The Evening Blues - 1-29-21



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Bobby Byrd

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features soul and r&b singer, songwriter and associate of James Brown Bobby Byrd. Enjoy!

Bobby Byrd - Try It Again

"The only thing “dangerous” about a gang of Reddit investors blowing up hedge funds is that some of us reading about it might die of laughter."

-- Matt Taibbi


News and Opinion

Saying 'Peace Not Going to Break Out... Anytime Soon,' Raytheon CEO Sees 'Solid Growth' in Middle East

Sixty years to the month after President Dwight D. Eisenhower prophetically warned against the "unwarranted influence" of the "military-industrial complex" in his farewell address, the chief executive of one of the world's biggest weapons makers affirmed that ongoing war in the Middle East is good for business.

During a Tuesday earnings call, Raytheon Technologies CEO Greg Hayes told investors he anticipated the Biden administration would temporarily block the sale of 7,500 of his company's Paveway bombs to Saudi Arabia, a nearly $500 million deal sealed during the final months of former President Donald Trump's tenure. Hayes quasi-cryptically said that a certain "offensive weapons system" to a certain "customer in the Middle East [who] we can't talk about" was coming off the company's books.

No single sale, not even one for half a billion dollars worth of so-called precision bombs, is going to seriously dent Raytheon's profits. On Tuesday's earnings call, Hayes sounded upbeat: "Look," he told investors, "peace is not going to break out in the Middle East anytime soon. I think it remains an area where we'll continue to see solid growth."


Unlike Trump, the new administration appears far more concerned about the Saudi-led war in Yemen, which has killed well over 100,000 people, many of them with weapons made in and sold by the United States. Fulfilling a campaign promise, President Joe Biden is freezing arms sales to the Saudis, and to the United Arab Emirates, pending further review.

Such sales are nothing new. In January 1957, Eisenhower proclaimed the eponymous doctrine extending U.S. military aid to any Middle Eastern nation beset by the bugaboo of Soviet-led international communism. The Cold War meant hot sales for the likes of Raytheon, which in addition to pioneering microwave ovens was at the time turning out cutting-edge missiles that would change the ways wars were fought.

Wars haven't stopped being fought in the Middle East—in no small part due to incessant U.S. intervention in the region—and today Raytheon is a $100 billion behemoth that, with over $25 billion in annual sales, is the world's fourth-largest weapons seller.


Iran disappointed over Biden administration's refusal to lift sanctions

Iran has responded with anger and disappointment to the new US secretary of state saying American sanctions against Tehran will not be lifted until it comes back into verifiable “full compliance” with its commitments under the 2015 nuclear deal.

Antony Blinken said Iranian compliance would take some time, indicating there is unlikely to be any major movement in negotiations until after the Iranian presidential elections in June.

Blinken made his remarks at a press briefing, prompting some Iranians to claim the Biden administration was using the same failed bargaining tactics as Donald Trump.

Hesameddin Ashena, adviser to the Iranian president, Hassan Rouhani, told Blinken on Twitter if this kind of approach had been effective, then “Donald Trump would not have left the White House waiting for a phone call from Iran”.

The Iranian foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, has in a series of interviews and articles over the past fortnight set out a plan whereby Iran would come back into compliance with the deal as soon as the US lifted its panoply of sanctions. He also insisted Iran was not willing to renegotiate the existing deal, or to discuss its missile programme.

The Half-Baked Smear Campaign Against Robert Malley — and Biden’s Iran Policy

As a top national security official in the Obama administration, Robert Malley helped negotiate the 2015 nuclear agreement between the United States and Iran, which President Donald Trump withdrew from in 2018. The ongoing fight over the deal and whether the U.S. can or should rejoin it largely informs the battle over Malley, who currently leads the International Crisis Group, an organization dedicated to ending violent conflicts. But the fight over Malley also ties into a broader debate over how the U.S. should engage in the Middle East: either through diplomacy with rivals or continuing thus far failed attempts to bludgeon them into submission.

