The Evening Blues - 12-28-17



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Sugarpie Desanto

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features blues and soul singer Sugarpie Desanto. Enjoy!

Sugar Pie DeSanto - Baby What You Want Me To Do

“What difference does it make to the dead, the orphans and the homeless, whether the mad destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or in the holy name of liberty or democracy?”

-- Mahatma Gandhi


News and Opinion

Trump claims China 'caught red handed' transferring oil to North Korea

Donald Trump on Thursday said he was “very disappointed that China is allowing oil to go into North Korea” and said such moves would prevent “a friendly solution” to the crisis over Pyongyang’s nuclear program. Earlier, China said there had been no sanction-breaking oil transfers between Chinese ships and North Korean vessels, of the kind described by a South Korea newspaper, Chosun Ilbo, which said spy satellites had detected 30 instances of such transfers since October.

That report was picked up by Fox News, commonly a source of information linked to Trump’s tweets. “Caught RED HANDED,” the president wrote, with a characteristic use of capitals. “Very disappointed that China is allowing oil to go into North Korea. There will never be a friendly solution to the North Korea problem if this continues to happen!” ...

China has repeatedly said it is fully enforcing all resolutions against North Korea, despite suspicion in Washington, Seoul and Tokyo that loopholes still exist. Asked at a regular briefing whether Chinese ships were illegally providing oil to North Korean ships, a Chinese defence ministry spokesman, Ren Guoqiang, reiterated that China, including the military, strictly enforced UN resolutions.

“The situation you have mentioned absolutely does not exist,” he said.

North Korea will not be accepted as a nuclear power by US or Russia, say Rex Tillerson and Sergei Lavrov

The US and Russia have insisted they will not accept North Korea as a “nuclear state”, amid a series of missile tests by the East Asian nation and increased rhetoric from both Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke by phone on a myriad of issues, but both agreed on their stance regarding Pyongyang’s continued development of nuclear weapons despite United Nations sanctions.

State Department Heather Nauert said in a statement that “both sides agreed that they will continue to work towards a diplomatic solution to achieve a denuclearised Korean peninsula”.

However, on the same call on Tuesday, Mr Lavrov criticised President Donald Trump’s “aggressive rhetoric” towards North Korea, as many world leaders and the UN have before. ...

The phone call comes on the heels of Russia’s offer to be a mediator between Pyongyang and Washington, fostering dialogue rather than trading barbs as Mr Trump and Mr Kim have been doing for several months.

Anyone Of “Russian Descent” Now Targeted In Senate Investigation

The Senate committee probing alleged Russian interference in the U.S. political system has deemed anyone “of Russian nationality or Russian descent” relevant to its investigation, according to a document obtained by TYT. In an email dated December 19, 2017, April Doss—who serves as senior minority counsel on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI)—defined the scope of the committee’s inquiry as anyone a subject “knows or has reason to believe [is] of Russian nationality or descent.” The senior majority counsel for the SSCI, Vanessa Le, was cc’d on the emails. ...

On July 27, 2017, Charles C. Johnson, a controversial right-wing media figure, received a letter from Sens. Burr and Warner requesting that he voluntarily provide materials in his possession that are “relevant” to the committee’s investigation. Relevant materials, the letter went on, would include any records of interactions Johnson had with “Russian persons” who were involved in some capacity in the 2016 U.S. elections.

The committee further requested materials related to “Russian persons” who were involved in some capacity in “activities that related in any way to the political election process in the U.S.” Materials may include “documents, emails, text messages, direct messages, calendar appointments, memoranda, [and] notes,” the letter outlined.

Doss’s statement was in response to a request made by Robert Barnes, an attorney for Johnson, for clarification as to the SSCI’s definition of a “Russian person.”

Iraq-Raping Neocons Are Suddenly Posing As Woke Progressives To Gain Support

The invasion of Iraq was unforgivable. It remains unforgivable. It will always be unforgivable. Its architects should be tried in The Hague and imprisoned, and nobody who helped inflict that unfathomable evil upon our world should ever be employed anywhere they could do any more damage or mislead anyone else. All behaviors of the mainstream media, US intelligence agencies and US defense agencies should be viewed through the lens of those unforgivable lies and murders forevermore, and nobody should ever take them at their word about anything ever again.

