The Evening Blues - 7-11-22



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: King Karl

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features swamp pop singer King Karl. Enjoy!

King Karl - Baby Baby Come To Papa

"Inhumanity is the keynote of stupidity in power."

-- Alexander Berkman


News and Opinion

Article written by U.S.-biased writer, but includes some important facts amongst the biased analysis:

UN: Russia and Ukraine are to blame for nursing home attack

Two weeks after Russia invaded Ukraine in February, Russian forces assaulted a nursing home in the eastern region of Luhansk. Dozens of elderly and disabled patients, many of them bedridden, were trapped inside without water or electricity. The March 11 assault set off a fire that spread throughout the facility, suffocating people who couldn’t move. A small number of patients and staff escaped and fled into a nearby forest, finally getting assistance after walking for 5 kilometers (3 miles).

In a war awash in atrocities, the attack on the nursing home near the village of Stara Krasnyanka stood out for its cruelty. And Ukrainian authorities placed the fault squarely on Russian forces, accusing them of killing more than 50 vulnerable civilians in a brutal and unprovoked attack.

But a new U.N. report has found that Ukraine’s armed forces bear a large, and perhaps equal, share of the blame for what happened in Stara Krasnyanka, which is about 580 kilometers (360 miles) southeast of Kyiv. A few days before the attack, Ukrainian soldiers took up positions inside the nursing home, effectively making the building a target. ...

The report by the U.N.’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights doesn’t conclude the Ukrainian soldiers or the Russian troops committed a war crime. But it said the battle at the Stara Krasnyanka nursing home is emblematic of the human rights office’s concerns over the potential use of “human shields” to prevent military operations in certain areas.

G20 Diplomats Fail to Reach Consensus on Ukraine War

The G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia, on Friday failed to produce a joint statement as the group of the world’s leading economies and largest developing nations are divided on how to respond to the war in Ukraine.

Many G20 members have not followed the US-led sanctions campaign against Russia, including Indonesia, China, India, Brazil, and South Africa. The meeting opened with Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi calling for the G20 nations to work together to end the war. ...

The G20 summit put Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in the same room for the first time since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. The Biden administration has abandoned diplomacy with Russia altogether, and Blinken refused to engage with Lavrov in Indonesia.

“You know, it was not us who abandoned all contacts,” Lavrov told reporters at the summit. “It was the United States. That’s all I can say. And we are not running after anybody suggesting meetings. If they don’t want to talk, it’s their choice.” Blinken hasn’t spoken with Lavrov since February 15.

Pentagon spokesperson refuses to “preclude” Ukrainian attack on Russia’s Kerch bridge

In May, when the Biden administration announced that it would send medium-range missile guided missile launchers to Ukraine, the White House insisted that the weapons would not be used to attack Russian territory. “We're not going to send to Ukraine rocket systems that strike into Russia,” Biden told reporters. “We are not encouraging or enabling Ukraine to strike beyond its borders,” he later added in a New York Times op-ed announcing the deployment of HIMARs missile systems to Ukraine.

On Friday, however, a Pentagon spokesperson indicated that the United States would not discourage Ukraine from using US weapons to attack territory claimed by Russia.

Asked by a reporter whether there were any “preclusions” on what could be targeted by US-supplied weapons, and whether the Kerch bridge in the Black Sea would be “precluded as a potential target,” the defense department official stated, “there aren't any preclusions that I'm aware of about the Ukrainians fighting on their sovereign territory against Russia.”

The Kerch bridge was built by Russia in 2015-2018 and forms the main connection between Russia and the Crimean peninsula, which Russia annexed in the wake of the US- and EU-backed coup in Kiev in 2014. The statement by the US defense official suggesting that the bridge constitutes Ukraine’s “sovereign territory” is yet another expression of the US endorsement of Ukraine’s aim, openly adopted as military strategy in 2021, to retake Crimea by military means.

The statements by the US official can only be interpreted as a green light for Kiev to attack the Kerch bridge and constitute a significant provocation. They came just one day after Philip Breedlove, the former NATO supreme allied commander in Europe, declared, “the Kerch bridge is a legitimate target.”

[More at the link. -js]

Long range HIMARS, Ukraine counteroffensive & Russian parliament extraordinary session

$400 Million in Additional Security Assistance for Ukraine

Today, the Department of Defense (DoD) announces the authorization of a Presidential Drawdown of security assistance valued at up to $400 million to meet critical needs for Ukraine’s fight. This authorization is the Biden Administration’s fifteenth drawdown of equipment from DoD inventories for Ukraine since August 2021.

Capabilities in this package include:

  • Four High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) and additional ammunition for HIMARS;
  • Three Tactical Vehicles to recover equipment;
  • 155mm artillery ammunition;
  • Demolition munitions;
  • Counter-battery systems;
  • Spare parts and other equipment.

