Like Nikta's about to do?
I guess it's good if it forces the show forward as opposed to just kind of petering out when the holidays arrive.
And I had two e-mails about Arrow and could I write about it?
You missed it. Stan's covering that and you can go read his "Arrow" from last week.
It is a good show, I agree. I may grab something else in February since Fringe will be over by then. May not. We'll see. (If you have suggestions, go for it. I'm thinking Beauty and the Beast, offhand.)
Okay, Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "The Nation Bullpen" went up last night.

The useless Nation magazine and, look, there's old hairy back Dave Zirin! :D
Bill Van Auken and David North report:
There are occasions when statements appearing in newspapers are so significant that one can justifiably predict they will be cited for years to come.
Such is the case with the November 29 editorial published by the New York Times entitled “Rules for Targeted Killing.” It marks another critical milestone in the repudiation of core democratic rights and constitutional principles by the US ruling establishment.
The editorial notes approvingly that the Obama administration is “developing rules for when to kill terrorists around the world.”
The drafting of these “rules” has been attributed to concerns within the administration in advance of the elections that “standards and procedures” be put in place in case Obama lost. Undoubtedly a more compelling motivation is the fear that one day they could all be indicted for war crimes. The new rules, and the Times editorial itself, are a tacit admission of criminality.
Nonetheless, the Times hails this “first step toward acknowledging that when the government kills people away from the battlefield, it must stay within formal guidelines based on the rule of law—especially when the life of an American citizen is at stake.”
To call such language Orwellian barely begins to do it justice.
You'll read that at WSWS, not at The Nation, because Katrina's cronies are all about making excuses for Barack, not about holding him accountable.
Let's note Third so I can get in bed. Dallas and the following worked on it:
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 we came up with:
- Truest statement of the week
- Truest statement of the week II
- A note to our readers
- Editorial: Did the AP forget journalism?
- Media: Losing big in the court of public opinion
- How NPR Silences Women (Ann, Ava and C.I.)
- The UN again forgets women
- Kennedy still stands for sexism
- Look who's playing politics with Benghazi!
- Senator Murray calls for a DoD suicide prevention ...
- State of the left, state of the country
- Workers shut down Port of Oakland
- Highlights
On the big fear of Scott Brown, how wimpy are some pundits that they really think they can insist John Kerry not go into the Cabinet because Scott Brown might be elected?
They really have NO candidate to offer? Is that really true? How pathetic. John Kerry needs to be Secretary of State. He should have been it in 2008 for all the whoring he did for Barack. He was owed it. He's still owed it.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Monday,
 December 3, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri uncorks the crazy
 and threatens his political rivals, tensions between Erbil and Baghdad 
increase, the Peshmerga (and their tanks) station themselves around 
Kirkuk, violence increased in November, the Democratic Party needs to 
address the issue of Ranking Member on the House Veterans Affairs 
Committee because Corrine Brown and her non-stop defense of and excuses 
for the VA isn't going to cut it with veterans, and more.
This evening Hurriyet news reported
 that Kurdistan Regional Government Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani is 
"accusing Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of continually suspecting
 conspiracies against him" and quotes Barzani stating, "We want to solve
 issues through dialogue, not through tanks or F-16s. The problems with 
al-Maliki are not personal.  Most Iraqi factions support us."  What is 
Barzani talking about?  Nouri has created so many crises in Iraq that it
 can get confusing.  This one stems from Iraq's law of the land.
Iraq's
 Constitution was written in 2005.  At the time of the writing -- and 
still today -- there were areas in dispute.  Three provinces are part of
 the semi-autonomous Kurdish region.  In addition, Kurds feel they have a
 right to other areas including oil-rich Kirkuk.  The central government
 out of Baghdad also feels it has a claim to Kirkuk.  What you have is 
two sides attempting to make historical claims to one piece of land.  
That will never resolve the issue, as the writers of the Constitution 
knew.  So they created Article 140.  It calls for a census and a 
referdum to resolve disputed areas.  Nouri al-Maliki is installed by the
 US government as prime minister of Iraq in the spring of 2006.  Article
 140 is supposed to be implemented no later than the end of 2007.