The attacks against Malley’s appointment have been personal, with Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and others outright accusing the International Crisis Group head of “radical” sympathies with the Iranian government and enmity with Israel. In a recent New York Times column, Bret Stephens claimed, “Malley is widely seen as one of Tehran’s premier apologists in Washington.”

The ad hominem nature of the attacks against Malley has irked many Washington analysts, who see it as the start of a broader campaign to intimidate the incoming Biden administration over its Iran policy.

“This is standard operating procedure for the pro-Likud right wing,” said Joe Cirincione, a fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and previous head of the Ploughshares Fund, a nuclear nonproliferation organization, referring to the right-wing Israeli political party whose bent animates many Washington hawks. “This is how they operate. They traffic in bullying and lies as the main elements of their policy operation. They’d like to defeat Rob Malley and nail it as another scalp on the wall, but second, they would like to impose a cost on Biden and show that if he wants to move forward on his Iran policy, it will be difficult. Malley is the direct victim of the attacks, but Biden is the target.”

Is A PERMANENT Fence Around The Capitol An Overreaction?

US House members ask for more security amid fears they're targets

Pervasive fear among some members of Congress that they will be the targets of further politically motivated violence following the deadly insurrection at the US Capitol has led more than 30 of them write a letter to House leaders.

The group sent the letter to the House of Representatives speaker, Nancy Pelosi, and the Republican minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, asking for more support over security concerns.

As the less senior politicians do not have personal protection services provided by the government around the clock, they are asking if they may use their personal allowances for additional security costs in their home districts, such as for hiring local law enforcement or other security personnel.

The letter, first obtained by CBS News, reveals an enduring anxiety and sense of unease among lawmakers. It was sent by the Democratic representatives Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey and Dean Phillips of Minnesota.

And it was signed by 29 other Democrats who represent states all across the country, including Texas, Rhode Island, Washington, Georgia, Illinois, Alabama and Kansas, and one Republican, the Michigan representative Fred Upton.

Police chief wants permanent fence around U.S. Capitol after riot

The U.S. Capitol Police’s acting chief called Thursday for permanent fencing around the U.S. Capitol complex, citing the Jan. 6 riot by a mob of supporters of then-President Donald Trump.

The call for “vast improvements” of Capitol security came a day after a West Virginia man was arrested when his car parked close to the complex’s temporary barrier was found to contain a handgun and ammunition, as well as a list of members of Congress.

Acting Capitol Chief Yogananda Pittman noted that a 2006 security assessment of the Capitol “specifically recommended the installation of a permanent perimeter fence.”

“In light of recent events, I can unequivocally say that vast improvements to the physical security infrastructure must be made to include permanent fencing, and the availability of ready, back-up forces in close proximity to the Capitol,” Pittman said.


Biden Withdraws 'Horrific' Trump Rule Attacking Social Security Disability Recipients

Social Security defenders on Thursday celebrated news that the Biden White House has withdrawn a regulation pushed by the Trump administration that, if finalized, could have stripped disability insurance benefits from hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people.

One of several attacks on Social Security the Trump administration attempted to complete during its final days in power, the proposed rule would have subjected some disability insurance recipients to more frequent eligibility reviews—a move that would have added another layer of difficulty to an already strenuous process aimed at determining whether beneficiaries still qualify for the program.

David Sirota: New Signs Dems ABANDONING 2k Check Promise

As White House Floats Skimpier Relief Bill in Bid for GOP Support, Progressives Warn Going Small Would Be 'Catastrophic'

With the Biden White House reportedly weighing the possibility of splitting its proposed coronavirus relief package into two parts in an effort to attract some Republican support, leaders of the Congressional Progressives Caucus are warning that anything less than the president's $1.9 trillion opening offer would represent an unacceptable betrayal of economically desperate Americans.

In a letter (pdf) to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday, more than two dozen members of the CPC Executive Board wrote that "if we aim too low, the financial consequences will be catastrophic, long-lasting, and borne by the American families who can least afford it."

The letter was signed by CPC chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), deputy chair Katie Porter (D-Calif.), caucus whip Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), and 21 other lawmakers.

