The Evening Blues - 3-28-17



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Shakey Jake Harris

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features Chicago blues singer, harmonica player and songwriter, Shakey Jake Harris. Enjoy!

Shakey Jake, Memphis Slim, Willie Dixon, Jump Jackson - Jake's Blues

"The constitution supposes, what the History of all Governments demonstrates, that the Executive is the branch of power most interested in war, and most prone to it. It has accordingly with studied care vested the question of war to the Legislature."

-- James Madison


News and Opinion

NYT Says Congress Has ‘Duty’ to Make War–Rather Than the Right to Reject It

As reports come in detailing the degree to which Donald Trump has escalated the “War on ISIS”—and killed hundreds more civilians in the process—this would seem like a good time for the country to sit back and examine the United States’ approach to fighting “terrorism” and its recent iteration, the so-called Islamic State.

Not for the New York Times editorial board, which didn’t take the wave of civilians deaths as a reason to question the wisdom of America’s various “counter-terror,” nation-building and regime-change projects in the Middle East, but instead chose to browbeat Congress into rubber-stamping a war that’s been going on for almost three years.

The editorial, “Congress’s Duty in the War With ISIS” (3/26/17), began with a false premise:

But as the American military is doing its job, Congress is refusing to do its duty. Nearly three years into the war against ISIS, lawmakers have ducked their constitutional responsibility for making war by not passing legislation authorizing the anti-ISIS fight.

Congress does not have a “constitutional responsibility for making war”; it has a constitutional right to make war, which is to say it can authorize it or not authorize it. Congress is under no obligation—legal, moral or otherwise—to rubber-stamp existing wars started without its consent.

Presidents, on the other hand, do have a duty under the Constitution to get Congress’s approval before waging war.

This is an excellent article worth reading in full:

Ending Syria’s Nightmare will Take Pressure From Below

Ominous developments in East Syria have drawn the United States and Russia into closer proximity increasing the likelihood of a violent confrontation. The Trump administration has embarked on a dangerous plan to defeat the terrorist militia, ISIS, in Raqqa. But recent comments by US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson suggest that Washington’s long-term strategy may conflict with Moscow’s goal of restoring Syria’s sovereign borders. Something’s got to give. Either Russia ceases its clearing operations in east Syria or Washington agrees to withdraw its US-backed forces when the battle is over. If neither side gives ground, there’s going to be a collision between the two nuclear-armed adversaries. ...

In a matter of weeks, Washington’s approach to the war in Syria has changed dramatically. While the US has reportedly ended its support for the Sunni militias that have torn the country apart and killed over 400,000 people, the US has increased its aid to the SDF that is making impressive territorial gains across the eastern corridor. The ultimate goal for the SDF fighters is an autonomous Kurdish homeland carved out of West Iraq and East Syria, while US objectives focus primarily on the breakup of the Syrian state, the removal of the elected government, the control over critical pipelines routes, and the redrawing of national borders to better serve the interests of the US and Israel.

The idea of breaking up Syria is not new. The plan first appeared in an article by Oded Yinon in 1982 titled “A Strategy for Israel in the Nineteen Eighties”. Yinon believed that– for Israel to survive– it must become an imperial regional power that “must effect the division of the whole area into small states by the dissolution of all existing Arab states.” (Israel Shahak)

The most recent adaptation of Yinon’s plan was articulated by Brookings Institute analyst Michael O’ Hanlon in a piece that appeared in the Wall Street Journal titled “A Trump Strategy to End Syria’s Nightmare”. In the article, O’ Hanlon states bluntly:

“To achieve peace, Syria will need self-governance within a number of autonomous zones. One option is a confederal system by which the whole country is divided into such zones. A less desirable but minimally acceptable alternative could be several autonomous zones within an otherwise still-centralized state—similar to how Iraqi Kurdistan has functioned for a quarter-century….

Security in the Sunni Arab and Kurdish autonomous zones would be provided by local police and perhaps paramilitary forces raised, trained and equipped with the direct support of the international community. …(“A Trump Strategy to End Syria’s Nightmare”, Wall Street Journal)

In an earlier piece, O’ Hanlon referred to his scheme as “Deconstructing Syria” a plan that “would produce autonomous zones that would never again have to face the prospect of rule by either Assad or ISIL.” Many of the details in O’ Hanlon’s piece are identical to those in Trump’s plan which was announced by Secretary of State Tillerson just last week.