The United States has now committed $2.2 billion of security assistance to Ukraine in the last three weeks as we support their fight to defend their democracy. In total, the United States has committed approximately $8 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since the beginning of the Biden Administration. Since 2014, the United States has committed more than $9.2 billion in security assistance to Ukraine.

Idiot Senators want to see lots more Ukrainian blood flow:

In Kyiv, Sen. Blumenthal Says He Hopes to See a ‘Hand-to-Hand Insurgency’ in Russian-Occupied Ukraine

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) visited Kyiv with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on Thursday and said he hopes to see a “hand-to-hand insurgency” in territory Russia has captured since it invaded Ukraine.

“Long-range artillery is very, very important. But so is the hand-to-hand insurgency that we are hoping to see in eastern Ukraine, in the territory that’s already been occupied by the Russians,” Blumenthal said.

Both Blumenthal and Graham voiced support for an insurgency in eastern Ukraine in the latest sign that the US plans to support Ukraine in its war against Russia for years to come. But the main purpose of the visit was to discuss a plan to designate Russia as a “state sponsor of terrorism” with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Gazprom Nord Stream One maintenance: Europe fears permanent Russian gas cuts

Germany braces for ‘nightmare’ of Russia turning off gas for good

Germany is bracing itself for a potentially permanent halt to the flow of Russian gas from Monday when maintenance work begins on the Nord Stream 1 pipeline that brings the fuel to Europe’s largest economy via the Baltic Sea.

The work on the 759-mile (1,220km) pipeline is an annual event and requires the gas taps to be closed for 10 to 14 days. But never before in the pipeline’s decade-long history has Germany seriously been asking whether the flow will begin again.

Robert Habeck, Germany’s economy minister, has not shied away from addressing the government’s concerns. On Saturday, he spoke of the “nightmare scenario” that could occur.

“Everything is possible, everything can happen,” Habeck told the broadcaster Deutschlandfunk. “It could be that the gas flows again, maybe more than before. It can also be the case that nothing comes. “We need to honestly prepare for the worst-case scenario and do our best to try to deal with the situation.” ...

On Saturday, Canada said after consultation with Germany and the International Energy Agency that it would issue a temporary exemption to sanctions against Russia in order to allow the return from Montreal of a repaired Russian turbine that is required for the maintenance work to be carried out. On Friday, the Kremlin said it would increase gas supplies to Europe once the turbine was returned to Russia. Ukraine has objected to this, arguing it helps continue the continent’s dependency on Russian gas.

What Shinzo Abe Assassination Means For Japans Future

Sri Lanka president, PM to resign after tumultuous protests

Sri Lanka’s president and prime minister agreed to resign Saturday after the country’s most chaotic day in months of political turmoil, with protesters storming both officials’ homes and setting fire to one of the buildings in a rage over the nation’s severe economic crisis.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said he will leave office once a new government is in place, and hours later the speaker of Parliament said President Gotabaya Rajapaksa would step down Wednesday. Pressure on both men grew as the economic meltdown set off acute shortages of essential items, leaving people struggling to buy food, fuel and other necessities.

Police had attempted to thwart promised protests with a curfew, then lifted it as lawyers and opposition politicians denounced it as illegal. Thousands of protesters entered the capital, Colombo, and swarmed into Rajapaksa’s fortified residence. Video images showed jubilant crowds splashing in the garden pool, lying on beds and using their cellphone cameras to capture the moment. Some made tea, while others issued statements from a conference room demanding that the president and prime minister go. ...

Protesters later broke into the prime minister’s private residence and set it on fire, Wickremesinghe’s office said. It wasn’t immediately clear if he was there when the incursion happened.

Our Entire Civilization Is Structured Around Keeping Us From Realizing We Can Do This

The video footage coming out of Sri Lanka right now has been the recurring nightmare of every ruler throughout history.

Thousands of protesters outraged by the deteriorating material conditions of the nation’s economic meltdown have stormed the presidential palace of Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, and I guarantee you the aerial footage as they poured into the building en masse has made every government leader and plutocrat a little uncomfortable today.


Just look at that. Look at all those people flooding in there. That is some truly awe-inspiring power. Imagine how terrifying it would be to find yourself on the receiving end of it.

I don’t know enough about what’s going on in Sri Lanka yet to comment with any authority on what powers might be at play in this uprising, but I do know that every ruler throughout history has spent time envisioning what would happen if a crowd that size decided to storm their base of operation. If their numbers became too great to suppress, or if your forces who would be doing the suppressing joined the ranks of the people instead, the best-case scenario for you is that you’d have already fled the building by that point, as Rajapaksa had the good sense to do shortly before the building was stormed. If enough angry people get their hands on you, it won’t matter if they’re armed with rockets or pistols or their own bare hands; you are in for a violent end.

