The Evening Blues - 6-1-16
Hey! Good Evening!
This evening's music features blues singer and guitarist James Davis. Enjoy!
James 'Thunderbird' Davis & Ron Levy - Checkout Time
"Television brought the brutality of war into the comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of America - not on the battlefields of Vietnam."
-- Marshall McLuhan
News and Opinion
Pentagon: Special Ops Killing of Pregnant Afghan Women Was “Appropriate” Use of Force
An internal Defense Department investigation into one of the most notorious night raids conducted by special operations forces in Afghanistan — in which seven civilians were killed, including two pregnant women — determined that all the U.S. soldiers involved had followed the rules of engagement. As a result, the soldiers faced no disciplinary measures, according to hundreds of pages of Defense Department documents obtained by The Intercept through the Freedom of Information Act. In the aftermath of the raid, Adm. William McRaven, at the time the commander of the elite Joint Special Operations Command, took responsibility for the operation. The documents made no unredacted mention of JSOC.
Although two children were shot during the raid and multiple witnesses and Afghan investigators alleged that U.S. soldiers dug bullets out of the body of at least one of the dead pregnant women, Defense Department investigators concluded that “the amount of force utilized was necessary, proportional and applied at appropriate time.” The investigation did acknowledge that “tactical mistakes” were made. ...
The February 2010 night raid, which took place in a village near Gardez in Paktia province, was described by the U.S. military at the time as a heroic attack against Taliban militants. ... But the raid quickly gained international infamy after survivors and local Afghan investigators began offering a completely different narrative of the deadly events that night to a British reporter, Jerome Starkey, who began a serious investigation of the Gardez killings. ... When he traveled to Gardez and began assembling witnesses to meet him in the area, he immediately realized NATO’s story was likely false. Starkey’s reporting, which first uncovered the horrifying details of what happened that night, forced NATO and the U.S. military to abandon the honor killings cover story. A half-hearted official investigation ensued.
Fired for Speaking Out on Guantánamo, Former Prosecutor Settles With Library of Congress
In a small but significant victory for free speech, Col. Morris Davis, the former chief prosecutor at Guantánamo Bay, announced a $100,000 settlement Tuesday in his lawsuit against the Library of Congress’s Congressional Research Service.
Davis was fired from the CRS in 2009 for authoring two opinion pieces (one in the Wall Street Journal, the other in the Washington Post) that criticized President Obama for prosecuting some terror suspects in federal courts and others in military commissions — what Davis called a “dangerous legal double standard.”
Davis became an assistant director at CRS after retiring from a 25-year career as an Air Force lawyer in 2008.
The ACLU sent a letter to CRS in 2009 asking for Davis’s reinstatement, noting that his work at CRS had nothing to do with Guantánamo Bay. When CRS refused, the ACLU sued on Davis’s behalf.
The Supreme Court has previously ruled that government employees do not have First Amendment rights when speaking in an official capacity. But the taglines in Davis’s pieces made it clear that he was writing in a personal capacity and did not even mention the CRS.
Days of Revolt: The Return of the Radical
America’s Sinkhole Wars
We have it on highest authority: the recent killing of Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Muhammad Mansour by a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan marks “an important milestone.” So the president of the United States has declared, with that claim duly echoed and implicitly endorsed by media commentary – the New York Times reporting, for example, that Mansour’s death leaves the Taliban leadership “shocked” and “shaken.”
But a question remains: A milestone toward what exactly?
Toward victory? Peace? Reconciliation? At the very least, toward the prospect of the violence abating? Merely posing the question is to imply that U.S. military efforts in Afghanistan and elsewhere in the Islamic world serve some larger purpose.
Yet for years now that has not been the case. The assassination of Mansour instead joins a long list of previous milestones, turning points, and landmarks briefly heralded as significant achievements only to prove much less than advertised. ...
Like Bush, Obama will bequeath to his successor wars he failed to finish. Less remarked upon, he will also pass along to President Clinton or President Trump new wars that are his own handiwork. In Libya, Somalia, Yemen, and several other violence-wracked African nations, the Obama legacy is one of ever-deepening U.S. military involvement. The almost certain prospect of a further accumulation of briefly celebrated and quickly forgotten “milestones” beckons. ...
Try this thought experiment. Imagine the opposing candidates in a presidential campaign each refusing to accept war as the new normal. Imagine them actually taking stock of the broader fight that’s been ongoing for decades now. Imagine them offering alternatives to armed conflicts that just drag on and on. Now that would be a milestone.
Bombing Hiroshima changed the world, but it didn't end WWII
President Obama’s visit to Hiroshima on Friday has rekindled public debate about the U.S. atomic bombings of Japan — one largely suppressed since the Smithsonian canceled its Enola Gay exhibit in 1995. Obama, aware that his critics are ready to pounce if he casts the slightest doubt on the rectitude of President Harry S. Truman’s decision to use atomic bombs, has opted to remain silent on the issue. This is unfortunate. A national reckoning is overdue.
Most Americans have been taught that using atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 was justified because the bombings ended the war in the Pacific, thereby averting a costly U.S. invasion of Japan. This erroneous contention finds its way into high school history texts still today. More dangerously, it shapes the thinking of government officials and military planners working in a world that still contains more than 15,000 nuclear weapons.
