Meanwhile, the week's just started and I believe we've already seen the idiot of the week. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Janet Napolitano. From Politico:
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Sunday that the thwarting of the attempt to blow up an Amsterdam-Detroit airline flight Christmas Day demonstrated that "the system worked."
The system did not work. Politico's got the video at the link. What an idiot. What a stupid moron. It was only luck that prevented a terrible tragedy and Napolitano wants to pretend the system worked?
What an idiot.
Kendra Marr (Politico) reports:
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano reversed course Monday and admitted the U.S. air travel security system failed after a Nigerian man allegedly attempted to blow up a plane on Christmas Day.
On the "Today" show, Napolitano said her comment over the weekend that “the system worked” was “taken out of context.” She said her words referred to the U.S. air travel security’s reaction — notifying law enforcement, airports and carriers — 60 to 90 minutes after the suspect tried to bring down the jetliner.
That's got video too.
What an idiot.
And to claim she was taken out of context? Her whole job is context. Idiot.
She truly is the idiot of the week. It's hard to believe anyone else can top her.
Okay, let's talk Third. As always Dallas helped and who else?
The Third Estate Sunday Review's Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess, and Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
It was a long, long writing edition.
- Truest statement of the week
- Because it was long, C.I. went ahead with this. If we weren't all exhausted, she would have said no. She would have said find someone else. But she was just too damn tired. Can't blame her. And this is a truest. We all agree on that.
- Truest statement of the week II
- This is Helen Redomond and C.I. is the one who recommended this.  It's a great choice. 
- A note to our readers
- Jim breaks down the edition.
- Editorial: 'Universal' health care
- This was a quick editorial.  We had an idea for something longer but this worked.  Betty and C.I. really took the rough sketch here and made it better. 
- TV: That fall season
- Ava and C.I. go epic in this amazing piece that's a year-in-review and also one of the strongest advocating pieces for women you'll come across. My dad called to point out that the anti-woman Terry Gross did the hour with Quentin Tarantino tonight. That's Terry Gross.
- Barack and Bush: Separated at Birth
- They really are two of kind.  It's amazing Bush didn't come out and endorse Barack in 2008.  Barack just carries on Bush's legacy.
- Must see film for 2010
- Dad loved this pick. He loves this film. More American Graffiti is a good film. I like the first one and it's funny and all but this one's not really going for as many laughs. But it does deliver laughs. Especially with Terry the Toad fighting the authority.
- Iraq: The War Continues
- Our Iraq piece.  C.I. and I basically worked on this and she said, "Mike, I'm just too tired."  I was too.  We could have made this much longer but it was already after 11 in the morning (my time) and we'd been working since ten that night.
- The Best Actress of the 20th Century
- Bette Davis. I agree with this and did before we wrote it. My big surprise was that I agree (and only did this month) that Joan Crawford was a better actress than Katharine Hepburn. Stan was bringing up some of her films -- he sees a lot of old films -- and so I checked some out (Elaine had seen most) and she can act. But Katharine Hepburn's always the same and it doesn't always work for her. Most of the time it doesn't. And once she hits her 40s, she's really pretty much a joke.
- Ty's Corner
- Ty's amazing and lengthy piece. He went and added some links today. He also went in and added some links to Ava and C.I.'s TV piece. He really would have loved to have had more time to work on this and when you praise him, he'll just say this is wrong or this should have had more and on and on. But this is really great. He wrote an amazing article.
- Roundtable
- This was it. We had either written everything or roughed it out or whatever and we did this. It worked out really great, I think. And I'm in it. If you read it when it went up, you didn't see me and Cedric. Jim took our question out. How come? I'm talking about my youngest sister who can get mad if she's written about online (which I realy don't worry about). Dona said, "Call Trina." And so they talked to my mom and she said she'd call my sister and find out but my sister was out like a light at her place so this went up and Jim added our comments later when he got approval. Apologies to Cedric who had to wait to have his comments included since he and I were both responding to the same question.
- Idiot of the Week
- Prohibition never works and it takes a real idiot to claim that it does.
