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Friday,
 September 7, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue,  Tom Hayden crawls out
 of his rock to spin (and spin badly), people take to the streets to 
show their support for Bradley Manning, Jill Stein appears on Bill 
Moyers' new program, and more. 
  
Old Whore Tom Hayden resurfaced to distort, lie and smear.  
 Tom Hayden is a joke.  He is so much of a joke that Barack Obama 
publicly and repeatedly derided what he termed "Tom Hayden Democrats" in
 2007 and 2008.  Possibly demonstrating that men who abuse women are 
nothing but big cowards, Tom Hayden's never called out Barack but 
instead worked overtime to talk up the man who has repeatedly and 
publicly mocked him.   
  
Hijacking the E-Train 
to Crazy Town and packing plenty of stupid, Tom rabidly barks at 
everyone including Paul Krugman -- anyone who might question the 
politics of  Barack Obama -- in total or partial as he tries to whip 
people in line for his abuser Barack Obama. 
  
Dirty
 whores don't speak for the campaign.  Which is why Tom Hayden goes on 
at length about ObamaCare and how it was up to politicians and the 
people are just too stupid to grasp this but last night in Charlotte, 
North Carolina, Barack was stating it's not "what can be done for us, it's about what can be done by us ."
  
There
 are many decisions Barack's made and actions Barack's taken that I will
 hold against him.  The lunatic ravings of Tom Hayden, however, are not 
on that list. Here Tom  is molesting the topic of Iraq: 
  
  
  
Many
 in the peace movement did not believe it then and dismiss it now. To 
the extent this is a rational objection - and not blindness - it rests 
on two arguments. First, some claim that Obama was only following the 
withdrawal plan already agreed to by George Bush. It is an interesting 
question for future historians to uncover what shadow entity 
orchestrated the Iraq-US pact between the end of Bush and the coming of 
Obama.  
  
Oh, history will be the 
judge?  Seriously?  I seem to recall most of us on the left ridiculing 
Bully Boy Bush when he responded to questions about the Iraq War with 
statements like that. 
  
That aside, it 
is logical to conclude that the immanence of Obama's victory pushed the 
Bush administration to wrap up the best withdrawal agreement possible 
before the unpredictable newcomer took office.  
  
It
 isn't logical to conclude any such thing.  If the opinion of the people
 of the world didn't matter to Bully Boy Bush before starting the 
illegal war, if the opinions of world leaders didn't matter to him, why 
in the world would the election of Barack matter? 
  
People
 like Tom Hayden live in their own fact free world.  Never having spoken
 to even one person who worked on the SOFA, Hayden 'just knows' exactly 
how it happened.  The SOFA replaces the UN mandate for the occupation.  
The UN mandate was yearly -- each year it had to be renewed.  Nouri 
renewed it on his end twice.  Outraging the Iraqi politicians both 
times.  The first time (the end of 2006), he insisted he wouldn't do 
that solo again, that he'd get approval from Parliament.  But then he 
turned around and did the exact same thing at the end of 2007.  
  
The
 Bush White House realized early on (late 2007), that an agreement that 
replaced the UN mandate would need to run longer than one year because 
there was too much anger over these yearly renewals.  For that reason, 
it was a contract that ran three years.   Even something that basic is 
beyond the Tom Haydens.  They bought into the lie -- and how popular it 
was -- that Nouri was sticking it to the White House and dictating the 
terms.  Other than the amount of 'rewards,' Nouri didn't dictate a 
thing.  And the SOFA was written prior to the November 2008 election.  
(Is Tom even aware of that?)  November was about fine tuning it and 
about surveying Parliament and greasing palms (the Parliament was 
adament that they would be voting on this contract).   
  
Tom: 
  
In
 addition, Obama increased his previous withdrawal commitment in 
February 2009 to include virtually all American forces instead of 
leaving behind a "residual" force of 20-30,000.  
  
Tom's spinning so hard that even he has to admit the reality in the next sentence: 
  
It
 is true that as the endgame neared, Obama left open the possibility of a
 residual force after American ground troops departed, saying he would 
be responsive to the request of the Baghdad regime.  
  
Yes, Barack gave an interview to the New York Times as candidate about residual troops.  I remember that very well.  And you know what I remember most about that? 
  