Truman exulted in the obliteration of Hiroshima, calling it “the greatest thing in history.” America’s military leaders didn’t share his exuberance. Seven of America’s eight five-star officers in 1945 — Gens. Dwight Eisenhower, Douglas MacArthur and Henry Arnold, and Adms. William Leahy, Chester Nimitz, Ernest King and William Halsey — later called the atomic bombings either militarily unnecessary, morally reprehensible, or both. Nor did the bombs succeed in their collateral purpose: cowing the Soviets.
Leahy, who was Truman’s personal chief of staff, wrote in his memoir that the “Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender…. The use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan.” MacArthur went further. He told former President Hoover that if the United States had assured the Japanese that they could keep the emperor they would have gladly surrendered in late May.
It was not the atomic evisceration of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that ended the Pacific war. Instead, it was the Soviet invasion of Manchuria and other Japanese colonies that began at midnight on Aug. 8, 1945 — between the two bombings.
ISIS Halts Iraqi Offensive at Gates of Fallujah
A day after announcing their “final assault” on the ISIS-held city of Fallujah, Iraqi troops have been stalled at the southern gates, in the face of major resistance from ISIS forces. Unlike previous defenses, there was no word of ISIS using suicide attacks, and rather faced the Iraqi military heavily armed in a gun-battle.
The commander of the offensive, Lt. Gen. Abdelwahab al-Saadi, was as upbeat as ever, presenting the fight as the Iraqi forces “repelling” an ISIS attack on the outside of the city, and claiming to have killed 75 ISIS fighters in the process. He offered no details on casualties on the Iraqi military side.
Other Iraqi military officials told a different story, saying the ISIS forces are heavily dug-in in trenches and tunnels around the city outskirts, and keeping Iraqi troops and affiliated militias at a distance in the ongoing offensive.
Battle for Falluja: IS group blocks Iraqi army at city's southern gates
Isis faces likely defeat in battles across Iraq and Syria – but what happens next?
Isis is under attack in and around the last three big cities it holds in Iraq and Syria – Fallujah, Mosul and Raqqa. It is likely to lose these battles because its lightly armed if fanatical infantry, fighting from fixed positions, cannot withstand air strikes called in by specialised ground forces. They must choose between retreating and reverting to guerrilla war or suffering devastating losses. ...
Isis is not the all-conquering military force it once was, but the war in Iraq and Syria is as much about politics as military success. At issue for all involved in the conflict in its present phase is not only the breaking Isis control of territory, but determining who will rule there in place of Isis.
So, if the Shia paramilitaries of the Hashd al-Shaabi, whom the US says are under Iranian influence, play the leading role in capturing Fallujah, this will help secure their long-term power and prestige in Iraq. It will be seen as a success for Iran rather than the US and its allies. Equally important in shaping the future political geography of the Middle East will be the relative roles of the Kurdish Peshmerga, Iraqi army and the US in driving Isis from Mosul or, in Syria, of the Syrian Kurds, their Arab allies, the US and the Syrian Army in taking Raqqa from Isis.
“It all depends on who liberates Fallujah, how it is liberated and when it is liberated,” says Fuad Hussein, chief of staff to the Kurdish President Massoud Barzani, in an interview with The Independent. He believes that the balance of power has shifted decisively against Isis compared with a year ago, but warns that nobody should imagine that the fall of Isis will bring peace and stability to the region. ...
Mr Hussein says that if the caliphate falls, “Isis will transform from a terrorist state into a terrorist movement”. It will be weakened by not having secure bases for training but it will not evaporate or be replaced by moderate Arab Sunni politicians who claim great influence on their own community and are well-financed by foreign powers.
In Syria, a more likely successor to Isis would be the Syrian branch of al-Qaeda, Jabhat al-Nusra, which has been growing in popularity among Sunni Arabs. Though ideologically similar to Isis in its Salafi-jihadi fundamentalist beliefs, Nusra is presenting itself as a less maniacal alternative to Isis and one that can probably count on a measure of support from Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
Israel Remaps West Bank for Massive Settlement Expansions
In a move which most analysts agree portends another massive expansion of the Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, the Civil Administration has brought in a special team to “remap” some 15,000 acres of “state-owned” land in the territory.
The remapping on the one hand is done to label territory as “military fire zones,” which is then used to justify the military expelling the Arabs living in those areas. The mapping is also a chance to declare Palestinian homes in those areas, even those built before the occupation, as “illegal” and give the land to settlements.
Even as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suggested he’s willing to negotiate a peace deal with the Palestinians along the Arab initiative, there is a growing sense that as the settlements expand in strategic areas and the Palestinian territory shrinks, the endeavor is quickly becoming an irreversible roadblock to Palestinian statehood.
Israel’s Coalition Remains Unstable as Far-Right Confronts Netanyahu
The Israeli far-right government survived its first week after the installation of Avigdor Lieberman as Defense Minister, but there remains considerable internal conflict, which is only growing after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that he is willing to negotiate along the Arab Peace Initiative.
Naftali Bennett responded by accusing Netanyahu of “going left” in a plot to replace his Jewish Home Party with the center-left Zionist Union. Bennett’s key political ally, Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, vowed that so long as they are in the government, there will be no Palestinian statehood under any terms.
The Land of Israel Caucus in the Israeli parliament has also publicly demanded that Netanyahu immediately annex the settlement of Ma’ale Adumim, in the occupied West Bank, on the grounds that Israel never had any intention of giving the land back to the Palestinians anyhow.