- Highlights
And that's that and I'm tired and, confession, also wanting to watch Terminator Salvation. I did not know that Elaine loved the films. I would have suggested we see it this summer. She rented it tonight and said she hoped I didn't hate it. I love it. So she's ready to watch it, so I'm done.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
| Monday, December 28, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, US  veterans continue to wait for their GI Bill benefits check, pretty much All  Things Media Big & Small stay silent on counter-insurgency (much to their  lasting and historical shame) and rumbles of discontent with Nouri emerge in the  Shia communities.  For the second weekend in a row, James Cameron's Avatar was the  number one film at the box office. Bob Strauss (San Jose Mercury News) reports it took  an estimated $75 million in ticket sales (North America) over the weekend and BBC notes it's total box office take (in North America only)  so far is $212 million "and could be on its way to grossing more than $1  b[illion] (625.6 million pounds) worldwide."  Cameron's last film was Titanic  which grossed more than $1.8 billion at the box office.  I know James and he  more than deserves a plug but we open with that because it is Iraq related.   David Price is with Network of Concerned Anthropologists. Last week, he observed: Fans of Avatar are understandably being moved by the  story's romantic anthropological message favoring the rights of people to not  have their culture weaponized against them by would be foreign conquerors,  occupiers and betrayers. It is worth noting some of the obvious the parallels  between these elements in this virtual film world, and those found in our world  of real bullets and anthropologists in Iraq and Afghanistan.                Since 2007, the occupying U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan  have deployed Human Terrain Teams (HTT), complete with HTT "social scientists"  using anthropological-ish methods and theories to ease the conquest and  occupation of these lands. HTT has no avatared-humans; just supposed "social  scientists" who embed with battalions working to reduce friction so that the  military can get on with its mission without interference from local  populations. For most anthropologists these HTT programs are an outrageous abuse  of anthropology, and earlier this month a lengthy report by a commission of the  American Anthropological Association (of which I was a member and report  co-author) concluded that the Human Terrain program crossed all sorts of  ethical, political and methodological lines, finding that:       "when ethnographic investigation is determined by military missions, not subject to external review, where data collection occurs in the context of war, integrated into the goals of counterinsurgency, and in a potentially coercive environment -- all characteristic factors of the HTT concept and its application -- it can no longer be considered a legitimate professional exercise of anthropology."The American Anthropological Association's executive board found Human Terrain to be a "mistaken form of anthropology". But even with these harsh findings, the Obama administration's call for increased counterinsurgency will increase demands for such non-anthropological uses of ethnography for pacification. Dropping back to the December 3rd snapshot: The American Anthropological  Association's annual meeting started yesterday in  Philadelphia and continues through Sunday.  Today the association's Commission  on the Engagement of Anthropology with the US Security and Intelligence  Communities issued their [PDF format] "Final Report on The Army's Human Terrain  System Proof of Concept Program."  The 74-page report is a  blow to War Criminals and their cheerleaders who have long thought that the  social science could be abused or that the social sciences were pseudo  sciences.  Only a small number of outlets have covered the AAA's findings.  First up  were  Patricia Cohen (New York Times), Dan Vergano (USA Today), Yudhijit Bhattacharjee (Science  Magazine) and Steve Kolowich (Inside HigherEd). Another wave  followed which included Tom A. Peter (Christian Science Monitor)  reporting, "Today the program enjoys a core of supporters, but it's done little  to address the concerns of anthropologists and, now, rising military complaints  that the program has slowed the growth of the military's ability to train  culturally sensitive warriors." Christopher Shay (Time magazine)  added: Two years ago, the AAA condemned the HTS program, but this month's  72-page report goes into much greater detail about the potential for the  military to misuse information that social scientists gather; some  anthropologists involved in the report say it's already happening. David Price,  a professor of anthropology at St. Martins