If you’ve ever wondered why so much energy goes into keeping everyone propagandized in our society, this is why. If you’ve ever wondered why our rulers work so hard to keep us divided against each other, this is why. If you’ve ever wondered why we’re always being instructed to take our grievances to the voting booth even though we learn in election after election that it never changes the things that most desperately need to change, this is why.

Our entire civilization is structured around preventing scenes like the one we’re seeing in Sri Lanka today. Our education systems, our political systems, our media, our online information. Religions that have been around for thousands of years because the powerful endorsed and promulgated them are full of passages extolling the virtues of obedience, poverty, meekness, and rendering unto Caesar what is Caesar’s. From the moment we are born our heads are filled with stories about why it’s good and right to consent to the status quo and why it would be wrong to take back what has been stolen from us by a predatory ruling class.


This is why we’re always inundated with messaging about the importance of civility and politeness any time people realize that they can simply confront corrupt officials in restaurants or at their homes to push for what they want. The managers of the oligarchic empire which rules over us are terrified that we will one day notice that there are a whole lot more of us than there are of them, and that there’s really nothing they could do to stop us if we decided to replace them with a system which benefits ordinary people instead of an elite few.

Things are getting worse and worse because the systems that are in place are designed to exploit and oppress rather than to uplift and help thrive. Those systems will protect their own ability to continue to exploit and oppress until the people use their numbers to replace them with something healthy. The people will never use their numbers to replace abusive systems with something healthy as long as they are successfully propagandized away from doing so.

This is why our political and media institutions act the way they act and why our systems are set up in the way that they are: to keep us from realizing how easy it would be to shrug off the old mechanisms of oppression like a heavy coat on a warm day and build something new that works for all of us.

Biden Defends PATHETIC Saudi Capitulation

Biden defends Saudi Arabia trip that aims to reset ties

Joe Biden on Saturday defended his decision to travel to Saudi Arabia saying human rights would be on his agenda as he gave a preview of a trip on which he aims to reset ties with the crown prince, who he previously denounced as a pariah. The American president will hold bilateral talks with Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz and his leadership team, including Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on his visit to the Middle East next week. ...

In a commentary published in the Washington Post late Saturday, Biden said his aim was to reorient and not rupture relations with a country that has been a strategic partner of the US for 80 years. ...

Biden needs oil-rich Saudi Arabia’s help at a time of high gasoline prices and as he encourages efforts to end the war in Yemen after the Saudis recently extended a ceasefire there. The United States also wants to curb Iran’s influence in the Middle East and China’s global sway.

Biden BLAMES Abortion Activists For His Own Failures

Biden admin gives women the finger:

White House 'Some Activists' Comment Roils Progressive Abortion Rights Champions

Comments by White House communications director Kate Bedingfield over the weekend have touched a fresh nerve among progressives already frustrated by the Biden administration's tepid response to the right-wing attack on abortion rights including the U.S. Supreme Court's reversal of Roe v. Wade last month.

Quoted in a detailed piece of reporting by the Washington Post, Bedingfield referred dismissively to those frustrated by the administration's slow and less-than-forceful response to the Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.

"Joe Biden's goal in responding to Dobbs is not to satisfy some activists who have been consistently out of step with the mainstream of the Democratic Party," Bedingfield said in on-the-record remarks to the Post on Saturday.

The White House's goal, she continued, is "to deliver help to women who are in danger and assemble a broad-based coalition to defend a woman's right to choose now, just as he assembled such a coalition to win during the 2020 campaign."

It was the phrase "some activists" that many on the progressive left recognized as a specific dig to those who have loudly advocated for an emergency-level response and openly criticized Biden and his lieutenants for failing to adequately acknowledge the level of the crisis.

"What activists are asking for isn't different from what the average voter is looking for—leadership," tweeted Shauna Thomas, co-founder of the women's rights group Ultra Violet, in response to the comment. "To trust that the President is doing everything in his power to save lives and protect our rights. No one is asking Biden to do the impossible. We’re asking him to do the maximum."

Thomas specifically pushed back on the suggestion by Bedingfield that a more forceful response to protection of abortion rights wasn't somehow "mainstream"—a claim belied consistently by public polling.

Others, like Rolling Stone journalist Noah Schachtman, argued that Bedingfield's comment should not be considered a casual comment taken out of context.

"This is not a blind quote from some random staffer," said Schachtman. "It's on the record, from Biden's top communications aide. So you can safely assume that shanking pro-choice activists is the White House's official position."

