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Bo$ton Globe Christmas Gift

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Years ago you would have gotten many. Now you get only one. Sorry.

"Smart fabrics not yet a perfect fit" by Scott Kirsner Globe Correspondent  December 23, 2018

Will this Christmas mark the demise of the dumb sweater as a gift?

Researchers at a Cambridge lab hope so. They’re developing fibers that would be integrated into the smart sweater of Christmases yet to come, enabling what was once a simple garment to store electricity, change colors, gather data about your health, or even help an acquaintance recall your name at a crowded holiday party.

The lab, part of a public-private partnership called Advanced Functional Fabrics of America, has collected roughly $150 million in corporate, university, and government funding, but its CEO, Yoel Fink, has even more ambitious plans for 2019: He wants to raise a venture capital fund that would be invested in startup companies working on products that incorporate next-generation textiles.

First, a little not-so-ancient history. Twenty years ago, researchers at MIT’s Media Lab unveiled the “musical jacket,” a denim garment embroidered with metallic yarns that could sense touch. A keypad near the wearer’s left clavicle could control notes and a drum machine. But while the keypad looked stylish, not everything was soft and flexible: The jacket was also studded with a circuit board, batteries, and small speakers. 

I'm tired of being talked down to by the disassembling pre$$ as it promotes the agenda.

The AFFOA lab, in Cambridgeport, feels like a blend of Walt Disney’s Imagineering division and Coco Chanel’s atelier. There are enormous industrial knitting machines, spools of colorful thread, dresses on mannequins, and fun demos: Put on this black baseball cap with an integrated earpiece and listen to a broadcast sent only to you from a light fixture overhead. Fink envisions play-by-play at a sporting match being delivered in different languages, or perhaps geared to fans of the home team versus the visitors.

It will even stop alien abductions.

Nearby, a mannequin sports a black-and-white plaid backpack, but the design of each backpack in this line is slightly different, so when viewed with an app on a mobile phone, you can see messages or images that the owner wants to share with others. (These backpacks, dubbed “the world’s first digitally connected backpack,” are featured in a fund-raising campaign on the website Kickstarter; it aims to collect $10,000 in pre-orders.)

Does it come with a vaping apparatus, too?

It’s intriguing to think about a winter coat that could double as a backup battery for the aforementioned iPhone, or a rope for mountain climbers that could inform its owner when it’s time to be replaced. Fink mentions another current project: a patterned dog collar that, viewed through a mobile app, could tell the story of a dog that is waiting to be adopted at a shelter, and AFFOA, which opened its Cambridge headquarters just last year, is working with corporate partners like Ralph Lauren, ‘47 Brand, Bose, and New Balance, Fink says.

When I reached out to New Balance, spokeswoman Mary Lawton confirmed that the company is working with AFFOA on a new kind of running tight but said the company was not ready to discuss specifics of what it will be able to do. The product is slated to debut in the second half of next year, Lawton said.

What would a running tight, cocktail dress, or baseball cap need to do for you in order to make it an appealing purchase? That’s the central question for the functional fabrics industry — and no one yet has the answer.

Maggie Orth, now an artist and writer in Seattle, says she feels “enormously skeptical” about tech-enabled textiles, and while apparel companies like the idea of advanced products that would let them charge a premium price, Orth says that “every fashion company I’ve talked to had a very strong opinion about return on investment. It had to come in a quarter, or maybe two. Long-term research projects don’t fit into that model.”

That's why the stuff is made in Bangladesh.

Benjamin Cooper, an entrepreneur and researcher in what he calls the “soft systems” sector, believes AFFOA is “a great organization and a step in the right direction,” but, he adds, “anyone who is thinking that tomorrow these things are going to hit the market is going to be disappointed.”

Five years ago, Cooper ran a startup called Sensible Baby that sought to integrate sensors into an infant’s onesie, to detect breathing, movement, and temperature data, and relay it to a parent’s smartphone. Theproduct never attained broad distribution, and Cooper learned that “the consumer market is extremely fickle.”

Fink believes the timing is right. “It’s like we’re in the late 19th century, with horse-drawn buggies, and suddenly the car shows up,” he says. “It’s a moment in history.”

And he wants other people's money to do it!

One way he hopes to accelerate things is by setting up a venture capital fund to invest in new companies that would integrate AFFOA’s fibers into their products; he is aiming to raise about $50 million for that in the year ahead.

Dumb sweaters have been with us for a long time. Are they about to be displaced?

Same situation new$papers find themselves in.

Maybe next Christmas — or the one after that.....

If I am still here blogging.

Who is Yoel Fink again?

--more--"

So where can I return it?

Amazon Delivers

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Sorry I was a day late:

In a race against the clock — and gas gauge — Amazon driver brings you your packages

Not so fast:

"Employees at Amazon’s new NYC warehouse launch union push" by Josh Eidelson Bloomberg News  December 13, 2018

NEW YORK — A committee of employees at Amazon’s recently opened Staten Island fulfillment center is going public with a unionization campaign, a fresh challenge to the e-commerce giant in a city where it plans to build a major new campus.

Labor unrest is the latest complication in Amazon’s plan to invest $2.5 billion and hire 25,000 people in the city over the next 15 years. Several New York City politicians who were shut out of negotiations handled by the governor and mayor have raised objections to a new office park in Queens that threatens to overload mass transit and drive up rents in an already expensive housing market.

It's all Democrats so WTF?

Now workers in another borough are saying the company treats them like robots and should be focused on improving conditions there rather than raking in tax breaks to build a new headquarters.

The union they’re working with sees the nearly $3 billion in incentives offered to bring an Amazon office campus to Long Island City as leverage to prevent the company from retaliating against them for organizing.

Look, it's the 21$t-century. It used to be that the factory came to town and added to the community and its people with a symbiotic effect, but that's gone now. We are in the age of the corporate $hakedown, con$umer-worker, and gig economy, soon to be replaced by AI. Get u$ed to it.

Employees backing the union effort said in interviews Tuesday that the issues at the warehouse include safety concerns, inadequate pay, and 12-hour shifts with insufficient breaks and unreasonable hourly quotas, after which they lose more of their day waiting unpaid in long lines for security checks.

‘‘They talk to you like you’re nothing — all they care about is their numbers,’’ said Rashad Long, who makes $18.60 an hour and commutes four hours a day to work at the warehouse. ‘‘They talk to you like you’re a robot.’’

He's making how much and complaining?

No wonder Bezos wants the illegal immigrants pouring in.

A handful of pro-union Amazon employees joined community activists and elected officials at a City Hall press conference Wednesday prior to a city council hearing about the proposed major office development in Queens. There, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer denounced the government’s ‘‘bad deal’’ with Amazon, asking, ‘‘What do the people get, and what are the workers going to get? Where is the labor agreement?’’

Amazon spokeswoman Rachael Lighty said in an e-mail that the company ‘‘follows all state employment laws.’’

Not all Staten Island workers see it that way.

Amazon is slated to reap more than $1 billion in tax breaks and grants from New York as part of the Long Island City deal. Some lawmakers have said the state’s Public Authorities Control Board should reject the development unless the company makes stronger commitments in areas including infrastructure investment, housing affordability, and worker rights.

That also means health benefits, right? 

Employees are working with the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, or RWDSU, which has also backed organizing efforts at the Whole Foods grocery chain that Amazon acquired last year. Amazon’s workforce is union-free throughout the United States.

They are going to $poil Whole Foods?

‘‘There’s never been greater leverage— if taxpayers are giving Amazon $3 billion, then taxpayers have the right to demand that Amazon stop being a union-busting company,’’ said RWDSU’s president, Stuart Appelbaum. ‘‘It’s incumbent upon the governor and the mayor to make sure that nothing happens to these workers who are standing up for their rights. If Amazon continues its union-busting activities in New York, they should call off the deal.’’

The (anonymous?) governor and mayor are both Democrats.

RWDSU has been meeting workers in person and contacting them over social media since around the time the Staten Island facility opened.

Appelbaum declined to discuss the specifics of how Amazon employees were seeking to obtain union recognition.

The union president is Applebaum, huh?

--more--"

So how did that city council meeting go?

"Amazon went to New York’s City Hall. Things got loud, quickly" by J. David Goodman New York Times  December 13, 2018

NEW YORK — It was variously described as a rite of passage, a take-your-medicine moment, and a very New York-style welcome: Two Amazon executives raised their right hands and then faced more than three hours of public grilling by the New York City Council, but if the ritual of barbed questions and evasive answers was not unusual, the circumstances of Wednesday’s hearing were: Amazon does not need the council’s approval to locate new offices in Long Island City, Queens.

Still, the appearance marked the company’s first major foray into New York’s public spotlight since announcing the deal.

Council members took advantage of the executives sitting before them to vent their anger at the terms of the agreement, as well as at Amazon’s business practices, treatment of labor unions, and work on behalf of federal immigration officials. 

I don't Rekognize that.

They were backed up, with applause, shouts, and jeers, by a spectrum of liberal opponents who packed the chambers, unfurling an anti-Amazon banner from the balcony at the start of the hearing.

These are the same people who scream civility and tolerance at you!

Several times the crowd drowned out the two executives as they attempted to explain the merits of the deal struck with the company last month by Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio.

At least they dropped their names in this article.

“We believe this project will be a positive economic impact for the city and the state,” said Brian Huseman, vice president of public policy for Amazon. Repeatedly, his remarks were met by guffaws from the audience of antagonists.

Lobbyists for Amazon, hired to navigate an increasingly hostile political landscape, sat in a row near the front, and could be seen occasionally huddling with a de Blasio official on the sideline.

Democrat de Blasio was supposed to be the new voice of Occupy Wall Street, remember?

The two fronts in the room mirrored those that have been competing in recent weeks to win over public opinion in Queens, where Amazon has been quietly taking meetings with local leaders, and activists who backed Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have been going door-to-door to build opposition to the company’s new outpost.

At the council on Wednesday, opponents of the deal, which would bring an estimated 25,000 jobs to Long Island City, in exchange for as much as $3 billion in state and city incentives, strongly outnumbered supporters.

None of the council members in the overwhelmingly Democratic body spoke up in favor of the deal, and they vented their frustration at having been left out of the closed-door negotiations that preceded the announcement of the deal.

Closed door negotiations by Democrats! 


What is with them, anyway?

“James, you disrespected this body with how you handled this process,” Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer, who represents Long Island City, said to James Patchett, the president of the city’s Economic Development Corporation, during a particularly aggressive exchange.

“We got played,” the council speaker, Corey Johnson, said to Patchett at another point, speaking of Amazon’s nationwide competition. “They were able to pit city after city against each other.”

“I don’t know who I’m more angry at: the administration or Amazon,” said Jumaane Williams, a councilman from Brooklyn who is a candidate for public advocate, but the rhetorical points they scoredover the course of the often testy hearing remained symbolic: By design, the agreement between the city, the state and Amazon does not give the City Council the power to veto it. Instead, the company’s development of new offices along the East River will be subject to a state planning process.

By the time it was over Huseman and the other Amazon executive, Holly Sullivan, looked as though they may have regretted coming.

Throughout the hearing, Sullivan and Huseman, who kept his hands folded on the table in front of him, tried to maintain an even tone and a posture of listening even when the questions were witheringly direct.

Patchett showed more frustration with the council, sparring at several points with Van Bramer, who pressed him to discuss de Blasio’s involvement in the negotiations.

“I certainly spoke with him or met with him in person over 10 times,” Patchett said of his interactions with the mayor.

“So the mayor cannot meet with many of his own commissioners about everyday city business and how the city functions,” Van Bramer said, “but he can meet with you 10 times at least in the last year just on this Amazon deal?”

Why isn't he asking the mayor instead?

--more--"

Looks like it is back to the drawing board:

"Bezos’ preschools come as rich get richer, more generous" by Sally Ho Associated Press  December 03, 2018

SEATTLE — From Jeff Bezos’ free preschools to Andrew Carnegie’s public libraries, education stands out as a favorite cause among America’s wealthiest people, and as the rich get richer, and apparently more generous, this legacy of so-called investment philanthropy has shaped government priorities and driven policy changes, but with such high-profile giving fueled by both capitalism and poverty, critics have thrust that dichotomy into the spotlight, challenging how the system that allowed these philanthropists to amass their fortunes ultimately contributes to the social problems they are trying to address.

It's called tossing the rabble chump change, duh (nice big old tax break, too).

Bezos announced this fall he is dedicating half of his new $2 billion Bezos Day One Fund toward creating free preschools in low-income communities nationwide, which could make him the top philanthropic funder of early education.

I know he likes young men, and sure hope this isn't being set up as some sort of procurement ring.

It’s unknown if Bezos considers this seed money or a fixed endowment, but the tech titan, newspaper owner, and space entrepreneur is clear he wants to disrupt the status quo in the same way his Amazon.com company has changed retail, declaring his preschoolers are‘‘the customer.’’

For what?

The Amazon founder and chief executive in 2018 became the first $100 billion mogul to top Forbes’s annual rankings of the world’s richest people. Forbes’s calculations overall say the world now has more than 2,200 billionaires with a combined fortune of $9.1 trillion, up 18 percent from the previous year, and that coincides with a record-breaking amount of charitable giving in 2017, according to the annual Giving USA report written by Indiana University. With $410.02 billion in contributions, the total given to education causes across the United States was second only to the amount of money given to churches and religious groups.

The exemption line on the tax form says altruism$m.

Larry Lieberman of the nonprofit watchdog Charity Navigator said schools, children, and learning have near-universal appeal among the wealthiest philanthropists, who often credit their own success to the opportunities and power of education, and much like faith-based organizations, many well-funded educational institutions are dependent on, and therefore masterful at, fundraising.

It's a $elf-$erving charity, I'm $ure.


Yet for as long as education philanthropy has existed, so has criticism about one man’s funding priorities and what role capitalism, wealth distribution, and poverty play in it.

Fundamentally, philanthropy expert David Callahan said, those philanthropists are also advancing the idea that meritocracy can solve the inequality, without affecting the system of capitalism that produces it.

‘‘It’s the myth of the American Dream. The American Dream is that anyone who can work hard enough and improves themselves will succeed,’’ Callahan said. ‘‘Pretty much everyone buys into it at some level, and a lot of philanthropy reflects it.’’

And THAT, my dear readers, is what I call $TATU$ QUO AGENDA-PU$HING!

America’s leading philanthropists have long favored grander ideas that promise seismic shifts rather than contributing to fixed costs that may better the existing systems of public goods. While approaches have evolved, high-end philanthropy has been successful in leveraging the might of their private, often tax-exempt dollars to push government investment and policy changes in their pursuits, and whereas some philanthropy amounts to writing blank checks left in presumably capable hands and modestly outlined directives, the wealthiest have personified ‘‘venture’’ or ‘‘investment’’ philanthropy, which hinges on the expectation that the grants prove specific results.

No, no, no, not in our $y$tem!

Bezos said he is building a nonprofit organization to open and operate the free preschools, using the teaching philosophy of Maria Montessori. Bezos himself attended a Montessori school, which generally focuses on individual learning and social-emotional development, but earlier this year, Bezos’ company as Seattle’s largest private employer intensely fought the city council’s proposed business tax intended to fund more services for the region’s growing homelessness crisis, forcing city leaders to quickly retreat.....

There is no place like home.

--more--"

Maybe you would prefer a $lice of Apple?

"Apple puts music service on Amazon Echo in subscription push" by Mark Gurman Bloomberg News  November 30, 2018

Apple and Amazon.com announced their second partnership this month: The iPhone maker’s music-streaming service is coming to Amazon’s Echo devices in December.

The move gets Apple Music onto the most popular voice-controlled speakers, giving it distribution beyond Apple’s own devices. Subscribers will be able to control Apple Music with Amazon’s Alexa digital assistant, the first time Apple has opened up its music service to full voice control outside its own Siri technology.

The decision pushes Apple’s music service into more living rooms at a time when its own Internet-connected speaker, the HomePod, hasn’t sold as well as the competition. Given the breadth of Alexa-enabled speakers on the market, the move could also boost Apple’s own subscription numbers.

I would turn the music off if I were you.

‘‘This is further evidence that Apple sees it needs to work with other hardware players in order to advance Apple Music, and it is an admission that the HomePod has been a disappointment,’’ said Gene Munster of Loup Ventures.

Apple will sell 3.5 million HomePods this year, compared with 28.5 million Echos and 16.2 million Google Home speakers, making Amazon the best partner to help increase Apple Music subscriptions, according to Loup Ventures. Apple Music currently has more than 50 million subscribers. The service is a key component of Apple’s plan to expand digital services revenue and offset slowing growth of iPhone unit sales.

Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos cares more about increasing the number of people using Alexa and Echo speakers than he does about selling phones or music subscriptions. Earlier this month, the e-commerce giant began selling the latest Apple iPhones, Watches, and iPads on its website. One notable exclusion as the HomePod.

It’s unclear if the two moves are related, but the e-commerce deal could spur more purchases of Apple devices by Amazon customers. While Amazon is the market leader in smart speakers, the company’s efforts to design and sell its own smartphone flopped, and it doesn’t sell pricey tablets like the iPad or high-end wearables like the Apple Watch.

This isn’t the first time Apple is leveraging other hardware makers to boost Apple Music. When it launched the service in 2015, it released a version that works on Android. Apple hasn’t said how many users it has on Android, but the app has been downloaded more than 10 million times, according to the Google Play store’s website. Apple also offers integration with Sonos speakers for its music service.

Apple hasn’t announced a similar partnership with Google for its Home speakers. Google competes directly with the iPhone with its Pixel devices, and Android is the main rival for Apple’s iOS mobile operating system.

Amazon and Google have clashed in similar ways, with Google pulling YouTube from Echo speakers last year when Amazon didn’t sell Google Chromecast video streaming gadgets. Amazon reversed course in the end.

Apple’s HomePod was supposed to be the ultimate hub for Apple Music as it focused on audio playback over general purpose tasks like the Amazon Echo and Google Home. However, the device struggled out of the gate in part due to its high $349 price, sometimes sub-standard voice control experience, and delays to key features like stereo sound and multi-room audio playback. Soon after going on sale earlier this year, Apple cut some HomePod orders with suppliers. Since then, it has added new features like the ability to summon an iPhone’s location and make calls.

--more--"

I hear a lawsuit being filed.

"Here’s what Apple’s snub says about Boston’s status as a tech hub" by Andy Rosen and Jon Chesto Globe Staff  December 13, 2018

Apple announced Thursday that it would mostly bypass Boston as part of a multicity expansion, but home-grown digital retailer Wayfair continued its march through the Back Bay, where it plans to grow a workforce that could soon hit 10,000.

The dual developments were a telling indicator of Greater Boston’s status as a technology hub: The region seems capable of nurturing homegrown tech wunderkinds, and tech giants elsewhere see it as an ideal location for specialized, strategic outposts, but as Apple’s and, recently, Amazon’s decisions to look elsewhere show, Boston has struggled in the trophy class of tech expansions, the new campuses with thousands of jobs, including lower-level positions that can provide an anchor in the middle class for workers.

Unlike the $ports teams, they will have to settle for less than a championship.

In some ways, the city is a victim of its own success. Its booming tech sector is partially responsible for the competitive labor market, pricey real estate, and high cost of living that can make Boston a tough sell for big corporate relocations.

I $uppo$e you come up with whatever excu$e you can while staring at oneself in the mirror.

Tom Hopcroft, chief executive of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council, said talent is the top reason companies expand in the state – and it’s the number one obstacle to their growth here. Tech wages are the third highest here, after California and Washington state.

“The labor market is so tight, you have to pay a premium to get talent here,” Hopcroft said.....

At least it keeps the unions out.

--more--"

Related:

"The fast-growing online retailer Wayfair Inc. landed $31 million in tax incentives from the state Thursday to help the company add thousands of jobs in Boston and hundreds in Pittsfield. The Economic Assistance Coordinating Council approved a plan to dole out the incentives to the home-goods seller over 10 years. In return, Wayfair pledged to add a total of 3,300 jobs. A spokeswoman for the council said this is the state’s second-biggest tax-credit award since 2010. The largest was a $46 million package pledged to MassMutual earlier this year in return for its decision to add 1,500 jobs in Springfield and up to 1,000 in Boston. (General Electric was awarded $125 million in grant money in 2016 as part of a plan for a state agency to acquire the two Fort Point buildings where GE will move.) Boston-based Wayfair had already said it plans to eventually employ at least 10,000 people here, approximately doubling the 5,000-plus workforce at its approximately 650,000-square-foot Copley Place headquarters....."

"The latest tax incentives are attached to some 3,300 new jobs, mostly in Boston. That would normally be a jaw-dropping number. Not for Wayfair. (Wayfair still isn’t turning a profit, even as it clears $6 billion in annual revenue.) State officials would argue the tax incentives helped make the Pittsfield project a reality; Wayfair considered several other states for the call center. This expansion will be a sort of homecoming for Niraj Shah. The Wayfair chief executive grew up in Pittsfield, graduating from the city’s high school in 1991. His father, like many of his generation, worked at General Electric. GE, of course, once dominated Pittsfield’s economy. GE is long gone from the city today, but maybe Wayfair can start to take its place......"

Yeah, who needs Amazon!

Also see: General Post

"SoFi is cutting 7 percent of staff" by Julie Verhage Bloomberg News  December 02, 2018

Social Finance Inc., the lending and refinancing startup valued at more than $4 billion, is cutting about 7 percent of its staff, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The 100 job cuts are happening in the company’s mortgage department, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private. SoFi has said it plans to dramatically expand its mortgage business in 2019. As part of that effort, the company is now undertaking a wholesale restructuring of how that division operates — including a shift away from underwriting loans directly.

SoFi has lost money for two consecutive quarters, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg, as profits of its core lending business fell and it pushed into new product lines. This summer, the company was seeking a $1 billion revolving line of credit to fund operations and expansion. Meanwhile, Chief Executive Officer Anthony Noto, who started the job this year, has said his goal is to get the company ready for an initial public offering.

The San Francisco-based startup, with about 1,400 employees, does the majority of its business in student loan refinancing, but facing higher interest rates that have weighed on US lenders, it has recently been broadening its focus in an effort to expand into an all-purpose online financial services company. SoFi has told investors it will be profitable again by the end of the year.

The company first got into the mortgage space in 2014. To date, it has made more than $3 billion in mortgage loans, with half of that coming from existing members, according to the company. While that’s not a small number, it pales in comparison to the billions of dollars SoFi has lent out via student loan refinancing and personal loans.

A bubble waiting to pop.

Under its new structure for its mortgage division, borrowers will continue to deal with the fintech startup throughout the process, although the underwriting, title, appraisal and closing will be done by a partner. The strategy will help the company reduce the risk on its books, the person said.

The bulk of the staff reductions in SoFi’s mortgage division will come from operations, according to the person. Employees were informed of the staffing changes earlier Friday.

“These changes put us in a better position to help even more members by offering competitive rates and a smoother digital experience,” a company spokeswoman wrote in an e-mailed statement.

Uh-huh.

--more--"

Phone call for you:

"AT&T plans three streaming options in its war with Netflix" by Gerry Smith Bloomberg News  November 30, 2018

AT&T Inc. is putting its new Time Warner arsenal of media properties to work, unveiling plans to roll out a three-tiered streaming-video service to compete with Netflix Inc.

One of the new products being launched late next year will be a movies-only plan, the company said on Thursday. Another will have original programming as well as blockbuster films, and the highest-priced choice will include content licensed from other companies.