"We are concerned by the views of some in Congress who are advocating for a scaled-back, 'wait and see' approach," the letter states, alluding to the bipartisan group of lawmakers that the White House economic team has sought out for input on coronavirus relief in recent days, despite warnings that outreach to austerity-obsessed Republicans is both futile and dangerous.

"This goes against both the economic consensus and the voices of our constituents, who are crying out for additional relief to keep food on their tables and a roof over their heads," the letter continues. "The families and small businesses that make up the economy do not have the luxury of 'waiting to see' how this public health and economic crisis progresses—they need relief now."

Pointing to the Obama administration's woefully inadequate response to the Great Recession as a cautionary tale, the progressive lawmakers cautioned that "if we do not act now, a prolonged, sluggish economic recovery will surely result."

Hours of scrolling, endless refreshing: US tech woes make scheduling vaccine a nightmare

People across the United States have likened signing up for a vaccine shot in recent weeks to refreshing a page for highly coveted concert tickets. In Michigan, a website for vaccine sign-ups crashed almost immediately after the state expanded vaccine access to people 65 and older. The site, which processes 900 appointments on a typical day, saw more than 25,000 people trying to register. In Texas one website saw 9,000 appointments fill in less than six minutes. Users in Minnesota reported similar issues. Some health departments in Florida are using the ticketing site Eventbrite, leading to concerns about ticket scalpers buying up slots and reselling them.

The Trump administration promised in November that 20m Covid-19 vaccines could be distributed by 2021. As of this week just 18.5 million people have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and about 3.2 million people have been fully vaccinated.

New vaccine doses can only be produced so quickly, but supply is just part of the problem. For Americans whose vaccines are not being arranged through their workplace, scheduling can be a major setback.

Most states have no centralized system to register for appointments and those that do exist are rife with glitches. Both these hurdles have made it difficult for those who aren’t tech savvy and people who don’t have time to refresh an online sign-up all day to get a potentially life-saving vaccine slot.

Biden signs order to reopen Obamacare markets for special Covid-19 coverage

Joe Biden has signed an executive order to reopen federal health insurance marketplaces in an executive action meant to signal the importance of expanding healthcare, a key commitment during his campaign.

The order is designed to aid people who lost their jobs, and consequently their health insurance, amid the pandemic.

The order will formally reopen HealthCare.gov insurance markets for a special sign-up opportunity geared to people who need insurance during the pandemic. ...

“As we continue to battle Covid-19 it is even more meaningful [that] Americans have access to healthcare,” said Biden, in a brief appearance at the White House as he signed the order. Biden went on to emphasize he was not expanding Obamacare at this time. Biden said the orders would, “undo the damage Trump has done”.

“I’m not initiating any new law, any new aspect of the law,” he said. “Of all times that we need to reinstate access to the affordability of and extent of access to Medicaid is now – in the middle of this Covid crisis,” Biden said.

Biden’s executive order will reopen the marketplace from 15 February to 15 May.

European regulator gives green light for Astra-Oxford Covid-19 vaccine

GameStop Shares: Dark Pools Owned by Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, UBS, et al, Have Made Tens of Thousands of Trades

Dark Pools owned by the biggest names on Wall Street – such as Goldman Sachs’ Sigma X2, JPMorgan Chase’s JPM-X, UBS’ UBSA, Morgan Stanley’s MSPL, and Credit Suisse’s Crossfinder — have been making tens of thousands of trades in the shares of GameStop on an ongoing weekly basis. FINRA, Wall Street’s highly compromised self-regulator, reports the Dark Pool data on a stale basis, two to three weeks after the trading has occurred. It is then lumped together for the whole week, rendering it useless in terms of monitoring price manipulation. ...

It’s a fair guess that you haven’t heard a peep about Dark Pools on the evening news. The fact that you haven’t is a perfect commentary on why mainstream media is failing the American people when it comes to exposing Wall Street’s serial looting of the little guy.