ISIS, U.S.-Backed Forces Battle Over Syria’s Tabqa Dam

U.S.-led coalition forces in Syria dismissed ISIS claims that the country's largest dam was at imminent risk of collapse. The dam is located on the Euphrates about 25 miles upstream from ISIS' stronghold of Raqqa.

The Syrian Democratic Forces, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab militias supported by a U.S.-led international coalition, has been battling to capture the facility since Friday.

ISIS said in messages carried on its social media channels that the dam's operations had been put out of service and that all flood gates were closed. It said the dam was at risk of collapse as a result of airstrikes and increased water levels. ... But U.S.-led coalition forces said the 2.5-mile long dam was structurally sound and denied that any of its strikes had hit it.

Mosul: Did Trump's administration ease restrictions on airstrikes to fight islamic state group?

The innocent lives already lost amid Trump’s war on terror

Though the incident is still shrouded in confusion, reports over the weekend indicated that the United States launched an airstrike on the Iraqi city of Mosul that may have killed more than 100 people.

U.S. officials have confirmed that the coalition conducted the attack March 17 over the crowded neighborhood of Mosul al-Jadida, located near the front lines of the Iraqi-led offensive against the city's Islamic State occupiers. The U.S. military and Iraqi authorities have both launched formal investigations into the incident. "If confirmed," my colleagues reported, "the March 17 incident would mark the greatest loss of civilian life since the United States began strikes on Islamic State targets in Iraq and Syria in 2014." ...

Of course, there's nothing new about Iraqi civilians dying in American airstrikes — the country has been the target of U.S. military operations for decades. But Trump's aggressive approach seems a poor fit for the complexity of the current fight. The Trump administration is reportedly seeking ways to bypass Obama-era operational constraints meant to prevent civilian deaths. An Iraqi special forces officer, speaking anonymously to the New York Times, said there has been a clear relaxation of the rules of engagement since Trump took office. That claim was denied by a Pentagon spokesman. ...

Trump's stated focus on a military solution also obscures the trickier battle that will remain even after Mosul is fully liberated: reconciling Mosul's embittered and traumatized majority Sunni population with Iraq's Shiite-dominated government. Otherwise, a new version of the fundamentalist outfit could find a foothold.

Did RAF Tornados kill Iraqis fleeing ISIS? MoD confirms UK planes were operating in Mosul where hundreds of civilians lost their lives in alleged coalition airstrike

RAF jets were operating in the region of Mosul where hundreds of civilians were allegedly killed in coalition airstrikes, officials have said. British Tornado aircraft destroyed five terrorist Islamic State targets using laser-guided Paveway IV missiles weighing 500lbs each.

The planes were flying in 'very challenging conditions with heavy cloud' on the day that as many as 200 civilians are said to have lost their lives in coalition strikes on the al-Jadida neighbourhood in western Mosul. The US-led coalition said it had carried out a strike on ISIS militants and equipment in the area of the reported deaths on March 17 and had launched an investigation.

RAF officials refused to confirm whether their jets were flying in the specific area of the deadly bombings but said they were 'supporting the liberation of western Mosul'.

Islamic State releases video threatening Iran for tolerating Jews

The Islamic State group threatened Iran for its role in the region’s conflicts, in a rare Farsi-language propaganda video released on Monday. The 36-minute video, entitled “The Farsi Land: From Yesterday ’till Today,” was issued through IS’s social media channels from Diyala province in neighboring Iraq.

A masked man directs his message to Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. “Oh, Khamenei, you cursed person who controls the so-called Islamic Iranian regime, rest assured that soon we will destroy your house like this,” he says, pointing to ruins behind him.

The video also chastises Iran for its tolerance towards Jews. “Iran raised its slogans against the US and Israel to deceive the Sunnis, while Iranian Jews live safely in Iran under its protection, and it has provided them with temples and churches as seen in Tehran and Isfahan,” the narrator says.

Lawsuit Seeks Transparency as Searches of Cellphones and Laptops Skyrocket at Borders

A lawsuit filed today by the Knight First Amendment Institute, a public interest legal organization based at Columbia University, seeks to shed light on invasive searches of laptops and cellphones by Customs and Border Protection officers at U.S. border crossings.