AT&T will have plenty of competition. Walt Disney Co. is introducing an online service with Star Wars and Marvel shows around the same time, and Jeffrey Katzenberg has a new short-form video project in the works. But AT&T’s CEO, Randall Stephenson, has to find new ways to retain TV viewers: His DirecTV Now online streaming service is going to lose subscribers this quarter and next, AT&T said.

The telecom giant provided the latest details as part of a presentation to analysts and investors, who are looking for signs that the company can get a payoff from its $85 billion Time Warner deal.

A surprising loss of both TV and wireless subscribers in the third quarter raised concerns about the company’s core business and drew attention to its $183 billion debt load and a costly 5G network expansion ahead. AT&T’s top executives attempted to address those worries by targeting a leverage ratio of 2.5 times net debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization by the end of 2019, down from the current pro forma ratio of 2.85 times. To raise cash to pay down debt, the company suggested it could sell assets like real estate or its 10 percent Hulu stake.

AT&T shares, which are down 21 percent this year as of Thursday, rose as much as 2.8 percent before closing up 2.19 percent at $31.24 Friday.

In September, Stephenson said he planned to use Time Warner’s HBO as the anchor for the new online video service and surround it with Warner Bros. shows and films — and possibly sports programming.

During a question-and-answer session with analysts, AT&T media chief John Stankey tried to allay concerns that the company’s various video options would confuse customers. In addition to the upcoming streaming service, the company has multiple tiers of DirecTV Now.

To narrow its focus, WarnerMedia — the new name of Time Warner — has already started to reduce the number of niche consumer subscription services, such as FilmStruck. He said the company is moving toward a more “unified library” of content. This centralized system will help serve both the upcoming video-on-demand service as well as play an important role in beefing up the DirecTV Now offerings.

Stankey also suggested that rival video-on-demand services like Netflix and Amazon are facing shorter-length content licenses — in other words, they won’t have shows and movies locked down for as long. As they lose the rights to well-known entertainment properties, they’re in a race to create more original content.

AT&T faces less of that pressure because it now owns the media libraries of Turner, HBO, and Warner Bros., Stankey said.

--more--"

Where are you, Michael Dell?

You get that hotel room reserved yet?

"Worried about the Marriott data breach? It’s too late" by Hiawatha Bray Globe Staff  November 30, 2018

Another day, another data breach.

This time, it’s 500 million identities stolen over a four-year period from the Marriott hotel chain. It’s one of the worst digital data thefts yet, but there’s no point panicking now. The time to panic was decades ago. Once we let corporations and governments stash our personal data in massive computer databases, we signed up for a future of stolen secrets and vanishing privacy.

How did the Marriott thieves manage to get in?

A pa$$ key?

I'll bet they were real quiet about it, too.

With relative ease, probably. All it takes is one careless employee clicking on a seemingly innocent e-mail that installs malicious code on a single computer. That infected machine can spread its toxins through whole networks by planting programs that capture passwords and scoop up stockpiles of valuable information. From public schools to the Pentagon, no network will ever be safe because networks are operated by humans.

So AI is the answer, right?

Indeed, the data stolen in the Marriott hack had probably been stolen before in some previous assault. Just last year, a breach at the massive data brokerage Equifax exposed immense quantities of sensitive information on 147 million Americans, including driver’s license and Social Security numbers. That single break-in captured personal data on 45 percent of the US population. Throw in countless other identity hacks over the past decade, and it’s a near-certainty that nearly every American’s private data is private no longer.

I suppose all things being Equifax..... you want to see your file (think of it as a gift from Snowden)?

Long before the Marriott breach, data security researcher Brian Krebs began issuing a somber warning: “Assume your credit card data is for sale on the underground, and assume your Social Security number and other static data are for sale,” said Krebs, publisher of the KrebsOnSecurity website, “because it probably is.”

This doesn’t let Marriott off the hook. The breach occurred in the reservations database of Starwood Hotels and Resorts, a company Marriott acquired two years ago for nearly $14 billion. Apparently, none of the money went for an upgrade to Starwood’s data security systems because the breach began two years before Marriott made the acquisition and continued for two more years under new management.

Jake Olcott, vice president of communications at BitSight, a Boston-based data security company, said this suggests that Marriott failed to exercise “cyber diligence.” Olcott said it is a common problem when companies merge because “the IT and IT security folks are often not brought into the transaction until very late in the deal flow.” By then, both buyer and seller aren’t eager to hear any bad news that might derail the transaction, so any bad news about weak network security may have been shoved into the shadows.

Is that what happened this time? We may find out when the lawsuits are filed. At the least, the Marriott case is a good reason to insist on tougher state and federal sanctions against corporations that misplace our personal data.

Will that stop the data theft?

For now, we’re the ones who’ve got to pay attention.....

Well, $omeone should.

--more--"

Don't Google it:

"Google reveals new security bug affecting more than 52 million users" by Tony Romm and Craig Timberg Washington Post  December 11, 2018

WASHINGTON — Google revealed Monday that its soon-to-be shuttered social network had suffered another security lapse, a software bug that could have allowed third-party apps and developers to gain access to 52 million users’ personal information without their permission.

For six days in November, an update to the underlying code of Google+ meant that apps seeking to access users’ profile information — including their names, e-mail addresses, occupations, and ages — could view that data even if it was ‘‘set to not-public,’’ Google said in a blog post. Apps could have accessed some non-public profile data that had been shared with a user as well.

Google said that its systems had not been compromised and that there’s ‘‘no evidence that app developers’’ were aware of the bug or ‘‘misused it in any way,’’ but the revelation threatens to sharpen the scrutiny of the company’s chief executive, Sundar Pichai, when he testifies to Congress on Tuesday.

SeeGoogle CEO Sundar Pichai testifies on Capitol Hill

The security mishap is the latest stumble for Google’s problematic social media offering. In October, Google admitted it had failed for six months to reveal information about a bug that put at risk the data of hundreds of thousands of users.

Among those looped into discussions about delaying public notification was Pichai, a person familiar with the matter said at the time. Google said it delayed release of information because it was initially uncertain which users were affected or that data had been misused.

In response to its latest findings, Google said Monday that it would shutter its social network in April 2019, five months sooner than it initially announced. The company also said it would inform affected users, including ‘‘any enterprise customers.’’

That's like closing the barn door after the horse is out.

‘‘We understand that our ability to build reliable products that protect your data drives user trust,’’ wrote David Thacker, a vice president for product management at Google. ‘‘ We will never stop our work to build privacy protections that work for everyone.’’

Google discovered its earlier Google+ security bug in March, the same month that Silicon Valley rival Facebook was facing scrutiny over its role in allowing people affiliated with political consultancy Cambridge Analytica to collect data on 87 million users. That incident prompted demands that Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg testify on Capitol Hill, as he soon did.
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The Federal Trade Commission has investigated privacy incidents at Google and other leading technology companies on several occasions.....

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Time to Face facts:

"Facebook says bug opened access to private photos" by Mike Isaac   December 15, 2018

SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook announced Friday that it had discovered a bug that allowed outsiders access to private photos, potentially affecting some 6.8 million people who use the service.

I hope there weren't any nudies in there.

“We have fixed the issue but, because of this bug, some third-party apps may have had access to a broader set of photos than usual,” said Tomer Bar, an engineering director at the company, in a blog post.

The announcement is the latest in a string of problems the social network has had with consumer data. In March, The New York Times reported that Cambridge Analytica, a third-party firm, harvested the data of Facebook users without their express knowledge or consent, and in September, a separate, more serious breach gave hackers full access to the Facebook accounts of tens of millions of users.

That last one was played down.

Facebook has pledged to better protect user information.

“If we can’t, then we don’t deserve to serve you,” said Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s chief executive, in a note to users this year.

This most recent incident is somewhat less severe than previous ones, but it is still another headache for Facebook, which has faced intensifying scrutiny from regulators and the public after a year of embarrassing failures to protect customer data.....

Yeah, they are “sorry this happened.”

--more--"

Now what about your headache?

"Facebook offered advertisers special access to users’ data, activities" by Adam Satariano New York Times  December 06, 2018

NEW YORK — Facebook used the mountains of data it collected on users to favor certain partners and punish rivals, giving companies such as Airbnb and Netflix special access to its platform while cutting off others that it perceived as threats.

The tactics came to light on Wednesday from internal Facebook e-mails and other company documents released by a British parliamentary committee that is investigating online misinformation. The documents spotlight Facebook’s behavior from roughly 2012 to 2015, a period of explosive growth as the company navigated how to manage the information it was gathering on users and debated how best to profit from what it was building.

The documents show how Facebook executives treated data as the company’s most valuable resource and often wielded it to gain a strategic advantage. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, and Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer, were intimately involved in decisions aimed at benefiting the social network above all else and keeping users as engaged as possible on the site, according to e-mails that were part of the document trove.

In one exchange from 2012 when Zuckerberg discussed charging developers for access to user data and persuading them to share their data with the social network, he wrote: “It’s not good for us unless people also share back to Facebook and that content increases the value of our network. So ultimately, I think the purpose of platform — even the read side — is to increase sharing back into Facebook.”

The release of the internal documents adds to Facebook’s challenges as it wrestles with issues as varied as how it enabled the spread of misinformation and whether it properly safeguarded the data of its users. Zuckerberg and Sandberg are under scrutiny for their handling of the matters; the executives have publicly said they were slow to respond to some of the problems.

Facebook had tried to keep Parliament from releasing the documents. The materials had been under seal in the United States as part of a lawsuit in California with an app developer. In a statement, Facebook said the documents were selectively chosen to be embarrassing and misleading as part of a “baseless” lawsuit. The company said, “The facts are clear: We’ve never sold people’s data.”

No, they GAVE IT AWAY like a drug dealer does at first!

Much of what was disclosed in the documents was not new, but the e-mails provide insight into the calculations of top executives as they worked to cement Facebook’s position as the world’s dominant social network. The documents’ publication coincides with a more hawkish shift in public opinion toward online collection of user data, prompted partly by revelations this year of how the political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica misused Facebook users’ information.

The 250 pages of documents cover a period when Facebook was shifting its business from a focus on desktop computers to mobile devices. After years of being largely open in sharing data with partners, Facebook was beginning to debate how to be compensated for the data it was sharing.

For companies it liked, including Airbnb, Lyft and Netflix, Facebook made special “white list” agreements. The deals gave the partners preferred access to data that other companies had been restricted from receiving after a Facebook policy change, but for other companies that Facebook perceived as a threat, the company was less accommodating. In 2013, after Twitter released the video app Vine, Facebook shut off the access to its Facebook friends data.

“Unless anyone raises objections, we will shut down their friends API access today,” Justin Osofsky, a Facebook executive, said in an e-mail at the time.

Zuckerberg responded: “Yup, go for it.”

E-mails also show that Facebook was hungry for more data and that user privacy, at least at the time, was an impediment to its goals of growth and engagement. In one e-mail exchange, employees discussed avoiding a potential public backlash about an update to its Android app that would log calls made by people on their phones.

It was a “pretty high risk thing to do from a PR perspective,” but they charged ahead anyway.

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A veiled threat:

"These Facebook holdouts are very glad they stayed away" by Steve Annear Globe Staff  December 21, 2018

With yet another privacy scandal rocking perceptions of the Harvard-born company, those like Bethanie Grenier, 33, who managed to navigate life without ever embracing Facebook and is now a schoolteacher and lives in Maine, are rejoicing over that decision, and, in some cases, they’re casting a big “I told you so” at their friends or family who chastised them for bucking the trend.

“[I’m] pretty pleased with myself for dodging that bullet,” said Jill Rodgers, a 36-year-old yoga instructor and marketing freelancer from Somerville.

The latest Facebook lapse that’s left some people reconsidering how much information they put online was detailed in a New York Times investigation this week.

In its report, the Times claimed that Facebook “gave some of the world’s largest technology companies more intrusive access to users’ personal data than it has disclosed,” and in some cases without permission.

For its part, Facebook has denied the accusations, saying none of the partnerships or features gave companies access to information without consent.....

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We all know breaking up is hard to do, but after a trial separation the first three weeks of this month, I have decided that I no no longer fear missing out on what is in the Globe and will shortly be saying goodbye forever.

UPDATES: 

McLean beefs up computer security after breach

"Scarcely a day goes by in Boston’s technology sector without a promising company raising what in most businesses would be a monumental sum. Tens and sometimes hundreds of millions fly around with scarcely an eyebrow raised, but there are still some cash infusions big enough to astonish....."

SoftBank just invested $500 million, which makes the $80 million the Cambridge biotech got look like $pit in the hand.

"MetLife has agreed to pay $1 million in a settlement with Secretary of State William Galvin and to provide payments, with interest, to hundreds of Massachusetts retirees and beneficiaries that the insurer had wrongly designated as “presumed dead.” MetLife had acquired the obligations to pay the pensions from the retirees’ former employers, making the insurer responsible under a group annuity contract. Galvin said his office began an investigation a year ago after MetLife disclosed that it had failed to make payments to thousands of retirees because the company couldn’t find them. A spokeswoman for the insurer said the company’s focus since identifying the issue has been to enhance its processes to deliver better service."

Apple plans to lease space in Kendall Square

Apple’s holiday deals

They expected us all to upgrade every two years, and sorry I lost the signal.

President Trump's Christmas Gift to the American People

$
0
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On behalf of the American people, I wish to convey a big THANK YOU, Mr. President!

President orders troops out of Syria

It's a total rewrite and cob job from my front page piece!

"Trump Withdraws U.S. Forces From Syria, Declaring ‘We Have Won Against ISIS’" by Mark Landler, Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt  |  Dec. 19, 2018

WASHINGTON — President Trump has ordered the withdrawal of 2,000 American troops from Syria, bringing a sudden end to a military campaign that largely vanquished the Islamic State but ceding a strategically vital country to Russia and Iran.

I know there are many people who say I am being hoodwinked; however, you must understand my position as a one issuer antiwar American. After 18 long years of endless wars and escalations, even the chimera of withdrawal and peace is welcome!

In overruling his generals and civilian advisers, Mr. Trump fulfilled his frequently expressed desire to bring home American forces from a messy foreign entanglement, but his decision, conveyed via Twitter on Wednesday, plunges the administration’s Middle East strategy into disarray, rattling allies like Britain and Israel and forsaking Syria’s ethnic Kurds, who have been faithful partners in fighting the Islamic State.

I'll get to the geopolitical ramifications later; the action itself is Kennedyesque if nothing else. The reason he did the tweet is it was the only way he could get away with it!

The abrupt, chaotic nature of the move — and the opposition it immediately provoked on Capitol Hill and beyond — raised questions about how Mr. Trump will follow through with the full withdrawal. Even after the president’s announcement, officials said, the Pentagon and State Department continued to try to talk him out of it.

“We have won against ISIS,” Mr. Trump declared in a video posted Wednesday evening on Twitter, adding, “Our boys, our young women, our men — they’re all coming back, and they’re coming back now.”

“We won, and that’s the way we want it, and that’s the way they want it,” he said, pointing a finger skyward, referring to American troops who had been killed in battle.

He's gone rogue!

The White House did not provide a timetable or other specifics for the military departure. “We have started returning United States troops home as we transition to the next phase of this campaign,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said in a statement. Defense Department officials said that Mr. Trump had ordered that the withdrawal be completed in 30 days.

The decision brought a storm of protest in Congress, even from Republican allies of Mr. Trump’s like Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who said he had been “blindsided.” The House Democratic leader, Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, suggested that the president had acted out of “personal or political objectives” rather than national security interests.

I'm aghast at Pelosi's reaction. Who cares what reason the wars are coming to and end and the troops coming home? She wants the wars to continue! The fact that Graham feels that way doesn't surprise me; he was once connected at the hip with John McCain and Joe Lieberman.

Like many of Mr. Trump’s most disruptive moves, the decision was jolting and yet predictable. For more than a year, and particularly since the Islamic State has been driven from most of its territory in Syria’s north, he has told advisers that he wanted to withdraw troops from the country.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and other top national security officials argued that a withdrawal would, essentially, surrender Western influence in Syria to Russia and Iran.

The war is over. They won. Time to leave.

The Trump administration’s national security policy calls for challenging both countries, which are the chief benefactors of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria and have provided him with years of financial and military support.

Abandoning the Kurdish allies, the officials argued, also would cripple future American efforts to gain the trust of local fighters for counterterrorism operations, including in Afghanistan, Yemen and Somalia.

Now you know where the terrorist are coming from, and it's not the first time the Kurds have been betrayed by the United States government. Kissinger was the first to do it, and H.W. Bush kind of abandoned them before Clinton's CIA got run out of the area by Saddam Hussein.

It wasn't until W. Bush's invasion that the country was split up and Kurds gained power in Iraq. The Kurds should realize they are a tool of USrael to destabilize four crossroad countries (Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran). More on deeper geopolitical motivations later.

The Russian Foreign Ministry welcomed the move, according to the TASS news agency, saying that a withdrawal created prospects for a political settlement in Syria’s civil war. It also said an initiative to form a Syrian constitutional committee would have a bright future once American troops were gone.

Most countries do.

While Mr. Trump has long cast American military involvement in Syria as narrowly focused on defeating the Islamic State, his generals and diplomats argue that the United States has broader, more complex interests there.

Gen. Joseph Votel, the commander of United States Central Command, and Brett H. McGurk, the American envoy to the coalition fighting the Islamic State, fiercely protested the military withdrawal, administration officials said. Both argued that the Islamic State would never have been defeated without the Kurdish fighters, whom General Votel said suffered many casualties and always lived up to their word.

Officials said General Votel argued that withdrawing American troops would leave the Kurds vulnerable to attack from Turkey, which has warned it will soon launch an offensive against them. It would also cement the survival of Mr. Assad, whose ouster had long been an article of faith in Washington.

So despite all the political posturing and agenda-pushing pre$$ these last seven years, the regime change agenda was always the goal, huh?

The Pentagon said in a statement that it would “continue working with our partners and allies to defeat” the Islamic State wherever it operated.

They are now moving their paid mercenary proxies that pose as terrorists to Africa.

Mr. Trump’s decision contradicted what other top national security officials have said in recent weeks.

Two months ago, the national security adviser, John R. Bolton, said the United States would not pull out of Syria as long as Iran was exerting influence there, either through its own troops or Iranian-backed militias.

He contradicted his warmongering, neocon PNAC national security adviser, huh?

Is it any wonder feel the way I do?

Last week, Mr. McGurk characterized the mission in Syria as one that sought the “enduring defeat” of the Islamic State. “We know that once the physical space is defeated, we can’t just pick up and leave,” he told reporters. “We want to stay on the ground and make sure that stability can be maintained in these areas.”

SIGH!

Military commanders fear that a hasty withdrawal will jeopardize the territorial gains against the Islamic State made by the United States and its coalition partners — essentially repeating what happened after Mr. Trump’s predecessor, President Barack Obama, pulled troops from Iraq in 2011.

Only problem is, the Russians, Syrians, Turks, and Iranians didn't have a strong hand in those places then, and the Obama administration ended up working with Iranian militias to stabilize Iraq.

It's only one of many misguided analogies over the last week or so.

Mr. Graham, emerging from a lunch with Vice President Mike Pence and other Republican senators, called it “Iraq all over again.” He demanded to know why Congress was not notified of Mr. Trump’s decision.

“If Obama had done this,” Mr. Graham said, “we’d be going nuts right now: how weak, how dangerous.”

During the meeting, officials said Mr. Pence barely talked about the looming government shutdown, which he was ostensibly on Capitol Hill to discuss, because there was such strong pushback from lawmakers on Syria.

In a letter to Mr. Trump, Mr. Graham and five other senators, from both parties, implored him to reconsider his decision, warning that a withdrawal would embolden the remnants of the Islamic State, as well as the Assad government, Iran and Russia.

Congre$$ wants to fight Israel's wars, sob.

American allies were notably muted in their reactions. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel called it “of course, an American decision,” and said his government would study its implications, but analysts said the withdrawal would deal a blow to Israel’s efforts to curb Iranian influence in Syria.

“It’s a bad day for Israel,” said Ehud Yaari, an Israel-based fellow of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Oh, yeah? 

Then it was a GOOD DAY for the REST of the WORLD!! 

Who or what is the Washington Institute for Near East Policy anyway?

(It's a Washington-DC-based think tank, founded by AIPAC, and part of the so-called pro-Israel Lobby. That's who my jew$paper turns to for expert analysis)

That was also where the print copy ended.

A statement released by the British government said that while the global coalition against the Islamic State had made progress, “we must not lose sight of the threat they pose.”

“Even without territory,” the statement said, the group “will remain a threat.”

For much of the day, the White House seemed paralyzed by Mr. Trump’s sudden move. By late Wednesday, it had yet to defend the consequences of the troop withdrawal, or explain what the American strategy in Syria will be once the American forces have left.

In a conference call with reporters, a senior White House official said that previous statements by Mr. Bolton and other senior officials that the United States would stay in Syria did not matter because, as president, Mr. Trump could do as he pleases.

“He gets to do that,” said the official, whom the White House said could speak only on grounds of anonymity. “That’s his prerogative.”

On constitutional grounds as commander-in-chief, God bless him.

The official referred all questions about how the withdrawal would proceed to the Pentagon. At the Pentagon, reporters asked officials for clarification, only to be told that there was none that could be given.

It was very much the image of a story spinning out of control, and a military taken by surprise by its commander in chief.

One Defense Department official suggested that Mr. Trump wanted to divert attention from his mounting legal troubles: the Russia investigation; the sentencing of his former personal lawyer, Michael D. Cohen, in a hush money scandal to buy the silence of two women who said they had affairs with him; and his former national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn, who was harshly criticized by a federal judge for lying to investigators.

I'm going to keep quiet about the hu$h money and house of lies.

In a statement, Ms. Pelosi derided what she described as a “hasty announcement” and noted it was timed to the day after Mr. Flynn was in court for sentencing after admitting “he was a registered foreign agent for a country with clear interests in the Syrian conflict.”

So when do the AIPAC lobbyists have to register?

She was referring to Mr. Flynn’s lobbying efforts to expel a Turkish cleric living in Pennsylvania whom President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey has accused of plotting a failed 2016 coup.

Obama failed in Turkey where he succeeded in Ukraine.

“All Americans should be concerned,” Ms. Pelosi said.

Why? 

Mueller wasn't. There was supposed to be a deal in place, and then they double crossed him.

Related
:

Flynn sentencing postponed to allow for Russia probe cooperation

That front page pos was different from the printed WaComPo that was not found.

Also see
:

Flynn associate arrested on illegal lobbying charges

He was rebuked by the judge, and I guess the ‘Lock her up!’ chant was bad karma.

Who ratted him out anyway?

Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee and the outgoing chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said after a visit to the White House, where his farewell meeting with Mr. Trump was canceled, that he did not believe there was a way to persuade the president to reverse the withdrawal order.

“It’s obviously a political decision,” Mr. Corker said.

Not in the way they think, though. It's about not wanting to sacrifice the NATO alliance with Turkey on the altar of the stateless Kurds.

Not everybody faulted the president’s move.

Robert S. Ford, the last American ambassador to Syria, said the United States could continue to strike terrorist targets from the air. The limited nature of the American ground presence, he said, would not force Iran out of the country, nor would it alter the battle between Mr. Assad and the remnants of the rebellion. 

I don't want that, either.

Related: The Pentagon’s “Salvador Option”: The Deployment of Death Squads in Iraq and Syria

Ford was in charge of them.

“The whole Syrian conflict is about Syrians’ relations with other Syrians,” said Mr. Ford, who now teaches at Yale and is a fellow at the Middle East Institute. “Two thousand special operators and a dozen or two American diplomats can’t fix that.”

