Couldn't get my mom on the phone. I know they charge the cells but the landline should have been working. This is by Joseph Kishore:
With the US elections out of the way, the American ruling class is moving with remarkable speed to implement a deeply unpopular agenda centered on trillions of dollars in cuts to health care and other social programs.
The first order of business, to be at least partially implemented even before the newly elected Congress takes office in January, is the so-called “fiscal cliff.”
The language is chosen quite deliberately. The image of a “cliff”—first used by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in February 2012—is intended to create a sense of impending catastrophe. The fiscal cliff has become the latest mantra of the political and media establishment, complete with a continually updated countdown on CNN. The aim is to foster a crisis atmosphere to force through measures long desired by the ruling class that would otherwise be impossible to impose.
This “cliff” is an artificial creation. As a result of legislation agreed to by Congress and the Obama administration, the end of the year will bring with it the expiration of Bush tax cuts on all income brackets as well as the implementation of across-the-board cuts in military and domestic spending (excluding Social Security and Medicaid).
Other measures set to expire at the end of the year, particularly extended federal unemployment benefits, have gone unmentioned in the media. Both parties agree on the need to cut off meager assistance to the jobless.
I'm sure Mom's highlighting it because it's the type of article she'd note and it also has to do with what she was writing about Friday in "Potato Chips in the Kitchen." We should all tell Barack, "Jump off that cliff. We're not scared!"
I'm cold tonight and can't get warm. And I'm a freak for my family. Black Irish, I think it's called. Where you think the worst has happened at the drop of the hat. So I'm wondering what's going on at my folks that they can't answer the phone. I finally called Tony's parents. They're friends with my parents and live next door. So they're going to go check and call me in a minute.
But that was like 25 minutes ago so I'm entertaining bad thoughts and I'm sure everything's fine.
I hope so. I'll write about Fringe tomorrow night because I honestly don't remember it right now.
I saw the WSWS article a couple of hours ago and called and called and --
Okay. That was my dad. There must be a problem with the landline because it's not working. They didn't know that until Tony's parents came over. Then he and Tony's father took the plate off the wall and tried to look at the wires to see if there was a loose wire or something. They couldn't find anything but that's what the long delay was.
So everyone's fine. And I was freaking for nothing.
It's going to be weird when Elaine and I move to Hawaii with our daughter. I'll probably be making calls like that about once a month.
Again, I'm a freak for my family. I'll get worried at the drop of a hat when it comes to my parents, my brothers, my sisters, my grandparents, my aunts and uncles.
Let me note Third (quickly). Dallas and the following worked on the edition:
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),
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
And this is what was written:
- Truest statement of the week
- Truest statement of the week II
- A note to our readers
- Editorial: We support Barack Obama . . .
- TV: The continued demise of the media
- Roundtable
- Truest online exchange of the week
- Book Excerpt: Hilary Rosen to the rescue!
- Crapapedia
- We do not embrace sexism (Marcia, Ann, Ava, C.I.)
- Life without water in New York City's towers (WW)
- Highlights
I agree with Jim. Awful edition. So much time wasted on election pieces that never turned out. (Read Jim's note for more on that.)
The only thing that worked was Ava and C.I.'s TV piece. Now that's amazing. Jim thinks it lifts the whole edition up.
I don't know. I think it explains why Ava and C.I. have this rabid following.
I'm not insulting Ava and C.I. I'm pointing out that they write these amazing pieces of writing over and over and that's why they have a devoted following. Ty sent me an e-mail saying over 13,000 views already on the TV piece. And that was this morning.
They're covering Lily Tomlin, Ellen, Lily lying that she was always out of the closet, Malibu Country, Partners (which is a funny show) and more. It's a great article.
Okay, when I work myself up into a frenzy over my family, I get a bad headache. When it passes, I just want to crawl into bed and that's where I am now.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Monday,
 November 12, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Nouri argues with 
Russia though no one's sure what exactly is being said, a new proposal 
is made for the rations card system, 10 more people are executed, Debra 
Sweet and Cindy Sheehan talk activisim in light of last week's 
elections, and more.
The
 former top US commander in Iraq from February 2007 to September 2008 
was General David Petraeus. Late Friday, Petraeus resigned as CIA 
Director citing an affair. If this is indeed the reason he stepped down,
 an affair, if that made him subject to blackmail, then he wasn't 
properly vetted because he had 'intense' relationships with many female 
journalists while he was in Iraq and that should have come up when he 
was up for the post of CIA Director.
Today on Democracy Now! -- no link to that trash -- Amy Goodman again spoke with CIA contractor Juan Cole
 and supposedly they talked about counter-insurgency but that would 
require honesty and you don't get honesty from those currently on the 
CIA payroll. Michael Crowley's dishonest at Time magazine but we'll put that down to a reluctance to tell the 'ugly truth' about counter-insurgency.
