: Could The Withdraw From Afghanistan Been Done Better?


A Little Night Music

Betty Everett - My Love

Betty Everett & Jerry Butler - Love is Strange

Betty Everett - You're No Good

Betty Everett & Jerry Butler - Ain't That Loving You Baby

Betty Everett - Getting Mighty Crowded

Betty Everett - Ain't Gonna Cry

Betty Everett - Too Hot To Hold

Betty Everett - Who Will Your Next Fool Be

Betty Everett - Love Comes Tumbling Down


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Comments

mimi's picture

Nothing more, nothing less.
I am just too sad to say anything. Good Night.

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10 users have voted.
mimi's picture

@mimi
Couldn't figure it out, but as tired as I am, that's my fault. Good NIght.

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8 users have voted.

@mimi @mimi Biden: Success!!! Success, I tell you!!! No other country has ever accomplished what we did in the largest airlift evacuation in World History!!! 120,000 evacuated. A Record!!!!

Then , some sadness, and the required display of Empathy, which Biden has decided is his trademark, for loss of troops and 20 years.

NOT A TRACE OF HUMILITY , or Apology to the country we destroyed, and in a continuous pique of fury, will now try to starve and punish.

That's the AMERICAN WAY!

(On the other hand, I am 100% very happy that we are out of Afghanistan no matter what.)

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14 users have voted.

NYCVG

mimi's picture

@NYCVG
"wunnebar" and "overwhelmming" I had to crawl back under the cover and have some more sweet dreams about them.

Thank You guys. You really help a lot to get the picture.

Best of luck to all of you. I have to continue ripping off common ivy from our brick walls and cutting down some bamboo that pops up everywhere. I think, you know, that bamboo is like the the US MIC forces, they pop up at all places from the undergound that they shouldn't and the Taliban are the most sticky common ivy, getting rid of it is as wasteful and effort as ripping of common ivy from your house.

The order of the day: Survive!

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9 users have voted.
janis b's picture

@mimi

Thanks for that visceral description of its invasion. For 25 years I’ve had to deal with that beautiful and tenacious plant. For four months every year I experience it as an attacking army that would envelope almost everything if allowed. Then during the winter months I appreciate it for its protective qualities. It strongly deflects the increasingly strong winds, plus it provides privacy year round. But from what you describe I recommend, if you have the resources, to do what’s necessary to contain it before it becomes even more out of control. Nothing like being a curse and a blessing at the same time.

I hope you have some help to tame the invaders and survive in the end ; ).

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8 users have voted.
mimi's picture

@janis b
the signs of love of my sister towards her deceased husbamnd from Goa, India (now 25 years ago). No way, I can touch them.

I wonder how you could help people bury their loved ones in a more timely manner. For some they can't do it. Well, I have to live with it or leave myself. I wished I could have my independent life back, but so far I haven't found a way that would be humane to my next of kin. Wink

I hope you are well and got some rest. Thank you for passing by. Always nice to hear from you. Smile

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5 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@mimi

i thought nycvg did a great job of explaining.

here's my take on what biden was trying to say.

"blather, blather, i did a really good thing! see, what the newsdroids are saying is bunkum. this was a great thing. better than some other thing. it's the military that makes the plans after i tell 'em to and then executes them, so anything that went wrong has nothing to do with me. see, i did a fabulous thing. and i have a big sad about all the stuff that the military got wrong. see my almost tears and the frog that's rising in my throat? big sad, indeed. but, it's all over and it's great. really great. everybody has a bright future! blather. blather."

have a great evening!

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9 users have voted.

@joe shikspack

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12 users have voted.
Lookout's picture

A wet one with Ida....almost 5" of rain since Sunday. Looks like it is coming your way js.

Luckily light winds and no power loss here. Onward we go.

I love Caity, but I'm celebrating the Afghan withdrawal. I wish it was the start of something, but find I agree with Chris...the US empire will torture the Taliban because of senseless pride over their own stupidity. It is what it is.

I posted this one in the AM OT, but it is so good I'll drop it here too for those who missed it...
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtbZ8dp2AIw]
I love Texas swing, but this southern flavor version is what I first heard.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NkM587RpiE (from 1927)

Have not played it in years but sure has been on my mind this week. One of the 1st fiddle tunes I played.

Well take care. Let me drop one more interesting piece. (15 min)

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhRb5hnTseU]

links below the clip...