Since the Dobbs ruling was announced on June 24—and previously once a leaked draft of the ruling was published many weeks earlier—progressives have repeatedly asked for the Biden administration to forge a forceful response that would include declaration of health emergency and a robust set of policies and a political program designed to help impacted woman and other pregnant people while laying the legislative groundwork to codify the protections afforded by Roe into federal law once and for all.

Critics of Bedingfield said the mindset exhibited by her comment is not just offensive to many fighting tirelessly for abortion rights and reproductive care, but signals a serious and potentially devastating political blind spot for the Democratic Party come the crucial midterm elections this year.

"Republicans refer to their most involved voters as 'the base,' and deliver for them, while Democrats refer to theirs as 'some activists' and ignore them," said Monica Keane, an independent researcher, on social media. "This is why they lose."

"Such smug arrogance," said Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, professor of African American studies at Princeton University, in response to the White House comment.

"Biden apparently has no idea how his moribund, left for dead, campaign actually won in 2020," Taylor added. "The right rampages and the leadership of the Dems wage war on the left."

Dems FREAK At Biden's Lack Of Abortion Action

Much more at the link:

Uber broke laws, duped police and secretly lobbied governments, leak reveals

A leaked trove of confidential files has revealed the inside story of how the tech giant Uber flouted laws, duped police, exploited violence against drivers and secretly lobbied governments during its aggressive global expansion. The unprecedented leak to the Guardian of more than 124,000 documents – known as the Uber files – lays bare the ethically questionable practices that fuelled the company’s transformation into one of Silicon Valley’s most famous exports.

The leak spans a five-year period when Uber was run by its co-founder Travis Kalanick, who tried to force the cab-hailing service into cities around the world, even if that meant breaching laws and taxi regulations.

During the fierce global backlash, the data shows how Uber tried to shore up support by discreetly courting prime ministers, presidents, billionaires, oligarchs and media barons. Leaked messages suggest Uber executives were at the same time under no illusions about the company’s law-breaking, with one executive joking they had become “pirates” and another conceding: “We’re just fucking illegal.” ...

The leak also contains texts between Kalanick and Emmanuel Macron, who secretly helped the company in France when he was economy minister, allowing Uber frequent and direct access to him and his staff. Macron, the French president, appears to have gone to extraordinary lengths to help Uber, even telling the company he had brokered a secret “deal” with its opponents in the French cabinet. ...

After meeting Kalanick, Joe Biden, a supporter of Uber at the time, appears to have amended his prepared speech at Davos to refer to a CEO whose company would give millions of workers “freedom to work as many hours as they wish, manage their own lives as they wish”.

The Guardian led a global investigation into the leaked Uber files, sharing the data with media organisations around the world via the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). More than 180 journalists at 40 media outlets including Le Monde, Washington Post and the BBC will in the coming days publish a series of investigative reports about the tech giant.

The Democratic Party-sanctioned police rampage in Akron, Ohio

For the last week, the working class city of Akron, Ohio, located about 40 miles south of Cleveland, has been subjected to a reign of police terror following the release of body camera footage showing eight Akron police officers shooting Jayland Walker in the back scores of times. Dozens of people, including family members of Breonna Taylor and Jacob Blake, have been arrested for peacefully assembling to protest Walker’s killing. Police have been filmed beating demonstrators and shooting them with tear gas at point-blank range.


This police rampage is being presided over by Democratic Mayor Dan Horrigan, who has imposed a curfew and denounced protesters as “violent” and “lawless.” The curfew and police occupation are being aided by the Biden administration, which has deployed the FBI to “coordinate with state and local partners to provide resources and specialized skills.” ...

After carrying out mass arrests of protesters throughout the week, the Akron cops have vindictively kept jailed protesters locked up for days inside the Summit County Jail, without access to medical care or even a phone call. Once bail has been posted, police have taken protesters and dropped them off around town, far from their home and their friends and family.

While the Democrats posture as defenders of democratic rights, they, no less than the Republicans, are defenders of the same capitalist system and lavishly fund the police to defend this system of inequality.



the horse race



Kamala Harris urges voters to elect a ‘pro-choice Congress’ in midterms

Vice-President Kamala Harris renewed pleas to voters ahead of the midterm congressional races to elect pro-choice candidates, as the Biden administration continues to face criticism from progressives over a perceived lackluster response to the recent landmark supreme court decision striking down federal abortion rights in the US.

In an interview with CBS News on Sunday, Harris urged voters to elect a “pro-choice Congress” in November and highlighted that down-ballot contests at the local level would also be central to restoring abortion rights in certain parts of the country. ...

On Friday, Joe Biden signed a limited executive order designed to protect access to reproductive health services by expanding access to emergency contraception and bolstering legal services to support people who cross state lines to seek an abortion.

