Some will see a movie. If you're thinking about The Avengers, even after Stan warned you off it, read Joanne Laurier's review for WSWS:
Decades ago, superhero movies and television shows were tongue-in-cheek. Today’s films present their comic book characters with a high degree of self-seriousness. They have a different tone and mood than their cartoonish ancestors. Even though it has a certain playfulness, and allows all sorts of physical mauling to go on, The Avengers still treats its characters with undue reverence.
The rise to prominence of the superhero comic book trend in film, putting aside for the moment the question of its artistic value, has an objective significance. It coincides with the global economic decline of the US and the deteriorating social conditions of the population. Unwilling and intellectually too impoverished to look reality in the face, Hollywood increasingly resorts to “solving” America’s and the world’s problems through simplistic fantasy. It makes up for the military fiascos and social disasters it can’t and won’t represent by inventing cartoonish successes and triumphs that should convince no one.
Such films, insofar as they have a major impact, which is questionable, tend to reinforce and exacerbate the wishful thinking and illusions of a somewhat stunned population that has not yet for the most part consciously grasped the real causes of its predicament.
Now for politics. The stupid and sorry Elizabeth Warren was caught out in her attempt to pass herself off as a Native American. She's now claiming she's 1/32 some form of Native American. But she can't prove it. Mass Live explains:
The campaign of Brown, the Republican incumbent senator, has been pushing the story about Warren’s heritage, after it came out that Warren had listed herself as Native American in the Association of American Law Schools’ law directory; and that both Harvard Law School and the University of Pennsylvania listed her as a minority.
She's now trying to say that it's true because her mother told her. But she didn't claim it all her life did she? And there's something a little sad about an adult trying to blame their mom for something. In addition, she's claiming that any criticism of her on this is criticism of her family. Quit being such a titty-baby. Grow the hell up, Elizabeth Warren.
You lied and you did so for a reason. Quit trying to drag your mother into it, you little liar.
This does matter and the editorial board of the Boston Globe agrees:
The documents suggest for the first time that either Warren or a Harvard administrator classified her repeatedly as Native American in papers prepared for the government in a way that apparently did not adhere to federal diversity guidelines. They raise further questions about Warren’s statements that she was unaware Harvard was promoting her as Native American.
The Warren campaign declined Thursday to answer the Globe’s specific questions about the documents. In a statement, Warren’s spokeswoman, Alethea Harney, said that “over the past month Elizabeth has answered countless questions openly while the people who recruited her have made it clear it was because of her extraordinary skill as a teacher and a groundbreaking scholar.’’
Some want to point to a poll that says it's not an issue. Screw the damn poll. Walk around in Boston. People are telling jokes about her, she's become the butt of jokes over this. You can't stand still at the supermarket or on the street or while filling up your car without hearing someone making fun of her. She's embarrassed herself and become an embarrassment and a non-stop joke.
Yeah, it's going to effect the election. A long summer filled with jokes about 'Native American' Elizabeth Warren? Yeah, it's going to hurt her bad when it's time to vote.
She needs to address the situation honestly and stop trying to blame things on her mother.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
| 
Friday,
 May 25, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the Russian bikers tortured
 by Nouri's forces are released, Nouri's brown shirts take to downtown 
Baghdad as they've done so many Fridays before to stage a faux protest, 
the US prepares to arm Nouri, Memorial Day weekend is upon us, and more. 
Starting in Russia. Yesterday
 it was learned that four Russian bikers were grabbed in central Iraq by
 Nouri's security forces, imprisoned and beaten.  The four are: Oleg 
Kapkayev of Saint Petersburg, Alexander Vardanyants  and Maxim Ignatyev 
of Vladimir and Oleg Maximov of Tula.  Russian Legal Information Agency reports that the wife Oleg Maximo spoke to her husband and he told her they were being moved to another location.   
 Dmitry Rogozin is the Deputy Premier of Russian Government tasked with the defense and space industry.  