Despite having had six years to implement Article 140 (and despite forever promising he was just about to), Nouri has refused to implement it. The climate was not just one of mistrust on this issue, it was one of Nouri refusing to follow the law. And he made it worse a few months ago by sending Iraqi forces (Tigris Operation Command) into these disputed areas. The Kurds fear that he is doing that to 'resolve' the dispute by force.
Despite having had six years to implement Article 140 (and despite forever promising he was just about to), Nouri has refused to implement it. The climate was not just one of mistrust on this issue, it was one of Nouri refusing to follow the law. And he made it worse a few months ago by sending Iraqi forces (Tigris Operation Command) into these disputed areas. The Kurds fear that he is doing that to 'resolve' the dispute by force.
The dispute could have ended last week and it stood a serious chance.  Dropping back to Thursday's snapshot:
Tensions
 continue between the KRG and the Baghdad-based central government over 
Nouri sending in the Tigris Operation Command forces into disputed 
regions, as Martin Kobler noted today when addressing the UN Security 
Council.  In an interesting development, Mohammad Sabah (Al Mada) reports
 Nouri is said to be angry because his generals are not providing him 
with details and summeries of the ongoing negotiations with the Kurdish 
Peshmerga officials.  If Nouri is really being kept out of the loop, 
that says a great deal about how much his power has faded in the last   
weeks.  Even more surprising since the Peshmerga has published the main points the two sides agreed upon:
1.
 Forming an operational mechanism, principles of cooperation and joint 
committees in the disputed regions. The joint operations in the disputed
 regions of Kurdistan will remain unchanged but the mechanism of 
operation will be revitalized between the federal forces and the forces 
of the Kurdistan Region. 
2.
 The meetings of all the joint operations committees will be rescheduled
 to once a month. This will be increased if deemed necessary, especially
 for meetings of the SAC. 
3.
 The location of the meetings and coordination for the meetings will be 
organized by the command of the Iraqi Armed Forces who will work as a 
coordinator for the work of the committees, especially the SAC. 
4.
 A follow-up procedure will be conducted for the work and the decisions 
of the joint committees and punitive measures will be taken against any 
defaulting party or individual. 
5.
 Any party or individual will be punished in case of reporting 
misleading information to their superiors in order to create problems 
and crisis at any level. 
6.
 The SAC must be immediately informed about any problems that arise in 
the disputed areas in order to immediately work on solving them. 
7.
 The agreements must be honored and the commanders, officials and 
individuals who violate the terms of the agreements will be punished. 
8.
 Forming a quick mechanism to pull out all the forces of both sides that
 were mobilized to the region after Nov. 16, 2012. Pulling out these 
forces must be transparent, truthful and supervised by the supreme 
committee members after the consent of the SMC. 
9.
 Reconsidering the decision of forming operations command in the region,
 especially the Tigris Operations Command, and giving back the authority
 of security in Kirkuk to the police, Asayish and internal forces. 
This
 could have been the first step in resolving that crisis.  Instead, 
Nouri nixed the deal and uncorked the crazy.  And he was spewing it on 
Saturday.  Al Mada reported
 the prime minister made a public statement in which he attacked 
Shi'ites, Sunnis and Kurds, stated that those attempting to withdraw 
confidence for him should be warned and floated "arrests" as part of his
 threats.  It was a very disturbing speech.  In the speech he made a 
demand that everyone attend a meet-up.  All Iraq News notes
 that the Kurdistan Alliance has already: They won't be attending.  They
 issued a statement explaining Nouri has refused to be practical and 
resolve the crisis (he created).  While the Kurds willingly met with 
Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi in good faith, Nouri blew off the
 exchange.  When the Iraqi military and the Peshmerga came up with a 
14-point plan to resolve the latest crisis (created by Nouri), Nouri 
said it would not be allowed.
Dar Addustour added that Nouri declared in his speech that the Kurds don't believe in the Constitution and that efforts at a no-confidence vote in him will be met by actions that have never been taken before. In addition, he announced he wants to arrest members of Parliament who raised the torture of Iraqi women in prisons. He also made a number of statements involving President Jalal Talabani which appear to be that the same people who put him (Nouri) in power put Jalal in power and if Nouri goes down so does Jalal. Al Rafidayn emphasized the attacks on Jalal Talabani in Nouri's remarks. Today the Iraq Times reports MP Amir al-Kanani, with Moqtada al-Sadr's political bloc, states that Nouri's speech was in response to the loss of popularity for his political party Dawa as a result of his attempts to end the food ration card system and as a result of the Russian arms deal that fell apart. Dawa is Nouri's political party. His political slate that he ran with in 2010 is State of Law. Provincial elections are supposed to take place in April which could be behind any concern about the popularity of Dawa. All Iraq News notes that State of Law was supposed to meet this evening in Nouri's offices to prepare their strategies for the upcoming elections.
