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Tuesday,
 September 4, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the political 
stalemate continues, the Iraqi ministries undercount the dead, Cindy 
Sheehan announces she is no longer on the Peace and Freedom Party's 
presidential ticket, Jill Stein fights Google and Jill Stein wins, and 
more.  
  
Starting with the US and the presidential race there.  A surprise announcement 
 was made today when Cindy Sheehan issued a statement at her website.  
Sheehan was Roseanne Barr's running mate on the Peace and Freedom Party 
ticket.  Due to health reasons, Cindy has stepped down and also due to 
personal reasons: "As to the personal reasons, Candidate Barr and I have
 irreconcilable differences on how best to serve the Peace and Freedom 
Party."  Cindy goes on to off her "hope that the Party/Campaign would 
take my suggestion to replace me with the worthy and talented Ms. 
Cynthia McKinney."  Former US House Rep Cynthia McKinney was the Green 
Party's presidential nominee in 2008.
  
I can't 
speak for Cindy Sheehan.  I can repeat what I noted last week which is 
one person was doing work and one person was Tweeting.  Cindy was the 
vice presidential candidate.  She was going to the media, being 
interviewed.  At her site, she and Jon Gold had upped the publishing so 
that new content was coming from the campaign. 
  
  
But, as I noted Friday ,
 right now there is movement do dump Roseanne by some members of the 
Peace and Freedom Party ("How would it feel to be the first presidential
 candidate whose own party publicly rebukes them?").
  
Cindy worked her ass off -- Cindy and Jon Gold both did.  And Roseanne Tweeted. 
  
And
 Tweeted hateful Tweets that led to complaints from the Peace and 
Freedom Party which led Roseanne to say 'This is my personal Tweet feed 
and this is my campaign Tweet feed.'  Yeah, let's pretend like you can 
draw that line and run for public office.  Roseanne's ticket was the 
ticket to cover because it is so f**ked up.  I'm glad Cindy's off the 
ticket for that reason.  I'm sad she's off the ticket because she really
 using the platform in a way that spotlighted issues and that raised the
 profile of the Peace and Freedom Party.   
  
I 
like Roseanne as a person and as an artist but months ago I said I 
wouldn't vote for her and that's why: The crazy.  She's governed by fear
 and can't let go of the hate.  We've had more than enough fear and hate
 the White House.  In fact, we've had so much for so long that there are
 elements on the left that see the country in terms of Hatfields and 
McCoys.  (The right has seen it that way for some time.  I never thought
 we on the left would fall victim to that as well.)  And we want to 
demonize Republicans as a result of that view. 
  
Republicans
 are your friends, your lovers, your co-workers.  They're not the 
enemy.  They may have different ideas and an exchange about those ideas 
might make both sides stronger but no exchange ever takes place when 
people demonize.  If there are politicians you do not care for, call 
them out in any tone you want.  But politicians don't necessarily 
represent the people -- if the Green Party or the Peace and Freedom 
Party honestly thought politicians represented the people, they wouldn't
 be working to build a political party, they'd just join one of the two 
dominant ones. 
  
If 15 Republicans nationwide 
switched to the Peace and Freedom Party this cycle, the party would 
consider it a success and should.  They wouldn't say, "Ew, former 
Republicans?  We don't want them!"   But it's unlikely that they'll 
recruit from that group or many groups when Roseanne can't stop Tweeting
 hate which, yes, does include wishing cancer on people.  When you're 
crossing those lines as a comedian, you're in trouble.  When you're 
doing it as a political candidate, your campaign's dead.   
  
I
 don't think, my opinion, Cynthia McKinney could revive it.  If she were
 asked, I would hope she would say no.  What would be the point?  
Cynthia's an elected politician who served in Congress.  She ran last 
cycle for president and knows the hard work involved.  So now she's 
going to join on to Roseanne's campaign and bust her ass -- but not so 
much that she steals attention -- to keep the campaign in the news?  How
 does that help Cynthia in any way?  It doesn't.  
  
In Roseanne's art, she is caring and loving and embracing.  It's a shame she did not bring that side into her campaign.  
  
  
Robert Mackey (New York Times) reports that
 Google relented and notes that Ben Manski, Jill's campaign manager , 
states that the "ad was primarily intended to be shown on cable and 
satellite channels, like MSNBC and Comedy Central, which, like the 
Internet, are not subject to government regulation of objectionable 
language in the way that words and images broadcast over the airwaves 
still are."  The word in question was "bulls**t" -- according to Mackey,
 it was partially bleeped for the TV ad -- and you can stream the 
commercial -- unbleeped -- at the Times ' report. 
  