  
On the subject of Iran, Barack Obama appears on the front page of this morning's New York Times. War pornographer Michael Gordon and Jeff Zeleny who lied in print (click here, here and here -- the paper finally retracted Zeleny's falsehood that should have never appeared) present a view of Barack Obama that's hardly pleasing.
 Among the many problems with the article is Obama as portrayed in the 
article -- and his campaign has issued no statement clarifying. The Times has the transcript online
 and from it, Barack Obama does mildly push the unproven claim that the 
Iranian government is supporting resistance in Iraq. Gordo's pushed that
 unproven claim repeatedly for over a year now. But Obama's remarks 
appear more of a reply and partial points in lengthy sentences -- not 
the sort of thing a functioning hard news reporter would lead with in an
 opening paragraph, touch on again in the third paragraph, in the fourth
   paragraph, in . . . But though this isn't the main emphasis of 
Obama's statements (at any time -- to be clear, when it pops up, it is a
 fleeting statement in an overly long, multi-sentenced paragraphs), it 
does go to the fact that Obama is once again reinforcing unproven claims
 of the right wing. In the transcript, he comes off as obsessed with 
Hillary Clinton. After her, he attempts to get a few jabs in at John 
Edwards and one in at Bill Richardson. Here is what real reporters 
should have made the lede of the front page: "Presidential candidate and
 US Senator Barack Obama who is perceived as an 'anti-war' candidate by 
some announced that he would not commit to a withdrawal, declared that 
he was comfortable sending US troops back into Iraq after a withdrawal 
started and lacked clarity on exactly what a withdrawal under a 
President Obama would mean." That is what the transcript reveals. Gordo 
really needs to let go of his blood lust for war with   Iran.  
  
And then over at Third that Sunday (November 4, 2007), we offered "NYT: 'Barack Obama Will Keep Troops In Iraq " which was taking the transcript and writing the report as the Times should have covered it.  Tuesday November 6, 2007 (see that day's snapshot ),
 Tom Hayden finally discovers and writes about the article with rah-rah 
for Barack because he didn't read the transcript (and he actually 
misread the printed article) resulting in this garbage . 
 After we called him out, he would write another article suddenly 
'discovering' the transcript and find that things were not as sunny as 
he'd made out to be.
  
Point being, he's no one to trust for facts. 
  
  
  
Tom-Tom's
 thrilled Barack doesn't have 'residual troops' in Iraq but for Barack 
to have residual troops, the SOFA would need to be extended or 
replaced.  With nothing to extend it or replace it,  it had to be 
followed.  That's how a contract works. 
  
Tom: 
  
Here,
 some on the left seized on these remarks to later claim that Obama had 
to be forced by the Iraqis to finally leave. There is no evidence for 
this claim, however. It is equally possible - and I believe more 
credible - that Obama was simply being Obama, knowing that the Iraqis 
could not possibly request the Americans to stay. 
Dissecting
 diplomacy, like legislation, is like making sausage, in the old saying.
 Obama certainly knew that he would gain political cover if he could say
 with credibility that he was only following Bush's withdrawal plan and 
Iraq's request. 
  
There is evidence for
 that claim.  I know Tom doesn't care for Arabs.  Remember it was only 
during his Iraq War makeover that he finally 'apologized' for being a 
tool of the right-wing Israeli government while he was a small-fry state
 legislature who stupidly thought he would end up president done day.  
There was Tom, cheering on the murder of Palestinians.  He really hasn't
 changed his anti-Arab views.  Try to remember that when everyone was 
telling Jane Fonda  that Rollover 
 was an iffy project, Tom was telling her it was political, prescient 
and important (in the film, the world's financial downfall is caused 
largely by greedy, you know this is coming, Arabs).  If Tom weren't so 
'allergic' to Arabs, maybe he'd read the Arab press.  You can find many 
articles that argue Iraqis forced Barack to back down.  Those articles 
generally note   that Iraq refused to grant immunity to US service 
members and that the White House had already made that a deal breaker.
  
  
 Having ignored the mountain of articles on that point, Tom wants to then argue: 
  
  
A more bizarre left criticism of Obama on Iraq is that the war itself never ended but instead morphed into a secret war with tens of thousands of Americans fighting as Special Ops or private contractors.  
  
  
Is he drunk again?  Is that it?  I have no idea.  But last week,  Sean Rayment (Telegraph of London) reported :    
  
More
 than 3,500 insurgents have been "taken off the streets of Baghdad" by 
the elite British force in a series of audacious "Black Ops" over the 
past two years.  
  