Prof Andrew Pollard, Oxford vaccine team:

Clear that the delta variant can infect people already vaccinated
Making herd immunity impossible to reach even with high vaccine uptake

Anyone who is still unvaccinated will, at some point, meet the virus.
We don't have anything that will stop transmission, so I think we are in a situation where herd immunity is not a possibility and I suspect the virus will throw up a new variant that is even better at infecting vaccinated individuals.

Professor Paul Hunter, University of East Anglia

The concept of herd immunity is unachievable because we know the infection will spread in unvaccinated populations and the latest data is suggesting that two doses is probably only 50 percent protective. Time to change the way the data is collected and recorded as the virus becomes endemic. We need to start moving away from just reporting infections, or just reporting positive cases admitted to hospital, to actually start reporting the number of people who are ill because of Covid. Otherwise we are going to be frightening ourselves with very high numbers that actually don't translate into disease burden.

Interesting analysis.

Some think we shouldn't discuss COVID science but I think it is healthy to look at best evidence. Now we might disagree about best evidence, but in that case evidence is at the core of the discussion.

Wishing you all good health and all the best!

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13 users have voted.

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

@Lookout this is a delayed response to something you asked about on Saturday. I thought I did post this on Sat. but again, I screwed up on the computer.

YES. I have noticed frequent and ongoing shortages and empty spaces on the NYC stores I frequent. Target is 1/2 empty.

Plus the NY TImes, had a front page report advising us that supply chain shortages are increasing and and will continue. I will shop and prep accordingly and I'm sure you will do the same.

Still no Gulden's mustard. So I bought some store brand. any mustard beats no mustard at all.

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11 users have voted.

NYCVG

Lookout's picture

@NYCVG

need a shipment? Col. Mustard in the library with a candlestick?

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7 users have voted.

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

@Lookout I'll tough it out and the other brands will have to cut the mustard----an ancient saying that is gobble-de-gook to me. "cut the mustard/" what?

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5 users have voted.

NYCVG

Lookout's picture

@NYCVG

about the origin of "cut the mustard"
https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/cut-the-mustard.html

Some sources credit O. Henry, but it was used before he wrote it (see the link above).

The author O. Henry—who spent many years in Texas, where he may have picked up the expression—used cut the mustard in his 1907 collection of short stories The Heart of the West: “I looked around and found a proposition that exactly cut the mustard.”

https://www.dictionary.com/e/cut-the-mustard/

Amazing how we use phrases whose origins we don't understand.

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5 users have voted.

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

snoopydawg's picture

@NYCVG

I can buy it at the dollar store for an actual dollar. Another thing that is being done is that packages are getting smaller or thinner and the price stays the same. I’ve noticed that even before I read about it. Or they get smaller with increased prices.

Supply chains are broken again because of Covid. And in Australia truckers have closed roads for protests against what the government is doing. People know that they have the power if they will use it.

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8 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@Lookout

yep, i hear that ida's comin' to town. the weatherdroids seem to think that ida is mostly a spent force and we will only get about two inches overnight and tomorrow.

like you, i am cautiously celebrating the withdrawal, hoping that the sheer embarrassment doesn't drive the mic/media into some sort of trumpian re-invasion down the road.

like caity, i don't suppose that the u.s. withdrawal will do a lot for the suffering people of afghanistan on its own.

i am hoping that, unlike american elites, the taliban are capable of learning from their mistakes and adjusting to the realities around them. it's a slim hope but one with a tiny amount of promise at this point.

great tune, thanks!

heh, it seems almost funny that people are still discussing "herd immunity" to covid like it was a thing that was probable. i am expecting that it will just become like the flu (though far more dangerous) and continue spreading and mutating requiring constant surveillance and adjustment of vaccines.

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6 users have voted.

and c99.

I read the bit about the cat and dog airlift Britain conducted and laughed as hard as I do at any favorite comedians's jokes.

"What a story to tell the world about ourselves, amid the chaos of our leaving. What a gift to extremist movements across the Middle East and beyond, who draw their power from the idea that the west holds foreign lives contemptuously cheap; that cats of no conceivable interest to the Taliban can be airlifted out but not human beings at risk of being hunted down and executed. Even Farthing’s Afghan staff, whom he had insisted he would get out, were left behind in the end, after their paperwork was rejected at the airport."

"Cats of no conceivable interest to the Taliban" I could not stop laughing.

This says more about how ragged and undone I am by the pile-up of calamities than it does about anything else. Our careless disregard of animals reflects our careless disregard of anything but the Funnel of Profits to the Wealthy.

Pharma must be feeling neglected. New ads on TV WARNING us not to miss our tests and check ups. Fuck them. now and forever.

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11 users have voted.