  
John
 Hockenberry:  So we've got a little time here and I want to do a couple
 of things.  First, I want to give you your chance to lay out your 
platform, if you can relatively briefly.  What is the Green Party's 
message in 2012? 
  
Jill
 Stein:  The message is we need an economy that works for every day 
people -- not for the bankers who control not only the economy but 
certainly our political system as well.  So as the only political party 
that does not accept corporate money, we actually have the unique 
ability to reflect the urgent needs and desires of the American people. 
 And we are not bought and paid for, we can actually call for the real 
solutions that the American people are clamoring for.  And I would add 
to this that several polls recently have showed that between 50 and 60% 
of the American electorate is actually calling for a third party and 
saying they would seriously consider voting for one.  So why is it?  
Number one, we're calling for jobs -- not simply tax breaks or corporate
 tax breaks or favors for the so-called job creators who are creating 
jobs in India and China.  We're calling for 25 million jobs here in this
   country through a Green New Deal.  We know how to do this.  It got us
 out of the Great Depression in the 1930s.  It can get us out of this 
Great Recession right now.  And we're calling for a Green version of 
this New Deal because it would also jump start the Green economy that 
could spell an end to climate change and make wars for oil obsolete.  
That's number one.  Number two, health care as a human right.  Through 
Medicare for all -- basically simply extending the elegibility of 
Medicare to start at the moment of conception so that everybody is 
covered comprehensively.  It puts you back in charge of making your 
health care decisions, not a profiteering CEO and it saves us trillions 
of dollars.  A well kept secret: It doesn't cost us, it saves us because
 it eliminates the massive, wasteful health insurance bureaucracy.  
Number three, tuition-free public, higher education.  We have a 
generation of   students who are locked out of a future.  They are 
endentured servants under the current system.  Both Mitt Romney and 
Barack Obama are promising they will stay the course on student debt.  
That's not what we need.  We've bailed out the bankers who caused this 
problem through waste, fraud and abuse on Wall Street.  We can bail out 
the students who've been the victim of that problem and provide free, 
public higher education that is tuition-free.  We know that it pays for 
itself.  We did this through the GI Bill after WWII.  We know for every 
dollar we tax payers invest, we get seven dollars back in benefits to 
the economy.  
  
John
 Hockenberry:  Okay.  We're talking with Jill Stein, Green Party nominee
 for President of the United States.  Students are victims of the bank 
crisis because they're holders of this debt and their interest rate 
reflects some of the consequences of the financial crisis, is that what 
you're saying there? 
  
Jill
 Stein: Well, it's not only the debt --  the sky rocketing of tuition so
 that state legislators have been able to provide big tax breaks to the 
wealthy.  The burden has fallen on the students because the public 
support for higher education isn't there -- 
  
John Hockenberry: Right. 
  
Jill
 Stein: Add to that the unemployment crisis which falls hardest on their
 backs with 50% unemployment  and underemployment for students.  That 
really locks them into endentured servant status. 
  
John
 Hockenberry: It was a miserable summer for college students, 
absolutely, as you point out, Dr. Jill Stein.  Alright, how come climate
 change is almost no part of the debate in 2012 between the Republicans 
and the Democrats where it seemed to be on both party platforms in 2008? 
  
Jill
 Stein:  Yeah, well I think, you know, it's no secret our parties have 
been bought and paid for by Wall Street and multi-national corporate 
interests and, of course, oil, fossel fuel, nuclear -- nuclear power, 
etc., you know, all the dirty energy stands to benefit from staying the 
course.  So you see de-regulation of energy, the continuation of the 
current crisis which is not only causing drought, heat waves, the 
melting of the Artic and beyond, rising prices of food, fires, etc.  You
 know, we have a disaster that is really beginning to hit the American 
people.  The American people are calling for real solutions to climate 
change.  They are told, over and over, that it's a choice between your 
job or your climate and, in fact, that's not true at all.  
  
  
It's a very lively segment and The Takeaway
 deserves credit for doing it -- not just the interview with Jill, the 
segment is also about political conventions, American voters and other 
issues with various people sounding off.  
  
In 
Charlotte, North Carolina, the Demcorats have kiced off their national 
convention.  And on the subject of the implosion of Roseanne's campaign 
(a) it is news, (b) I'm glad we made time for the campaign (again, it 
was news), (c) Roseanne may pull herself out of her spiral, (d) if she 
doesn't that might make for an even more interesting story -- meaning no
 one ever had an excuse not to cover the Roseanne campaign.  They made 
excuses. They ignored her and they ignored Jill.  It's their loss. 
  