That
 Tweet reads: 'The Russian bikers detained in Iraq are at the Embassy of
 the Russian Federation [in Baghdad].  Motorcylces have not been 
returned yet.  Thanks to everyone  who helped.'  The Moscow Times notes,
 "[Russian President Vladimir] Putin has been forging good relations 
with the biker community in the past two years, riding motorcycles 
and attending biker events."   RIA Novosti adds,
 "The four men will leave for Russia on Saturday morning, the bikers' 
lawyer Alexander Orlov, also a member of the Moscow-based motorcycle 
club Rolling Anarchy MCC (RAMCC), told RIA Novosti."    
As
 many are noticing, the US press has ignored the story completely.  That
 may be due to the fact that there's a detail that's inconsistent -- not
 on-message -- with Barack Obama's current campaign for a second term as
 US President.   Ekaterina Saviba (Gazeta) reports  it today: They came to Iraq on May 17 and were detained by the Iraqi military on May 20. "Our attempt to go towards Baghdad failed because of Yanks in Hummers – they didn't let us in. Our guys decided to go round the American checkpoints and pass north of them," report motorcyclists' friends on the Russian motorcycling forum Ruriders.ru. "They managed to ride several dozen kilometers a day, while having long heartfelt conversations with local authorities, all while the outside temperature was 42 Celsius." Again, that was also in yesterday's reports. The Russian bikers, en route to Baghdad, were unable to enter the city and had to go around due to Americans blocking them in Hummers, due to American checkpoints. The 20th was Sunday and the US may have activated some branch still in Iraq (there are many) to put up checkpoints in advance of the meet-up in Baghdad. They may have pulled the units stationed outside of Iraq -- in Kuwait for example -- back in to set up those checkpoints. 
Along
 with the usual Russian contingent which staffs the country's Baghdad 
embassy, other Russian officials were in the country this week as 
Nouri's Iraq hosted talks with Iran about the nuclear program.  Ali Arouzi (NECN News -- link is text and video) reports,
 "International nuclear talks being held in Baghdad this week with Iran 
ended inconclusively with both sides at a stalemate."  A stalemate grows
 in Nouri's Baghdad?  What a complete lack of surprise?    
The
 ongoing political stalemate in Iraq could see Nouri al-Maliki face a 
no-confidence vote that, if successful, would remove him as prime 
minister.  Alsumaria reports
 that the 'Badr brigade' says this would be the worst thing that could 
happen.  The Badr brigade only split or 'split' from the Islamic Supreme
 Council of Iraq when it had to (or risk ISCI being outlawed).  They 
still take their orders from Ammar al-Hakim and the US has been very 
successful in buying al-Hakim's support for Nouri.  al-Hakim has already
 made statements like those made similar   statements out of his own 
mouth.  Now he uses the Badr brigade as a megaphone in the hopes that 
this will give the (false) appearance of a wave of support for Nouri 
surfacing.     
How did things get to this point?     
Iraq's
 currently in Political Stalemate II.  Political Stalemate I followed 
the March 7, 2010 elections in which Iraiqya -- headed by Ayad Allawi --
 came in first and Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law came in second.  
Despite herculean efforts on Nouri's part -- some legal but most 
questionable or outright illegal -- to walk away with the election, he 
was runner up. But Nouri wanted to be Miss Iraq, he wanted the crown and
 felt he did very well in the swimsuit competition.  He had the backing 
of the White House and the Iranian government. for his desired second 
term as prime minister.  The Iraqi Constitution, the election results 
and the will of the Iraqi people were all against Nouri; however, Barack
 Obama doesn't care about rule of law or democracy.  He wants what he 
wants when he wants it.  And like Bully Boy Bush before him, Barack 
packed a chubby for Nouri.     
So
 for over eight months things were at a standstill.  Then in November 
2010, the US brokered an agreement among the political blocs.  This is 
known as the Erbil Agreement (because it was signed off in Erbil).   In 
exchange for giving Nouri a second term, the US insisted, the blocs 
would receive concessions that they wanted.  This is the agreement that 
was agreed to.    
The
 Erbil Agreement wasn't about all the political blocs saying, "We don't 
want anything.  Give Nouri a second term!"  To get the blocs on board it
 was  necessary for them to be offered arrangements that would benefit 
them.  And with everyone agreeing to the deal -- including Nouri -- and 
with the US government brokering it and insisting it was sound, the 
political blocs fel tthey deal was solid.    