University in Washington and one of  the co-authors of the AAA report, says the army appears to be using the  anthropological information to better target the enemy, which, if true, would be  a gross violation of the anthropological code. One Human Terrain anthropologist  told the Dallas Morning News that she wasn't worried if the information  she provided was used to kill or capture an insurgent. "The reality is there are  people out there who are looking for bad guys to kill," she said. "I'd rather  they did not operate in a vacuum." Price and other critics see this as proof  that the anthropologists don't have full control over the information they  gather and that commanders can use it to kill. "The real fault with Human  Terrain is that it doesn't even try to protect the people being studied," says  Price. "I don't think it's accidental that [the Pentagon] didn't come up with  ethical guidelines." Anthropologically informed counterinsurgency efforts like the Human  Terrain program are fundamentally flawed for several reasons. One measure of the  extent that these programs come to understand and empathize with the culture and  motivations of the people they study might be the occurrence of militarized  ethnographers "going native" in ways parallel to the plot of Avatar. If  Human Terrain Teams employed anthropologists who came to live with and freely  interact with and empathize with occupied populations, I suppose you would  eventually find some rogue anthropologists standing up to their masters in the  field. But so far mostly what we find with the Human Terrain "social scientists"  is a revolving cadre of well paid misfits with marginal training in the social  sciences who do not understand or reject normative anthropological notions of  research ethics, who rotate out and come home with misgivings about the program  and what they accomplished. Now you might think National Public Radio, so fond of being seeing erudite  (they wish), would be all over the study from a leading organization of social  scientists.  You would be wrong.  It's not that counter-insurgency isn't  discussed NPR, it is, it's just that they only do so to promote it.  (Ava and I wrote about that earlier  this month.)  Similarly, the foundation grant heavy (bloated?) Democracy  Now! has never taken on counter-insurgency.  It's refused to do so.  We've been  covering it repeatedly in this community while Goody's been all over  psychologists and blah blah.  But never alarmed by this.  You need to grasp  that. There's a lot of money being made in and off counter-insurgency.  And there  are a lot of people who will not speak the truth.  You need to grasp that it's a  bastardization of a science and you need to grasp that when such a thing  happens, when science is used to attack a native people and a society is silent,  you have the next Nazi Germany.  That's not hyperbole.  This has been going  on throughout the decade and who will call it out.  Tom Hayden will do so as an  aside approximately every 15 months or so.  That's still more than any of his  peers.  Davy D of KPFA can't cover it because his hero Samantha Power is a  counter-insurgency pusher.  She blurbed the manual with praise.  And what you're  seeing is a left incapable of standing up to the war pushers, a left incapable  of calling out the disgusting Sarah Sewall -- who may very well be the modern  day Josef Mengele -- and a foundation backed attack on native people.  You've  got the idiot Thomas E. Ricks -- an expert on nothing -- who can't stop going  ga-ga over counter-insurgency (make he's sure he's called out the War Crimes  trials, in fact make sure he's tried).  So much so that 'reporter' Thomas E.  Ricks attacks the Vice President of the United States today.  Dumb ass Thomas E.  Ricks wants to take on Joe Biden and wants to start false rumors (no, Joe Biden  has not fallen asleep in meetings -- Thomas E. Ricks is LYING) because Joe Biden  won't sign on 100% to Tommy Ricks' beloved war crimes.   These aren't just 'fact-finding' missions (for the military), these are  experiments carried out in the field.  And these expermients can result in  death.  No social scientist should be in bed with the military.  Anyone who  thinks otherwise is completely stupid (Thomas E. Ricks) or completely unethical  (Monty McFate).  And we started covering it, honestly, because I know the liar  Monty McFate and she was shooting off her mouth (with lies as always) to the  idiot George Packer (who never learned to fact check).  That's why it landed on our radar December 20,  2006.  We have now been covering it for over three years.  And where's our  'brave' 'independent' media? Two years ago, David Price was part of a panel (with  pro-counter-insurgency advocates Monty McFate, Col John Agoglia and Lt. Col.  