C.I.'s year-in-review
As the year drew to a close last night, I thought of three important
stories on Iraq and how two got covered to a degree and one got
completely ignored and they swirled around my head along with the image
of a faded movie star. I also thought of fake asses -- which, honestly,
does include the press. But I was thinking beyond that and thinking of
celebrities who, frankly, do not know when to shut up. You aren't
required to have an opinion on everything and you should grasp that you
probably don't have an opinion to share on everything.
We cover
Iraq here. We will include other topics. I feel comfortable with
politics having majored in it for a b.s. (how appropriate) and for a
masters. (International relations and campaign politics were the two
areas that I emphasized.) And we comment on entertainment, which I'm
more than qualfied for. However, sometimes Ava and I are pushed out of
our comfort zone. We weren't, for example, experts on gay porn until an
issue came up (an Iraq War veteran passing off hate crimes as sexy) and
we were asked to address it (see "Media: Gay Rights and Gay Wrongs").
Which we did but only after hours of conversations with friends in the
adult entertainment industry and with friends who consumed a lot (a
really lot) of gay porn. They brought us up to speed and recommended
what to look for and what titles to watch in order to be able to
comment. They basically spent several days giving us a crash course, a
Berlitz, if you will, in gay porn.
By contrast, if you read Debra Messing's sad Twitter feed,
do you really think she's an expert on any of the things she Tweets
about? No. She's an idiot who repeats talking points which is why she
didn't realize that the FBI doesn't work like the TV show AMERICAN IDOL
(remember when she thought you could 'vote' on which cases the FBI would
pursue?) and why she tried to present herself as an expert on what was
going on in Colombia but was so uninformed she didn't even know how to
spell the name of the country.
I have no problem with issues. I
have no problem with, for example, Jessica Lange taking up the plight of
American farmers and testifying before Congress -- something she did
very elequently. I have no problem with a performer taking a stand on
an issue.
I have a huge problem with people who confuse
partisanship with politics. I loathe idiots who can't speak for
themselves. I have a very good friend who I get very frustrated with
because she can't use her brain. Does it not function? As Cass Elliot
might have said during her Mamas and Papas days, "_____ can't speak
tonight, I forgot to program her.'' She used to say that of Michelle
Phillips because Michelle loathed speaking during a concert. I know
Michelle, she's not the person I'm referring to. And Michelle is an
issues person. The homeless is not abstract to Michelle. She chooses
products she uses based upon what they do for others. She makes a point
to use her time to deliver meals. But back to that unnamed friend, she
used to call her husband constanlty before that divorce (one of many).
You'd go to visit her on the set and say, "Hey, what do you think about
what's going on in Iran?" She'd say, hold on, and rush -- in those
pre-cell phone days -- off to a pay phone to dial the husband (a
nightmare himself, but that's another story) and immediately greet him
with, "What's our position on ____?" These days, she tends to call a
woman who fancies herself a playwright (she does the equivalent of
collages, verbal collages, where she grabs other people's words and
assembles them). The friend had a good education that included some
college but she never really learned to think. You probably know
someone like her in your own life, someone who has always just now, at
this moment, figured out everything and will prattle on about that until
she next just then, at that moment, figures out everything and prattles
on until . . . You get the idea?
Oh well, at least she
has some human interaction. Unlike Patty Arquette who thinks listening
(to the dreadful) KPFK educates her. I can't stand her anymore. I
began the walk away from that 'friendship' in 1994 when I saw how
judgmental she was -- and of a dead person -- and how black and white
everything had to be for her. She has no education to speak of and she
can't read (she refuses to read) so she's dependent upon the loons at
KFPK to tell her reality. I don't expect reality from people who can't
face reality themselves and see 'news' as, "How can I make the
Republican Party look bad so I can steer attention away from the bad
things the Democratic Party is doing?"
Most have
neither the sense or the class to be on Twitter with partisan nonsense.
Jamie Lee Curtis is one of the few with grace -- if she makes a
mistake, she will own it and she will apologize. Most double down and
block the person who points out their mistake. For instance, I believe
Alyssa Milano has now blocked more people on Twitter than she has
followers.
And why does she have a platform to begin
with? She thinks she's wonderful when the reality is that she was and
remains part of the problem. I'm not talking about political parties
here or how she's a schill for the Democratic Party. I'm talking about
her own actions, she needs to be responsible for those. If she's going
to be on Twitter, she needs to take accountability for all the hate she
fostered and all the discrimination she endorsed.
AND
JUST LIKE THAT . . . is a nightmare. In part, that's due to Sarah
Jessica Parker realizing that all those lovey-dovey talks with David
Remnick that she thought made her look so cosmopolitan and informed
really just made her a stooge who embraced a Whites-only world. That's
the reality that she's trying desperately to make up for with in AND
JUST LIKE THAT . . . aka AFTER THE GALS CLIMB OUT BED AND FINALLY
REALIZE PEOPLE OF COLOR ALSO POPULATE NEW YORK CITY.
Sarah
was a producer of the original show. Just like Alyssa was a producer
of CHARMED. And CHARMED was just as guilty of ignoring people of
color. Debbi Morgan and Dorian Gregory were the only actors of color
portraying recurring characters on the show. Both of those characters
were created by Constance Burge before she left the show. She left due
to conflict with Brad Kern -- he was a pig on the set and he was
harassing people. Alyssa, as an actress, didn't side with Constance who
created the show. She sided with Brad and she was happy to work with
Brad who got away with a lot because of her support. A lot of women
suffered because people like Alyssa repeatedly supported Brad Kern. It
took 2018 before CBS fired him -- after their third invesitgation -- third -- into his sexual harassment of women.
So
the next time hypocrite Alyssa wants to talk #MeToo, it needs to be
pointed out that she has refused to take accountability for the support
she gave Brad Kern and how that support allowed him to harass women on
the set repeatedly.
She won't do it.
She
Tweets compulsively but doesn't have time to Tweet about how women were
harmed because of her actions. She Tweets constantly but can't Tweet
about how she refused to cast people of color once she became a producer
of CHARMED. (San Francisco is a majority-minority city which means
Anglo Whites make up less than 50% of the population. In the census
taken last year, Anglo Whites made up 39% of the population.)
And
as appalling as it is that she couldn't cast people of color, it's
equally astounding that she couldn't find any gay characters. We do
grasp that, right? The original series CHARMED that she starred in for
eight seasons and that she produced for the last four was set in San
Francisco. But no gay people were in the city? We have the highest
percentage of out LGBTQ people of any city in the country. Of the top
ten largest cities -- by population -- NYC has the lowest percent of out
LGBTQ people. But gay San Francisco didn't exist on CHARMED. And, in
fairness to NYC, the percentage is of out people -- so closet cases like
Barry Diller don't figure into the count. NYC might actually have more
LGBTQ people than we do in San Francisco if you included those people
who are hiding in shame in their closets.
For someone who
wants to play more-woke-than-thou daily on Twitter, Alyssa has a lot of
skeltons visible in her very open closet.
And these
people who will not admit to their own failings, are projecting on
others. Right now, Joe Biden, President of the United States, has the
FBI all up in arms over his daughter's sex diary (we scooped THE GLOBE a
few weeks back -- a friend sent me their current issue and it's got the
sex diary on the cover). In the diary (which I haven't read but have
heard the contents of for about three months now) Ashley reflects on
abuse by Joe. He walks in on her in the shower, for example.
Now
I do remember people trying to make photos of Donald with his daughter
into something disgusting. I don't know her name and I don't want to
look it up. It's the oldest daughter, if that helps. And Donald was a
perv and he was this and he was that based upon how he acted in some
photo.
Really? You don't think you might have been
projecting some? Because I hate Donald Trump and I have hated him for
years. I have accused him of many things, some to his face, but I have
never accused him of untoward interest in or actions to his daughter.
These same celebrities are silent as Ashley Biden's diary details how she feels Joe abused her.
If they were truly outraged about alleged incestous feelings or actions, why are they silent now?
Is
it just partisanship or is it also that they can't see the bad in their
own and they refuse to see any good in their designated enemies?
It's a question we really should be asking -- as a country.
Because this issue of finger pointing has gotten so out of hand and is dividing the country.
And
I'd love to see people stop celebrating journalistic dilettante Spencer
Ackerman and instead asking him how he feels about his part in
formulating a way to silence criticism of Jeremiah Wright? Back in
2008, he participated in a journalsim forum and insisted that what was
needed was to respond to any criticism of Wright by screaming "racist!"
He wrote, "Fred
Barnes, Karl Rove, who cares -- and call them racists." He wrote, "I
do not endorse a Popular Front, nor do I think you need to. It's not
necessary to jump to Wright's defense. What is necessary is to raise
the cost on the right of ghoing after the left. In other words, find a
right winger's and smash it through a plate-glass window. Take a
snapshot of the bleeding mess and send it out in a Christmas card to let
the right know that it needs to live in a state of constant fear."
If
you missed it, that 2008 hidden conversation formulation is now used
daily on everything. Also, in case you missed it, grasp that Spencer's
position inherently is an acknowledgement that there is actually no
defense for some of Wright's statements (Barack Obama would later
disassociate himself publicly from Wright and Wright would then publicly
rebuke Barack.) Since the statement's could not be defended -- meaning
the critiques were not off mark in Spencer's mind -- the answer was to
attack the ones offering these critiques and try to smear them as
racists so that no one would listen to them and so that others would be
afraid to speak out.
Our public discourse has
degraded. I'm not a clutch-the-pearls type and could care less about
foul language or words that whiners don't like. (The press is the
biggest whiner in the world -- a fact I knew before this website started
but one that has been repeatedly confirmed each year as various
journalists e-mail to say I was too hard on them and didn't I know that
their editor or their producer insisted that this or that be cut or soft
peddled?) I do care when false accusations are made intentionally.
When you know what you are saying is false, you shouldn't be saying it.
But
people wanted to insist, for example, that Donald Trump was a racist. I
know Donald and he's not. Now he's a hater of the poor. And
African-Americans make up a greater percentage of the poor than they do
of the general population in the US. But if you're a person of color
with money, Donald loves you. He loved Michael Jackson, I'm not joking,
for awhile the two were best friends -- it was around the time Michael
was obsessed with the TV show DYNASTY and visiting the set of that
show. When we would bump into each other during that time period, all
he wanted to talk about was DYNASTY, Donald Trump and did Prince think
he was a better artist than Michael?
I watched
throughout his four years as president as his words were repeatedly
distorted to try to score political points. He's not a learned person
and he is not a great speaker. I once had to sit next to him at a large
dinner party. It's when I learned to understand how he spoke because
it is fragmented and all over the place. Over the years, we probably
attended 12 to 20 other parties and dinners (and I made clear to every
host and hostess that I would not be seated next to him again because I
did not like him). And people would come up to me and say, "He said
____. What does he mean?" And I'd have to do a Trump to English
translation for them.
I don't like Donald. (I'd say he
doesn't like me but I honestly don't think he cares enough about me --
or most people -- to have an opinion. His focus is always on himself.)
But it was appalling to watch people distort what he said. He said
enough that was outrageous that you didn't have to go off inventing or
distorting to call him out.
Call it THE MADNESS OF THE PARTISAN LEFT. As opposed to the real left.
The
real left, of which I'd be a part, cares about issues. We care that
the Iraq War is still going on. We care that the American people are
still being spied upon. We care that immigrants are still being kept in
cages. We care that whistle-blowers are under attack and that includes
the fact that we want the persecution of Julian Assange ended. We want
Guantanamo shut down -- you know, the prison/gulag that Barack promised
he would close if elected president -- the travesty that remains open
despite Barack serving two terms as president.
Jeanne Crain.
If
you missed it, Bruce Springsteen, alleged voice for the poor and
working poor, has done worse than take his 'rock' music to Broadway.
He's now written a book with Barack. The Drone War was Barack's war and
killed many civilians. Guess 'voice of the people' Brucie isn't the
voice of all the people, just the voice for the people who sail on David
Geffen's yacht.
Bruce is a lot like Jeanne Crain.
He had a few good years of popularity. He's not been popular in his
chosen field (recording) for some time now but the media pretends
otherwise. His recording career has been in the sewer for years now.
Jeanne
Crain. Some people probably don't even know who she is. For awhile,
she was FOX's number one female star. In 1949, she was one of the
country's biggest box office attractions. That's the year she appeared
in A LETTER TO THREE WIVES, THE FAN and PINKY -- and was nominated as
Best Actress for an Academy Award. It should have been a glorious
career.
She had talent.* She had the looks. Audiences loved her.
Most people don't even know who she was today and haven't seen a film she was in. She's forgotten and she did it to herself.
First
off, she accused her husband of beating her and having affairs. The
country was, "Oh, poor Jeanne." Because they loved her. They thought
they knew her -- the way many thought they knew Bruce once upon a time.
But after making those accusations in court what did Jeanne do? Get
back with him (and stay married to him for decades). She forced the
public to take sides and when they supported her, she basically betrayed
them by returning to her alleged abuser. That's not girl-next-door
behavior the country wants to embrace. So that was a big blow to her
career.
But she made it worse. She had to share that
she hated Communists. Did anyone really need that factoid? Shouldn't
she have just kept her mouth shut? No one ever accused her of being a
Communist. Actually, no one ever thought she was smart enough to be
anything politically. Again, we're dealing with an uneducated mind.
There was no reason for her to weigh in upon anything other than dresses
because that's about all she knew. (*Let me address that before I
forget. "She had talent." Joseph L. Mankiewicz worked with Jeanne and
disliked her because he thought her talent was minimal. His dislike
turned to hatred -- and his comments grew more intensely against her --
as the years passed. That was because of what we're about to get into,
her rush to partisanship.) (Patricia is a conservative, for those who
don't know.)
Why did she make it worse? Because she
just knew America needed to know her every thought and, in fact, needed
to know what do from her because, hey, she was a half-literate performer
who didn't have the brains to even study her own craft to improve in
her field. (Her idea of 'studying' to become a better actress was to
dye her hair a bright red and cut it short. Wow, Jeanne, that's got to
be much easier than attending a workshop at The Actors Studio.)
I
was thinking abotu Jeanne and about how most people don't know her and
how there's no push for a revial or renewed interst in her. And why
would there be? We, in the entertainment industry, are mostly
leftists. Equally true, the Patricia Heatons don't seem to know a damn
bit of history with regards to their peers who preceeded them.
Patricia's on Twitter, you'd think she'd be promoting Jeanne like crazy.
Barbara
Stanwyck is one of the few great stars that was a conservative. (She
was also a lesbian -- does that balance it out some way?) She was known
to be nice to every member of the crew, she was known to get along with
all of her co-stars (do we talk about the affair with Marilyn Monroe?
no, let's stay on topic). She was a much praised actress who had earned
the praise and who had endured for decades so she's in the canon of
great female stars -- Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, etc. All Democrats,
please note, except Barbara. Republican Ginger Rogers really isn't in
the canon and really won't be because too many of us found her
politically disgusting. But Barbara knew how to speak to what she knew
about. She had tremendous knowledge (education can come outside of
school to people who actually read and Barbara was a big time reader).
Jeanne
didn't know anything. Her foolishness included thinking America needed
her to tell them how to vote. She was there for Eisenhower. She was
there for Nixon -- when he lost to Kennedy. I wondered, "Does
CRAPAPEDIA note any of this in their entry on her?" Nope.
But
that is what killed her career. She'd destroyed her innocent image
with her accusations against her husband that she then retracted them by
going back to him. If a man lied on me and accused me of a false
affair and if he beat me and beat me in front of our children, I
wouldn't go back to him when I had the money and means to raise them on
my own. But Jeanne went back which, to most Americans, was saying, "I'm
a liar who lied about this man."
But that could have
worked in her favor for phase two of her career. FOX had dumped her but
that was fine with her. She wanted to play seductresses and bad girls
and that's why she dyed the hair brighter and cut it shorter and started
sporting her breasts at every party she attended -- and all she did
after FOX fired her was attend parties.
So, one good
role (and UNIVERSAL had one in mind -- though it didn't pan out in the
end) and she could restart her career, phase two as one of the wicked
women of the screen.
But that's around the time she got
the idea that she was smart and she knew the world and that what her
audience wanted from her was instructions in who to vote for.
Partianship killed her.
She
sided with a loser (Nixon) and she sided with him in every run for
president. Tricky Dick was a crook who left the Oval Office in disgrace
and left because he was about to be impeached and he would have been
removed from office.
She tied herself to a crook and it sank her ship for good.
And
that's why I don't get these idiot celebrities who think the world
needs partisanship from them. Who are the great politicians of this
age? I can't think of many.
The only one that springs
immediately to my mind on a national level is Senator Patty Murray who
does good work by keeping her nose down and focusing on issues. I
remember in 2002 when Ms. was gearing up an issue on women that would
include politicians and a friend slid a draft over to me and was
appalled when I suggested that they include Patty. They didn't think
she did enough for women. I'm confused by how Patty hasn't done enough
but Nancy was considered our champion. Nancy was then (and still is) my
representative in the House. I know her record. I know she talks big
but I also know she fails to deliver.
That's the
average politician. That's the baseline average. Why would anyone want
to tie themselves to a politician? They're crooks or they're
ineffective. There are a few workhorses, like Patty, who keep their
noses down and do the work. And I like Patty and I like the work she
does. But I'm not going to go on a yacht with her or co-write a book
with her.
Bruce is happy to do that with Barack.
He's tied to Barack and Barack's drone war is an issue that's only going
to get bigger and be a bigger problem for him each year. Now it's
going to be a problem for Bruce too since he got in bed with Barack.
I'm
not going to whore my image on some politician. I'm not that stupid.
My family had its first political scandal, during my lifetime, while I
was in primary school (a sex scandal, naturally, the politician caught
sleeping with some beauty who was not his wife). Gore Vidal and I used
to mock most of the politicians we knew, we'd laugh about them and what
fakes they were. Yes, that included Al Gore. No, I am not sorry that I
wrote of Al's affair from 1992 in Ava and my "TV: Global Boring"
and I'm not sorry that this confirmed what Tipper already knew and was
part of what led to their separation. I do care about the other piece
we wrote that destroyed a friend's marriage. I think she's much better
off without that jerk but I'm sorry that our highlighting the way he
trashed -- repeatedly -- her former boyfriend and the way he berated her
sons allowed her to realize she wasn't wrong to doubt him and think she
needed to leave. I probably should have pulled her aside and talked to
her about that. I did call her before Ava and my piece went up to let
her know about it and what it was going to say.
But I
never though about it, that relationship, before Ava and I wrote about
it. That's the reality. Most things I don't think about. I go about
my life and some of it never registers. I did not like that ego
maniac. But he was married to my friend so I didn't make a point to
question the dislike -- what was the point, I'd have to see him
regularly since he was married to her. But when we had to watch the
reality show -- and we watched several episodes on one day -- and I had
to look at it from other angles, it was obvious how horrible he was.
I
don't know everything. I'm not stupid enough to think I do. I cannot
speak to everything. I like Alec Baldwin. I consider him a friend --
it's been awhile since we've spoken but I do consider him a friend.
(And I don't need an intermediary to e-mail this site trying to set us
up. I have his number, he has mine. So don't e-mail this site again
trying to set us up for a conversation.) People want me to weigh in on
that set tragedy. Why? I don't believe Alec was trying to kill or harm
anyone. That's not his style. I stand by that and have no problem
doing so. The facts will come out. They don't need me for that because
I wasn't on that set. Nor was George Clooney. Didn't stop George from
weighing in. Hey, George, as long as your talking about anything, how
about you address the long standing rumors that you're bisexual and that
you at least don't beat the men you are alleged to have slept with -- a
big difference from claims made by women you've slept with. Want to
talk about those rumors since you want to circulate rumors about Alec?
I'm down with that conversation, Buster Brown, I'm down with it and I've
got the names. We didn't note Katie Halper when she did her Alec
show. I didn't stream it nd I didn't want to and it didn't go up here.
I didn't believe that her guest knew what happened and I wasn't in the
mood for it. Equally true, there were many other topics -- worthy ones
-- that could have been covered. I don't use this site to block
criticism of my friends. I consider Dave Chappelle to be a wonderful
friend. I did not launch an attack on him with regards to his
anti-trans comments. First off, it was in keeping with the persona he
uses onstage. Second off, for him it was a bit of progress. Meaning
the past criticism of him had resulted in a slight change on his part. I
stated that the critiques needed to continue. I didn't attack him but I
didn't shut down the conversation -- and I reposted some criticism of
him here.
It's a conversation that we all need to be
having. And stop pretending it's just no big deal. This is a huge
deal. This has been huge progress for the transgender community. I am
very happy about that. But we have to grasp that it was a big shift and
that others need to be encouraged to shift with the rest of the
country. And that this requires a real dialogue. Ann was right when she wrote:
Dahlia McCamon offers some important words that we all need to hear. I
also think we all need to see. What I mean by that is, we aren't a
censorship community in THE COMMON ILLS. We believe in more voices, not
less voices. Netflix needs to give Dahlia McCamon a special. Not only
that, they should actually do a conversation special -- roundtable would
be great -- about Dave Chappelle's show.
I think the conversation is needed for all of us but especially for Dave
who does not appear to grasp why people are responding to his comments
the way they are.
We only know what we can
discuss. And we can't have a real discussion if some are making false
accusations -- a la Spencer Ackerman -- just to stop a discussion from
taking place.
We can't have a real discussion if we're not informed.
The
Iraq War has not ended. The Iraqi people continue to suffer because of
the US-led war. And most people in America have no idea about that
reality because so many outlets either ignore Iraq or lie about it.
2020 saw three big events that were Iraq related.
Let's
start with the good news. The Turkish government's continued violation
of Iraq's national sovereignty as it terrorizes Kurdistan has finally
gotten serious western press attention. This has been ongoing for
years. The term ecocide has been attached to Turkey's actions with
regards to chopping down (and burning down) forests in Kurdistan.
In December, AP reported:
Dozens of
flag-waving demonstrators from a Kurdish organization broke into the
Dutch grounds of the global chemical weapons watchdog Friday to protest
what they alleged was the use of chemical weapons by Turkish forces.
Police
said they arrested about 50 protesters who managed to get past
security, including a high fence that surrounds The Hague headquarters
of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons,
spokesperson Dick Goijert said.
A
Kurdish group called DEM NED organized the protest against the alleged
use of chemical weapons by the Turkish armed forces, Goijert said. He
did not have further details.
And THE NEWSHOUR (PBS) offered this report two days ago.
Turkey's
actions have killed and wounded a large number of civilians and its
actions, in another country, do qualify as a declaration of war.
For
years, the world looked the other way as the Palestinians were targeted
and their rights violated. At the start of the last century, the world
looked the other way while Turkey carried out a genocide in Armenia.
Turkey's actions against the Kurds -- in Kurdistan, in Syria and within
Turkey -- look a lot like gencoide. At what point do people plan to
speak up? At what point does the world call it out?
We can't have that conversation unless we're aware of what's going on.
And
it doesn't benefit the Democratic Party or the Republican Party to
address Turkey's illegal actions. Therefore, you're not going to hear
about it on MSNBC or on FOX NEWS. Partisan media has no skin in the
game and they're not interested.
Partisan media
apparently has no interest in the innocents killed in THE DRONE WAR
either. Barack Obama lied about it so that's got Dem partisans silent
and Donald continued it so that's got Rep partisans silent.
But Azmat Khan's "Hidden Petnagon Records Reveal Patterns Of Failure In Deadly Airstrikes" was major news -- even if most outlets ignored it. From the article:
Shortly before 3 a.m. on July 19, 2016, American Special Operations
forces bombed what they believed were three ISIS “staging areas” on the
outskirts of Tokhar, a riverside hamlet in northern Syria. They reported
85 fighters killed. In fact, they hit houses far from the front line,
where farmers, their families and other local people sought nighttime
sanctuary from bombing and gunfire. More than 120 villagers were killed.
In early 2017 in Iraq, an American war plane struck a dark-colored
vehicle, believed to be a car bomb, stopped at an intersection in the
Wadi Hajar neighborhood of West Mosul. Actually, the car had been
bearing not a bomb but a man named Majid Mahmoud Ahmed, his wife and
their two children, who were fleeing the fighting nearby. They and three
other civilians were killed.
In November 2015, after observing a man dragging an “unknown heavy
object” into an ISIS “defensive fighting position,” American forces
struck a building in Ramadi, Iraq. A military review found that the
object was actually “a person of small stature” — a child — who died in
the strike.
None of these deadly failures resulted in a finding of wrongdoing.
These cases are drawn from a hidden Pentagon archive of the American air war in the Middle East since 2014.
The trove of documents — the military’s own confidential assessments of
more than 1,300 reports of civilian casualties, obtained by The New York
Times — lays bare how the air war has been marked by deeply flawed
intelligence, rushed and often imprecise targeting, and the deaths of
thousands of civilians, many of them children, a sharp contrast to the
American government’s image of war waged by all-seeing drones and
precision bombs.
The documents show, too, that despite the Pentagon’s highly codified
system for examining civilian casualties, pledges of transparency and
accountability have given way to opacity and impunity. In only a handful
of cases were the assessments made public. Not a single record provided
includes a finding of wrongdoing or disciplinary action. Fewer than a
dozen condolence payments were made, even though many survivors were
left with disabilities requiring expensive medical care. Documented
efforts to identify root causes or lessons learned are rare.
The air campaign represents a fundamental transformation of warfare that
took shape in the final years of the Obama administration, amid the
deepening unpopularity of the forever wars that had claimed more than
6,000 American service members. The United States traded many of its
boots on the ground for an arsenal of aircraft directed by controllers
sitting at computers, often thousands of miles away. President Barack
Obama called it “the most precise air campaign in history.”
This was the promise: America’s “extraordinary technology” would allow
the military to kill the right people while taking the greatest possible
care not to harm the wrong ones.
This was
a major issue and Azmat wrote a major report. It's one she worked
years on researching. You saw partisans like Norman Solomn not amplify
the report, no, they attempted to attack it. You know what, if like
Norman, I had been a pledged delegate to the DNC Convention for Barack
Obama, I might want to attack the report too because it doesn't just
tell on Barack it tells on those who supported him, those who claimed to
be aware and supported him and continue to support him. Like Alyssa
Milano, if Norman wants to make public statements, there's a lot of his
actions that he could take accountability for. Like Alyssa, Norman
thinks he can just get away with pretending he has nothing to apologize
for.
Do I regret once praising Norman here? I praised a
lot of idiots here and what I hope I've learned is that you take from
them what you can. Take what you can work with. Mike
loves Jimmy Dore, for example. I do too. Like me, Mike's been let
down by a lot of 'informed voices.' So he repeatedly notes at his site
that Jimmy is brave despite being under attack and maybe some day that
bravery will vanish but for right now Jimmy deserves praise. That's a
good attitude to have and I think I'll steal it from Mike and apply to
my own life.
The attacks on Jimmy -- or on Glenn
Greewnald or on Naomi Wolf or on RFK Jr. -- are attacks meant to
silence. They don't want him to be part of the conversation. They
don't want him to be heard. That may be great partisanship but it's not
what the left is supposed to believe in. (I actually don't believe the
right favors censoring speech either.) We don't grow as a society or
as a person by only hearing what we want to hear. We don't show
conviction and sharpen our own opinions by refusing to interact with one
another in the public square.
That's how we get weaker and, goodness, have we gotten weaker. Jonathan Turley
is someone who has charted our wayward course, how those of us on the
left (I would say Democratic partisans) are straying further and further
from our convictions as we embrace, for example, censorship and he's
also charted the very real damage of bumper-stickerism (my term for
virtue signaling -- an indicator passed off as action). We need a more
robust conversation in the public square -- if that means more swearing,
oh well. The only thing we don't need is people making statements that
they know are false.
We can't have honest
discussions, discussions that will allow us to enlarge our
understanding, if our media doesn't cover important events.
Which brings us to the third big story of Iraq.
No,
not the October 10th election. That's been misreported by the US media
to a large degree, yes, but it is there go-to subject when they feel
they have to cover Iraq.
Far more important? The
protests. They have been woefully under-reported in the media. Most
Americans don't know that Iraq's current prime minister (hopefully,
outgoing prime minister) only holds that spot because protesters drove
the previous one of out office.
These protests throughout Iraq in 2021 have been under-reported and ignored.
December saw two resignations. Most Americans have no idea. The governor of Dhi Qar, Ahmed al-Khafaji resigned right before Christmas due to protest. And, at the same time, the governor of Najaf, Louai al-Yasseri, resigned -- also due to protests.
When
these protests aren't covered, I guess it's easier for the media to
pretend that the ongoing Iraq War is a success. After all, if the US
truly 'liberated' the Iraqi people, all would be fine and dandy and
Iraqis would have no reason to take to the streets.
But
all is not well and that's why Iraqis are making their voices heard --
heard on the streets, heard via social media and heard via the Arabic
press. Sadly, the US press really doesn't pay attention to what's
actually going on in Iraq. It's so much easier to just write 500 words
or so of nothing while tossing around the term "king-maker."
We
can't have an honest discourse if we don't have information. We can't
have a robust democracy without real information. And that's why what
Julian Assange did is so very important and why the persecution against
him needs to end. The persecution goes beyond punishment of Julian, Joe
Biden and others in the US government are attempting to scare the s**t
out of anyone else who might want to air some truths.
This week, Ajamu Baraka (activist and the Green Party's vice presidential candidate in the 2020 elections) Tweeted:
Barack Obama was the worst thing to every happen to Black people in the U.S. Trump? Not even close. Obama finished off the counterrevolutionary project of making Black people "Americans" & driving Black public opinion to the right.
It's
amazing that 'man of the people' Bruce Springsteen would rather be
friends with a killer like Barack Obama then to speak out and defend
Julian Assange.
You will know them by the company they keep and by the people they whore for.
Julian deserves support. As Margaret Kimberley noted December 14th (at BLACK AGENDA REPORT):
Assange ran afoul of four different U.S. presidents, republicans and
democrats alike. Wikileaks revealed war crimes committed during the
George W. Bush administration in their Iraq War Logs and Afghanistan War
Logs. Private Chelsea Manning leaked the Collateral Murder
video, which shows the deaths of civilians, including two Reuters
reporters, as they were gunned down by a U.S. army helicopter crew in
2007.
Collateral Murder was released in 2010 when Barack Obama was
president. All of the purported differences between democrats and
republicans disappear when U.S. hegemony is in need of protection.
Obama’s Attorney General, Eric Holder, confirmed that Assange was under
investigation. While the Justice Department ultimately chose not to
indict, they laid the groundwork for Donald Trump to make Assange a
political prisoner. Obama’s unprecedented use of the Espionage Act sent
other whistleblowers to jail and gave Trump license to get his hands on
Assange. As always, Joe Biden follows Trump policy and he continues the
Assange persecution.
The Trump administration built on the work of the Obama DOJ and
secured a 17-count indictment in 2018, with charges that could result in
a 175-year sentence. Of course they didn’t stop with criminal charges,
which were useless as long as the Ecuadorian government gave Assange
sanctuary in its London embassy. The Trump administration secured a $4 billion IMF loan
for Ecuador, just one month before Assange’s protections were lifted.
The timing of the transaction and the arrest were clearly not
coincidental.
It isn’t surprising that presidents wage war against the truth
tellers of the world. What is especially disheartening is the way that
journalists have abandoned Assange and turned into U.S. government
spokespeople if they discuss his case at all.
A
vibrant democracy depends upon a robust conversation in the public
sqaure which depends upon an informed citizenry. 2021 made clear that
too many partisans are killing democracy with their attacks on free
speech and their efforts at censoring anyone they disagree with. We're
living in a world currently where just noting that the pandemic
continues is seen as ''questionable'' speech that might require it come
with a warning label.
Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Lady Liberty"
of 2020 remained just as true throughout 2021 but, hey, that doesn't
mean (if you're Barack) that you shouldn't hold super-spreader events so
that hundreds can celebrate your birthday with you. As Trina
has rightly observered over and over throughout this ongoing pandemic:
We were not all in this together -- some profited and some were able to
live as though the pandemic never even started.
--------------------
Past year-in-reviews
2020: The Year Long Walk of Shame
2019: The Year For Dummies
2018: The Year of Media Self-Exposure
2017: The Year of Chicken Little
2016: The Year of WTF
2015: The Year of the Ass
--------------
Earlier today, Kat's "2021 in music" went up here, Ruth's "Ruth's YOUTUBE Report" went up here, Martha and Shirley's "2021 in Books (Martha & Shirley)" went up here and we reposted Rebecca's "sexiest men of 2021" (as "Rebecca eyes the hottest guys of 2021") and Stan's "2021 in films (Ann and Stan)" and Ann's "2021 in films (Ann and Stan)" (as "Ann and Stan on 2021 in film")