As Iraq began to stabilize in 2007 and 2008, counterinsurgency got much of the credit. Soon the theory caught fire in Washington: Think tanks hired
 and the media spotlighted some of the doctrine's many well-educated 
(and combat tested) proponents. The U.S. military developed more counterinsurgency training
 programs for its troops, offering tips on things like making nice with 
village elders and knowing when to let the enemy escape rather than risk
 high civilian combat casualties. This was a form of warfare that even 
many liberals (perhaps misguidedly) saw as kinder and gentler enough than the usual shock and awe to tolerate.
Tips
 on making nice? That sort of leaves out the violence and intimidation, 
doesn't it? Counter-insurgency isn't just handing out a bunch of water 
bottles, it's about getting a native people to turn on their own. That 
means ratting out fellow Iraqis to foreigner invaders. And the ratting 
out? What comes after that? Do the foreign invaders just hand out 
daisies? No. They take out the fingered. 
Those
 sort of targeted assassinations aren't quite the opposite of 
counterinsurgency. (That would be carpet-bombing.) But they fly in the 
face of the doctrine in multiple ways. Drone strikes -- which often kill
 unlucky civilians -- are enraging local populations in countries like 
Pakistan and Yemen, risking "damaging and counter productive" effects for U.S. interests. At least one recent would-be terrorist plotting to attack America has said
 he was motivated by drone attacks in Pakistan. Counterinsurgency 
requires huge numbers of troops to protect and build relationships with 
local populations.   Drone-based counter-terrorism strategy requires few
 if any boots on the ground. Death is rained down anonymously, typically
 no explanation or apology for "collateral damage."
Moving
 over to Iraq where the prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is supposed to 
run Iraq, not ruin the country. Possibly he misunderstood? He's forever 
in search of new enemies to tick off. For example, from Friday's snapshot:
After the decision last month to buy billions of weapons from Russia, it may appear Russia and Iraq are getting very close -- and they might be. But friendly? Do you threaten a friend? AFP reports, "Baghdad has told Russian energy giant Gazprom to either cancel its energy contracts in Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region or abandon its work with the central government, a spokesperson said on Friday."
October 9th,
 Nouri was strutting across the world stage as he inked a $4.2 billion 
weapons deal with Russia. Then something happened 30 days later and the 
status of the deal became in question. Was it all just buyer's remorse 
over a big-ticket item? Saturday, Mohammed Tawfeeq and Joe Sterling (CNN) reported:
Iraq's prime minister has canceled a recently signed arms deal with Russia after "suspicions over corruption" surfaced, his spokesman told CNN on Saturday.
Under the $4.2 billion deal forged last month, Russia would deliver attack helicopters and mobile air-defense systems to Iraq.
Amani Aziz (Al Mada) reported that there are senior Iraqi government officials who are involved with a brother of Russian President Vladimir Putin. All Iraq News noted there are calls for Nouri to step forward and clear his name. Al Rafidayn added Nouri spokesperson Ali al-Moussawi announced that the deal is off. New contracts may be needed, he said, because weapons are, but the deal is off. AP hedged the bets going with language about the deal being "reconsidered" and in "turnaround." Reuters spent the day providing constant updates and in their third one they noted, "In a confusing exchange, the announcement by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's office was immediately contradicted by the acting defence minister who denied the corruption charges and said the Russian arms deals were still valid." RIA Novosti reminded, "At the time the deal was announced in October, the Russian press had hailed it as the country's largest since 2006. Under the contract, Moscow is to supply 30 Mil Mi-28NE night/all-weather capable attack helicopters, and 50 Pantsir-S1 gun-missile short-range air defense systems." Al Mada reports today that Iraqiya is demanding Nouri provide a report to Parliament explaining the details of the weapons deal with Russia.
If the deal is off, Nouri looks rather poor on the world stage. But then, he already did as Hiwa Osman (Rudaw) notes today:
Those
 who saw the picture released by the prime minister's office of Nuri 
al-Maliki inspecting fighter jets by knocking on the metal body of the 
plane should not be surprised that he has decided to halt the deal out 
of suspicion of corruption.
The
 picture should have sounded alarm bells for the Russians, Czechs and 
people of Iraq. He seemed like a man shopping for a car in a sales lot, 
not a head of state buying strategic weapons. From the start, the deal 
did not seem to have been examined well or to have gone through the 
proper procurement procedures.
You
 don't make a four billion dollar deal, take the bows nationally and 
internationally for it, then cancel a few weeks later without your image
 taking a huge hit to your image. That's setting charges of corruption 
to the side. Those who hoped that, come Monday, something as basic as 
whether the deal was on or off would be known were hoping in vain. 
