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Adastros Visits the Electoral College and Calls West Virginia for Obama

10-11-08
Check out his thinking, and a very optimistic EV map that we hope will be blazing across TV screens on the evening of Nov 4th. But we have lots to do before then.

Reuters via IHT: The current financial crisis is only the beginning

10-10-08
Excerpt (read rest at link): The core of the issue isn't even solvency. It's the way in which the debt causing the banking insolvency distorted, distended and hollowed out economies around the world. It caused a huge misallocation in the English-speaking economies into real estate, and into consumption that could only seem to make sense to people drunk on the appreciation of property prices. It caused a less huge but still significant misallocation elsewhere; I think we will see that a lot of what was being produced by Europe and Asia's vibrant export industries were products that the United States and Britain will find they can do without, or with much less of.

Nicholas D. Kristof: Can this be pro-life?

10-10-08
Kristoff at the IHT (the international version of the NY Times) on how this summer's decision by the Bush administration to name birth control pills as a form of abortion is playing out in Africa. Remember that US help in third world countries for abortion is against the law. So the extra mouths to feed that could lead to backroom abortions and other dangerous situations cannot even be prevented. You have to ask why the religious right feels a need to overpopulate the world so that more living children will die. Are they hoping for more wars which would need more soldiers with which to fight them?

Maureen Dowd: Mud Pies for ‘That One’

10-09-08
Excerpt: John McCain has long been torn between wanting to succeed and serving a higher cause. Right now, the drive to succeed is trumping any loftier aspirations. He cynically picked a running mate with less care than theater directors give to picking a leading actor’s understudy. And he has been running a seamy campaign originally designed by the bad seed of conservative politics, Lee Atwater. Atwater relished teaching rich, white Republicans to feign a connection to the common man so they could get in office and economically undermine the common man.

Paul Krugman: Health Care Destruction

10-08-08
Excerpt: So what should be done? Barack Obama offers incremental reform: regulation of insurers to prevent discrimination against the less healthy, subsidies to help lower-income families buy insurance, and public insurance plans that compete with the private sector. His plan falls short of universal coverage, but it would sharply reduce the number of uninsured. Mr. McCain, on the other hand, wants to blow up the current system, by eliminating the tax break for employer-provided insurance. And he doesn’t offer a workable alternative. Without the tax break, many employers would drop their current health plans. Several recent nonpartisan studies estimate that under the McCain plan around 20 million Americans currently covered by their employers would lose their health insurance.

NYT: Hey, Senator. The Real "Mavericks" Want Their Name Back

10-08-08
There is really a Maverick family. No they don't live off Dixie Queens. Well not according to this report. Nor do they ramble through smaltzy exclamations of how much you know I'm suffering, which claiming you'll go to Hell to get bin Laden or promise a mortgage relief program you have no intention of really creating. But they were known as rebels, progressive ones, from fighting for the rights of the indentured to protecting draft resisters. And one of them did refuse to brand his cattle, making their family name synonymous with being unbranded. Excerpt: Considering the family’s long history of association with liberalism and progressive ideals, it should come as no surprise that Ms. Maverick insists that John McCain, who has voted so often with his party, “is in no way a maverick, in uppercase or lowercase.” “It’s just incredible — the nerve! — to suggest that he’s not part of that Republican herd. Every time we hear it, all my children and I and all my family shrink a little and say, ‘Oh, my God, he said it again.’ ”

Nicholas D. Kristof: Racism Without Racists

10-06-08
Kristof says that people aren't necessarily racist, but tend to favor their own kind without knowing it. I hope he's wrong. This article was based on information that he acquired from a poll at Stanford University. It seems to me that the good news would be that a person who doesn't know he or she is a bit racist doesn't have to lie to pollsters about it right? So that 'nonracism' should be already factored in, and in fact some of Kristof's words seem to indicate that to be true.

Maureen Dowd: Sarah’s Pompom Palaver

10-06-08
Excerpt: She dangles gerunds, mangles prepositions, randomly exiles nouns and verbs and also — “also” is her favorite vamping word — uses verbs better left as nouns, as in, “If Americans so bless us and privilege us with the opportunity of serving them,” or how she tried to “progress the agenda.” Poppy Bush dropped personal pronouns and launched straight into verbs because he was minding his mother’s admonition against “the big I.” Palin, by contrast, uses a heck of a lot of language to praise herself as a fresh face with new ideas who has “joined this team that is a team of mavericks.” True mavericks don’t brand themselves.