Edward Villacres -- a three-to-one imbalance) on The Diane Rehm  Show (see the October 11, 2007 snapshot for a transcript of  some of the exchanges).  Search in vain for serious explorations of this issue.   Now everyone can bore you to death demonizing Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachmann  -- and no one's ever supposed to notice that the same sexism Barack unleashed  among 'progressives' in 2008 continues to run wild and trample on equality --  but you can't deal with the things that really matter.  If it were you or your  child being 'studied' by the occupiers so that they could enslave you, it damn  well would matter to you.  But it happens 'over there' and as long as 'over  there' doesn't show up on your TV screens, it appears everyone's not wanting to  rock the boat or risk offending Harvard or, yes, the "the Kennedy School of  Government".  And while America's salivates over another round of "Bash the Bitch" (it's amazing how often that game  is played), don't for one damn minute think anyone's being informed. Amy Goodman won't call it out, she's too wrapped up in War Hawk Sammy  Power.  Remember?  Remember her interview with Sammy?  Best if you caught it on  WBAI because WBAI was in fundraising mode and there was Amy raving over her  while trying to get people to call in and 'support independent media.'  Amy was  raving that Samantha Power "'might be the next Secretary of State" and, growing  more excited in her pitch, qualifiers fell away and you were left thinking not  only would Power be Secretary of State, if Barack won the general election, but  Samantha Power was right up there with Mother Teresa, maybe even ahead of  Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, to hear Amy rave on air.  You can't take those  moments back and those moments -- and Goodman's silence on counter-insurgency --  are very telling. This refusal to question the counter-insurgency movement is a undemocratic  refusal and it's completely against the norms of an open society.  But that's  what's taking place in the United State right now.  Few will question it.  Few  will even bother to report on it.  The findings of the American  Anthropological Association are perfectly in keeping with the tenets of  social science.  There's nothing controversial about the study the organization  issued. There's something very controversial about the group-think that refuses  to question counter-insurgency.  And when you grasp that Amy Goodman couldn't  stop caterwauling about "we never see where the bombs drop" and yet refuses to  devote even one damn segment in all these years to counter-insurgency, you  realize how pathetic she and 'independent' media are.  Now, in fairness, she  will talk counter-insurgency .  . . in past decades.  But as she herself whined,  if we can't talk about the war before it starts or while it's going on, when can  we talk about it?  After it's over!!!!! When it's too late!!!  Amy Goodman needs  her words tossed back in her face. We've noted the number of Iraqi Christians as 800,000 often quoting one  media outlet on that or another.  An e-mail to the public account ask that we  note Help Iraqi Christians (which we just did) and they note there  were an estimated one million Iraqi Christians (in Iraq)  at the start of the Iraq War.  Their source is the US State Dept.  If you go  to the 2006 State Dept report, it reads, "According to official  estimates, the number of Christians decreased from 1.4 million in 1987 to fewer  than 1 million with Catholics (Chaldeans) compromising the majority. Christian  leaders eastimated that approximately 700,000 Iraqi Christians lived abroad."   Though the report uses "fewer than 1 million" (and 800,000 is fewer), if you  look at the numbers it's not so simple.  In fact, there numbers add up to over  one million -- the State Dept numbers in that report (which may be not checking  their figures or switching to pre-war numbers without including that  notification).  But we will now say "an estimated 1 million" when referring to  the number of Iraqi Christians in Iraq at the start of the Iraq War. Friday, Bushra Juhi (AP) reported that Bartela  was placed under curfew after a conflict between Iraqi Christians and Shi'ite  Muslims over decorations.  UPI states 5 Chrisitans and 5 Shi'ites  required hospitalization.  A number of outlets take the position that Shias were  wrong or Iraqi Christians were in the wrong.  I have no idea.  (I don't think  the outlets do either.) But what is known is that Bartela (also spelled  "Bartella") is a village with a majority Christian population.  Many have long  reported on that including Alice Fordham (Times of London) back on  December 18th.  That does not mean that reports of Shia entering Bartela and  ripping down Christian decorations (as reported in Christian media) are true.   But it is worth noting that only the Christian media (here for the Christian Post article by Ethan  Cole) bother to note that the village is mainly Christian.  