Open Thread 07-08-15

Morning news dump and music by Al Basile.

Tsipras to EU: Greece's Days as 'Laboratory for Austerity' Are Over
In a speech before European Parliament, Greek Prime Minister says, 'We want an agreement that will give a final end to the crisis and show there is light at the end of the tunnel.'

As the European Parliament convened in Strasbourg, France on Wednesday all eyes—and ears—were aimed at Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras as he made his case for why the European Union must change its handling of the financial crisis in his own country and across the continent.

Arguing that his people—who overwhelmingly rejected the terms of a previous deal in a referendum on Sunday—have suffered more than enough living inside a "laboratory for testing austerity," Tsipras said his goal is to keep Greece in the eurozone, but that a "viable agreement" must replace what has been so far offered from the group of foreign creditors known as the Troika.

"We want an agreement that will give a final end to the crisis and show there is light at the end of the tunnel," Tsipras declared. So far, he argued, the bailout funds have not gone to help the Greek economy or the people, but instead have been funneled back to financial interests which have received political firepower from maneuvers by the European Central Bank, the IMF, and the most powerful members of the European Commission.

German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’

The German Patriot air and missile defense systems, stationed at the Turkish border with Syria, have carried out “unexplained” commands allegedly issued by unknown hackers, according to a German media report since rebutted by the government.

The US-produced missile systems, belonging to the German Bundeswehr armed forces and based on the territory of NATO ally Turkey since 2013, have been compromised, according to a report in the German Behörden Spiegel.

As a result, the systems, consisting of six launchers and two radars, reportedly carried out “unexplained” orders, the publication claimed, providing no further information on the kind of commands.

A spokesman for the Federal Department of Defense however rebutted the report on Tuesday, saying that “there is no base data” for an extremely improbable attack, Die Welt newspaper reported.


New SWAT Documents Give Snapshot of Ugly Militarization of U.S. Police

Extensive records from SWAT team raids in northeastern Massachusetts released today by the American Civil Liberties Union corroborate what police reform advocates have long insisted: that “Special Weapons And Tactics” units spend a majority of their time responding to low-risk situations that do not require SWAT’s quasi-military approach.

The documents include after-action reports from 79 SWAT operations between August 2012 and June 2014 by the Northeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, or NEMLEC, a consortium of police departments covering 925 square miles in Middlesex and Essex Counties outside Boston. According to NEMLEC, its SWAT team exists to respond to “critical incidents,” mainly “active shooters, armed barricaded subjects, hostage takers, and terrorists.”

However, an examination of the records by the The Intercept demonstrates that such critical incidents are few and far between in Northeast Massachusetts. Nonetheless, SWAT teams frequently roll out in “NEMLEC Communities,” carried in BearCat armored response vehicles and armed with flash-bang grenades.

Just one of the 79 SWAT deployments in 2012-14 — assistance with the search for the perpetrators of the Boston Marathon bombing — involved terrorism. Other SWAT actions during that period show no hostage situations, no active shooters and only 10 non-suicidal barricaded subjects.

Climate Change May Knock Seafood Off the Menu

LONDON—Pink salmon—the smallest and most abundant of the Pacific salmon species, and a supper table mainstay in many parts of the world—may be swimming towards trouble.

And they are not the only dish likely to disappear from the menu. Mussels, oysters, clam and scallop could all become scarcer and more expensive as the seas become more acid. And as the world’s waters warm, fish will start to migrate away from their normal grounds at an ever-increasing rate.

New research shows that as the world’s waters acidify because of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, the pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) could become smaller and less likely to survive.

Al Basile - Daddy Got a Problem

Al Basile - I Miss You

Al Basile - Airlift My Heart

Al Basile - Shaking The Soul Tree

Share
up
0 users have voted.

Comments

mimi's picture

Just wanted to ask everyone to share their thoughts about Germans. There is not enough beating up of Merkel going on at the gos. I just HR'd brooklynbadboy. Gos has become a toxic environment. Diablo

Heh, have you paid the mule and the 40 acres by now to the descendents of the slave? No? Shame ... Ooops, wrong side. Mamba

up
0 users have voted.
lotlizard's picture

Issues and the role of (U.S.-stage-managed) institutions like NATO, the IMF, etc., are complicated, so make it about tribes and groups?

Push everyone's buttons, activate the emotional autopilot that runs on primitive WW II stereotypes like Hogan's Heroes?