The World Tribune states,
 "Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki has canceled a $4.2 billion 
weapons contract with Russia amid allegations of bribery. But the 
Defense Ministry,
which signed the deal, has insisted that the project would continue."
which signed the deal, has insisted that the project would continue."
The Russian press is as unsure of what's taking place as everyone else. Pravda feels
 the need to find an enemy before nailing down any details and they tell
 you that the "rumors" flying "could be provoked." By whom? "However, 
sources at the government say that there could be a third party involved
 in the scandal. 'The United States has made significant efforts to 
prevent the transaction, - a source in the Russian government circles 
said. - I won't be surprised if they try to prevent or complicate it 
post factum. The Americans have not been in Iraq for so many years to 
give the arms market of Russia,' another expert from the military and 
diplomatic circles said on conditions anonymity." The Voice of Russia   quotes
 Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh stating, "We will renegotiate the 
agreement to put an end to suspiciouns of corruption in the weapons 
deal." Olga Denisova (Voice of Russia) observed this afternoon, "At present, the news from Iraq is very contradictory." UPI adds,
 "Confusion surrounds Iraq's weekend announcement that it's scrapping a 
$4.2 billion Russian arms contract but the feeling is it may be a ploy 
by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government to renegotiate a more 
favorable deal."
Something only slightly less than confusion surrounds the food-ration card system. Last Tuesday,
 Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh announced the cancellation of the 
program. There was a huge pushback that grew and grew -- from 
politicians, from clerics, from the people until Friday
 when it really couldn't be ignored. The program has been in place since
 1991 meaning that it is all over half of Iraqis know (Iraq has a very 
young population, the median age has now risen to 21). It allowed Iraqis
 to get basic staples such as flour sugar, rice, etc. As the clerics, 
including Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, noted, this move would hurt 
the people who are already struggling economically. It was also an 
idiotic political move to make. In April,   provinicial elections will 
be held. Nouri's already in campaign mode and this very unpopular move 
did not help him there. The smartest thing politically would have been 
to go into a full retreat on the proposal and announce that you had 
heard the people, to flatter them and make it appear you listened.
Saturday, there was a moment when it looked like Nouri might grasp that. All Iraq News reported
 the Cabinet of Ministers will hold an emergency meeting on the issue. 
Nouri's political slate is State of Law, his political party is Dawa. 
How unpopular is the move to cancel the food-ration program? Alsumaria reported
 Dawa announced that they had nothing to do with the decision and 
they're also tried to insist at the same   time that it wasn't Nouri's 
decision. Kurdistan Alliance MP Sharif Soliman told All Iraq News that those responsible for the decision are trying to make up excuses and push the blame elsewhere. The Kurdistan Alliance's Mohsen Saadoun told Alsumaria that Nouri is responsible for this decision.
Today Alsumaria reports
 that the food program is not getting the axe. Instead, the people will 
be able to decide if they would like to remain on the existing system or
 receive cash. When you tell people they can remain on the ration card 
system or they can get cash, when you tell that to people in a bad 
economy with many bills, they will be tempted to go for the cash. The 
ration card is the better system. But there are bills owed that have to 
be paid and there is the hope in people that things have to get better. 
So they will tell themselves that they can make it right now with the 
cash and that, in a few   months or a year, fate will provide and things
 will be better. In the meantime, they've been moved off the progam and 
the prices -- as Sistani, politicans and the people have noted -- will 
sky rocket. So the money will be of little use to them then.
But
 they won't be able to go back on the ration card system. The point is 
to dismantle the system. That was what the US government tried to do 
immediately after the invasion. It's what Nouri and others have done 
with the constant reduction of what rations the cards provided. All Iraq News notes
 the Parliament has voted to cancel the decision to replace the cards 
with cash but it's not clear whether the Cabinet's emergency meeting and
 new decision overrides that move by the Parliament.  Khalid al-Ansary and Nayla Razzouk (Bloomberg News) covers it in a brief English language story.
All Iraq News notes
 the trade unions, including the General Federation of Trade Unions, 
want to know which Cabinet members voted to do away with the ration card
 system and they also want to know who was involved in the $4.2 billion 
weapons deal with Russia -- a deal that may or may not be off. Meanwhile
 Al Mada reports the weapons deal and the ration card system move has   political blocs are calling for a reshuffling of the Cabinet.