Dar Addustour added that Nouri declared in his speech that the Kurds don't believe in the Constitution and that efforts at a no-confidence vote in him will be met by actions that have never been taken before. In addition, he announced he wants to arrest members of Parliament who raised the torture of Iraqi women in prisons. He also made a number of statements involving President Jalal Talabani which appear to be that the same people who put him (Nouri) in power put Jalal in power and if Nouri goes down so does Jalal. Al Rafidayn emphasized the attacks on Jalal Talabani in Nouri's remarks. Today the Iraq Times reports MP Amir al-Kanani, with Moqtada al-Sadr's political bloc, states that Nouri's speech was in response to the loss of popularity for his political party Dawa as a result of his attempts to end the food ration card system and as a result of the Russian arms deal that fell apart. Dawa is Nouri's political party. His political slate that he ran with in 2010 is State of Law. Provincial elections are supposed to take place in April which could be behind any concern about the popularity of Dawa. All Iraq News notes that State of Law was supposed to meet this evening in Nouri's offices to prepare their strategies for the upcoming elections.
Al Mada notes
 that the religious authorities in Najaf are said to be troubled by the 
escalation of the conflict.  They're not the only ones troubled.  Wael Grace (Al Mada) notes
 that the actions are troublinging investors and would-be investors 
dismaying the business community in Iraq.  Also watching the situation 
closely is the government of Turkey.  Rudaw reports,
 "Turkish officials say they are following recent tensions between the 
Kurdistan Region and the Iraqi government with concern."  Alsumaria reports
 Iraqiya head Ayad Allawi declared today that Nouri al-Maliki's actions 
have been an assault on the Kurdish region.    It's noted that Allawi 
has spoken via telephone with both Barzani and Talabani about the issue 
already today.  The Iraq Times notes
 that Allawi is scheduled to visit Erbil on Wednesday.  Iraqiya is the 
political slate that came in first in the 2010 parliamentary elections. 
Earlier today Alsumaria reported that a large number of Peshmerga are moving towards Kirkuk. The Iraq Times reports that they arrived with tanks by afternoon. Nouri called the move "irresponsible escalation." Meanwhile Alsumaria notes Talabani was returning to Baghdad today in an attempt to re-start a dialogue on the issues.
How
 serious is the above?  Not at all serious to the reporters covering the
 US State Dept.  Despite the fact that a press conference was held 
today, no one asked spokesperson Mark Toner one question about Iraq.  
In violence, Alsumaria reports a Kirkuk mortar attack injured a police officer. Also in Kirkuk, Alsumaria reports a 20-year-old man shot dead his 2 brothers and 1 sister behind the Dawa Party's offices and he shot his parents as well but they were left injured, not dead. All Iraq News notes 1 person was shot dead in Mousl. Friday ended the month of November. Iraq Body Count counted 244 deaths from violence in the month. AFP reports the government ministries (under)count 166 deaths. The outlets notes this is an increase from the government's claims of only 144 deaths in October.
As noted above, Nouri's threatening 
to arrest members of Parliament who spoke publicly about the abuse Iraqi
 women are suffering in prisons.  The BRussels Tribunal has a very important article on this torture. 
 We're going to highlight a little from their report each snapshot this 
week and hopefully include the entire thing that way.  Here they are on 
the starting point:
The
 torture journey starts when security forces raid and search the houses,
 through random raids or ordered raids. The Fourth Commander of the 
Second Brigade – Team 6, Major Jumaa Al-Musawi, has confirmed this 
information. This man has a criminal record, and he was assigned to this
 position by the American Forces during their first training courses in 
intelligence gathering. He used to live in Al-Thawra (now called Sadr 
City) / Sector 87.  In his own words:   
"When
 we receive the raid and search orders from the Brigade Intelligence, we
 usually start with a little party and drink alcohol, or take some 
drugs. We choose the most cruel soldiers to carry out such operations. 