Documents filed in the case note that these searches have risen precipitously over the past two years, from a total of 5,000 searches in 2015 to 25,000 in 2016, and rising to 5,000 in the month of February 2017 alone. Among other questions, the lawsuit seeks to compel the federal government to provide more information about these searches, including how many of those searched have been U.S. citizens, the number of searches by port of entry, and the number of searches by the country of origin of the travelers. ...

The legality of warrantless device searches at the border remains a contested issue, with the government asserting, over the objections of civil liberties groups, that Fourth Amendment protections do not apply at ports of entry. Some particularly controversial cases of searches at the border have involved journalists whose electronic data contains sensitive information about the identity of sources. Last year, a Canadian journalist was detained for six hours before being denied entry to the United States after refusing to unlock devices containing sensitive information. It has also been alleged that border agents are disproportionately targeting Muslim Americans and people with ties to Muslim-majority countries for both interrogation and device searches.

Scots of two minds on independence

Canadian government aims to legalise marijuana by 1 July 2018

The Canadian government is scrambling to craft legislation to legalise recreational marijuana by 1 July 2018 – a move that would fulfill a campaign promise by the prime minister, Justin Trudeau.

The Liberal government will reveal the legislation in the second week of April, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, putting Canada on course to become the first G7 country to fully legalise marijuana use.

Since becoming the Liberal leader in 2013, Trudeau has spoken out about the need to decriminalise and regulate recreational marijuana, arguing that it would help ensure that marijuana is kept away from children and that profits don’t end up in the hands of what he has described as “criminal elements”.

Shortly after taking power, his government signalled that legalisation remained a priority, promising to unveil legislation by spring. Medical marijuana is already legal in Canada.

Mexican Archdiocese: Companies That Help Build Trump's Wall Are "Traitors"

Denouncing President Donald Trump's proposed border wall between Mexico and the United States as "an open threat that violates relations and peace," the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mexico City said Sunday that companies who profit from its construction are "traitors to the homeland."

The country's largest archdiocese made the charge in an editorial (Spanish) published in its weekly newsletter, Desde la fe. A spokesman said the editorial represented the views of the diocese.

"Joining a project that is a serious affront to dignity, is to shoot yourself in the foot," the editorial declared. "The wall is a monument of intimidation and silence, of xenophobic hatred."

It continued: "Any company with the intention to invest in the wall of the fanatic Trump would be immoral, but above all, its shareholders and owners should be considered traitors to the homeland."

The archdiocese also blasted what it described as "the timidity of the Mexican government's economic authorities, who have not moved firmly against these companies," which it said numbered in the hundreds. "For them, the end justifies the means," the editorial said of such firms.

Local Lawmakers Fight Back Against AG Sessions's Threats to Cut Funding to Sanctuary Cities

Jeff Sessions vows to “claw back” federal money from sanctuary cities

After months of tough talk about cracking down on jurisdictions that refuse to cooperate with the feds on immigration enforcement, the Trump administration just took the first step toward punishing so-called “sanctuary cities.”

In a surprise appearance at the start of the White House press briefing Monday, Attorney General Sessions said he would take “all lawful steps to claw-back” federal funding from sanctuary cities, an undefined term that typically refers to jurisdictions where local law enforcement refuses requests by immigration agents to hold non-serious offenders who face deportation.

Following Trump’s election, more than 100 cities — including New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, and Austin — have affirmed their “sanctuary” status. Trump signed an executive order during his first week in office that called for increased cooperation between local, state, and federal authorities to target, arrest, and detain undocumented immigrants — and threatened to pull federal grant money from jurisdictions that refuse to comply.

Will Dems Derail Sanders's Push for Public Option?

Is the US facing an epidemic of 'deaths of despair'? These researchers say yes

In 2015, the Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton’s groundbreaking paper in the National Academy of Science’s magazine reported that mortality rates among a section of Americans were suddenly surging – something unheard of in previous decades. Mortality was only rising in a certain group: middle-aged non-Hispanic whites without a college degree.

Case and Deaton have returned with a new paper published last week by the Brookings Institute. It paints a grim picture of two Americas, in which one has recovered from the 2008 economic crisis and the other hasn’t. The latter, once called “blue-collar aristocrats”, consists of families who were previously able to get by with jobs not requiring college degrees. The disappearance of those jobs has been accompanied by an alarming rate of suicides, overdoses, and diseases caused by drugs and alcohol.

