The Evening Blues - 9-11-15

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features Chicago blues guitarist Otis Rush. Enjoy!

Otis Rush - I`Cant Quit You Baby

"The basic tool for the manipulation of reality is the manipulation of words. If you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use the words."

-- Philip K. Dick


News and Opinion

US spy chief's 'highly unusual' reported contact with military official raises concerns

James Clapper said to have frequent communication with military official who is said to be implicated in a Pentagon inquiry into manipulated intelligence

Barack Obama’s intelligence chief is said to be in frequent and unusual contact with a military intelligence officer at the center of a growing scandal over rosy portrayals of the war against the Islamic State, the Guardian has learned.

James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, is said to talk nearly every day with the head of US Central Command’s intelligence wing, Army Brigadier General Steven Grove – “which is highly, highly unusual”, according to a former intelligence official.

Grove is said to be implicated in a Pentagon inquiry into manipulated war intelligence.

In communications, Clapper, who is far more senior than Grove, is said to tell Grove how the war looks from his vantage point, and question Grove about Central Command’s assessments. Such a situation could place inherent pressure on a subordinate, sources said. ...

Clapper’s calls, knowledgeable sources speaking on condition of anonymity said, placed Grove in a difficult bureaucratic position: between the nominal leader of the entire US intelligence apparatus and his lower-level analysts, several of whom consider the year-long war against Isis to be in dire straits.

Grove and his civilian deputy, Greg Ryckman, are said to be the sources of dissatisfaction among analysts within Central Command, where an internal controversy about integrity in intelligence has now sparked an official inquiry by the Pentagon inspector general.

More than 50 intelligence analysts, both those within Central Command and their seconded Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) colleagues, have registered complaints about manipulated or skewed data, the Daily Beast reported on Wednesday. Analysts object to internal portrayals, said to come ultimately from Grove and Ryckman, of a war proceeding better than Isis’s persistent hold over large swaths of Iraq and Syria suggests. The existence of the Pentagon inquiry was first reported last month by the New York Times.

U.S. government blocks release of new CIA torture details

U.S. government officials have blocked the release of 116 pages of defense lawyers' notes detailing the torture that Guantanamo Bay detainee Abu Zubaydah says he experienced in CIA custody, defense lawyers said on Thursday.

The treatment of Zubaydah, who lost one eye and was waterboarded 83 times in a single month while held by the CIA, according to government documents, has been the focus of speculation for years.

"We submitted 116 pages in 10 separate submissions," Joe Margulies, Zubaydah's lead defense lawyer, told Reuters. "The government declared all of it classified."

Margulies and lawyers for other detainees said that the decision showed that the Obama administration plans to continue declaring detainees' accounts of their own torture classified. A Central Intelligence Agency spokesperson declined to comment. ...

Margulies said the 116 pages of notes he submitted for clearance were limited to Zubayda's description of his torture and did not include prohibited information.

Margulies said he followed "the rule to the letter" and accused the CIA of trying "guarantee that Abu Zubaydah never discloses what was done to him."

Zubaydah, a 44-year-old Saudi national, has been held in Guantanamo for nine years and not been charged with a crime.

The CIA Asks America to Please, Think of the Torturer

Tomorrow, the U.S. Naval Institute — a non-profit organization that encourages debate on national security — will publish the CIA’s rebuttal to the Senate’s torture report. The 353-page tome is mostly old news.

The bulk of Rebuttal: The CIA Responds to the Senate Intelligence Committee’s Study of Its Detainment and Interrogation Programis previously published work, including the CIA’s official response and the Senate minority response.

Its first 40 pages, however, are an intransigent masterpiece.

Eight editorial essays from agency luminaries such as George Tenet, Porter Goss and Jose Rodriguez, Jr. kick off the book. The pieces read like the grumpy tantrums of adult children begging the reader to remember the context of the torture program and realize the SSCI’s report was a politicized attack by Democrats.

The writers also quibble and squirm over the definition torture and … and, incredibly, beg readers to consider the feelings of the agents who performed the torture.

“I cannot tell you how disgusted my former colleagues and I felt to be labeled ‘torturers’ by the President of the United States,” writes Rodriguez, a 31-year CIA veteran. Rodriguez worries over the possibility that his colleagues might be criminally prosecuted for their actions at black sites.

“Having been the subject of a criminal investigation myself,” Rodriguez explains — investigators questioned him during the Iran-Contra affair. “I can tell you of the terrible effects such investigations have on the morale and well-being of individuals being investigated and their families.”

Remember, this man is writing about the psychological damage that possible pending criminal investigations could have on people who tortured other people.

Military Curfews, Firebombings, Airstrikes & Shattered Peace Deal: Is Turkey on Brink of Civil War?

Pentagon Intel Chief: Syria, Iraq Unlikely to Survive Current Wars

For months now, ISIS has controlled “more than half” of Syria’s territory. Al-Qaeda controls the Idlib Province, and they and various other factions control the border with Jordan. Meanwhile, Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has been acting as de facto independent for over a year, seizing disputed territory including the city of Kirkuk, while ISIS holds much of Western Iraq, including the major city of Mosul, which they’ve had for over a year.

It’s worth asking at this point whether Syria and Iraq are even a thing anymore, or indeed if they’ll become a thing again in the future. While the official US stance is “yes,” Pentagon intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Vincent Stewart conceded at a defense conference today that he has “a tough time” seeing either nation ever really coming back together.

