The Evening Blues - 3-20-26

Hey! Good Evening!
This evening's music features blues rock band Fleetwood Mac. Enjoy!
"War against a foreign country only happens when the moneyed classes think they are going to profit from it."
-- George Orwell
News and Opinion
Trump’s $200 billion Iran funding request points to massive scale of war plans
The Washington Post reported Wednesday that the Pentagon is seeking more than $200 billion from Congress to fund the US war of aggression against Iran, a sum that would exceed the roughly $188 billion spent by the US on arming Ukraine over three years. The scale of the request is a measure of the war Trump has launched. Far from being, as the president has called it, an “excursion,” the $200 billion the Pentagon is seeking exceeds even the peak annual cost of the Iraq war, which ran to roughly $140 billion a year at the height of the 2007 surge—when 170,000 American troops occupied the country. No ground invasion has yet taken place in Iran, and the administration is already seeking a larger appropriation than the costliest year of the eight-year Iraq occupation. The war burned through more than $11 billion in its first week alone.
The supplemental comes on top of the $839 billion defense appropriations bill for Fiscal Year 2026, the largest military budget in American history, which Congress passed in January. When combined with spending on intelligence agencies, the Department of Energy’s nuclear weapons programs and other national security expenditures, total US military spending exceeds $1 trillion a year.
Every leading Democrat in Congress voted for the defense appropriations bill earlier this year. In the House, it passed 341 to 88, with Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Minority Whip Katherine Clark and Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar voting in favor. The Senate approved it 71 to 29, with Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Whip Dick Durbin on the same side. The same Democrats who now posture as critics of the war voted to fund the military machine waging it. ...
The Democrats did not oppose the war in principle. Their critique amounted to an accusation that the Trump administration is insufficiently aggressive toward Russia and China—that by bungling the Iran war and threatening to abandon NATO, it is jeopardizing the broader military confrontation that both parties regard as essential. Democratic Senator Adam Schiff declared that “Russia is the problem here,” accusing the administration of “enriching our adversary, Russia, at Ukraine’s expense,” after the White House temporarily lifted sanctions on Russian oil last week to ease soaring energy prices. Representative Ro Khanna, the ranking Democrat on the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), warned that the Iran war is “stretching armed forces thin” and undermining US readiness against China.
Hegseth, nope. Just no. Not one more dollar. Not one more bomb. Not one more excuse.
Congress needs to make it clear we won't fund unauthorized forever wars. It’s time we pass the Block the Bombs Act and hold warmongers accountable. https://t.co/BJZ7OWKYiR
— Congresswoman Delia C. Ramirez (@repdeliaramirez) March 19, 2026
Pfffffffttttt!!!
Strike on Iran gasfield exposes US-Israel rift as Trump claims he did not know
The US-Israeli war against Iran has exposed further divisions between the two countries after an Israeli strike on Iran’s largest gasfield angered US allies in the Gulf and prompted Donald Trump to say he knew nothing in advance about the attack – a claim that Israeli officials disputed. Speaking in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump said he had spoken to Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu following the strikes on Iran’s South Pars gasfield – part of a reserve shared with Qatar – and had told the Israeli prime minister to refrain from further attacks that could escalate a regional war on energy infrastructure.
“I told him, ‘Don’t do that,’ and he won’t do that,” Trump said. “We didn’t discuss [the strikes]. We do independent, but get along great. It’s coordinated. But on occasion he’ll do something, and if I don’t like it … and so we’re not doing that any more.” Israeli attacks on the South Pars gasfields have opened a Pandora’s box of retaliatory strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure, including pipelines and natural gas processing facilities that serve LNG (liquefied natural gas) to economies around the world, particularly in Asia.
While the US has focused on targeting Iran’s military, navy and ballistic missile complex, Israel has instead carried out targeted assassinations and bombed civilian infrastructure. Those strikes led to severe ecological concerns following the bombing of oil depots in Tehran, and prompted Iran to launch retaliatory attacks on Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, as well as Saudi Arabia’s Samref refinery, near the Red Sea port of Yanbu, the country’s only outlet for crude exports given the current closure of the strait of Hormuz.
Seeking to distance himself from the Israeli strikes without condemning them outright, Trump claimed on Truth Social that he had known nothing about the targeting of Iran’s gas reserves in advance, and would oppose them in the future – unless Iran launched further attacks on Qatar’s energy infrastructure.