Case and Deaton call these “deaths of despair” – and argue they have recently reached disturbing levels. While opioids account for many of the deaths, drug abuse may only be a symptom of a larger, unseen epidemic of despair.

[An interview with one of the study's authors follows at the link. - js]



the horse race



Cheney: Russian meddling possibly 'an act of war'

Former Vice President Dick Cheney said Monday that Russia’s meddling in the U.S. presidential election could be "considered an act of war.”

Cheney, who served as President George W. Bush’s No. 2, spoke about Russia at The Economic Times’ Global Business Summit on Monday.

“There’s not any argument at this stage that somehow the election of President Trump was not legitimate, but there’s no question that there was a very serious effort made by Mr. Putin and his government, his organization, to interfere in major ways with our basic, fundamental democratic processes,” he said. “In some quarters, that would be considered an act of war.”

Dick Cheney Says There's No Doubt That Russia Has WMDs — I Mean, Hacked The Election

Today in a speech at the Economic Times’ Global Business Summit, former Vice President Dick Cheney has said in no uncertain terms that Saddam Hussein definitely has weapons of mass destruction— I mean, that Russia definitely hacked the election.

Citing a “rising number of threats” in the world, Cheney asserted that there is “no question” that Saddam Hussein, I mean Vladimir Putin, has 600 metric tons of chemical weapons that are still unaccounted for, I mean, ordered a hacking campaign to tilt the 2016 election in favor of Donald Trump. Calling this behavior an “act of war”, Cheney went on to accuse Saddam I mean Putin of plotting a 9/11-style attack on America I mean of having designs on the Baltic states.

Gosh this is hard. I keep mixing these two stories up for some reason!

US - Democrats call for House intelligence chairman Devin Nunes to recuse himself from Russia probe

The Democrats are flinging poo at an incredible rate:

Top Democrats call for Devin Nunes to recuse himself from Trump-Russia inquiry

Leading Democrats have escalated the controversy over the erratic behavior of Devin Nunes, the Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee, calling on him to recuse himself from the investigation into alleged links between the president’s associates and Russia.

Both Adam Schiff, Nunes’ counterpart on the committee, and Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader of the House of Representatives, demanded that he step aside from the ongoing Russia affair that has become an enduring sore for the young Trump administration.

The intervention of senior Democrats takes the dispute to a new level of intensity, raising the prospect of the governing party being forced to make a second humiliating concession after US attorney general Jeff Sessions was forced this month to stand back from all Russian inquiries after he failed to disclose meetings with Moscow’s ambassador to Washington. ...

The open partisan split within the powerful intelligence committee came as Schiff complained that members of the panel continue to wait for Nunes to present them with documents ostensibly relating to intelligence collected on Trump days after he had briefed the president. The embattled committee chairman raised further questions when he said he had no choice under classification rules except to view the sensitive intelligence at the White House, a statement likely to intensify speculation that the Trump administration fed Nunes the material.

The source who made the materials available to Nunes “could not simply put the documents in a backpack and walk them over to the House intelligence committee space”, Nunes’ office said on Monday.



the evening greens


US Media’s Global Warming Denialism

An annual climate report issued this month by the World Meteorological Organization confirms that average global temperatures and global sea levels continued their inexorable rise in 2016, setting new records. Global sea ice dropped to an “unprecedented” extent. Extreme weather conditions, probably aggravated by climate disruption, displaced hundreds of thousands of people, left millions hungry, and caused “severe economic damage.”

Yet in the midst of such frightening changes, and a national presidential campaign with enormous consequences for U.S. climate policy, the four major broadcast networks — ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox News Sunday — significantly decreased their coverage of climate issues on evening and Sunday news programs, according to a new analysis by Media Matters. Television programs like these are the major source of news for 57 percent of adult Americans.

The four networks devoted a mere 50 minutes on their evening and Sunday news programs to climate change in all of 2016. That was a two-thirds drop from the meager time they gave to perhaps the most important issue of our time in 2015. (These figures reflect deliberate coverage by the networks, not incidental mentions of climate by talk show guests.) ...

The networks can hardly claim there was nothing of substance to cover. Audiences love news about political controversy, weather, and disasters — and the issue of climate disruption provided all three. The 2016 election, for example, offered a stark and highly controversial choice between Donald Trump, who dismissed global warming as a “hoax” and promised to revive dirty coal as a fuel of choice in the United States, and Hillary Clinton, who supported major new investments in clean energy.