Saudi Blockade Paralyzes Food Shipments to Yemen

A nation with little arable land, Yemen has long had to import some 90% of its food from abroad. This has traditionally meant ships, but with a Saudi-led naval blockade of the entire Yemeni coast for the past several months, it’s not easy to get those ships into port.

Many shipping companies have pulled out, since trying to deliver to Yemen means endless delays from the naval forces off the coast. Those who continue to try to deliver food warn of a growing risk of famine, particularly in the north, where the blockade is preventing virtually all shipments.

23 ships are parked off the cost of Hodeida alone, with no indication when or even if they’ll be allowed to dock. Even when they’re given the go-ahead, it’s difficult to make their deliveries since Saudi warplanes destroyed much of the port’s infrastructure in airstrikes, including the cranes that would usually lift huge cargoes of grain off the ships.

"I Saw With My Own Eyes That They Killed People": Afghan Speaks Out As U.S. Reopens War Crimes Probe

Disturbing Video Shows Migrants Being Thrown Food 'Like Animals' in Hungarian Camp

Hungarian police said on Friday they had launched an investigation after video posted online showed a crowd of migrants clamoring for food in a hangar at a reception center as police in surgical masks throw out packs of sandwiches.

The description of the footage says it was taken at a refugee camp in Roszke on Hungary's southern border with Serbia, where thousands of migrants have been crossing into the European Union every day.

"It was like animals being fed in a pen, like Guantanamo in Europe," Klaus Kufner, a volunteer at the camp, told AFP. ...

In an emailed response to Reuters' questions, police said they had launched an "emergency enquiry" into the matter, describing it as a fact-finding investigation, without elaborating.

Obama calls on US to resettle 'at least 10,000' Syrian refugees in 2016 fiscal year

New target not enough to clear backlog of 15,200 refugees awaiting resettlement as aid groups criticize move for being ‘barely a token contribution’

The White House announced on Thursday that President Barack Obama had called for resettling “at least 10,000” Syrian refugees in the United States in the next fiscal year, in what would be an exponential acceleration of US efforts so far to welcome the refugees.

But the plan immediately met with criticism from across the political spectrum, including an influential member of Congress who warned of security risks and aid groups who said the plan did not go far enough to address a historic humanitarian crisis.

The new target number for resettlements was unveiled as tens of thousands of refugees from four years of war in Syria and other conflicts continued to move on foot north through Europe, setting off a new round of global alarm.

While the 10,000 figure represented a significant leap above the 1,800 Syrian refugees total that the United States was expected to have admitted by the end of this month, it would not be enough to clear a backlog in the US resettlement program.

Under a referral program managed by the United Nations, 15,200 Syrian refugees currently await processing by the United States for resettlement, according to State Department figures. Security vetting and other processing for each refugee normally takes 18 to 24 months post-referral, the State Department has said, but aid groups have put the typical wait time at closer to about 33 months.

Kerry Exaggerates Recent Russian Role in Syria

Finland Proposes Taxing the Rich to Take in More Refugees

As Obama administration considers taking in 10,000 Syrian refugees, Finland plans on accepting 30,000

Finland on Thursday proposed raising taxes on high earners to help pay for an influx of refugees that is expected to arrive later this year from war-torn regions in the Middle East and Africa.

Finance Minister Alexander Stubb said the highest bracket of earners would pay one percent more on capital gains taxes, while those who make more than $81,000 USD (72,300 euros) a year would pay what Stubb referred to as a "solidarity tax."

"These will help to cover higher immigration costs which we estimate to be about 114 million euros this year," Stubb said on Thursday at a press conference.

Finland is expected to take in 30,000 new refugees, compared to just 3,600 last year, at a time when the numbers of asylum seekers from Syria, Eritrea, and Afghanistan, among other countries in the Middle East, are rising with meteoric speed.

'Where to Invade Next': Michael Moore Fights US Empire with Progressive Solutions

Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, known for his provocative critiques of American politics, institutions, and culture, this week premiered his newest project—Where to Invade Next, an exploration of European countries that value progressive policies and quality of life.

Opening at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) on Thursday, the satirical documentary received "eager laughter and frequent applause," writes the Hollywood Reporter.

While its title implies a judgment of U.S. military policy, the film is, in fact, "an impishly entertaining, career-summarizing polemic bent on demonstrating how other countries around the world—with their happy workers, superior schools, humane prisons, healthy sexual attitudes and fully empowered women—are putting U.S. progress to shame," writes Variety.

This is an interesting interview with public intellectual Henry Giroux, it's an opportunity to hear him speak plainly, outside of the context of an academic article. Here's an excerpt to whet the appetite:

The Violence of Neoliberalism and the State of the American Left - An interview with Henry Giroux

What are your thoughts on Bernie Sanders and his candidacy within Democratic Party? Few months ago Ralph Nader said: “He makes Clinton a better phony candidate. She is going to have to agree with him on a number of things. She is going to have to be more anti-Wall Street to fend him off and neutralize him. We know it is bullshit. She will betray us once she becomes president. He is making her more likely to win. And by April he is done. Then he fades away.”