Nouri
 used it to become prime minister-designate and then, in December 2010, 
beging his second term as prime minister.  But that's all that 
happened.  He refused to implement the agreement.  He offered one excuse
 after another as is his way.  He distracts and stalls and hopes the 
other side gives up.  He's done that over and over.    
By
 last summer, the Kurds had enough of the stalling.  They publicly 
demanded that the Erbil Agreement be implemented.  Their call was 
quickly joined by Iraqiya and Moqtada al-Sadr.  And it wasn't 
implemented.  And it's still not implemented.  April 28th, there was 
another Erbil meet-up and among those participating were Moqtada, KRG 
President Massoud Barzani, Allawi and Iraqi president Jalal Talabani.  
In their meeting they agreed that Nouri needed to implement the 
agreement or face a no-confidence vote.  They also agreed that Moqtada 
al-Sadr's 18-point plan needed to be implemented.  Moqtada delivered the
 message, implement the Erbil Agreement or face a vote of 
no-confidence.  As the end of the month gets closer, the number of MPs 
reportedly  willing to vote out Nouri grows.  This week alone, it's 
grown from over 163 to 200.    
A
 list of potential replacements has been named.  All on the list come 
from the National Alliance (a Shi'ite group which ISCI, State of Law, 
Moqtada's bloc and others belong to).  Kitabat reminds
 that the National Alliance is supposed to be naming a single choice of 
who should be Nouri's replacement.  But through it all, Moqtada has 
repeatedly noted publicly that Nouri can stop this at any point prior to
 the vote.  All he has to do is implement the Erbil Agreement.     
Not
 only does he refuse to, the White House refuses to call that out.  They
 brokered the agreement, they gave the political blocs their word that 
the agreement was legal and would hold.  The White House brokered the 
agreement and swore it would be upheld.  They have betrayed the Iraqi 
people.  These are the betrayals that lead people to stop trusting the 
US.  These are the type of betrayals the people of Iran spent decades 
living with.  It's not smart to betray people, it's not smart to make a 
promise and not keep it.    
And all those promises    
That you made me from the start    
Were filled with emptiness    
From the desert of your heart    
Every sweet caress    
Was just your second best    
Broken promises    
-- "All Those Promises," written by Janis Ian, first appears on her Folk Is The New Black    
And
 now the White House thinks they can act like they're not involved?  Now
 they want to pretend like they have to stand on the sidelines?     
And
 they're not on the sidelines, they're repeatedly pimping for Nouri.  
For example, the US State Dept issued this readout of the meeting 
between William Rurns, Deupty Secretary of State, and "Iraqi Acting 
Minister of Defense" Saadoun al-Dulaymi:    
Today,
 Deputy Secretary Burns met with Iraqi Acting Minister of Defense 
Saadoun al-Dulaymi, at the Department of State to discuss issues of 
mutual interest and our shared commitment towards a long-term 
partnership under the Strategic Framework Agreement.  Minister Dulaymi 
is in Washington as lead of the Iraqi delegation for inaugural meetings 
of the Defense and Security Joint Coordinating Committee between the 
United States and the Government of Iraq. Deputy Secretary Burns noted 
the importance of these meetings as an excellent mechanism to build our 
mutual commitment to an enduring security partnership under a 
civilian-led process. 
The meeting also 
covered bilateral issues on the security and political fronts and the 
Deputy Secretary offered our continued support as Iraq strengthens its 
democratic institutions and enhances the capacity of its security forces
 to bring greater stability and prosperity to its people.  On Iraqi 
political issues, the two discussed the importance of resolving 
differences through dialogue and compromise and in a democratic fashion 
in accordance with the Iraqi constitution. 
The
 Deputy Secretary expressed appreciation to Minister Dulaymi for Iraq's 
willingness to host the E3+3 meetings in Baghdad and noted that, 
following the successful hosting of the Arab Summit in March, it is 
another sign of Iraq taking a constructive role in the region and with 
the international community to reach shared goals of greater regional 
stability.  Deputy Secretary Burns assured Minister Dulaymi that the 
United States would continue to support Iraq in its effort to strengthen
 ties with its regional neighbors. 