Frank Rich: Pitbull Palin Mauls McCain

10-06-08
Would the Republican Right convince a John McCain to step aside for the testosterone flush Sarah Palin for the good of the part (er) country? Frank Rich has succeeded in frightening me again. Unfortunately Rich usually does know what he's writing about. Read it and see if you don't feel in your gut that the scenario is possible.

NYT: Dick Cheney, Role Model

10-05-08
Sarah Palin really really likes the kind of power Dick Cheney has. Thinks it's constitutional.

Lew Rockwell -- Eric Margolis: Iraq: They Make It a Desert and Call It Peace

10-05-08
Excerpt: Those Wall Street financial alchemists who turned garbage into gold must have helped John McCain prepare for his debate with Barack Obama last Friday. Senator McCain’s insistent claims that the US is winning the war in Iraq thanks to his "surge" strategy are the military-political equivalent of the junk securities that Wall Street’s shady financiers have been selling around the globe.

McClatchy: Since 2001 Big Players in Financial Crisis Paid Out $64m to Washington Politicians and Parties. Received Lax Supervision in Return

10-05-08
Oh yeah, you could see whenever you checked donations for any candidate, some of the top donors would be from and/or Merrill Lynch nearly 100% of the time and the rest of the top 8 banks would usually be some where in the top 20.

The Cagle Post -- Froma Harrop: Law For Poor Didn't Cause Meltdown

10-05-08
Excrpt: Accomplished Googlers can probably find the original talking points off which dozens of conservatives made essentially the same case: The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 caused the financial crisis. For example, a Wall Street Journal editorial lumped CRA together with far more plausible causes of the meltdown. This liberal-inspired law, it complained, "compels banks to make loans to poor borrowers who often cannot repay them." In fact, the CRA had about zero to do with today's problems. Its accusers are "know-nothings," Aaron Pressman writes on BusinessWeek.com. He says the law "was actually weakened by the Bush administration just as the worst lending wave began."

Cartoon: There You Go Again, Joe. Lookin' Back 'Stead of Forward

10-05-08
Ms. Palin rightly dismisses looking back since the Bush/Cheney administration looks a bit too much like a prelude to a McCain/Palin administration.

Cartoon -- Oliphant: Wall Street and Congress and Their Traveling Act

10-04-08
Don't Mess With Oliphant. There are toonists, there are good toonists, and then there's Oliphant. I even have to admit he's good when I don't agree with him.

Centerface: Exploring The Bailout Bill From An Ignoramus' Perspective

10-04-08
Pretty good explanation gets goings right after the exposition on the New Jersey Insurance plan bailout (which may be necessar for some.

Pennlive.com: Pennsylvania Statehouse: Obama widens Pa. lead

10-03-08
Excerpt: Obama made big gains after his first debate with McCain, according to the new Quinnipiac University poll. In a survey after the debate, Obama leads McCain, 54 percent to 39 percent. He led McCain 49 percent to 43 percent in a survey before the debate. "Obama clearly won the debate, voters say," said Peter Brown of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. Polls indicate that voters believe Obama would be the best candidate to handle economic issues. The post-debate survey included 832 likely voters from Sept. 27-29. The pre-debate poll surveyed 1,138 likely voters from Sept. 22-26. Both polls had a margin of error of about 3 percentage points.

Nicholas Kristoff: Save the Fat Cats

10-02-08
He has a compelling case. I've been loathed to link and cite all the pro bailout stuff that is flooding the news papers, since they get so much of their advertising from banks and expensive property developers. But Kristoff has a good argument here.

LA Times: McCain opposes regulation -- until he supports it

10-02-08
Excerpt: ...these two sides of McCain make it hard to discern how the politician who boasts of delivering "straight talk" would govern from the Oval Office. It is unclear if a McCain administration would be led by the small-government crusader who claims President Reagan as his touchstone, or the energetic regulator who once advocated a new federal agency to license professional prizefighters.

Nicholas D. Kristof: Impulsive, Impetuous, Impatient

09-30-08
Excerpt: Although he is frantically trying to distance himself from President Bush, Mr. McCain, by his own accounting, would be more Bushian in foreign policy than even Mr. Bush is now. While Mr. Bush has been forced to accept more sensible policies in his second term, Mr. McCain has become steadily more of a neocon in the cowboy role that Mr. Bush played in his first term, prone to solving problems with stealth bombers rather than United Nations resolutions.