HG. The response to Bernie Sanders from the right is to dismiss him as a socialist, a term that stands in for everything conservatives don’t like, such as economic justice, but refuse to talk about. Various elements on the left dismiss him because of his support for Israel’s bombing of Gaza, the war on terror, the military budget, and his failure to reach out to racial and ethnic minorities. What I think is notable about Sanders is that he is highlighting the lack of democracy in the United States and talking about issues that are crucial to address. These range from breaking up the banks, a single-payer health care system, the regulation of drug prices, a tax on corporate trading, stronger labor unions, elimination of corporate tax havens, an investment in crumbling infrastructures, new economic models for producing jobs, the raising of the minimum wage, and the expanding of social Security Medicare, Medicaid and nutrition programs. These are all worthwhile goals. On another level, Sanders offers a platform grounded in reason, justice, and logic. He offsets the Donald Trump campaign which is grounded in spectacle, crass populism, appeals to hate, racism, and mobilizes moral panics. Sanders proves at one level that there is still room in the American public to challenge the fascist mobilization of desire, emotion and nonreason. My critique of Sanders following that of Chris Hedges, Jeffrey St. Clair, Stanley Aronowitz and others is that the problem is that Sanders is pushing for radical reforms within the Democratic Party, which is completely in the hands of the corporate elite. This is a party that is not only reproduces a morally and politically bankrupt system, but embraces almost all of what can be called the pathologies of neoliberalism. Sanders is useful only in that he provides a case study on why his platform, which is progressive, should be in the hands of an independent political party and not the corporatized Democratic Party. Also, there is those reactionary elements in Sanders’s politics that must be addressed and include his support of the war machine industries,  his support for the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, his silence on Israel, and his refusal to argue for a an independent political formation outside of the democratic party.  Remember the Democratic party is the party of war and surveillance, a party that shreds civil liberties, prosecutes whistle blowers, and uses the police to quell student demonstrations, strikes, and collective dissent that spills into the streets. Sanders is a decent man operating in a dead end political machine and in that sense his failure should serve as an insight into the limits of the kind of politics he is endorsing.

Intelligence Overseer Says Press Is More Aggressive Post Snowden

The press has become more aggressive about reporting on national security in the post-Snowden world, ranking House Intelligence Committee member Adam Schiff said Thursday.

Speaking to a convention of government contractors, the California Democrat attributed the change partly to “less confidence or trust” in the government, and partly to a “rush to publish.”

“One of the dynamics that has really changed post-Snowden is the conversations that traditionally have taken place between the media and the intelligence community — when the media has a story, and they go to the IC and say we’re going to run with this story, and there’s a discussion of, OK, what impact would that have, and the newspaper’s willingness to effectively self censor, not publish out of the public interest — I think that dynamic has changed,” Schiff said during a roundtable discussion at the annual Intelligence and National Security Summit at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center.

DOJ Vows to Crack Down on Corporate Criminals, But Watchdogs Skeptical

After years of letting Wall Street greed run rampant, the U.S. Department of Justice is now claiming that it will finally crack down on corporate criminals.

But observers and watchdog organizations say that a set of new guidelines, authored by Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates on Wednesday, come "way too late" and do not, in themselves, constitute bold action.

"The memo amounts to a striking admission that the DOJ's policy on Wall Street corporate crime has been completely ineffective," said Robert Weissman, president of watchdog group Public Citizen, in a statement released Thursday. "The real test going forward will be if the agency can put this policy into action and enforce it aggressively." ...

New York Times reporters Matt Apuzzo and Ben Protess reported the guidelines Wednesday night as the "first major policy announcement by Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch since she took office in April."

But buried within the Times article are key qualifiers. "Because the memo lays out guidelines, not laws, its effect will be determined largely by how Justice Department officials interpret it," Apuzzo and Protess wrote. "And several of the points in the memo merely codify policy that is already in place."

Seattle teacher strike: parents show support despite scheduling upheaval

Eleven kids, 25 quesadillas and two days into Seattle’s first major teacher’s strike in 30 years, David Seawell’s child-wrangling duties were done for the day Thursday night. With parents rushing to find last-minute childcare, Seawell and four other families from Hawthorne Elementary collaborated to create an ad hoc childcare collective – a creative solution for a situation that took many by surprise.

Despite the inconvenience, Seawell fully supports the teachers entering the third day of a strike that kept kids home on their first days back at school.

“The fact that 30 minutes of guaranteed recess for elementary school was a ‘sticking point’ before the strike ... it’s shameful that the district was pushing back on that,” Seawell said.

Many parents are expressing similar concerns with the district’s emphasis on over-testing and under-playing. While there have been the odd yells of “You’re paid too much already!” from a handful of passing motorists, the feedback from the community has been overwhelmingly supportive – both on and offline.

The teacher strike developed after negotiations broke down over wages and other issues. After receiving no cost of living increases in six years, teachers are balking at the district’s proposal to add another half hour of instruction time without additional pay. Many point out that educators work nights and weekends – time that remains unpaid and unaccounted for.

The district maintains that they simply do not have the money to meet the teachers’ demands.

'There's No Going Back': Why Spain and Catalonia Are on Immediate Collision Course Over Independence

Catalonia now stands on the brink of a historic election that will serve as a de-facto referendum on the Spanish region's independence. The electoral campaign begins today — somewhat fittingly on September 11, the National Day of Catalonia — and over 1 million independence supporters will gather on the streets on Barcelona.

On September 27, the region will take to the voting booths and if the separatist parties win an absolute majority many are predicting that they will begin preparation to secede unilaterally from Spain within 18 months. ...

The pro-independence faction sees the election as a unique opportunity to begin the emancipation of the Catalan people from the bullying, centralist Madrid government. Unionists see Catalan nationalism as a dangerous form of populism doomed to divide a region and cripple the economy. What both agree on, however, is that a unilateral declaration of independence would be a watershed moment in history, not only for Catalonia, but also Spain itself, Europe's fifth largest economy. ...