But for many abortion advocates and progressive Democrats, the president’s measures do not go far enough. The administration has, for example, resisted calls to use federal land in anti-abortion states to facilitate terminating pregnancies, or subsidizing travel to people forced to travel in order to access services. ...

Asked if the Democrats should have done more to enshrine the right to abortion into federal law when the party controlled both chambers of Congress, Harris responded: “We certainly believe that certain issues are just settled. Certain issues are just settled. And that’s why I do believe that we are living, sadly, in real unsettled times.”



the evening greens


‘Disturbing’: weedkiller ingredient tied to cancer found in 80% of US urine samples

More than 80% of urine samples drawn from children and adults in a US health study contained a weedkilling chemical linked to cancer, a finding scientists have called “disturbing” and “concerning”. The report by a unit of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that out of 2,310 urine samples, taken from a group of Americans intended to be representative of the US population, 1,885 were laced with detectable traces of glyphosate. This is the active ingredient in herbicides sold around the world, including the widely used Roundup brand. Almost a third of the participants were children ranging from six to 18.

Academics and private researchers have been noting high levels of the herbicide glyphosate in analyses of human urine samples for years. But the CDC has only recently started examining the extent of human exposure to glyphosate in the US, and its work comes at a time of mounting concerns and controversy over how pesticides in food and water impact human and environmental health.

“I expect that the realization that most of us have glyphosate in our urine will be disturbing to many people,” said Lianne Sheppard, professor at the University of Washington’s department of environmental and occupational health sciences. Thanks to the new research, “we know that a large fraction of the population has it in urine. Many people will be thinking about whether that includes them.”

Sheppard co-authored a 2019 analysis that found glyphosate exposure increases the risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and also co-authored a 2019 scientific paper that reviewed 19 studies documenting glyphosate in human urine. Both the amount and prevalence of glyphosate found in human urine has been rising steadily since the 1990s when Monsanto Co. introduced genetically engineered crops designed to be sprayed directly with Roundup, according to research published in 2017 by University of California San Diego School of Medicine researchers.

Biodiversity Destruction Imperils Natural Species Crucial to Humanity's Survival

A new report backed by the United Nations warned Friday that humans must ramp up efforts to sustainably use and protect the world's flora and fauna to avoid the extinction of thousands of species which billions of people rely on for survival every day—whether they know it or not.

After more than four years of preparation by 85 experts from around the world, drawing from scientific data as well as Indigenous people's knowledge, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) released its report showing people across the globe depend on 50,000 wild plant and animal species for food, energy, medicine, and other purposes.

"Without wild species, our whole planet unravels," said Pablo Pacheco, an author of the report and a scientist at the World Wide Fund for Nature. "Billions of people rely on wild species for food, medicine, energy and clean water."

As IPBES reported in a separate study in 2019, unsustainable exploitation and destructive practices—including overfishing, the climate crisis and continued extraction of fossil fuels, deforestation, and pollution—are pushing one million species towards extinction.

According to the new report, 12% of wild tree species are threatened by unsustainable logging practices and unsustainable hunting is imperiling 1,341 wild mammal species. More than a third of marine wild fish stocks are overfished and nearly 450 shark and ray species are identified as threatened, also largely due to overexploitation.

Major Arctic Drilling Project Seen as Ultimate Test for Biden's Climate Legacy

Climate groups raised the alarm and put President Joe Biden on notice after the Bureau of Land Management opened the public comment period Friday for a proposed drilling project in the Alaskan Arctic that critics warn would unleash a dangerous "carbon bomb" and threaten pristine ecosystems if given approval by the federal government.

Oil giant ConocoPhillips has proposed the oil drilling and extraction Willow Project in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve, located in the Western Arctic coastal region in the far north of the state. Hundreds of state, local, and national environmental and Indigenous groups, however, have come out forcefully against the project and described the federal government's assessment of its possible impacts as flawed.

"If approved the Willow project would be bigger than any other proposed oil and gas project on our nation's public lands, and it poses an unparalleled climate and biodiversity threat that puts President Biden's climate legacy at risk," said Kristen Miller, conservation director of the Alaska Wilderness League, following BLM's release on Friday of its Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (DSEIS).

The release of the DSEIS triggered a 45-day public comment period which by statute must precede final approval of the project. While groups have denounced ConocoPhillips initial 2020 proposal for the project as misleading and a plan that would lead to certain disaster for the region and the planet, opponents said Friday that Biden's approval or rejection of the project would likely seal his legacy as a climate champion or a leader who caved to the interests of the fossil fuel lobby.

Allowing new drilling in "an area that is already being ravaged by climate change," said Miller, "would put critical wildlife and subsistence resources in the crosshairs, and it would lock us into decades of carbon-intensive oil and gas extraction."