That's a key  detail to the story and it is telling that a number of outlets (including those  trying to play it down the middle -- CNN among them) refused to identify the  village as what it was. Violence continued over the holiday weekend.  As Third noted, " Friday 9 were reported dead and 25 injured; and  Saturday 11 were reported dead and 36 reported  wounded" while Sunday saw 7 reported dead and thirty-six  wounded. Today Reuters notes the US military and Iraqi  forces shot dead 1 person and arrested a second. And on the 'freedom' front, in 'liberation' news, Alsumaria reports, "Strict traditions and social conventions  are back in the spotlight in Iraq with the decision of Iraq's Education Ministry  to separate boys and girls in Sadr City schools. The Ministry's surprising  decision spurred mounting debates. Decision advocators confirm that social and  religious status in Sadr City does not permit to mix boys and girls in  schools." KUNA meanwhile reports, "Some 9,000 Iraqis  registered as refugees in Jordan are now resident in third countries, out of  17,000 the UN Refugee Agency recommended be repatriated and out of an overall  53,000 refugees."  In Iraqi political news, Meanwhile Qais Mizher (Washington Post) reports  Shi'ites demonstred against Nouri al-Maliki in Karbala on Sunday. And distaste  for Nouri may be spreading throughout the Shia communities.  Saad Fakhrildeen and Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) report the Grand  Ayatollah Ali Sistani has repeatedly delivered sermons on "the government's  failing" and Friday, Sayed Ahmad Safi "delivered a scathing critique of the  political establishments to the tens of thousands gathered for the religious  rites" declaring, "More than 50% of our people live in poverty in a rich  country, but when we see all the circumstances this poses a question mark. Why  is there not a quorum in the Parliament? Why is there no legislation [passed]?  Why don't the executives come spontaneously without an invitiation.": Turning to the US, in the December 24th snapshot, we were noting the  veterans were still not receiving their GI Bill benefits for the fall semester  of 2009 -- the semester that has ended. And we were noting how the VA went  before Congress in October and declared they needed no more funding, no more  workers, they were on top of it, it was a glitch (one they attempted to blame on  universities initially before they learned colleges weren't going to be played  by a bunch of lazy VA workers) and they were on it.  They said only a few  "thousands" didn't have their checks yet.  And a few "thousands" still don't  have their checks.  Where is the outrage?  Over the long holiday weekend,  stories emerged that may help put a human face on those who are suffering  because the VA can't do the damn job they're supposed to.  Joe Seelig (Highlands Today/ Tampa Tribune)  reported: Howard Jenkins is the local veterans  employment representative for the Heartland Workforce in charge of the Veterans  Work Study Program. He said he didn't know the number of students other programs  have, but it is a big problem.             He's spoken with his counterparts in similar programs in Florida and they are having problems, too, he said. "I have one that's affected also," said Jenkins. "He hasn't gotten paid for the hours he's been working here. He started working in October. He's never been paid. The Veterans Work Study Program augments their standard of living while they go to school." Many of these veterans have families with children, he said. "The young man I have is working for college for next semester," he said. "There are about 90 veterans signed up for classes at SFCC (South Florida Community College)." About 277,000 veterans have signed up for school under the GI Bill across the country and only about 50,000 had been processed, he said. Mike noted Marisa Schultz (Detroit News) reporting  on this topic: Tom Tiefry, an Eastern Michigan University  student and U.S. Marine, is among the thousands waiting for his money. Without  any income, the Afghanistan war vet has been draining his savings, can't move  out of his mom's home in Gibraltar and hopes his beat-up 1994 Chevrolet Camaro  can survive the commute during the Michigan  winter.                                    "It's very frustrating," said Tiefry, 23. He made a commitment to his country for four years of service and views the delay in his GI Bill funds as the government not honoring its commitment to him. "My word was good," Tiefry said. "But it wasn't a given that their's was. It never crossed my mind that this sort of thing could happen."  