 And the Defense Dept issued this American Forces Press Service story
 about Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta meeting with al-Dulaymi.  
There's no "acting defense minister."  Not per the Iraqi Constitution.  
The prime minister nominates someone to be Minister of Defense and 
Parliament says yes or no via a vote.  That's how it's supposed to work 
per the Constitution.  But Nouri's never put a name to the Parliament.  
The minute he does, he doesn't control the Defense Ministry, the 
Minister does.  Why are US public servants wasting time and tax payer 
money meeting with these non-ministers?  If they hadn't lied so much -- 
the White House -- $500 million wouldn't have already been wasted on the
 police training program this year.  Most Americans don't realize that 
the Iraqi   police are under the Ministry of the Interior and even more 
aren't aware that Nouri has never named a nominee for that position 
either.    
How
 do you waste $500 million US tax payer dollars on a training program 
for a ministry that has no minister?  That's your first clue that the 
money's going to be wasted.  Nouri was supposed to have named a full 
Cabinet before he was moved from prime minister-designate to prime 
minister.  It's a power-grab and the US government enables and endorses 
it.     
Doubt that?    
The Defense Dept issued the following late yesterday: 
 
 
I
 seem to remeber, a few years back, a US Senator talking about the 
danger that we would arm Nouri with the weapons he could use on his own 
people.  Maybe that observation doesn't matter because the man is no 
longer a US Senator -- now he's Vice President of the United States.  
Joe Biden knew this was a problem in 2008.  I'm failing to see how 
anything's changed to make Nouri less at risk of attacking the Iraqi 
people.    
Yesterday the US State Dept released 2011 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices and here's how the section on Iraq opens:    
During
 the year the most significant human rights developments were continuing
 abuses by sectarian and ethnic armed groups and violations by 
government-affiliated forces. Divisions between Shia and Sunni and 
between Arab and Kurd empowered sectarian militant organizations. These 
militants, purporting to defend one group through acts of intimidation 
and revenge against another, influenced political outcomes. Terrorist 
attacks designed to weaken the government and deepen societal divisions 
occurred during the year. 
The three most important 
human rights problems in the country were governmental and societal 
violence reflecting a precarious security situation, a fractionalized 
population mirroring deep divisions exacerbated by Saddam Hussein's 
legacy, and rampant corruption at all levels of government and society. 
That doesn't qualify as a ringing endorsement of Nouri al-Maliki.    
Today the US puppet sent his little cult into the streets of downtown Baghad.  Alsumaria reports
 that the thug's thugs were out in full force, carrying signs supproting
 Nouri and insisting that anyone not supproting Thug Nouri was 
influenced by foreign countries.  They also threatened violence if Nouri
 was subjected to a no-confidence vote.  Ayad Allawi, leader of Iraqiya,
 noticed what took place this morning.  Alsumaria reports
 that he charges Nouri with attempting to take the political crisis into
 the Iraqi street and to scare people into silence.  Allawi says that if
 there is any bloodshed, Nouri will be responsible.  
"We
 were preparing a party for her birthday, which was May 11, a party she 
was not able to enjoy.  She was going to be 26 years old when she 
died."  That's Ramon Rubalcava speaking about the 2004 death of his 
daughter Isela Rubalcava.  Spain's wire service EFE notes
 Isela Rubalcava was born in El Paso to Maria Isela and Ramon Rubalcava 
and she was killed in a Mosul mortar attack on May 8, 2004 becoming "the
 third woman of Mexican descent to die on the Iraq war front and the 
first woman from El Paso to die in combat."  She is one of at least 4488 US service members to die in the Iraq War.  Monday is Memorial Day.  At Huffington Post, Jim Downs offers the origins and history of Memorial Day.  Dora Robles Hernandez (Detroit Free Press) notes that Saturday through Monday will see the Detroit area host 20 different Memorial Day parades.  Though not all metro areas will see that many events -- for example, the states of New Hampshire and Maine will have about that many events this weekend combined
 -- there will be observations throughout the US.  And because it's 
Memorial Day, the Sunday chat and chews finally find veterans issues and
 the Chair   of a veterans committee.  Sunday on CNN's State of the 
Union, Senator Patty Murray (Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs 
Committe) will be among the guests which also include Iraq War veteran 
Paul Rieckhoff of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, the American
 Legion's Tim Tetz and Peter Chiarelli who is now a retired general and 
who has carved out a role for himself advocating on behalf of those with
 Post-Traumatic Stress and coming up with proposals to allow the stigma 
attached to PTS to be removed.  It should be a very interesting 
broadcast.  (I was asked to note this by a friend who endorses 
Chiarelli's PTS work.)    