On
 lively and sounding off,  Archbishop Desmond Tutu shook things up over 
the weekend.  As War Criminal Tony Blair banked more blood money by 
speaking Thursday in South Africa, he faced protests and also saw 
Archbishop Desmond Tutu bow out of the speaking engagement with his 
office stating the Archbishop could not share the stage with Blair due 
to his Iraq War actions.  Saturday, Tutu had a column on the matter which the Observer has published :If leaders may lie, then who should tell the truth? Days before George W Bush and Tony Blair
 ordered the invasion of Iraq, I called the White House and spoke to 
Condoleezza   Rice, who was then national security adviser, to urge that
 United Nations weapons inspectors be given more time to confirm or deny
 the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Should they be 
able to confirm finding such weapons, I argued, dismantling
 the threat would have the support of virtually the entire world. Ms 
Rice demurred, saying there was too much risk and the president would 
not postpone any longer.On what grounds do we decide 
that Robert Mugabe should go the International Criminal Court, Tony 
Blair should join the international speakers' circuit, bin Laden should 
be assassinated, but Iraq should be invaded, not because it possesses 
weapons of mass destruction, as Mr Bush's chief supporter, Mr Blair, 
confessed last week, but in order to get rid of Saddam Hussein?The
 cost of the decision to rid Iraq of its by-all-accounts despotic and 
murderous leader has been staggering, beginning in Iraq   itself. Last 
year, an average of 6.5 people died there each day in suicide attacks 
and vehicle bombs, according to the Iraqi Body Count project.
 More than 110,000 Iraqis have died in the conflict since 2003 and 
millions have been displaced. By the end of last year, nearly 4,500 
American soldiers had been killed and more than 32,000 wounded.On
 these grounds alone, in a consistent world, those responsible for this 
suffering and loss of life should be treading the same path as some of 
their African and Asian peers who have been made to answer for their 
actions in the Hague.
It quickly became the column read 'round the world.   Tom Foot (Independent) explains , "Archbishop
 Desmond Tutu today brands Tony Blair and George Bush war criminals and 
calls for both former leaders to be hauled before an international 
court. "  Adam Sich (ITN) added ,
 "As for the call for Mr Blair and Mr Bush to face justice in The Hague,
 he said different standards appeared to be set for prosecuting African 
leaders than western ones, and that the death toll during and after the 
Iraq conflict was sufficient on its own for them to face action."  BBC quoted 
 War Criminal Tony Blair insisting, ""I would also point out that 
despite the problems, Iraq today has an economy three times or more in 
size, with child mortality rate cut by a third of what it was. And with 
investment hugely increased in places like Basra."  Pakistan's The Nation covered it .   CNN covers 
 the story and notes, "Tutu detailed some of the costs of the war. More 
than 110,000 Iraqis have died in the conflict, while millions have been 
displaced, he said. Close to 4,500 U.S. soldiers have been killed and 
more than 32,000 wounded, Tutu added." The Irish Times covers the story as well ,
 "As for the call for Mr Blair and Mr Bush to face justice in The Hague,
 he said different standards appeared to be set for prosecuting African 
leaders than for western ones, and that the death toll during and after 
the Iraq conflict was sufficient on its own for them to face action. 'On
 these grounds, alone, in a consistent world, those responsible should 
be treading the same path as some of their African and Asian peers who 
have been made to answer for their actions in The Hague'."  The Oman Observer carries an AFP report . 
 Thanks to Archbishop Tutu, two War Criminals are getting some of the 
long overdue condemnation they've had coming.  Today George Monbiot 
offered "We're one crucial step closer to seeing Tony Blair at The Hague " (Guardian ):
  
  
When Desmond Tutu wrote that Tony Blair should be treading the path to The Hague,
 he de-normalised what Blair has done. Tutu broke the protocol of power –
 the implicit accord between those who flit from one grand meeting to 
another – and named his crime. I expect that Blair will never recover 
from it.The offence is known by two names in international law: the crime of aggression and a crime against peace. It is defined by the Nuremberg principles
 as the "planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of 
aggression". This means a war fought for a purpose other than 
self-defence: in other words outwith articles 33 and 51 of the UN 
Charter.That the invasion of Iraq falls into this category looks indisputable.
 Blair's cabinet ministers knew it, and told him so. His attorney 
general warned that there were just three ways in which it could be 
legally justified: "self-defence, humanitarian intervention, or UN 
security council authorisation. The first and second could not be the 
base in this case." Blair tried and failed to obtain the third.
 
