Sunday, August 12, 2007

She's a celebrity, get her out of here!

Sometimes, we wonder, are we too hard on Katrina vanden Heuvel for refusing to publish women in equal number to men? Are we too hard on her because she's turned a strong, left weekly into the unofficial house organ for her Council for Foreign Relations? Are we too hard on her because her overly applauded article this year boasted of "dozens" of photos in the magazine's possession of the abuse of Iraqis but didn't run one photo? Are we too hard on her for using her forum to promote organizations that she and her family belong to -- and often lead -- without disclosing that to readers?

As she rushes off as some sort of one-person editorial first responder to every disaster, is it wrong to hold her to journalistic standards?

The answer comes back, yes.

Eric Morrison (Juneau Empire) informs us, she's a celebrity.

landers

Our apologies. Our sincere apologies. All this time, we were operating under the impression that she was attempting to be a journalist. We never realized that she was actually the third Landers sister. The unknown Landers, the one shut out from the non-nude Playboy pictorial. Audrey, Judy, Katrina could use a phone call!

Knowing now that she's a celebrity, we understand how wrong it was of us to judge her journalistically when she went to town on David Corn and for Barack Obama. While we were confused by the titles "editor" and "publisher," Matt Stearns (McClatchy Newspapers) wasn't and wisely saw fit to quote David Corn and ignore Katrina vanden Landers.

We not only regret our error, we now understand why, though RadioNation with Laura Flanders was cut from six hours a week to one, Katrina vanden Landers has been happy to hog air time repeatedly -- five guest appearances since the last week of May! Now an hour show doesn't have a lot of time to waste but obviously D-list celebs like Katrina vanden Landers bring in the tens and twenties of listeners across the world. Again, our apologies. And speaking for her devoted fans (both of them), let's all hope she doesn't screw this regular gig up the way she did her last one at Air America Radio. We'll save that tale for when she enters the Celebrity Gone Completely Nuts and pops up on the front of tabloids -- well, the inside pages -- everywhere.

Weeks load of crap in one morning

Justice? A soldier convicted for his role in the rape and murder of an Iraqi teenager was sentenced to 110 years in prison. And Military prosecutors did not say Pfc. Jesse Spielman took part in the rape or murders.



The above is from a lefty type site and their link heading provides you with enough crap content to exceed your weekly allotment.



Jesse Spielman didn't get justice! Oh goodness!



Spielman will be eligible for parole in 1o years.



He didn't, for instance, get the death penalty. The death penalty was what those involved US soldiers gave to 14-year-old Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi got, after she was gang-raped. The death penalty is what her five-year-old sister Hadeel Qassim Hamza received. The death penalty was what her parents Qassim Hamza Raheem and Fakhriya Taha Muhasen were handed. Unlike Spielman, they are up for no parole, unlike Spielman, they had no defending attorneys. Their crime was that some sick perverts thought rape was 'fun,' thought raping a 14-year-old equaled 'more fun' and, best of all, thought they could kill Iraqis, blame it on insurgents and avoid any responsibility.



The defense whines that the soldiers had long questioning. We'll bleed a little for those prisoners in Guantanamo Bay and in the secret US prisons throughout the world first.



In the Article 32 hearing last year, here's how Capt. Alex Pickands characterized the events,

"Murder, not war. Rape, not war. That's what we're here talking about today. Not all that business about cold food, checkpoints, personnel assignments. Cold food didn't kill that family. Personnel assignments didn't rape and murder that 14-year-old little girl."



And nothing prevented Spielman from coming forward. He covered up the crimes. Paul Cortez testifed that Spielman was the lookout for the crimes and only mere feet away while Abeer was being gang-raped and the murders were taking place.



He entered guilty pleas to some charges and went to trial on others. He participated in the crimes and we're not too sorry that the lookout's going to do ten years. There's no adult male who doesn't grasp that rape is illegal in this country. Ditto murder. Had Spielman been the lookout for the same series of crimes in Memphis and not Mahmoudiya, we think his sentencing would have been even harsher.



After the gang rape, after the murder, they desecrated Abeer's body by attempting to set it on fire to destroy the evidence. They stayed silent for months. Only the kidnapping of other US soldiers (and their eventual murders) finally prompted one uninvolved soldier to come forward with his suspicions based on rumors.



Spielman will most likely walk in ten years. Abeer, her parents, her five-year-old sister won't have that gift. Abeer would have been 16-year-old this month. She didn't even live to see 15.





Spielman stated, prior to sentencing, "I could have stopped it. I take responsibility for my actions." He took part in War Crimes and he took part in covering them up.