Instead what has actually happened is that nothing whatsoever has changed since the invasion, Americans still take it on faith that Vladimir Putin, Bashar al-Assad and Kim Jong Un are world-threatening enemies in sore need of ousting, and bloodthirsty psychopaths like Max Boot who have been consistently wrong about everything are still hailed as experts worth listening to.

Oh yeah, and now they’re being adored as progressive heroes.


Boot, who is a PNAC signatory and senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, published an article yesterday in Foreign Affairs which perfectly matches the newfound love of progressivism in his neocon soulmate Bill Kristol. The article, titled “2017 Was the Year I Learned About My White Privilege”, details in halting, equivocation-laden prose the months-long journey into awakening that this lying warmonger claims to have experienced during the Trump administration.

This spectacularly evil man, who wrote an essay titled “The Case for American Empire” just weeks after 9/11 in which he called in plain English for America to “unambiguously to embrace its imperial role,” is now seeing his latest essay shared eagerly by Democrats everywhere enthusiastically exclaiming “Look! See? This conservative gets it!”


Russia accuses U.S. of training former Islamic State fighters in Syria

The chief of the Russian General Staff has accused the United States of training former Islamic State fighters in Syria to try to destabilize the country. General Valery Gerasimov’s allegations, made in a newspaper interview, center on a U.S. military base at Tanf, a strategic Syrian highway border crossing with Iraq in the south of the country.

Russia says the U.S. base is illegal and that it and the area around it have become “a black hole” where militants operate unhindered. ... The United States says the Tanf facility is a temporary base used to train partner forces to fight Islamic State. It has rejected similar Russian allegations in the past, saying Washington remains committed to killing off Islamic State and denying it safe havens.

But Gerasimov told the daily Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper on Wednesday that the United States was training up fighters who were former Islamic State militants but who now call themselves the New Syrian Army or use other names. He said Russia satellites and drones had spotted militant brigades at the U.S. base.

Ahed Tamimi's Father: Israeli Occupation Won't Break Us

Iran votes to declare Jerusalem 'capital of Palestine'

Iran declared Jerusalem the "capital of Palestine" on Wednesday following a parliamentary vote, according to the country's semi-official Fars news agency.

Iran's announcement to recognize the holy city as the “Palestinian capital forever” comes in direct response to President Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

“It comes in response to the recent U.S. decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in hopes of dealing a blow to Muslims,” said Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, according to Turkey's Anadolu news agency.

More than 350 million Latin American voters to elect new leaders in 2018

The anti-establishment tide that has swept much of the world is set to break over Latin America in 2018. Some 350 million voters are due to head to the polls in Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Venezuela, Costa Rica and Paraguay to elect new presidents – and in several cases, potentially slam a defibrillator into their ailing political systems. “Attempting to understand or interpret the elections for what they mean in a left-right swing would be a mistake,” said Christopher Sabatini, a Latin America expert at Columbia University. “What we are more likely to see is more popular reaction against corruption.”

Seizing the headlines in July will be Mexico, where Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the perennial candidate of the left, will face off against José Antonio Meade, the technocratic successor to Enrique Peña Nieto. Few will miss the incumbent, whose term of office has been stained by a failure to rein in the country’s soaring murder rate, and pervasive corruption – in which the presidential couple themselves have been implicated.

While López Obrador, 64, a former mayor of Mexico City, is not as radical as his detractors claim, his promises to tackle graft and poverty have won him a 5% to 15% poll lead over his rivals. Yet López Obrador’s own missteps – such as suggesting an amnesty for criminals – and fear of change may see voters plump for business as usual.

Brazil’s Michel Temer, meanwhile, probably views even Peña Nieto’s meagre ratings with envy. Temer – a rightwing 77-year-old career politician who helped remove Dilma Rousseff in last year’s controversial impeachment – has seen his approval ratings drop as low as 3% amid widespread allegations of corruption, which have at times seemed to implicate Brazil’s entire political class. ...