It
 is understood that while the majority of the terrorists were captured, 
several hundred, who were mainly members of the organisation known as 
"al-Qa'eda in Iraq" have been killed by the SAS.  
  
The
 SAS is part of a highly secretive unit called "Task Force Black" which 
also includes Delta Force, the US equivalent of the SAS.  
  
 3,500
 killed over the last two years.  Seriously, Tom-Tom, you're going to 
ignore that?  You who tries to reference the Honduran death squads in 
how many articles on Iraq?  You're going to ignore that 3,500 Iraqs have
 been 'taken off the street' as a result of being captured by US and 
British forces?  And that "several hundred" have been killed during this
 time? 
  
The wars on Latin America in the 70s 
and 80s targeted which groups?  The citizens the oppressive regimes 
wanted to shut up.  And we're not bothered by the news from the 
Telegraph? 
  
And this isn't 'conspiracy' talk.  
This is what's been reported by the few reporters who've bothered to 
report.  In December of last year, while everyone was filing 
'withdrawal, Ted Koppel filed an important report on Rock Center with Brian Williams (NBC).
  
MR.
 KOPPEL: I realize you can't go into it in any detail, but I would 
assume that there is a healthy CIA mission here. I would assume that 
JSOC may still be active in this country, the joint special operations. 
You've got FBI here. You've got DEA here. Can, can you give me sort of 
a, a menu of, of who all falls under your control? 
 
 
 AMB. JAMES JEFFREY: You're actually doing pretty well, were I authorized to talk about half of this stuff.
 
  
  
  
Back
 during Vietnam when he had a little bit of guts, Tom Hayden wouldn't 
have accepted this as 'withdrawal' but today he's just an old whore.  In
 fact, didn't Tom-Tom just affect outrage over 600 US troops in 
Honduras?  (He did, click here .) As Barbra Streisand  tells Robert Redford in The Way We Were , "Hubbell, people are their principles."  How sad for Tom Hayden that he no longer has any principles.
  
You know who does appear to have principles?  Bradley Manning. 
  
Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released US military video  of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters  journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010 , the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington   Post) reported 
 in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of 
violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his
 personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized 
software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight 
counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified 
information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported 
 that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges 
including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could 
result in the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took 
place in December.  At   the start of this year, there was an Article 32
 hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced that the government would 
be moving forward with a court-martial.  Bradley has yet to enter a plea
 and has neither affirmed that he is the leaker nor denied it.  The 
court-martial was supposed to begin this month has been postponed until 
after the election .   
  
Yesterday, protests took place across America as people showed their support for Bradley.  Yael Chanoff (San Francisco Bay Guardian) reports  on the action in San Francisco where participants included Iraq Veterans Against the War 's Joshua Shepherd: "It's
 a process to turn around once you've joined the military and committed 
so much of yourself to this institution," Shepherd told protesters 
today.Shepherd was one of six veterans arrested at Obama campaign headquarters in Oakland Aug. 16. After the rally, protesters marched and protested a group watching Obama's   DNC speech."I
 find it hypocritical that Obama promised to protect whistle blowers 
four years ago," said David Zebker, a San Francisco CPA who attended 
march.
  
  
  
  
A
 group of about 20 local DC area people, who are affiliated with the 
Bradley Manning Support Network,arrived at the DNC headquarters to meet 
with a representative of the Obama 2012 campaign to deliver our letter 
with our concerns for Bradley Manning (see below). 
We
 were met at the main entrance of the DNC by security who refused 
entrance to about 4 people from the group who wanted to go inside and 
deliver our letter and to request that it be faxed to President Obama. 
The security guards told us to get off the front steps as were on 
private property. We explained that we were there on business. They 
refused us entry. We said we would not leave. Police were called. US 
Capitol Police showed up in four police cars and one police wagon. We 
talked with the police and explained were there with important business 
we needed to engage the campaign with and President Obama. After a while
 the US Capitol Police all left presumably because they didn't want to 
get involved, probably telling the security guards that it wasn't their 
jurisdiction and that we hadn't broken any laws. 
  