Yet the major TV network news programs “did not air a single segment informing viewers of what to expect on climate change and climate-related policies or issues under a Trump or Clinton administration,” according to Media Matters. Similarly, their reporters did not ask even one question about climate change during all of last year’s presidential and vice presidential debates. Instead, they waited until after the election to inform viewers about how the country’s vote for Trump would affect the future of climate policy. ...

In the long run, nothing the Trump administration does about health insurance, tax reform, or military spending — short of getting us into nuclear war — will matter nearly as much as its determined efforts to prevent global action on climate disruption.

Only Sweden, Germany and France are pursuing Paris climate goals, says study

Sweden, Germany and France are the only European countries pursuing environmental policies in line with promises made at the Paris climate conference, according to a new ranking study. The UK is in fifth position in the table which assesses policy actions taken by EU states to meet Europe’s pledge of a 40% cut in carbon emissions by 2030.

Poland, the Czech Republic, Spain and Italy are judged to be propping up the league, due to their support for forestry and carbon accounting dodges that weaken the greenhouse gas reduction effort. ... “Relying on credits from planting trees is troublesome as the carbon removals can be reversed at any time when trees are cleared and burned,” the report says. “Emissions from fossil fuels, on the other hand, stay in the atmosphere for centuries.” ... When [this and accounting loopholes] were taken into account, only Sweden’s record was judged compatible with the Paris goals.

An underlying problem confronting EU policy-makers is the profound, costly and rapid nature of the changes needed to limit global warming to 2C, as agreed at Paris. Carbon emissions would have to halve every decade between now and 2050, with land use emissions following the same trajectory, according to a report published earlier this week.

'Sightings' of extinct Tasmanian tiger prompt search in Queensland

“Plausible” possible sightings of a Tasmanian tiger in north Queensland have prompted scientists to undertake a search for the species thought to have died out more than 80 years ago.

The last thylacine is thought to have died in Hobart zoo in 1936, and it is widely believed to have become extinct on mainland Australia at least 2,000 years ago.

But sightings of large, dog-like animals that are neither dingos nor foxes have persisted over the decades, despite widespread scepticism.

Recent eyewitness accounts of potential thylacines in far north Queensland have spurred scientists from James Cook University to launch a search for the animal long considered extinct.


Also of Interest

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

Trump’s Incoherent Foreign Policy


At Site of Deaths, Our Reporters Find Cost of U.S.-ISIS Battle

After 12 Rejections, Apple Accepts App That Tracks U.S. Drone Strikes

The feminists of Farc: ‘We are not demobilising, we are mobilising politically’

Gorsuch’s Soft Style and Hard Line

Republicans' choice after AHCA failure: back Obamacare or undermine it?

Bill Black: Why Did Preet Bharara Refuse to Drain the Wall Street Swamp?

I am an Arctic researcher. Donald Trump is deleting my citations


A Little Night Music

Shakey Jake & the All Stars - Hold That Bus, Conductor

Shakey Jake - Call Me If You Need Me

Shakey Jake - Do The Boogie With You

Shakey Jake - Jake's Cha Cha

Shakey Jake Harris - Ragged and Dirty

Shakey Jake - Respect Me Baby

Shakey Jake - Hey Baby

Shakey Jake Harris - Good Times

Shakey Jake - It Won't Happen Again

Magic Sam & Shakey Jake - Live At Sylvio's



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MarilynW's picture

Is this what winning looks like?
Screen Shot 2017-03-28 at 1.23.19 PM.png
Iraqi mother at the death scene of her child

MOSUL, Iraq — Dozens of Iraqi civilians, some of them still alive and calling out for help, were buried for days under the rubble of their homes in western Mosul after American-led airstrikes flattened almost an entire city block.

At the site on Sunday, more than a week after the bombing runs, reporters for The New York Times saw weary survivors trying to find bodies in the wreckage. Iraqi officials said the final death toll could reach 200 or more, potentially making it one of the worst civilian tolls ever in an American military strike in Iraq.

The fighting against the Islamic State here has grown more urgent, with Iraqi officers saying the American-led coalition has been quicker to strike urban targets from the air with less time to weigh the risks for civilians. They say the change reflects a renewed push by the American military under the Trump administration to speed up the battle for Mosul.

New York Times
March 27
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/27/world/middleeast/mosul-iraq-isis-civi...