Across Latin America, voters will be led not by ideology but issues – such as the demand for cleaner government [and] rejection of entrenched political groups.

Matt Stoller: “Monopoly is a Form of Lawlessness”

Donald Trump's golf course in Scotland loses tax breaks

Donald Trump‘s Scottish golf resort will no longer qualify for a controversial tax break, after a change in the rules by the country’s government.

The Trump Turnberry complex in South Ayrshire was able to claw back around £110,000 in business rates relief after the Scottish National Party altered measures in February to help the hospitality sector. ... However, a change in the Scottish Government’s recent budget will rule out Trump Turnberry from the rates relief, the Sunday Herald reported.

Mr Trump bought the property in 2014. Shortly before he was inaugurated as US President last January, he transferred control of the companies which own the resort to his sons Eric and Donald Jr. His other Scottish golf course, located in Aberdeenshire, did not qualify for relief because it is defined as a golf course instead of a hotel.

“Bussed Out”: How Cities Are Giving Thousands of Homeless People One-Way Bus Tickets to Leave Town

Private prison investors set for giant windfall from Trump tax bill

Individual investors in US private prisons are poised to collect their most lucrative earnings ever thanks to changes in the tax code signed by Donald Trump, continuing what has been a banner year for the industry since the 2016 election. “It’s going to be great for the investors, banks and hedge funds that own shares in private prisons, and are dependent on increased incarceration and criminalization,” said Jamie Trinkle, campaign and research coordinator with the racial and economic justice coalition Enlace.

Under the new GOP law, investments in so-called “real estate investment trusts” (reits) will see a 25% reduction in tax, from 39.6% down to 29.6%.

Corecivic, formerly Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), and the Geo Group, which together own more than 80% of private prison beds in the US, both restructured as reits in 2013 after a private letter ruling by the Obama Administration IRS green-lit the change. “This tax act is of unprecedented benefit for reit investors,” said David Miller, a tax partner at Proskauer Rose. “I think reits will explode in popularity as a result of this act.”

With dividends of more than $430m paid out by the two major private prison companies in 2017, in theory, prison investors could see an additional $50m in dividend earnings next year, thanks to the GOP legislation. The actual figure will be lower than that, however, as some proportion of those shares are owned by institutional investors which are taxed differently from individuals. The exact breakdown between the two is not available in public filings.

Keiser Report: Taxphoria

CEO-Worker Income Gap Higher in U.S. Than Anywhere Else

As corporations and wealthy individuals across the United States are slated to benefit from massive tax breaks thanks to the GOP's latest tax legislation, a Bloomberg analysis published Thursday found that chief executives of American companies already make 265 times the amount of money an average worker is paid—the largest CEO-worker income gap in the world.

"CEOs of the biggest publicly traded U.S. companies averaged $14.3 million in annual pay, more than double that of their Canadian counterparts and 10 times greater than those in India," according to Bloomberg. While India ranked second on Bloomberg's CEO pay-to-average income ratio, Indian chief executives made about a tenth of their American counterparts' incomes, averaging $1.46 million annually. ...

Last year's CEO-to-worker compensation ratio, calculated by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), was 271-to-1, with the chief executives of American companies seeing an average of $15.6 million in annual compensation. The EPI report, which was published in July, notes that "regardless of how it's measured, CEO pay continues to be very, very high and has grown far faster in recent decades than typical worker pay," and "exorbitant CEO pay means that the fruits of economic growth are not going to ordinary workers."

EPI president Lawrence Mischel and research assistant Jessica Schieder found that CEO compensation rose "by 807 or 937 percent (depending on how it is measured—using stock options granted or stock options realized, respectively) from 1978 to 2016." They argue that "exorbitant CEO compensation...has fueled the growth of the top 1 percent incomes" at the expense of "the vast majority of workers."

"Simply put, money that goes to the executive class is money that does not go to other people. Rising executive pay is not connected to overall growth in the economic pie," Mishel explained, as Common Dreams previously reported. "We could curtail the explosive growth in CEO pay without doing any harm to the economy."