For your typical American audience, when it comes to international relations even Hetalia Axis Powers involves too much nuance and subtlety.

up
0 users have voted.
Shahryar's picture

there's nothing for me there. I spit on the front page. It's sad and makes me cry. You all know it. "Hillary the Wonderful", "Trump has Wig", "Rubio Drinks Water". And the diaries on the side are ossified. There's no point in reading gjohnsit's diaries there. The discussion is useless. I already know what people will say because...well, thinking must be hard.

For awhile at the end of last month and beginning of this month, when I'd go there I wouldn't read anything. I'd think to myself as I was waiting for it to come in, "let's see what those a#$@#% have to say".

It took 6 months to break the habit, like cigarettes really.

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

I am very disappointed but actually more angry than not. Sometimes I can't help but ranting there. I can't for my life understand how a person can spend his time to argue along the same line over and over again. Trained psychologists, testing us the guinea pigs. But I really disrespect the site now, which is such a pity, because there are many good people, writers and journalists among them.

up
0 users have voted.

Vox, which is owned by Jerome Armstrong and Kos, is now running talking points in sync with dkos. The meme, "Bernie doesn't relate to minorities" is being pushed by both of them.

up
0 users have voted.

"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

lotlizard's picture

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

have known Germans, and even worked for them: the lowest conceivable level of humanity. A German produces on average twice the feces of a Frenchman. Hyperactivity of the bowel at the expense of the brain, which demonstrates their physiological inferiority. During times of barbarian invasion, the Germanic hordes strewed their route with great masses of fecal material. In recent centuries, French travelers knew immediately when they had crossed the Alsace frontier by the abnormal size of the turds left lying along the roads. As if that were not enough, the typical German suffers from bromhidrosis—foul-smelling sweat—and it’s been shown that the urine of a German contains twenty percent nitrogen, while that of other races has only fifteen.

The German lives in a state of perpetual intestinal embarrassment due to an excess of beer and the pork sausages on which he gorges himself. They fill their mouths with their Geist, which means spirit, but it’s the spirit of the ale, which stultifies them from their youth and explains why, beyond the Rhine, nothing interesting has ever been produced in art, except for a few paintings of repugnant faces and poems of deadly tedium.

Their abuse of beer makes them incapable of having the slightest notion of their vulgarity, and the height of this vulgarity is that they feel no shame at being German. They took a gluttonous and lecherous monk like Luther seriously (can you really marry a nun?) only because he ruined the Bible by translating it into their own language.

—Umberto Eco, The Prague Cemetery
up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

Umberto Eco on ‘The Prague Cemetery’

Q.: Did you enjoy writing this particular book?
A.: Less than the others. ... With this novel, the material I was dealing with was so ugly that I felt a lot of embarrassment. I had to create an absolutely ugly character, a repugnant character, which can certainly be a challenge for a writer. ...
Q.: You said in your Paris Review interview in 2008, “When you imagine a character, you lend him or her some of your personal memories. You give part of yourself to character number one and another part to character number two.” That made me wonder if it was difficult to write a character like Simonini (me adding: the only fictional character in this novel), who has such despicable and difficult views.
A.: Yes, but, you know, every time you are on the highway and another driver does something irritating, you could kill him. So when you have to invent somebody who hates other people, you can find the origin in your belly. In the worst part of you.

I also endowed Simonini with a lot of clichés already in existence. You know, I just came back from Germany, and they gave public readings of the novel, and they read the section at the beginning ranting against Germans. And then I was obliged to explain, “Listen, I didn’t invent anything!” The first part, about the defecatory habits of the Germans, was written by a Frenchman at the beginning of the First World War for nationalistic purposes. He wanted to defame Germans. The last part was taken from Nietzsche, who was an anti-German German. We have people around us who are nurturing and sharing these clichés. It’s easy to build up a negative character because our real life is full of negative characters.

“Truth is stranger than fiction.”
That's why I seldom read fiction... but Umberto Eco I would read. Smile
Thanks for the "hint".

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

I'm glad you caught the reference, and weren't offended. ; ) In Eco's bold and outrageous meta-novel, he creates only one fictional character, but otherwise plunges himself wholly into the factual milieu that resulted in the creation of the false and filthy forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Before focusing in on the mendacious and murderous slagging of the Jews, he gives a few whacks to the other peoples of Europe. And the French, for instance, and as evidenced below, drawn again from contemporary sources, get it worse than the Germans:

As soon as I became French (and I was already half French through my mother) I realized that my new compatriots were lazy, swindling, resentful, jealous, proud beyond all measure, to the point of thinking that anyone who is not French is a savage and incapable of accepting criticism. I have also understood that to induce a Frenchman to recognize a flaw in his own breed, it is enough to speak ill of another, like saying “we Poles have such and such a defect,” and since they do not want to be second to anyone, even in wrong, they react with “oh no, here in France we are worse,” and they start running down the French until they realize they’ve been caught out.