The report also includes photos by Ted Madjosz.  Max Obuszewski (Baltimore Non-Violence Center) adds 
 of the DC protest, "When we arrived we were chanting "President Obama 
Free Bradley Manning." Kevin Zeese an attorney who is a member of the 
steering committee of the Bradley Manning Support Network explained why 
the charges against Manning should be dismissed and why we were focused 
on President Obama. He noted that the decision to hold Manning in 
solitary confinement was made by a three-star general at the Pentagon 
and it would be surprising if he acted without the approval of the 
president, Joint Chiefs of Staff or   Secretary of Defense, in other 
words the decision to illegally torture a U.S. soldier being held in 
pre-trial detention was made at the highest levels of government."  The Bradley Manning Support Network notes 
 that protests took place "in 34 cities across the United States [and] 
targeted local Obama campaign headquarters to demand the President free 
accused WikiLeaks whistleblower and Nobel Peace Prize nominee PFC 
Bradley Manning.  International supporters, in Australia and the U.K. 
also protested at U.S. embassies." 
  
  
  
I want to relay my experience protesting the torture and illegal imprisonment of Bradley Manning.  
As
 two people tried to enter the office to deliever a letter to Obama on 
Manning's behalf, the staffers locked the door and closed the curtains. 
That says a lot. But here's what I thought was most interesting. 
They
 weren't prepared for protest. I am convinced peaceful protest is a good
 avenue to pursue. They think they've locked everything down, that 
people are too afraid, too tired, too progagandized to take them on. 
They need to know that isn't true.  
And 
here's one more thing. They wouldn't let anyone in while we were 
picketing. If there was a large enough group to form 24 hour picket 
lines around the Obama and Romney campaign HQ's, it might be worth 
trying. It would be necessary to offer voter registration while 
picketing because this is offered at the HQ and this should not ever be 
stopped. But if their response to protest is to shut down their office, 
well, it's something to think about! 
  
  
PRELIMINARY PHOTOS.PRELIMINARY VIDEO HERE.
 Charlotte,
 NC—At 4:15pm today, Thursday, September 6, hours before President 
Obama's acceptance speech at the Democratic Convention, five CODEPINK 
activists dropped a 40 foot giant pink slip banner that read "YES WE CAN
 END WAR" off of a parking garage at S. College and 3rd Street near the 
  Democratic Convention.  CODEPINK national organizer Alli McCracken, 
23, from Washington, DC, was arrested and charged with a misdemeanor for
 "attaching a banner to private property without permission."
 "When
 the war in Afghanistan started I was only 12 years old, and for my 
entire adult life the US has continued to squander precious tax   
dollars on war, while young people like me can hardly afford college or 
healthcare, and many can't find jobs," said McCracken.  "Both the 
Republicans and Democrats continue to pour money into the bloated 
Pentagon budget instead of addressing people's real 
needs.  I'm sick and tired of the huge amount of corporate and super-PAC
 money going into elections that keeps our politicians funding war, 
killer drone strikes, and weapons to Israel.  Let's put people before 
profits!"
 
 "There
 were 34 police officers involved in arresting this one peace activist, 
clearly a huge waste of taxpayer money," said Medea Benjamin, cofounder 
of CODEPINK.    "At a convention that is supposed to be
 the most open convention in history, it's tragic that a young activist 
would be arrested for peacefully expressing her desire to end war, a 
position that the overwhelming majority of Democratic delegates 
support."
 CODEPINK
 has demonstrated at both the RNC and DNC, including speaking out every 
night at the RNC and Wednesday night, September 5, when CODEPINK 
co-director Rae Abileah unfurled a pink banner inside the convention that read "Bring Our War $$ Home" during Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer's speech.
 In
 the wake   of the Citizens United case, with corporate and super PAC 
money in politics polluting democracy and drowning out the will of 
voters, CODEPINK will also be calling for money out of politics. "We 
want people-powered elections that prioritize human needs over war and 
greed," said CODEPINK co-director Jodie Evans.  "And we'd like the 
police to go after the real war criminals instead of nonviolent 
protesters."
 CODEPINK,
 founded in 2002, is a women-initiated grassroots peace and social 
justice movement working to end the war in Iraq, stop new wars, and 
redirect our resources into health care, education and other 
life-affirming activities. www.codepink.org
 
  
Wow.  The war's 'over' but Iraqis are being killed by Brits an
  
  
  
  
  
This week on Moyers & Company,
 Bill talks with Green Party presidential and vice presidential 
candidates Jill Stein and Cheri Honkala about their campaign platform 
and what they've learned about American politics.  
  
The
 episode, appropriately entitled "Challenging Power, Changing Politics,"
  delves into the history of the candidates' civic engagement and their 
vision for a just, sustainable future. Don't miss it! 
  
  
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