Please don't tell me the Middle East Institute is another corporate war lobby.

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I'm sure as the troops come out the mercenaries will go back in.

Looks like the Mad Dog got angry (because my front-page pos was the Washington ComPost version?):

"Mattis resigns over differences with Trump" by Paul Sonne, Josh Dawsey, Washington Post  December 21, 2018

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigned Thursday after a clash with President Trump over the withdrawal of US troops from Syria, saying in a parting letter that the president deserved someone atop the Pentagon who is ‘‘better aligned’’ with his views.

The retired Marine general’s surprise resignation came a day after Trump overruled his advisers, including Mattis, and shocked American allies by announcing the pullout. In the process, Trump declared victory over the Islamic State, even though the Pentagon and State Department for months have been saying the fight against the group in Syria is not over.

The discord caused Trump to lose a Cabinet official who won widespread praise at home and abroad but who experienced increasing differences with the commander in chief.

Long seen as a bulwark against Trump’s isolationist and more extreme impulses, Mattis served as a calm ‘‘reassurer-in-chief’’ as the president sent out startling and provocative tweets. Mattis’s departure adds new uncertainty about which course the administration might take on its global challenges.

Mattis pointed to some of his differences with Trump in a resignation letter he submitted to the White House on Thursday.

The defense secretary resigned during what one senior administration official described as a disagreement in the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon, in which Mattis sought to persuade the president to stand down on Syria but was rejected. Trump was later given a copy of the resignation letter and noted to aides that it was not positive toward him. By then, the president had shocked the Pentagon by filming a video on the White House lawn in which he claimed the Islamic State had been defeated and said US troops who had died in combat would be proud to see their fellow service members return home.

While the Syria announcement looked poised to score political points with the public, Mattis and other top advisers suspect that it will deliver a win to Russia, Iran, and Syrian leader Bashar Assad, while risking a resurgence of the Islamic State.

I don't care what is the reason, and he did!

Mattis also has argued against drawing down troops from Afghanistan, which Trump is leaning toward executing in the coming months, according to administration officials. Senior administration officials said late Thursday that Trump had ordered the military to come up with a plan to remove thousands of troops from the country, after a 17-year war, starting as early as January. The United States has about 14,000 troops deployed to Afghanistan as part of a NATO mission.

It's the old one-two punch, and he still has one card to play (said he would meet with them).

The Pentagon released the resignation letter moments after Trump announced on Twitter that Mattis would be leaving, saying the already retired Marine would ‘‘retire.’’ Trump thanked him, but made no mention of his differences of opinion with Mattis.

In other words, he showed some class and grace?

During his nearly two years at the Pentagon, Mattis secured sizable increases in defense spending after years of budget caps and oversaw the development of a new strategy that orients the military toward competition with China and Russia and away from combating extremist insurgencies in the Middle East.

A staunch Russia hawk, Mattis bristled at the president’s conciliatory gestures toward Russian President Vladimir Putin and moves to undermine NATO, according to people close to him. Russia and China ‘‘want to shape a world consistent with their authoritarian model,’’ Mattis underscored in his resignation letter.

Moscow and Beijing were looking for ‘‘veto authority over other nations’ economic, diplomatic, and security decisions,’’ he said, warning the president that the United States must ‘‘use all the tools of American power to provide for the common defense.’’

Like what we have now, sssshhh.

Lawmakers, ambassadors, and policy makers for two years have looked to Mattis as a source of stability in a chaotic administration. His sudden resignation on Thursday sent jitters through a Washington establishment already coping with a meltdown in the financial markets and a possible government shutdown.

Establishment = Deep State


House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, said she was ‘‘shaken’’ by the resignation and described it as ‘‘very serious for our country.’’

Yeah, I saw that.

Republicans were also dismayed by the decision.

Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska said it was ‘‘a sad day for America because Secretary Mattis was giving advice the president needs to hear.’’ Sasse said Mattis ‘‘rightly believes’’ that Russia and China are adversaries and described the isolationism that Trump sometimes promotes as a ‘‘weak strategy that will harm Americans and America’s allies.’’ Sasse added: ‘‘No, ISIS is not gone.’’

Known as the ‘‘Warrior Monk’’ from his days in uniform, Mattis developed a reputation as a cerebral thinker in the Marine Corps who liked to deliberate, read, and study all possibilities before making important decisions.

That style clashed with the most freewheeling presidential administration in the postwar era, most notably this week, when Trump decided to withdraw from Syria without first running the move through a regular policy process that would consider the options and ramifications.

Where it would have been blocked, and he is sick of that.

Mattis’s frustrations grew with the arrival of national security adviser John Bolton, who curbed decision-making meetings and interagency policy discussions that the defense secretary valued, according to people familiar with the matter.

Oh, he didn't like Bolton, huh?

Must have been a personality clash, because they both are arguing for the Jewi$h War Agenda.

The final rupture between the defense secretary and the president came after weeks of tensions over Trump’s broadsides against allies, his demands to withdraw from military entanglements in the Middle East and personnel decisions.

The defense secretary lost a crucial battle this month when the president disregarded his recommendation to make Air Force Chief of Staff General David Goldfein the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and instead chose Army Chief of Staff General Mark Milley.

He's a Bo$ton boy and Trump watched the Army-Navy football game with him.

So Mattis wanted Goldfein and Trump went with Milley, huh?

The person close to Mattis said that choice was particularly offensive to the defense secretary.

Oh, so it was Mattis who threw the tantrum, not Trump!

‘‘It’s the one major selection the secretary of defense usually gets,’’ the person said.

That's where my print copy ended.

It wasn’t the first time Mattis was overruled. The president announced the creation of a Space Force as a separate branch of the military, even though Mattis had opposed the idea. Trump forced his defense secretary to scramble after announcing a ban on transgender individuals from serving in the military by tweet last year. Trump also foisted other initiatives on Mattis that the defense secretary didn’t see as particularly important, from a deployment to the US border with Mexico to a military parade that failed to materialize.

The Space Force sent Mattis into orbit, and the Globe hates a parade.

Mattis expressed skepticism over the prospects of nuclear disarmament negotiations with North Korea and bristled at the president’s decision to suspend certain military exercises with South Korea as a good-will gesture. Trump told advisers that he trusted Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who has led the North Korea negotiations, more than he trusted Mattis.

Now we know who was dragging his heels on North Korea, and I wonder what Tillerson would have done.

Several possible replacements for Mattis this week decried the president’s decision to pull out of Syria, and the Senate may prove unwilling to confirm a replacement who would execute such a withdrawal. Retired Army General Jack Keane called the move a ‘‘strategic mistake’’ on Twitter. Republican Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Tom Cotton of Arkansas signed a letter demanding that Trump reconsider, warning that the withdrawal bolsters Iran and Russia.

In the weeks leading up to Mattis’s dismissal, Trump publicly called the defense secretary ‘‘sort of a Democrat’’ and began referring to him as ‘‘Moderate Dog.’’ He had once hailed Mattis by his nickname “Mad Dog,’’ the secretary earned in battle.....

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Related:

John Kelly, Trump’s chief of staff, will leave White House by end of year

The job has being taken over by Mulvaney because the military is insubordinate:

"Pentagon considers using Special Operations forces to continue mission in Syria" by Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Eric Schmitt New York Times  December 22, 2018

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is considering using small teams of Special Operations forces to strike the Islamic State group in Syria, one option for continuing a US military mission there despite President Donald Trump’s order to withdraw troops from the country.

The US commandos would be shifted to neighboring Iraq, where an estimated 5,000 U.S. forces are already deployed, and “surge” into Syria for specific raids, according to two military officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Has anyone asked Iraq if they want them?

The strike teams are one of several options— including continued airstrikes and resupplying allied Kurdish fighters with arms and equipment — in a new strategy for Syria that the Pentagon is developing as officials follow the order Trump gave Wednesday for a military drawdown even as it tries to maintain pressure on the Islamic State.

Trump would have to sign off on all that, right?

The Pentagon will deliver the options to Trump for approval within weeks — well before Defense Secretary Jim Mattis steps down at the end of February. Mattis resigned Thursday, in part because of Trump’s decision to overrule his senior advisers and withdraw troops from Syria.

Officials at the Pentagon said the plans sought to maintain US support for the Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-led militia of Arab and Kurdish soldiers who have proved to be the most successful ground fighters against the Islamic State, but the local forces and their Western allies continue to be tested around the town of Hajin in eastern Syria, where the Islamic State is holding on to a last slice of territory.

Not anymore.

SeeSyrian Kurdish-led fighters take Hajin, last town held by Islamic State

Though Trump has boasted about the Islamic State’s defeat, the militant group has for months endured airstrikes and offensives by the US-backed Syrian fighters — and has even conducted deadly counterattacks into Hajin’s surrounding districts.

Under the cover of a sandstorm in October, the Islamic State nearly overran a US Special Forces team and a group of Marines outside of Hajin, wounding two US troops, a third military official said.

The group tried the same tactic again in November, waiting for a sandstorm to mask its movements, and nearly captured Gharanij, a nearby town.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called the Trump administration’s progress against the Islamic State “extraordinary.”

“We’ve made the caliphate in Syria go away,” Pompeo told National Public Radio on Friday. “And we’re very proud of that,” he said.

Pompeo also spoke Friday with President Barham Salih of Iraq about continued efforts to fight the Islamic State, said Robert Palladino, a State Department spokesman.

Two military officials said that the US Central Command was planning to position a force across the border in Iraq that can return to Syria for specific missions when critical threats arise.

Derek Chollet, a former assistant defense secretary in the Obama administration, said the Pentagon could “rename these guys, and call them a counterterrorism force.”

I'm sick of the semantics as well as the violation of other nations' sovereignty.

The Pentagon did not comment Friday about the options. In an earlier statement, Dana W. White, the Defense Department spokeswoman, said the US military “will continue working with our partners and allies to defeat ISIS wherever it operates.”

“The campaign against ISIS is not over,” White said in the statement, using an alternative name for the Islamic State group.

And never will be since the USA is ISIS.

In 2014, when the United States began launching airstrikes in Iraq and Syria, the Islamic State controlled an area across the two countries that roughly amounted to the size of Britain. US Special Operations forces were deployed to Syria in October 2015.

By last month, the Islamic State’s territory was reduced to the small pocket around Hajin — about 1 percent of the ground it used to control.

Last week, the Syrian Democratic Forces retook the center of Hajin, forcing the militants to fall back to the town’s outskirts, but the Islamic State’s remaining hold on roughly 20 miles of territory has forced Defense Department officials to cull options for keeping what is left of the international campaign against the extremists from falling apart.

That will include weighing whether US airstrikes can remain effective without US targeting guidance from the ground, and whether they would defend Kurdish forces only from the Islamic State — and not other militants.

Officials are also discussing whether the Kurdish-led force can fight without the weapons, ammunition, and other supplies that will end once the US military leaves. Even allowing the Syrian Kurds to keep guns and heavy weapons provided by the United States would break the Pentagon’s 2017 pledge that the arms would be reclaimed once combat ended.

The decisions are being prepared over the year-end holidays and will be made in the coming weeks, officials said.

--more--"

Related: For elite US troops, a never-ending war

All of a sudden it is a big concern, but “on the flip side, what’s the alternative? It's the future of warfare.” 

Anybody feel a draft?

"US envoy to coalition fighting ISIS resigns in protest of Trump’s Syria decision" by John Hudson and Ellen Nakashima Washington Post  December 22, 2018

WASHINGTON — Brett McGurk, the US envoy to the international coalition fighting the Islamic State, has resigned in protest of President Trump’s decision to abruptly withdraw US troops from Syria.

Don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out.

His resignation, confirmed by a State Department official familiar with the matter, comes on the heels of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s announced departure earlier last week over differences with the White House over foreign policy. Mattis said he would stay on until February to ensure a smooth transition.

Both Mattis and McGurk objected to what they saw as shortsighted decision and a breach of faith with US allies including the Syrian Kurds, who fought alongside US forces in Syria and now face a dangerous and uncertain future.

For Trump, the long-serving government officials are the first high-profile departures in protest of his policy decisions.

The resignations send a negative signal to foreign partners whose support is crucial to containing Islamic State forces, said experts and former officials.

Earlier this month, McGurk said that the Islamic State was far from defeated despite its loss of territory. ‘‘Nobody working on these issues day to day is complacent. Nobody is declaring a mission accomplished,’’ McGurk said at a State Department briefing. ‘‘Defeating a physical caliphate is one phase of a much longer-term campaign.’’

McGurk, who was appointed to the job in 2015 by Barack Obama and retained by Trump, had long maintained that the US mission in Syria should retain a disciplined focus on countering the Islamic State rather than wider regional ambitions such as the overthrow of Syrian President Bashar Assad, said diplomats who worked with him over the years.

In theory, his preference for a modest US role was aligned with Trump’s view, but McGurk disagreed with the president’s assessment that the threat posed by Islamic State had been eliminated.

In recent months, McGurk’s preference for a limited US mission was overruled by other Trump advisers, in particular, national security adviser John Bolton, who vowed in September that the United States now had a new goal in Syria aimed at countering Iran’s influence. ‘‘We’re not going to leave as long as Iranian troops are outside Iranian borders and that includes Iranian proxies and militias,’’ he told reporters at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

I guess he was not speaking for the president.

However, Trump this week ordered the withdrawal of all 2,000 or so US troops from Syria and declared the Islamic State defeated. The move blindsided senior officials and ran counter to his own top aides’ advice, including that of Mattis.

‘‘With the departures of folks like Secretary Mattis and Brett McGurk, you see indications that the experts felt so cut out of the process and so appalled by the decision that they simply couldn’t implement whatever the president’s vision is in a way that they could stomach, and so they chose to get out instead — in Brett’s case sooner than anticipated,’’ said Joshua Geltzer, who was White House counterterrorism senior director under Obama and is now a visiting professor at the Georgetown University Law Center.

The United States began airstrikes in 2014 against Islamic State strongholds in Syria, a country riven by civil war since 2011. US ground troops entered the country in 2015 to provide support to local forces fighting the militant group.

That's right, the troops illegally entered Syria under the Obama regime.

In addition to the Kurds, McGurk also valued US partnerships with the British and the French, opposing a rapid withdrawal that left America’s commitment to those partners in limbo, said one diplomat, who was not authorized to speak about US personnel.

At the time, Bolton and the new US special representative for Syria, Jim Jeffrey, said the president was committed to a mission in Syria that kept US forces there to ensure that the Islamic State doesn’t reemerge, but were never able to cite any memos or meetings in which the president expressed this view.

Because he never wanted to, was talked into continuing the wars, and then lost the House.

McGurk, who negotiated the 2011 US withdrawal from Iraq for Obama, sought ways to forge alliances in a region rife with sectarian and other rivalries. He was, for instance, the driving force behind the creation of the Syrian Democratic Forces as a Kurdish-led force that also included Arabs — a move that he hoped would assuage Turkish concerns. The Syrian Kurdish militia, the YPG, is closely affiliated with the PKK, which is regarded as a terrorist organization by both Turkey and the United States.

The move, though, never fully satisfied any of the parties, and with the pending US withdrawal from Syria, Turkey has sent signals it will move against the Kurds.

That is where my print copy ended.

Nonetheless it was his tenacity and his personal touch in building relationships that served the counter-ISIS effort well, colleagues said. He met face-to-face with Kurdish and Arab leaders of the SDF, and was a constant presence in Baghdad and Irbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq, becoming the most recognizable American official in the country at a time when an Islamic State blitz threatened both capitals.

‘‘At the end of the day he was focused on defeating ISIS,’’ said one former official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the matter’s sensitivity. ‘‘All of his engagements make this [Syria decision] untenable because there’s a betrayal to foreign partners.’’

Then mission accomplished!

As for betraying foreign partners, is it worth fracturing NATO for them?

McGurk’s departure in protest of the president’s Syria decision likely will complicate the counter-ISIS effort, said former officials.

‘‘Anybody coming into this role will have a very difficult time being credible with our foreign partners,’’ said Nicholas Rasmussen, former director of the National Counterterrorism Center under Presidents Obama and Trump. ‘‘Obviously our diplomats are only as credible as the willingness of their country to live up to their commitments, and that has been undermined significantly in this case.’’

Yeah, right. Trump lives up to his campaign promises and he's undermining the country.

--more--"

"Trump, angry over Mattis’s rebuke, removes him 2 months early" by Helene Cooper and Katie Rogers   December 23, 2018

WASHINGTON — Less than two hours after Defense Secretary Jim Mattis went to the White House on Thursday to hand a resignation letter to President Trump, the president stood in the Oval Office and dictated a glowing tweet announcing that Mattis was retiring “with distinction” at the end of February, but Trump had not read the letter.

I'm told he doesn't read.

As became apparent to the president only after days of news coverage, a senior administration official said, Mattis had issued a stinging rebuke of Trump over his neglect of allies and tolerance of authoritarians. The president grew increasingly angry as he watched a parade of defense analysts go on television to extol Mattis’s bravery, another aide said, until he decided Sunday that he had had enough.

In a tweet later that morning, the president announced he was removing Mattis from his post by Jan. 1, two months before the defense secretary had planned to depart. Trump said that Patrick M. Shanahan, Mattis’s deputy and a former Boeing executive, would serve as the acting defense secretary, praising him as “very talented” and adding that “he will be great!”

Trump’s sudden announcement that he was firing a man who had already quit was the exclamation point to a tumultuous week at the Pentagon, where officials have been reeling from day after day of presidential tweets announcing changes in US military policy.

Mattis had wanted to stay through a NATO defense ministers meeting scheduled for February, hoping to enshrine recent moves by the alliance to bulk up its security compact as a bulwark against Russia, but his resignation letter did him no favors on that count: It had become hard to envision how he could continue for two months to represent a president whose own views toward Russia are far more benign.

As it became clear that the two men’s ideas of how to treat both friends and adversaries were so publicly at odds, the White House decided there would be no reason for Mattis to stay during what two officials called his “lame duck” period.

Officials in allied nations, who had already expressed unease over Mattis’ resignation, voiced exasperation over his hastened departure. “And now Trump gets rid of SecDef Mattis almost immediately,” Carl Bildt, a former prime minister of Sweden, wrote on Twitter. “No smooth transition. No effort at reassurance to allies. Just vindictive.”

Even as he accelerated Mattis’s exit, Trump seemed to suggest a slower one for the 2,000 troops in Syria — a drawdown he announced last week over Mattis’s objection. On Twitter, Trump said that he had spoken with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey that morning to discuss “the slow and highly coordinated pullout of US troops from the area.”

The New York Times makes it sound like he is already backtracking.

Just days ago, Trump declared victory over the Islamic State group and said that troops would be pulled out immediately. “They’re all coming back,” Trump said in a video broadcast Wednesday, “and they’re coming back now.”

On Sunday, a senior administration official would not say what that ultimately meant for the timetable for troops in Syria but said the president had reiterated to Erdogan that the United States would remain there long enough to ensure an orderly handover and “help out logistically” to eradicate any territory still held by the Islamic State group.

The official spoke amid reports that Turkey was moving troops near a town in northern Syria held by Kurdish allies of the United States, even though Turkey had said it would put off a promised offensive after Trump’s hasty decision to leave Syria.

That is all part of this. It's either take the side of the weaker, stateless, Kurds and risk fracturing NATO while turning a key crossroads country against us or work with regional powers to settle the situation.

Mattis resigned Thursday in large part over that pullout order. The defense secretary was also upset about Trump’s decision to bring home half of the 14,000 US troops stationed in Afghanistan and his order to deploy US troops to the border with Mexico.

Trump's gift came in two parts!

The president has grown increasingly angry as commentators have described Mattis in near heroic terms for standing up to Trump,

Mike Pompeo, the secretary of state, and John Bolton, the president’s third national security adviser, are left to direct policy while the president considers a long-term replacement for Mattis.

Oh, yeah? 

Looks to me like Trump is doing his own thing, and he's the decider!

In a call with reporters, a White House official framed Shanahan’s tenure as one that could keep daily operations stable in the interim.

Brett H. McGurk, the special presidential envoy to the coalition fighting the Islamic State group, is also stepping down over Trump’s decision to pull troops from Syria, telling colleagues this weekend that he could not in good conscience carry out Trump’s new policy.

McGurk, a seasoned diplomat who was considered by many to be the glue holding together the sprawling international coalition fighting the terrorist group, was supposed to retire in February, but according to an email he sent to his staff, he decided to move his departure forward to Dec. 31 after Trump did not heed his own commandersand blindsided America’s allies in the region by abruptly ordering the pullout.

He certainly got me to open my eyes wide!

Shanahan, who, like Mattis, is from Washington state, was at Boeing for 30 years, in a number of jobs including general manager of the 787 Dreamliner and senior vice president of supply chain and operations. Aides say that Trump likes him in part because he often tells the president that he is correct to complain about the expense of defense systems.

He's a yes man?

“Patrick has a long list of accomplishments while serving as Deputy, & previously Boeing,” Trump tweeted.

At the Defense Department last year, Shanahan scuttled a pledge to destroy the military’s existing stockpile of cluster munitions, allowing the military to once again arm itself with a type of weapon that has been banned by 102 countries largely because of concerns that they disproportionately harm civilians. 

Kids pick up the duds and ones that didn't explode because they look like colorful toys, and then the things explode.

Asked about the decision at a conference in October, Shanahan attributed the move to what he said was the threat posed by North Korea.

PFFFFT!

On Sunday, in N’Djamena, Chad, President Emmanuel Macron of France criticized Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Syria, saying that “an ally must be reliable.” French forces are part of a coalition led by the United States aimed at destroying the Islamic State group, but it is unclear what will happen to the coalition now.

Where is your European army, monsieur?

Macron also praised Mattis, seeming to contrast him to Trump. “I want here to pay tribute to General Mattis,” Macron said. “For a year we have seen how he was a reliable partner.”

Looks at that groveling toady! Maybe he should be more worried about the Yellow Vests in France.

--more--"

"‘Sails clipped,’ Pentagon heads into uncharted waters" by Paul Sonne and Missy Ryan Washington Post  December 24, 2018

WASHINGTON — An unspoken mantra has guided how senior military officials have navigated the Trump era: ‘‘Keep your head down.’’

Faced with an impulsive president who has upended bedrock alliances and delivered policy bombshells by tweet, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and other Pentagon leaders have responded by confining themselves to executing orders, rebuilding military strength, and trying to shelter their institution from the upheaval and drama.

For nearly two years, the approach produced dividends. The Pentagon strengthened the war effort in Afghanistan, winning an increase in troops against President Trump’s initial instincts. The fight against the Islamic State continued apace in Syria and Iraq, and the military won extra leeway to make decisions on the battlefield. Funding from Congress, long crimped by budget caps, began flowing anew.

He should have followed his instincts.

Last week, much of that came crumbling down, opening a period of uncertainty about how and when Trump will choose to employ force.

Hopefully never.

Against the advice of his generals, the president ordered an immediate withdrawal from Syria. Military and civilian leaders from across the government had spent months making the case for continued involvement, as partner forces struggled to fully extinguish the Islamic State.

In the same meeting in which Trump issued his order on Syria, he decided to remove nearly half of the US troops in Afghanistan. General Joseph Dunford Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, wasn’t even there, according to people familiar with the situation.

Two days later, Mattis had tendered his resignation, citing irreconcilable differences between Trump’s worldview and his own.

Peter Feaver, an expert on civilian-military relations at Duke University, said any president would have struggled to win over the Pentagon after years of budget cuts and what military officials had seen as micromanagement under President Obama.

‘‘Then you had Trump, who brought in a whole other dynamic of friction-generating behavior,’’ Feaver said.