But when a bunch of quixotic posters on a Reddit message board can be parlayed into the exciting narrative of a Robinhood band taking on the evil hedge funds, it goes viral on the evening news – sucking in hundreds of thousands more unsophisticated retail investors.

It’s important to remember who has been pumping the GameStop/Reddit story on CNBC. That would be none other than Andrew Ross Sorkin, who created a completely false narrative about who and what caused the crash of 2008 – appearing to be intentionally protecting the reputations of the mega banks on Wall Street. Sorkin’s reporting on the 2008 crash looked even more suspect when we repeatedly asked the New York Times to correct his outrageously incorrect reporting and they failed to change one word.

What’s being ignored in all the current hoopla is that the largest federally-insured banks in this country, that now double as trading casinos and Dark Pools thanks to the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, have every incentive to suck in the small investor at the top of a market bubble in order to create an escape route for themselves. It’s called “distribution” and it occurs, by hook or crook, at the top of every market bubble.

Krystal Ball: Billionaire CRIES About Wealthy Paying Fair Share AGAIN


GameStop's three largest shareholders earn over $2bn amid stock surge

The three largest shareholders in GameStop, the video game retailer at the center of a frenzied duel between Wall Street and small investors, have made more than $2bn from the company’s astronomic recent share rise. Stock in the company continued its vertiginous rise on Wednesday, hitting a fresh 52-week high of $354.83, making the 13% stake held by Ryan Cohen, 34, GameStop’s largest single shareholder, worth more than $1.3bn.

Over the past two weeks, according to CNBC, Cohen’s net worth increased an average of $90m a day, or nearly $4m per hour, as GameStop stock has surged more than 1,550% this year alone.

Other winners include Donald Foss, the 76-year-old founder and former CEO of Credit Acceptance Corp, a subprime auto lender. Foss bought 5% of GameStop early last year for about $12m. His stake is now worth more than $500m.

GameStop’s chief executive, George Sherman, has seen his 3.4% stake jump to a value of about $350m. ...

But some in Wall Street are also making huge gains. BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, owned 9.2m shares in GameStop at the end of December, according to a regulatory filing. If it still holds all those shares, they were worth more than $3bn on Wednesday.


Krystal and Saagar: Robinhood CEO EMBARRASSES Himself With Pathetic Excuse For Shutting Down Trading

GameStop shares plunge after ban by Robinhood app

Amateur trading app Robinhood stopped users from investing any further in GameStop – a US chain of video games stores – and seven other companies on Thursday, after an extraordinary rise in their value, spurred by users of the chat forum website Reddit, that cost some hedge funds billions of dollars. The move slammed the upward surge in their share prices into reverse and sparked allegations that the hedge funds had wielded influence over Robinhood and other trading platforms to stop the rout. ...

GameStop shares were down 44% by the end of the day, while the share prices of seven other companies caught up in the affair, including Nokia, BlackBerry, Trivago and AMC, also suffered big falls as share-buying was effectively halted.

Traders joining in the frenzy have flocked to Robinhood, an app which claims to “democratise” finance by letting ordinary people trade shares and more complex financial instruments, such as options. The trades are offered free of commission charges and the app, which was founded only in 2013, now has more than 13m users. But the buying ban on the Reddit traders has sparked a furious backlash. Social media lit up with theories about hedge funds with an interest in the Robinhood company and other trading platforms flexing their muscles to quash the Reddit rebellion.

One customer has already filed a class action lawsuit in New York, according to reports in the US. As the backlash built, Robinhood said on Thursday evening that it would allow limited trading on the stocks on Friday.

Saagar Enjeti: Janet Yellen Paid 800 GRAND From Hedge Fund Linked To Robinhood Scandal


Reddit traders exposed illegal practices of hedge funds – Max Keiser on Robinhood saga

What Is Important About The Reddit Gamestop Short-Squeeze

So, some Redditors found that Gamestop was being massively shorted. They bought up the stock, forcing the hedge funds involved to buy those stocks at huge prices to cover their shorts. This is known as a short squeeze, and market players do it all the time. What is different here is that a bunch of unwashed hoi polloi are getting in on the action.