All this comes at a delicate moment for Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy who is hoping that gradual economic recovery will help his right-wing Popular Party (PP) win another term at the general election due before the end of the year.

Rajoy has taken a hardline on the Catalan question, warning voters against the "virus of disunity" and endowing Spain's Constitutional Court with further powers to neuter any unilateral attempt to secede

Venezuela opposition leader Leopoldo López jailed for nearly 14 years

Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López has been sentenced to nearly 14 years in prison, further heightening tensions in the country’s already polarised political landscape.

Convicted of inciting violence in his role as the leader of a 2014 street protest movement, López was reported to be calm as judge Susana Barreiros read the sentence of 13 years, 9 months and seven days in prison.

In a closed-door trial human rights advocates decried as politically motivated and deeply flawed, the judge allowed only one of the 60 defence witnesses proposed by his lawyers, and rejected 30 proposed exhibits, according to his lawyers.

Roberta Jacobson, the United States’ assistant secretary of state for the Western Hemisphere, said on her Twitter feed she was “deeply troubled by the conviction of Leopoldo Lopez” and called on the Venezuelan government to protect democracy and human rights.

López, a 44-year-old US-educated economist who hails from a wealthy family, is the leader of the more radical wing of the Venezuelan opposition, and has advocated for the removal of the leftist government led by President Nicolás Maduro. His radicalism has won him a loyal following among some and the ire of government supporters.

‘There is no parliamentary authority for military action in Syria’ – British MP Jeremy Corbyn

Jeremy Corbyn set to beat 100-1 odds to become leader of UK's Labour party

A longtime peace activist and rebellious local politician is poised to radically alter British political dynamics as he looks set to be elected the Labour party’s new leader, riding a wave of popularity that threatens to split his party.

Jeremy Corbyn, a soft-spoken leftwing lawmaker, is no career politician, nor a naive idealist. The 66-year-old socialist MP for London’s Islington North has been in parliament for 32 years, during which time he has voted against his own party leadership more than 500 times and had the lowest expenses of any MP.

His backers say his leadership will finally mean a choice for voters seeking an authentic and principled politician, anti-austerity and anti-elitism. His detractors, many in his own party, say he will turn Britain’s main opposition party into a political pressure group at best, with no hope of regaining office. ...

Corbyn’s vision is for Labour to campaign for a radical upheaval of the economic system, not be a softer “Tory-lite” party which also commits to spending cuts. His economic commitments are popular with the young, he has promised to bring the railways into public ownership and abolish university tuition fees. He champions “People’s Quantitive Easing”, which would allow the Bank of England to print money for housing projects, energy, infrastructure and digital development. ...

As a fervent anti-war and pro-Palestinian activist, Corbyn has attracted the most stringent criticism for his foreign policy, with the Conservative chancellor, George Osborne, going so far as to call him a “national security threat”. He opposes the funding of Britain’s Trident nuclear missile system and has previously indicated he would favour leaving Nato, or even the European Union, though he has played down both those ideas during the campaign.

Most notable of his desire to break with the past has been his promise to apologise for Tony Blair’s decision to go to war in Iraq, should he become leader.



the horse race



Jeb Bush — and Rest of GOP — Court Adviser Who’s “Not a Big Believer in Democracy”

Before Jeb! Bush unveiled his tax! plan! on Wednesday, he met in Manhattan with Stephen Moore, an economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation. Also there were Steve Forbes (whose family owned Forbes Magazine until they sold it last year to Hong Kong-based investors) and Larry Kudlow (a CNBC contributor and the worst economic prognosticator since Irving Fisher).

Moore, Forbes and Kudlow wield real power in parts of the Republican Party, and together with economist Arthur Laffer have created something called the Committee to Unleash Prosperity. ...

What’s particularly notable about this is that Moore is honestly, straightforwardly dismissive of the importance of democracy. In the 2009 movie Capitalism: A Love Story, Moore went on camera to say, “Capitalism is a lot more important than democracy. I’m not even a big believer in democracy.”




The Evening Greens



El Niño expected to hit US hard, but not enough to ease California drought

Climate officials are warning that this winter’s El Niño weather pattern is likely to be one of the strongest on record, bringing huge storms and a cold, wet winter for many – but nowhere near enough rainfall to reverse the disastrous long-term drought in the western US.

Any heavy rainfall will be welcome news for thirsty California, parched for the last four years by a historic dry period.

But people should not be fooled that the rain is the answer to long-depleted reservoirs and groundwater supplies and overuse in the bone-dry state, the scientists warned on Thursday.

Meanwhile, a forecast of El Niño bringing a dry, warm winter in the northern half of the US will not help the north-west’s chances of avoiding a repeat next summer of 2015’s deadly wildfires. However, as soon as any winter rains do arrive, the first storm brings a great risk of flash-flooding to areas of the region with a fire-blasted landscape, the experts warned.

The Climate Prediction Center of the federal National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warned that: “Strong El Niños can result in more frequent and intense storms and heavy rain and snowfall in certain parts of the country and an increase in tropical cyclones in the Pacific.”

The weather pattern already detected from El Niño that has kept the Atlantic hurricane season relatively quiet so far, however, is expected to continue to do so for the remainder of the fall, NOAA reported.