Appeals Court Delivers Devastating Blow to Cellphone-Privacy Advocates
Courts across the country are grappling with a key question for the information age: When law enforcement asks a company for cellphone records to track location data in an investigation, is that a search under the Fourth Amendment?
By a 12-3 vote, appellate court judges in Richmond, Virginia, on Monday ruled that it is not — and therefore does not require a warrant.
The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld what is known as the third-party doctrine: a legal theory suggesting that consumers who knowingly and willingly surrender information to third parties therefore have “no reasonable expectation of privacy” in that information — regardless of how much information there is, or how revealing it is. ...
The 5th, 6th, and 11th circuits have reached the same conclusion. ...
For a while, it looked like there might be a split in the lower courts that would require the Supreme Court to reconsider the third-party doctrine.
But now that the 4th Circuit has ruled, that seems less likely.
All your disk image are belong to us, says US appeals court
The government can prosecute and imprison people for crimes based on evidence obtained from their computers—even evidence retained for years that was outside the scope of an original probable-cause search warrant, a US federal appeals court has said in a 100-page opinion paired with a blistering dissent.
The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that there was no constitutional violation because the authorities acted in good faith when they initially obtained a search warrant, held on to the files for years, and built a case unrelated to the original search.
The case posed a vexing question—how long may the authorities keep somebody's computer files that were obtained during a search but were not germane to that search? The convicted accountant said that only the computer files pertaining to his client—who was being investigated as part of an Army overbilling scandal—should have been retained by the government during a 2003 search. All of his personal files, which eventually led to his own tax-evasion conviction, should have been purged, he argued.
But the appeals court said the authorities' behavior was acceptable and didn't reach the constitutional question of whether the Fourth Amendment rights were breached for accountant Stavros Ganias, who was sentenced to two years in prison. That's because three years after the original search of the accountant's files in connection to the Army scandal, Connecticut authorities got another search warrant for Ganias' own tax files that were already in the government's possession, the appeals court ruled in a 12-1 decision Friday written by Judges Debra Ann Livingston and Gerard Lynch. Ganias had subsequently deleted those files from his hard drives after the government had imaged them, according to court records.
0:02 / 21:12
OAS Threatens to Suspend Venezuela While Ignoring Recent Ouster of Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff
Oh my, global institutions are finding that neoliberalism is a bottomless pit of austerity and despair.
Why the global economy may need to get worse before it gets better
A wind of change is howling through the world’s economic institutions. Last week it was the International Monetary Fund saying that austerity could do more harm than good and that neoliberalism was not all it was cracked up to be. This week it is the turn of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development to challenge the orthodoxy.
The OECD says governments around the world should consider banding together to spend more on public works, something it deems necessary because lasting recovery from the deep recession of 2008-09 remains elusive.
There is, of course, a word to describe action by the state to boost demand when private-sector activity is weak, and that word is Keynesianism. It was not a word that was used much in the three decades when neoliberalism reigned triumphant.
But times change and after five years in which its forecasts have proved persistently overoptimistic, the OECD is becoming increasingly fretful. It is concerned that weak growth will feed on itself. It is worried that central banks are being asked to do too much with low interest and quantitative easing. It fears that any one of a number of risks – a hard landing in China, a financial crisis in emerging markets or, most pressingly, Brexit, could lead to activity stalling altogether. It wants something done to break the cycle of low productivity, low wage growth and low investment.
Social unrest in France: A decisive week ahead
Gosh, it looks like all of that neoliberal austerity is causing social instability. Who would have imagined? I hope the investor class takes it in the shorts.
It’s not just Brexit — Greece, Spain, France are also on the brink
The hedge funds will have prepped their positions. The investment banks will have ordered in pizza and extra coffee ready for a long night of dealing. Exit polls will have been commissioned, and currency traders will be ready to buy or sell sterling as soon as they start getting a clear idea of whether Britain has voted to stay in or get out of the European Union on June 23.
But hold on. In fact, it is not just the risk of Brexit that the markets need to be worrying about. In truth, the real drama is going to come over a long and difficult weekend, leading up to potentially wild day in European assets on Monday, June 27.
Why? Over that weekend, Spanish voters will go back to the polls in another attempt to settle on a government, which may well see the far-left Podemos group make big gains. Greece will be struggling to find the money to pay back its latest debts. And if the strikes in France escalate, the country may be close to running out of its strategic fuel reserves — and approaching a total meltdown.
Brexit, Spexit, Grexit, and Frexit could all collide. The result? A car crash for the European markets.
Why the Verizon Worker's Victory is A Big Deal
Friday, May 27, the six-and-a-half-week Verizon strike came to an end with a tentative contract agreement.
The Communications Workers of America and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, the unions that represent the Verizon workers, hailed the contract as a victory, citing its creation of 1300 new call center jobs along the East Coast, first-ever contracts for Verizon wireless store employees in Brooklyn and Everett, Massachusetts, and raises of nearly 11 percent over the life of the contract. The workers beat back demands from the company to cut pensions, transfer workers out of state for up to two months, and proposed cuts in disability and accident benefits.