They do not like their own kind, even when advantage is to be gained from it. No one is as rude as a French innkeeper. He seems to hate his clients (perhaps he does) and to wish they weren’t there (and that’s certainly not so, because the Frenchman is most avaricious).

They are vicious. They kill out of boredom. They are the only people who kept their citizens busy for several years cutting each other’s heads off, and it was a good thing that Napoleon diverted their anger onto those of another race, marching them off to destroy Europe.

They are proud to have a state they describe as powerful, but they spend their time trying to bring it down: no one is as good as the Frenchman at putting up barricades for whatever reason and every time the wind changes, often without knowing why, allowing himself to get carried into the streets by the worst kind of rabble. The Frenchman doesn’t really know what he wants, but knows perfectly well that he doesn’t want what he has. And the only way he knows of saying it is by singing songs.

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

On my trip to Germany. I am so under read. Would be nice to get my head together... I always pretended I am Swedish when I went to France in my younger age in the early seventies years. They believed me too...I always found the French way more nice (concerning racial behavior) than the Germans. But then folks (who knew French people way better than me and were colonized by them - but they were also colonized by Germans, but knew those things just by stories their parents told them) told me I am so "fictional" in my thinking and told me they are worse than the Germans. So we fought back and forth who is more racist French or Germans. When I said Germans they told me I have a "guilt" complex, very dismissive even. So then I became guilty not continue to argue about it. Anyhow "women" need to know when to talk and when to be silent, I learned that too, from women, who didn't want to be liberated by some white Western women. Now, 45 years later, I see the same thing going on at gos. I still haven't learned to be silent. It's time now to get serious about that.

up
0 users have voted.

as an indicator of how far the overton window has moved to the right, I'm pretty sure most of us here at c99p would be considered far left or even radical left. Shit, radical left? We are what used to be mainstream left, now we are labelled radical. What is now mainstream left is the old moderate right. Radical left, yeah right, Rubin, Hoffman, SDS, the Weathermen, that was the radical left, now the old mainstream left gets tagged with that badge. I'm not a big fan of labels but labels act as a scorecard for the sheeple, putting us all in convenient boxes.

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

I serve Kaffee and Kuchen and can even make a latte, like Merkel. Preved
I am radically opposed to boxes. So, if we shared the box, may be we could crash the cardboards. That would be rivoolushunary. Dash 1

Sigh. Help

Silliness is the only way to survive. Crazy

up
0 users have voted.
Big Al's picture

When someone wants the entire thing torn down, from the Federal Reserve to the Capitalist system, to Wall Street, to
Obamacare, to the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderberger Group, I think that puts them in the radical category.
When someone advocates a boycott of the electoral system, a change in the political system, a move to direct democracy, etc.
then I'm probably farther to the left than even the radicals in the 60's.
I'm comfortable with that now.

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

"Truth is stranger than fiction". Smile
I am always exited about truth. Can't get enough of it.

up
0 users have voted.

back in my gardening days, radical hot dry weather produced a particularly pungent and heady harvest. It was a pain watering constantly but the stress seemed to bring out the best of the sticky goodness. The surrounding dead and yellowing vegetation made the plants stick out like a sore thumb and insects were a problem but worth it all. That was back in the day.

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

versus a more desert dry climate, which one would you choose?

up
0 users have voted.

the particular plant type that I subtly reference my answer would be, yes. Biggrin

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

Shok

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

okay, any befuddlement about the "left/right" labels, because the whole notion of "left" and "right" is at once a fossilized and outmoded, and relatively new, formulation—based solely, and in the original, upon where delegates to the French National Assembly seated themselves in 1789: supporters of the king sat to the right, supporters of what would become known as the French Revolution to the left. That's where it came from. "Left." And "right."

That such a division is of no contemporary relevance can be seen in the amusing, and to me frankly disgusting, reverence with which some of those who identify as "left," then and now, regard the racist authoritarian monarch FDR. Who arrogated to himself in foreign policy powers unmatched by any president before or since—the Lend-Lease Bill of spring 1941 "enabled him to designate as a beneficiary any country in the world; to manufacture and procure whatever munitions he wanted; to sell, transfer, exchange, lease and lend any articles of defence he liked; to repair and recondition the articles of defence of the designated governments; to communicate to these governments any defence information he considered necessary; and to determine the terms and conditions of receipt and payment"—and in domestic policy deliberately crafted his New White Deal to benefit white men only, refusing even to support federal law that would put an end to the actual physical lynching of black people, as "I've got to get legislation passed by Congress to save [white male] America. The southerners by reason of the seniority rule in Congress are chairmen or occupy strategic places on most of the Senate and House committees. If I come out for the antilynching bill now, they will block every bill I ask Congress to pass to keep [white male] America from collapsing."

