Thursday Open Thread 04-02-15

Good morning 99percenters!
Some morning news and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young with a little Buffalo Springfield thrown in.

The American empire is over: Afghanistan, China and our new bystander status
After a decade plus of war, the U.S. can only watch as China brokers Afghan peace. Here's where we went so wrong

Call it an irony, if you will, but as the Obama administration struggles to slow down or halt its scheduled withdrawal from Afghanistan, newly elected Afghan President Ashraf Ghani is performing a withdrawal operation of his own. He seems to be in the process of trying to sideline the country’s major patron of the last 13 years — and as happened in Iraq after the American invasion and occupation there, Chinese resource companies are again picking up the pieces.

In the nineteenth century, Afghanistan was the focus of “the Great Game” between the imperial powers of that era, Britain and Czarist Russia, and so it is again.  Washington, the planet’s “sole superpower,” having spent an estimated $1 trillion and sacrificed the lives of 2,150 soldiers fighting the Taliban in the longest overseas war in its history, finds itself increasingly and embarrassingly consigned to observer status in the region, even while its soldiers and contractors still occupy Afghan bases, train Afghan forces, and organize night raids against the Taliban.

In the new foreign policy that Ghani recently outlined, the United States finds itself consigned to the third of the five circles of importance.  The first circle contains neighboring countries, including China with its common border with Afghanistan, and the second is restricted to the countries of the Islamic world.
In the new politics of Afghanistan under Ghani, as the chances for peace talks between his government and the unbeaten Taliban brighten, the Obama administration finds itself gradually but unmistakably being reduced to the status of bystander. Meanwhile, credit for those potential peace talks goes to the Chinese leadership, which has received a Taliban delegation in Beijing twice in recent months, and to Ghani, who has dulled the hostility of the rabidly anti-Indian Taliban by reversing the pro-India, anti-Pakistan policies of his predecessor, Hamid Karzai.

Senator Menendez indicted on corruption charges

United States Senator Robert Menendez (D-New Jersey) has been indicted on federal corruption charges, federal authorities have announced, including eight counts of bribery. He denied any wrongdoing and insisted that he is not going anywhere.

Following news of the indictment, Senate aides told Reuters that Menendez will temoporarily step down as the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Panel. He is set to appear in court in Newark on Thursday.

A spokesperson for the US Department of Justice said that Menendez, 61, and a Florida medical professional, Dr. Salomon Melgen, are both named in an indictment unsealed on Wednesday this week “in connection with a bribery scheme in which Menendez allegedly accepted gifts from Melgen in exchange for using the power of his Senate office to benefit Melgen's financial and personal interests.”

The two were each indicted on one count of violating the travel act, eight counts of bribery and three counts of honest services fraud. Additionally, Menendez was also charged with one count of making false statements, according to Peter Carr, the Justice Dept. spokesperson.


How Big Business Is Helping Expand NSA Surveillance, Snowden Be Damned

Since November 11, 2011, with the introduction of the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, American spy agencies have been pushing laws to encourage corporations to share more customer information. They repeatedly failed, thanks in part to NSA contractor Edward Snowden’s revelations of mass government surveillance. Then came Republican victories in last year’s midterm Congressional elections and a major push by corporate interests in favor of the legislation.

Today, the bill is back, largely unchanged, and if congressional insiders and the bill’s sponsors are to believed, the legislation could end up on President Obama’s desk as soon as this month. In another boon to the legislation, Obama is expected to reverse his past opposition and sign it, albeit in an amended and renamed form (CISPA is now CISA, the “Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act”). The reversal comes in the wake of high-profile hacks on JPMorgan Chase and Sony Pictures Entertainment. The bill has also benefitted greatly from lobbying by big business, which sees it as a way to cut costs and to shift some anti-hacking defenses onto the government.

For all its appeal to corporations, CISA represents a major new privacy threat to individual citizens. It lays the groundwork for corporations to feed massive amounts of communications to private consortiums and the federal government, a scale of cooperation even greater than that revealed by Snowden. The law also breaks new ground in suppressing pushback against privacy invasions; in exchange for channeling data to the government, businesses are granted broad legal immunity from privacy lawsuits — potentially leaving consumers without protection if companies break privacy promises that would otherwise keep information out of the hands of authorities.