The first thing we do is to lock the men and youngsters in a room, and 
the women and children in another room. We start to steal what can be 
taken fast, like jewelry, and we mess up the house, like throwing the 
women's underwear here and there; some soldiers even steal some of this 
underwear. After that, we start to do a body search on the women, and 
having fun touching their private parts or breasts. We threaten them to 
arrest the men in the house when they refuse to be touched. If those 
women are pretty, we usually rape them immediately, and leave the house 
when we find no weapons or incriminating material. In case we find some 
weapons, every man and youngster in the house will be arrested, and if  
 there are no men at home, we arrest all the women instead. This is 
totally according to the orders we receive."   
What
 follows is one of many stories about the crimes committed by these 
corrupt creatures, who shamelessly brag about their misdeeds to each 
other. Al-Musawi and his assistant Lt. Rafid Al-Darraji (another 
criminal who was imprisoned in Abu-Ghraib and sentenced to death, but 
was released by the Americans, using him as a guardian, along with their
 own guard dogs, giving him the Lt. rank. He used to live in Al-Nuariyah
 District. Here is what they state:   
"In
 July 2006, we received an order to raid and search the house of one of 
the fabric merchants in Karradah (his name is not mentioned). When we 
reached his house at 1:00 a.m., we didn't find the man, we only found 
his wife and his 17 year old son. During the search we found a rifle, 
which – according to our law – is permitted for the personal protection 
of civilians. But we threatened the woman that we would arrest her son 
if she didn't let us rape her. So, we handcuffed the son and locked him 
in a room, and one soldier after the other raped the lady in the other 
room. The other soldiers stole what they could find, then we headed to a
 well-known brothel in Al-Doura District in Um Alaa's house to enjoy the
 rest of the night there."   
They
 continue: "The first thing we do when an arrested woman is being 
transported to the detention location, is that every part of her body is
 touched by all the soldiers in the vehicle, while using dirty language.
 When we reach the detention facility, we leave her in the investigation
 room, supervised by the intelligence officer and his assistants. They 
directly take all her clothes off, blindfold her, handcuff her, then the
 intelligence officer starts to rape her with his assistant. And later 
they ask her some questions: if she's guilty or innocent and so on. Then
 they blackmail her, saying that she should be cooperative and give 
important information about the District where she lives, otherwise they
 would distribute photos of her while she was naked and being raped. 
They would accuse her of false charges if she would file a complaint 
about harrassment and torture. If she receives a "guilty" verdict, she  
 usually stays in the same location for a period of one to three months,
 in order to finish the procedures of her "case", to be sent to the 
headquarters. During these months, every single intelligence officer and
 soldier in the Brigade will rape her. After that, she will be sent to 
Al Tasfeerat Prison in Shaab Stadium, or to Al-Muthanna Airport Prison. 
Sometimes the prisoner is transferred to the facility of the Chief 
Commander's Office in the Green Zone, which is a cellar under the 
building of the Baghdad Operations Headquarter, supervised by Major 
General Adnan Al-Musawi. This place is one of the most dangerous, 
dirtiest prisons of Al-Maliki.   
More
 than the Russian weapons deal, more than the escalation, this is the 
most dangerous story for Nouri al-Maliki.  That's why he's threatening 
people who are talking about it.  Why is it so dangerous?  
Because
 it could be your mother, your sister, your daughter.  This goes to the 
core of abuse in Iraq.  And this story harms Nouri because he's over the
 prisons.  So he wants it to go away and various of his flunkies have 
stepped forward in the last days to dismiss it.  Yesterday,  Aswat al-Iraq ran
 a story about how the judges are insisting that "only" 46 Iraqi women 
are being held right now for questioning.  46 women who are not charged 
with one damn thing shouldn't be held to begin with.  But they want to happy talk it and tell you that it's "only" 46.
The Crazy has been let out and it is running free and, if you doubt that, note that the story continues that, oops, one of the women was pregnant. And she went into labor during questioning. Don't worry though. They're going to let her go just as they're done questioning her. They have held a pregnant woman without charge, they have upset her and she went into labor. She is still not released from custody.
In what world is that acceptable? It's not, especially not in Iraq.
The Crazy has been let out and it is running free and, if you doubt that, note that the story continues that, oops, one of the women was pregnant. And she went into labor during questioning. Don't worry though. They're going to let her go just as they're done questioning her. They have held a pregnant woman without charge, they have upset her and she went into labor. She is still not released from custody.
In what world is that acceptable? It's not, especially not in Iraq.
And this news emerges just as the Iraqi people are again saying "enough."  Kitabat puts the announcement on their front page:
Friday, January 25th, Iraqis are preparing to return to Baghdad's Tahrir Square and protest. It's another call for change and it will come ahead of the scheduled provincial elections. The announcement notes that Nouri al-Maliki has become more tyrannical, that the Parliament is more corrupt, that two years ago, Iraqis took to the streets calling for change and were promised change but there was none.
Nouri's abusive to Iraqi women and like most men who beat up on women, what really scares him is that people are going to learn what a petty, little coward he is that he has to beat up on women.
Friday, January 25th, Iraqis are preparing to return to Baghdad's Tahrir Square and protest. It's another call for change and it will come ahead of the scheduled provincial elections. The announcement notes that Nouri al-Maliki has become more tyrannical, that the Parliament is more corrupt, that two years ago, Iraqis took to the streets calling for change and were promised change but there was none.
Nouri's abusive to Iraqi women and like most men who beat up on women, what really scares him is that people are going to learn what a petty, little coward he is that he has to beat up on women.
In other news,  Sean McLachlan (Gadling) continues reporting on his now completed trip to Iraq with, today, a look at Iraq's Christian community: 
The Christian Community in Iraq
 is a lot smaller than it was in 2003 when the Coalition invaded. During
 the occupation, radical Muslims claimed the Christians were helping the
 invaders and used this as an excuse to attack them. Churches and shops 
were bombed and individual Christians were murdered or told to leave on 
pain of death.
In an interview with the BBC, the priest at St Joseph's Chaldean Church in Baghdad said that in the past nine years his parish has shrunk from 1,200 families to 300. The New York Times reports that before the war the Christian population was estimated to be as high as 1.4 million, and has now dropped to less than 500,000.
I met few Christians in my 17 days in Iraq other than some shopkeepers and the owners of a liquor store when I went on a beer run in Basra. I was anxious to see some of the early medieval centers of Christianity that make the country so important to Church history. The Christian community in Iraq is splintered into more than a dozen different churches, including the Assyrian Church of the East, the Syrian Orthodox Church, the Syrian Catholic Church, the Armenian Apostolic Church, and many more. Many of their rites and beliefs are from a markedly different religious tradition than what we are familiar with in the West.
In an interview with the BBC, the priest at St Joseph's Chaldean Church in Baghdad said that in the past nine years his parish has shrunk from 1,200 families to 300. The New York Times reports that before the war the Christian population was estimated to be as high as 1.4 million, and has now dropped to less than 500,000.
I met few Christians in my 17 days in Iraq other than some shopkeepers and the owners of a liquor store when I went on a beer run in Basra. I was anxious to see some of the early medieval centers of Christianity that make the country so important to Church history. The Christian community in Iraq is splintered into more than a dozen different churches, including the Assyrian Church of the East, the Syrian Orthodox Church, the Syrian Catholic Church, the Armenian Apostolic Church, and many more. Many of their rites and beliefs are from a markedly different religious tradition than what we are familiar with in the West.
There are a 
series of photo that go with the essay.  I would argue that Chrisians --
 and all minorities groups -- immediately became at risk in Iraq 
following the US invasion as a result of the US government's desire to 
put thugs in charge to shock the Iraqi people into submission.  Thugs in
 charge guaranteed that the murders of Iraq's various minorities never 
resulted in any real punishments.  
One of the worst attacks on Iraqi Christians is back in the news so let's drop back to the November 1, 2010 snapshot for details:
Yesterday in Baghdad, Iraqi forces swarmed Our Lady of Salvation Church where people were being held hostage by assailants.  Ernesto Londono and Aziz Alwan (Washington Post) report,
 "The bulk of the bloodletting happened shortly after 9 p.m. when Iraqi 
Special Operations troops stormed Our Lady of Salvation church in the 
upscale Karradah neighborhood to try and free worshipers who had been 
taken hostage. Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy's Miami Herald) reports,
 "Insurgents seized   control of a church in central Baghdad on Sunday, 
taking hostages during evening mass after attacking a checkpoint at the 
Baghdad Stock Exchange." Graham Fitzgerald (Sky News) observes, "Apparently no attempt was made to negotiate with them and bring the siege to a peaceful conclusion." John Leland (New York Times)   quotes
 police officer Hussain Nahidh stating, "It's a horrible scene. More 
than 50 people were killed. The suicide vests were filled with ball 
bearings to kill as many people as possible. You can see human flesh 
everywhere. Flesh was stuck to the top roof of the hall. Many people 
went to hospitals without legs and hands."  Lara Jakes (AP) reports there were 120 hostages in the church.  Ned Parker and Jaber Zeki (Los Angeles Times via Sacremento Bee)   add,
 "The Iraqi police immediately sealed off the surrounding area in the 
busy Karada commercial district. The American military was called in to 
help. As U.S. Army helicopters buzzed overheads, American officers 
accompanied Iraqi commanders and shared satellite imagery, according to 
Iraqi police and the U.S. military. A caller to the Baghdad satellite 
channel Baghdadiya, who insisted he was one of the attackers, said the 
group was demanding the release of al-Qaida prisoners in Egypt and 
threatened to execute the hostages if the authorities failed to meet 
their demands."
Anne Barker (Australia's ABC) reports,
 "The siege began when militants wearing suicide vests and armed with 
grenades took an entire congregation hostage. Some 120 people were held 
in the church for at least four hours." Today the Telegraph of London explains (link has text and video) the death toll has risen to 52. BBC News offers a photo essay of the siege.  Lewis Smith (Independent of London) quotes
 hostage Marzina Matti Yalda, "As we went outside the hall to see what 
was happening, gunmen stormed the main gates and they started to shoot 
at us. Many people fell down, including a priest, while some of us ran 
inside and took shelter in a locked room as we waited for the security 
forces to arrive." The Telegraph of London quotes
 a young male hostage (unnamed) stating of the   hostage takers, "They 
entered the church with their weapons, wearing military uniforms. They 
came into the prayer hall, and immediately killed the priest." Martin Chulov (Guardian) adds,
 "The priest they call Father Rafael is believed to have survived, but 
his colleague, Father Wissam, is believed to have been killed." Jim Muir (BBC News) offers
 a video report and an Iraqi female hostage states, "Gunmen entered the 
church and started to beat people. Some of the people were released but 
others were wounded and some died and one of the   priests was killed." 
Muir points out that churches in Iraq have been attacked before "but 
there's never been anything like this."
Today All Iraq News reports
 the Ministry of Housing and Construction has announced that the 
reconstruction of the Chuch has been completed.  They state 
reconstruction was done at a cost of 2.3 billion dinars.  Last week in 
Australia, the Assyrian Times notes,
 Senator Concetta Fierravanit-Wells discussed the plight of Iraqi 
Christians before the Australian Senate and she made a number of motions
 including one which "calls upon the Government to raise the signficant 
human rights concerns of Christian Assyrians with the Iraqi Government."
Ray McGovern has a piece at OpEd News on Susan Rice
 that we will try to highlight a section of tomorrow.  We are short on 
time and space today so I'm pulling the last part of Martin 
Kobler's briefing to the UN Security Council and we'll include it 
tomorrow.  Right now we have to go over a House Veterans Affairs 
Committee hearing. 
US House Rep Bob Filner 
served in Congress for many years.  He chose not to seek re-election 
last November and instead ran for, and won, Mayor of San Diego.  He was 
sworn in today and hopefully will be as strong a voice for the San Diego
 community as he was for veterans in the last year as he served as Chair
 of the House Veterans Committee or Ranking Member (depending on whether
 or not Democrats controlled the House) on the Committee.  His departure
 leaves a huge hole on the Democratic side of the Committee.  Bob Filner
 didn't play games.  He didn't care who was in the White House and who 
appointed the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.  If it was a Democrat, his 
questions were just as tough in hearings as they were when it was a 
Republican.  He put the veterans first and he brought common sense into 
every hearing to cut through all the double talk various officials 
wanted to try to hide behind. 
US House Rep 
Linda Sanchez has that same focus and intensity and she would make a 
great Ranking Member.  US House Rep Michael Michaud is a bit lower key 
but he has a methodical approach that could be a real plus for the 
Committee.  US House Rep Silvestre Reyes also has a lower key approach 
but echoes Filner's common sense approach that cuts through the double 
talk.  Those are the three strongest Democrats on the Committee 
currently and any of the three would make a great Ranking Member.
A veteran
 of the Iraq War stopped me last Wednesday after a House Veterans 
Affairs Committee and said, "Please tell me they're not making her 
Committee Chair.  I can't understand her and she looks like she's ready 
to go on the road with Bootsy [Collins] and George [Clinton]."  He was 
referring to Corrine Brown.  [And her bad wig -- her bad wigs are 
infamous.]    Veterans do not feel she is on their side because all she 
does is make excuses. 
That's all she did at 
last week's hearing.  It's all she ever does.  US House Rep Al Green sat
 in on the hearing and I believe he's just been assigned to this 
Committee.  The former judge was first elected to Congress in November 
2004 and has been re-elected every two years since.  He made a point to 
state Wednesday that on the Veterans Affairs Committee, he doesn't come 
in saying he's a Democrat, "I'm a person who respects people who are 
willing to risk their lives for us. They go to distance places and they 
don't always return the way they left. And I just believe that we have 
to do as much as we can to assist them. And I'm a believer that when it 
comes to these issues, we can transcend party lines and work hard for 
them."  It's a shame he doesn't have more seniority because he'd be a 
wonderful Ranking Member or (when the House goes back to the Democrats) 
Chair.
The topic of the hearing was the money 
that VA has wasted on trips.  And US House Rep Corrine Brown wanted to 
offer excuses and whined about how the VA having to go through their 
records to provide answers to Congress was an imposition on VA.  Is the 
woman crazy?  If it takes too many hours for the VA to gather the 
information, that goes to their not doing an adequate job with their 
record retention which does include storage.  
While
 Brown made one excuse after another,  US House Rep Al Green stated, 
"The optics of this are quite disturbing. I sense that you are contrite.
 I sense that you want to attone. But I have to let you know the optics 
are quite disturbing." He is correct.  Appearing before the Committee?  
VA's Deputy Secretary W. Scott Gould and he was accompanied by the VA's 
Phillipa Anderson and W. Todd Grams.  US House Rep Jeff Miller is the 
Chair and he outlined the issues right at the start. 
Chair
 Jeff Miller: We are here to examine, in detail, VA's conference 
spdning, particularly following the VA Inspector General's report 
highlighting the wasteful spending that occurred at HR conferences in 
Orlando, Florida in 2011.  We will also examine VA's response to 
Congress regarding its conference spending.  Fundamentally, this hearing
 is about accountability -- accountability to veterans, to taxpayers and
 to this oversight Committee.  I am concerned on all fronts.  Let me 
briefly share the reason why.  On August 16, 2012, the Ranking Member 
and I sent a letter to the Secretary asking a series of questions 
related to VA's conference spending.  In that letter we referenced the 
conflicting testimony we received over the course of the 112th Congress 
regarding VA's total expenditures.  First we were told $20 million was 
spent in FY 2011 on conferences.  Then we were told it was a little over
 $100   million.  Finally, we were told that no accurate, reliable 
figure on conference expenditures exists.  Because of these 
discrepancies, we asked for clarification of VA's total conference 
spending for that year and prior years, as well as a breakdown of all 
individual conferences.  Rather than receiving a coherent response 
clearly explaining these discrepancies and answering all of the 
questions we posed, VA produced a data dump of information to the 
Committee under the cover of a letter by Assistant Secretary for 
Congressional and Legislative Affairs, Joan Mooney, on August 24, 2012. 
 Even though I discussed what I believed was the lack of a response to 
our letter at the Committee's September 25, 2012 hearing, we were not 
informed by Ms. Mooney until a week later that her latter, and the 
information provided along with it, served as the Secretary's official 
response.   But even assuming what was provided in August was the   
Secretary's official response, our questions still weren't answered.  