Israeli officials disputed that claim, telling US and Israeli media that Washington had in fact been informed of the South Pars gasfield attack before it took place. Israel’s efforts to bring about regime change and its attacks on critical infrastructure have increasingly raised criticisms among US allies that Washington has effectively allowed its foreign policy to be hijacked by Netanyahu’s government. Late on Thursday, Netanyahu denied he had dragged the US into the conflict, telling reporters: “Does anyone really think that someone can tell President Trump what to do?”
Larry Johnson & Col. Wilkerson: Second F-35 Down - Iran War Spirals Into DEVASTATING New Phase
Iran says it will show ‘zero restraint’ if energy infrastructure is targeted again
Iran said on Thursday it would show “zero restraint” if its energy infrastructure was targeted again as Qatar revealed that almost a fifth of its liquefied natural gas export capacity had been knocked out in an Iranian strike that is likely to have a years-long impact.
The warning, delivered by the Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, followed Israel’s attack on Iran’s massive South Pars gasfield – which it shares with Qatar – which triggered Iranian retaliatory strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas complex and other Gulf neighbours, sending stock markets tumbling globally and triggering sharp increases in gas prices. Ras Laffan supplies about 20% of the world’s liquefied natural gas. Israel also confirmed on Thursday that the Bazan Group refinery in Haifa had been hit and damaged in a claimed Iranian strike.
Araghchi said in a post on
“Our response to Israel’s attack on our infrastructure employed FRACTION of our power. The ONLY reason for restraint was respect for requested de-escalation. ZERO restraint if our infrastructures are struck again.” Amid warnings of an unprecedented energy crisis, and a growing sense of panic in global capitals, Israeli officials dismissed Donald Trump’s claim that their attack on the gasfield had not been coordinated with Washington, as Trump asked Congress for an additional $200bn (£150bn) to pay for his war.
Trump wants an extra $200 billion from Congress for his & Israel’s war on Iran.
Instead of ensuring that more Americans have a roof over their heads or that young students are fed, Trump wants to spend more on bombing hospitals and schools for Israel’s benefit. pic.twitter.com/sIcTHSgxiu
— IMEU Policy Project (@imeupolicy) March 19, 2026
Iran Is Playing the Long Game to Exhaust the U.S. — So Far It’s Working | Vali Nasr
Oman claims Israel pushed US into Iran war when deal was possible
Oman’s foreign minister has claimed the US has “lost control of its own foreign policy” and accused Israel of persuading Donald Trump’s administration to go to war with Iran – a conflict he described as a “catastrophe” and a “grave miscalculation”. Writing in the Economist, Badr Albusaidi, the Omani minister who mediated the latest nuclear talks between Iran and the US, offered an unusually damning assessment of events leading up to the US and Israel’s bombing of Iran and the war it has triggered across the Middle East.
“It was a shock but not a surprise when on 28 February – just a few hours after the latest and most substantive talks – Israel and America again launched an unlawful military strike against the peace that had briefly appeared really possible,” Albusaidi wrote. Of all the Gulf countries, Oman was the most vocal and publicly proactive in trying to halt a US attack on Iran, although other states – including the UAE and Qatar – also worked hard to find diplomatic solutions and warned Trump that a war would be devastating for the region
According to Albusaidi, Iran and the US had been on the “verge of a real deal” in nuclear negotiations held in Geneva in February, describing the talks as “substantive”. As revealed by the Guardian this week, a similar assessment had been made by the UK’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, who attended the final stages of the nuclear talks. According to sources, he had been surprised at the significant progress towards a permanent, substantive nuclear deal and judged that it was enough to halt a war between the two sides.
The US negotiating team consisted of Trump’s special envoy, the real estate developer Steve Witkoff, and his son-in-law Jared Kushner. They reportedly brought no experts with them. Sources said the Iranians had agreed to highly significant concessions including a reduction and pause on their enrichment of uranium and also offered the US the chance to participate in a future civil nuclear programme, in exchange for a lifting of sanctions and unfreezing of assets.
A final phase of negotiations had been planned for the following week in Vienna, but 48 hours after the talks finished, the US and Israel began their strikes on Iran. Albusaidi blamed “Israel’s leadership” for persuading Trump to join the war on the false basis that Iran’s regime would offer an “unconditional surrender” after the assassination of its supreme leader Ali Khamenei. “The American administration’s greatest miscalculation, of course, was allowing itself to be drawn into this war in the first place,” he wrote. “This is not America’s war, and there is no likely scenario in which both Israel and America will get what they want from it.”
Iran War Only Intensifies /Lt Col Daniel Davis & Nima Alkhorshid
Whoopsie!
West Point analysis warns that strait of Hormuz blockade will strangle US defense industry
The closure of the strait of Hormuz is causing a “paralyzing, real-time problem” for any prospective manufacturing surge in the US defense industrial base, and even for the repair of defense equipment damaged by Iranian attacks, according to analysis published by West Point’s Modern War Institute. In particular sulphur, a vital upstream input in the extraction of critical minerals including copper and cobalt, has seen a “near total” disruption of seaborne trade in the straits, which makes up half the world’s total shipments, and prices have spiked nearly 25% since the war began, and seen a 165% rise year on year, the report said.
According to the analysis, these minerals – used in everything from microprocessors to jet engines to drone batteries – “dictate how fast things can be built and scaled under the pressure of an ongoing war”, and the effects of a sudden supply shock on US defense readiness have never been modeled.
One of the authors of that analysis, USAF lieutenant colonel and nonresident fellow at the US Naval War College Jahara “Franky” Matisek, told the Guardian in a telephone conversation that it’s “a cascading issue” raising the possibility that a “knock-on effect of this war is that it may cost double or more than double to replace all these weapons because all the mineral demand is going to go way up”. Matisek warned of another possibility: “Markets are not going to be able to provide the amount of minerals that are needed to replace all these radars that have been destroyed and all these munitions that have to be replaced. It’s a really precarious spot to be in right now.”
The sulphur used as an industrial and agricultural inputs is mostly created as a byproduct of refining crude oil. The Middle East produces about 24% of the world’s supply, and around half of the world’s seaborne trade in the substance passes through the strait of Hormuz. Sulphur is an input in the manufacture of artificial fertilizers, and international organizations, industry bodies and media reports have drawn attention to the possible downstream effects on agriculture and food supplies, especially in low-income countries whose farmers need to buy in the same markets as their counterparts in wealthy countries.
But sulphur is also burned to make sulphuric acid – the world’s most produced industrial chemical – which is used to extract copper and cobalt from low-grade ores. And these very metals, the Modern War Institute warns, are crucial for replenishing and repairing US military equipment being used or damaged in the current war in the Middle East, pointing out that “copper is a designated strategic material embedded in the transformers, motors, and communications hardware that enable bases to operate and defense factories to function”.
The Iran crisis is worse than you think
JAPAN shocked by TRUMP. BATTLE for Hormuz and KHARG. BESSENT breaks glass removes Iran oil sanctions
US may remove sanctions on Iranian oil stranded in tankers, Bessent says
The US may soon remove sanctions on Iranian oil stranded on tankers at sea, the treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, said on Thursday as Washington seeks to curb prices soaring over Iran’s closure of the strait of Hormuz.
“In the coming days, we may un-sanction the Iranian oil that’s on the water. It’s about 140m barrels,” Bessent said during an appearance on Fox Business Network’s Mornings with Maria.
“That’s about 10 days to two weeks of supply that the Iranians had been pushing out that would have all gone to China,” he continued. “In essence, we will be using the Iranian barrels against the Iranians to keep the price down for the next 10 to 14 days as we continue this campaign.”
Oil prices have been above $100 per barrel for much of the past two weeks as Iran has closed the strait of Hormuz to shipping and attacked tankers.
The treasury recently took a similar step to temporarily allow the sale of sanctioned Russian oil stranded on tankers, which Bessent said added around 130m barrels to global supplies.
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Report from Beirut: 1,000+ Dead, 1M+ Displaced, Many Fear Long-Term Occupation of Southern Lebanon
Denmark reportedly flew blood bags to Greenland in preparation for a US attack
Denmark reportedly readied itself for potential attack from the US in January – flying bags of blood to Greenland and explosives to blow up runways in case of a battle with its former closest ally. During the tense days when Donald Trump threatened to take over Greenland – a largely autonomous territory that is part of the Danish commonwealth – “the hard way”, Copenhagen was so shaken that it started preparing for US invasion, according to Danish public broadcaster DR.
When, in January, Danish soldiers were flown to Greenland, they were reportedly carrying explosives to destroy runways in the capital, Nuuk, and in Kangerlussuaq, a small town north of the capital, to prevent US aircraft from landing in the event of an invasion. They also carried supplies from Danish blood banks to treat wounded people in the event of battle, according to DR, which had spoken to sources from across the Danish government, authorities and intelligence services in Denmark, France and Germany.
Denmark reportedly started seeking political support from European leaders in a series of secret talks that started soon after the 2024 US election.
The 3 January US attack on Venezuela was a crucial turning point, many of the sources told DR. The following day, Trump said the US needed Greenland “very badly” – renewing fears of a US invasion. The following day, Frederiksen said that an attack by the US on a Nato ally would mean the end of both the military alliance and “post-second world war security”.
Russian tankers to Cuba. Is it enough to prevent Cuba takeover?
US military is not preparing for Cuba takeover, top general tells lawmakers
The US military is not rehearsing for an invasion of Cuba or actively preparing to militarily take over the island, the top general overseeing American forces in Latin America has told lawmakers.
But Gen Francis Donovan, head of US Southern Command, said the Pentagon stands ready to address any threats to the US embassy in Havana, defend its base at Guantánamo Bay and aid US government efforts to address any mass migration from the island, if needed.
Donovan’s remarks came during a Senate hearing focused on Donald Trump’s increasing use of the US military in Latin America, where his administration has reasserted the idea that the region falls into Washington’s zone of influence.
Trump prompted concern on Monday when he said he expected to take Cuba “in some form” and that “I can do anything I want” with the neighboring country, which sits about 90 miles (180km) south of Florida’s Key West. But so far, US efforts appear aimed at creating economic leverage over the island.
Interesting detail remains at the link:
Efforts to shut down pro-Palestinian speech face series of setbacks in court
Few debates from the last few years have been more contentious than whether criticism of Israel and Zionism is antisemitic, threatens Jewish people or violates their civil rights. Allegations of antisemitism have cost people jobs, provided pretexts for censorship and fueled an unprecedented crackdown on protest over Israel and shows of support for Palestinian rights, especially at universities.
Pro-Israel groups have filed hundreds of lawsuits or legal actions in an effort to silence some of this speech, with the vast majority filed since 2023 in response to the protest movement surrounding Israel’s recent war in Gaza. The most important rulings to have come out of these cases, experts say, have found that speech and slogans at the heart of the controversies are protected by the first amendment.
A number of the rulings also state that the speech at issue is not antisemitic and does not violate the civil rights of Jewish students. Together, those decisions are delivering a blow to pro-Israel groups’ legal campaign to shut down protests and criticism of Israel through the courts. “The courts have said, ‘We agree, this is first amendment protected speech,” said Radhika Sainath, an attorney with Palestine Legal, which filed briefs in many of the cases. That, she continued, has resulted in “wins for Palestinian rights because they are starting to create a body of law”.
Among long-debated phrases that courts have found are protected speech are phrases like “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” and “globalize the intifada”. Some judges have been unequivocal in their orders. “Plaintiffs are entitled to their own interpretive lens equating anti-Zionism (as they define it) and antisemitism. But it is another matter altogether to insist that others must be bound by plaintiffs’ view,” a first circuit court panel wrote in its dismissal of a lawsuit brought by pro-Israel groups and Jewish students against MIT. ...
Many of the orders are being appealed and other cases are ongoing, so any body of precedent is still in formation. Additionally, American universities have cracked down on pro-Palestinian protest even without the prospect of losing in court, in response to the Trump administration’s unprecedented pressure campaign to clamp down on progressive speech in higher education. But the rulings are a blow to a broader project to use the law to crack down on pro-Palestinian speech.
Immigration judge denies asylum claim for Liam Conejo Ramos and his family
The family of Liam Conejo Ramos, the preschooler whose detention sparked protests in January, has been denied asylum in the US by a federal immigration judge.
Attorney Danielle Molliver told Minnesota Public Radio that the family is appealing the ruling to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). The decision is the latest step in the Trump administration’s effort to deport the five-year-old child, whose photograph in a bunny hat in Minneapolis went viral after he and his father were detained by immigration officials in January.
The family “is very disappointed”, Molliver told the Minnesota Star Tribune. “They were hopeful, at the minimum, they would get their day in court and have an audience and present their testimony.”
The family, including Liam’s 13-year-old brother and their parents, Adrian Conejo Arias and Erika Ramos, who is pregnant, faces an uncertain future as the Trump administration moves to expedite the removal of the child and his father. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has previously denied the claim that they are looking to fast-track the removal.
With the appeal filed, Molliver’s office, Nwokocha & Operana, has until the end of April to submit any supporting documents and statements to the BIA. Molliver told the Minnesota Star Tribune that “every day is a struggle” for the family, as how much time is left in the US or whether the children will be allowed to finish the school year remains unclear.
“It all depends on how long the BIA takes,” Molliver told the news outlet. “They don’t want to go back to Ecuador.”
The Trump administration is deporting a significant number of parents without asking them if they have children or allowing them to decide whether to bring their children with them, in apparent violation of its own policies, a major report has found.
In interviews with dozens of parents deported to Honduras, as well as physicians and psychologists, government officials and staff at reception centers for deportees, researchers found that many parents were deported quickly after they were detained, without a chance to arrange for the care of their children.
According to the report by the Women’s Refugee Commission (WRC) and Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), parents were forced to leave their children under the informal care of friends or family members who were also vulnerable to deportation. Others were separated from young children and toddlers – including a mother who was deported without her two-month-old baby.
Immigration officials “didn’t ask me anything”, one 22-year-old mother told researchers in Honduras, where she was sent without her two-year-old child. “They never said: ‘You have a daughter, you can bring her,’ because I would have brought [my daughter], she is very attached to me.” Some pregnant and postpartum women, meanwhile, had arrived at reception centers in Honduras displaying “extremely high levels of emotional distress” including symptoms of anxiety and panic, according to staff at the centers.
“What we’ve found is fairly significant evidence that [Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers] are not asking about people’s children at the time of arrest. They are not ensuring that those children have safe care, and they are not allowing parents an opportunity to decide what happens to their children if they are deported,” said Zain Lakhani, director of migrant rights and justice at WRC.
Teenager becomes youngest person to die in ICE detention in Trump’s second term
A teenager held at a US immigration detention facility in Florida died this week, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said on Thursday, the youngest person to die in ICE custody since Donald Trump took office last year. Royer Perez-Jimenez, 19, originally from Mexico, was found “unconscious and unresponsive” in his room on 16 March at the Glades county detention center in Moore Haven, Florida, according to the ICE press release.
“He died of a presumed suicide; however, the official cause of his death remains under investigation,” reads the notification.
A report released in January by several advocacy groups, including the ACLU of Florida and the Detention Watch Network, found troubling conditions at the Glades county detention center from 2008 to 2022.
“Extensive testimony documents that detained people were sprayed with antimicrobial sprays at toxic concentrations, exposed to a disabling carbon monoxide leak, and pepper-sprayed as punishment for asking for necessities like water and toilet paper,” said Emma Shaw Crane, lead author and assistant professor of anthropology at Stanford University. “These hazards made the air inside the jail unbreathable and collectively punished detained people who could not breathe freely inside this facility.

US states sue Trump EPA over decision to repeal bedrock climate finding
A coalition of 24 states, alongside a dozen cities and counties, has sued the Trump administration over its decision to revoke the bedrock scientific determination underpinning virtually all US climate regulations. The new lawsuit, filed in the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Thursday, is being led by the states of Massachusetts, California, New York and Connecticut. It argues that the Environmental Protection Agency’s February rescission of the 2009 endangerment finding – which the White House described as the “single largest deregulatory action in US history” – was illegal.
“When the federal government abandons the law and the science, everyday people suffer the consequences,” Andrea Joy Campbell, the Massachusetts attorney general, said in an emailed statement. The lawsuit seeks to reinstate the endangerment finding, which found that greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare, and formed the basis for climate standards on cars, power plants, and other sources of greenhouse gas pollution. It also aims to reverse a related move from the EPA to repeal all limits on standards for planet-warming emissions from motor vehicles.
“Across our country, communities are already suffering from climate disasters. From freak storms to devastating floods to deadly cold snaps and unbearable heat waves, the climate crisis is here, and it is already reshaping the way we live,” said Letitia James, the New York attorney general, in a statement. “Instead of helping Americans face our new reality, the Trump administration has chosen denial, repealing critical protections that are foundational to the federal government’s response to climate change.”
The court may consolidate the new case with another lawsuit filed by environmental groups in February.
When repealing the endangerment finding, the EPA claimed that the US Clean Air Act does not apply to carbon dioxide and other planet-warming pollutants. The law is only meant to regulate pollution “that harms health or the environment through local and regional exposure”, the agency argued. But scientists have for decades warned that greenhouse-gas emissions are warming the planet and thereby intensifying dangerous extreme weather events, harming air quality, allowing the rapid spread of disease, and worsening illnesses from allergies to malaria.
Damaged Russian tanker carrying natural gas floats into Libyan waters
A severely damaged Russian tanker carrying liquified natural gas that has been adrift in the Mediterranean for two weeks, raising concerns of an ecological disaster, has floated into Libyan waters, Italy’s civil protection agency said on Wednesday.
The Arctic Metagaz was part of a Russian “shadow fleet” used to circumvent sanctions imposed on the country’s oil and gas after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. It was struck in a suspected drone attack close to Maltese waters earlier this month, causing a huge hole. The crew is believed to have been rescued between Malta and Libya.
Earlier this week the tanker was adrift between Malta and the Sicilian island of Lampedusa, prompting the governments of Italy, France, Malta, Spain, Greece and Cyprus to write a joint letter to the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, warning that the vessel posed an “imminent and serious risk of a major ecological disaster”.
Russia’s foreign ministry acknowledged that the Arctic Metagaz, which had been carrying LNG from the Arctic port of Murmansk, was adrift in the Mediterranean and said Moscow’s involvement in resolving the situation depended on “concrete circumstances”. Russia’s transport ministry claimed the vessel was attacked by Ukrainian naval drones launched from the Libyan coast.
Also of Interest
Here are some articles of interest, some of which defied fair-use abstraction.
Will Trump Break the Nuclear Taboo?
War On Iran: – Refineries Hit – Oil Passage Toll To Pay For Iranian Damage
Lebanon Death Toll Passes 1,000, Amnesty Says Israel Must Stop Attacking Hospitals
Oil and gas prices jump after Iran and Israel attack gasfields
Majority of Americans Believe Waging War on Iran Benefits Israel More Than US
US national debt surges past $39 trillion just weeks into war in Iran
Seven-year-old Canadian girl with autism and mother detained by ICE in Texas
Longtime Epstein lawyer ‘had no knowledge’ of his crimes, he testifies to House committee
‘Now We Know Why Trump Fired the Inspector General at Social Security,’ Says Watchdog Group
Archaeological site in Chile upends theory of how humans populated the Americas … again
Trump's SHOCKING Iran War Power Grab w/ David Sirota
Bibi DEMANDS Ground Troops As Marines Rushed to Iran
A Little Night Music
Eddie Boyd & Peter Green – You Got To Reap
Otis Spann w/Fleetwood Mac - My Love Depends On You
Memphis Slim w Peter Green - Boogin' And Bluesin', Wind Gonna Rise
Fleetwood Mac - Black Magic Woman
Fleetwood Mac – I Believe My Time Ain't Long (Version 2) / Shake Your Money Maker (Live)
Fleetwood Mac – Before The Beginning
Otis Spann w/Fleetwood Mac - It Was A Big Thing
Eddie Boyd & Peter Green – The Blues Is Here To Stay
Memphis Slim w Peter Green - Boogie Woogie 1 9 7 0
Fleetwood Mac – My Heart Beat Like A Hammer
Fleetwood Mac – Great Balls Of Fire


Comments
Yo! Thank you, Professor!
How about a few pre-Buckingham Nicks tunes?
Skipped the news links. They're just too depressing, and I'm getting old. Rec'd!!
Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.
evening orlbucfan...
i'll put it on the list for next time. have a great weekend!
It looks like it will be an interesting weekend and is just
starting.
The rest of the tweet:
The rest of the tweet:
evening humphrey...
it appears that the iranians have been taking names and writing notes and it may be a while before they get to the bottom of their list.
Great Peter Green sounds
Thanks for this and enjoy your weekend.
Zionism is a social disease
evening qms...
green is definitely one of my favorite guitarists, always happy to share.
have a great weekend!
It appears that the Iranians didn't read Trump's latest post
on Truth Social.
heh...
it seems that the trumpster is all ready to declare victory and walk away. i doubt that his owner netanyahu will let him off the leash like that.
Pretty good AI video. Worth a view!.... I watched it twice LOL
nicely done! n/t
I just thought that I would share this.
The rest of the tweet:
heh...
it's good that from time to time people from other countries get platformed to remind the u.s. government and its allies that they are a bunch of liars and hypocrites.