Alsumaria reports that a headless corpse of a woman was discovered in Baghdad.  Staying with violence, as noted in the October 15th snapshot, Iraq had already executed 119 people in 2012.  Time to add more to that total.  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported
 last night that 10 more people were executed on Sunday ("nine Iraqis 
and one Egyptian").  Tawfeeq notes the Ministry of Justice's statement 
on the executions   includes, "The Iraqi Justice Ministry carried out 
the executions by hanging 10 inmates after it was approved by the 
presidential council."  And, not noted in the report, that number's only
 going to climb.  A number of Saudi prisoners have been moved into 
Baghdad over the last weeks in anticipation of the prisoners being 
executed.  Hou Qiang (Xinhua) observes, "Increasing
 executions in Iraq sparked calls by the UN mission in the country, the 
European Union and human rights groups on Baghdad to abolish the capital
 punishment, criticizing the lack of transparency in the proceedings of 
the country's courts."
| 
October 10th was World Day Against the Death Penalty -- in fact, it was the tenth World Day Against the Death Penalty. Amnesty International noted some countries were seeing a decrease or halt in executions while other were seeing an increase, "In 2012, Iraq,
 the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip in the Occupied Palestinian Territories
 and Saudi Arabia have actually seen a rise in executions. Almost a 
third of those executed in Saudi Arabia in 2012 – 65 by early October – 
were alleged drugs offenders, including many foreign nationals.
 In Iraq 119 people have been executed this year so far – almost double 
the known total for all of 2011." That same day, Human Rights Watch 
issued "Iraq: Urgent Need for a Death Penalty Moratorium" which included: Iraqi officials contend, when challenged about the death penalty, that it is rooted in cultural tradition. But the prevalence of unfair trials and torture in detention, particularly in national security and terrorism-related cases, raises serious concerns and makes the lack of transparency in Iraq's imposition of the death penalty particularly egregious, Human Rights Watch said. 
The US presidential election was last week. Cindy Sheehan discussed it on Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox with Black Agenda Report's Glen Ford and World Can't Wait's
 Debra Sweet. In the excerpt below, Debra's commenting on Glen's belief 
that there will not be significant resistance in the next four years to 
Barack. 
Debra
 Sweet: The Democrats came to power and they paralyzed the movement for 
the most part -- not the people on this call, at least the ones I know, 
were never paralyzed and didn't have the same level of illusions that a 
lot of people have had. But, you know, thinking back to 2008, you told 
this story the other night when you spoke at Revolution Books
 about losing half of your mailing list three days after Obama's 
inauguration when you criticized him -- in fact, you called him a War 
Criminal -- because he did a drone strike in Pakistan. What did he do 
after his re-election? He just did a drone strike in Yemen. 
Cindy Sheehan: Right. 
Debra
 Sweet: Right. And this is a whole picture here of the unbridled -- 
whether it's Republican or Democrat -- they have complete unity on the 
importance of the national security state -- up and down, US domination 
being expressed militarily, financially and even ideologically all over 
the world. Everybody on the call knows this so I feel it's essential to 
say, absolutely, there has not been significant -- There wasn't even 
enough resistance, for God's sake, when Bush was in. Otherwise, we would
 have driven him out. 
Cindy Sheehan: Right. 
Debra Sweet: I mean, forgive me, and I am not a Pollyana person -- 
Cindy Sheehan: Uh-huh. 
Debra
 Sweet: I am not about to lay down in the face of this horror of the US 
continuing to do what it does even in the United States. And I've got to
 say that when Glen is talking about there won't be enough significant 
resistance coming from the Black community? You know we all have to take
 into account that there's an epedimic of mass incarceration that most 
specifically and completely effects the Black community, the Latino 
community, oppressed communities across the country -- people who are 
effected by this. It is so bad that in New York City, 2000 people get 
stopped every day for illegal searches -- you know illegal under the 
Fourth Amendment of the Constitution -- where NYPD says, 'You know, 
basically we're holding you and we're looking through all your stuff and
 you're not free to go until we're through with you. This is what 
develops the new face of Jim Crow, it's the new face really of slavery 
in this society. And all of those   things, they were never addressed in
 this election and are not even going to be talked about. But they are 
the very things that are happening to people that I believe have the 
potential to create very significant resistance indeed.  
In
 fairness to Glen, he was speaking of Black resistance in particular 
(although the question the caller asked was about left resistance in 
total). Friday, Stan described
 a scene that's all too familiar -- where someone who would be against 
empire wars suddenly is for them because of Barack's skin color. Glen 
referenced incidents like that, to be clear since we're not quoting from
 Glen. In terms of Debra's remarks, I applaud them but would have noted 
one more targeted group: activists. And not just when they show up at 
political party conventions. You see the targeting especially as 90s 
drew to a close and the targeting of environmentalists seriously began. 
They were kind of the test case. How much could they be targeted without
 creating an uproar? Today, we have more activists arrested and serving 
hard time today than at any time since   Watergate. Think Bradley Manning (still unconvicted) and attorney Lynne Stewart. Targeted for their activism.  | 
the world cant wait
 