Robert Master, co-chair of the New York State Working Families Party and political director for District 1 of CWA, said "By executing a pretty smart strike plan and staying on message in the media, we were able to inflict real damage on the company and protect the interests of members. In an era in which strikes have become so infrequent this really does demonstrate that workers can exercise the strike power in effective ways still.
We knew that public sentiment would be on our side. America is against big corporations right now and that's a good healthy thing for our society. Nobody goes out and says "Oh no, Lowell [McAdam, Verizon CEO] really deserves $18 million a year," that's just not something you feel on the street."
Illinois bill aims to take away Dennis Hastert’s taxpayer-funded pension
An Illinois lawmaker is pushing legislation to take away former US House speaker Dennis Hastert’s taxpayer-funded state pension following his conviction in a hush-money case.
Hastert receives a $28,000 annual pension from Illinois’ General Assembly Retirement System from his service in the legislature. ... Hastert pleaded guilty to violating banking laws while seeking to pay $3.5m to someone he sexually molested. ... Officials say they can’t revoke his pension because his conviction wasn’t related to his statehouse career.
After wave of anti-abortion laws, US sees signs of women taking drastic measures
Five years into a surge of anti-abortion legislation, experts say women are increasingly turning to dangerous methods to end their pregnancies
In the south, abortion providers frequently encounter women who have tried taking misoprostol, an abortifacient that is only available in abortion clinics in the US but is available and inexpensive in most Mexican pharmacies. Myths circulate online about the ability of herbal extracts or over-the-counter products, some of which pose a health risk, to cause a miscarriage.
A volunteer, Emily Rooke-Ley, who operates a hotline for minors seeking an abortion in Texas, recently spoke to a teenager who couldn’t pay for her abortion and tried drinking “loads of vitamin C” instead.
There are phone calls about substances that carry warning labels for pregnancy: “‘What if I drank a whole bottle of this-or-that?’” said Sue Postal, who recently closed her clinic in Toledo. Others take more drastic measures, such as the young woman in Postal’s clinic whose boyfriend had punched her in the stomach as hard as he could – at the woman’s insistence.
Until recently, abortion rights activists treated stories like these as harbingers of the future if states continued to erode abortion rights. Thirty-eight states have passed more than 300 new abortion restrictions since 2010, laws that have shuttered dozens of abortion clinics across the south, west and midwest.
But a growing number now reject the idea that these anecdotes represent the worst-case scenarios. And a small body of research has emerged to support them. Among the most eye-catching is a report, released in November, projecting that anywhere from 100,000 to 240,000 women of childbearing age in Texas – the site of the nation’s most bruising abortion fight – have at some point attempted to induce their own abortions.
Libertarian Presidential Candidate Gary Johnson Would Pardon Snowden
Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson recently said as a president he would pardon Edward Snowden and called the fugitive a "real American patriot."
What Can Sanders' Five Representatives Achieve at the DNC?
This article has information about write-in voting and also about a constitutional amendment to correct a number of the inequities created by allowing the elites to control voting regulations in order to marginalize the voting power of the 99%. There's a lot more detail than can be fairly extracted and it's worth a full read.
Troubles of Anti-Trump/Clinton Write-ins
With the increasingly likelihood of a presidential contest between the generally despised Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, millions of angry voters are considering protesting the lineup by either sitting out the election or writing in alternatives. ...
The only problem is that — with the control of voting left up to the states by the Constitution and with tabulation taking place on the local and county level — most write-in votes would not be counted.
Under state laws, political parties must “qualify” for their candidates to be listed on the ballots and counted. The two major parties are qualified in every state, but the Libertarian Party candidates will appear on the ballots in only 33 states, the Green Party in 21, and the Constitution Party in 13.
By definition, the names of write-in candidates are not listed on ballots; however, interested candidates must still file various forms of paperwork in 35 states for their votes to be counted, and seven states do not allow write-in votes for presidential candidates. While permitted in the remaining eight states, votes for write-in candidates may not be counted or reported by local registrars.
Even after the end of this year’s political conventions and the statutory period to qualify for the ballots in individual states, steps could still be taken by alternative candidates, such as Bernie Sanders or an establishment Republican, to register a willingness to accept write-in votes in those states where they are permitted.
All of this could change with the enactment of the U.S. Voters’ Rights Amendment (USVRA), which would finally guarantee that every citizen has the right to cast effective votes in all elections. In addition, the USVRA mandates a national, hand-countable paper ballot in all federal elections, allows write-in candidates for all federal offices, and requires that all such votes be counted. ...
A national policy referendum, in conjunction with presidential elections, would create broad federal guidelines, rather than binding laws. Elected representatives would be expected to carry out the policies and direction of the People, and could be held accountable if they fail to do so.
Goldman Sachs Financed Hillary Clinton’s Son-in-Law to Make Bullish Greek Bets After It Structured Unseemly Greek Debt Deals that Hobbled that Country
On May 10, the New York Times gently dropped a bombshell on the hedge fund investing world of New York’s one-percenters. Hillary and Bill Clinton’s son-in-law, Marc Mezvinsky, who married their only child, Chelsea, in an opulent 2010 wedding, was shuttering the Eaglevale Hellenic Opportunity Fund after it had lost 90 percent of its value. That is a staggering loss for a hedge fund, which is, as its name implies, supposed to have hedges in place to prevent that kind of loss. ...