"Willow is a legacy setting project that will test whether the Biden administration is righting America's course from a dangerous climate path," she added.

A federal court last year put the permits for the project on hold pending a more thorough federal review and Friday's DSEIS is the result of that order. While the oil company has continued to lobby for the project's approval, an analysis of Willow by the Center for American Progress in March showed that the emissions resulting from the project—estimated to produce 160,000 barrels of oil per day for 30 years—would "would dwarf the greenhouse gas emissions avoided by fulfilling [Biden’s] 2030 commitments on renewables on public lands and waters."


Also of Interest

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

Fueling the Warfare State

Russia Warns Lithuania It Could Take ‘Harsh’ Measures Over Kaliningrad Ban

'Drinking The Kool-Aid' On The War In Ukraine

Shinzo Abe and the Legacy of Japanese Militarism

Huge Abu Akleh painting to greet Biden in Bethlehem

FDR’s Lesson About The Supreme Court Rampage

Humanity Is Learning That The Rules Are All Made Up And Can Be Re-Written At Any Time

Here Are the Orwellian Details of the U.S. Patent JPMorgan Got Approved for Its Sprawling System of Spying on Employees

Native American elders recall abuse at US government boarding schools

"Gabby Giffords Won't Back Down": AZ Rep. Survives Shooting, Fights Aphasia & Pushes for Gun Laws

Kamala Delivers GOBBLEDYGOOK Answer On Abortion

Krystal Ball: Pete PLOTS 2024 As Voters Grab PITCHFORKS

86 Year Old Flight Attendant Is Still Working. Why?


A Little Night Music

Guitar Gable With King Karl - Walking in the Park (with Sally)

Guitar Gable With King Karl - Cool Calm Collected

Guitar Gable With King Karl - This Should Go On Forever

Guitar Gable With King Karl - Irene

"Chuck" Brown (King Karl) - Hard Times At My Door

King Carl - Do You Like To See Me Cry

King Carl - Just Because

Guitar Gable - Congo Mombo

King Carl - Everybodys Feelin' Good


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Comments

Lookout's picture

Biosphere collapse, WWIII, economic crash, self inflected energy crisis, and even more.

Talk about end of empire. It is all around us. The Dutch sure see it.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcA7DDzjr6E]
This was a pretty funny fake call. Made me laugh. Hope you like it too.

Thanks for the EB news and music!

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11 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@Lookout

Biosphere collapse, WWIII, economic crash, self inflected energy crisis, and even more.

yep, the world is going to shit.

fortunately, the music is still good.

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7 users have voted.

For an insulting half assed non response? Two days? Three?
For blaming "activists" who are "out of the mainstream"? A weekend?

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7 users have voted.

On to Biden since 1973

joe shikspack's picture

@doh1304

heh, i'm sure that biden had his best team of democrat consultants working on his response all weekend. they probably should have called in rahm emmanuel to utter a good "fucking retard" quote in earshot of a reporter.

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4 users have voted.
enhydra lutris's picture

"Scientists" find it disturbing that some persistent chemical sprayed on shitloads of crops and which drifts to far more which is also sprayed on and/or drifts onto a vast percentage of the lawns and other landscaping of everybody who isn't a farmer is present in hellacious numbers of humans? Were they all astronomers or what?

The phrase "Bidens Climate Legacy" is weird upon the mind, not quite self-cancelling but nonetheless speaking to something which isn't there like Clinton's regulatory zeal or somesuch non-thing.

be well and have a good one

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10 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

scientists and reasonably hip individuals have been aware of the problem for ages. until now the "scientists" just haven't had the numbers.

heh, "biden's climate legacy" reminds me of the concept of self-destructing code.

have a great evening!

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7 users have voted.

@enhydra lutris

"Scientists" find it disturbing that some persistent chemical sprayed on shitloads of crops and which drifts to far more which is also sprayed on and/or drifts onto a vast percentage of the lawns and other landscaping of everybody who isn't a farmer is present in hellacious numbers of humans? Were they all astronomers or what?

Alex Jones.

How long was it that the ultimate woke put down of AJ or anyone listening to him that was 'he thinks chemicals are turning frogs gay'?

As with a whole slew of other issues - like warnings on the WEF - turns out he was *right*.

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4 users have voted.
karl pearson's picture

It's good that Native Americans are given the opportunity to air their past abuses at government schools; however, it would be better if the US would honor its legal promises and commitments to these people.

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7 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@karl pearson

agreed. sadly, the ruling class rarely makes a promise that it intends to honor in good faith.

"They made us many promises, more than I can remember, but they never kept but one; they promised to take our land, and they took it."