Ostensibly, CISA is supposed to help businesses guard against cyberattacks by sharing information on threats with one another and with the government. Attempts must be made to filter personal information out of the pool of data that is shared. But the legislation — at least as marked up by the Senate Intelligence Committee — provides an expansive definition of what can be construed as a cybersecurity threat, including any information for responding to or mitigating “an imminent threat of death, serious bodily harm, or serious economic harm,” or information that is potentially related to threats relating to weapons of mass destruction, threats to minors, identity theft, espionage, protection of trade secrets, and other possible offenses. Asked at a hearing in February how quickly such information could be shared with the FBI, CIA, or NSA, Deputy Undersecretary for Cybersecurity Phyllis Schneck replied, “fractions of a second.”

Leaked TPP Investment Chapter Reveals Serious Threat to User Safeguards

A newly leaked chapter of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement from Wikileaks has confirmed some of our worst fears about the agreement. The latest provisions would enable multinational corporations to undermine public interest rules through an international tribunal process called investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS). Under this process, foreign companies can challenge any new law or government action at the federal, state, or local level, in a country that is a signatory to the agreement. Companies can file such lawsuits based upon their claim that the law or action harms their present or future profits. If they win, there are no monetary limits to the potential award.

This type of tribunal process is not entirely new—similar provisions in other international agreements have been used to undermine laws regarding the environment, health, and other regulatory areas. However, this new leaked text has revealed how these investor-state provisions could also be used to undermine user protections built into digital regulations, including copyright rules.

The TPP Investment chapter encompasses intellectual property in its definition of foreign investment, including all "other tangible or intangible, movable or immovable property." In this way, it is similar to ISDS provisions in other trade agreements, including the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Under NAFTA, pharmaceutical giant Eli Lily, took advantage of this broad definition to target a Canadian court ruling that found one of its patents invalid. They are demanding Canada give them $500 million in damages, claiming that Canada has "expropriated" their property through this decision. This is one of the few, if only, known cases where an investor-state case has been filed over a patent issue. Since policymakers now always seem to group together patents, copyrights, trademarks, and other kinds of intangible "property" together, it is not a far leap for Big Content companies to feel emboldened by this patent case to begin undermining user rights in copyright law as well.

Crosby Stills Nash - Carry On / Questions

Crosby, Stills & Nash - Suite Judy Blue Eyes

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young - Ohio

Crosby, Stills & Nash - Wooden Ships

Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth

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Roger Fox's picture

I recently got an email from DKos asking me to log back in and write. I was essentially asked to look at my Facebook feed and pick a subject and write about it. In recent months that what DKos has become an extension of social media. I've noticed that what is on Facebook on Monday, is a Wreck list dairy on Tuesday.

Initially my interest in DKos was born of original writing, something that is quite rare today. The Democratic Underground Wreck list used to be filled with cross posts from DKos.

The last straw for me was when I asked Markos why dont Dems propose creating 20 million jobs, let the GOP vote against it, then run on the GOP killing 20 million jobs. Markos told me wouldn't work. So its not worth talking about.

#asshat

If a Democrat isn't about proposing solutions that actually address problems... like jobs, then that person isn't really a Democrat.

/end rant

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FDR 9-23-33, "If we cannot do this one way, we will do it another way. But do it we will.

NCTim's picture

... for their donor/bribe/sponsors. The we get shit like TPP, grand bargains and reduction to earned benefits.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

shaharazade's picture

days. I was glad to see both gulfgal98 and praenomen's dairy's in the last few days as they dealt with the Democratic party complete sell out by the neoliberal, neocon Third Way assholes that own it. I know full well what the Republican's are about but a Democratic site that refuses to address what's going on in their own house is beyond useless it's giving aid and succoring the creeping fascism and lawlessness of our current one party governance. Today it hit a new low I went to dkos and Armando has decided to lead the charge of Racist! over both of praenomen's diary's. The first regarding populism and his response to bbb's blatantly racist dismissal of populists liberal Democrat's leaving the party as white bubba's.