According to the account in the New York Times, the Eaglevale Hellenic Opportunity Fund imploded as a result of bullish bets on Greek bank stocks and Greek government debt. That’s raising even more eyebrows in investment circles since it was Goldman Sachs who secretly sold a complex and convoluted derivative deal to Greece in 2001 that hid the true state of its debt, then reworked the deal multiple times until Greece ended up owing Goldman a stunning 5.1 billion euros, almost twice Greece’s original obligation, thus making future bullish bets on Greece highly doubtful. Along the way, Goldman Sachs learned more about Greek debt than just about any player on the planet. ...
There is one last thing to remember about hedge fund losses. For every crushing trade, there is someone on the other side of that trade making a killing. As the public learned well from Goldman Sachs and John Paulson secretly creating a subprime debt investment designed to fail, while Goldman peddled it to their own clients as a good investment and Paulson shorted it to make a profit of $1 billion (the notorious 2007 Abacus deal), until we know whom the beneficiaries of this hedge funds’ losses were, we’re in the precise place that Goldman Sachs wants to keep us: in the dark.
More Than 300 People in First Nation Community Have Been Poisoned By Mercury, And Ontario Isn't Cleaning It Up
After eating fish from the river for years, Chief Simon Fobister can't walk in a straight line. Instead, his feet take him to the left.
In 2014, Japanese doctors diagnosed the chief with mercury poisoning when they visited Grassy Narrows First Nation to study astonishingly high levels of the neurotoxin in the northern Ontario community's water. The chief is one of more than 300 people poisoned by mercury after a pulp and paper mill dumped chemicals into the river system in the 1960s and '70s. ...
New research released Monday says mercury contamination in the English-Wabigoon River system that flows past Grassy Narrows can be cleaned up, but it would cost $30 to $50 million.
John Rudd, the lead author of the study, told VICE News his team analyzed both old and new data, including data from Ontario's Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, and came to the conclusion that certain parts of the river system are still contaminated with high levels of mercury, and that the concentration of mercury in the fish was not decreasing with time. ...
Ontario has taken the approach that mercury will naturally flush out of the environment if given enough time. Since 1986, the province has compensated 311 residents for mercury poisoning through a Mercury Disability Board established following legal action by First Nations. ...
Between 1962 and 1970, Reed Paper mill in Dryden, Ontario dumped chemicals including mercury into the English-Wabigoon River system that runs past Grassy Narrows. The mercury settled into the sediment at the bottom of the river, contaminating the system at least 250 kilometers downstream. The mercury enters the food chain through bugs that live in the sediment and absorb the toxic chemical, and are eaten by small fish, which are eaten by larger fish. The mercury becomes more concentrated in larger fish, including Walleye, which are prized by locals.
North America far off from ocean preservation targets, report finds
Mexico, Canada and US collaborate on report that concludes the three nations will have to dramatically ramp up efforts to reach 10% protection goal
North America is far from reaching national and international targets for protecting oceans, according to a first-of-its-kind report released on Wednesday.
The Dare to Be Deep report, created by a coalition of NGOs in the US, Canada and Mexico, finds that less than 1% of these countries’ oceans are protected like national parks – with only four years left to reach the 10% protection goal set in the multilateral Biodiversity Convention.
The US is not a signatory to the agreement, but Barack Obama affirmed his commitment to reach the goal in a joint statement with Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, in March.
Michael Gravitz, director of policy and legislation at the Marine Conservation Institute, said if the countries fail to reach the 10% goal, “we would expect the sort of diversity of life that lives in some of these places to be thinned out, to become less biodiverse, less stable, and less able to resist the changes that warming and acidification bring”.
Of the 0.89% of North American waters that are protected, only 0.04% are fully protected, according to the report. ...
For a marine area to be considered fully protected, regulations must prohibit any activities that pull from the ecosystem’s natural resources. The limited protection areas are regulated, but allow some types of fishing, mining and oil and gas development.
Scientists say Flint's water safe enough for hand-washing and showering
Professor who first confirmed the contamination said sampling found lead levels are steadily declining and municipal water can be used for personal cleanliness
Municipal water in Flint, Michigan, has improved significantly and is suitable for personal cleanliness uses, scientists said Tuesday in a bid to calm fears raised by actor Mark Ruffalo and others who have questioned the safety of the supply that flows into the city’s bathtubs and showers.
Marc Edwards, a Virginia Tech engineering professor whose testing last summer confirmed the lead contamination of Flint’s water, said sampling in recent months has found that lead levels are steadily declining, although they remain too high for people to drink from the tap without a filter. Also trending downward are bacteria that can cause Legionnaires’ disease, while byproducts from disinfectant chemicals are at normal levels, he and other specialists said.
“We’re seeing some very, very encouraging results,” Edwards said at a news conference in Flint, adding that he was “pretty hopeful” the water would meet federal standards for lead content within the next six months.
The upbeat assessment contrasted with a grim portrayal by Ruffalo and Water Defense, an organization he founded, which said in February its testing had turned up lead and dangerous chemicals in sinks, tubs, showers and water heaters. Ruffalo, who starred in the Oscar-winning film Spotlight, has continued sounding the alarm, while Edwards has accused him of fearmongering based on flawed testing that has frightened some people into forgoing basic hygiene. ...
In a statement to the Associated Press, Ruffalo said Water Defense has never advised against bathing or showering in Flint but believes more testing and “a proper epidemiological study” are needed before any conclusions can be drawn.