-- Red Cloud

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10 users have voted.

Cool. Such a comfort.
Tomorrow's predicted high is 99. Better than the 101 today.
It is, after all, the little things.
All is well here, joe, hoping the same for you and yours.
Great music! Like, it is some total surprise or something! Lol!
Biden. I could bitch all night long about his idiocy, glad you did it for me so succinctly, my friend.

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8 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@on the cusp

wow, that sounds so much like the brilliant planning of economists to shrink the food supply drastically during a time of global famine. i hope that the dutch people rise up and drive rutte and the other wef toadies out on on a rail.

sorry to hear about the hellish heat down there. it's been fairly mild here for the last several days, though tomorrow it's supposed to get into the 90's again.

have a great evening!

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6 users have voted.

didn't fall that far from the tree. Bannon was (mostly) wrong about Abe being like Trump.

Correct in that they are/were both nationalists, but Abe was definitely for a top-down, elite controlled Japan, not a populist in any meaningful sense.

Not mentioned was that Abe's grandfather Nobusuke Kishi was a real live war criminal, responsible in the latter part of WWII for running Japan's vast slave labor system. He was imprisoned with other Class A war criminals after the war but cut a deal with US intelligence agencies and never went to trial. Subsequently, he went on to found the (still ruling and wildly misnamed) Liberal Democratic Party.

Real power in Japan is mostly exercised behind the scenes - politicians have some power but are mainly actors - not directors/producers/screenwriters - and can do little without the cooperation of the bureaucracy, whose mission is to preserve itself and carry out the wishes of the big corporations and wealthy elite.

Not everyone is happy with that, of course.

The LDP gained significantly in the July 10 Upper House elections, getting some sympathy vote boost due to Abe's assassination, no doubt, and helped by a somewhat fractured opposition and real concern about threats from China - Abe was a strong supporter of Taiwan. FWIW - some of the strongest criticism of the CCP is from the Japanese Communist Party.

LDP is going to have its work cut out for it as the economic situation is deteriorating - yen value collapsing - they are trapped by decades of irresponsible fiscal policy and with big effective majorities in both houses of the Diet it becomes harder for them to deflect responsibility.

Some good independents and more interesting minor parties did make some electoral gains - one to watch that looks like a legitimate populist movement in the making is the Sansei Party - they only got one Upper House seat, but have been growing rapidly.

Look a bit familiar? Just throw in a few more baseball caps and Gadsden flags...

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4 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@Blue Republic

i hope you're right that there might be an overturning of the political elite in japan. hopefully it will empower people who will challenge the corporate power elites and also repudiate the move towards militarism that abe represented.

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6 users have voted.

@joe shikspack

Given their situation w/China, in particular.

That said, what it and the region do *not* need is old school militarism. But the existing Self Defense Forces are the lineal descendants of the pre-war military.

Realistically, Japan need a reasonably powerful navy and air force - which probably need to be
professional.

Beyond that, though, for practical territorial military and civil defense they would be a lot better off with something akin to Switzerland or Finland - where the army is mainly the armed/trained/organized/decentralized populace itself, and not an armed, politically influential bureaucratic entity.

Japan lacks means of physically sheltering their populace ( the Swiss can put their entire population into deep hardened shelters) and of course the population is almost completely disarmed - their infrastructure and organization are far too centralized. Take down their networks or decapitate central command and there would be chaos.

Swiss style decentralization and armed neutrality would seem to be a worthwhile goal, but sure to be resisted by the PTB.

The existing system continues to work for the elite, even as conditions worsen for ordinary people and Japanese, like many other Asians tend to regard times of radical change as extremely dangerous. So, things are unlikely to change profoundly until the wheels fall off the current system. Then the bets are off.

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1 user has voted.
janis b's picture

I heard a report on the radio today on my way home regarding the protest of Chinese people against local banks in Henan province whose deposits have been frozen since mid-May, while the government investigates criminal activity by the banks. Violence ensued, and the report I heard was that the government used security personnel in response, in hope that it could avoid using military personnel.

Following is some background from two months ago when the freeze started ...

SHANGHAI, May 18 (Reuters) - Three banks in China's central Henan province have frozen at least $178 million of deposits, offering scant information on why or for how long, leaving firms unable to pay workers and individuals locked out of savings, depositors told Reuters...

While nominally small, China's numerous local banks have outsized significance because they lend to small and mid-sized firms so their activity can be an indicator of the health of the economy, the world's second-biggest after the United States.
https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/chinese-depositors-left-dark-three-...

Today’s report …

HONG KONG — A financial scandal in central China has touched depositors across the country, some of whom placed their life savings in four rural banks offering high rates of return, then found their funds frozen as investigators examined allegations of widespread fraud.