'Incredible News for Bees': Court Rejects EPA Pesticide Approval

Neonicotinoid known as sulfoxaflor may not be used in the U.S. until EPA obtains necessary scientific research

A federal appeals court on Thursday overturned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) approval of a controversial pesticide, saying the agency violated federal law by giving a green light without obtaining or reviewing reliable studies on the neonicotinoid's impact on honeybees.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal's ruling (pdf) in the case, which was brought by environmental law firm Earthjustice, means that the pesticide in question—a neonicotinoid known as sulfoxaflor—may not be used in the U.S. unless the EPA re-approves it after obtaining the necessary analysis of its effects on pollinators.

Other neonicotinoids, such as clothianidin, imidacloprid, and thiamethoxam, have been linked to population declines among honeybees, bumblebees, and other insects, which environmental activists say threatens food security.

Trendsetting Manhattan Leads in Methane Leaks, Too

Methane is spewing from more than 1,000 natural gas leaks under Manhattan, giving it 10 times the number of leaks per mile in its aging natural gas pipelines as cities with more up-to-date infrastructure, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.

Methane is the second-largest contributor to global warming after carbon dioxide, making the reduction of methane emissions a high priority in fighting climate change.

While methane emissions are significantly smaller than those of CO2, methane is much more potent as a greenhouse gas, trapping 86 times more heat in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide over a 20-year period and 34 times more over 100 years.

In the study, researchers measured concentrations of methane on the streets of New York, which has a high concentration of decades-old cast iron and steel pipes beneath its streets. They compared the findings with measurements in Durham, N.C., and Cincinnati, which recently replaced their aging pipelines.

"What was surprising was how well [pipeline replacement] programs worked," said lead author Robert Jackson of Stanford University. "They reduced leaks to very low densities." ....

Replacing the pipes, some of which have been in use for more than 100 years, also improves air quality and reduces the risk of explosion. One such explosion killed eight people and destroyed an apartment building in East Harlem in 2014.


Also of Interest

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

Spy Chief James Clapper Compares U.S. ‘Intelligence Community’ to Spider-Man

How Hungary's Prime Minister Turned From Young Liberal Into Refugee-Bashing Autocrat

New Pluto images confirm it as a world of mysteries

'There have to be limits': mixed feelings from Germans over refugees

The stories Americans tell about 9/11 leave out discrimination against Muslims

Want to Know What’s Really Going on in Syria? Warning: It’ll Take You More Than 5 Minutes


A Little Night Music

Otis Rush and Eric Clapton - Double Trouble

Otis Rush - Three Times a Fool

Otis Rush - Homework

Otis Rush - Hold That Train

Otis Rush - Natural Ball

Otis Rush - My Own Fault

Otis Rush - As The Years Go Passing By

Otis Rush - All Your Love I Miss Loving

Otis Rush feat. Eric Clapton & Luther Allison - Every Day I Have The Blues

Otis Rush - My Love Will Never Die

Otis Rush - It Takes Time

Otis Rush - Whole Lotta Lovin'

Otis Rush - Tore Up

John Mayall ft Otis Rush - So Many Roads

Otis Rush and Friends at Montreux 1986



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MarilynW's picture

Good news Joe. Thanks for that, it makes my day.

But I want more, how about banning Round up?

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To thine own self be true.

joe shikspack's picture

i want more, too. now that the court has pronounced epa's work in approving pesticides to be slipshod and substandard, i would like to see somebody revisit their approvals for previous neonics and see if they can be banned, too.

banning roundup would be a great thing to do, i'm so sick of seeing brown stripes by the roadside where the state road crews have sprayed that crap so that they don't have to mow or cut brush.

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MarilynW's picture

That's a small step towards banning Roundup, the name brand of glyphosate.

Health Canada (severely weakened by PM Harper and the subject of mockery) has announced a plan for warning labels on Roundup.

  • A statement indicating to apply only when the potential for drift to residential or populated areas is minimal.
  • A 12-hour restricted entry period for agricultural uses to better protect agricultural workers;
  • New environmental hazard statements to inform users that, at high enough doses, it can be toxic to non-targeted species.
  • Recommended spray buffer zones to protect land and aquatic habitats from unintended exposure.
  • Precautionary statements to reduce the potential for run-off of glyphosate to adjacent aquatic habitats.

A pretty weak-assed move. What's wrong with this
thumb_Screen Shot 2015-09-11 at 5.56.22 PM.png
on the label?

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To thine own self be true.

joe shikspack's picture

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enhydra lutris's picture

Earthjustice is going after at least 2 more neonicotinoids according to their latest e-mail.

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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

excellent! (said in my best mr. burns voice)

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mimi's picture

the rest has to wait til I can read it later. It's always good to see the quotes the first thing before one hits the news section.

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link

The United States is sending an additional 75 U.S. troops and other assets to Egypt's Sinai Peninsula to bolster the security of international peacekeepers, who have come under attack from militants in recent days, the Pentagon said on Thursday.
...
The announcement came a week after bomb attacks wounded six soldiers, including four Americans, who were assigned to the Multinational Force and Observer (MFO) peacekeeping mission. Cook said planning began before that incident.
..
There are more than 700 U.S. troops currently based in Sinai, the majority of whom are in the southern part of the peninsula, said Pentagon spokesman Major Roger Cabiness.

Why? Just why?

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joe shikspack's picture

that might damage some very valuable sand?

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MarilynW's picture

I can think of a hundred places they could be sent within the country to protect the environment.

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To thine own self be true.

mimi's picture

in the field of protecting the environment is not easy. It's amazing and infuriating.

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Hey Joe here's the update I promised on the Snowy Range Music Festival.