Elephants could vanish from one of Africa's key reserves within six years
Elephants could disappear from one of Africa’s most important wildlife reserves within six years unless industrial scale poaching is stopped and mining is brought under control, the WWF has said.
Selous national park, a world heritage site in southern Tanzania, has lost an average of almost 2,500 elephants a year since the 1970s. But it has now reached a crtitical stage with only about 15,000 left, according to the latest census.
“The population is at an historic low. and urgent measures are required to protect the remaining animals and return the population to a stable and sustainable size. If this trend continues, elephants could vanish from Selous by early 2022,” says the WWF in a new study.
But the park, which is also home to lions, leopards, wild dog, buffalo, hippo, crocodile and over 400 bird species, is also threatened by large scale mining. Nearly 75% of Selous is covered by oil and gas concessions, and 54 mining concessions have been awarded.
Mining could lead to water pollution and environmental degradation, says the report. “Extractive industries cause environmental degradation, including the destruction of wildlife habitats in the immediate area around exploration sites. In 2012, the boundary of the Selous World Heritage site was modified to enable the construction of a large scale uranium mine in the southern area of the reserve. Once operational, the mine is expected to produce about 60m tons of poisonous radioactive waste,” says the study.
Also of Interest
Here are some articles of interest, some which defied fair-use abstraction.
When New York City tried to ban cars – the extraordinary story of 'Gridlock Sam'
America First, Planet be Damned: Trump Calls for Orgy of Extraction in North Dakota Energy Speech
Bernstein – The White House Is Terrified the Clinton Campaign “Is in Freefall”
Montreal grocery store vandals aimed to 'recalibrate' gentrified area
Washington, D.C., Teachers Union Wrestles with the Legacy of Michelle Rhee
A textbook on Mexican Americans that gets their history wrong? Oh, Texas
The Untold Story Behind Saudi Arabia’s 41-Year U.S. Debt Secret
Massive Protests in Brazil After a Girl Was Blamed for Being Gang-Raped in Rio
A Little Night Music
James 'Thunderbird' Davis & Ron Levy - Come By here
James Davis - Chains Around My Heart
James 'Thunderbird' Davis - Blue Monday Blues
James Davis - Old County Rock #1
James 'Thunderbird' Davis - Hello Sundown
James "Thunderbird" Davis - Instrumental #4
James "Thunderbird" Davis - The Dark End Of The Street
James "Thunderbird" Davis - Next Time You See Me
James "Thunderbird" Davis - Go Girl
Comments
I now understand
Seeing the full length of your post (I usually only read the intro) I now understand why you send this up at 3pm CDT as the Evening Blues. It will take me until Bedtime to make it through it all.
Prof: Nancy! I’m going to Greece!
Nancy: And swim the English Channel?
Prof: No. No. To ancient Greece where burning Sapho stood beside the wine dark sea. Wa de do da! Nancy, I’ve invented a time machine!
Firesign Theater
Stop the War!
afternoon edmass
heh, i used to post it at 7 or 8pm and people said that it was too late to read all that, so i started posting it earlier in the day.
Thunderbird...
Davis is another new one on me. I enjoyed it. Thanks for another good news review.
I like the idea of gov'ts around the world developing more public works. May be they will pull it off before the EU meltdown! I always thought Greece should have bailed on the EU and used quantitative easement with their own currency. Now watch the great EU exit to leave them high and dry. And Goldman Sachs sucking both ways loaning money and pulling the big short...geez.
Hooray for CWA successful strike!
Interesting how Obama is going to protect oceans when yesterday we read he is expanding fracking off shore.
I haven't seen this piece posted here today. The whole article is interesting (and hopeful)
from: http://observer.com/2016/05/fellow-democrats-turn-on-clinton/
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
afternoon lookout...
glad you are enjoying james davis.
that article is a nice bookend with the article in the blog posts of interest section about carl bernstein's water-carrying for the obama administration that they are freaked out about clinton's failing campaign.
there will be a bit of a break in the news...
it's time for my summer vacation, so the news section will be potluck for the next few weeks.
i've set up music diaries for the period i'll be out which will (hopefully) autopublish and you guys can bring the news that you're reading to share with others down here in the comments section for a bit.
i'll try to check in when i am able to get a wifi connection and maybe post some photos as i go along.
you all have a great time and try to keep the disco dancing to an absolute minimum.
Oh? That wasn't a challenge?
[video:https://youtu.be/EIF5fqURcNk]
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.--Aristotle
If there is no struggle there is no progress.--Frederick Douglass
afternoon winddancer...
heh, it's kind of a long-running joke amongst folks here. but, sure, you could take it as a challenge if you like.
I figured it was an inside joke,
but some (most?) days I have very little restraint. = ) Like, my first impulse, now that I could take it as a challenge, was to go get some more. However, today is a C&W day for me, and the two generally don't mix well. Maybe later. = )
PS. Thanks for the news. As always very helpful.
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.--Aristotle
If there is no struggle there is no progress.--Frederick Douglass
We'll miss your insights...
but you deserve a vacation! Hope you and yours have a great trip.
- Innocents Abroad
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
thanks lookout...
i'll try to drop in as often as i can get wifi connections, though some of the places that i'm going are a ways from the usual comforts of civilization.
You outsourced us to robots?
It was only a matter of time.