To
 address veterans issues in a meaningful way that actually helps, 
bi-partisanship is needed in the Congress -- a point Senator Mike 
Johanns made Wednesday in a Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing 
entitled "Seamless Transition: Review of the Integrated Disability 
Evaluation System." Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Committee, 
Senator Richard Burr is the Ranking Member.  There Committee heard from 
one panel of witnesses: DoD's Dr. Jo Ann Rooney, GAO's Daniel Bertoni 
and the VA's John Gingrich.  We covered Chair Murray's questions and 
some of the report entitled Interim Committee Staff Report: 
Investigation of Joint Disability Evaluation System in Wednesday's snapshot,   Ava covered Senator Jon Tester's questioning in "How to keep the witness focused (Ava)," Kat reported on Ranking Member Richard Burr's participation with "Senator Burr: I've had too many of these hearings" and Wally 
 focused on how the VA claiming next year they'll fix things or the next
 year or the next never does anything but waste the Committee's time and
 the taxpayers' money with "It's your money (Wally)."  Ava, Kat and Wally covered important aspects of the hearing so please read their reports.  From Kat's, we'll note this:    
Ranking
 Member Richard Burr: So we're all in agreement that we're just south of
 400 days in the cycle of an applicant being processed?  395, I think, 
394.  In May 2011, the Secretary of the Defense and the Secretary of 
Veterans Affairs committed to revising the IDES [Integrated Disability 
Evaluation System] so that it could be completed in 150 days and went 
further and agreed to explore options for it to be 75 days.  Now I-I -- 
I've had too many of these hearings.  We have them every year.  And we 
hear the same thing: "Oh, gosh, look at what we're doing."  Now I've 
heard the most glowing progress report from both of you and then I get 
the realities of the days haven't changed.  You have met some 
improvements in certain areas.  I commend you on that.  The timeliness 
goals in areas have been better.  But the reality is that we've got a 
broken system and we're five years into it and I hear   testimony where 
'we're starting to begin to review our business processes.'  Well, you 
know, why did it take five years to get to this?  What -- What can you 
convey to me today that's concrete, that tells me a year from now, we're
 not going to be at 393 days.  When you [Dr. Jo Ann Rooney] said 
earlier, "We're instituting IT changes this summer that will improve our
 times by thirty or forty," I thought you were going to say "percent." 
 And you said "days."   So now my expectations are that if we implement 
what you just said, we're going to be down to 360 days which exceeds the
 DES [Disability Evaluating System] and Secretary of the VA by the 110 
days over what their goal was for today.  
At
 its most basic, the VA and the Defense Dept are attempting to make the 
transition from service member (DoD's role) to veterans (VA's role) 
seamless and timely.  That's not happening currently.  with respect to 
Integrated Disability Evaluation System, this is supposed to determine 
whether or not a service member is able to continue serving.  If the 
answer is no, the service member then becomes a veteran and VA needs to 
have a disability claim.  The disability rating will determine the 
benefits. So it matters.  And the Interim Committee Staff Report noted 
examples including, "A servicemember with a lung condition who was being
 treated with steroids and immunosuppressive drugs was incorrectly rated
 at 0% rather than 100%."     
 Not
 only are there problems with the disability ratings, there's the 
problem with the length of time they take.  This isn't minor if you're 
the veteran and you're waiting for a disability check that you've more 
than earned to come but it's not in the mail.  Committee Chair Patty 
Murray noted 27,000 have waited over 100 days to go through the system. 