Dreamers don’t trust Democrats to fix DACA in 2018

For Dreamers and the undocumented youth movement, 2017 ended as it began: badly.

As recently as this month, Democratic leaders promised activists that they would push Congress to a solution on Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals before the end of the year. President Trump had, in September, canceled the Obama administration program, which gave work permits and protection from deportation to close to a million undocumented people brought to the U.S. as children, and Dreamers were hopeful that Democrats would make it a priority to come up with a replacement. Last week, Democrats reneged on their promise, declining to fight for a DACA replacement in a year-end spending bill to avert a government shutdown — the only real opportunity they had to force the Republicans’ hand on the matter.

“Nancy Pelosi looked me in the face and said, ‘We are going to get this done by the end of the year,’” said Adrian Reyna, an advocate with United We Dream, the most prominent advocacy group for Dreamers in the country. “We can’t be living our lives on false promises. We don’t have the luxury to do that.”

That leaves the Dreamers, as recipients of DACA protection are known, facing a bleak and uncertain 2018, newly aware that the Democratic Party is willing to go only so far in its fight for them. Some moderate Republicans have expressed a desire to legalize the Dreamers, too, but revisiting DACA is far from a priority for the GOP at large, and any bipartisan solution will involve exacting negotiations over ramped-up immigration enforcement.

Think positive thoughts:

Erica Garner 'Showing Her Fighting Spirit' as Family Holds Onto Hope for Recovery

Early Thursday, the New York Daily News reported that Erica Garner—the 27-year-old civil rights activist and daughter of Eric Garner—had been declared "brain dead" by doctors. But later in the day, the Daily News updated their report as new information emerged.

Erica "is close to death but still showing her fighting spirit after a massive heart attack," the Daily News now reports.

Erica remains on life support, according to her mother, Esaw Snipes. As the Daily News notes, "family members were being called early Thursday to Woodhull Hospital to say final goodbyes."

However, Snipes told the Daily News Thursday evening that she "got the wrong information" and that the family is still holding onto "a glimpse of hope."

"She's still here with us," Snipes said.

The news comes just hours after Erica's official Twitter account—operated by one of her co-workers—announced that a CAT scan revealed that Erica had "suffered major brain damage from a lack of oxygen while in cardiac arrest."



the horse race



"Is This Your Punishment??" Tucker Questions Jill Stein About Her Russia Probe

A jailed Russian hacker claims he can prove he broke into the DNC server

A jailed Russian hacker claims he can prove he broke into the computers of the Democratic National Committee on behalf of Russian intelligence — because he left a secret calling card inside the system. In an interview Wednesday with Russia’s independent TV Rain, Konstantin Kozlovsky said he inserted a .dat file imprinted with his passport number and the number of the visa he got for a trip to the Caribbean island of St. Martin.

“If the Americans made snapshots, you can check it out,” he said in a written exchange with the outlet from his Russian jail cell. “Or the file should be on backups for September 2015. That’s the main proof I can provide from inside this dungeon.”

After the intrusions allegedly took place, from summer 2015 to early 2016, Kozlovsky was imprisoned on charges of being part of a hacking plot to steal millions from Russian banks. This month, reports began to circulate in Russian media that Kozlovsky had confessed in Russian court in August to being part of an operation run by the country’s intelligence service, the FSB, against the DNC.

‘Subversive political machine’: Facebook boasts it helped SNP win general election

MSM Uses Russiagate To Punch Left

The Daily Beast, whose corporate owner has Chelsea Clinton on its board of directors, recently published a report titled “Kremlin Troll Wrote for Far-Left U.S. Sites”, which it then promoted with great success on Twitter using incendiary taglines like “Those Hillary-hating hot takes you read on leftie sites during the election? Some of ’em were written in Moscow.”

The short, low-energy Daily Beast blurb went viral by reporting on another arm-flailing Russiagate “bombshell” by the Washington Post, whose sole owner is a CIA contractor and dangerous oligarch. WaPo’s article revolves around a pseudonymous writer with alleged ties to the Kremlin who succeeded in getting published by numerous alternative media outlets, most notably in CounterPunch.