He's thrown billions at them.

Some of it has been about style. For many senior officers brought up in an organization that stresses discipline and honor, it has been jarring to see a commander in chief insulting allied leaders or wading into personal feuds.

Aren't they supposed to follow orders and not care about personality?

It has also been about substance.

Oh. 

But not primarily, huh?

Current Pentagon leaders rose through the ranks in the post-Sept. 11, 2001, era, when NATO nations sent thousands of troops to fight alongside the United States. Trump, meanwhile, voiced doubts about the value of the alliance, threatened to abandon the partnership with South Korea and questioned whether the military should stay in the Middle East.

For a while, Mattis was able to reconcile his own internationalism with Trump’s ‘‘America First’’ beliefs. As the presidentendorsed the Pentagon’s shift toward Russia and China and filled military coffers, Mattis likened the president’s worldview to traveling on a plane and putting on your oxygen mask before helping others, several people recounted.

Defense officials have also grappled with a lack of predictable decision-making. They have repeatedly been blindsided by the president’s Twitter pronouncements: ending military aid to Pakistan, banning transgender troops, creating a Space Force.

Most worrisome for some military leaders, however, is the fear that their tradition of partisan neutrality - fundamental to maintaining public support - could be under threat.

Look at that. Trump threatens the war machine!

That was where my print copy ended.

As the Pentagon prepared to strike Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s military in 2017 in response to his chemical weapons use, Trump began asking, ‘‘Who is my military guy who is going to sell this on the Sunday shows?’’ according to a person familiar with the discussions who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal discussions. When Mattis and other Pentagon leaders demurred, then-national security adviser Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster appeared on ‘‘Fox News Sunday.’’ He wore a suit instead of his Army uniform.

Well, it is a civilian position.

Btw, Trump's one-offs over the Syrian lies is like throwing red meat to appease the neocon war crowd.

When Trump pulled the military into other politically divisive initiatives, including plans for a massive military parade and the deployment of active duty troops to the southern U.S. border ahead of the midterm elections, Pentagon officials got in line despite their private reservations.

If they hadn't, it would have been treason.

Asked about the border mission, Dunford said he was duty-bound to execute any lawful order, no matter his personal beliefs.

‘‘The American people would not want generals to be making policy decisions and wouldn’t want generals to determine when we should use force,’’ Dunford said at a Washington Post event this month. ‘‘I think it would be problematic were generals to start to make decisions based on one political party or another being in office and say, ‘No I don’t really like that so I’m not going to do that.’ ‘‘ 

Unlike the officials over at the DoJ.

Crystallizing the view of many uniformed leaders, Dunford said he would be unlikely to resign out of principle. ‘‘My code tells me that lance corporals and (privates) and seamen can’t resign when they’re told what to do,’’ he said.

Kori Schake, deputy director general of the International Institute of Strategic Studies and co-editor of a book with Mattis, said research shows that, despite such efforts, public attitudes about the military are growing more politicized.

Who are what is the International Institute of Strategic Studies

‘‘The president is rapidly corroding the norms of civil-military relations that create the public respect for our military,’’ Schake said.

Those are fighting words to this president!

--more--"

Meanwhile, over in Syria:

"Turkey masses troops near Kurdish-held Syrian town" by Sarah El Deeb and Zeynep Bilginsoy Associated Press  December 24, 2018

BEIRUT — Turkey is massing troops near a town in northern Syria held by a US-backed and Kurdish-led force, a war monitor said as Turkish media reported Sunday new reinforcements crossing the borders.

The Turkish buildup comes even though Turkey said it would delay a promised offensive in eastern Syria following President Trump’s decision this week to withdraw US troops.

Trump tweeted on Sunday that he had a‘‘long and productive’’ call with Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan in which they discussed ‘‘the slow & highly coordinated’’ pullout of US troops from the area. This is the two leaders’ second phone conversation in 10 days. US military officials are scrambling to come up with a schedule for the withdrawal of an estimated 2,000 troops.

Dragging their feet, are they?

A statement from the Turkish presidency said the two leaders agreed to coordinate militarily and diplomatically to ensure the US pullout from Syria does not lead to an ‘‘authority vacuum.’’

Trump’s decision, announced last week after a call with Erdogan, surprised his allies and own experts, sparking the resignation of two of his top aides. He had asked for an immediate withdrawal, but experts convinced him that they needed time to work out a timetable.

The Turkish IHA news agency reported that a convoy of Turkish troops — a commando unit— had been sent into Syria overnight.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the reinforcements were sent to the front line with Manbij, where US troops have been based. The Observatory said 50 vehicles crossed into Syria — carrying troops and equipment.

A Turkish military official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with government protocol, said the military reinforcements were dispatched to the areas administered by Turkey in northern Syria, without elaborating.

The spokesman for the Kurdish-led Manbij Military Council, Sharfan Darwish, said Turkish reinforcements have arrived in the area. ‘‘We are taking necessary measures to defend ourselves if we are attacked,’’ he said without elaborating.

US troops based around Manbij patrolled the town and surrounding area on Sunday and were photographed speaking with the residents.

Turkey has welcomed Trump’s decision. Ankara views the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces as an extension of the insurgency within its borders. Erdogan has vowed to dislodge the Kurdish fighters from along its border with Syria.

The United States has since 2014 partnered with the Syrian Kurdish militia to drive out the Islamic State group, a partnership that soured relations between Ankara and Washington.

So did Obama's attempted coup of Erdogan.

Allaying some of Turkey’s fears was a deal reached in June over Manbij. According to the deal, the Kurdish militia would withdraw from Manbij and US and Turkish troops would patrol the area as a new administration for the mixed Arab-Kurdish town is elected, but Ankara says that the United States and the Kurds didn’t live up to their end of the deal and that it would start an offensive in eastern Syria to drive out the militia. Turkey already has troops in northwestern Syria and has backed Syrian fighters there to clear towns and villages of Islamic State militants and Kurdish fighters.

We never do!

After Trump’s decision, Erdogan said he would delay the eastern Syria offensive and would work on plans to clear out the Islamic State from the region.

A spokesman for the Turkey-backed Syrian opposition fighting group said the continued Turkish and allied forces buildup is to prevent Syrian government troops from taking advantage of the tension in the area to seize territory.

Youssef Hammoud, spokesman for the Syrian opposition fighters, accused the Kurdish militia of reaching out to the Syrian government to replace US troops if they withdraw.

Sounds good to me. It's their country!

Darwish dismissed the claims as ‘‘untrue,’’ calling them ‘‘old accusations’’ from the rival Syrian groups.

That is where my print copy ended it.

Also Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron said he ‘‘deeply regrets’’ Trump’s decision to pull US troops out of Syria and warned it could have dangerous consequences.

So when is the false flag attack to make him look bad and once again advance the war agenda?

Macron showered praise on US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, who quit after Trump’s unexpected move. ‘‘An ally should be reliable, coordinate with other allies. Mattis understood this,’’ Macron said during a trip to Chad.

I think he just blew the bromance with Trump, and what is he doing in Chad when his people are in the streets of Paris?

Macron said that the troop withdrawal endangers Kurdish fighters, who were instrumental in the US-led coalition’s fight against Islamic State militants.

‘‘We should not forget . . . what we owe to those who died on the ground fighting terrorism,’’ he said, referring to the Syrian Democratic Forces. ‘‘The SDF is fighting against the terrorism that fomented attacks against Paris and elsewhere . . . I call on everyone not to forget what they have done.’’

Macron did not say what France’s military will do next in Syria. Kurdish officials met with a French presidential adviser Friday, and one asked France to play a larger role in Syria following the American withdrawal.

How much is that going to cost French taxpayers?

Is this why they raised taxes, cut benefits, and are seeking to scale back hard-won workers' rights ?

--more--"

"Turkey-backed Syrian fighters prepare to replace US forces" by Sarah El Deeb Associated Press  December 25, 2018

BEIRUT — Turkish-backed Syrian fighters said Monday that they are preparing to move into eastern Syria alongside Turkish troops once American forces withdraw and that they are already massing on the front line of a town held by Kurdish-led forces.

It won't be taking that long if Turkish troops are already massing on the border.

The US pullout will leave the oil-rich eastern third of Syria, currently controlled by Kurdish-led forces that the Americans have backed over the past four years, up for grabs with multiple parties seeking to move in.

A Syrian Kurdish official said the Kurdish militia is now reaching out for potential new allies following the US withdrawal, underscoring the dire situation the group now finds itself in.

‘‘We will deal with whoever can protect the . . . stability of this country,’’ said Ilham Ahmed.

The Kurdish militia partnered with the US-led coalition since 2014 to fight Islamic State militants. Now, they are left to face a triple threat from Turkey, the Syrian government, and the Islamic State. Turkey views the Kurdish fighters as terrorists because of their links to a Kurdish insurgent group inside Turkey.

The poor, abandoned Kurds. 

Ahmed said her group is talking with the Russians and the Syrian government — both rivals of the United States — as well as European countries about ways to deal with the US withdrawal. She didn’t elaborate.

The Kurds now face the dilemma of whether to try to hold on to the 30 percent of Syria they wrested from militants. The territory includes some of the richest oil fields in north and east Syria but also is home to large Arab populations.

The Kurds could pull back to the Kurdish-majority region in the far northeast but that would leave resources and Kurdish-majority pockets in the east isolated and vulnerable.

They may have no choice.

The militia could also negotiate with Damascus, allowing a return of government forces back into the east in hopes of gaining a level of self-rule for Kurds. The government has so far rejected the notion of such autonomy.

I like the idea! A political settlement!

Syrian government forces have reportedly been massing troops in Deir el-Zour province, across the Euphrates River from Kurdish-held territory.

On Monday, Iraq said it could consider deploying troops inside Syria to protect Iraq from threats across its borders. Iraq’s Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi said his government is ‘‘considering all the options.’’

One could consider that an invasion, no?

President Trump has said the withdrawal from Syria will be slow and coordinated with Turkey, without providing a timetable. Turkey said the two countries will ensure there is no ‘‘authority vacuum’’ once the US troops leave.

A Pentagon spokesman, Navy Commander Sean Robertson, said the execute order for withdrawal has been signed but provided no further details.

Turkish Presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said a US military delegation is expected in Turkey this week.

Turkey says it and its Syrian Arab allies can replace the United States in preventing a resurgence of the Islamic State group.

Kalin said there will be no ‘‘step back, weakness, halting or a slowing down’’ of the fight against the Islamic State, but Turkey has made it clear it will not tolerate a contiguous Kurdish-held enclave along its border with Syria.

Turkey-backed Syria opposition groups said they have up to 15,000 trained fighters ready to deploy, alongside Turkish forces, in eastern Syria to replace US troops.

Staying would have required a war against them? 

Would it have been worth bit?

Youssef Hammoud, spokesman for the Turkey-backed Syrian opposition forces, said their fighters and weapons have been deploying on the front line near Manbij, a Kurdish-administered town in northern Syria where US troops are based. They are preparing to first take Manbij, he said.

Manbij was at the center of an agreement the United States and Turkey reached in June under which Kurdish forces were to withdraw. In recent weeks Turkey said the United States was dragging its feet in implementing the deal and vowed to launch a new offensive against the Kurds.

Those threats and a phone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last week appear to have triggered Trump’s decision to withdraw all 2,000 US forces based in Syria.

As if, and that is what happened.

You want a war with Turkey and the fracturing of NATO?

Hammoud said there is ‘‘no alternative’’ to Turkish forces and their allies replacing U.S troops.

‘‘We are ready to fight Daesh,’’ said Hammoud, using the Arabic acronym for IS. The extremists are largely confined to a remote desert enclave hundreds of miles to the southeast of Manbij.

Kurdish forces in Manbij ‘‘have taken measures to fend off any attack,’’ said the spokesman for the Kurdish-led Manbij Military Council, Sharfan Darwish.

Turkey’s armed forces have led two offensives into Syria since 2016 to push Islamic State militants and Kurdish forces back from the border.

Trump has claimed to have defeated IS, but the Kurdish fighters are still battling the extremists in the remote town of Hajin near the Iraqi border. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the fighting displaced nearly 1,000 civilians on Sunday alone.

Ahmed, the senior Syrian Kurdish official, had just returned from a trip to France in which she called on Paris to play a larger role in Syria following the U.S. withdrawal.

‘‘I urge Trump to go back on his decision inciting Erdogan against the Syrian people in general and the Kurdish people in specific and I call on him to return the favor,’’ she said. Hundreds of Kurdish fighters died in the fight against IS.

I urge him to not.

--more--"

And look who decided to pick up the slack as we all celebrated Christmas:

"Report: Israeli attack near Syrian capital wounds 3 soldiers" by Bassem Mroue Associated Press  December 26, 2018

BEIRUT — Israeli warplanes flying over Lebanon fired missiles towardareas near the Syrian capital of Damascus late Tuesday, hitting an arms depot and wounding three soldiers, Syrian state media reported, saying that most of the missiles were shot down by air defense units.

So they violated Lebanese airspace to illegally attack Syria, great!

The TV, quoting an unnamed military official, identified the warplanes as Israeli. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency earlier reported that Israeli warplanes were flying at low altitude over parts of southern Lebanon.

So they couldn't be detected by radar!

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor, said Israeli airstrikes targeted three positions south of Damascus that are arms depots for Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah group and Iranian forces.

The reported attack near Damascus is the first since US President Trump announced last week that the United States will withdraw all of its 2,000 forces in Syria, a move that will leave control of the oil-rich eastern third of Syria up for grabs.

I wonder if the Israelis coordinated it with him.

Following Trump’s announcement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that Israel would ‘‘continue to act against Iran’s attempts to entrench itself militarily in Syria, and to the extent necessary, we will even expand our actions there.’’

Just leave the United States out of this one, 'kay?

Nearly an hour after the attacks began, Damascus residents could still hear the air defense units firing toward targets in the air.

‘‘The aggression is still ongoing,’’ said a presenter on state TV, which interrupted its programs to air patriotic songs.

Later the TV quoted an unnamed military official as saying that Syrian air defenses ‘‘shot down most of the missiles before reaching their targets and the aggression damaged an arms depot and wounded three soldiers.’’ It added that the Israeli warplanes fired the missiles from Lebanese airspace.

Israel’s military spokesman’s unit did not confirm the raids, but said in a statement that ‘‘an aerial defense system was activated against an anti-aircraft missile launched from Syria.’’ No damage or injuries were reported by the Israeli military.

Israel is widely believed to have been behind a series of airstrikes in the past that mainly targeted Iranian and Hezbollah forces fighting alongside the government in Syria. Tuesday’s attack is the first since a missile assault on the southern outskirts of Damascus on Nov. 29.

Russia announced it had delivered the S-300 air defense system to Syria in October.

Has it been deployed yet?

In eastern Syria, Turkey-backed opposition fighters have been moving to the outskirts of Manbij, and the Turkish army continued to dispatch tanks, artillery, and other equipment to the border and an area administered by Turkey in northern Syria, Turkish media reported.

Turkey said it’s working with the United States to coordinate the withdrawal of American forces but remains determined to clear US-allied Kurdish fighters from northeastern Syria.

For weeks, Turkey has been threatening to launch a new offensive against the Kurds, who partnered with the United States to drive the Islamic State group out of much of northern and eastern Syria. Ankara views the Kurdish forces as terrorists because of their links to an insurgent group in Turkey.

President Trump announced the withdrawal of US forces after a phone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan earlier this month.....

--more--"

It's all about leadership:

"Trump tweets away, as allies question his leadership" by Katie Rogers   December 24, 2018

WASHINGTON — As lawmakers and foreign allies alike braced for the potentially destabilizing effects of his policy decisions on national security, President Trump said Saudi Arabia would “spend the necessary money needed to help rebuild Syria, instead of the United States.” It was not immediately clear how or when that would happen, or whether it was in addition to the $100 million that Saudi Arabia sent the United States in October for Syria reconstruction.

“Saudi Arabia has now agreed to spend the necessary money needed to help rebuild Syria, instead of the United States,” Trump wrote. “See? Isn’t it nice when immensely wealthy countries help rebuild their neighbors rather than a Great Country, the U.S., that is 5000 miles away. Thanks to Saudi A!”

Ensconced in the White House with no official Christmas Eve plans but to host a meeting on border security and track Santa Claus on military radar, Trump showed no sign of slowing a Twitter storm amid a government shutdown, a departing defense secretary, and cratering stock market. He even lamented, “I am all alone (poor me).”

I know the guy is self-centered and narcissistic, but so what? 

That doesn't mean he isn't human or capable.

His posts were replete with grievances about funds for border security, the Federal Reserve chairman, Democrats critical of his relationship with US allies, and Brett McGurk, the departing special envoy for the coalition fighting the Islamic State group.

Trump’s abrupt decisions last week to pull troops from Syria and Afghanistan have plunged some of the United States’ longest allied partners into uncertainty as they grapple with an American leader who largely treats those relationships as bottom-line business transactions, but the bulk of his ire was directed at foreign policy critics and fallout over his “America First” approach.

He described McGurk as an Obama-era appointee, and accused him of “loading up airplanes with 1.8 Billion Dollars in CASH & sending it to Iran” as part of the nuclear deal that world powers struck with Tehran — an agreement from which Trump has withdrawn the United States.

Trump has repeatedly made this misleading claim about money the United States transferred to Iran in 2016. The Obama administration did not directly give money to Iran as part of the 2015 nuclear deal; instead, the United States unfroze billions in assets as part of a decadeslong debt dispute, $1.7 billion of which was transferred in cash in 2016. The payment was indirectly tied to the nuclear deal.

McGurk, who worked under the administration of President George W. Bush as well as President Barack Obama, led the delicate, 14-month negotiations with Iran that prompted the release of Jason Rezaian, the Washington Post journalist. This summer, McGurk was the target of assassination threats from Iranian-backed militias and demonstrators in Iraq.

It's times like these when I would be worried about assassination of the president

It doesn't make me feel any better that the Nostradamus predicted it, either:

The great shameless, audacious bawler,
He will be elected governor of the army:
The price of his removal will be small,
Nary a sixPence paid for the deed.

That is Century III, Quatrain 81.

Over the weekend, Trump suggested on Twitter that McGurk was a grandstander. The envoy resigned in protest over the Syria decision, which he said had blindsided US officials and allies in the Middle East, including US-backed Kurdish soldiers who are fighting the Islamic State.....

--more--"

"Trump’s dangerous blunder in Syria endangers US ally" December 26, 2018

With two phone calls and a tweet, President Trump has engineered the exit of US troops from Syria, appeased not one but at least two autocrats, and made the world a more dangerous place.

The charged language is to draw up certain images in your mind regarding a couple of fellows named Chamberlain and Hitler.

This is what passes for US foreign policy today, and in the process, Trump has lost Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, one of the few grown-ups in the Neverland that the White House has become, and Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy to the international coalition fighting the Islamic State, both of whom resigned after the president’s decision.

All of this began following a call between Trump and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey last week, after which Trump announced to a surprised military that ISIS had been “defeated” and he was bringing home the 2,000 US troops now on the ground in Syria.

US forces, in conjunction with the 72-nation coalition and Kurdish forces within Syria, have indeed succeeded in reducing the territory once held by the would-be caliphate, and with it much of the Islamic State threat, but reducing the threat is not eradicating it, and to think otherwise is hopelessly naive, and even those who support a withdrawal would agree that it should be done carefully: You can’t have an exit strategy without a strategy.

IRAQ!

Enter our hopelessly naive president, who ignores the advice of his entire national security team, thumbs his nose at longtime allies, but wins the praise of Russian leader Vladimir Putin. Only the last-minute pleas of US military leaders, who insisted on an orderly timetable for withdrawal, have kept this exit from looking like the fall of Saigon at the end of the Vietnam War.

First of all, that's the wrong analogy. Kabul is the 21st-century Saigon, and if you go by the Globe's logic, they are saying we should have stayed in Vietnam!

The danger is that not only could ISIS flare back up, but also that the sudden void created by the withdrawal could threaten US allies. Turkish troops are massing in northern Syria, with more crossing the border daily as they eye a possible offensive against Kurdish forces — yes, the same forces which have fought so bravely side by side with Americans against ISIS. It is one thing to give up the hope of regime change in Syria and know that the detested Bashar al-Assad — he who has gassed his own citizens — remains in charge. It is quite another to betray the Kurds and leave them vulnerable to an assault by Erdogan’s Turkey, which considers the militia a terrorist organization.

There the Globe goes with the "he gassed his own people" bullshit!

US forces have successfully prevented such Turkish “mission creep” in the region, but no longer.

Another big “winner” in this foreign policy debacle is, of course, Iran which has tens of thousands of “proxies” in the region fully prepared to fill the vacuum being created by this precipitous withdrawal of American forces. Iran’s alliance with the Assad regime and Russia could shift the balance of power permanently in the region.

That must mean Israel is the big loser, and how discouraging to see the Globe editorial board support Wars for the Jews because of their hatred of Trump.

Such is the power of one seemingly small exercise of presidential power — not to mention presidential peevishness.

And an even smaller pre$$.

There are few ways to curb the powers of the commander in chief, however poorly executed, but 2019 will be the year when Congress can and must reassert its own foreign policy role— a role it abdicated nearly a decade ago when it failed to exercise its right to approve American involvement in Syria. The consequences of that failure of courage have now come home to roost.

They abdicated long before Syria. Try since 2001.

The next Congress must make clear that a Turkish attack on our allies the Kurds will result in sanctions. That human rights violations by any of the parties involved — and that would include the Assad regime, which is reportedly murdering thousands of political prisoners — will be punished.

For the United States and its pre$$ to be lecturing the world about human rights is the height of hypocrisy.

There was a time when America stood for something on the world stage, when allies could count on this country to keep its word and its commitments. It will fall to Congress in the year ahead to help pick up the foreign policy slack until there is a change of occupant in the White House.....

What a sickening and totally gross editorial!


--more--"

Now I want you to consider what would have happened had Trump gone the other way and stuck with the Kurds.

In that case, the Globe editorial would have excoriated him for losing Turkey and causing a fracture in NATO! He couldn't have won with them no matter what he did!

Also see:

Trump move to pull US troops from Syria opens way to turmoil

Yeah, whole region is going to blow up because we are leaving -- as opposed to it blowing up after we invaded Iraq.

US must thwart Turkish aggression in Syria

Looks like Egypt is also falling back into line, too.

The Kurds are also going to help by releasing 3,200 ISIS prisoners, who will be sent to Africa.

Somalia blast kills at least 16 near presidential palace The Al Qaeda-linked Al Shabab extremist group, which often targets Mogadishu, claimed responsibility for the attack.

It's pronounce Al-CIA-Bob, folks.

US self-defense airstrikes in Somalia kill 11 al-Shabab

It was the AP that decided they were in self defense (I didn't know Somalia terrorists can shoot down airplanes, did you?)!

"The United States military’s Africa Command says that it has carried out six airstrikes in the Gandarshe area of Somalia which killed a total of 62 extremists from the al-Shabab rebel group. In a statement issued Monday, the U.S. military said it carried out four strikes on Dec. 15 in which 34 people were killed and two more on Dec. 16 which killed 28. It said all strikes were in the Gandarshe coast area south of the capital. The U.S. military statement said all six strikes were carried out in close coordination with Somalia’s government. It said the airstrikes were conducted to prevent al-Shabab from using remote areas as a safe haven to plot, direct, inspire, and recruit for future attacks. It said that no civilians were injured or killed."

How the f*** would they know?

As for Korea:

"The North’s all-or-nothing position means that the negotiations will be far more complicated than Washington had hoped....."