Let's start with the line up to see if you know anybody or if you want to include them sometime in the Evening Blues. And if there's an asterisk its because they were great. And a double asterisk its because there is a story to tell.
Claudettes
Blues Encounter**
Taylor Scott Band*
Billy Branch Orchestra**
Anne Harris*
Cherry Poppin' Dadies
Los Lonely Boys
Dexter Allen**
Super Chickan
Josh Hoyer and the Shadowboxers*
BlindDog Smokin'*
Indigenous*
Big Sam's Funky Nation
Nic Clark Taylor Scott and Andy Sydow**
Trudy Lynn & Steve Krase
Lionel Young
Ken Saydak, John Stilwagon, Mike Hurwitz

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Homers24

joe shikspack's picture

i'm familiar with billy branch and i've featured him before in the evening blues, both on his own and with other harmonica players. i'm also familiar to some degree with los lonely boys and indigenous and have heard of the cherry poppin' daddies. super chikan i've seen and have a couple of his cd's, but i've only ever featured a couple of his songs in the eb because the last time i looked (a while ago) the pickings on youtube were pretty slim for him. hopefully there's more there now.

sounds like you had a great time given the number of starred performers on your list.

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Billy Branch, Cherry Poppin' Daddies, Los Lonely Boys, Super Chikan, Indigenous and of course Blinddog Smokin'. What I want to know is how was Blinddog, they're one of my favorites.

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... tore the house down.

And that is no small feat because this house is the Albany County Fair Grounds and there isn't a real house between the Snowy Range and Nebraska. And they still brought it down ... just beat it to the ground.

And they had some help. They also had Billy Branch, Anne Harris, and Big Llou Johnson on stage with them. But oh my God did they bring it down.

And get this. They not only threw out Mardi gras beads during the show at the end of it they handed out probably more than 100 long stemmed roses to the crowd.

But I swear it was one of the best sets I've ever seen BlindDog pull off and Carl and his pimp shoes routine was hilarious.

And PS this whole riff of mine and in fact the entire Snowy Range Music Festival is all Carl Gustafson's fault. He's the one who started it and has breathed life into it ever since.

PPSS And don't even get me started on my hero Chicago Chuck.

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Homers24

especially with the extra help. Heh, would have loved to seen Pimp Shoes! Did anyone record it?

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Billy Branch's wife (an amazing presence in and of herself) had her video camera going. But as far as someone official where we could find it on youtube I'm afraid its gone with the wind.

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Homers24

gulfgal98's picture

It looks like a good selection of both music and articles tonight.

I have been out most of the afternoon so I have not had a chance to read most of them yet. I hope to read more later. Thank you for bringing EB over here. Good

Edit to add: I am looking out my window and see two beautiful mourning doves on the branch outside the window. They llok like they are getting ready to nap. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

joe shikspack's picture

heh, mourning doves always look like they're either eating or napping. the ones around here just sit under the bird feeder waiting for the more active birds to spill seeds out of the feeder to them.

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gulfgal98's picture

they dropped down and foraged on the ground for leftover seeds. I love mourning doves.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

burnt out's picture

All talked out for the day, so just gonna kick back and listen and learn from all the smart folks that'll be showing up here tonight. Thanks

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All I want is the truth. Just give me some truth. John Lennon

joe shikspack's picture

sounds like a good plan for a friday night. i'm pretty wiped from a busy end of the week so i may just take up the same plan. B)

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... take a step back and just let me roll.

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Homers24

... because they are not what they might appear. First because its only three guys; Johnny Long, Little Joe McLleran, & David Berntson. And they just play blues and a little ragtime even if Little Joe is one of those guys that if you watch him play the guitar you'd swear he's got six fingers on each hand.

But that's not the story.

You see each morning of the festival starts with a guitar and harmonica workshop before the main bands start playing. And for two years in a row now Little Joe and his dad David have put them on. And both of the workshops attract all kinds of people from novices like me to actually more experienced. But two things you can count on is there are going to be a few kids there and before it is over Little Joe, David, and this year Johnny are going to get those kids on stage with them. And I should have said three things because the third thing is once they've been on stage with them those kids are never going to be the same. Because somehow they just pull more music out of those kids than they ever knew they had in them and its enough to make you cry. Or at least make me cry. Last year it was a 10 year-old boy named Josh. Who this year had his harp in his mouth and his hat on the ground raking in pretty good money(including some of mine) outside the venue. And this year it was "Stixx" who was an eight year-old drummer named Jordan before the took the stage and set down at that drum set and was Stixx before she got off because she got a little braver with every song and then just took off.

I've got her autograph on the bill of my cap.

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Homers24

joe shikspack's picture

i really appreciate our local blues society doing, from sponsoring some blues in school programs to getting younger players on stage with established musicians that really inspires a lot of kids. i'll never forget the look on one young fellow's face after he got to play a couple of tunes on stage with hubert sumlin, who was a very generous, kind-hearted man.

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... so I can tell you about Dexter Allen.