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To thine own self be true.

snoopydawg's picture

@MarilynW @MarilynW
the death of that woman's child was an unfortunate mistake and he feels sad for the civilians who were killed after they were told to stay in their homes during the fighting. Many people hid in their basements and their homes were destroyed on top of them.

Maj. Gen. Maan al-Saadi, an Iraqi special forces commander, said his men had called in the American airstrikes that caused the civilian deaths, adding of the victims, “We feel sad for them.”
But he called the episode an unfortunate outcome in a nasty war. He said that Iraqi forces had lost thousands of men fighting the Islamic State, and that to lose so many civilians in a single attack “in return for liberating the entire city of Mosul — I think it is a normal thing.”
“This is a war, and mistakes can happen, and there can be losses,” he said. “But we are fighting the most dangerous terrorist organization in the world, with huge, unprecedented support from the international coalition."

I again have no words to describe how this atrocity committed against innocent people makes me feel.
Deep sadness and anger at those who were involved in this. And I know that this type of killing is going to keep happening unless we can find a way to get our government to stop the attacks. But that's going to be very difficult because too many people in this country think that this outcome is okay because we have to kill every terrorist who wants to harm us. They see no connection to the reason why they do and our responsibility for them to feel that way.

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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

@MarilynW

i'm afraid that it is what winning looks like.

if only she would have allowed the pipeline through.

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From Vermont Public Radio, about kids learning about immigrants becoming citizens, worth a listen if you need a lift:

U.S. Naturalization Ceremony Held At Putney's Grammar School As Kids Study Immigration

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joe shikspack's picture

@NorthernVermont

it's really good to hear the decency of the kids who are willing to share their country with immigrants.

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Shakey is very blues-y!

I meant to post about Bessie Smith the other evening, but got distracted. Sometimes, reading a book or a story makes you want to see the movie derived from it. I went in the opposite direction. In high school, I read The Death of Bessie Smith and wanted to hear the recordings of the artist about whom the play was written. I've never regretted it. The accuracy of the story has since been questioned, but I don't care. It was a powerful story. That it even could have happened to anyone was enough.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Death_of_Bessie_Smith

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joe shikspack's picture

@HenryAWallace

shakey jake was a fine blues musician and also the uncle (and frequent musical partner of) magic sam - possibly one of chicago's most soulful blues singers and guitarists.

i heard bessie smith's recordings long before i knew anything about the circumstances of her demise. it made the events seem all the more tragic to me, i think.

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Azazello's picture

The people who run the corporate media know that most Americans still depend on TV for their information. For these Americans, if it doesn't appear on TV it isn't happening, it's not telereal. So it is with climate change and many other vital issues, they just don't cover them. I was shocked when NPR actually did a piece on Case-Deaton. I don't know what kind of coverage it got on the picture-box. I wonder how much television coverage this story got.
Here's Jimmy Dore on the bombing in Iraq:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kp5utoC8y84 width:500 height:300]

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

joe shikspack's picture

@Azazello

i agree with you. television defines reality in america. but it is under attack.

i think that the most significant thing that trump has done (and is an ongoing project for him and president bannon) is to challenge the mainstream media for the right to define reality.

i started reading an article on counterpunch and its introduction struck me as interesting (i can't vouch for the rest of the article):

Fake News: the Unravelling of US Empire From Within

US ruling ideology and Washington power have become unstuck as never before. A war of opposing certitudes and denunciations is waged day to day between the long-ruling US corporate media and the White House. Both continuously proclaim ringing recriminations of the other’s ‘fake news’. Over months they both portray each other as malevolent liars.

US bully pulpits are now beyond show disagreements and successful media inquisitions of the past. Slanderous accusations long confined to vilifying the designated Enemy have crept into accusations of the President himself. ‘The Russians are coming’ is returning as the final recourse of smear to stop deviations from the global program of hugely profitable enemy hate and perpetual preparations for foreign war.

The ruling big lies of the US money party and corporate globalization have divided into opposing camps. The Press and the President denounce each other non-stop on the public stage, while US dark state agents take sides behind the scenes.

Fake news is the medium of battle.

great jimmy dore episode - thanks!