Patricia Alex (New  Jersey Record) reports: The delays had thousands of vets who served in Iraq and Afghanistan scrambling to pay rents and mortgages, and fearful they would not be able to continue school next semester. "It's been three months of going into debt," said Chris Mazzoccchi of Saddle Brook, who served with the Marines in Iraq. Mazzocchi, 24, quit his job in ground service at Teterboro Airport to take advantage of the bill and began studying criminal justice at Bergen Community College this semester. He is entitled to tuition reimbursement and a housing allowance of $2,033 a month, he said. Idiot of the month is Mark K. Matthews (Orlando Sentinel) who  'reports' this morning on the delay, "A major problem has been the sheer  number of applicants. Under the new GI Bill, recent veterans are allowed to  transfer their benefits to children and spouses -- increasing an already  inflated pool of new students."  No, Marky, you stupid idiot, that's not true.   And why do I know that's not true?  Because the VA was specifically asked that  in a Congressional hearing in October.  I was there, Marky, where the hell were  you? Back in October, AP owned this story and the reason may be because  they are one of the few outlets that still covers Congressional hearings.  No  surprise, they are the ones (specifically Kimberly Hefling) who broke the story  last week.  No surprise, a lot of idiots like Mark K. Matthews, who couldn't get  off their fat asses (he's in DC) and sit through a hearing, are yet again  offering defenses for the VA.  Repeating, that had nothing to do with it.  This  was addressed in a Congressional hearing that you should have been present for  Mark K. Matthews. So where does is stand right now? Here's what the VA management hopes (three sources), they hope they can get the checks out (or all but 100 out) no later than January 5th (out in the mail, not received) and then, when Congress is back in session, the VA's attitude will be: "Oh, we already took care of it." If that happens and Congress lets them get away with it with no objections, not one member of Congress deserves to be re-elected. The VA swore in October, to Congress, that they were on it, that this was all being handled and no more problems and they were so on top of it, they didn't need additional money and they didn't need additional employees. The VA lied to Congress. And the VA shut out Congress. Three different members of Congress, in an open hearing, told the VA that if there were any other problems with this program, Congress needed to be notified immediately and the VA swore it would happen. Last week, Congress was notified . . . when Kimberly Hefling started filing AP reports on this subject. Lastly,  KPFA's Flashpoints Radio is facing serious cuts while other  programs don't appear to be.  For example, I can think of one mid-day program  airing three times a week with two hosts.  Strange because when one of the hosts  was in management just a blink ago, the show got by just fine -- for months and  months -- with just one host. Local Station Board member Henry Norr (at The Daily Censored)  writes about what is seen as a targeted attack on Flashpoints and we'll note  the last paragraph of the article: "To express support for Flashpoints, write to  general manager Lemlem Rijio at gm@kpfa.org and turn out for the first meeting  of the new LSB, now set for 7 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 11, 2010 (disregard dates  announced earlier) at the Humanist Hall, 390 27th St. (near Telegraph),  Oakland." For those who've never listened to KPFA's Flashpoints Radio, it remains the only  program on KPFA that addresses the Iraq War.  The Iraq War doesn't exist on KPFA  without Flashpoints.  That's reality.  And remember just a second ago we were  talking about a co-host of another program who could be let go?  When that  co-host was in management she was all for "The War Comes Home."  It was going to  be this, it was going to be that.  It was going to be all over Pacifica and  cover the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars.  A lot of money was put into that project.   Where did the money go?  The show barely aired and that 'hard hitting' website  that was supposed to back it up?  If you care about "Santos Grill und die  Gartenparty wird gelingen" (which is German and announces that the grill and the  garden party will be successful) you should check out the  website for War Comes Home.  How the hell did KPFA not only lose their  website but lose it to a German grill cook?  And it's real cute how, at the  bottom, it reads: "Copyright 2009, Warcomeshome.org. All rights reserved."   Grill cooking.  I really would love to hear where the money for The War Comes  Home project went.  And if Pacifica can't pay for websites, they need to return  to Blogspot.  That is where Wake Up Call (WBAI), for example, used to be.  But  someone needs to find out where the money for War Comes Home went because it was  supposed to be funded. | 
 patricia  cohen
patricia  cohen 