But that does put me in mind of the push for worker-less factories and processing systems, the world over. Robotics and worker's astonishing productivity, are reaching a tipping point. By 2030, and beyond, it will become obvious that there is no compelling need for anyone to work more than a few days per week. We are over producing as it is. Of course, the professional class, the innovators, and the freelancers will continue to generate their own work, and enhance their standard of living.
Nations have stepped up discussions about National Incomes for all citizens as a way to deal with this future. There are some exciting proposals out there.
Have a happy healthy vacation, joe, You will be missed.
evening pluto...
robots with human backup, i hope. if the autopublish function doesn't work, hopefully jtc will kick the machine and it will spit out the evening blues.
i absolutely agree with you that unemployment is the solution rather than the problem. much organized industrial labor has more to do with the desire of the 1% for dominance than the need for human labor to produce widgets.
Have a great and
relaxing time, joe. We'll miss you, but it sure is deserved and I bet needed. Good to be unconnected for awhile.
A comment subject line in the left hand column caught my eye and I thought "Oh no! Who's leaving and why?" Glad to see it's a vacation.
Will be back later to actually read the news. Take care.
thanks olinda...
i am quite ready to hit the road and spend some quality time poking around in some pleasant places.
Wishing you happy and safe travels and
of course a great vacation.
thanks shirley! n/t
May the c99er “Aloha” be with you wherever you go !! n/t
thanks lotlizard...
i'll try to report some from the road as the gods of wifi allow.
Someone can correct me on my "simplistic"
view of the millions of people in European countries protesting their government for issues that go against the people, I believe that Americans can't take the chance and do that in the United States because if Americans call in sick/take the day off to protest, there really is no safety net -- they can easily lose their job and their health insurance and then end up losing their home to medical debt... just to name one horrific thing.
we have some folks here who live in europe...
who are probably better equipped to respond to your question, but, it seems to me that labor protest (in fact social protest in general) seems to be better accepted in many of the western european countries than they are here. the social safety net probably does enable people to stand up for their rights more effectively than here as well.
American workers have very few rights and privileges
…by global standards. Don't US workers treasure self- and family fulfillment, the way workers in other nations do? In over 150 to 200 years of trying, workers cannot seem to made enough progress. Their inability to achieve the high levels of of worker's rights enjoyed by the rest of the world's developed nations is a reflection of the US Constitution, a carefully crafted document that appeased slave holders in the past, and appeases corporate monopolies today.
Slaves in the US were engaged in the important work of nation-building, but any suggestion of dignity and progress for the slaves was unthinkable and shocking. The aspirations of labor in the US, in the 21st century, are still subject to hostile disregard by those in power. The prejudice of the 18th century that viewed workers/slaves as undeserving of privileges that are meant for their elite superiors, is still alive in the US culture. The proof is displayed in the weak and inadequate Labor protections and in the scapegoating of US workers, who are easily asset-stripped by fellow voters.
The lives of workers are used up by their employers, while workers never had a fair-shake or a way out. To leave a job could put a worker at great risk because their health care would be revoked. That right there is a haunting reflection of what came before.
.
I'm happy you are going on vacation, joe
But DAMN I am going to miss the evening blues somethings fierce! I love this series and hate it not being available during the weekend.
Oh well, I suppose I will live without you. So have a great time, and think of me often while I wait for you to come home, okay?
The article on Forgetting the Crimes of War
is a must read. The amount of war crimes that the US committed in Vietnam is something that is always left out of the history books, as are the war crimes in every war that the US creates or funds. That is a must read article. But as the saying goes, The winner gets to write the history books
And reading that no one will be held accountable for murdering those women and children in Afghanistan, especially where there is proof that they tried to cover it up by cutting out the bullets, it's no wonder we are called the Great Satan!
Nor is it any wonder why so many veterans are committing suicide each day.
Here's another great article called The Cowards of Wars
It goes into detail about how the US says that it's spreading freedom and democracy to other countries, but instead of delivering it, the US bombs the facilities that the people in those countries rely on to live.
We have not only been at constant war in one way or another, either by director invasions, or by funding other country's military to do our dirty work for us, or by creating the terrorist organizations that we eventually have to take out.
The article also shows how the US has put pressure on the ICC, and other organizations that were put in place after WW2
http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/04/01/the-cowards-wars/
The greatest war crime is invading countries that haven't threatened another. The psychopathology of the people in our government that have authorized these continual war crimes to happen is beyond my comprehension.
How many countries has the US invaded since the Monroe doctrine was signed. And since 1945, over 1.3 BILLION PEOPLE have been killed by the US.
So which country is really the greatest threat to world peace?
I just finished a wonderful trilogy by Justin Cronin.
The ending finishes with someone saying that the US had been made in to a toxic wasteland because the corporations had poisoned the land, air and water and sometimes the earth fights back.
Over 7 billion people were killed in in less then 2 years since the start of the epidemic. It only took 32 days for most people in the United States to be killed off.
(sorry for the long rant, I'm just disgusted with the numbers of innocent civilians who have been killed because of the US's imperialism and its exceptionalism)
evening snoopy...
the one that for the last 70 years (give or take a few) has been the greatest purveyor of violence in the world, of course.
that's an excellent counterpunch piece, i like the intro:
it reminds me of tacitus describing the romans:
Yep, great article
And still many people in this country believe that we are either defending those people from the terrorist, we created, or defending our country and its freedoms. They have drunk the propaganda koolaid.