So says the Jew York Times, and it simply means that the North Korean negotiating style is exactly the same as Israel's -- and we talk to them all the time.


{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Trump better be careful:

"Walking a fine line between being overly optimistic and too pessimistic, the Federal Reserve bumped up its benchmark interest rate on Wednesday and said the US economy remained strong, but the Fed’s decision also demonstrated Fed chairman Jerome Powell’s determination to pursue an independent course based on economic analysis rather than bow to critics like the president— and many investors — who argued that the recent stock market sell-off and mixed signals about the durability of the nation’s long expansion warranted a pause in any more hikes. In other words, he tried to tell the world, the Fed would be flexible as it tries to keep the economy humming without risking a surge in inflation, but like anyone seeking a compromise, Powell ended up making few people happy. Investors registered their displeasure with the Fed’s tightrope-walking by sending stocks sharply lower. The Dow Jones industrial average swung from a gain of 380 points just before the 2 p.m. Fed statement was issued to a loss at the close of nearly 352 points, or 1.49 percent. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 1.54 percent, while the Nasdaq dropped 2.17 percent. All three indexes are in the red for the year. The stock market’s fall from record highs is worrisome to anyone saving for college or retirement, with many remembering the painful losses their 401(k) balances sustained during the financial crisis. There was a lot of information released by the Fed for investors to digest. The Fed has come under sustained criticism from President Trump, who has not followed the practice of his many predecessors of not commenting publicly on the central bank’s actions....."

That is the kind of thing that gets a guy's head taken off in Dallas (although in this case, I suspect a heart attack is more in order). 

Notice how they never make the list of the usual (Cubans and the MIC) suspects despite the motive?

Of course, you need to keep it all in perspective:

"Stocks tumbled on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve, citing the strength of the economy, signaled that it planned to keep raising interest rates and shrinking the extraordinary amount of support it has provided to financial markets in the decade since the financial crisis. The central bank raised its benchmark interest rate another quarter percentage point. That increase had been widely predicted, but in the financial markets, hopes had been high that the Fed would simultaneously signal its growing concern about the outlook for economic growth. They were disappointed. Of course, this year’s losses have to be put in perspective. Since the market bottomed in March 2009, the S&P is up 270 percent....."

"Mnuchin denies Trump is seeking to oust Fed chief" December 22, 2018

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin issued an emphatic statement saying President Trump denied he’d suggested firing Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell and declaring the president doesn’t believe he has legal authority to dismiss the central bank chief.

Also see:

"President Trump said he now understands he lacks the authority to do so. Trump previously told advisers that Powell will “turn me into Hoover,” a reference to Great Depression-era President Herbert Hoover. Trump has also repeatedly criticized the Fed for increasing interest rates....."

The President of the United States is so prescient! 

He's nothing like what the pre$$ reports, and think of this for a moment: the hardest person to fire in the United States is the Federal Reserve chairman -- not the President of the United States!

That tells where the REAL POWER LIES!

You want to know who rules over you? 

Then simply see who you are not allowed to criticize or fire!

Mnuchin said in a pair of tweets Saturday evening that he’d spoken with the president about the matter and included a statement he said came from Trump.

Trump has discussed firing Powell many times in the past few days as his frustration with the central banker intensified following this week’s interest rate increase and intensifying stock market losses, according to four people familiar with the matter.

Bloomberg reported Friday that advisers close to Trump aren’t convinced he would move against Powell, and are hoping the president’s bout of anger will dissipate over the holidays, and some of Trump’s advisers have warned him that firing Powell would be disastrous.

Former Senate Banking chairman Richard Shelby publicly cautioned Trump against the move on Saturday. “I’d be very careful about doing that,” the Alabama Republican said. “The independence of the Fed is the foundation of our banking system.”

!!!!!!

Somehow, the Constitutional mandate regarding the government regulating the money supply has been turned over to private central bankers who print the money and then loan it with interest to the U.S. taxpayers in the form of its government.

Sherrod Brown, the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, said in a statement that “Given the Fed’s consensus on monetary policy, any effort to remove Powell would hit the trifecta: unlawful, ineffective, and damaging to the economy.”

A member of the House Financial Services Committee, Ross predicted the panel’s incoming Democratic chairwoman, Maxine Waters of California, would launch a “significant oversight investigation” if Trump ousted Powell.

Any attempt by Trump to push out Powellwould have potentially devastating ripple effects across financial markets, undermining investors’ confidence in the central bank’s ability to shepherd the economy without political interference.

It would come as markets have plummeted in recent weeks, with the major stock indexes already down sharply for the year.....

They thankfully went up today.

--more--"

"Trump took credit for a growing economy. Now what?" by Victoria McGrane Globe Staff  December 24, 2018

Taking credit for the expanding economy and the booming stock market has ranked high among President Trump’s favorite pastimes, but the commander in chief has had a lot less to crow about lately, and many economists and business-watchers say some of this is his own fault.

The Globe reporter seems almost happy the stock market is taking a bath.

The Dow Jones industrial average took another nose dive Friday, marking its worst week since the 2008 financial crisis — a plunge exacerbated by the impending government shutdown sparked by Trump’s demands for a Southern border wall, along with broader fears of a recession.

I get the feeling some are rooting for one. Anything to make this president look bad, and one can't help but wonder if the banker's will drive it into the ditch over his troop withdrawals.

News reports over the weekend that Trump wants to fire his Federal Reserve chairman, and an unexpected and strange Sunday statement from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin that there’s nothing to panic about, set the stage for further stock market drama Monday, and before all this, markets and CEOs were already rattled by Trump’s ongoing trade war with China, inconsistent messaging, and public browbeating of the Fed — all possibly raising the risks of an economic slowdown.

I'm surprised there was no mention of the wars this time.

“I don’t think if Hillary Clinton or Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush had won their presidential races that we would be instituting tariffs on our allies. We probably would not be instituting tariffs on China, and there certainly wouldn’t be considerable concern about a damaging trade war,” said Michael R. Strain, director of economic policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, a leading conservative think tank, ticking through many of the concerns driving the worries of economic slowdown and the stock market’s recent roller-coaster ride.

The Globe first turns to the AEI for expert analysis, great!

Of course, I don't think we would be withdrawing troops if Hillary, Marco, or Jeb won.

It’s difficult to parse just how much credit or blame any president deserves when it comes to the economy, he added, but in this case, “I think there’s a good amount of blame here that you can put on President Trump.”

They would blame him for curing cancer if he did it.

At the least, Trump “is costing himself the upside that he promised,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an economist who advised the late Senator John McCain’s Republican presidential campaign in 2008.

Look at experts they talk to! 

No Trump lover there!

The stock market is on track this month to record its worst December performance since 1931 — which, students of history may recall, was not a particularly auspicious time in US economic history.

There goes the Globe again, talking down to us all!

And they wonder why the American people despise the elite pre$$?

CEO confidence soared in the early days of Trump’s tenure, thanks to regulation rollbacks and tax cuts, but now it has plummeted to a two-year low, according to a survey released last Monday. It found the administration’s trade policy among the top reasons for growing pessimism.

That's another reason to have him removed: trade policy.

In a separate survey, close to half of chief financial officers said they think the US economy will enter a recession by the end of next year.

Of course we will. 

They are bringing one about to destroy this president.

Trump’s frustration with the recent market exploded into cyberspace last week with tweets haranguing the Fed to stop raising interest rates.

By many measures, the US economy continues to look strong. Unemployment is at a 49-year low. Wages are up. Holiday spending is strong. Even his critics say Trump cannot be blamed for all of the recent stock market volatility.

But the pre$$ will blame him anyway.

Some was to be expected as the Fed at long last normalized monetary policy following the 2008 financial crisis. International tumult surrounding issues such as Brexit are among the factors weighing on global growth, and in the midst of the second-longest expansion in the record books, economists say, the US economy would naturally slow eventually, but Trump isn’t making matters easieron himself.

Yeah, right, he is bringing it all on himself. 

Talk about blaming the victim!

Take his very public frustration with the Fed. The irony is that while there’s enough uncertainty in the global economy to mount a strong argument that the Fed should pause— and many economists like Paul Krugman, along with Wall Street investors, have quite loudly advocated for that — Trump’s public outbursts pressure central bank officials to press on, lest they look like they are caving in to political pressure, Fed-watchers say.

On the one hand they tell us they are supposed to above the political pressure, then to prove it they do the opposite?

In recent decades, most presidents have largely avoided expressing any public thoughts about monetary policy, so that investors do not start doubting the Fed is doing what is best for the economy.

Pffft!

Thank God we have a President Trump then!

Trump’s various trade disputes, particularly the smoldering trade war with China, rank high on the list of reasons Wall Street is worried about a recession.

There are two in$titutions you do not antagonize in AmeriKa: the War Machine and Wall Street.

Among other antagonistic trade moves, the president slapped tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods in September and threatened to go further at the start of next year.

China retaliated. Earlier this month, Trump and President Xi Jinping of China agreed to a 90-day cease-fire, but Wall Street’s initial relief evaporated when news reports revealed the two sides still appeared further from a resolution than Trump initially indicated.

Nothing about the arrest of the telecom executive that was meant to embarrass Trump?

Tariffs spark worries about slower growth because they raise prices for US consumers, who drive 70 percent of the nation’s economy. They also make it more expensive for businesses to buy the goods and services they need, and the uncertainty surrounding the unresolved trade picture takes its own toll as companies scramble to figure out where to source their widgets or where they should build that new factory. 

Looks like an argument against globali$m, doesn't it?

Businesses are saying “we don’t know where to invest because we don’t know who we’re going to trade with . . . and we need to know the rules of the road and where there might be potholes. We don’t know how to move forward — we’ll hesitate, we’ll delay investment,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at the accounting firm Grant Thornton.

Stock-market losses alone are unlikely to hurt Trump with his base, since few of them are wrapped up in the daily movements, said Jon McHenry, a Republican pollster and strategist, but if the recent turmoil is a leading indicator for the larger economy, it poses a real danger, as it would for any incumbent president, he said.

It won't hurt him with me. I see the forces he is at war with.

That’s likely more so for Trump, who has logged hundreds of tweets essentially declaring himself the mastermind of “the best Economy in the history of our country!” as he described it in mid-September.

“If the economy goes down, that is a huge deal for any president,” McHenry said, “but certainly for one who has taken credit for so much of what’s going on with the economy.”

--more--"

"Stocks hit 20-month low as D.C. turmoil weighs on markets" by Alex Veiga Associated Press  December 24, 2018

President Trump’s attacks on the Federal Reserve spooked the stock market on Christmas Eve, and efforts by his Treasury secretary to calm investors’ fears only seemed to make matters worse, contributing to another day of heavy losses on Wall Street.

The major stock indexes fell more than 2 percent Monday, nudging the market closer to its worst year since 2008. Stocks are also on track for their worst December since 1931, during the depths of the Great Depression.....

--more--"

That's odd because my printed front page carried this report:

"Stocks fall as Trump tweets that Fed is the economy’s only problem" by Alan Rappeport New York Times  December 25, 2018

NEW YORK — A 48-hour effort by the Trump administration to soothe jittery financial markets did little to reverse the free fall in stocks Monday, as the president’s renewed attack on the Federal Reserve and the specter of a prolonged government shutdown further rattled investors already worried about a global economic slowdown.

Falling like a WTC tower on 9/11, huh?

With a single tweet Monday, President Trump undercut his top economic advisers’ efforts to reassure the markets that he did not intend to fire Jerome Powell as Fed chairman, but Trump, who blames the Fed’s recent interest rate increases for the market gyrations, said “the only problem our economy has is the Fed,” an assertion that exacerbated the worst sell-off on Wall Street since the 2008 financial crisis. 

If the $hoe fits, take the money and run, right?

Stocks continued marching toward their largest December declines since the 1930s, with the S&P 500 closing down 2.7 percent Monday after a shortened trading session before the Christmas holiday.

The markets are trying to digest the confusing signals from Washington.

For the markets, the Fed is a complicated player at the moment. Investors have been disappointed by rising interest rates, concerned that they could sap growth, but the speculation about firing Powell, a move that could turn the independent central bank into a political tool, has undermined confidence in a pivotal institution essential to economic policy.

It's an unconstitutional in$titution with an inordinate amount of power.

Markets had already been on edge in recent weeks because of uncertainty surrounding trade negotiations between the United States and China, signs of slowing global growth, and the prospect of a prolonged US government shutdown. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin added to the jitters by announcing Sunday that he had called bank executives to ensure the markets were functioning properly, the type of discussions usually reserved for moments of crisis.

“It signaled a sense of panic and anxiety that didn’t need to be there,” said Brian Gardner, an analyst at the investment banking firm Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. “My first reaction when I heard it was, what has happened over the last couple of days that the market does not understand or realize? Is there something that Treasury knows that the rest of us don’t?,” and while Mnuchin and Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s incoming chief of staff, tried to reassure markets on the Fed’s leadership, there is still an effort within the White House to discern whether any legal rationale exists for removing Powell from the chairman’s spot, said two people familiar with the discussions.

I'm sure Treasury got a heads-up (pun intended, sorry) and they haven't given up on regime change!

Peter Navarro, Trump’s top trade adviser, has been openly critical of the Fed’s decision to raise interest rates and blamed the central bank for the market volatility. Mnuchin, meanwhile, has said the recent stock swings are the result of high-speed electronic trading and post-crisis financial rules that he says make it harder for banks to play their traditional market-stabilization role.

Trump on Monday made clear he is still not happy with Powell, and Wall Street is bracing for more intervention from a president who views the stock market as a report card on his presidency.

Henrietta Treyz, director of economic policy research at the investment advisory firm Veda Partners, spent her weekend studying the 1935 Banking Act to determine whether Trump could unseat Powell as chairman but keep him on the Fed board without violating the law. She has yet to determine whether that could pass legal muster.

The President of the United States can be removed, members of Congre$$ can be removed, and anyone else can be fired from a job -- except the Fed chairman.

Treasury officials tried to brush away criticism of Mnuchin’s public statement and his calls to bank executives, saying he was trying to ensure that banks had ample liquidity for lending, but the conversations were described by several on the receiving end as more routine than the striking statement suggested.

The Treasury secretary asked for updates on how markets were functioning and inquired about any stresses in the system, according to one bank chief executive. Another bank CEO was so unconcerned about the recent fall in stocks that he used his time with Mnuchin to discuss new capital requirements and how they could affect the bank’s balance sheet in the long term as the Fed continues selling government securities it amassed during the financial crisis, according to a person with knowledge of the discussion.

That is another reason behind the drop: The Fed is dumping all the $hit it bought to prop up the stock market.

Policy makers who participated in the President’s Working Group call Monday also described it as routine, with no market problems reported and nothing to warrant an official statement after the discussion. The call was described by a person familiar with the conversation as a “check-in” scheduled at the Treasury’s request for officials so they could plan for a prolonged government shutdown.

Former Treasury officials said Mnuchin had probably amplified concerns about the markets by publicizing his efforts to calm them.

“I never heard anyone in any venue in the last two months voice any concerns about liquidity,” said Paul H. O’Neill, who served as Treasury secretary under President George W. Bush, noting that Mnuchin had injected more uncertainty into the calculations of investors.

OMFG!

He wrote that book and was banished!

O’Neill also suggested that Mnuchin was in a difficult position in trying to assuage a mercurial boss and could be overcompensating to please him.

If anyone should know, he should (considering who he served).

“The president apparently is blaming Mnuchin for the markets going south, which is a fairly strange thing,” he said.....

--more--"

"Global growth looks to be slowing; White House denies US economy has peaked" by David J. Lynch Washington Post  December 26, 2018

WASHINGTON — A global economy that until recently was humming has broken down, a sharp contrast to the picture just a year ago.

The sudden slowing has fed into a global financial sell-off that has driven several US stock indexes into or near ‘‘bear market’’ territory with losses of more than 20 percent. Stocks fell sharply Monday near the end of what is shaping up to be Wall Street’s worst December since 1931.

The turmoil was on President Trump’s mind Christmas Day, when he cast fresh doubt on the record of the Federal Reserve’s chairman, Jerome Powell, whom he has increasingly blamed for the market weakness.

‘‘Well, we’ll see,’’ the president said when asked whether he had confidence in Powell. ‘‘They’re raising interest rates too fast; that’s my opinion. But I certainly have confidence . . . I think that they will get it pretty soon. I really do.’’

Efforts by Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to allay fears seem only to have inflamed them. Political turmoil at the highest level in the United States and other advanced economies — epitomized by the partial shutdown of the US government and protests in France — is further feeding investor anxiety.

?????

Additional forces threaten to turn what had been a gradual global slowing into something more serious. Central banks that went to extraordinary lengths to boost growth after the 2008 global financial crisis have become less supportive — with the Fed announcing another increase in its benchmark interest rate last week, and tensions over Trump’s‘‘America First’’ trade offensive are sapping business confidence on multiple continents.

‘‘The theme coming into this year was everything was synchronized, everything was good everywhere,’’ said Torsten Slok, chief international economist for Deutsche Bank Securities. ‘‘Now everything is not good everywhere.’’

That is only a slight exaggeration. The adverse signs are enough for economists such as Megan Greene of Manulife Mutual Funds to warn of a ‘‘synchronized slowdown.’’ Few economists expect an outright recession in the United States or a ‘‘hard landing’’ in China, where the authorities are trying to manage a gradual deceleration, but anemic performances by the global economy’s main engines could shake already stressed political systems in several countries, including the United States. ‘‘The political risk in a slowdown or even recession in 2019 is of stirring up already worrisome levels of nationalism,’’ said George Magnus, author of ‘‘Red Flags: Why Xi’s China Is In Jeopardy.’’

In the United States, despite nearly a decade of uninterrupted economic growth, nearly 55 percent of Americans say the country is on the wrong track, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average. A sharp slowdown could short-circuit belated rewards for workers who are receiving average annual wage increases of 3.1 percent, the highest mark in nine years, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

That means it was less during the entire Obama regime.

Also see: Employers are raising the minimum wage

Trump gets zero credit!

‘‘If that doesn’t continue, you’ll see continued domestic political polarization,’’ said Peter Harrell, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security. ‘‘Clearly, a slowing economy is a huge concern to the Trump administration.’’

What is the Center for a New American Security?

At least the Globe makes you think.

An economic slowdown — coupled with tumbling stock prices — could also make the president more amenable to a quick deal with China in the monthslong tariff war, Harrell said. ‘‘They are getting nervous about the markets and nervous about the slowing in the economy, and there’s a similar reaction in Beijing.’’

There are also problems in Europe with Germany, Italy, and Britain.

One major economic shift— the 41 percent decline in oil prices since early October — will produce winners and losers. Every penny of decline in the pump price of a gallon of gas leaves American consumers with an additional $1 billion to spend on other goods and services, according to Torsten Slok, chief international economist for Deutsche Bank Securities, but lower prices will sap investment spending by oil and gas companies in the United States and elsewhere. The loss of income for major oil-producing nations that carry heavy foreign-debt loads will outweigh the consumer gain, Carl Weinberg, chief international economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote in a research note.

Related:

"Crude fell to the lowest level in a year and a half as concerns over the global economy and turbulence in Washington overshadowed signals from OPEC that it may deepen output cuts....."

And we know who is controlling supply!

"Oil has been very good to university endowments in Texas. It was so good in the year through June 30 that the University of Texas saw the value of its endowment reach $31 billion, surpassing Yale to become the second-largest endowment in US higher education, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The endowment was fueled by mineral rights from land it controls in the Permian Basin. It’s an area bigger than Delaware that has emerged in the past decade as the world’s fastest growing oil-producing region due to advances in hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. The state system shares the mineral rights revenue with Texas A&M University, which saw its endowment value surge to $13.5 billion. The boom may recede as the price of a barrel of oil has tumbled by 40 percent from a high this year of $76 in October."

"The company that has failed to end a 14-year-old oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico is suing to challenge a Coast Guard official’s order to design and install a new containment system to capture and remove the crude before it forms slicks that often stretch for miles. The federal lawsuit that Taylor Energy Co. filed Thursday in New Orleans asks the court to throw out Coast Guard Captain Kristi Luttrell’s Oct. 23 administrative order. The company faces daily civil penalties of up to $40,000 if it fails to comply with the order. Luttrell issued it one day after the Washington Post published a front-page story about the leak off Louisiana’s coast. The story included a new estimate that approximately 10,500 to 29,400 gallons of oil is leaking daily from the site where a Taylor Energy-owned platform toppled during Hurricane Ivan in 2004. That estimate, contained in a report that the federal government commissioned from a Florida State University researcher, is much higher than previous government estimates and dwarfs the company’s own assessment of the leak’s volume."

It's the Gulf Gusher you never heard about, and Taylor Energy has argued that performing more work out at the leak site could be dangerous and cause more environmental harm than good.

Sounds suspicious to me.

‘‘The global economy — its financial and economic stability and its growth path — will be riskier on this redistribution of income,’’ he wrote, citing upheaval in Venezuela and Nigeria, and Saudi Arabia’s growing debt burden.

Is that why Nigeria is falling out of favor?

You rarely ever read about the ongoing destabilization and coup effort in Venezuela in my pos pre$$, and one wonders if this has anything to do with Khashoggi.

The Trump administration goal of 3 percent annual US economic growth for several years appears to be fading, with the Federal Reserve lowering its 2019 forecast to 2.3 percent, down from this year’s expected 3 percent. The Fed also has backed away from plans to raise interest rates three times next year.

So there isn't that much difference between Trump and them. 

I'm glad they weren't pressured by politics!

Though almost all economists expect the economy to continue growing through 2019, there is now a roughly 1-in-6 chance of a recession over the next 12 months, the highest likelihood since the recovery began in mid-2009, according to the New York Fed.

Kevin Hassett, the head of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, disputed the consensus view that the US economy has peaked.....

--more--"

Time to retire:

"With retirement, many are making it up as they go" by Robert Weisman Globe Staff  December 26, 2018

Roslindale social worker Edy Rees said she and her husband, software engineer Mark Katz, “had this great plan” for retirement: She would garden and volunteer. He’d build furniture at his woodworking bench. They’d travel to visit friends in the British Isles, but outside forces intervened. Katz, now 70, took early retirement when his company was sold, becoming an on-and-off consultant. Budget cuts forced Rees, 76, to leave her job at a charity, though she continued for a time as an unpaid volunteer. After her daughter had a baby girl, Rees was pressed into grandmother duties. Katz jumped into helping on political campaigns. There’s been little time for travel.

I'm sick of the self-centered $upremacism, sorry.

For many older people today, a make-it-up-as-you-go approach to retirement has supplanted the old notion of an orderly passage from the office to the golf links. Jobs are less secure than they were in the past, pension plans less generous or nonexistent. Market convulsions throw retirement agendas into flux, punishing those who haven’t saved enough and are scrambling to catch up. Many in their 60s and 70s who need or want to keep working are taking part-time jobs, or stints in the gig economy that blur the line between work and retirement.

This month’s stock market plunge, which erased billions in market value from Americans’ retirement accounts, has buttressed the case for staying in the workforce.

“This is shaping up to be one of the worst Decembers of the past 50 or 60 years,” said Doug Butler, senior vice president and research director at Rockland Trust’s investment management group. “When the market’s down, people are asking, ‘Do I still have enough to retire?’ If they can delay their retirement, there’s a lot of positive benefits. They can also change their spending habits— maybe take a two-week vacation rather than a three-week vacation.”

How eliti$t!