I’ve got no love for CounterPunch’s elitist editors, who spent July of this year orchestrating a deceitful smear campaign against me, nor for their humorless gray-ponytailed sausage fest of a publication. But this story, like all Russiagate “bombshells”, falls apart under the slightest amount of scrutiny. Contrary to the viral proclamations of the Daily Beast, none of the articles in question had anything to do with Hillary Clinton, and only one of them was published prior to the election. As CounterPunch editor-in-chief Jeffrey St. Clair and managing editor Joshua Frank wrote in their almost-readable account of the ordeal, the amount of online traction that the pseudonymous writer Alice Donovan was able to accrue with these articles was so small that they had a mere 49 Twitter followers at the time this story broke.

And yet empire loyalists everywhere, from bloodthirsty neocon Eli Lake to psychotic tweakers Eric Garland and Louise Mensch, are parading about this inconsequential accident as though it means something.

Vanity Fair under fire for urging Hillary Clinton to quit politics and knit instead

Vanity Fair became embroiled in a social media storm over a video in which Hillary Clinton was urged to quit politics for knitting – an attempted joke that backfired even before it drew a bizarre tweet from Donald Trump.

The row began just before Christmas, when the magazine posted a series of videos in which editors and writers held up glasses of champagne and suggested satirical New Year’s resolutions for Clinton, Trump, the White House press secretary, Sarah Sanders, and economic adviser Gary Cohn.

The clip aimed at Clinton urged, among other things, that she should stop blaming others for her loss in the 2016 presidential race; that she should teach yoga breathing classes; and that she should embrace knitting over any political ambition. “Take up a new hobby in the New Year: volunteer work, knitting, improv comedy – literally anything that will keep you from running again,” the writer Maya Kosoff suggested.

Former Clinton aides, writers and celebrities were among those who tweeted their outrage, even after Vanity Fair put out a statement of regret, four days after the item was published.



the evening greens


How to succeed in business:

Banned From the Banking Industry for Life, a Scott Pruitt Friend Finds a New Home at the EPA

The Environmental Protection Agency has tasked a banker who was banned from the banking industry for life with oversight of the nation’s Superfund program. In May, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation fined Oklahoma banker Albert Kelly $125,000. According to a consent order, which The Intercept obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, the FDIC had “reason to believe that [Kelly] violated a law or regulation, by entering into an agreement pertaining to a loan by the Bank without FDIC approval.”

Two weeks later, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt appointed Kelly to lead an effort to streamline the Superfund program. In July, the FDIC went further, banning Kelly from banking for life. The “order of prohibition from further participation” explained that the FDIC had determined Kelly’s “unfitness to serve as a director, officer, person participating in the conduct of the affairs or as an institution-affiliated party of the Bank, any other insured depository institution.”

But Pruitt, who had received loans from Kelly’s bank, apparently didn’t find Kelly’s unfitness to serve in the financial industry as disqualifying his longtime friend from serving as a top official at the EPA. Since May, Kelly, or Kell as he was known in Oklahoma, has led the effort to streamline the Superfund program — which oversees remediation of some of the country’s most toxic sites.

Pruitt earned only $38,400 as an Oklahoma state senator. Even with a $35,000 profit from selling his previous home, that was not enough on its own to buy a house in the Lakes at Indian Springs community in Broken Arrow, the suburb of Tulsa that Pruitt represented in the legislature. Yet in 2004, Pruitt purchased a sprawling ranch house in the upscale gated community for $605,000. ... To help pay for it, Pruitt turned to SpiritBank — a community bank that Kelly’s family had run since the 1930s. SpiritBank gave Pruitt and his wife three mortgage loans: one for $81,000, another for $359,000, and a third for $533,000. His wife, Marlyn Pruitt, has reported no assets or income. The year before, SpiritBank had also loaned Pruitt money to help buy a share of the Oklahoma City RedHawks, a minor league baseball team.