NYCVG

joe shikspack's picture

@NYCVG

no need for apology.

when i saw the line, "cats of no conceivable interest to the taliban," i was reminded of an advertisement for a satire magazine back in the 70's (i think that it was national lampoon) that had a picture of a cute puppy with a gun to its head and a caption that read something like, "subscribe or the dog gets it!"

have a great evening!

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6 users have voted.
lotlizard's picture

seems to attract a particularly ugly variety of “left” or “anti-fascist” virtue signalling…

https://www.hitradio-rtl.de/beitrag/gedenkmauer-fuer-bombenopfer-in-dres...

https://www.tag24.de/dresden/crime/schmierfinken-schlagen-wieder-zu-gede...

If the Westboro Baptist Church is notorious for picketing funerals, Antifa or whoever has them beat here, proceeding directly to defacing memorials in cemeteries.

I wonder if this sort of display doesn’t lead to more votes for right-wing populists? “Just to show ‘them’ I’m not OK with people coming in and dancing on our graves.”

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7 users have voted.
enhydra lutris's picture

@lotlizard

WTF. It was not a strategic attack on industrial sites, communications and rail yards, but a carpet bombing of the city center. After the fact there were lesser attacks on some industrial targets, some communications facilities and some rail facilities, but first and foremost it was a wanton attack on the city center, and on civilians. It was a straight up terror campaign. Dresden was not Ploesti.

be well and have a good one

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17 users have voted.

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

@lotlizard

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7 users have voted.

@joe shikspack @joe shikspack
while chopped up, this is exactly what Morrison looked and sounded like when I saw them in June/July 1967 - particularly the clips of him on a stage. It piqued my curiosity as to when and where it had been filmed. film history to the rescue. The outdoor performance could only have come from the Murray the K in New York TV special -- recorded early September 1967. The stage clips must be from their appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show - 9/17/67. Didn't see either of those broadcasts and a full recording of the appearance on Sullivan has never been released.

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4 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@Marie

on sullivan on our black and white teevee. apparently they pissed sullivan off by not censoring themselves and never got another appearance.

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5 users have voted.

@joe shikspack
None of the black & white recordings of Morrison that I've seen comport with what I saw live. Nor do the later recordings in color. In '67 Morrison wasn't yet bored with their music and performing and was physically present and gorgeous (not messed up on drugs/alcohol).

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5 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@Marie

i remember thinking then that "light my fire" was kind of tame compared to "break on through" which i'd heard on the radio, but i was definitely favorably impressed.

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5 users have voted.

@joe shikspack
was their first single. So, it hit the AM airwaves first in 1967. It didn't do that well. Light My Fire went to #1. Both were from their first album that was released 1/67. I probably didn't purchase it until after I went to that concert.

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3 users have voted.

@joe shikspack
was quite there in 1966, but the song was: [video:https://youtu.be/rOpQjD-rX0g]

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4 users have voted.

@Marie

the Doors performed at Staples High School in CT, September 21,1967. Morrison didn’t look much older than my classmates. We enjoyed a remarkable run of notable performers thanks to fellow students Dick Sandhaus and Peter Gambachini who organized a series of concerts. An embarrassment of musical riches.

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7 users have voted.

“What the herd hates most is the one who thinks differently; it is not so much the opinion itself, but the audacity of wanting to think for themselves, something that they do not know how to do.”
-Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

lotlizard's picture

@joe shikspack  
has for decades been a kind of counterculture shrine…

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=jim+morrison+grave+paris

As we Baby Boomers slip through the hourglass, that constant stream of visitors paying homage and leaving flowers and mementos may fade away.

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6 users have voted.

@lotlizard
Revivals, recordings, music videos, and the Oliver Stone movie have extended the fan base of The Doors far beyond those that could possibly have seen/heard them while Morrison was alive.

Freddie Mercury had the right idea -- no known and accessible grave site for weirdos to venerate.

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5 users have voted.
enhydra lutris's picture

Betty Everett exploded on to the scene with the shoop shoop song, though that particualr video's gestures always seem a bit off. I've really not really listened to much of the rest of her ouvre before this. Sadly, early on my ears started crying out for this:

Afghanistan and now back to Ukraine, without a hitch, and of course Ukraine censors stuff, it is an authoritarian state, no matter how they stage it, and of course we cheer because, (pause) you got it.

Fun listening Krystal discuss the Maddow circus, most enjoyable in a way.

be well and have a good one.

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6 users have voted.

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

i agree that mickey and sylvia's version of love is strange is superior to all others. i'm partial to betty everett's 50's recordings, particularly the ones on the cobra label.

heh, msdnc is going to have less maddow. sounds like an improvement to me.

have a great evening!