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

and/or folks who are members of organizations like OR, JD, etc.--I just found out that a Dude who was Bernie's National Deputy Campaign Director, Arturo Carmona, is running to replace the noxious former US Representative, Javier Becerra, and hasn't been endorsed by either Our Revolution or Bernie. Here's what The LA Times wrote about the 34th District, months ago,

". . . Today, Latinos make up more than two-thirds of the district’s population and more than half of registered voters. Asian Americans account for more than 15% of voters in the district, where the percentage of Republican registered to vote is in the single digits.

Many of the district’s neighborhoods have seen a wave of gentrification in recent years, leading to higher rents andan uptick in shops selling specialty items such as gourmet coffee and artisan goods.

Apparently, Assemblyman Jimmy Gomez (D-Los Angeles), a former labor organizer, has the support of most Establishment Democrats. (BTW, Becerra was re-elected in the district with 77% of the vote.)

And, according to the LA Progressive, Becerra’s district, in last spring’s Democratic primary, was the only Latino-majority district in the region to “feel the Bern." IOW, Bernie took that district; so, it makes no sense to me that at least one of the more progressive candidates--if not Carmona--didn't get an endorsement.

Now, I'm going on what I've read--I'm no where near Cali. So, if some of you Guys who live there think/know that Carmona is a jerk or something, just say so. OTOH, if anyone out there thinks he's a decent candidate, hope you'll advocate that he receive an endorsement over the next week, since it could make the difference between an Establishment Dem, or a progressive Dem replacing Becerra. (Becerra was a piece of work--I once posted a town hall video that he led. Whew!) I plan to follow-up on this April 4 Special Election. Of course, maybe Carmona will win without an endorsement--from what I've read, I hope so.

BTW, shout out to Crider--long time, no see! Hope everything is okay.

Pleasantry

Thanks for tonight's roundup of News & Blues, Joe.

Have a nice Evening, Everyone!

Bye

Mollie


"I think dogs are the most amazing creatures--they give unconditional love. For me, they are the role model for being alive."--Gilda Radner

"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers

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

joe shikspack's picture

@Unabashed Liberal

a few days ago i saw a piece about the election to replace xavier becerra. there are 19 candidates, gomez - the establishment candidate is polling about 20%. unfortunately, there are 3 progressive candidates (including carmona) that are likely to split the progressive vote. things may have changed since last week, but gomez was definitely leading the pack.

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enhydra lutris's picture

Will Dems Derail Sanders's Push for Public Option?

Is that really a question?

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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

yeah, that got me, too. i was going to write something snarky, but then i just got pissed off thinking about it and moved on.

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@enhydra lutris

Will Dems Derail Sanders's Push for Public Option
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Creosote.'s picture

@gjohnsit @gjohnsit
at least according to an email from FightfortheFuture.org, which came in around 4:30 pm today. They spell out some of what we can expect:

Congress just decimated Internet privacy rules and voted to allow Internet Service Providers to spy on you and sell your sensitive information to advertisers without your consent.

The House of Representatives voted on the bill today, and it was already passed by the Senate last week.[1] The President has already said that he’ll sign it.[2]

The most disturbing part? The members of Congress who pushed for this attack on our privacy have been taking money hand over fist from the very same Big Cable companies that stand to profit from selling the intimate details of our lives.[3] [2 fundraising paragraphs snipped]

Slashing these privacy rules means that ISPs like Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T will be able to constantly monitor and store your most private information, like the websites you visit, the products you buy, and your real time location, and sell that data to the highest bidder.

Even creepier, it will allow ISPs to inject ads into your web browsing, install undetectable software on your devices to track your activity, and deploy systems to undermine encryption.[4]

When ISPs collect and store this information, they’ll also be making it available to the Federal government and law enforcement through bulk surveillance programs.

This is nothing less than an all out assault on our basic right to use the Internet safely and securely, and it’s putting all of us at risk.

[end blockquote; emphasis added; text of footnotes not furnished here]

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lotlizard's picture

@Creosote. It’s not as if the fire was first lit with Trump. Surveillance and its capacity to repress dissent grew exponentially during the years Obama and the elites, media, etc. backing him and Hillary were in charge.

http://wallstreetonparade.com/60-minutes-takes-a-pass-on-wall-streets-se...

Evil practices by the ISPs are, first and foremost, the evil fruit of those who own and run the ISPs — from the major stockholders and the CEO on down.