   
As
 he questioned the witnesses, Senator Mike Johanns observed, "I don't 
hear anything that makes me feel 'Gosh, we're going to turn the corner 
here.'  In fact, I must admit, quite the opposite, I'm going to walk 
away from this hearing very, very worried that the system is 
imploding."  Even the issue of supervision was a question mark.  Senator
 John Boozman wanted to know who was in charge of overseeing the 
joint-DoD and VA effort?  The best answer he received was that John 
Gingrich was the point-person for the DoD side; however, he stated he 
does not oversee the VA effort.    
Who is responsible for overseeing the full project and not components or pieces?    
No answer was ever provided.    
Senator
 Boozman declared, "I guess I would like to see somebody accountable for
 the whole system. And you may be that person but it's not fair to you 
if you don't really have authority to see it through. So I personally 
think that the two Secretaries need to designate somebody that's got the
 authority."  Possibly if there was one person responsible for 
overseeing it, the process would be moving along more smoothly and much 
quicker.  That was the argument Boozman made and it sounds reasonable.  
But did anybody listen?  Will a single person be named to be responsible
 for overseeing the entire project?    
Senator Johanns
 wanted to know much longer it is going to take -- "1 year, 2 years, 5 
years?" -- for the goals to be met?  No one could provide an answer. "I 
can't give you a specific time frame," Daniel Bertoni told him.  But he 
did note that enrollments continue to rise -- 19,000 just last year -- 
and that this adds to to the delays.     
We'll close with this from Senate Veterans Committee Chair Patty Murray's office:    
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  Thursday, May 24, 2012 
CONTACT: Murray (202) 224-2834 Collins (202) 224-2523 Michaud (202) 225-6306 
VETERANS: Murray, Collins, Michaud Applaud Veterans Homes Fix in Military Construction Spending Bill (Washington, D.C.) – Today, U.S. Senators Patty Murray (D-WA) and Susan Collins (R-ME), members of the Military Construction Appropriations Subcommittee, along with U.S. Representative Mike Michaud (D-ME), Ranking Member of the House Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on Health, applauded the inclusion of an amendment in the Senate Military Construction and Veterans Affairs spending bill which would modify the way State Veterans' Homes are reimbursed for nursing home care provided to veterans. The Senate Committee on Appropriations approved the bill on Tuesday by a vote of 30-0. The amendment, authored by Senator Murray, would result in more flexibility in determining reimbursement rates by requiring VA and the State Veterans' Homes to collaborate in setting rates that accurately reflect the level of care provided. Washington and Maine are home to State Veterans' Homes which require a high level of skilled nursing due to requirements by Medicare and Medicaid. However, currently the VA payments do not cover this level of care. 
"This
 amendment is a critical step to ensuring Washington State Veterans' 
Homes will not lose out on millions of dollars they need to keep 
operating," said Senator Murray.
 "Thankfully we were finally able to move forward to provide this 
flexibility -- preventing staff layoffs which would have dramatically 
reduced the number of Washington veterans they serve. I am grateful to 
Senator Collins and Representative Michaud for their leadership on this 
issue." 
"By
 granting the Department of Veterans Affairs increased flexibility in 
reimbursement rates, our goal is to recognize the high-quality of care 
State Veterans' Homes provide disabled veterans and ensure they never 
have to turn away any of our veterans because of inadequate 
reimbursement from the VA," said Senator Collins.
 "The men and women cared for by State Veterans' Homes defended our 
freedom, many of them in combat. We must defend their right to the care 
they deserve." 
"Our
 severely disabled and elderly veterans deserve access to the best 
possible care and Congress cannot wait any longer to address the 
shortfalls our State Veterans' Homes are facing," said Representative Michaud.
 "I am grateful for Sen. Patty Murray's collaboration and leadership on 
this issue and I look forward to continuing to work with her to ensure 
that this issue is resolved before the end of the year."  
### 
Meghan Roh 
Deputy Press Secretary | Social Media Director 
Office of U.S. Senator Patty Murray 
202-224-2834 | ||||||
 Dmitry Rogozin
 Dmitry Rogozin  
