MARVEL AGENTS OF SHIELD wraps up next week with the final two episodes.  This was one of the best episodes of the season.  Why?  It's like they suddenly remembered Mack was there.  Among other things, they let him have a real talk with Daniel about Daisy.  He broke the news to Daniel that Daisy was in love with him and that she'd probably realize it herself shortly.  He had a conversation with Daisy that touched on their long history and one we could have used many episodes ago.
This show's non-stop effort to promote Clark Gregg or Gregg Clark -- whatever -- has really harmed Mack.  And it's not just this season, but it is especially this season.  There was a time for Mack to be hesitant and in the background learning.  That would be season two.  By season three, he's more than adapted to the team.  When Yo-Yo came on and the two first fell in love, I really thought Mack was going to get a chance to shine but he didn't get that chance.  Every man on this show had to play back up to Clark Gregg's nebishy nell Coulson.  It harmed the show and it short changed the actors.  Henry Simmons, who plays Mack, is a real actor, someone you can see having a long career with many high points.  
On MARVEL AGENTS OF SHIELD, Henry Simmons has delivered on everything that they gave him; however, they never gave him enough.  He wasn't a background player but he wasn't a lead either.  Pretty much everyone on the show has had to be a supporting character to Coulson.  That is true of all the cast but it is especially true of the men on the show.
In one scene on the latest episode, Daisy told Mack what Enoch told her an episode or two back, that this would be the team's last mission.  She wondered if they would be people who just drifted apart?  
By the way, Daniel, Daisy and Mack ended up together why? 
Cora told Daisy that she wanted to be good now, she'd seen the error of her ways.  Mae didn't believe her, Daisy didn't either.  But then Cora told her that in every possible future evil Sibyl sees Daisy protecting Cora.  
That gave Daisy the idea that to defeat Sibel -- and Nathaniel and the other goons -- she needs to do the unpredictable.  So she steals a quinjet and sets off with Daniel who wants to be with her (obviously).  He prays she's flown this many times?  Okay, how about once?  Nope.  That's part of defeating Sibel by doing something she couldn't predict.  And guess what?  Mack was thinking along similar lines and surprised them.
Now on the other ship, where Nathaniel is holding Jemma, remember Deke ended up on board accidentally.  They found him.  And they beat him up.  They wanted him to give information 
They found Deke on the ship and beat him up.  They wanted him to talk and to explain where Fitz was and how Jemma was keeping the secret.  Deke wouldn't talk.  They beat him up more -- and in front of Jemma -- and Deke still wouldn't talk.  They tried to torture Jemma and Deke said he didn't know anything.  But Nathaniel found that device on the back of her neck that prevented her from giving out Fitz's information.  He doesn't know how to remove it, though.  
We did get to see Fitz in Jemma's memories, which was good.
So Cora and Mae went at it and Cora had a meltdown and took down the electrical grid.  When it came up, it came up without the firewall and Sibel was able to get in.  Now on the ship that Daisy, Daniel and Mack are on, they see all these spaceships entering -- it's the bad guys, Sibel's sending them.
We're geared up for a major battle to wrap up the series. 
 Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
 
Thursday, August 6, 2020.  Oh, look, one of those 'trusted' voices on 
Iraq -- one who, of course, got everything wrong -- is back again to 
tell us all how great things are going in Iraq.
Yesterday
 afternoon, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL published a ridiculous piece of 
garbage by Sam Gollob and Michael O'Hanlon.  The piece is entitled "
At Long Last, Iraq Is Getting Back On Track" -- and that title tells you everything you need to know.
You'd
 think THE JOURNAL would avoid this sort of garbage if only to protect 
whatever's left of their name.  It's not a great paper by any means but 
their opinion section has long harmed their image and allowed a lot of 
partisan Democrats to attack them for anything and everything, whether 
they did it or not.  
Look at the hideous Paul 
Greengrass.  If the #MeToo movements was going to start removing 
directors from positions of power, you would have thought Greengrass 
would have been an early starting point.  But his actions on the set 
remain as non-criticized as the garbage he churns out.  For our 
purposes, we're looking at the hideous movie THE GREEN ZONE.
The
 flick completely ignored its source material (Rajiv Chandrasekaran's 
IMPERIAL LIFE IN THE EMERALD CITY) to film a lie.  In the bad and boring
 movie, facts are tossed aside so that the lie can be told: It was that 
bad WALL STREET JOURNAL that lied us into Iraq.  Amy Ryan plays the bad 
reporter whose work features every baseless claim -- presented as fact 
-- that the Bully Boy Bush administration made.  And her character works
 for THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.