He was the lookout for a gang-rape and four murders. He could have come forward at any time and didn't. Had he been tried in a US federal court and found guilty of the same charges, he would be looking at life in prison. No get out of jail card after ten years.



That's the reality. This wasn't a case of someone thought they were being fired upon and they fired back. This was invading a home, killing the parents, killing a young daughter, and gang-raping the older daughter before killing her. Spielman states he was only the lookout. That's backed up by testimony of others. He acted as the lookout while all of this was going on. He's responsible and "Justice?" is only warranted if you're wondering if ten years in prison is too little for what he did?



For the record, they never claimed they 'cracked' in the Article 32 hearing. They did whine about the food, they did whine about the living conditions. But there are approximately 160,000 US service members in Iraq and you better believe, male or female, the majority knows there is no excuse for leaving base (without permission), in the dead of night to go conduct War Crimes.



Nearly a year ago (November 2006), we wrote "Justice for Abeer and her family?" We find it pathetic that the bulk of the left and 'left' elected to sit out the whole issue. We find it appalling that some elements are now whining that the lookout will likely do ten years in prison.

Iraq

On the 11th day

26 deaths had been announced

For the 8th month



The fifth year mark

Still seven months away

3684 were never coming back.



The Do-No-Crats

Still had weeks left

Before they returned to DC

To do nothing else

But preen and pose

And garner applause

From their built in cheering section

Hey, just because.



Silly websites

Run a fat boy's 'critique'

Praising a movie

Preaching illegal war.



Mercenaries kill innocent Iraqis

And they're above the law.

Guess this war will still be going on

Well into next fall.

David Bacon's "Living Under Trees" now showing

David Bacon is a journalist who covers labor.



You're probably aware of him.



If you're not, yes, there are still a few labor reporters left.



C.I. noted that Bacon has a showing of his photography and since Bacon regularly covers labor and immigration rights, we want to all be sure to give him a shout out. His exhibit is at ARte Americas currently. That's 1630 Van Ness Avenue, Fresno, CA 93721. It is entitled "Living Under Trees" and the cost is $3 for the general audience, $2 for students and seniors.



The exhibit can be viewed Tuesdays through Saturdays through August 23rd (August 23rd is the last day, to be clear). The hours are eleven a.m. until five p.m. each day except Thursdays when the hours are eleven a.m. until eight p.m.



The photos take an in depth look at the lives of immigrant farm workers in California. Margaret Slaby's "Visual Eloquence: Photo exhibit at Arte Americas reveals a rich community among poor farmworkers" (The Fresno Bee) provides you with more information.

Highlights

This feature is written by Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude, Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man, Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix, Mike of Mikey Likes It!, Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz, and Wally of The Daily Jot. Unless otherwise noted, we also picked the highlights.


Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Spineless" -- We're starting with Isaiah because we always forget him! Mid-week, Elaine will usually remind us, "We forgot him." He posts on Sunday and we write this on Sunday (while everyone else is editing pieces -- look out for Ava and C.I. this week -- "WOW!" that's all we'll say!). If you're new, a little back story. Ruth does reports, Kat does music reviews. Isaiah's a community member who couldn't figure out what he wanted to do but knew he wanted to do something. He used to draw a little and figured he could do something to give The Common Ills a visual. So he started doing The World Today Just Nuts in 2005. We used to all post various of his comics at our sites. That largely stopped when Hello! (a program for pictures, illustration, etc.) went kaput (it's still around, it just doesn't interface with Blogger/Blogspot anymore) on December 31, 2006. When it was still around, it was easy to repost Isaiah's comic. Flickr has these terms of use and you have to sign in to get the code. (You can repost without the code but it looks like crap if you do it that way.) We've got the password for Flickr but it's a pain in the butt and it's also true that we're never sure what size to do. If you use too big of a size (sometimes that's "large" and sometimes it's "medium"), you end up with your whole web page being thrown off for days and days. So it's hassle. But we keep forgetting Isaiah and we're going to make an attempt to figure out Flickr. We love what he does. And we love that he does it. A lot of times, he'll pass on ideas to Wally and Cedric because he'll have one that's more verbal than visual or that's really beyond a single panel. So he's a part of the community and we are really, really sorry that we repeatedly forget to include him. (Watch, we'll forget again next week. And be sure to check The Common Ills later today for his latest comig. You'll laugh.)

"The bigamist Thomas Friedman" -- Betty's latest. We told you things were unraveling in Betinna's world. With Thomas Friedman being on vacation, Betty's using the break to push Betinna's story a little further along then she'd planned to at this point. We're thrilled and can't wait for the next plot point. (Yes, we've badgered her and know where the end comes. We don't know how it ends but we do know the basic plot points.) You've got a turnaround coming soon so be sure to read the latest chapter.


"Spinach, Orange and Almond Salad in the Kitchen" -- Mike says, "I kept telling everyone Ma was fine. Everyone kept asking and not believing. I wonder if that wasn't why Ty, Jess, Jim, Ava and C.I. made a point to visit Friday. She's fine. This is her first grandchild. She's just enjoying that. And trying not to burn up in the summer heat! More rain, please more rain!"
Here Trina is discussing a number of issues as she always does. You've got the recipes. (Mike says he is highly, highly allergic to strawberries and so is his father. If they even touch the juice of one off a plate, they break out in hives.) You've also got probably one of the kinder interpretations offered of why some are screaming "Racism!" when John Conyers is held to account the same as any other member of Congress who talks big and doesn't deliver.

"gonzales, conyers & more" -- On that last note, Betty asked Rebecca to address the issue and Rebecca says, "Betty asks, I deliver." Betty was working on her chapter Friday night and trying to get it up because the usual Friday posters would be posting late (that's also why Kat posted early Friday evening -- especially early for her because she's on the West coast). Rebecca had talked to her friend T about this (and notes T may have some stuff she wants Rebecca to add this week), to Cedric and to Ty (Ty in person because she and Elaine go to Mike's Iraq study group on Fridays) to get a sense of what they wanted covered. She said she felt like she let everyone down but Ty, Cedric and Betty say Rebecca came through beautifully.

"The Black Commentator has been delinked" -- A rare solo post from Cedric. He says he wishes he'd remember to include Gina and give her credit because she did drop everything else to make this the topic for Thursday night's roundtable that ran in Friday's gina & krista round-robin. Other than that, he says he can handle what he wrote. We can more than handle it, we praise him. We are not worthy, Cedric!

"THIS JUST IN! IT WAS BULLY BOY!" & "Bully Boy hard at work" -- Wally and Cedric doing a joint post and explaining how Pearl Jam's webcast got censored. They note they use Isaiah's illustration and, yes, that's a Hello! illustration because Hello! is so much easier to use. Cedric says they almost went with an Alberto but saw that was on Flickr and weren't in the mood. Rebecca notes it is "Flickr" with no "e."

"The 'saintly' War Hawk Andrew White" -- Ty told us, "This has to be noted. Pru e-mailed on this." We all love Pru, one of the earliest community members in England. Kat's addressing man of the cloth Andrew White who gave testimony and wasn't happy that it was public (he thought it wouldn't be). If you were a man of the cloth lying in your testimony, you'd be unhappy it was public too.


"Toledo Blade editorializes US troops out of Iraq" -- Did you hear about The Toledo Blade editorial? It's the strongest editorial on the illegal war we've read yet in a daily paper. You can, and should, read it by clicking on "Iraq's demise."

"John Stauber, Ruth Conniff" -- The community determines the content at The Common Ills. C.I. is only one member. We are all members of the community and try to respect the community. Elaine feared she was stepping on dangerous ground here because the community didn't want to hear about the Yearly Toilet Scrubbers. She's the only in the community who made any kind of comment on it. Fortunately, no one was upset. (But we really do try to respect the community at our own sites. They're not interested in "Debate Central" as Susan's dubbed the so-called debates we've been seeing. So we don't defocus by obsessing over each one. That's just one example. The journalist who repeatedly smeared Cynthia McKinney is another example. Betty loathes that woman and asked if she could not be linked to -- before Betty started her site -- she explained why and C.I., Rebecca and this site honored it. Probably Folding Star did at A Winding Road as well. The other sites came after and we honored it as well. When members feel very strongly about something, we all try to show support.)

"fair gets it wrong" -- Rebecca's post (C.I. covered the topic as well the next day in that day's "Iraq snapshot"). The story of Iraqis living under occupation, FAIR explained in an action alert, was told by The Nation . . . interviewing not one Iraqi. Rebecca and C.I. rightly called it out. For good reason. That's offensive as hell and FAIR should be ashamed of themselves. Read Rebecca, read C.I. and grasp how some organization calling itself FAIR should be expected to behave FAIR-ly. They didn't. We aren't all surprised.

"Jane Mayer, Pelosi's office can't explain the 'woopsie' moment" -- Kat called Pelosi's office about Congress giving Bully Boy new powers to spy with. She gets the round around and writes about it.

"Tim Howe and Bob Somerby" -- Wally just remember this. It went up on Sunday and we're usually not thinking about last Sunday when we're trying to figure out our picks. Timmy Howe sends an e-mail to all of us . . . via C.I. Those of us writing this say, "Thanks for the scribbles. Glad to have a fan."

"the 'learned helplessness' of congress" -- Rebecca on our do nothing Congress. Picked by reader Dot who wrote an e-mail saying "It's the perfect connections to make."

"William Blum, Willi Langthaler, Matthew Rothschild...," "Marjorie Cohn, CCR, Ken Silverstein, John Nichols," "Ken Silverstein, Dave Lindorff, Betty, Cedric & Ty...," and "Dave Lindorff, Robert Parry, Scott Horton" -- Ty told us reader Darren had a request. We were thinking the same thing and Wally and Betty were the ones who had suggested it. Mike's addressing impeachment in the posts above. All worth noting.

"Other Items" -- Sherry e-mailed Rebecca and said, "This has to be highlighted!" C.I. noting a rotund film critic who doesn't have a lot on the ball.

"US helicopter goes down, Iraq dictoator talk floated" -- Community member Joan said "Sub Rosa" was her favorite of all the things last week at The Common Ills. (We liked it to, Joan.)

"THIS JUST IN! BARACK OBAMA IS SAMMY POWER IN DRAG!..." & "Bi-racial Barack wants to be an Irish woman" -- Wally and Cedric with a hilarious take on the voice behind the puppet.

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Truest statement of the week

"The idea that citizens are free to dissent is ingrained in the American mythos, a concept even older than the Declaration of Independence itself. Equally important in this value system is the conviction that no nation state can survive as a democracy unless it safeguards political expression and activity."



-- Heidi Boghosian in Punishing Protest (available online in PDF format for free and avaible in book format for $3 at the National Lawyers Guild website). (Boghosian is also a co-host of Law and Disorder.)

A Note to Our Readers

Hey --

The editorial, the note and truest statement went up late. Why? Computer issues? (That's a nice word for it.)

Here's who worked on this edition:

The Third Estate Sunday Review's Dona, Jess, Ty, Ava and Jim,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz,
and Wally of The Daily Jot

Here's what you've got.

Truest statement of the week -- Heidi Boghosian is our pick. Since this went up, e-mails have come in saying the PDF usually works on their computer but it doesn't on this. The page never finishes loading. If that's the case, it may be due to the page size. (Or maybe the computer problem is not your problem -- a little joke on our end, not aimed at readers.) Remember the report is available in book form for $3 and proceeds cover paper and if anything's left over go to the National Lawyers Guild.

Editorial: Are you angry yet? -- We published this and then had the idea of adding the Rolling Stones' song to it. ("Out of Time") We think it works better with the song. We're angry. And that includes because one segment of the peace movement isn't just useless, it's apparently trying to be useless.

TV: Plotz, Plots, Fizz, Fizz . . . -- "It's plop" Blair e-mailed. No, "plotz" as in "I'm plotzing." (It's Yiddish.) Ava and C.I. take a look at the two of the more useless members of the Water Cooler Set.

The Woody Allen Canon --The long piece this edition. Is there something wrong factually? Let us know. Forget typos. The piece is too long. That means, yes, that spellcheck won't work. It also means that going into it is a very slow process. (The further down we scroll in the edit post option, the slower it goes.) We do have an illustration we're hoping to add if it ever loads on Flickr.

Aidan Delgado's The Sutras Of Abu Ghraib -- An excerpt and a heads up that there will be a bood discussion next week. We had hoped to have it this week but half-way into the Allen piece, we realized there would not be enough time.

No End In Sight when the peace movement gets behind crap -- are certain elements of the peace movement really that stupid or are they not really for peace? That's a question we're seriously asking. The same person defending the trashing of war resisters (and IVAW) is back again sending C.I. a mass e-mailing in praise of a War Hawk movie. So is the woman STUPID or she is really not interested in peace? Since she's held regional leadership, that's an issue that should concern everyone.

The New Plantation -- noting the new edition of Ms. by spotlighting the story on slavery.

John Conyers Is No MLK (Betty, Cedric & Ty) -- Betty, Cedric and Ty wanted this topic as part of a roundtable and we'd planned on one this edition but there was no time. So instead, they wrote their own feature. We support them and stand with them.