Goebells was right. Tell them the same lie over and over again and they will believe it.
Great quote by Tacitus
When are you leaving? And for how long
well, i'm packing now...
so hopefully i'll be on the road pretty soon. i'll be back after i say howdy to the pacific again and mosy around some national parks.
So proud to have the writer of that piece as a friend!
She has an amazing body of work, and not just at CounterPunch.
evening julia...
i've read her work from time to time at counterpunch and have always been impressed.
The Pentagon approves deadly force against pregnant Afghan women
but oooh, Trump is gonna be the scary fascist?
How is Washington D.C. not already full of fascists?
Clinton Calls Trump A Fraud, or, 'Pot Calls
The Kettle Black.'
Interesting video, if you can stand to listen to it!
Some send-off for your well-deserved vacation, eh?
Seriously, guess no one is surprised that FSC is running a negative campaign, since she can't run on her--or WJC's--toxic neoliberal record.
(Not to defend Donald Trump, mind you. It's just that with all the baggage that 'the Grifters' have, it's hard to see where this will get her anywhere.)
Sorta tied up with business today, so don't have much news. I'll definitely drop by with a few Tweets while you're gone.
Hope that you and Ms Shikspack have a wonderful and safe vacation.
Please do send us some photos of your outings--if you've got time, and are so inclined.
Oh, and thanks for tonight's edition of News & Blues. After I walk 'the B' (more thunderstorms coming through--actually for the next week, I'm afraid), will be back to read more news. I'm very happy about Verizon's contract negotiations--that they beat back pension cuts, especially.
Hey, Everyone have a nice evening!
Mollie
"Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength, while loving someone deeply gives you courage."--Lao Tzu
In Loving Memory Of Sweet Kaya, SOSD Rescue
Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.
evening mollie...
heh, unless something goes right for bernie, this is going to be the election cycle of black pots and kettles.
i wonder how the american public will register their disgust.
i hope that your road trip goes well, too and that you return safe and sound.
Hey Joe
Hope you and the family have a great vacation - and take photographs - lots of!
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.” -Voltaire
thanks steve...
i'm just about to pack the camera and tripod up - and i even located the manual in case i decide to do something like time exposures at night that i don't usually do. heh, that's the thing that i really like about my old film cameras, they were fully manual (no automatic anything, though they had an internal light meter) but they were so simple. i never had to work my way through a series of menus... sigh.
oh well. i hope that i can post some photos maybe saturday night.
Totally agree re menus
they are a complete pain - if I can change shutter, aperture and iso without going through menus I am happy. (usially involves programming one into the function button). White balance I don't worry about because that's not baked in so can be changed in post.
Looking forward to seeing the pics - and kudos to your family for understanding
Seriously though - have a great vacation.
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.” -Voltaire
180 days since Hillary had a press conference
Kevin linked
Drumbeat builds for Clinton press conference
evening don...
looks like they've got hillary on the run. if she keeps this up she will become an anecdote for the press.
There's no benefit. It will only hurt her,” the ally said.
It is sad when a candidate for president believes that speaking to the press can only be bad. Surely she can find some sympathetic reporter to talk to.
Don't talk to the press - check. Don't debate Bernie. Check. Falling in the polls in CA Check. Falling in polls against Trump. Yep. Everyone is worried about her campaign. Check.
Her campaign is melting like the Arctic. Check.
Peace out, tmp.
We were jusst indirectly & inadvertantly promoted by GOS.
They send out these little teasers at least daily, a catchy intro and description for a linked post and suggestions to sign in or join up or at least drop by and read it. Today's had to do with a short little post titled "Living with Mom & Dad", crossposted from here by me. Anybody who clicks the link and goes to GOS to read it will see that it was crossposted from here with a link to here. Ya gogga love it.
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 --
Have a good vacation, Joe.
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 --
thanks el! n/t
San Diego Protest
I keep hearing all this stereotyping of voters by their shade of skin/ethnicity, in fact was overwhelmed with it at the Daily Clinton. But now we have California... watch this video and see how far stereotyping will get you in predicting the outcome of the Primary. Its a fun video...
My comment to pages of "overwhelming majority of the black vote, 67% of the Hispanic vote... only white voters blah blah blah " stereotyping and dog-whistling at TOP.
From the Light House.
Just saw this brutal video from Jon Stewart
http://www.downvids.net/demopocalypse-jon-stewart-comes-out-of-retiremen...
Stewart just took down Hillary as only he could. I suspect this will go viral.
I hoped I helped that go viral.
That was devastating. Why he could not have done that 6 months ago, I hope the voters who have not cast ballots yet see that.
Sent it off to FB to reach my tiny crowd.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Also sharing it around.
Why does it feel maybe too late?
From the Light House.
wow Joe, you are a hero!
There's a lot to read on this site these days, but I instinctively gravitate to your Evening Blues. The article about the US "justification" of dropping the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, excellent. I remember the late Gore Vidal telling us that the Japanese readiness to surrender was noted in Truman's diary before the bombings. These atrocities will never be justified.
And then the story Forgetting the Crimes of War was excellent.
The truth will out but it takes generations.
Have a great time on your summer vacation, looking forward to your return already.
To thine own self be true.