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Homers24

The oil bust is nearly a year old now, and all the way down we were assured that the frackers would survive and Saudi Arabia would fold.
It turns out the people bullish on shale oil were bullsh*tting us

If you believe all the recent stories about how Saudi Arabia is losing the price war it started against U.S. tight oil producers last year, the new Oil Market Report from the International Energy Agency offers a reality check. The Saudis are winning, though they're paying a heavy price for it.
...
IEA data show monthly contractions of 90,000 barrels a day in July and almost 200,000 barrels a day in August. Output is dropping for all seven of the biggest U.S. shale plays. The IEA predicts that the U.S. production of light tight oil -- the type pumped by frackers -- will go down by 400,000 barrels a day next year, about as much as Libya currently produces. That drop will account for most of the 500,000 barrels a day drop in production outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries that the agency predicts for 2016. Production is also dropping in Canada: It's below 4 million barrels a day for the first time in 20 months.
The IEA doesn't believe shale oilers' incantations about drastically lower marginal cost of producing oil from already drilled wells. It points out that tight oil wells dry up much faster than traditional ones: Recent data show that output drops 72 percent within 12 months of startup and 82 percent in the first two years of operation. "To grow or even to sustain production levels requires continuous investment," the IEA report says. Low oil prices reduce frackers' access to the capital they need, and rig counts are falling again -- in early September the drop was the steepest since May.
The number of active rigs has fallen by 40 percent from a year ago. They are far more productive, because they are only being used in the most profitable locations, but that tactic has largely exhausted itself. A steeper production decline cannot be staved off for much longer.
None of this should come as a surprise. If there is one thing the Saudis know about, it's oil.

No, it shouldn't have been a surprise, but some investors will be surprised anyway.
U.S. Shale producers $32 Billion in the first 6 months of the year. Plus, they are starting to have trouble selling bonds and equities.
rig-well.jpg
However, the real pain is just around the corner.

“If oil prices stay at these levels, the number of bankruptcies and distress deals will undoubtedly increase.”
Debt repayments will increase for the rest of the decade, with $72 billion maturing this year, about $85 billion in 2016 and $129 billion in 2017, according to BMI Research. About $550 billion in bonds and loans are due for repayment over the next five years.
In the U.S., the number of bonds yielding greater than 10 percent has increased more than fourfold to 80 over the past year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Oil production could drop as much as 500,000 barrels a day. The overhang of debt is going to crush many of the frackers.
losingmoney.jpg
It isn't just frackers that will feel the pain. Canadian tar sand miners are being hit too.

More than three-quarters of Canada's daily output of 2.2 million barrels of crude from oil sands is being produced at a loss at current prices, research from analysts at TD Securities shows, although producers are unlikely to halt operations.
Every thermal oil sands player is bleeding cash on every barrel produced with U.S. crude around $41 and the Canadian heavy benchmark, Western Canada Select (WCS), around $24 a barrel, according to a report released by the bank on Wednesday.

Much like the oil bust of 1986, this oil bust will impact commercial real estate.
cmbs.png

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joe shikspack's picture

couldn't happen to a nicer bunch.

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MarilynW's picture

it has poisoned wells and aquifers. We can't afford fracking.

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To thine own self be true.

enhydra lutris's picture

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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 --

... they had two things going for them. One is they were so damn good you could not help but start moving and grinning. And the more we moved and grinned the harder they played and the more they grinned. You could just tell they were loving it and feeding off us.

But Dexter now ... he's got a little different thing. He would make eye contact with a member of the audience, lock eyes on them like a laser beam and then just hit it just for that one person in a heart stopping crescendo. And I'd never seen that before and thought I'd seen it all.

Until Dexter jumped right off the stage and started walking up to people right in the audience. Some of which nearly fainted.

And then one of the people he walked up to was my four year-old grandson, Cohen, who was just rocking out. But for Cohen just memorizing him wasn't enough. I swear to you he brought that guitar down to Cohen's level and made him strum it.

Ok ... now that is another kid that is never going to be the same for the rest of his life after Dexter Allen gave him a little piece of his soul.

Man ... what a scene!!!

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Homers24

I'm there, baby, I'm there!

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joe shikspack's picture

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gulfgal98's picture

is the Mountain Song Festival. It sells out every year and some great musicians come to it. We are not attending, but it is a very big deal. First, because the Steep Canyon Rangers are always there. Why? Because three of the six full time members live here. But also because the Mountain Song Festival is a fund raiser for the local Boys and Girls Club which was founded by the late Cindy Platt, the mother of Woody Platt who is the guitarist and lead singer with the Rangers. It is always held at the Brevard Music Center which features a 2,000 seat open air auditorium.

From the Asheville Citizen Times newspaper.

Ten years ago when Woody Platt started Mountain Song Festival as a fundraiser for the Boys and Girls Club, Brevard was a blip outside Asheville, the festival was modest and Platt’s band, Steep Canyon Rangers, was still working for the wide fan base it captures today.

Now, Mountain Song Fest is a three-day event featuring some of the most respected names in Bluegrass: Ricky Skaggs, Del McCoury Band, The Milk Carton Kids, Larry Keel Experience and, of course, Steep Canyon Rangers, among others.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

joe shikspack's picture

great line-up! i've never had the chance to see the steep canyon rangers and have wanted to for some years now. i'll be seeing del and david grisman, though in november. woohoo!

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gulfgal98's picture

here at the White Squirrel Festival one year. They were awesome. Woody's wife, Shannon Whitworth, is also a singer/musician as well as a painter. Guitarist and singer, Woody Platt, mandolin player, Mike Guigino, and percussionist, Mike Ashworth are all from Brevard.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

gulfgal98's picture

I personally think her vocal range is limited, but my husband really likes her. Wink

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FS6mg5uhCBk]

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

joe shikspack's picture

as they say. B)

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not attending, bummer and a half gg!!

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Shahryar's picture

extending the definition slightly (but not too much) here are the Four Just Men from Manchester. Well, the Mersey River does go through Manchester too!