Ah, that's why The Nation sucks so -- A "celebrity" runs the magazine. Next week we'll return to this topic. Why next week? This feature went differently in print. It requires an illustration which would not load. Dona noted it was now 10:00 am on the East Coast and said we had to get some stuff up. So we rewrote this since we couldn't use the illustration. (It really needed the illustration.) Unless we get a better idea for this, next week we'll just run the take we did on this that ran in today's print edition.

Green Party facts -- a look at the Green Party.

Highlights -- Mike, Kat, Betty, Wally, Cedric, Elaine and Rebecca wrote this and we thank them for it.

We thank Dallas for links and we thank everyone who helped out.

We do not think the online interference. And we're putting it nicely.


-- Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess, Ava and C.I.

Editorial: Are you angry yet?

Are you angry yet?



Congress has done nothing to end the illegal war.



Alleged reporter John F. Burns can go on right-winger Hugh Hewitt's radio show and proclaim, "I think there's no doubt that those extra 30,000 American troops are making a difference." The alleged reporter can then opine that leaving Iraq will "lead to much higher, and indeed potentially cataclysmic levels of violence, beyond anything we've seen to date." Burnsie is supposed to be a reporter, not a columnist. But Burnsie's reputation, whatever was left of it, fell apart on this illegal war. Too scared to write about the resistance but he can get their help to travel safely for his laughable "At the grave of Saddam . . . piece".



Let's be real clear, John F. Burns is supposed to be a reporter for The New York Times and the guidelines of the paper allow him to state what he can see. They do not allow him to forecast the illegal war. It appears even Elisabeth Bumiller understood the guidelines better than Burnsie. (And he's not just a reporter, he's the Baghdad chief for the paper.)



Are you angry yet?



Last week, various websites were happy to run the Pedophile's attack on Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan. Various allegedly left sites were happy to run a piece by a Pedophile. How much shame and disgust is that right-winger going to be allowed to bring the left (the right kicked him to the curb) before he's sent packing? How credible do you think you look to any reader when you run the ravings of a Pedophile?



And wasn't it real cute how 'brave' voices didn't say a word in Cindy Sheehan's defense? Wasn't that sweet?



Thursday afternoon, a scolding column from a left voice (he is left) enraged a campus group. Dona said if C.I. hadn't made a joke in response to the question of "Why should we listen to him?" it would have gotten ugly. ("Well [pause] [slowly] he's still a . . . [said quickly and go up at the end] nice piece of ass.")



At least he was writing about Iraq.



But do any of them get how angry students on campus are with the useless Congress and with so many useless allegedly left outlets?



Do they get that students who are struggling to make ends meet aren't thinking, "Well forget tuition, I'm headed to DC for another rally that was just like the one before and the one before and the one before and the one before and . . ."?



Do they get, Congress or left voices, how much frustration and anger there is right now?



The Democratically controlled Congress took office in January and not a damn thing's changed.



Who's called them out? Sadly, not many activists. Has it been a party in DC all summer long?



That's how it's played outside the Beltway.



As we noted last week, an alleged peace activist wanted to justify the public slamming of war resisters by a centrist. Now the same alleged peace activist (representing for the regional branch of a national peace organization) wants to push a war that tells you the illegal war was a noble aspiration but the planning got screwed up.



Are you angry?



You should be.



Iraq didn't figure into Nancy Pelosi's 100 Days. And impeachment?



Well apparently John Conyers is now Jesus and no one must say a word against him.



They must not point out that you have to be a real chicken sh*t to repeatedly tell people (in interviews and gatherings) that you're working on impeachment (even send your wife to one meeting) while never doing anything about it in your role as committee chair.



St. Conyers. Burned at the stake with his own words.



The peace movement doesn't exist to prop up do-nothing Congressional members. It doesn't exist to be an organ for the Democratic Party. It doesn't exist to 'get the word out' on bad documentaries by War Hawks who supported the illegal war and still think the illegal war was a good idea, just planned poorly.



As yet another year goes by in the illegal war, we can look back on what's been done and see there's very little to get excited about.



Iraq Veterans Against the War and Tina Richards and Military Families Speak Out continue to fight. But we're really grasping how important Cindy Sheehan was. Sheehan still is important, but we're talking about how important she was when various groups were happy to use her. She drops out in May and damned if most of them can even figure out what to do. Here's a hint, get out of the damn Beltway. You can't speak for the people if you've removed yourself from the people.



Students are pissed off and they have a reason to be. If this is news to you, it only demonstrates how quickly you've become out of touch.

You don't know what's going on
You've been away for far too long
You can't come back and think you are still mine
You're out of touch, my baby
My poor discarded baby
I said, baby, baby, baby, you're out of time
-- "Out of Time" (written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards)
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