When the bank customers began showing up to demand their money, the authorities in the city of Zhengzhou tried to use health code apps meant to prevent the spread of Covid-19 to prevent them from traveling.

This time the authorities sent in guards en masse to break up the demonstration. They beat the protesters, kicking them to the ground and shoving them onto buses — the harshest response yet to the bank depositors’ efforts to seek redress.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/11/business/china-bank-protest.html

It all sounds a bit dodgy to me.

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8 users have voted.
janis b's picture

@janis b

Somehow I can’t help but think that all the big and wealthier governments try to use the covid epidemic as 'disaster capitalism’.

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6 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@janis b

heh, i suppose the idea that a bank might commit fraud isn't exactly shocking. i suppose what is surprising is that china is taking so long to get its forensic accountants going and down to the bottom of the matter.

have a great evening!

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7 users have voted.
janis b's picture

@joe shikspack

everywhere, and like some other countries I know, are dangerously vieing for superiority and control. I don't think any major country's strategy will work in the long run, which is of course sad for all.

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5 users have voted.
Pluto's Republic's picture

.

"Inhumanity is the keynote of stupidity in power."

-- Alexander Berkman

.

Many societies and civilizations have a knack for selecting psychopaths to lead them.

The people being ruled do not ask — "How will this psychopath benefit the People's lives?"

Instead, they wonder — "How badly can this psychopath hurt our existential enemies?"

If we've learned anything over the years, we have learned that Democracy is neither wise nor intelligent. (It's like a box of chocolates. You never know what you are going to get.) Western Democracy has few standards and requires no meritorious qualifications. Our elected leaders don't really have to be moral people, as long as they use moral words. They are not required to be honest or truthful. They don't need a clean legacy. They can have a history of promoting all kinds of catastrophic policies fraught with unintended consequences, and still they can win a "Democratic" election. The leaders who are elected are not required to be intelligent or knowledgeable, they do not need to be recognized for their useful expertise or extraordinary achievements. To qualify as President, they will take a physical exam at some point before the election, but they are not required to have a sound mind. Mental defects are now the norm in US leaders.

The Democratic process is what shaped our largely non-representative government — and for this reason, Democracy is globally mandatory under US hegemony. Democracy cannot be expected to make the kind of wise choices that will lead us out of dystopia.

In every other area of human endeavor, we operate as a meritocracy. We go to great lengths seek out excellence, we honor it and appoint it to lead the way forward. Society shares a collective vision of what excellence looks like, while it continues to evolve into ever greater achievements. In spectator sports judging excellence is a national obsession. At the Olympics, excellence is a global vision, and we all know it when we see it. Yearly, we award prizes to the individuals who have made outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, physiology and medicine, literature, economics, and peace. The Nobel is widely regarded as the world's most prestigious award. Every year, we celebrate and honor the excellence of artists who have made inspired and transformational contributions to their craft — from the fine arts, to film arts, to electronic arts, and to music — the human culture recognizes and values their excellence.

Whether it's a spelling bee or a chess match, we believe that excellence brings value to the systems and culture that we share. However, when it comes to politics — a risky endeavor that can make or break people's lives and the nation's viability — Americans loudly reject 'meritocracy' as a worthy ideal. Instead, Americans have been programmed to uphold 'mediocrity,' and declare it to be the gatekeeper of equal rights for all. Thus, with sufficient Big Donor money behind him or her, any conniving, self-absorbed psychopath can become the 'Leader of the Free World'.

In truth, a meritocracy of expertise, accomplishment, and a commitment to improve People's lives — operating in an environment of mental excellence and constructive consensus — poses an existential threat to our current ruling class. Inherited wealth and Old Money would cease to be the vortex of power and influence over our systems of government. Politics as the generator of winners and losers, economically, would naturally recede and make way for better values.

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6 users have voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
lotlizard's picture

@Pluto's Republic  
can be just as corrupt and unqualified as the worst whites (males, heteros, cis people etc.) in history and get away with it, the way they got away with it.”

Americans have been programmed to uphold 'mediocrity,' and declare it to be the gatekeeper of equal rights for all

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6 users have voted.

to the David Sirota piece about FDR's court packing plan. Well worth a read. We have been taught erroneous lessons about the Court and the Marbury case.

It's just crazy how much power we've given over to Scotus, but it doesn't have to be this way. There is nothing in the Constitution about Scotus having the final say, as if they were the more equal of the intended co-equal branches.

Adding justices, preferably phased-in in a term-limited way as some have proposed, jurisdiction stripping by Congress using its power explicitly stated in the Constitution -- all need to be part of a national conversation about Court reform, restoring democracy and checking an institution that has gotten dangerously powerful.

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3 users have voted.