The old ideal of a career culminating with a handshake and a gold watch mostly applied to buttoned-down professionals in the post-World War II era. Some in the baby boomer generation, many of whom expect to live longer than their parents, question the very term retirement because it connotes stepping aside and disengaging.

“It suggests that you’re relaxing and laying back, and you deserve that, because you put in a lot of work,” said Sarah Lamb, professor of anthropology at Brandeis University. “Old age was seen as a time of stepping away from society and getting ready to die. Now that view’s fallen out of fashion, and the culture emphasizes ongoing extended adulthood. 

He talked to jwho?


“The new ideal is you want to be healthy and stay productive,” she said. “Many people want to keep working, if they’re not volunteering or skydiving, because it’s a sign that they’re not really getting old.”

Skydiving? 

Like that blood-soaked war criminal they just planted?

Retirement seldom figures in pillow talk between significant others. A recent study by Fidelity Investments, the Boston financial services giant, found more than four in 10 of the couples it surveyed disagreed about what age each partner planned to retire. That included a third of baby boomers nearing retirement or already in some phase of downshifting, unplugging, or cutting their ties with their employers.

The study also found that more than half weren’t aligned on how much they should save before they retired.....

--more--"

It's all, once again, about leadership:

"Strong economy vs. shaky leadership: What does that mean for 2019?" by Neil Irwin New York Times   December 25, 2018

NEW YORK — Sometime in the last couple of months, predictions of a major economic downturn or recession in 2019 went from being a crank view to the conventional wisdom.

That's what happens with us truth bloggers. Takes months, sometimes years, before the propagandists in the pre$$ concede we were right all along!

It is true that the global economy is sputtering and that the stock market is in its worst pullback in a decade, but this sense of gloom and pessimism has gotten ahead of the facts on the ground, especially concerning the US economy.

Like the New York Times has anything to do with facts!

The real risk is not that insurmountable challenges knock the economy off course. It is that poor leadership converts moderate economic shocks into a crisis.

The combination of erratic behavior from the president and a thinly staffed government in the United States, the potential crises facing other major economies, and the lack of trust amid allies and major trade partners could make routine economic challenges turn into something worse.

The Downfall of President Donald J. Trump.

Surveys show rising pessimism among top corporate executives, and over the weekend Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin called bank CEOs to seek assurances that their institutions were sufficiently liquid to keep lending to consumers and businesses, according to a Treasury announcement.

They were unconcerned not too long ago -- like two articles up!

What changed in a day?

It was the kind of disclosure that risked causing more damage than it was intended to prevent. If a top health official announced that he had convened conversations with top pharmaceutical CEOs and was pleased to learn there were no drug shortages, your first response would not be relief. It would be to ask, “Wait, we need to worry about drug shortages?”

Speak for yourself, NYT shitter.

The level of arrogant elitism is astonishing, presuming to tell us what we should think!

Then there are the president’s repeated attacks on a Federal Reserve. It all raises the possibility that if things do get worse, the US governmentwill be an agent of chaos rather than the source of steadiness and calm it is normally known for during crises.

OMFG!

What does that mean, Trump won't bail them out?

It is a lack of confidence in global leadership that explains this paradox: an economy that is doing this well and yet widespread conviction that things are about to turn bad. The unemployment rate is near a five-decade low, as is the rate at which people are filing new jobless claims. The American consumer appears strong; this is looking to have been one of the strongest holiday sales seasons in many years.

Appearances can be deceiving!

Surveys of supply managers, which act as an early warning system for slowdowns in business activity, are in strongly positive territory.

The most concrete warning signal is coming from financial markets, but the bond market is generally more closely tethered to economic ups and downs than the stock market, and while it is suggesting slower growth ahead, it is not at recessionary levels.

Most economic and financial indicators are not pointing toward some economic collapse in 2019, but rather to a return to the kind of moderate economic growth that was completely normal from 2010 to 2017.

Oh, we will be returning to Obama's stagflation. Great!

In this story, 2018 has been the aberration — fueled by a commodity boom and the temporary effects of tax cuts. To the degree there is a market correction and adjustment in business sentiment, it is about realizing that we are returning to the old new normal.

OMFG, WTF does that mean!

The OLD NEW NORMAL, huh?

As opposed to the NEW NEW NORMAL?

That, dear readers, is not only poorly written PROPAGANDA but COMPLETE NONSENSE!

There are some rumblings of things that could go wrong in the financial system. Companies that loaded up during the era of ultralow interest rates are facing high debt burdens. Some may find themselves in bankruptcy. Oil prices have fallen enough that it seems it will be a tough 2019 in energy-producing areas, but the biggest worry for 2019 is not so much that any of these disruptions proves so large as to cause a recession. The real fear is that shaky policy allows small shocks to create a broader crisis of confidence.

The boom year of 2018 may be unlikely to repeat itself, but if leaders in the United States and overseas keep their wits about them — far from a guarantee given recent events — there is no reason 2019 needs to be a bad year.....

--more--"

At least we now know who is under the suitIt's the President of the United States, not his Deep State shadow.

It gives one hope even when one feels down in the count and wants to shutdown.

Into the Wild Blue Yonder

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"Santa Claus has come to town, and to your mall, and to your phone, computer, tablet, and e-mail. It’s too soon to fully capture holiday retail sales through the end of the year, but a wave of post-Christmas data puts the industry on track to meet record-breaking expectations. Amazon reported record-breaking sales of its own, and lest you think Amazon tracked only your package and shipping data, think again....."

Alexa tells you it is the be$t Chri$tma$ ‘‘since 1999’’ -- and it is all going to be returned:

"Big data’s gift to retailers won’t be returned" by Sarah Halzack Bloomberg  December 27, 2018

There are a number of problems that retail executives don’t much like discussing, but you’d be hard-pressed to think of one they’re more tight-lipped about than their rate of merchandise returns.

Our post-holiday gifting hangover tends to be a peak time for returns, exacerbating a problem that’s grown more vexing for retailers with the rise of e-commerce: People often order a ton of stuff with the intention of keeping just one or two items, and retailers frequently foot the bill for the return shipping, crimping the profitability of the order. Apparel gifts, in particular, are often coming back through retailers’ doors at this time of year.

Return rates may not seem as if they should be a particularly high priority for retailers, given everything else coming at them right now. Tariffs have been slapped on some imports, with higher levies potentially to come. Mall traffic is endangered. Amazon.com Inc. looms, but tamping down on returns is intertwined with some of retail’s bigger problems and shouldn’t be overlooked. Consider, for example, the role inventory management has played in recent years in sorting winners and losers in the clothing business.

We’ve seen Gap Inc. struggle mightily to work through an issue related to the timing of orders at its namesake chain, while J.C. Penney Co.’s margins have been pinched as it works to unload slow-moving merchandise.

If the merch ain't moving..... greate$t economy ever?

Related:

"Gap Inc. plans to close one of its major New York City stores next month. The clothing retailer, which said in November that it might close hundreds of underperforming Gap stores, will close a three-story location at 680 Fifth Ave. on Jan. 20, the company confirmed in an e-mail. Chief executive Art Peck also said last month that the value of some flagship locations was being scrutinized. Gap, which also operates the Old Navy and Banana Republic chains, has seen sales slide at its namesake brand amid broader struggles for some brick-and-mortar clothing retailers. It’s hoping that shuttering weak stores will boost the bottom line. The Fifth Avenue store is just south of Trump Tower, in an area with high rents that is frequented by tourists — particularly during the holiday season, because of its proximity to Rockefeller Center. Gap’s shares, which rose along with most US stocks on Wednesday, have lost about a quarter of their value in 2018."

That's according to Bloomberg(!), and you want to go get something to eat (I heard it's the “the jewel of the city”)? 

Retailers can do small things to cut down on returns of online orders, but this is a complex issue that was never going to be fully solved by such simple measures.

If retailers could better predict how many e-commerce shipments might be coming back to their warehouses or their brick-and-mortar stores, it would smooth their inventory-management overall, and transportation costs have become burdensome these days, so if, say, an apparel chain can prevent having to pay for a return trip in a truck for a sweater, this surely helps them cope.

Seems $trangely ironic that is what I'll be returning, and how can transportation costs be a burden when the price of gas has been so low and relatively still is?

Related: 

"Things haven’t been this bad for the world’s biggest oil stock since Ronald Reagan became president, but brace yourself, 2019 may not be much better. Exxon Mobil Corp., down 22 percent for the year, is headed for its worst annual performance since 1981, when the United States was in recession and a 20-year crude glut was just beginning. The decline comes as Exxon pursues one of the largest restructurings in its modern history, a seven-year, $200 billion push for oil in South America and natural gas in Mozambique and Papua New Guinea." 

The tiger has become a pu$$ycat!

Against this backdrop, Girish Rishi, the CEO of JDA Software, and Uwe Weiss, the CEO of Blue Yonder, a company recently acquired by JDA, talked about their efforts to use artificial intelligence and machine learning to tackle retail’s big returns challenge. They explained their idea of ‘‘return-conscious pricing,’’ and it’s a powerful example of how, like so many other aspects of retail, e-commerce is necessitating a different way of problem-solving and fresh thinking about shopper behavior.

Well, even if the venture doesn't work out at least the money got into the right hands.

Rishi and Weiss said that when pricing fashion items, retailers often simply ask themselves, ‘‘What price would make this item competitive in the marketplace?,’’ but, in an era when exploding return rates are weighing on profitability, they also should be asking, ‘‘What price would lower the return rate for this item?’’

Blue Yonder is finding that lowering prices tends to lower return rates. There’s some intuitive logic to this, even if it doesn’t seem to make forgood business senseat first blush. If a blouse costs $40 or $45, and it’s not a perfect fit or exactly to your taste, you’re going to want your money back, but maybe, at $32, returning it isn’t worth the hassle.

OMFG!

It still doesn't fit, whether it's $30, $45, $100, $500, or $15.

You know what isn't worth the hassle anymore?

‘‘It’s not very rational for retailers to lower their price,’’ Weiss says. ‘‘But if you lower the price, you get into a different price category or cluster. And getting into the cluster means you reduce the likelihood of a return, which gives you greater profitability.’’

Think of it as a fire $ale, and don't stay out in the cold for long.

So which "clu$ter" are you in?

Optoro, a company that helps retailers manage returns, estimates that some $94 billion worth of merchandise will besent back during the holiday season. By using their own data more wisely, store owners and chains can help ensure next year’s reject batch isn’t quite as much of a deluge.

They are already talking about next year!

--more--"

Looks like the record-breaking Chri$tma$ is going to get returned, huh?

"Federal minimum wage fell by 14 cents this year, when adjusted for inflation" by Christopher Ingraham Washington Post  December 27, 2018

A problem for workers at the low end of the wage scale because inflation steadily gnaws away at the value of the minimum wage as time passes.

We are told the Federal Reserve is on that, that their main mission is to keep inflation in check  etc, etc. It's behind everything they do, and why everything is such a mess.

While that’s bad news for low-end workers, it’s good news for the companies that employ them: An hour of minimum wage labor now costs less, relative to the price of everything else, than it did back in 2009. Employers get to decide what to do with that $1.06 in savings. They could pass it on to consumers, for instance, or they could simply pocket it as profit for themselves and their shareholders. Given that corporate profits are near record levels, it’s safe to assume that there’s a considerable amount of the latter going on.

OMFG!!!

The cavalier attitude in describing the wealthy looting the minimum wage increases tells you all you need to know about my pre$$. This article just happens to be part of the WaComPo pile.

You know, freedom costs a buck-o-five and that is a pretty good return on it.

There’s been a steady decline in the inflation-adjusted value of the wage since about 1968, but that’s not because voters are demanding a stingy minimum: They’ve actually been clamoring for higher minimum wages for quite some time, but policymakers aren’t responding to public demand. In some cases, lawmakers are working to keep the minimum wage where it is by slow-walking voter-initiated minimum-wage hikes or overturning them completely.

And they wonder why we have populi$t fury?

Recent research shows that the reason elected officials are dragging their feet on popular policies like the minimum wage is that they pay a lot more attention to the needs and desires of business groups than they do to regular voters. Those groups tend to oppose minimum wage increases because they eat into profit margins.

OMFG! 

That's not news; it's just a shock to see it in print.

Corporate pushback aside, the latest research on the minimum wage shows that there’s little reason for policymakers to fear raising it. The best available data suggest that minimum-wage hikes increase pay for workers at the bottom of the income spectrum but otherwise have little effect on overall employment.

Or so we are told when the evidence indicates the exact opposite.

--more--"

You flip the page and they are still talking about it:

"For minimum-wage workers, the bump is a cause for celebration, but some business owners are stressed as they try to figure out how to adjust to the higher labor costs....."

I was just told it has no effe..... arrrggghhhhh!

"The richest people on Earth lost $511 billion this year after record first-half gains were obliterated by a succession of bruising market sell-offs. Global trade tensions and worries about a US recession dragged markets lower at year’s end, leaving the 500 people on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index with a combined net worth of $4.7 trillion as of Friday’s close. It’s only the second annual decline for the daily wealth index since its 2012 debut, and represents a sharp about-turn from the start of the year, when bullish investors helped propel the fortunes of the richest to a record $5.6 trillion. Even Jeff Bezos, who recorded the biggest gain for 2018, wasn’t spared the volatility. His fortune peaked at $168 billion in September, a $69 billion gain. It later tumbled $53 billion to leave him with $115 billion at year’s end. The Amazon.com founder had a better year than Mark Zuckerberg, who recorded the biggest loss since January, dropping $23 billion as Facebook Inc. careened from crisis to crisis. Overall, the 173 US billionaires on the list — the largest cohort — lost 5.9 percent from their fortunes to leave them with $1.9 trillion."

Oh, poor, poor, Bezos and Zuck!! 

How will they ever $urvive?!

By ringing a bell?


"Donations to the Salvation Army’s $3.5 million holiday drive might be lagging, but there is still some sparkle in the famous red kettles. Diamond rings, wedding bands, and other jewelry have been quietly slipped into red kettles in Boston, Sturbridge, Uxbridge, and West Bridgewater. It’s the fifth straight year shoppers have parted with precious jewelry for the holiday campaign, which ends on Christmas Eve. The extra cash will help boost the fortunes of the non-profit that serves people in need. Cash donations to the Red Kettle Holiday Campaign are down nearly 20 percent from 2017 in half the locations across Massachusetts, the agency said last week......"

This while corporate and wealthy elite fortunes have rose by about the same amount, wow -- and they pilfered your minimum wage increase, too!

You can't blame me; I was guilted in to giving by the tolling of the bell (plus I like them better than government. They fill the gaps without the corruption).

"New Orleans’ mayor says the city deserves to get a bigger percentage of the $166 million collected each year from a 15 percent surcharge on hotel rooms. Mayor LaToya Cantrell says the city of Mardi Gras fame receives barely more than 1 in 10 of each dollar collected from the taxes and fees visitors pay. The Southern tourist destination is grappling with longstanding infrastructure challenges, including potholes, drainage problems and sporadic drinking water issues. Winning a bigger slice of the pie could be a tall political order for the new mayor — much of the money is earmarked for the Superdome and other state-owned institutions."

You want the Saints to have a nice home, right?

That gets us back to the front page as the rest of the bu$ine$$ section is more of the $ame old slip that gets under my skin and  besides, there is nothing to get $toked about.

"Stocks Bounce Back From Edge of Bear Market" by Emily Flitter New York Times   December 27, 2018

NEW YORK — Throughout Wall Street’s December meltdown, analysts have been saying that markets were plunging despite plenty of evidence the US economy remains strong and corporate profit growth is healthy.

That argument finally found listeners on Wednesday, when early reports of a strong holiday-shopping season helped lift the S&P 500 by nearly 5 percent, its best day since 2009. The Nasdaq added 5.8 percent, and the Dow Jones industrial average rose just under 5 percent. That jump, of 1,086.25 points, represented the Dow’s best single-session gain ever.

Markets were stuttering Wednesday morning but became more sure-footed after White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett assured reporters that Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell’s job is ‘‘100 percent safe.’’

Why not just make him president then? 

That is obviously the most powerful position in this country, not the President of the United States.

Hassett, in an appearance on Fox Business Network, also said President Trump ‘‘is very happy’’ with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

That's the kiss of death from this guy.

Trump’s criticism of the Fed and Powell hasshaken Wall Street as it weathers its worst December in history, but to some traders, the gains finally made sense.

Was part of his gift to the American people.

Data from Mastercard showed that US holiday sales grew at the fastest pace in six years, and investors flocked to the retail sector. Amazon called its season “record-breaking” without offering details.

It's all going to be returned from out of the wild Blue Yonder!

Oil prices, too, were on the move after Russia’s energy minister told a Russian newspaper the country would benefit from continuing to cooperate with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries on regulating production.

Now you know who is controlling the supply of oil, and it puts a different look to the whole Khashoggi thing and Putin-MbS high five in Argentina, 'eh?

Makes one wonder if anyone was killed at all, and the CIA being so sure of it doesn't help convince me.

Technology stocks rebounded, too. Investors have had plenty of cause for concern. A slowing global economy could hurt sales, tensions are rising with China on manufacturing of devices, and privacy concerns could bring more regulation.

The rally doesn’t mean this year’s precipitous decline is over. Signs of economic health that encouraged the buying are doing little to address one of investors’ primary concerns. They worry the Federal Reserve’s decision to continue raising interest rates, even at a slightly slower pace, will hurt the economy and profits.

Which is who our public officials are running interference for!

“The Fed is making amonumental mistake,” said Barry Bannister, head of institutional equity strategy at Stifel. “They do not realize how long and by how much they’ve tightened already, and until they back off the market’s going to have a very weak floor under it.”

Agrees with Trump!

It helped matters Wednesday that Trump refrained from offering new criticism of the Fed. In the days before Christmas, he railed against the central bank and vowed to keep the government shut down for an extended period.

For the first trading session in many days, Trump posted just one tweet: about his trip to Iraq.....

That was on page A2, and it's all about Iran despite the warnings from Russia (let's not forget the Ukraine, either).

Not looking as goodgift as I thought, sob, after he was on the right track (how do you sing I've been working on the railroad in Korean?).

--more--"

Turns out the Iraqis also demand US withdrawal, but the Globe decided to post pictures instead before Trump returns his attention to the shutdown:

"Trump vowed to hold the line, telling reporters as he flew to Iraq that he’ll do ‘‘whatever it takes’’ to get money for border security. He declined to say how much he would accept in a deal to end the shutdown, stressing the need for border security....."

What about all the dead kids?

The pre$$ also asked him about his draft status and how he got Jewish doctors to give him as many deferrals as Vice.

The Democrats did a Russia in Alabama and no one gives a hoot?

Hoffman the billionaire, huh?

"‘It’s Over’: Iran’s economic turmoil ravages its middle class" by Thomas Erdbrink   December 27, 2018

TEHRAN — Before their “downfall,” as they call it, the Taymouris were the model middle-class Iranian family, prosperous college-educated business owners who made enough money to save for a down payment on their own home. Now, they are a model for a different sort: the millions of middle-class Iranians who almost overnight have seen their lives shrink, dragged down by economic forces beyond their control.

It behooves me to point out that the Iranian people are so like the American people!

The fact is, we would be friends were it not for the Zionist vise grip over the U.S. government.

Iran’s economy is in a shambles, savaged by years of mismanagement and renewed economic sanctions. The government has expanded the money supply by more than 30 percent annually for more than a decade, using the extra cash to cover budget deficits and other expenses. In the United States, by comparison, a broad measure of the money supply has increased by an annual average of 6.4 percent over the past decade, according to the Federal Reserve.

So the Iranians did the same thing, only multiplied by five (and remember, they don't control the world's reserve currency like the Fed leech that gets a piece of the action for every transaction. That's the reason that undergirds all the wars).

As a result of Iran’s rapid expansion of the money supply, said Djavad Salehi-Isfahani, a professor of economics at Virginia Tech University, inflation has exploded and by official figures is now running at an annual rate of 35 percent compared with below 10 percent a year ago.

I've gotten mixed me$$ages regarding that here, and the rapid expansion of the money supply was what saved the U.S. $y$tem in 2008 so WTF?

President Trump’s decision to leave the nuclear deal, known formally as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, and to reimpose harsh economic sanctions prompted the other major economic disaster to befall Iran: a collapse in its currency, Salehi-Isfahani said. The rial lost about 70 percent against the dollar before strengthening recently, but its rates are still fluctuating heavily.

“The withdrawal busted the expectations for an economic boom created by the JCPOA and Iran’s return to the global economy, which was expected to boost oil exports and foreign investment,” he said. “The reversal caused people to convert their rials into other assets, mainly dollars and gold.”

By raising the cost of imports, the currency collapse has reinforced the inflationary surge and decimated small businesses that, like the Taymouris’, rely on imported goods.....

Aren't those the same complaints Trump gets from the corporations and $pecial intere$ts?

--more--"

Ready for your new assignment in Africa?

"Tunisia’s journalists union announced a campaign of protests, possibly leading to a general strike, after a photographer set himself ablaze in a reminder of the spark that ignited the Arab Spring uprisings in late 2010. Abdel-Razaq Zarqi set himself on fire Monday in the restive Kasserine region, in an act of protest that triggered clashes between security forces and demonstrators, local media reported. The impoverished area has been the site of frequent militant attacks, often targeting security forces, and anti-government demonstrations. Tunisia had been hailed as the Arab Spring uprising’s most significant success story. While democracy has flourished in the nation, it has been roiled by political infighting, repeated labor strikes, and militant attacks that have battered the vital tourism sector. That has hindered successive governments from reviving the economy, attracting foreign investment, or making a significant dent in the core issues that led to the self-immolation of a fruit vendor that ignited the Arab Spring revolts eight years ago."

I'm tired of the self-adulating, self-aggrandizing, self-congratulatory elitism, and it's funny how the Arab Spring only benefited the unexpected (tells you who was really behind the protests), while the cause of the blaze was the fast-burning Thai pot the reporter was smoking (better get a lawyer).

Anybody hungry for pizza?

Sean Hannity’s ratings fall since the midterms 

I've stopped watching cable and network news, period, and why is the FBI promoting Eastwood's new movie?

Up, Up, and Away

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See: Into the Wild Blue Yonder

"Stocks rise as Wall Street’s roller coaster rolls on" by Emily Flitter New York Times  December 28, 2018

NEW YORK — Wall Street’s roller-coaster ride extended into Thursday, with stocks staging a late-day recovery as investors turned their attention to fresh data about the US economy.

There were only a few new clues about the economy’s health, and they sent mixed signals.

I'm sick of getting lied to, I mean, getting mixed me$$ages from my corporate pre$$.

Related(?): 

"Filings for unemployment benefits fell last week to the lowest since September, returning to hover near an almost five-decade low and signaling the labor market remains tight after what some economists saw as possible cooling signs...... Filings for unemployment benefits decreased for the third time in four weeks, hovering near an almost five-decade low that reflects a robust job market, Labor Department figures showed Thursday."

At lea$t the Fed's job is safe.

Concerns about the White House’s response to Wall Street’s decline grew last week as President Trump used Twitter to vent his frustration over the Fed’s decision to keep raising interest rates and sought guidance from aides about whether he could fire Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chairman. Despite the president’s frustrations, a number of White House officials have tried to reassure investors that Powell’s job is safe.

Traders have had their own concerns with Powell, as well. The partial shutdown of the federal government could also begin to wear on investors as they are forced to operate without official data that could help answer lingering questions about the health of the US economy. On Thursday, for instance, a Census Bureau report on new home sales was delayed because of the shutdown.

PFFFT! 

What would the shutdown have to do with home sales?

Related: 

"In the woodsy back corner of the 77-acre Hanover Mall, the new owners of the long-struggling shopping center see an opportunity to change its fortunes. It’s not the movie theater that sits there now, or another big box store. It’s housing. If it wins town approval, PREP Property Group, an Ohio-based company that bought the mall in 2016, would sell the land to a housing developer and use the proceeds to blow up the half-century-old indoor mall and turn it into an outdoor-oriented “lifestyle center,” like many of its newer competitors, with hundreds of customers in those apartments, just steps away. “When I heard about their plans, it was like a revelation,” said Ed Callahan, who has managed the Hanover Mall through years of foreclosure, bank ownership, and slumping sales. “We really lucked out with a new owner that saw this place as an opportunity.” It’s the sort of opportunity mall owners are seeing all over Greater Boston these days, and it’s the latest sign of the fast-changing landscape for brick-and-mortar retail......"

Even with mortgage rates being down?

Must be because it is hard for the state to make even limited changes (regarding $ome things, anyway).

Investors got some data to digest Thursday, and it was not encouraging.

WHAT?!!!!

A report on consumer confidence by the Conference Board, a business group, showed Americans growing more pessimistic about economic conditions.

Related:

"US consumer confidence tumbled this month as Americans began to worry that economic growth will moderate next year, but consumer spirits are still high by historical standards....." 

WTF are they talking about?!!!

In China, officials said industrial profits had declined in November for the first time in three years, a reminder that the growth of the nation’s economy, the world’s second-largest, continues to slow.....

They also talked to a Mr. David Donabedian, the chief investment officer for CIBC Private Wealth Management in Atlanta, and a Mr. Howard Silverblatt, a senior index analyst for S&P Dow Jones Indices who tracks and catalogs market performance.

--more--" 

"Blip or correction? Tech sector declines leave many investors wondering" by Hamza Shaban The Washington Post  December 27, 2018

Facebook is down 38 percent from its peak. Netflix is down 40 percent. Apple slipped 33 percent, and Amazon 28 percent. Alphabet, owner of Google, is down 19 percent.

The nation’s top-performing tech companies — known colloquially as the FAANGs (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google) — have led the sharp US market sell-off over the past few months, which has unnerved most people who own stocks. It’s a far cry from last summer, when the question was whether Apple or Amazon would be the first US company to be valued at more than $1 trillion.

Now the question facing the tech industry — and the millions of ordinary investors with disproportionate exposure to tech — is whether the decline represents a healthy correction after years of gains or more fundamental changes that could limit the sector’s upside in the years to come.

Some analysts argue that the tech sector is being hit by some of the same factors pushing down stocks overall; however, the biggest tech companies are also facing new, more enduring doubts about their future— such as whether they’ll be able to use personal data as profitably as they have, whether they’re getting too big, and whether consumers are growing less attached to their platforms.

Yup, and me gone soon, too. I'm sick of agenda-pushing $pew passing itself off as newz!

The implications are significant.....

Once again they turn to a Mr. Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst with S&P Dow Jones Indices before asking the opinion of David Kass, a finance professor at the University of Maryland.

--more--"

The FAANGs are out for Facebook.

UPDATE: Stocks finish week by sliding once again

Time to get some food and watch some TV (maybe Musk can help you there):

"Chain restaurants had a tough year, and 2019 looks worse" by Leslie Patton Bloomberg News  December 28, 2018

It’s not going to get much easier for the restaurant industry.

After facing stagnant sales and weak customer traffic in 2018, US restaurants will encounter more headwinds next year, including rising food and wage costs, that may stall profit and hinder efforts to jump-start growth.

Even the industry stalwarts are dealing with such issues in a fiercely competitive and increasingly crowded field. Starbucks Corp. is closing some US locations amid oversaturation worries. McDonald’s Corp., the world’s largest restaurant company, has been tweaking its value offering to stay relevant in the price wars and expanding delivery with Uber Eats to spur sales.

It wasn’t all doom and gloom this year. Amid a stock market rout, restaurant stocks fared better than the broader market, bolstered by a couple of standouts like Domino’s Pizza Inc. and Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc.

They survived the corporate sabotage over their rejection of GMOs, 'eh? 

Or did they capitulate?

Chipotle, while far from reclaiming its position as a Wall Street darling, is beginning to recover following a string of food-safety issues that damaged the brand.

Here’s a look at issues — both obstacles and opportunities — facing the restaurant industry in 2019.....

I've had enough (puke).

--more--"

"Massive media company disputes could keep millions of TV viewers from watching football playoffs" by Brian Fung Washington Post  December 28, 2018

Sports fans nationwide may soon find themselves cut off from some of the most anticipated televised football games of the year as massive media and television companies go to war with one another over the programming fees required to air those matches.

Why must my altrui$tic pre$$ frame every issue in the context of war, and do the propagandists, 'er, reporters even know they are doing it or have they self-internalized the values of their masters?

Beginning next week, TV customers on Verizon FiOS and Charter’s Spectrum service could be hit by widespread channel blackouts after the companies’ contracts with major programming giants expire.

Verizon’s 4.5 million TV customers could lose access to ESPN, Freeform, and the Disney Channel and other networks belonging to Disney, as well as ABC affiliates based in Philadelphia and New York, on Dec. 31. Meanwhile, some 6 million Spectrum viewers could miss out on programming from Tribune Media in as many as two dozen markets across the country starting Jan. 1.

The disputes highlight how rising media consolidation in America, along with the pressures brought by cord-cutting, have increasingly turned contract-renewal talks into a high-stakes, winner-take-all affair. As more content has come under the ownership umbrella of a shrinking handful of powerful firms— and with many Americans restricted to just a few cable options— companies now undergo bruising, monthslong fights over content pricing and terms. In November, HBO went offline for Dish Network customers for the first time in the premium channel’s history; the spat remains unresolved.

The contract fight between Verizon and Disney spilled out into the public this week, with both companies sending messages to customers notifying them who will be to blame if a new deal isn’t signed.

Comcast also now offering Amazon Prime, and it's led to higher TV bills.

Disney didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment, but the company is now running ads targeting FiOS customers, urging them to call Verizon ‘‘to keep the networks you are paying for!’’ The ad features logos for key channels and events that could go dark, including the Disney Channel and the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s Rose Bowl game. ABC and ESPN are also expected to carry one of the National Football League’s wild-card playoff games and the Pro Bowl.

Time to go one a cruise:

"A middle-aged male former labor analyst at Disney Cruise Line claims his younger female manager created a hostile work environment by bullying him about his age, bragging about sleeping with married men in the office, and passing him over for promotions, according to a federal lawsuit, a scenario that legal experts say is rare, given the genders of the employee and supervisor. Disney Cruise Line said in a statement that the claims are without merit and ‘‘we will respond to them in court.’’

Been a real roller coaster, huh?

SET-HUT!

NFL playoffs could also become harder to access for Spectrum customers as a result of its dispute with Tribune, according to a company spokesman, because Tribune operates CBS, Fox, and NBC affiliates in various markets.

‘‘We want football fans in our markets to be able to watch these games and root for their favorite teams — we want to reach an agreement with Spectrum,’’ said Gary Weitman, Tribune’s senior vice president for corporate relations.

Despite the looming headache for pay-TV subscribers, those with digital TV antennas could still get around a blackout by tuning into broadcast networks directly.....

HUH?

--more--"

Related:

"The Justice Department urged a federal appeals court Thursday to reconsider AT&T’s $85 billion acquisition of Time Warner, arguing that the judge who approved the deal in June misunderstood fundamental economic principles and ignored how AT&T could unfairly extract higher fees from rivals by threatening to black out popular TV channels....."

At lea$t somebody is getting a pay raise:

"Legislative leaders to collect 3 pay bumps in 2019" by Matt Stout Globe Staff  December 28, 2018

State legislative leaders stand to collect not one, not two, but three different pay raises in January thanks to a humming economy and a controversial state law, promising to swell some lawmakers’ paychecks by nearly $12,000 just two years after theyawarded themselves a pay hike.

All of the state’s 200 senators and representatives are in line for a $3,700 increase to their base salary and a separate 8.3 percent hike to their office expense accounts, which currently range between $15,000 and $20,000, depending on how far they live from the State House.

Are you flipping kidding? 

This is what they wrote into their own pay raise law, huh?

When they’re sworn in Wednesday, House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo, Senate President Karen E. Spilka — both already among the highest-paid legislative leaders in the countryand dozens of their top deputies will also get a third increase— an 8.3 percent raise to their legislative stipends, the lucrative add-ons the Legislature affords to its highest-ranking officials and committee leaders, and the good economic tidings don’t stop with the Legislature. Governor Charlie Baker is entitled to take home an additional $21,000 on top of his $250,000 pay package, though aides say the Republican doesn’t intend to take the extra pay. Other constitutional officers could score increases of up to nearly $15,000.

I'll get to the governor later, just remember that they gave themselves Christmas bonuses with the pay hike law, and remember all this when the economy tanks and the budget cuts come in about four months.

The windfall for elected officials is, in part, a confluence of two different pay adjustments — one guaranteed by the Massachusetts Constitution, the other newly baked into state law— each designed to tether the pay of the state’s most powerful leaders to changes in the state’s wage levels every two years.

Windfall is unexpected good fortune, and the newly baked law(?) wasn't riddled with loopholes like everything else they pass? 

The fawning sycophant that is called a reporter must not have wanted to get state leaders mad!

The first, a constitutional amendment, ties lawmakers’ base pay to household median income, but gives the governor leeway to set the exact amount of the change. In a letter to state Treasurer Deborah B. Goldberg on Thursday, Baker ordered a 5.9 percent increase for legislators, pushing their base salary from $62,550 to $66,250.

For the people who say that's not much for public $ervice, we need to pay to get good people, where are they? That pay is already more than what 75% of what the citizens of this state make.

We would all be better off without the looters of Beacon Hill and Washington D.C.

The second trigger is more complicated. In ramming an $18 million pay raise package into law in early 2017, lawmakers boosted their own compensation by increasing the stipends they could receive, while also hiking the pay of an array of state officials.

I $uppo$e he means overriding Baker's veto, and that certain; looks like a $elf-$erving $hell game of blame.

Oh, yeah, and we know who got f***ed, too.

The Legislature also established a separate process, similar to the mechanism in the constitutional amendment, that ties the salaries of the six constitutional officers and lawmakers’ additional pay to changes in state wages over the previous two years.

That first biennial change under the legislation comes due next week, but while the pay raise package specified what type of federal data on which to base the adjustment, its vague wording did not task a certain office or official with actually determining it.

WTF?!!!

Goldberg’soffice, which handles legislative pay, said Thursday that “by default” it would take on the duty, and determined those pay scales would rise by 8.3 percent in 2019. Chandra Allard, Goldberg’s deputy chief of staff, said the office would apply it to both legislative stipends and expenses, as well as Goldberg’s own salary, which will jump to nearly $190,000.

OMFG!

Allard said the treasurer’s office would share the recommended increase with the other constitutional officers as well, though it will ultimately be up to them whether to accept it.

For the Legislature, the move promises an array of increases.

DeLeo, for example, made $157,500 last year, thanks to his base salary, an $80,000 stipend, and $15,000 in office expenses. After the hikes go into effect, his total compensation will balloon to $169,100 — a jump of $11,600. That same pay package will also welcome Spilka when she starts her first full term as the Senate leader.

Spilka on Thursday defended the increases, noting that the process for meting them out has been in place since early 2017.

Yeah, a proce$$ set up by YOU!

“This law, passed two years ago, created a transparent and standardized method to adjust pay and stipends for constitutional officers and legislators,” Spilka said. “We expect these adjustments to be made, in accordance with the law, through normal payroll mechanisms beginning in the new year.”

How bold of her!

That would be a first for Ma$$achu$etts, too! As the Globe has reported, our public records law is the worst in the nation, everything behind closed doors and secret (what is known as democracy 'roun' h're) with the Speaker dictating how you vote or you lose your chairmanship and parking place.

State Senate President Karen E. Spilka is among the leaders in the state Legislature who will see three pay increases in 2019.
State Senate President Karen E. Spilka is among the leaders in the state Legislature who will see three pay increases in 2019 (Lane Turner/Globe Staff/File).

That's what is known as a $hit-eating grin!

Meanwhile, Stan has been relegated to public access TV appearances.

A spokeswoman for DeLeo did not respond to questions Thursday about the pay increases.

DeLeo did it himself:

In this Monday, Aug. 1, 2016, photo, Massachusetts House Speaker Robert DeLeo speaks at a bill signing ceremony at the Statehouse, in Boston. Lawmakers in Massachusetts and other Democratic-leaning states are considering ways to flex their muscles in response to the policies of President Donald Trump. House Democrats have scheduled an unusual caucus for Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2017, at the Statehouse to discuss a response to "recent actions" by the Trump administration. DeLeo acknowledges that lawmakers have limited power to override presidential directives. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)
Massachusetts House Speaker Robert DeLeo spoke at a bill signing ceremony at the Statehouse, in Boston (Elise Amendola/Associated Press/File 2016). 

It's the same kind of grin!

Related:

"The Massachusetts Senate is teeing up a bill for Thursday designed to extend by months potentially the unemployment benefits for 1,250 workers locked out by National Grid, marking another foray by the Legislature into the heated labor dispute, but the legislation would differ from a bill the House passed this month, albeit with an admitted “error,” underlining a divide between the two chambers in how to respond to workers’ pleas for help....." 

The language was a “drafting error,” and the moratorium has been lifted.

Yeah, the Grid guys have been locked out since June (during which the Colombia gas explosion occurred) and the the Looti$lature still can't get unemployment benefits to them because of an "error" in what they wrote.

How about next time you make an error and rescind this God-awful money grab, you greedy $cum?

Baker — whose veto of the pay raise bill was overridden in 2017 — has said he intends to take the full $250,000 pay package afforded to him under the law in his second term, which includes a $65,000 housing stipend. His salary is currently $151,000. Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito, who makes $122,000 now, also plans to take her statutorily set $165,000 salary, but both said Thursday that they would not take any additional pay generated by the biennial adjustment tied to state wage levels. For Baker, that could have meant another $20,800, and Polito, an additional $13,700 in annual pay.

RelatedBaker giving Cabinet, agency heads pay raises

Yeah, a nice 5.5 percent rai$e on a Friday afternoon in between Christmas and New Years when the news cycle and public attention span is at its lowest point of the entire year. 

You win reelection around here, you become a money-grubbing $lea$eball (with deep apologies to grubs for use of the term).

Also seeTop Baker aide Jay Ash lands job as CEO of powerful business group

He shouldn't have left!

The state auditor and secretary of state, who under the law can make up to $165,000, would also be in line for $13,700 more through the 8.3 percent increase. Similar to the treasurer, the $175,000 salary afforded to the attorney general would also rise to more than $190,000 — a $14,560 difference.

When lawmakers passed the pay raise package in 2017, only Auditor Suzanne M. Bump took the full pay raise among the state’s six constitutional officers, and each would have to decide whether to accept the new pay as well.

Maybe $he can conduct an audit on her$elf.

Goldberg, for example, declined the initial raise to $175,000 in 2017, but Allard said she would take that salary, and the additional adjustment, when she begins her second term in January.

Why not? 

Everyone else is feeding at the taxpayer trough!

A spokeswoman for Attorney General Maura T. Healey said the Charlestown Democrat will also accept the increase to $190,000 given she “declined to take the midterm raise two years ago.”

Oh, if only women ran government, 'eh?

Efforts to reach aides to Bump and Secretary of State William F. Galvin were not successful Thursday night.

The 2017 pay raise legislation also increased the salaries for the state’s judges and a slew of other officials, from court clerks and assistant clerks to the Suffolk County register of deeds, but it did not bake in biennial adjustments for them as it did for the constitutional officers and legislators.....

At lea$t you now know what the taxes are for.

--more--"

That's today's big story, and it's getting to be tar and feather time (looks like he was silenced instead, and the Globe isn't asking any questions).

Maybe they can hide from the long arm of the law as they make themselves at home in the barbershop to escape the lynching they would get in China. Maybe some protection will even be provided to keep them from being beaten, although they are the least likely to go to jail.

Btw, whatever happened to the sexual harassment scandal up on the Hill?

Yeah, it's ‘‘almost as if forensics and DNA has let us down,’’ even though we are living through a defining moment in the fight for gender equality,” and you need a bucket-loader to through the $hit in Washington D.C.

"UAE reopens embassy in Syrian capital closed in 2011" Associated Press  December 28, 2018

BEIRUT — The United Arab Emirates reopened its embassy in Syria’s capital on Thursday for the first time in seven years, a reflection of improved relations between President Bashar Assad and some of his Arab foes as the war winds down.

Will someone please tell that to the Deep State and it's mouthpiece media?

On Thursday afternoon, United Arab Emirates charge d’affaires Abdul-Hakim Naimi visited the embassy and witnessed his country’s flag being raised again on the compound in central Damascus.

The move provides a major boost to Assad, whose forces have won a series of military victories in recent years with the help of Russia and Iran. Sudan’s president, Omar Bashir, visited Damascus earlier this month, becoming the first Arab head of state to visit Syria since the start of the war.

He's currently suffering a destabilization campaign at home; however, the military is still backing him.

Did you know that Sudan was one of the world's top supporters of Palestinians?

The United Arab Emirates’ Foreign Ministry said in a statement that ‘‘the step confirms that the UAE government is keen to restore relations between the two brotherly countries back to normal.’’ It added that the move is ‘‘to activate the Arab role in supporting Syria’s independence, sovereignty, unity and safety and prevent the dangers of regional intervention in Syria’s Arab affairs.’’

PFFFT!

This comes from one the two primary countries that funded and filled with manpower the terrorist groups that attempted regime change.

What it tells you is that the world is moving away from the neocon war plan and ignoring the EUSraeli Empire.

The United Arab Emirates was a supporter of the Syrian opposition, which is now largely confined to the northern Idlib province after losing its strongholds elsewhere. Some opposition fighters have joined Turkey for an expected assault on Kurdish forces in northeastern Syria.

The United Arab Emirates and other Gulf Arab supporters of the Syrian opposition view Turkey with suspicion because of its embrace of regional Islamists.

In October, Assad told a little-known Kuwaiti newspaper that Syria had reached a ‘‘major understanding’’ with Arab states after years of hostility. He did not name the Arab countries in the interview, which was his first with a Gulf paper since the war erupted, but said Arab and Western delegations had begun visiting Syria to prepare for the reopening of diplomatic and other missions.

The interview came on the heels of a surprisingly warm meeting between the Syrian foreign minister and his Bahraini counterpart on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September. The meeting turned heads because it featured hugs between the two ministers.

Very important because the U.S. Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain. That's the force that patrols the Persian Gulf.

What if they ask us to leave?

The encounter raised questions about whether the Gulf countries, most of them sworn enemies of Assad ally Iran, are reconsidering their relations with Syria.....

Does that include Saudi Arabia?

--more--"

Looks like we may be forced (part of the plan?) to get out of Iraq, too! 

That's what makes the AmeriKan Empire different from all others. We don't stay where we are not wanted (or so I've been taught and told). 

Thank you, Superman!

Also seePalestinian families depend on humanity

Good to see the Globe finally recognizing them.

Related:

"They’d met for a lunch earlier that fall. The subject of politics had never come up before, but it sure did that day. It emerged that the older woman thought Donald Trump was terrific: smart and ethical and just what this country needed. She talked about Hillary Clinton’s e-mails and Benghazi and the “antics” of the Clinton Foundation. The younger woman was appalled. They argued in the restaurant, tried to change the subject, kept returning to the argument. Their hug in the parking lot was strained....."

Yes, what is one to do in the era of Trump?

Yeah, if only women were running the planet:

"Michelle Obama, who’s touring the country to promote her autobiography, was named the most admired woman by Americans in a Gallup poll released Thursday. It’s the first time in 17 years that Hillary Clinton didn’t top the list....." 

Forget that 2020 run.

"Indonesia raises alert level as volcanic eruptions intensify" by Stanley Widianto and Simon Denyer Washington Post  December 28, 2018

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesia raised its alert level, widened an exclusion zone, and rerouted flights on Thursday, as eruptions again intensified from an island volcano that triggered a deadly tsunami at the weekend.

A landslide that followed a large eruption of Anak Krakatau on Saturday night sent waves between 6 and 10 feet high crashing into fishing villages and beach resorts on the densely populated islands of Java and Sumatra, killing at least 430 people, but the volcano is still erupting and is almost obscured by huge clouds of ash and lava billowing into the air. Meanwhile, heavy rain and stormy seas have raised fears that the volcano’s slopes could collapse again, potentially triggering a second tsunami.

They are on ‘‘red alert’’ for it, and ‘‘people are advised to keep calm and stay alert.’’

Haven't they been through enough already?

Rain is also hampering search and rescue efforts, while blocked and clogged roads forced search and rescue teams to use helicopters to assess damage, search for bodies, and evacuate people around the village of Sumur near the southwestern tip of Java.

‘‘Our main obstacle is with the weather, but the operation is still underway,’’ said Yusuf Latif, spokesman for Indonesia’s National Search and Rescue Agency. ‘‘We got through to areas that were previously deemed isolated, like the Sumur village and some areas on the west coast of Banten province.’’

The seawaters have left behind a coastline littered with the debris of crushed homes, wrecked vehicles, and fallen trees. They also left dozens of turtles stranded on land, with volunteers helping them back out to sea, Reuters reported.

The tsunami was the third major natural disaster to hit Indonesia this year, after an earthquake killed more than 500 people on the island of Lombok in August and an earthquake and tsunami killed more than 2,200 on Sulawesi in September. It also evoked painful memories of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that struck on Dec. 26, 2004, killing more than 220,000 people in a dozen countries. More than half the fatalities were in Indonesia.....

There was also the recent plane crash.

--more--"

I couldn't stay silent about Indonesia anymore.

Related:

"The fall got colder gradually, scientists said. September was warmer than usual, October temperatures were around average, and November was colder than usual. Extreme rainfall could be a result of climate change, said Don McCasland, Blue Hill Observatory's program director, but the causation is difficult....." 

For some reason, the Globe decide to stay silent on that

I think we all know why; it conflicts with the agenda-pushing narrative.

"A total lunar eclipse in January will showcase the ‘super blood wolf moon’" by Katie Camero Globe Correspondent  December 27, 2018

Astronomy fanatics are in for a treat Jan. 20, when Earth will pass between the sun and full moon to create a total lunar eclipse that will turn the moon’s silvery shine into a blood-red glow.

The perfect celestial alignment will be enhanced by the fact that it coincides with a “supermoon,” which means it will look bigger and brighter than usual. This happens just a few times a year, when the moon comes closest to the earth.

Together, the events will create a phenomenon known as the “super blood wolf moon” — a nod to a Native American term for full moons in January.

Some tribes named full moons based on the behavior of the plants, animals, or weather during that month. The “wolf” moon was named after the wolves that would howl out of hunger in the dead of winter.

The super blood wolf moon will appear in the night sky on the evening of Jan. 20 and last approximately 62 minutes, according to NASA.....

They have been shut down, and this is a BAD SIGN!

--more--"

The prophecy says the official beginning of World War III will be January 21st.

Do they dare assassinate the president two years to the day of his inauguration?

It's just the sort of mind-f*** thing the string-pulling globe-kickers would do to fuck with us all.

May God protect the President of the United States.

UPDATE:

"In a year of conflict and war, it was a moment of conciliation. There never has been a year quite like 1968, with war raging in Southeast Asia and in the streets of America; with assassinations depriving the nation of two inspiring leaders; with a presidential campaign catapulting to power a man who vowed to “bring us together’’ even as his election drove Americans apart......"