The character, as
 anyone watching the film knows, is based on Judith Miller who was the 
star reporter for THE NEW YORK TIMES.  It also cribs from a bad front 
page story that Chris Hedges wrote for THE NEW YORK TIMES.  But somehow,
 history gets rewritten in this bad movie so that the big offender was .
 . . a reporter for THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.  
Two
 things on the above, first off: Chris Hedges.  I like Chris.  I'm not 
his press agent.  It's not my job to get him good press.  We regularly 
highlight his work on RT and will continue to do so; however, that 
doesn't mean that we lie about what took place.  We are right now 
talking about pre-war Iraq press coverage.  The character Amy Ryan plays
 speaks with an anonymous source supplied to her by the government and 
publishes lies given to her from him.  You can't talk about that and not
 talk about what Chris Hedges did unless you are more committed to 
advancing Chris Hedges than to telling the truth.  The first front page 
'report' linking 9/11 to Iraq -- falsely linking -- appeared weeks after
 9/11 -- Chris Hedges had the byline, it ran on the front page of THE 
NEW YORK TIMES.  Not one claim in that article stands up today.  The 
government set Chris up with that 'insider' because they wanted their 
lies told to the world as fact.  Chris made it happen.
I
 don't hate Chris.  I like Chris.  But if we're talking about the press 
lies that got us into war with Iraq, Chris' report is part of those 
lies.  Yes, Chris went on to speak out against the war and suffered 
professionally for doing so.  And that's part of Chris' story as well.  
But this isn't the "Chris Hedges snapshot."  It's the "Iraq snapshot."  
And we're not going to use Judith Miller as our daily pinata the way so 
many others have.  Judith Miller printed a lot of lies and she believed 
them all.  She was gung-hu in Iraq, once the war started, and trying to 
commandeer troops to find those WMDs that she honestly -- and foolishly 
-- believed were in Iraq.  We have held Judith Miller accountable for 
what she did and will continue to do so.  We will not, however, present 
the lie that it was just her and we will not pretend that no one else 
needs to be held accountable.  To this day, my problem with Chris, he 
has not been accountable.  He will admit that his front page report is 
nonsense.  And after his main source was outed, he did agree with MOTHER
 JONES that the Iraqi exile had been a source.  But, as we have long 
pointed out, the article claimed two sources.  If the source lied -- 
Chris says they did, and I believe him -- then you have been burned by 
your source and you do not have to protect them.
We
 knew Judith Miller's source was Scooter Libby.  We noted that in 2004. 
 Long before the court case.  When Judith elected to go to jail rather 
than betray her source, that was fine, we applauded her for that.  But 
Scooter didn't burn Judith.  (He just told her Valerie Plame was a CIA 
agent.)  Chris was burned and he should have long ago exposed the other 
source and written at length about how that interview came to be -- 
everyone he knew at the paper that promoted the story as news, everyone 
in the administration that was part of providing the paper with the 
sources.
We called out someone who we 
highlighted in a video yesterday.  I don't even want to say her name.  
She deserved to be called out for what we called her out for.  Saying 
every US servicemember who went to Vietnam was a War Criminal was an 
outrageous and offensive statement.  The political leaders who sent them
 to Vietnam?  They're all War Criminals.  But the service members who 
were lied to and who were sent there are not War Criminals unless they 
were raping or murdering children or . . .  In the Iraq War, Steven D. 
Green is a War Criminal -- he plotted and took part in the gang rape of 
Abeer and he murdered her, her sister and her parents.  The Americans at
 Abu Ghraib -- unless they were whistle blowers -- were War Criminals.  
But every American that served in Iraq is not a War Criminal.  The 
political leaders who sent them to Iraq and keep them in Iraq are War 
Criminals.
My job is not to be a press agent 
for anyone.  My job is to explain to the best of my ability what is 
happening and what happened.  Most of us say something that deserves 
calling out from time to time -- including me.  And if I'm covering 
something and it's applicable, we're going to call them out.
Second:
 At this late date why is anyone treating Michael O'Hanlon as someone to
 listen to?  How many times can you be wrong about Iraq and still have 
the press treat your loony opinions as worth listening to.
Iraq
 is not back on track anymore than the 'surge' brought political 
stability to Iraq, anymore than Iraq had WMDs (they didn't) or even of 
the other positions O'Hanlon has argued over the years.  The only 
consistent aspect to his public statements about Iraq?  That they have 
been wrong over and over.
Iraq is in the midst 
of a pandemic -- like the rest of the world.  Their economy is in 
tatters.  They have (still) the issue of the lack of electricity and 
potable water.  In fact, 
IOM Iraq Tweeted this morning:
All the crises he inherited have deepened. The coronavirus pandemic, 
already alarming when Kadhimi was sworn in, has since only grown more 
frightening, forcing him to announce fresh lockdowns.