On May 22, Pruitt returned the favor to the Oklahoma banker with his announcement that he would be creating the Superfund task force — and appointing Kelly to head it. The appointment was notable in that Kelly would become a senior adviser in the federal environmental agency despite having no previous experience with environmental issues. A business major with a law degree and a 200-head cattle ranch, Kelly listed motivational speaking and political activity among the core competencies on his resume. The descendant of a long line of bankers and Republicans, Kelly had worked at his family’s bank for the previous 33 years.


Also of Interest

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

Clean Break II: Iran Hawks Decide to Burn It All Down

A Palestinian Teen Puts His Hand in His Pocket. His Punishment: A Bullet in the Face

How the Interrogation of Reality Winner Reveals the Deceptive Tactics of “Exceedingly Friendly” FBI Agents

A Leftist Economist Steps Aside As the Debate Shifts His Way


A Little Night Music

Sugar Pie Desanto - Soulful Dress

Sugar Pie De Santo - In The Basement

Sugarpie DeSanto - Slip In Mules

Sugarpie Desanto - - Mama Didn't Raise No Fool

Sugarpie Desanto - Going Back Where I Belong

Sugar Pie DeSanto - A Little Taste Of Soul

Sugar Pie DeSanto - One-Two, Let's Rock

Sugar Pie Desanto - Good Timin'

Sugarpie Desanto - I Cry Alone

Sugarpie Desanto - Maybe You'll Be There

Sugar Pie DeSanto - I Still Care

Sugar Pie DeSanto - The One That Loves You


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Comments

glad to see you are back in the saddle again. hope you're feeling better.

Iran declared Jerusalem the "capital of Palestine" . Damn straight. US, keep your nose out of other country's affairs. A foreign policy dictated by Israel? Bunch of greedy cowards running the MIC into the ground.

1,2,3, take a deep breath 1,2,3 and exhale 1,2,3. OK better now.

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joe shikspack's picture

@QMS

thanks, i'm doing ok in the saddle, sleeping a little more than usual, but doing a little better every day.

keep breathing. you're not alone, we all see it.

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smiley7's picture

and Gandhi rang straight through; thanks for the blues!

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joe shikspack's picture

@smiley7

glad you fortified yourself with the music before diving in. Smile

have a great evening!

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

feeling much better. When you didn't post by 2 or 3 this afternoon, I figured that you'd gotten worse. Glad you made it, but hope that you don't push yourself too hard, Joe.

Pleasantry

Below's a link and excerpt to a fluff piece about Biden. From where I stand, I'd say that either Biden or Gillibrand (based on what we know today) will be the Dem Party nominee. Still pondering on the Repubs, but will venture to say that DT will have at least one primary challenger.

Actually, what keeps me up at night is that it's beginning to sound as though that fiscal austerian 'nutjob'--John Kasich--is contemplating a run as an Independent. (He's a No Labels darling, so he'll have the financing).

Here's the CNN piece I referenced above,

Joe Biden: So hot right now

By Chris Cillizza, CNN Editor-at-large

(CNN) Almost 6 in 10 Americans have a favorable opinion about Joe Biden in a new CNN national poll, a finding sure to give the Democratic former vice president a boost as he considers whether to run for president in 2020.

The 57% favorable rating is Biden's best in CNN polling since February 2009 -- when he was sworn in as Barack Obama's vice president. Just over 1 in 4 (27%) have an unfavorable view of Biden. . . .

What explains Biden's current popularity? A few things:

He drew hugely laudatory coverage earlier this year for his book tour in support of his memoir about the loss of his eldest son, Beau.

Politicians -- with the notable exception of Clinton (of late) -- always grow more popular when out of office.

Some level of buyer's remorse -- particularly among Democrats -- who believe that had Biden run in 2016, he would have easily beaten Donald Trump.

Biden has been open about his thinking on running for president in 2020, which would be his third bid for the nation's highest office. "If I were offered the nomination by the Lord Almighty right now, today, I would say no because we're not ready, the family's not ready to do this," Biden said on "The View" earlier this month. "If, in a year from now, if we're ready, and nobody has moved in that I think can do it, then I may very well do it."

WTH? The man's schtick makes me almost physically ill. What in the world is it that folks see in him?