The main hedge fund appears to have been driven to bankruptcy, or it would be if it wasn’t going to get bailed out.

And that’s what matters: not what the Redditors have done, which is 100% legal and done all the time, but the institutional response: to bail out rich people who got caught with their pants down.

The markets exist, at this point, for one reason and one reason only: to give money to rich people. It is an insider game, and if you’re on the inside you essentially can’t lose. The exceptions are very rare, the class of insiders is protected at all costs, as it was in 2008 to the tune of 20 trillion or so in the US alone (ignore the Treasury and things like TARP, the real action happens at the Fed.) Other central banks also flooded the system with money, so the end result was probably over a 100 trillion. ...

Hope you’re enjoying that $600 check, as Biden reduces the $2,000 check to $1,400 and says he’s OK with means testing it.


GameStop Madness with David Dayen | Useful Idiots

Merrick Garland Wants Former Facebook Lawyer to Top Antitrust Division

As the fight over the direction of the Biden administration’s antitrust policy intensifies, a new figure has entered the fray, scrambling the calculus: Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland. The battle so far has largely been fought out between lobbyists for Big Tech and their allies on the one hand and skeptics of monopoly power on the other. But according to three sources familiar with the discussions, Garland is hoping to install as the head of the Department of Justice antitrust division a longtime aide who served under him during the Clinton administration and who later was the attorney charged with shepherding his ill-fated Supreme Court nomination. That lawyer, Susan Davies, however, would be a controversial pick for another professional connection of hers: Facebook. ...

In 2012, Davies represented Facebook in a lawsuit brought by an advertiser, Sambreel Holdings LLC, that was effectively kicked off Facebook’s platform after the tech giant lured away all its clients and banned users from downloading it. In December, the Federal Trade Commission launched an antitrust suit against Facebook, looking to break it into its component parts and ban it from the type of anti-competitive behavior Davies defended as their counsel. ...

The rest of Davies’s client roster, meanwhile, is equally worrying to opponents of concentrated power, as she has spent most of the last decade working on behalf of major mergers, fending off antitrust enforcement, and, as her law firm bio puts it, “frequently interact[ed] with regulators and policy makers on behalf of corporate clients.”



the horse race



Republicans considering more than 100 bills to restrict voting rights

After an election filled with misinformation and lies about fraud, Republicans have doubled down with a surge of bills to further restrict voting access in recent months, according to a new analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice.

There are currently 106 pending bills across 28 states that would restrict access to voting, according to the data. That’s a sharp increase from nearly a year ago, when there were 35 restrictive bills pending across 15 states.

Among the Brennan Center’s findings:

  • More than a third of the bills would place new restrictions on voting by mail

  • Pennsylvania has 14 pending proposals for new voter restrictions, the most in the country. It’s followed by New Hampshire (11), Missouri (9), and Mississippi, New Jersey and Texas (8)

  • There are seven bills across four states that would limit opportunities for election day registration

  • There are also 406 bills that would expand voting access pending across 35 states, including in New York (56), Texas (53), New Jersey (37), Mississippi (39) and Missouri (21)



the evening greens


Ex-Governor Fined $1000 For Poisoning Flint Michigan

General Motors announces plan for all-electric lineup by 2035

General Motors has announced it plans to phase out gasoline- and diesel-powered vehicles globally by 2035, a dramatic shift by the largest US automaker away from fossil-fuel-powered engines.

GM, which also said it plans to become carbon neutral by 2040, made its announcement just over a week after Joe Biden took office pledging to tackle greenhouse gas emissions and dramatically boost the sales of electric vehicles.

GM sold 2.55m vehicles in the US last year, only about 20,000 of which were electric vehicles (EVs). It said in November it was investing $27bn in electric and autonomous vehicles over the next five years, up from $20bn planned before the coronavirus pandemic.

Mary Barra, GM’s CEO, has aggressively pushed the automaker internally to embrace electric vehicles and shift away from gasoline-powered vehicles. She said in a statement the automaker had worked with the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), an environmental advocacy group, to “develop a shared vision of an all-electric future and an aspiration to eliminate tailpipe emissions from new light-duty vehicles by 2035”.