The Iraqi economy, having suffered extensive collateral damage from 
the oil war, has weakened. Powerful, Iran-backed militias have grown 
more brazen. Corruption, already ingrained in the body politic, seems to
 have metastasised across every aspect of the state.
             
            
Even the weather has been worse than expected. Iraq is now 
wilting in the hottest summer ever recorded, with temperatures nearing 
52 degrees Celsius (125 Fahrenheit) in Baghdad and 53C (127F) in Basra 
last week.
             
            
The heat threatens to bring the protests against electricity and 
water shortages — a summer fixture in the Iraqi political calendar — to a
 fever pitch. Some demonstrations in Baghdad have already boiled over 
into clashes with security forces: Two protesters were killed last 
Monday.
 On the protesters, how telling that the 
same week the world learned of the kidnapping and torture of 16-year-old
 Hamid Saeed by Iraqi forces, O'Hanlon would show up to insist that Iraq
 was back on track.  How telling and how typical.  
Mina Aldbroubi of THE NATIONAL Tweets:
For more on Saeed, see:
INDIA BLOOMS notes another rocket attack on the Green Zone yesterday.  But, hey, O'Hanlon says back on track!
 
The 
political blocs that stand to lose in new elections will have sufficient
 incentive to try to stall them. Nahrain University Political Science 
Professor Yaseen al-Bakri told
 Al Monitor that “they want the current parliamentary term to be 
completed and avoid going to early elections because they are well aware
 of the little chances they have in the early elections.”
Stalling
 the electoral process could be as easy as hampering progress towards 
the establishment of a new electoral law. While parliament has passed 
the law, it has not sent the law to the president for approval because 
of disagreements between parliament’s rival factions.
Who are these unnamed political blocs?
And does he mean stall in Parliament?
The
 stall has traditionally come from one of Iraq's vice presidents -- they
 have multiple vice presidents.  Often, it is over something like the 
issue of the displaced and the refugees and are provisions made to allow
 them to vote?  
The law is not sent to the 
president, it's sent to the the three presidencies.  That includes the 
Vice Presidents.  I really think something has happened in the last 
years.  Either out of ignorance or out of a desire to elevate the office
 of the president of Iraq, journalists keep pretending that the highest 
position in Iraq is the president.  The presidency was given to the 
Kurds.  It is a ceremonial position.  If it had true power, you can be 
sure that Shi'ite majority Iraq would never have given the post to the 
Kurds.
News out of Kurdistan this morning is of the death of a prominent political figure.  
RUDAW reports: 
A prominent Kurdish nationalist from Iran has died in Sulaimani on Thursday after a battle with COVID-19.
Jalil Gadani, a long-time member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of 
Iran (KDPI), passed away at Hiwa hospital in the Kurdistan Region’s 
eastern city on Thursday after being in intensive care for almost a 
week, according to an official statement published by the group on Thursday. 
Gadani, who has been involved in Kurdish Iranian politics for more than 
six decades, split from the KDPI in 2006 with a number of senior members
 to form the splinter group called Kurdistan Democratic Party 
(KDP-Iran). He held senior positions in both parties for decades.
"Jalil Gadani was a book that was written over a 60 years period, my condolences to the Kurdish people," said Facebook user Hassan Ahmed. 
On Sunday, Iraqi security forces detained a Kurdistan 24 team that was covering a clash between Kurdish villagers and several Arab families in the disputed Kirkuk province.
The incident occurred in the Guli Tapa village in southern parts of Kirkuk, where a confrontation ensued over land-ownership disputes. Shortly after, a Kurdistan 24 media team, made up of a reporter and a cameraman, arrived on the scene.
Local
 Kurds in Daquq district, where Guli Tapa is located, claimed that the 
Iraqi Federal Police had supported Arab families coming and attempting 
to take over lands Kurds own.
Upon arrival, "we were detained by a unit of Iraq's Federal Police 
for three hours in a window-tinted car," said Soran Kamaran, Kurdistan 
24's reporter in Kirkuk province. Kurdistan 24 cameraman Nawzad Mohammad
 was accompanying Kamaran.
"We were told [by the security forces] that they do not allow such 
incidents to be reported," Kamaran said. He added that the police unit 
also confiscated their equipment and still hold on to them.
There are entire generations of kids in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya who have known nothing but war their entire lives. They've grown up with PTSD, anxiety, depression because of Obama. No one talks about the toll on their mental health. Are they not human? Don't they matter?
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