Hey, hope to have a transcript tomorrow, if I can get here in time. Or, maybe I'll post on the spiraling cost of prescription drugs--mostly due to the ACA from what pharmacists tell us. Whatever, the situation has gotten ridiculous. But, more on that later.

Today's been so hectic and depressing--had a tradesman over to get an estimate on a relatively minor job, just to find out that we may have to have a major job done. What a way to start the day! Sad

Thanks for tonight's EB. I sure hope you get a chance to rest up--if you were to need to take a long weekend to rest, sure folks would understand.

Everyone have a nice evening. And stay warm!

Bye

Mollie


"Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength, while loving someone deeply gives you courage."--Lao Tzu


"Purity test"??
I've come to flag that phrase, like many others, as a tool of neoliberalism in order to shut down intelligent conversation. When someone disagrees with you, their issues are not lesser than yours. The lines that they draw are not inferior to yours. They are not being "pure" when they honor those lines. Rather, they are acting with principle.
--SnappleBC

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

joe shikspack's picture

@Unabashed Liberal

heh, i've been sleeping late, hence getting a later start on the eb, hence the late post time. i'm getting incrementally better and i feel ok today. thanks!

biden is certainly a contender that one can't rule out for the dem nomination. parties like consistent, predictable, party hacks to head the ticket - and biden certainly fills that slot. he's solidly in the pocket of bankers and doesn't scare wall street, he's also a guy who wouldn't scare off the neocons who are now sniffing around the dem party because of the non-interventionist bent of much of the repug party. so, he could be a shoe in.

on the other hand, like fritz mondale, he's not a very exciting choice and he may have a tough time convincing millenials and progressive voters that there's anything in it for them. he may be smart enough, though, not to accuse them of being russians.

gillibrand, at this point doesn't have the name recognition that is needed. of course, that can change. i think that if bernie runs, he'd crush gillibrand, though how he'd do against biden is debatable.

good luck on your home repairs, i hope that everything works out well.

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mimi's picture

about Iran declaring Jerusalem the capital of Palestine and Iran Hawks wanting a Clean Break II and burn it all down sounds like "someone and his friend" want definitely a juuuge war in the ME.

I wished that others would send those "someones" a one-way ticket to leave town like they did with the homeless. We should start a Bussing Out campaign and send the one-way tickets with the poop packages.

What a cruel world we live in.

Hope you stay warm and toasty in the cold. Good Night.

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joe shikspack's picture

@mimi

heh, your point is a good one:

Iran declaring Jerusalem the capital of Palestine and Iran Hawks wanting a Clean Break II and burn it all down sounds like "someone and his friend" want definitely a juuuge war in the ME.

it's sort of surprising that the neocons don't like that guy more.

i still want to exile them all to an island in the middle of nowhere.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

@joe shikspack

it's sort of surprising that the neocons don't like that guy more.

i still want to exile them all to an island in the middle of nowhere.

On some other planet. Orbiting some other star.

Wink

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Meteor Man's picture

The take from Naked Capitalism:

2) What Watson is doing, this time on the national stage, is just what Neera Tanden did a year ago when she got Matt Bruenig fired. If getting people fired for the views they express — I’m gonna say “modulo Nazis,” here — isn’t McCarthyism, I don’t know what is. I mean, come on. I guess there’s one thing liberals just aren’t liberal about, and that’s insulting royalty, eh?

And

4) You should really go poke through that thread if you want to get insight into the mindset of Clinton’s current, remaining supporters. It’s really hard for me to process this. It’s like watching one of those movies where humans turn into pod people. Which is a horrible trope, and now I’m dehumanizing (unless, of course, it’s all-too-human to turn into a pod person). Help!

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2017/12/200pm-water-cooler-12282017.html

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

joe shikspack's picture

@Meteor Man

heh, that second observation is interesting. i don't get hardcore clinton at all. they make no sense to me.

have a great evening!