This man was a cold-blooded racist murdering war pig. He was not "left" . . . except as it might be understood by those who, in the French Assembly in 1789, sat on the "left," but were, a few years later, degraded by the power—because power always degrades—they had meanwhile seized from the "rightist" king, so as to start dragging off to the scaffold whomsoever might have once pissed them off.

In my opinion, the essential division comes down to this: "it looks more and more to me like the only really important idea is to say yes to anything that brings life and no to anything that brings death."

To wit, if you claim to be all left because you're against US wars and shit, and yet you would support "armed struggle" by, say, the people of Donbass, or the Palestinians, you're just another Dick Cheney. The only difference is in whom you determine it is right and meet, to kill.

As for the cited avatars of the supposedly once "radical left": Jerry Rubin went to work on Wall Street; Abbie Hoffman peddled always himself; the SDS were wanking white-people motormouths who, in Grace Slick's apt phrase, "didn't mean shit to a tree"; and the Weathermen—more wanking white people, who succeeded mainly in blowing themselves up.

In my opinion, the true "radical left" of that period were people who stayed all the fuck way away from "politics."

To wit, Ken Kesey:

The acid test was breaking out into an area in which it had no specific goals. It was just discovering what there was out there if you continued to move away from the norm.

It was a test. And there were people that passed, and there were people that didn’t pass.

When we did the show up in Portland—to give you an idea of someone who passed—some businessman, just walkin’ around on the street, came in; we charged a buck, and for a buck you got to see us make all our noise, and the Dead make all their noise, and anything else that happened.

This guy was in a suit, and he had an umbrella. He got the customary cup of stuff. And about midnight, you could see him really get ripped. Somebody who’d probably never been anything but drunk on beer. But he looked around, and he saw all these strange people, and he looked down, and the spotlight was showing down on him, and he saw his shadow.

And he stands up straight, puts that umbrella over his shoulder, and he says:

“The king walks.”

And:

“The king turns around.”

And:

“Now the king will dance.”

To wit, Jerry Garcia:

They just brought in all this political, heavy-handed, East Coast, hard-edge shit, and painted it on Haight Street, where none of it was happening. Everybody had already been through being disillusioned. It represented a step backward. I thought, "Aw man, not this shit again." I thought we had already gone through it, and now we're into the psychedelic era. There was a whole new consciousness starting to happen, and it was really working nice, but then the flood came, and that was it.

The information we’re plugged into is the universe itself, and everybody knows that on a cellular level. It’s built in. Just superficial stuff like what happened to you in your lifetime is nothing compared to the container which holds all your information. And there’s a similarity in all our containers. We are all one organism, we are all the universe, we are all doing the same thing. That’s the sort of thing that everybody knows, and I think that it’s only weird little differences that are making it difficult. The thing is that we’re all earthlings. The earthling consciousness is the one that’s really trying to happen at this juncture and so far it’s only a tiny little glint, but it’s already over. The change has already happened, and it’s a matter of swirling out. It has already happened. We’re living after the fact. It’s a postrevolutionary age. The change is over. The rest of it is a cleanup action. Unfortunately it’s very slow. Amazingly slow and amazingly difficult.

To wit, Stanley Kubrick:

And here man undergoes a transformation as important as when he became a tool-user. He becomes a natural being again, having used his tools for hundreds of thousands of years to pull himself up by the bootstraps. Now, he no longer needs them. He has transcended his own nature, as that original ape did, and now he is no longer a “man.”

Instead, having grown old and died, he is reborn as a child of the universe. As a solemn, wide-eyed infant who slowly looks over the stars and the Earth, and then turns his eyes on the audience.

These last 20 seconds, as the child of man looks down on his ancestral parents, are the most important in the film. We in the audience are men, and here is the liberated, natural being, Kubrick believes we will someday become.

But when Kubrick’s space infant looked at the audience the other night, half of the audience was already on its feet, in a hurry to get out. A good third of the audience, must not have seen the space infant at all.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AXS8P0HksQo]

up
0 users have voted.

There you go making making me use my grey matter for something other than support for my cranium.