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7 users have voted.
snoopydawg's picture

GOOD! Maybe some sanity will return to my uncle. He’s gone totally blue maga after Rachel broke his mind. It’s like when people on the left complained that their folks started watching Fox and now they can’t talk to them.

Comment:

Wilbtube
Ding Dong the McCarthy Imitator is gone. The Wicked Witch is really gone.

Looks interesting

Knock it off!

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11 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

heh, i'm sure that msdnc will find somebody to replace maddow eventually. i'm sure that keith olbermann is warming up his audition tape as we speak. that said, i hope that your uncle will get better soon.

glad that greenwald is still on the case. Smile

have a great evening!

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7 users have voted.
Azazello's picture

Good stuff in the EB tonight. Hedges was good but I think Medea Benjamin's piece is a better summary, especially for people who haven't been following closely.
This cracked me up, from MoA:

On democracy, Zelensky and Biden also need a fresh approach. U.S. officials must stop lecturing the Ukrainians so publicly on corruption. Of course, fighting corruption must remain central; aid conditionality should be strengthened. But talking more broadly about our shared commitment to deepening Ukrainian democracy makes for a better public message — especially because anytime Biden mentions “corruption” and “Ukraine” in the same sentence, his opponents will add “Hunter Biden.” Given U.S. struggles with preserving democracy at home, a humbler tone also is appropriate.

Another school board clip:

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13 users have voted.

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

Raggedy Ann's picture

@Azazello .
I love that mama bear! Pleasantry

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5 users have voted.

"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

Azazello's picture

@Raggedy Ann
I think "Mama Bear" is a whack-job.

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10 users have voted.

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

Pricknick's picture

@Azazello
Funny how wack jobs congregate.

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3 users have voted.

Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

Raggedy Ann's picture

@Pricknick Wink

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4 users have voted.

"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

Pricknick's picture

@Raggedy Ann
The last time I was told that was by kos himself.
Does the ban hammer follow your astute observation as it did there?
I say doubtful.

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3 users have voted.

Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

joe shikspack's picture

@Pricknick

if only i had a "kindness hammer"

i'd swing it in the morning
i'd swing it in the evening
all over this land...

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6 users have voted.

@Pricknick
really cute.

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1 user has voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@Azazello

yeah, biden really ups the u.s. game when it comes to hypocritically calling on other nations to do something about their endemic corruption.

heh, you'd think that wearing a mask was some sort of horribly difficult thing to ask a person to do. i mean, i can understand that people find getting stuck with needles to be intrusive and unpleasant, but wearing a mask? c'mon.

oh well, i guess "mama bear" is better than the jagoff from pennsylvania running for a county executive seat:

Steve Lynch, who is running for Northampton County executive, took aim at mask mandates during a Harrisburg rally, issuing a call to action directed at "strong men" and declaring, "make men great again," tweaking a popular campaign slogan of former President Donald Trump.

"Men," Lynch said, "I need you in the coming weeks, because when we walk into those school boards, we're gonna have everything we need to do to go in there with those 9-0 school boards that voted to put these masks back on the children with no scientific—it's done! Giving them the research and the data. Do you understand that? Forget going into these school boards with frigging data. You go into school boards to remove 'em. That's what you do."

"They don't follow the law," he said of school board members. "You go in and you remove 'em. I'm going in with 20 strong men. I'm gonna speak in front of the school board and I'm gonna give them an option: They can leave or they can be removed. And then after that, we're gonna replace them with nine parents and we're going to vote down the mask mandates that evening—that evening. This is how you get stuff done. Forget writing your legislators. Forget it. They're not listening. You gotta do something. It's us. It's we the people."

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6 users have voted.
Raggedy Ann's picture

Now that we are in an endemic, I'm relieved.

Enjoy the evening! Pleasantry

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2 users have voted.

"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

well, i suppose an endemic is more egalitarian, though the society that it is happening in is far from that and "them's that gots" will have a better time of handling it when covid comes knocking on their doors.

have a great evening!

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3 users have voted.
Raggedy Ann's picture

@joe shikspack . That's up to the universe.

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1 user has voted.

"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

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11 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@humphrey

heh, well, it was just a little war crime ... to celebrate, you know?

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7 users have voted.

@humphrey We are a criminal enterprise pretending to be an honorable country.

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8 users have voted.

NYCVG

Kent Porter, who, unfortunately, has had much experience covering fires in the past few years.

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7 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@Marie

thanks for the link! those are some pretty impressive images.

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2 users have voted.