'Playing the race card' is the rallying call. They want Markos to step in and use his ban hammer on the racist's and punish the people who rec'ed the offending diaries. Bbb's offensive 'white bubba' diary is not mentioned, all that being derided is the words "Playing the race card." What a twisty way to censor and demonize the liberal left Democratic wing who are leaving the party in droves. Any real debate or conversation about the Democratic party's failure and take over is now buried under the pile of finger pointing and accusations of racism and hippie punching. Populist's are nasty racist's and it's whitey far lefty's fault the Democrat's are losing voters. Such misplaced venom and blame.

If they really want to help minorities and poc in this sad excuse of a representational republic they need to quit defending the politics of identity. They need to address the real systemic racism that both party's keep alive and well with their nasty ass anti-democratic by-partisan agenda both domestic and globally. The raging culture war provides a by-partisan smoke screen and enables the 1% elites to keep dismantling all social, political and parliamentary avenues for people to address their grievances.

I somehow cannot believe that the prominent pot stirrer's on dkos give a rats ass about real political solutions that would help restore some semblance of equality, justice and above all those inalienable human and civil rights. Delusional! as BTD once said before he lost his freaking mind.

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Roger Fox's picture

Clearly about clicks/revenues.

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FDR 9-23-33, "If we cannot do this one way, we will do it another way. But do it we will.

If it has anything to do with immigration and latinos, Kos turns into a bleeding heart. If it's spying, corruption, saving the safety net, meh.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Shahryar's picture

about 20 years ago one of our boys and his family moved to this town outside Portland. There were farms, fields, lots of open space, which I remember well.

But over time malls got put up. "Housing" got built (a lot of it is pretty ugly). When the town was incorporated in the late 60s the population was about 1000. By 1990 it was 7000, now 20,000. You get the idea.

If I wanted to I could go to one of the malls and half expect it to be an open field. That would be crazy though. It's not a field or a farm. It's an everlovin' mall. Why would I expect it to still be a site full of people with Democratic ideals? I mean, a field (trying to stay in the analogy).

It's still called Wilsonville but it's a different one. Some bits are the same, an awful lot has changed and not for the better.

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snoopydawg's picture

As for the people leaving the Democratic party, don't post or tec a comment about voting 3rd party.
I did once, and lost privelges for a week.
Markos has become the absent landlord.
That site sure ain't what it used to be as you summoned up nicely in your comment.
What was wrong under Bush is now ok under Obama.
People recced a comment about being able to sleep at nite since Obama is 'anti war'.
Guess they didn't notice he's expand d PNAC's goals and the Grand Chessboard goal in surrounding Russia with the ukraine coup.
Mention that and you're called a Putin lover.
I've met some great people there, but the political side is going off the rails.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

the diary but my tip on the tip jar wouldn't take. I tipped it 3 times and it never stuck, when I tipped it displayed my tip and my name but I'd come back later and it would be gone, I finally gave up. I've seen other people say that happened to them but that was a first for me.

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Shahryar's picture

your mention of "Putin lover" reminded me how many of them believe Snowden deliberately went to Russia because he loves it so. And that reminds me that they still believe lefties didn't vote in 2010 and that's why the Dem majority in the House was lost. Which reminds me that they think the 50,000 Florida Dem votes that Nader got in 2000 cost Gore the election but the 300,000 Dem votes for Bush didn't matter. Oh yeah, and Obama ended the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

A lot of the people we're trying to talk to are *those* people.

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one would think they might cater to their political interests instead of calling them bubbas and fucking retards.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Big Al's picture

They've made it about race since Obama took office. I don't know how they can even deny that.
They make it about race every fucking day when they rail against the tea party and the republicans, conservatives,
and now they're taking it even farther to go after all white males, like the 15% of white males in the
fucking republican party are representative of all white males in this fucking country.
I'm fucking pissed.

So that's why I'm swearing. I'm a Navy veteran, I'm pulling that card.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture


So that's why I'm swearing. I'm a Navy veteran, I'm pulling that card.

As someone who spent decades working with the military (as a civilian), I love it, LOL!

Give 'em h*ll!

I may pull that same card, too!

Aggressive

Mollie

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

Menendez is no different than Chris Christie - why not both of them?

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Big Al's picture

Because John Kerry does.

Life is simple sometimes.

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