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snoopydawg's picture

how dare she run against Her? It was Her's turn dammit and everyone else had no business trying to take it away from Her. The kos kids absolutely hate Stein for running and some have gone as far as saying that there should only be two parties allowed to run. Period. They hate Bernie for the same reason. And because he wasn't even a democrat.

Russia Gate has gotten way out of hand. After the republicans found out more about the Hillary's emails investigation and that Comey had written his statement before the investigation was finished and they've learned more about Uranium One, they think that the FBI should be investigated itself and if wrongdoing is found, people should be purged from it.

This has been received as the republicans are being blackmailed by Putin or that they are just as complicit as Trump is.

Republicans are Traitors

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

joe shikspack's picture

@snoopydawg

i'm pretty sure that it's not you and me. the clintonites have just gone nuts. that's not to say that the republicans are not also nuts, they are, but the clintonites appear to be even more batshit crazy than the republicans, now.

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Deja's picture

@joe shikspack
It's a little unnerving, actually. It would seem that the Brock Hillbot Army had a lasting effect, or it never stopped. Maybe both?

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divineorder's picture

.. were here!

We are in Taos for a couple of nights celebrating our 47th anniversary (any excuse will do).

Went to see who was playing at Old Taos Inn tonight and we really lucked out!

The Rudy Boy Experiment from Albuquerque is playing tonight. Since Stevie Ray met his unfortunate demise young Rudy is my favorite technical blues guitarist.

Have a good one all!

20171228_185557-3096x1742.jpg

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

joe shikspack's picture

@divineorder

happy 47th!

glad to hear that you guys lucked into a great time!

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divineorder's picture

Abnormally high temps and lack of snow was due to climate change. Shook my head in agreement .

The ski area is higher than old Taos town and the ancient Taos Pueblo nearby. Getting down in teens at night so sk8 are can make snow. Here in town was low 50s, go figure.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

enhydra lutris's picture

sugar pie, she always always has a fun twist on things.

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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

glad you enjoyed sugar pie, she had a long career, much of it spent out in california.

have a great evening!

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until Saturday (I'm off to bed and fading fast) but will catch it then. All I can say is good going Scotland.
Thanks J.S. for all of this.

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joe shikspack's picture

@randtntx

have a good sleep. it'll all be there in the morning.

there are times when i am quite proud to have some scots heritage, this being one of them. Smile

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found this in a tweet by Max Blumenthal and he said that NYT seldom posts things like this about Israel

didn't see it directly in the video

wow - a rolling wall with water cannons behind the wall that can spray water with chemicals added and launch tear gas

Chinese built the gear they say.

Chiana's second largest military gear supplier is Israel

he Anti-Protest Gear That Despots Love

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joe shikspack's picture

@DonMidwest

wow, good find, thanks!

The Pentagon has catalogued more than 40,000 contaminated sites across U.S. states and territories, and it has so far spent more than $40 billion attempting to clean them up. We have found no other single entity — corporation, government agency or individual — responsible for so much environmental degradation. The total amount of land contaminated by the military is larger than the state of Florida. Thousands of sites remain dangerously polluted and fenced off, awaiting the government's attention. Thousands of others have already been returned to public use — for parks, housing and schools — in some instances without thorough cleanups.

Faced with these liabilities, the Pentagon has routinely sought to minimize its responsibility for fixing its environmental problems. It burns hazardous waste and explosives because it's the cheapest way to dispose of them, even though the burning process has been outlawed for most American industries since the 1980s. It employs contractors to dispose of hazardous waste and clean up toxic sites, then claims it is not responsible when some of those contractors commit fraud, improperly handle toxic material, or cut corners on cleanups. It has in some cases explicitly refused to cooperate with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and let dangerous sites linger unaddressed.

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orlbucfan's picture

Hey Joe (insert Hendrix cover tune here). Smile Hope you are getting better and feeling warm. Rec'd!! @joe shikspack

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.

thanatokephaloides's picture

@DonMidwest

This has struck very close to home for me.

A chemical used in firefighting at Peterson Air Force Base (doubling as Colorado Springs' municipal airport) is appearing in every municipal water supply between Colorado Springs and Pueblo (Security, Widefield, and Fountain).

Sad

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides