Adam H. Johnson Retweeted
On "Ep 34: What the Hell is Wrong with MSNBC?" we explore why the most influential outlet on the left ignores so many issues––war, worker strikes, Palestine, climate change––that are important to the left. 
Our guest: an anonymous former MSNBC employee.
Our guest: an anonymous former MSNBC employee.
I really enjoyed that. I think you will as well. If we give up and allow MSNBC to be 'the left,' there are people out there who will think MSNBC's talking points are the most we can ever hope for.
We need to not just dream bigger, we need to think bigger.
See Kat's "Ed Schultz talks MSNBC."
former MSNBC host Ed Schultz talks about how he was ordered not to cover Bernie Sanders' announcement that he was going to run for President, even though all the preparations for it had already been made, and that Clinton operatives were involved in blocking the coverage 
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Wednesday, April 18, 2018.  Ignore facts and reality and you too can embrace violence.
Last Friday night, US President Donald Trump took to the airwaves to announce that the US, the United Kingdom and France were bombing Syria. The claim put forward as fact was that Syrian ruler Basher al-Assad had attacked his own people with chemical weapons -- an attack that made no sense unless it was, in fact, carried out by the so-called 'rebels.' As Ava and I noted in "TV: Neither humanity nor honesty factor into corporate news," the corporate media refused to question the claims put forward.
What they -- and some faux left people -- did do was say it was like Bully Boy Bush.
An illegal war? Good for them!
Not so fast. That's not what they did.
Trump Tweeted something with "mission accomplished" in it and they began comparing it to Bully Boy Bush under the banner "Mission Accomplished."
To them, that was criticism.
To them.
To anyone with half a brain, their 'critique' was revealing. Those 'critiquing' were revealing their own true dreams and hopes: A long, long war.
Donald's speech suggested this could be a one-off and that didn't please them. They wanted a long struggle -- as they made clear -- all of them but especially NBC's Chuck Todd and CBS' Margaret Brennan.
They couldn't question the attack, they couldn't question the hard to believe claims for the attack, but they could question the notion that the bombing of Syria might end quickly.
War -war -war. They are damaged souls who can only find happiness when others are suffering.
And now the claims for bombing are already falling apart. Will Morrow (WSWS) reports:
Jonathan Cook (ANTIWAR.COM) notes:
People died because of these lies.
This morning, Sam Tawseef posted a video that was supposed to be depicting 'justice' in Iraq -- a woman who had been raped was stoned to death by a crowd of men. It was a crowd, women may have been present, but I saw men and I only saw it once because when I went to reload the clip -- a little over two minutes long -- it had already been removed (even though I was only the third view of it).
I don't understand the removal.
It was disturbing. It was also supposed to be real. It happened. Why was it taken down?
The same mob mentality and cruelty in that crowd has been present in the US press. That woman was every country the US government has bombed and attacked this century alone. The mob lusting for blood was the US press. No one stepped forward to say, "Stop!" They just went along with it and the woman was stoned to death.
Last Friday night, US President Donald Trump took to the airwaves to announce that the US, the United Kingdom and France were bombing Syria. The claim put forward as fact was that Syrian ruler Basher al-Assad had attacked his own people with chemical weapons -- an attack that made no sense unless it was, in fact, carried out by the so-called 'rebels.' As Ava and I noted in "TV: Neither humanity nor honesty factor into corporate news," the corporate media refused to question the claims put forward.
What they -- and some faux left people -- did do was say it was like Bully Boy Bush.
An illegal war? Good for them!
Not so fast. That's not what they did.
Trump Tweeted something with "mission accomplished" in it and they began comparing it to Bully Boy Bush under the banner "Mission Accomplished."
To them, that was criticism.
To them.
To anyone with half a brain, their 'critique' was revealing. Those 'critiquing' were revealing their own true dreams and hopes: A long, long war.
Donald's speech suggested this could be a one-off and that didn't please them. They wanted a long struggle -- as they made clear -- all of them but especially NBC's Chuck Todd and CBS' Margaret Brennan.
They couldn't question the attack, they couldn't question the hard to believe claims for the attack, but they could question the notion that the bombing of Syria might end quickly.
War -war -war. They are damaged souls who can only find happiness when others are suffering.
And now the claims for bombing are already falling apart. Will Morrow (WSWS) reports:
On Monday, the US and British 
intelligence agencies released a joint report charging Moscow with 
unspecified “cyber warfare” against the West. The American media was 
filled with hysterical warnings that Russia may have hacked “millions” 
of personal devices as well as critical infrastructure.
The tenor of the media coverage was epitomized by the New York Times,
 which labelled the intelligence agencies’ report a “computer-age 
version of a Cold War air raid drill, but asking citizens to upgrade 
their password rather than duck and cover.”
The coordinated campaign comes 
amid the unravelling of the official pretext for Friday night’s illegal 
US-British-French bombing of Russia’s ally Syria—the claim that the 
Assad government carried out a chemical weapons attack in eastern Ghouta
 on April 7.
On Sunday, the Independent published
 an on-the-spot report by well-known veteran journalist Robert Fisk, an 
expert on Middle East policy, who visited Douma, the town in Ghouta 
where a gas attack supposedly occurred.
Fisk spoke with Dr. Assim 
Rahaibani, who works at the medical clinic where the widely publicized 
videos were filmed showing children being hosed down with water, 
ostensibly to relieve poison gas inhalation. He quotes Rahaibani as 
follows:
“I was with my family in the 
basement of my home three hundred metres from here on the night, but all
 the doctors know what happened. There was a lot of [government] 
shelling and aircraft were always over Douma at night—but on this night,
 there was wind and huge dust clouds began to come into the basements 
and cellars where people lived.
“People began to arrive here 
suffering from hypoxia, oxygen loss. Then someone at the door, a ‘White 
Helmet,’ shouted ‘Gas!,’ and a panic began. People started throwing 
water over each other. Yes, the video was filmed here, it is genuine, 
but what you see are people suffering from hypoxia, not gas poisoning.”
This account is in line with 
statements by Russian authorities, who have charged that the White 
Helmets, the anti-Assad “rebel” organization funded by Britain, staged 
the gas attack under orders from UK intelligence to provide its Western 
sponsors with a pretext for intervention. Fisk notes that by the time he
 arrived in Douma, the White Helmets had already left to join fighters 
of the Islamic fundamentalist group Jaysh-al Islam, who fled Douma for 
Idlib under an agreement brokered with Russia.
Fisk’s report is a devastating 
exposure of the lies of the governments of France, Britain and the US, 
which have provided no evidence to substantiate their charges against 
the Assad regime. The imperialist governments’ narrative was immediately
 disseminated by a corrupt media that functions shamelessly as a 
propaganda arm of the state.
As the World Socialist Web Site insisted
 from the outset, the incident was a CIA-organized provocation to 
provide a pretext for imperialist intervention, continuing the 
seven-year-long US regime-change operation against Russia’s ally Assad, 
during which time Washington has armed and funded right-wing Islamist 
proxies.
Fisk’s report is at the same time
 a damning indictment of the corporate media, along with various 
pseudo-left organizations, such as the International Socialist 
Organization, which regurgitated all of the governments’ lying pretexts 
and made no effort to investigate them. The media has responded to 
Fisk’s report by burying it. In the 24 hours since its publication, 
neither the Washington Postnor the New York Times,
 which in 2005 called Fisk “probably the most famous foreign 
correspondent in Britain,” has reported on Fisk’s on-the-spot story.
The US government responds to 
each exposure of its lies by concocting new ones. The chemical weapons 
charge followed directly after the collapse of the unsubstantiated 
British and US claims that Russia carried out the attempted 
assassination on British soil of its former agent Sergei Skripal and his
 daughter Yulia, using a nerve agent. Both Yulia and Sergei are now on 
their way to a full recovery despite having supposedly been poisoned 
with the most fatal military-grade agent in existence.
Jonathan Cook (ANTIWAR.COM) notes:
The air strikes on Syria at the weekend were patently illegal 
according to international law. That would have been the case even had 
there been a chemical weapons attack in Douma, in part because it would 
have been necessary for independent inspectors to determine first 
whether the Syrian government, and not the jihadists there, was 
responsible.
The air strikes would have been illegal too, even if it could have 
been shown that a chemical weapons attack had taken place and that Assad
 personally ordered it. That is because air strikes would have first 
required authorization from the UN Security Council. That is why 
international law exists: to regulate affairs between states, to prevent
 militarism of the “might is right” variety that nearly destroyed Europe
 80 years ago, and to avoid unnecessary state confrontations that in a 
nuclear age could have dire repercussions.
Had Assad been shown to be responsible, Russia would have come under 
enormous international pressure to authorize action of some kind against
 Syria – pressure it would have been extremely hard for it to resist.
But had it resisted that pressure, we would have had to live with its
 veto at the Security Council. And again, for very good reason. Israel, 
the US and the UK have used depleted uranium munitions in the Middle 
East, and Israel and the US white phosphorous. But who among us would 
think it reasonable for Russia or China to unilaterally carry out 
punishment air strikes on Maryland (US), Porton Down (UK) or Nes Ziona 
(Israel), and justify the move on the grounds that the US and UK could 
veto any moves against themselves or their allies at the Security 
Council? Who would want to champion belligerent attacks on these 
sovereign states as “humanitarian intervention”?
But all of this is irrelevant because whatever incontrovertible 
information the US, UK and France claimed to have that Syria carried out
 a chemical weapons attack last week is clearly no more reliable than 
their claims about an Iraqi WMD program back in 2002.
People died because of these lies.
This morning, Sam Tawseef posted a video that was supposed to be depicting 'justice' in Iraq -- a woman who had been raped was stoned to death by a crowd of men. It was a crowd, women may have been present, but I saw men and I only saw it once because when I went to reload the clip -- a little over two minutes long -- it had already been removed (even though I was only the third view of it).
I don't understand the removal.
It was disturbing. It was also supposed to be real. It happened. Why was it taken down?
The same mob mentality and cruelty in that crowd has been present in the US press. That woman was every country the US government has bombed and attacked this century alone. The mob lusting for blood was the US press. No one stepped forward to say, "Stop!" They just went along with it and the woman was stoned to death.
“Why should we hear about body bags and death? I mean, it's not relevant. So why should I waste my beautiful mind on something like that.”
Barbara Bush on the Iraq War
Apparently, YOUTUBE is now the late Barbara Bush. Our 'beautiful minds' will not be touched by reality. Anything that might cause discomfort -- no matter how true -- will be removed.
They should be ashamed of themselves.
A woman was stoned to death. It was there for all to see. If it was false, leave it up, someone will step forward with knowledge to say, "This is a clip from ____ and not Iraq" or whatever. But this was a clip of a group killing a woman. I don't know why we erase reality. It's something that adults should have seen. It's not pretty and that's why we need to see it and we need to know that it happens. It was a shocking video -- but not because of blood (there really wasn't any, she was covered in cloth, niqab, etc) -- but because you saw a group gathered to kill and no one stopped them. All present went along with the stoning.
Was it barbaric? Yes, it was. And so is dropping bombs on children which, for the record, the US government does pretty much every day in Iraq and Syria. But we're far enough removed that our 'beautiful minds' don't have to be touched by reality.
This removal has allowed us to look the other way and refuse to call out what Bully Boy Bush, Barack Obama and now Donald Trump have done -- in our names, with our tax dollars.
Grasp the YOUTUBE and/or US government policy: Killings can take place we just don't want you to be able to see the dead.
'Justice' in Iraq? It remains the same dirty joke it's been ever since the 2003 invasion. AFP reports:
Iraqi courts have sentenced to death a total of more than 300 people, including dozens of foreigners, for belonging to the Islamic State group, judicial sources said on Wednesday.
The suspects are being tried by two courts, one near the former jihadist stronghold of Mosul in northern Iraq and another in Baghdad which is dealing notably with foreigners and women.
 Belkis Wille Retweeted
“Individual circumstances don’t matter,” says @belkiswille Wille, @hrw's senior researcher for #Iraq, in @nytimes. “Cooks, medical workers, everyone is given the death penalty.”
nytimes.com/2018/04/17/wor…
#ISIS
There is no justice in Iraq. There is vengeance but no justice.
May 12th, elections are supposed to be held in Iraq. Some find the campaign of current prime minister Hayder al-Abadi to be familiar.
1-Campaign video by Iraq PM Abadi curiously resurrects images of Saddam Hussein steeped in every Iraqi's psyche:Leader as superman, appearing in all guises; military parade & might; similar body gestures; leader loved by ppl & of course some sentimental poetry. #IraqElections2018
The following community sites -- plus Cindy Sheehan -- updated:






 