Steve Lopez: In Alaska, community organizers have real responsibilities

09-30-08
Excerpt: "[Community Organizer]Bonny changed the way Anchorage thinks and plays in such a positive way," a city official said when Sosa died in August at age 50, just a few days after being diagnosed with a brain tumor. Only a few weeks after her death, Sarah Palin, the governor of Alaska, ridiculed Sen. Barack Obama for his days as a community organizer. She and other GOP operatives belittled the very idea of such work...

LA Times: Olmert says Israel must withdraw from West Bank for peace

09-30-08
Personally, I'm beginning to like lame duck leaders. They tend to become more reasonable. Excerpt: Israel will have to give up "almost all" of the West Bank areas it occupies and accept the division of Jerusalem in order to take advantage of a rapidly closing window of opportunity for peace with the Arabs, outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said in an interview published Monday.

Paul Krugman: The 3 A.M. Call

09-30-08
Excerpt: Then there’s the frightening Mr. McCain — more frightening now than he was a few weeks ago. We’ve known for a long time, of course, that Mr. McCain doesn’t know much about economics — he’s said so himself, although he’s also denied having said it. That wouldn’t matter too much if he had good taste in advisers — but he doesn’t.

LA Times -- James Rainey: Some on the right are joining a chorus of criticism over Sarah Palin

09-29-08
Excerpt: [George] Will mocked the Republican standard-bearer as a veritable Queen of Hearts (a la "Alice in Wonderland") for demanding the head of Christopher Cox, a former Republican congressman who is chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist argued that such impulsiveness sows doubts about McCain's ability to apply "calm reflection and clear principles" to important decisions. He ended his broadside by all but declaring McCain unfit for the Oval Office.

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American Missile Strike in Sadr City Lands Near Hospital. Why We Are Killing Sadr's People These Days.

posted 05-04-08

Our military says, it's the militants fault because they hide among their people. 

But, wait a minute, we invaded their land.  So, of course they are among their people.

I guess if those militia members don't have the decency to line themselves up against a wall for extermination, then, of course they are at fault.

Now that we've invaded their part of Baghdad (Sadr City) so the same idea applies there too.l

Isn't this a fun war?

The bad guys used to be the Sunnis.  But we mostly got the Shia and Sunni civilians divided and started paying off the Sunni militias so that they would be 'pacified' (well at least until the money stops and the Badrists sure aren't going to pay them so that's you, taxpayer), and now we are attacking one sect of the Shia for the other sect of the Shia.  Can you guess which one we support?  Well, it seems to have many names, but all you have to remember is that it is closer to the Iranians than al Sadr's group, has been more murderous than al Sadr's sect, is less open to uniting with the Sunnis and therefore to creating a viable Iraqi government, but it promises Bush that Exxon and Chevron will get incredible contracts on rebuilding the massive Iraqi oilfields and extracting Iraqi oil; so it's the one we are killing other Shia to protect.

 The whole scenario of shifting bad guys is straight out of 1984, but lets not digress.

 It's as if we went into Europe to fight the Nazis, and then when they were defeated we turned around and started fighting the Dutch and the Belgians because France offered us as much wine as we could ship home to do so.  Those were more innocent days.  Those Gallo folks just never had a clue on how to manipulate a war for their own ends. (Hint, it starts with unimaginably large donations through the PACs to the proper political party.)  Let Exxon and Chevron show them how it's done.* 

 Excerpts below (indented) are from AP report at Yahoo News  " " .

U.S. and Iraqi forces have waged street battles with Shiite militias since late March in Sadr City, the power base of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and his Mahdi Army militia.

The fighting is part of a 5-week-old crackdown by the Iraqi government and U.S. forces on Shiite militia factions. The clashes have brought deep rifts among Iraq's Shiite majority and have pulled U.S. troops into difficult urban combat.

Before the "clash" actually al Sadr had a peace agreement with the Shiite faction that we back.  He even renewed the ceasefire agreement recently, but no, his people controlled too much and were in a place to challenge al Maliki when his folk started handing out those oil contracts that allowed victors' spoils on their best fields.

Militia members have been blamed for firing hundreds of rockets or mortars from Sadr City into the Green Zone, the U.S.-protected area housing the American embassy and much of the Iraqi government. In the past month, more than a dozen people — including two American civilians and soldiers — have been killed inside the zone during the attacks.

What they don't tell you is that the heavy shelling of the Green Zone started when the Badr Brigade (short name of al Maliki's militia for which the US is recruiting and training new personnel and calling them the "Iraqi army") started on the Sadrists in Basra.  Like with Palestine such heavy shelling is likely to ease when our troops and the Badr Brigade (Iraqi army) stop  attacking the Sadrist's people.  Instead our generals have decided to take out the Sadr militia, just because they think they can and because our mainstream press will mostly report 'just the facts' as handed to them by the Bush administration.  