And those questions that were answered conflicted with prior VA 
testimony.  For example, when we tallied up the total VA conference 
expenditures for FY2011 based on the information VA provided, it came to
 $86.5 million.  This represents the fourth answer provided it came to 
$86.5 million.  This represents the fourth answer provided to the 
Committee this Congress on VA conference spending in FY2011: First $20 
million, then over $100 million, then no reliable number and, now, $86.5
 million.
That's not 
minor.  And although Corrine Brown may feel that it 'imposes' on VA to 
make them accountable, that is -- someone get her a copy of the 
Constitution -- Congress' job.  As always, US House Rep Phil Roe -- a 
medical doctor -- could be counted on to provide wisdom in these areas. 
 He noted that, at his practice, they figure out the next year's 
continued education needs and then they figure out a budget and then 
they start booking.  He also addressed what he'd learned in the 
continued education classes he'd taught.  And he noted that it's 
nonsense to claim that it takes months to find out these costs.  He said
 he could make one phone call and find out the costs of continued 
education for the 450 employees and have the answer in five minutes.   
Gould wanted to argue that with 320,000 employees -- they took months to
 reply.  And as Roe pointed out, these are written checks.  It shouldn't
 be   difficult to calculate.  
US
 House Rep Bill Flores objected to sending VA staff to Italy -- on the 
taxpayer's dime -- and wondered why, when additional training is needed,
 it can't be done online?  US House Rep Tim Walz made several good 
points.   We'll note this comment by Walz,  "The thing that's always 
concerned me about professional development is: Why aren't we 
backplanning it from the results that Dr. Roe talked about, what we're 
going to get out of this?  I've got to be honest with you, if you're 
doing professional development and the wait time on claims increases, 
your professional development stinks.  And that's the way it is." 
That's
 an overview.   We're not done.  We have to go back to Brown.  In the 
hearing, she noted she was made fun of about her comments at a previous 
hearing.  Unless someone else wrote about the hearing the way we covered
 it in the snapshot, she was referring to my comments.  
To
 which I say, when she was demanding accountability from the VA (when 
Bully Boy Bush occupied the White House), I looked the other way on her 
speaking.  We never could quote her in full because she's so bad about 
not finishing sentences.  But we would selectively quote her.  Now?  I'm
 going to try and transcribe her bad speech as she makes idiotic 
statements using lousy grammer?  Forget that.  I don't want to pick up 
her bad habits.
Reality, she's a member of 
Congress and has been for nearly 30 years.  She should have worked to 
improve herself.  She didn't.  She didn't even try.  She sounds like an 
idiot.  
No sympathy?  I arrived in college 
with a huge knowledge gap because I arrived with a huge memory gap of 
whole years wiped away.  
In college, this 
huge knowledge gap of things I learned but couldn't recall was 
embarrassing.  I was an idiot throughout freshman year.  The most basic 
things my peers knew, I had no idea about.  (World War II to give but 
one example.)  I was funny and could make the entire room erupt in 
laughter but, honestly, a lot of those 'jokes' that people thought were 
so funny?  No joke. I was being serious.  I was that ignorant.  And it 
was a very steep climb but I worked very hard and made up for as much as
 I could as quickly as I could.
So I don't 
really have a lot of sympathy for a Congress member who, year after 
year, opens their mouth and sounds like an idiot because they don't know
 proper English, because they can't finish their sentences and because 
they're reading level is so low that it's embarrassing when they try to 
read from their opening statements.  I'm sorry, Corrine, I have no 
sympathy for you.  Life has obstacles.  Anyone who works to overcome 
their own, I don't mock them.  There's a Democrat in the House who has a
 condition that makes his speaking a struggle.  I have never and would 
never mock him and I congratulate him on the long road back that he's 
made and is making.  But a woman who sits in Congress for 29 years and 
can't learn to speak?  Who is never tempted to better herself and thinks
 sounding like a buffoon is acceptable?  Get used to the mocking because
 if you're going to be Ranking Member, your poor speech is about   to 
get a lot more attention.  And not just from me.  You're a member of the
 US Congress.  That should force you to strive for something better, not
 beg you to be a public embarrassment.  If no one's ever before made it 
clear to you how embarrassing you are, hate me but use that hate to 
improve yourself because your current speaking abilities are 
unacceptable.