  
  
  
  
Violence didn't stop in August.  Today, Press TV reports  that 2 bombings between Al-Adhaim and Tuz Khurmatu claimed the lives of 6 Iraqi soldiers with another two left injured.  AFP notes  that 16-year-old Ali Mohammed Ali was discovered outside Kirkuk "his hands, feet and head cut off."   Alsumaria notes  a Kirkuk roadside bombing has left a Peshmerga captain and two members injured today.  In   adddition, Dar Addustour reports  a Basra cafe frequented by Emo teens and young people was bombed.
  
The Iraq War hasn't ended -- even if the press interest in it has.  NPR's Scott Horsley won "Biggest Damn Liar Of The Week " on Sunday from Third for his 'report' on Weekend Edition Sunday in which he proclaimed , "There are no more US troops in Iraq."  At Third, we noted that last month,  RTT reported ,
 "More than 225 U.S. troops, seven Defense Department civilians, 530 
security assistance team members and more than 4,000 contracted 
personnel are currently in the office at the Iraqi government's   
invitation." We pointed to the December 13th, Talk of the Nation which noted 
 all US troops would not be out of Iraq by the end of 2011. The guest 
was Ted Koppel and he noted the 157 who guard the US Embassy, the "few 
hundred U.S. military trainers."  (That's not counting contractors.)  
And we noted that, as last week closed, Sean Rayment (Telegraph of London) was reporting :
 
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.  
  
  
Fars News Agnecy reports
 that Ammar al-Hakim, leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, is 
stating that the situation in Iraq has improved and the country "is 
moving towards progress and development" making him Iraq's home grown 
Tony Blair -- a liar supreme, able to stand out even in a world of 
liars.Al Mada reports 
 today that the National Alliance is in disagreement with Article 140.  
Article 140 takes its name from being the 140th article in Iraq's 
Constitution passed in 2005.  And it's law, not proposal, not bill, not a
 notion.  Law.  The Constitution was passed in 2005.  The US installed 
Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister in the spring of 2006.  Article 140 
was supposed to have been implemented by   the end of 2007 per the 
Constitution.  Nouri refused to do so. Kirkuk is disputed.  It is
 oil-rich and the Kurdistan Regional Government says they have a right 
to it and the Baghdad-based central government says they have a right to
 it.  That's what "disputed" means (we're going slow in case Chris 
Hill's joining us this morning -- at his 2009 confirmation hearing he 
showed indifference to and ignorance of the issue).  Article 140 calls 
for a census and a referendum.  And Article 140 has been repeatedly 
ignored. In March 2010, Iraq held parliamentary elections.  
Nouri's State of Law came in second to Iraqiya which meant no second 
term for Nouri unless Iraaqiya imploded in the 30 day process of naming a
 Cabinet.  (When named prime minister-designate, you have 30 days to 
name a Cabinet.  If you don't succeed within 30 days, another prime 
minister-designate is supposed to be named.)  Nouri threw his   fit and 
had the White House backing him.  This brought the government to a 
standstill for over 8 months (Political Stalemate I).  During this time,
 Nouri made spectacular promises in an attempt to sway people to his 
side.  He even (finally) scheduled a census for Kirkuk. The US 
brokered a contract with the various political blocs.  It gave Nouri a 
second term in exchange for various concessions.  Among those was 
implementing Article 140.  This contract is called the Erbil 
Agreement.   The day after it was signed, Parliament held their first 
real session in over 8 months and Nouri was named prime 
minister-designate.  Nouri then trashed the Erbil Agreement and called 
off the the Kirkuk census that had been scheduled for the beginning of 
December.  Resolving the issue of the disputed territories is 
seen as very important and instead addressing it, it has been ignored 
and ignored and ignored.    That doesn't resolve anything and only 
breeds further tensions.  So now the National Alliance -- of 
which Ammar al-Hakim is a part -- wants to act as if Article 140 of the 
Constitution is optional?  And al-Hakim wants to pretend that things are
 better in Iraq? This as Nawzad Mahmoud (Rudaw) reports ,
 "Several Kurdish lawmakers in Baghdad believe that the situation is not
 yet ripe for negotiations between the Kurdistan Region and central 
government."  Speaking to various Kurdish MPs a portrait of a distracted
 Nouri quickly emerges: 
 
Last
 week, the Non-Aligned Summit was held in Tehran where leaders discussed
 solutions to the current situation in Syria. During the summit, Iraqi 
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki proposed an initiative to end Syria's 
violence.  
"Maliki should have proposed an initiative to end Iraq's political turmoil instead," Abdullah said. 
He added, "It's surprising that Maliki is busy finding a solution for Syria while his own country is in crisis."  
All Iraq News reports people are setting fires to the many orchards in the province and farmers are demading the authorities do something. 
  
  
  
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