In response to the shelling, American and Iraqi troops in recent weeks have moved into Sadr City, hoping to push the militants far enough from the Green Zone so their rockets and mortars would be out of range.

This, of course, using the Palestinian model, just extends the shelling, but it also kills off a lot of the Sadr militia and who care how many civilians get in the way.  "It's the militants' fault!"  Says a military spokeswoman.  "It's the militants fault!" says the mainstream press.  "It's the militants' fault!" Screams the vast right wing network of news and commentary sources and tens of thousands of Internet trolls, paid or not.

 And in this way, "Truth for Dummies" is created in our nation. 

The New York Times report on the same attack " " is notable for showing the response reporters get if they barely question the methods of the US-Iraqi army.

 The ugly daily fight for ground in the poor Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City unfolded Saturday at a small mosque next door to a hospital, damaging the hospital and a number of its ambulances, and near a group of children who were wounded as they gathered tin cans to sell for salvage.

The missiles that hit close to the Sadr General Hospital were American. After a night of clashes in the neighborhood, the Americans fired at least three “precision-guided munitions” at the small building next door to the hospital. Neighbors said the building was used as a place of prayer for pilgrims, hospital employees and neighborhood residents, but the military identified it as a command center for the Shiite militias that it is battling.

Report notes that both sides use some kind of missiles, but you can see from their list that the Iraqi army (Badr militia) and US  forces have bigger, less controllable fire power. 

The militias use rocket-propelled grenades, sniper rifles and mounted machine guns as well as AK-47 rifles while the Americans shoot Hellfire missiles, tank rounds, satellite-guided missiles and rounds from machine guns.

 But, of course:

When asked about the attack, Col. Gerald O’Hara, a spokesman for the multinational forces, said the Americans “take great care to prevent any collateral damage and will continue to do so.”

“We don’t target civilians and regret any casualties,” he added. 

Yet, the results of courts martial on soldiers who have killed civilians show the truth, though. The low level troops who murder civilians, even when they have the option to not kill them, get ridiculously light punishment, any immediately higher officers who order such killings might get even lighter punishment and the officers high enough to order attacks that can kill and maim hundreds face no punishment at all.  Such a scenario shows the truth of our military 'adventure' in Iraq.  We get BS talking points after the fact, instead of extreme care during an attack which is actually unnecessary unless we are fighting for one faction over the other, in an effort to secure the power of the one group that will hand out overly rewarding oil contracts to American Big Oil. 

More from the NYT report linked above:

Haider Abbas, 10, was brought to the hospital with what appeared to be a gaping hole in his back and shrapnel injuries across his stomach. The boy screamed and whimpered in pain, barely able to answer a doctor’s questions.

“My friend brought me to the hospital, but we had to leave the other wounded kids behind,” he said. “The Iraqi Army refused to allow them to be evacuated, but my friend took me anyway.”

The doctor, Abdul Rahman Hadi, said the boy was bleeding internally. “He needs surgery quickly,” Dr. Hadi said. “The irony is that not one of his relatives has come because he is an orphan.”

Another victim of that attack, Ahmad Yahya, 31, whose leg was broken, said the Iraqi Army had blocked evacuation from the area of the attack. “I was with a group of about 15 children who were collecting the empty cans or the trash in Jamila,” he said. “I don’t know why this happened.” 

 

 

 

 

 

 * Yes there are a few problems with my analogy up there. The oil in Iraq was our primary purpose in 'liberating' it  (if you think women forced back into full body and head cover is liberation). But my was just a snap illustration.

Iraq would be more like us liberating Europe which the expectation of grabbing economic control of it's wine and then finding out that the Dutch and Belgians didn't want to slave in the fields to provide us wine or even just give up their vineyards so that we could bring in cheap labor from whereever our companies could find it to jarvest the grapes as send them back to our companies here for processing.

In our imagined post WW2 scenario, France would willingly give out generous contract to US companies if they would 'rebuild' them and those of Holland and Belgium, and run them for a few decades.  But first we must 'pacify' those countries so that the French could control them.  But we'd find ourselves up against the militias (previously known as freedom fighters) of the two nations and call them 'militants' and start killing them and the civilians around them in the countryside and later in their cities.  And then we blame the 'militants' for the horror of our slaughter.  Poor Stalin.  He could only dream of such joy, and such a docile press without direct federal control. Who knew that fat cat money would work just as well as a gulag? (Return to * above

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