Also of Interest

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

Suck It, Wall Street

'Sending a message': GameStop investors on why they bought shares

The System Is Rigged - Episode 4537: Game Stop Corp

Congressman’s Companies Evicting Renters During Pandemic

Emmett Till's home gains landmark status and will turn into museum

Remnants of mosque from earliest decades of Islam found in Israel

Do you drink bottled water? Read this

Bloomberg Reporter: The INSIDE Story Of How Reddit Took Down Wall Street Hedge Fund

Rising: SHOCKING Report Reveals Cuomo Undercounted Nursing Home Deaths By THOUSANDS

Krystal and Saagar: Biden Team LOSES IT At Slightest Criticism By NYT


A Little Night Music

Bobby Byrd - I need help (I can't do it alone)

Bobby Byrd - We Are In Love

Bobby Byrd - Signed, Sealed & Delivered

Bobby Byrd - If You Don't Work You Can't Eat

Bobby Byrd - Keep on doing what you're doing

Bobby Byrd - Saying it and doing it are two different things

Bobby Byrd - Never get enough

Bobby Byrd - Funky Soul #1 Part I & II

The J.B.'s & Bobby Byrd - Shake Your Money Maker

Bobby Byrd - Doin' The Do

Bobby Byrd - I Know You Got Soul


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15 users have voted.

Comments

ggersh's picture

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWObSNGiGmw&feature=emb_logo]

People aren't happy w/the most popular prez, I wonder why?

#Where's my2K

Stay safe everyone, have a sweet weekend! Another storm on the way, it's looking as if we get another 6+ inches.

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9 users have voted.

I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

joe shikspack's picture

@ggersh

heh, i guess that google is trying to keep biden from getting grumpy at them.

i saw some snow flurries this afternoon as i was driving back home through pennsylvania, but the weatherman says that we aren't going to get anything substantial until sunday, maybe. as of now they are saying 4-6 inches of snow and a tenth of an inch of ice. i guess we'll see.

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7 users have voted.
Lookout's picture

and you better follow the rules or you will be de-platformed at the very least!

Matt's quote was good too. Lots of chatter about the rigged market today.

Just a quick drive by. Thanks for the news and blues. Have a great weekend!

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9 users have voted.

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

@Lookout

He's in his element.

https://taibbi.substack.com/p/suck-it-wall-street

... This is where society will ultimately come down, of course, uniting to denounce $GME as financial Trumpism, even though it actually comes closer to being an updated and superior version of Occupy Wall Street. It’s likely not any evil manipulation scheme, but ordinary people acting — out of self-interest, but also out of sheer enthusiasm for one of the best reasons to do just about anything, because you can — on a few simple, powerful observations.

They’ve seen first that our markets are basically fake, set up to artificially accelerate the wealth divide, and not in their favor. Secondly they see that the stock market, like the ballot box, remains one of the only places where sheer numbers still matter more than capital or connections. And they’re piling on, and it’s delicious, not so much because they’re right, but because the people running for cover are so wrong, and still can’t admit it.

Buy the ticket, take the ride, nitwits. If you earned anything, it’s this.

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13 users have voted.
joe shikspack's picture

@Lookout

i thought that glenn's quote was great in the way that it points out that democracy in america is meaningless and all of the supposed virtues of our culture are not as advertised.

i'm glad that a lot of people are seeing that the market is rigged, but what makes me cautiously optimistic is that it might be possible for people of lesser means to band together and create an alternative market that supports values that make sense to all of us.

what if, instead of focusing on manipulating an already rigged market by competing with hedge funds, "the little people" plowed their spare capital into creating decent small businesses that treat workers and customers well, refuse to pay outrageous ceo/management salaries and operate fully transparently?

it's a thought.

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15 users have voted.
Lookout's picture

@joe shikspack

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3 users have voted.