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

wherever s/he goes
the people all complain

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BlFyBQemaA]

Meanwhile:

a touch of grey
kind of suits you anyway

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dH309ri5M_4]

And, anyway:

The change has already happened, and it’s a matter of swirling out.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQ48foxPzVE]

up
0 users have voted.
shaharazade's picture

woke me up out of my heat induced stupor. I'm not a huge SiFi fan or a Grateful Dead head but enjoyed both Jerry Garcia and the ending shots from 2001. 2001 and Bladerunner are on my top ten all time movie list so I must like selected SciFi. As for FDR a pol is a pol. I had no idea about the French origins of left and right. These days any measurement of political ideology or stance, right center left or conservative moderate, liberal are meaningless. There is no center to use as a core. 'The pump don't work as the vandals took the handles'.

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

I do love the American Beauty Rose album. Our accountant in SF was also the Grateful Dead's accountant. she said they brought their money to her in brown grocery bags. That's how Chuck Berry gets paid for his gigs.

up
0 users have voted.
shaharazade's picture

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

Blade Runner is useful because it asks people to consider the distinctions—if any, which, in the end, there are none—between "human" and "replicant."

With "replicant," here, standing in as Other.

up
0 users have voted.
smiley7's picture

What a day here, headaches in every direction, but this post lifts my spirits, tku.

up
0 users have voted.
gulfgal98's picture

I forgot what day of the week today was and missed posting my Open Thread today. Blush I am very sorry. Sad Whatever day you normally post, I am will be happy to take since you posted in my stead. Yes, I did have computer problems earlier this week, but that is not my excuse today. Instead it was a brain fart.

up
0 users have voted.

Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

don't worry about it. How about you do tomorrow morning?

up
0 users have voted.
gulfgal98's picture

I will do tomorrow and then next week, hopefully I will be back on schedule.

Thank you again for covering for me, JtC Good

up
0 users have voted.

Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

lotlizard's picture

http://www.taz.de/Griechenland-Krise/!160743/

For a limited time, the left-alternative German newspaper 'die tageszeitung' (or 'taz', pronounced tats) will be making some of its articles on the Greek fiscal crisis available in English.

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

up
0 users have voted.
lotlizard's picture

http://www.taz.de/taz-Texte-zur-Euro-Krise-auf-Englisch/!t5210399/

The Social Democratic party leadership under Sigmar Gabriel continues to be principle-less and without any kind of moral compass. Like the Democrats in America, the last time the SPD showed any traces of being "left" was way back in the early 1970s, before Helmut Schmidt.
http://www.taz.de/Kommentar-Sigmar-Gabriel/!5204477/

up
0 users have voted.

now the stock exchange is closed due to "technical difficulties". We pay for drones and bombs when we should be buying Snowdens.

Oh well, nice day. Off to the sunshine with my kindle. enjoy the day.

up
0 users have voted.

"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

about all the media noise about ISIS using social media to recruit new members? Here you go:

FBI chief wants 'backdoor access' to encrypted communications to fight Isis
Experts warn that ‘magical thinking’ of a security flaw only the US government could exploit could easily be utilized by hackers, foreign spies and terrorists

The director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation has warned US senators that the threat from the Islamic State merits a “debate” about limiting commercial encryption – the linchpin of digital security – despite a growing chorus of technical experts who say that undermining encryption would prove an enormous boon for hackers, cybercriminals, foreign spies and terrorists.

In a twin pair of appearances before the Senate’s judiciary and intelligence committees on Wednesday, James Comey testified that Isis’s use of end-to-end encryption, whereby the messaging service being used to send information does not have access to the decryption keys of those who receive it, helped the group place a “devil” on the shoulders of potential recruits “saying kill, kill, kill, kill”.

Comey said that while the FBI is thus far disrupting Isis plots, “I cannot see me stopping these indefinitely.” He added: “I am not trying to scare folks.”

Since October, following Apple’s decision to bolster its mobile-device security, Comey has called for a “debate” about inserting “back doors” – or “front doors”, as he prefers to call them – into encryption software, warning that “encryption threatens to lead us all to a very, very dark place”.

up
0 users have voted.
lotlizard's picture

Be they in Ferguson or in Washington DC, officials who believe that, in order to be effective, government must be secret, omniscient, and deadly are, mentally and spiritually, already in a very dark place.

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

I had a piece on the dKos front page that asserted that all information generated by the US government, should be freely flowed to the people who paid for it: US citizens. And without restriction.

Them was the days, eh. Heh. ; )

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

up
0 users have voted.
hecate's picture

transcended to the hum in the wires.

up
0 users have voted.