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joe shikspack's picture

i like that ventures-like guitar riff that punctuates the lines of the verses - very cool!

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title: How corruption threatens democracy in Turkey

sub title: In hindsight, when considering the major corruption investigations of December 2013 that were derailed by crooked Islamist rulers, and the terrible democratic experience the nation has had to endure since then, I'm sure Turks now have a better and clearer understanding of the importance of the link between corruption and democracy.

You might recall the announcement of corruption investigations in Dec 2013. Erdogan has used power to fire thousands and avoid the law since then.

When corruption undermines the pillars of democracy, especially the rule of law, independent auditing, media scrutiny and parliamentary oversight, democracy is interrupted. In turn, the nation has been left unable to effectively address fundamental challenges, from homegrown political crises to ethnic and sectarian polarization, and from growing economic difficulties to mounting security challenges.

The fact that corrupt politicians, including President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, his family members, and his political and business associates, are terrified to give full account of what they have done, as part of what has turned out to be a long-running graft network, reveals how easy it is to subvert the rules of democracy and destroy democratic institutions.

another article title & subtitle

Erdoğan and the four missed golden opportunities

Though it was not long ago a country seen as a problem-solving interlocutor in the Middle East and a model of democracy for the Islamic world, Turkey has somehow turned overnight into a country where terror takes more lives every day and whose global authority has dwindled as its tomorrows look unsure.

a third column - title & sub title - how hard to have a political party with AKP against you and PKK radicals ready to fight

The HDP’s twin enemies: the AKP and the PKK

It is becoming obvious that the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) acted differently to the expectations of both the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) when HDP Co-chair Selahattin Demirtaş declared in Parliament, “We will not let you [President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan] become [a Turkish-style] president.”

Things continue to get worse and since Erdogan does not want to go to jail, expect him to make it even worse. Chances of cancelling the Nov 1 election go up as Erdogan looses more and more support. And, one can be put in jail for speaking ill of Erdogan

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joe shikspack's picture

erdogan really appears to want to be a tin-pot dictator in the worst way. i hope that the turkish people can pull this back from the brink.

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Azazello's picture

Evenin' everybody. Love that picture of HRC at the Giroux link. El Nino is usually good for Tucson, all our record floods have come in October of El Nino years. I'm thinking about planting another mesquite tree, let El Nino water it in.
Have a great night all.

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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

heh, hillary looks pretty animated there, doesn't she?

good luck with that mesquite tree. i hope that the flooding treats you well.

have a good one!

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Crider's picture

I looked it up, and September eleventh is still officially called Patriot Day by the federal government.

the_tourist_guy1.jpg

[video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=208t80uceSg width:420 height:315]

I'm delighted to read that the neonicotinoid insecticides have been quashed by that judge!

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MarilynW's picture

The weather is wrong, Sept. 11, 2001 was a very clear day and it's the wrong kind of plane.
Some other wrongs I have missed.

Patriot Day? what a mockery!

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To thine own self be true.

Crider's picture

THat's why it is such an appropriate icon for that day and what followed!

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MarilynW's picture

and it's just as fake as the response to the tragedy.

Well done.

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To thine own self be true.

joe shikspack's picture

hey, happy patriot day! i guess i better go plant little flags all over my lawn. B)

have a great evening.

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MarilynW's picture

Blue Jays vs Yankees. Flags held up and 3 veterans from Operation Enduring Freedom were honoured.

*Enduring freedom to drop bombs on civilians, to rendition suspects, to kill suspects even American Citizens

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To thine own self be true.

hecate's picture

Enduring Fiefdom. That is the correct name for that thing.

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as you said, easier to read than Henry's writing

printed it out and read it

well done - where the country is - where liberalism is

and what a contrast to most of what happens in politics

surprised that Henry does not think that Bernie has a chance to win - my hunch is that the issues will stand up to the charge of socialism.

Henry assumes that by running as a democrat, he has taken on the cloak of the party

i don't think so

he will continue to push his issues

there are other issues like military that have not yet been addressed

so even if elected, the power could overwhelm him

it would for sure if he didn't rely on millions of Americans mobilized

and even that, will it be enough?

On the other hand, Bernie is the only hope for some movement in the right direction

Max Blumenthal made a video of people at the anti Iran rally. Those people are stupid and dangerous.

http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&I...

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joe shikspack's picture

he's right, the party is nothing but a republican-lite, corporate-driven machine to promote the interests of the 1%.

if bernie were to get elected, the only hope for him doing the right thing is if the movement that he summons grows beyond the dreams of its summoner and becomes an irresistable force, driving the money-changers out of the temple and creating real democracy.

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...the chance. If he can't do it with large grassroots support behind him, then it seems the only alternatives are either 1) to "just put up with this corrupt system, or 2) go on voting for 3rd party candidates and getting 2 or 3 % of the votes, or 3) get into the streets with dissent and non-compliance where blood will flow. Slim pickins'.

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gulfgal98's picture

I see Bernie as our voice and that is the reason I am voting for him. He is not our savior. He is not a magician who will make it suddenly become all right when he is elected. But he is the guy with the bully pulpit who is our voice. For me, that is big. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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

joe shikspack's picture

all good points. it is still very early in the electoral season and i am far from decided on voting. in many ways i feel that the movement behind sanders is more important than sanders candidacy itself and i am looking to see how that will shape up.

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mimi's picture

thinking about those people who protested in the video above as mentally so disturbed that they would need "therapeutic treatment". Palin included. Sorry for that. It irritates me all over again.

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