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Creosote.'s picture

@lotlizard
pretty accurately with the introduction of computers, first in offices of large firms, then with the PC. Along with all that Foucault & Co. spoke of. The basis for valuation of the dollar happened about then too. I could see my workplace change fast from about 1976, and especially in the eighties. The apparent mechanization of thought was very useful in invisibly funneling the everyday personal unquantifiable into money and power.

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lotlizard's picture

@Creosote. was in there, helping him expand and cement in place what amounts to “Total Information Awareness” by another name.

After Obama won in 2008, Schmidt became a member of President Obama's transition advisory board and has since become a member of the United States President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST).[48]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Schmidt

I actually think most people don't want Google to answer their questions. They want Google to tell them what they should be doing next.

[Eric Schmidt in] The Wall Street Journal (August 14, 2010)

https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Eric_Schmidt

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@Creosote.

My instinct upon first learning about this sort of thing (not really new, is it? Just worse) was: refuse to buy anything you see pooping up (thought that was a typo, but on reflection left it as not really being one after all) on internet ads - buy local from an actual physical place, not a chain, if you can find any 'people' stores (which I'd do anyway, if I had any money) - and remember that they're going on everything encountered on your computers, including places you personally didn't want to go/that had nothing to do with you or with anything you'd buy.

Personally, I've looked up a ton of pharma drugs for people, lots of stuff on pets when I can't afford any myself anymore, all sorts of symptoms and ills for other people - my info is useless to them and whatever they think might be extrapolated from my computer will be grossly inaccurate. Maybe mess up your searches to confuse the info further? Look up the price of yachts in Timbuktu or something on a regular basis, lol.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Creosote.'s picture

@Ellen North
and thanks for your response and writing.
Have seen very few ads after getting Ghostery; interesting if they show up now. Most of my clothes are from thrift shops, and things seem to wear out so slowly I'll need very little till its hospice time. Landline person; never owned a car, saved for a house instead. I do tons of fact-checking research for my independent contractor work, also supplement/med research, visit libraries, used-book sites, member-owned no-GMO co-op. But if their system allows third-party hops that's something darker. Meanwhile this policy fits well with USA Grifters election planning. I'm looking forward to how Sane Progressive responds too.

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@Creosote.

Well, thank you for yours! And your frugal habits also sparing you some of that burdensome coporate profiteering.

And of course for the points made - they're 'normalizing by law' the use of even our private lives for corporate profiteering, which I hope will backfire in their feces faces. The US Constitution is a pretty heavy document for them to be using as toilet paper and if it isn't causing a pain in their asses, that's because so many have been propagandized into apparently believing that it should only apply to the 'rights' of their guns to appear everywhere, rather than ensuring those of the American people.

And the latter need to rise up and demand the correct interpretation of the appropriate areas in the same manner that the propagandized Tea Party did in often protesting against their own interests, make those hemorrhoids sting every time they take a dump on the people's Constitutional rights and reach for the printed Founding Document roll to 'justify' it. Even their right to pursue what makes them happy is guaranteed, clearly showing what democracy/America was intended to be by the more enlightened of America's Founders. (Even if not by the more self-interested ones limited by the period in which they lived.)

Just came across this, which I found rather heartening, and explains why he, like Bernie, is running with the Dems.

Early in the show, Sam Ronan explains that the duopoly forces people to run as one or the other wing of the corporate party in order to even get their toe in the door/make their points known.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bm4mh52GWCY

Progressive Sam Ronan Drops Truth Bombs On Democrats Corruption
The Jimmy Dore Show

Published on 7 Mar 2017
Special guest Samuel Ronan gives Jimmy a visit to reflect on his recent loss in his run for the DNC Chair to Tom Perez and what he plans to do for the future.

Isn't the Sane Progressive amazing? She so often says what I'm muttering at (the 17 bored agencies probably probably monitoring me through) my computer screen (in case they ever get around to playing back this part of the gad-zillion years worth of other people's private information they've so rudely and pathologically barged into). She's probably retained more of her sanity than I have, though.

PS: I hope that there are a good many decades between you and hospice time - apart from all else, people like you are so needed!

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Creosote.'s picture

@Ellen North
Have been too immersed in work to dare take more screen time here, but recently saw my second author's book off to Routledge. Share your feeling about Sane Progressive and will be sending links to my Dem precinct person, a nearby liveaboard about my age who says she's fine with sailing to AK on her own. I'm fining SP is a touchstone; absence of any response is not a good sign here.
Running out of words here at the end of my workday!

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