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

enhydra lutris's picture

The battles between the Bears and the Bulls go all the way back to day one, and that is really all that the Game Stop fracas is all about. We can go back and find it being done with railroads and trolley systems. The histories of people like James Fisk and Jay Gould are full of great examples. For Robin Hood to intervene in the way that they did is market manipulation, pure and simple, and the DOJ needs to kick their ass over it, but you can be certain that they won't.

be well and have a good one

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9 users have voted.

That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

joe shikspack's picture

@enhydra lutris

yep, it seems pretty much inevitable that the system will respond by protecting the favored class. what matters is how the rest of us react to their provocation.

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7 users have voted.
snoopydawg's picture

Saying publicly that someone tried to murder you, well you better have some good evidence of it I’d think. Or get hassled to death over it.

Good gawd they haven’t learned anything have they?

Independent contractors working for the government? This is one thing that should never happen. Congress should never have allowed government workers in Washington to become privatized because of course it drives wages down and other issues. It started earlier, but things really took off after Cheney privatized a lot of the things that the military used to do. Like guard their bases. I went to hill Air Force base during the transition. One day there were military persons at the gate and they saluted my gr uncle. The next week it was private security with no respect for him and no salute. Then he privatized the supply chains and put his company in charge of supplies. Yay. Now look where we are with Uber and prop 22. Now that.

I posted a few photos of Sam in the photo thread. I got to get new ones, but it’s been cold and windy so I’m bundled up. Sam went stream hopping again today. She doesn’t get to ride in the car. I don’t know what I’ll do this summer with this.

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6 users have voted.

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

Voting is like driving with a toy steering wheel.

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

i think that it would be helpful for aoc to muster all of the evidence that she has against cruz and others and form it into an argument. if she can't make a compelling argument, then perhaps she should withdraw her accusation.

oh, lookee! the democrats are demonstrating their values! way to go democrats!

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7 users have voted.
snoopydawg's picture

@joe shikspack

If she is truly scared then she can get help from her improved health insurance. Reading about the increase in child suicide made me think how Biden could give us mental health care if he was worried about that. But.... Just think how f’cking incredible it is that we can’t have single payer in the middle of an epidemic that is not under control and will probably get much worse. Instead he’s transferring money to the health insurance CEOs with cobra subsidies. And he’s opening the ACA for people who have lost their jobs. And bringing back the individual mandate. Cool, but did he miss the part where people have no effing jobs?

Hey what did the bottled water story say? Please?

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4 users have voted.

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

Voting is like driving with a toy steering wheel.

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

after the bit about the (utterly unnecessary) pollution from the plastic bottles, there was this:

When it comes to the health qualities of bottled water versus tap, differences are largely negligible. Both tap and bottled water are required to meet quality requirements set by the EPA and FDA, respectively. Contamination is always possible in either – and is an urgent issue affecting tap water in parts of the US – but by prevailing standards both are generally fine to drink.

Prevailing standards, however, have not quite caught up to the threat of PFAS – a group of industrial chemicals numbering in the thousands and used in a variety of consumer products. PFAS have been found in both tap and bottled water. There is currently no federal guidance on PFAS regulation, though there is evidence that the most-studied forms of PFAS are carcinogenic and linked to liver damage, thyroid disease, and pregnancy risks, among other adverse health effects.

“PFAS have been found in the blood of over 98% Americans,” Dr Rebecca Aicher, project director at the Center for Scientific Evidence in Public Issues, told me. “Because the research has shown there may be human health effects, there’s a lot of interest in where the exposure is coming from – [and] we know there is exposure from drinking water.”

According to The Environmental Working Group, as of January 2021, 2,337 locations in 49 states are known to have PFAS contamination in their water systems. Last autumn, Consumer Reports also found concerning levels of PFAS in popular bottled water brands, including Nestlé products from the Perrier and Poland Spring lines, and canned carbonated waters like Bubly and LaCroix, among others.

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6 users have voted.
snoopydawg's picture

@joe shikspack

It’s really something how bottled water companies can screw up our water supplies and taking it without proper compensation. On top of that they are polluting the environment with all the plastic containers being thrown away and going everywhere. Plus using the materials to make it. Lots of waste. I’m lucky that my tap water tastes good. I don’t care for the taste of bottled water and never think of buying it for home.

up
5 users have voted.

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

Voting is like driving with a toy steering wheel.

Shahryar's picture

@joe shikspack

Here's the AOC/Cruz thing.

1. QAnon and Qanon style Republicans say crazy things
2. Dems say they should be censured, even expelled (they were elected, though, so forget that)
3. Cruz agrees with AOC on something
4. AOC rejects his help, saying "you tried to get me killed, you can sit this one out"
5. Repubs, angry about point #2 above, say "AOC accused Cruz of attempted murder! and should be censured!" in retaliation

Saying that AOC needs evidence is ridiculous. She's not bringing charges. She's clearly saying "you encouraged the mob of Trumpies, I don't feel like working with you".

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4 users have voted.
The Liberal Moonbat's picture

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6 users have voted.

In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.

Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!

snoopydawg's picture

@The Liberal Moonbat

https://www.theonion.com/increasingly-bold-israel-begins-building-settle...

This might even get congress to notice how wrong it is that Israel is destroying Palestinian lands, orchards and housing. They also have no problem bombing Syria and killing families while they sleep.

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9 users have voted.

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

Voting is like driving with a toy steering wheel.

joe shikspack's picture

@The Liberal Moonbat

that's just excellent, thanks!

i guess cramer can play the mayor in a live action recreation of "the nightmare before christmas."

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3 users have voted.
The Liberal Moonbat's picture

@joe shikspack Disney's live-action remakes are a total fucking disgrace, the epitome of late-stage capitalism's effect on the arts. Even Walt would balk. He believed to the core of his being that capitalism meant freedom, innovation, and excellence - now it's imposing on us the very same kind of social and intellectual poverty that was supposed to be the hallmark of "communism".

A live-action remake would work extra-poorly for The Nightmare Before Christmas too, simply because the stop-motion is an extra-big part of its special appeal; it's so different in that and other ways, it's easy to forget it's a Disney movie.

Disney in particular is in desperate need of an atomic ass-whupping/liposuction courtesy of Uncle Teddy's Trust-Busting Stick. Just hold still, Mickey, this is for your own good....

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6 users have voted.

In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.

Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!

will burn in hell, if there is one.
I participate in the annual tap water testing, and my tap water is fine. However, it doesn't taste good. I was talked into getting a Britta filter. Can't brag on it enough. I use a jug with filter, not the attached-to-faucet one. Everything tastes better, such as tea, even boiled vegetables.
I read a day or so ago about a Social Security trust fund big wig saying that all those unemployed peeps getting their retirement at 62 were causing fund stress, but now that old, full retirement peeps are dying from COVID, the fund is just all good.
Toss in a US capital that looks like a prison, I am just disgusted with it all.
But not the ebs!

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10 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@on the cusp

the raytheon guy appears to be running a profitable little hell here on earth.

i've been wondering for quite a while if covid was trump's secret plan to save social security.

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7 users have voted.

@joe shikspack Oh, well, maybe the folks on reddit can lead the way to a better world, destroying one billionaire at a time.

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6 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@on the cusp

i don't know if he's that smart, but he certainly is that vicious and ruthless.

have a great weekend!

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6 users have voted.
Pricknick's picture

@joe shikspack
give trump too much credit.
Just another presnut that upon death I'll fly my flag full staff. I only fly it on momentous occasions.
I've given up on pissing on graves. They are either burned into worm food or the embalming fluid makes piss look tame.

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7 users have voted.

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

joe shikspack's picture

@Pricknick

heh, well, if you took up dancing on graves, at least you'd get exercise. Smile

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7 users have voted.
Pricknick's picture

@joe shikspack
piss it is.
Thanks for the laugh.
Helps make the whole day worth it.

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5 users have voted.

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

Shahryar's picture

boy was I confused. Bobby Byrd. I was actually expecting Bobby Day, whose birth name was Robert Byrd. I'll have to check this other guy out! Thanks.

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3 users have voted.