That time might as well be on the dark side of the moon.

Slow Saturday Special: Out of Oxygen

$
0
0
 The Ma$$achuSetts Looti$lature stole it all (full of hot air, too).

The above the fold front-page feature should be enough to take the air out of you:

"Baker signs long-awaited Airbnb bill, opening new era for industry" by Matt Stout Globe Staff  December 28, 2018

Governor Charlie Baker on Friday signed first-of-its-kind legislation to tax and regulate the short-term housing rental market in Massachusetts, capping years of debate over how to navigate an industry that has exploded through companies like Airbnb.

Yup, you get $omething going and they gotta get their cut!

The new rules will take effect July 1 and could transform a market that spans the state, from Cape Cod summer homes to Boston apartment buildings to Western Massachusetts vacation retreats.

Or RUIN IT!

The bill requires every rental host to register with the state, mandates they carry insurance, and opens the potential for local taxes on top of a new state levy. A chief negotiator for the House said the goal is to register every short-term rental in the state by September, and local officials, including in Boston, say the new law will help buttress their own efforts to regulate the booming market, but before Baker’s ink could dry, the law drew a sharp rebuke from Airbnb, which called it “flawed” and unnecessarily complex. Advocates who have closely followed the process — including Airbnb’s decision to sue in federal court to overturn Boston’s municipal regulations — warn a lawsuit against the state could also follow.

I sure as hell hope $o.

“Our administration has long supported leveling the playing field for short-term rental operators who use their properties as de facto hotels,” Baker said in a statement Friday after signing the bill. “I appreciate the Legislature’s work to reach a compromise on this bill that adopts our proposal to avoid placing undue burdens on occasional renters.”

No, what they are doing is titling it back towards the "hospitality" indu$try and the real estate developers, for that is where campaign cash comes from.

The law followed a twisting, yearslong path through Beacon Hill, where as recently as this month its prospects for passing appeared unclear.

But somehow they got it done lackey-split, huh? 

During a period when the Looti$lature wasn't even in session!

House and Senate lawmakers in July passed a similar bill, but Baker blocked it, saying the rules were onerous for people who rent their homes only a few nights a year.

Faced with a ticking clock— the new legislative session begins Jan. 2 — lawmakers emerged on Dec. 20 with a compromise plan, and pushed it to Baker’s desk through sparsely attended informal sessions.

Gee, they can get thing$ done when they really want to, huh?

Only problem is, I don't want them doing anything!

This thing should have been suffocated in its crib!

Beyond requiring all hosts to register and carry insurance, it also subjects short-term rentals to the same 5.7 percent state levy now paid by hotels— but exempts people who rent their homes 14 or fewer nights a year. Officials have estimated that tax could raise at least $25 million annually.

They budgeted $60 million from pot and are going to receive a pittance of it because the CCC drags its heels on licensing, and that's what it is all about, the licen$e -- in the Land of the Free and $tate of Ma$$achu$etts!!

It also would allow cities and towns to impose their own taxes of up to 6 percent, except in Boston, where it would be 6.5 percent, with occasional hosts also exempted.

Additional taxes would be levied on hosts who own multiple units, and an extra fee would also fall on units in Boston, Cambridge, and a handful of other cities that support the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority, but only after bonds are paid off on the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center in South Boston.

Got all that?

Btw, the extra fee comes after money has been spent to pay off the inve$tors who bought bonds!

Some cities, including New York and San Francisco, have used short-term rental registries to rein in the industry, but this law makes Massachusetts the first state to require all hosts to register. That, more than the taxes, has been the focus of debate in recent months.

All about the $$$$$$$$$ in Ma$$achu$etts!

Hotel industry groups and housing advocates pushed for a comprehensive registry that would allow people to see whether their neighbors were renting a house or apartment short-term. Cambridge and Boston, meanwhile, have passed regulatory regimes of their own but say a statewide registry would aid enforcement, which in Cambridge has been hampered by hosts not signing up.

Then the bill is no $urpri$e then, and they used to call that under the table.

The new law will list the community and street name on the registry, but not specific addresses. Cities and towns, though, could choose to publish full addresses.

Yeah, why worry about your privacy or hackers and such?

“This is a tremendous victory for municipal leaders,” said Paul Sacco, president and CEO of the Massachusetts Lodging Association. “By adopting a more level playing field between short-term rentals and traditional lodgers, lawmakers made great strides toward a more fair and sensible system.”

PFFFFFT! 

Think bed and breakfasts going against hotels and inns!

Airbnb, however, has pushed back on the measure, saying the registry could put hosts’ privacy at risk. Andrew Kalloch, the company’s head of public policy for Massachusetts, also criticized its tax structure as overly complicated and “layered,” and warned it could hinder the platform’s ability to accurately collect the levies.

Welcome to Ma$$achu$etts!!

Why don't you just drive on through?

“Massachusetts has chosen a pathway here that nobody else in the country has chosen,” Kalloch said Friday. “Sometimes first in the nation is bad becauseit means . . . what you have chosen to pass is a flawed measure.”

You have to forgive them. It is the greed that blinds them.

Kalloch said he couldn’t say whether the company would challenge the law in court, as it has done for Boston’s new rules, which are slated to go in effect Jan. 1. Airbnb is claiming that Boston’s regulations requiring online rental platforms to police their listings and share user information with the city violate state and federal laws, but others say it’s possible, if not likely, that the new law draws litigation.

You are in Ma$$achu$etts now, $eat of the Re$i$tance like 250 years ago!

“I think it’s just a matter of time,” said Ford Cavallari, chairman of the Alliance of Downtown Civic Organizations, which supports the measure.

Requiring all hosts to register, Cavallari said, “is the light of transparency. I think Airbnb is going to have a better business because of it.”

Boston City Councilor Michelle Wu said the state’s decision to create a registry should bolster the city’s own plans to “ensure compliance.”

OMFG!

Sorry, no room to rent here even if you are Jesus himself -- and you can thank the $tate of Ma$$achu$etts for that!

--more--"

They want their nose in everything, but first we flip the page to see the story at the top of page A2 and the beginning of my Saturday Metro section:

"Cabinet heads, Baker’s top aides getting 5.5 percent pay raise" by Matt Stout Globe Staff  December 28, 2018

Governor Charlie Baker is giving an array of top deputies, from members of his Cabinet to dozens of department heads, a 5.5 percent pay raise in the new year, a first for many since Baker took office four years ago.

Well, at lea$t you know where the taxes on the room are going.

Baker’s nine Cabinet secretaries will see their salaries rise from $161,500, the same salary several started at when appointed in 2015, to $170,400 a year. Most members of Baker’s direct staff — 66 in total — will also receive the same 5.5 percent increase, according to a Baker spokesman, because they have not gotten the same “merit” pay raises that other executive branch managers have gotten over the past four years.

Another 39 agency heads will also receive a raise withinthe executive branch‘s sprawling bureaucracy, which includes dozens of departments and divisions overseeing everything from energy resources to elder affairs to public safety, but commissioner salaries aren’t uniform, meaning the exact increase each official receives will vary. For example, Christopher Harding, the state’s revenue commissioner, currently makes $158,000, and will get an $8,690 pay bump. Monica Bharel, the commissioner for the Department of Public Health, has a $140,000 salary and will make $7,700 more next year, and Ronald Amidon, the fish and game commissioner, will get $6,985 added to his current $127,000 salary.

The Globe reported on the pocket-$tuffing over at the DoR, but Baker got mad and they haven't mentioned it since.

Ronald J. Arigo, Baker’s chief human resources officer, said agency heads or commissioners hired after Jan. 2, 2018, will not be eligible for a raise, nor are any acting, interim or so-called 120-day appointees.

The news comes as an array of Beacon Hill officials prepare to take home bigger paychecks.....

They are already looking for ways to go around the voter-mandated tax cut, and don't worry about those unemployment benefits, either. By the time they get around to fixing the error in the legislation, the disagreement will be over.

That was the rea$on for the in$ertion of the error, wa$n't it?

If only we could recall the bastards (Globe wasn't against it in Wisconsin, but you aren't supposed to see the naked hypocrisy). He should have recused himself rather than force the citizens to go through a recall election (why does he look high?), but skipping the hearing will surely lead to a loss at the polls as it all falls apart.

Related:

"Governor Charlie Baker quietly slipped away Wednesday to Arizona to attend an annual gathering of the Republican Governors Association, weeks after it poured millions of dollars into his successful reelection bid. Baker will return Friday from the two-day meeting in Scottsdale, according to his office. The Swampscott Republican, who has otherwise shunned national GOP politics, has regularly attended the partisan organization’s confabs since his election in 2014, sometimes with little public notice. Jim Conroy, a Baker campaign adviser, said the governor is expected to speak at the event, and is also sitting on a selection committee for the RGA’s new executive director. The committee is expected to interview candidates at the conference, he said. After Baker departed Wednesday morning, his aides did not announce his attendance at the event. His office did not release a schedule for his travel, but signaled he was traveling when it identified Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito as “acting governor” in a public itinerary it distributed for her just after 8 a.m. The lieutenant governor serves in an acting capacity whenever the governor is out of state. The RGA spent heavily in Baker’s bid for a second term, dropping $6.6 million into a local super PAC to fund a series of TV ads touting his work in the corner office. The association spent more than $11 million on his behalf in 2014, when he won his first term over then-Democratic nominee Martha Coakley."

Are you sure he didn't steal it like in North Carolina?

Despite getting “900 more legal votes,’’ over the Democrat, he is being refused a seat by the incoming Democratic leadership because of so-called ballot harvesting that won them the House

That could start a revolt after the Democrats did a Russia in Alabama, even if no one gives a hoot?

Speaking of stealing things

Yeah, some problems take years to fix before they disappear from sight.

--more--"

Speaking of getting fucked:

"The rector of a Brighton seminary who has been on sabbatical during an investigation of alleged misconduct there will be returned to his home diocese in Worcester, according to an announcement Friday by church officials......"

Related:

"It wasapparently an open secret for some that ‘‘Uncle Ted’’ slept with adult seminarians......"

I no longer hear the Church, and think it should be totally and entirely dissolved. 

It's a centuries-old clique of child pedophiles for God's sake!

At least Spacey has seen the light, 'eh?

"Kevin Spacey is trying to avoid showing up for his arraignment in Nantucket assault case" by Matt Rocheleau Globe Staff  December 28, 2018

Actor Kevin Spacey is seeking permission to avoid appearing at his upcoming arraignment on a felony charge that he sexually assaulted an 18-year-old man at a Nantucket bar in 2016.

Defendants are required to appear for court arraignments unless their appearance is waived by a judge, according to Massachusetts court officials.

Spacey’s attorneys have filed a motion asking to excuse his presence at the hearing scheduled for 11 a.m. on Jan. 7 in Nantucket District Court.

He's not going to face the music?

Court officials did not immediately provide a copy of that filing Friday, but they did provide the Globe with a copy of prosecutors’ response opposing that motion and asking the judge in the case to deny it.

Spacey, 59, faces a felony count of indecent assault and battery, which carries penalties of up to five years in prison or up to 2½ years in jail or a house of correction and a requirement to register as a sex offender, according to court documents.

Spacey faces numerous other criminal investigations into sexual assault accusations, which began surfacing in the fall of 2017 and prompted his removal from the TV show “House of Cards.” His role in a Ridley Scott film was also cut.

The Nantucket case first came to light in November 2017 when former Boston news anchor Heather Unruh publicly accused Spacey of groping her then-18-year-old son at the Club Car bar on the island.

On Monday, the Globe first reported Spacey was facing charges. Shortly after that, Spacey broke his year-plus Twitter silence Monday by sending out a bizarre, cryptic video in which he seemed to be portraying Frank Underwood, his character from “House of Cards.”

An insanity defense in the offing? 

Why he can't appear?

Thinks he IS Frank Underwood, huh?

Spacey and his lawyers have not spoken publicly about the case since the criminal charge was filed, but an audio recording of a court hearing held earlier this month provides some insight into how the attorneys plan to defend him.

Is there any defense for what he has done?

Also at that Dec. 20 hearing, the attorneys tried to rush Spacey’s arraignment, asking that it be held that day, but court officials told them no judge was available.

During a subsequent exchange with the clerk as they discussed picking an arraignment date, one of Spacey’s attorneys, Los Angeles-based lawyer Alan Jackson said of Spacey: “He’s available anytime.”

So his attorney lied, huh?

--more--"

There is that grin again!

There once was a man from Nantucket.....

I can't remember the rest.

"Commission reverses course on recommended penalties for impaired drivers" by Naomi Martin Globe Staff  December 29, 2018

Suspected stoned drivers should not be penalized for refusing to answer police questions, a state panel said Friday, in revisiting its earlier decision.

Last week, the commission on impaired driving said that drivers suspected of being high should face an automatic six-month license suspension for refusing police demands for a saliva test, blood test, or 12-step “drug recognition expert,” or DRE, assessment that includes a urine test, but on Friday, the commission decided that pressuring drivers to answer police questions as part of the DRE evaluation would violate drivers’ constitutional rights to not incriminate themselves. The panel said police could examine a driver for physical signs of drug use — such as reddened eyes — but not interview suspects without first advising them of their so-called Miranda rights.

You are already paranoid so who is going to refuse police?

I'm wondering when the pi$$ te$ts to get your license are coming.

“You can’t have a situation where you have the right to remain silent, however we’re going to punish you if you don’t talk,” said attorney Peter Elikann, representing the Massachusetts Bar Association. “That’s just not going to fly.”

That tweak was among a slew of recommendations the commission voted to provide to lawmakers for the legislative session that starts in January. As five recreational pot stores have opened since November and more are coming, officials have struggled to address a potential rise in stoned drivers without an accurate test that can detect marijuana impairment. Saliva, blood, and urine tests only show past marijuana use, possibly from weeks earlier, not current impairment.

To combat a widely-held belief that people drive better when they’re high, the commission voted to include its consensus, based on scientific research, that THC, marijuana’s main psychoactive compound, impairs key driving skills, such as cognitive attention, motor function, reaction time, tracking, decision-making, impulse control, and memory. Impairment is worsened when marijuana is mixed with alcohol.

Where is that "widely-held belief" held, and by who?

Smells like more pre$$ weed to me!

Among other recommendations the commission passed:

■ Hospitals and other blood-drawing labs should be required to comply with search warrants to draw a suspected impaired driver’s blood. They should be compensated for their work and protected from legal liability.

■ All Massachusetts police officers should complete a specialized 16-hour impaired driving enforcement course.

■ Massachusetts should more than double its number of highly trained DRE officers at departments around the state, from 150 now to more than 351 in the near future.

■ Marijuana tax revenue should fund police training.

I'm regretting my vote for recreational marijuana as this joint burns down.

It was without a doubt the single worst vote I ever cast, and will vote for a repeal if it makes the ballot.

■ Massachusetts should implement electronic search warrants so that law enforcement can quickly obtain blood or saliva tests before a possible drug has left a suspect’s system.

Just in case you have cotton mouth.

■ The state should add a module to its required driver’s education course that covers impairment by marijuana.

Commission members debated whether lawmakers should make saliva tests that detect marijuana use automatically accepted as court evidence the way breathalyzers are. They ultimately decided against that, as those tests only show past use, not current impairment. The test results could still be used against a defendant in court, but prosecutors would have to show their validity first through an expert witness.

The commission should “leave it as a case-by-case basis until we’re at the point where we have a breathalyzer-like tool,” said attorney John Scheft, an appointee of Attorney General Maura Healey.

Now blow!

See resultThousands convicted of OUI could seek new trials under tentative deal on breathalyzers

Smoking pot must have made them forget the flawed breath tests!

Walpole Police Chief John Carmichael said the blood, saliva, or urine tests would only come as a result of other signs a driver is impaired. “Nobody’s going to be taken out of the car [for] using marijuana two weeks ago,” Carmichael said.

But they will get you out of the car anyway and then ride shotgun with you to monitor how high you get.

--more--"

Even the legal marijuana was a money grab in an attempt to sniff you out!

Related:

"Slick roads caused scores of crashes in Central Massachusetts and parts of New Hampshire on Friday, complicating both the morning and evening commutes in some areas, officials said. Remarkably, none of those crashes resulted in serious injuries, but the chaos gripped local residents who took to social media to document the morning mayhem. Precipitation had ended, but ice was still possible as temperatures hovered around freezing in communities like Colrain and Townsend. In New Hampshire, 88 crashes or vehicles off the road had been reported on state highways as of around noon, according to the state Office of Highway Safety....."

We are going to be worse than Utah, and please don't drink and drive.

"State GOP committee member calls party ‘all but irrelevant’ in Mass." by Matt Murphy State House News Service  December 28, 2018

One member of the Republican state committee penned a blistering post-Christmas indictment of party leadership in Massachusetts this week, calling for his fellow party leaders to “face the bitter truth” that the state GOP has become “all but irrelevant.”

Steve Aylward, of Watertown, wrote a lengthy e-mail to his fellow committee members lamenting how far party enrollment has fallen and how the party, apart from winning the governor’s office, has not made gains on Beacon Hill since 2010.

And the governor is basically a moderate Democrat!

“We will stay irrelevant until such time if any that we as a State Committee choose to stop listening to those who are in this thing for their own personal gain, and instead start listening to those who are in it for unselfish reasons,” Aylward wrote.

Good luck with that one in Ma$$achu$etts!

The letter comes as state Republican chairwoman Kirsten Hughes is preparing to step down after six years leading the party, and as treasurer Brent Andersen and state representatives Peter Durant and Jim Lyons are locked in a race to replace her.

SeeState GOP leader Hughes to step aside

RelatedOutgoing state GOP chair lands $75,000 contract with sheriff

She was one of the last ones to be in it for unselfish reasons and not personal gain!

Aylward challenged Hughes for the party chairmanship in 2017, but lost with 30 votes of the 76 cast. He is a conservative activist who partnered with Representative Geoff Diehl in 2014 to repeal a law tying the gas tax to inflation. In an interview, Aylward said he is supporting Lyons for party chair.

Lyons got into the contest last week after Diehl, a darling of the conservative grass roots, opted against running for party chair following his unsuccessful challenge of US Senator Elizabeth Warren this fall.

That was a surprise.

“We have good representation with Jim,” Aylward said, referring to the anti-establishment wing of the party. Aylward did not directly blame Hughes for what he considers to be the weakness of the Republican Party in Massachusetts, writing that the chairperson in “recent cases” has just been a “front person, put there to carry the water.”

“I lay the blame across the entire spectrum of our leadership,” he said.

Aylward said that for too long Republican Party leaders have blamed the climate in Massachusetts for electoral losses, overlooking successes like Scott Brown’s US Senate win in 2010 or the gas tax ballot campaign that he helped run.

That is because of the Ma$$achu$etts myth -- propagated by the Bo$ton Globe -- of a deep blue, altruistic, liberal sanctuary and haven when it is really nothing but a band of money-grabbing looters that $ee only green!

He faulted party leaders for doing a poor job recruiting candidates at the local level, for failing to engage with Republican town committees on a regional basis, and for not being more aggressive about seeking to register voters or have “visibility” in minority communities.

He also said that party enrollment had fallen to “less than 10 percent” and that the base was “disheartened and demoralized.”

Maybe I should reregister -- and maybe run for office!

“I could go on and on about our failings, why we lose and how our leadership maintains control in spite of those habitual losses. But while we fiddle, the country burns,” Aylward wrote.

Republican Party enrollment was actually 10.3 percent this past general election, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Look at the Globe finally nitpick details. 

Where you been?

Aylward, however, said he is not a pessimist.

He said he believes it is entirely possible to turn Massachusetts from a “blue state” to a purple one. He also said he is supporting Lyons for party chair because he believes that Lyons understands the importance of engaging with the grass roots of the party without the party turning its back on what has worked for the moderate and popular Governor Charlie Baker.

Why not turn our back on Baker? 

He's turned his on us!

Aylward has opposed Baker’s political agenda in the past. “I know there a lot of people in the party who are maybe disappointed in Baker, but he’s the governor and I think Jim showed us you can be for the grass roots while still supporting the governor,” he said, referring to Lyons.

Or you can be grass root and NOT support the RINO governor.

In his e-mail, Aylward didn’t lobby on Lyons’s behalf or even mention the three men running to succeed Hughes as party chair. Instead, he advocated for an approach that would “strike a blow against all of the crazy left-wingers who want nothing more than to destroy the country we love.”

We don't have those here. We just have looters.

“To crawl out of this darkness, we must always act with the awareness that we are in a war for our beliefs and our country,” he wrote. “Let’s stand by our President, and not be a slave to political correctness. And let’s listen to our constituents and our conscience instead of failed leaders.”

With that I agree, and always will be.

--more--"

With no oxygen, it's impossible to get a spark:

"Woman survives knife attack by date, who dies after police use Taser" by Travis Andersen and Jackson Cote Globe Staff | Globe Correspondent  December 28, 2018

COHASSET — It started like countless other dates: on Tinder, the popular dating app. That’s how Erich Stelzer, a 25-year-old Cohasset resident, is said to have connected last week with a 24-year-old woman. 

I see. The tasering of a Jewish man is front page news!

It ended Thursday night, law enforcement officials say, when police officers were called to Stelzer’s house around 10 p.m. and found him repeatedly stabbing the young woman.

Was he on any SSRIs?

Officers used tasers as part of their efforts to subdue Stelzer, who was then treated by EMTs but became unresponsive on the way to the hospital, where he waslater pronounced dead, according to a statement Friday by Norfolk District Attorney William W. Morrissey’s office. The hospital was not identified.

Attempts to reach Stelzer’s family for comment weren’t successful Friday, but his father, Harry Stelzer, posted a photo of his smiling son as an infant to Facebook and said he was overcome with grief. “My Son. Killed by Cops. Here comes the cover up,” he wrote.

I'm sorry someone died, but I had nothing to do with it.

Some people's deaths are more important than others, I guess.

Cohasset Police Chief William P. Quigley referred all questions to the Norfolk district attorney’s office.

In its statement, Morrissey’s office said that when officers responded to a report of a disturbance at 13 Church St., where Stelzer was living, they saw him “actively assaulting a 24-year-old woman with weapons including a knife. . . .  In an effort to rescue the victim and disarm Stelzer, Cohasset police officers used tasers to subdue Stelzer.”

Prosecutors said the woman “was able to escape from Stelzer and was taken to a local hospital for treatment.”

The woman’s condition wasn’t immediately available, and officials did not disclose her name.

She a Jew, too?

An official with knowledge of the case said Stelzer and the woman met last weekon Tinder, a dating app used by millions of people nationwide. Representatives for Tinder couldn’t be reached for comment.

Harry Stelzer wrote on Facebook that he learned of his son’s death the night before.

“There was a [violent] confrontation at his house last nite,” the elder Stelzer wrote. “Police came and tased him 4 times. 4 times. He died on the way to the hospital. 25 years old. He was my life. This is not over. Let me bury my dead and then the show begins. Rest In Peace my son. Love you for ever. I am hurting.”

Last January, a bearded, burly Erich Stelzer posted to his Facebook page a photo of himself in workout clothes. A few months later, he posted a message quoting from Aaron Lewis’s song “Country Boy.”

There was no visible police presence Friday evening at the duplex-style home where the alleged attack occurred. No one answered the door. Electric holiday candles in the window were dark.

Mary Burnieika, 48, who lives two doors down from Stelzer’s home, said she did not know him or his mother well.

“I’m just sad that whatever happened happened,” she said. “It’s just awful.”

Dan Tarpey, 63, who lives in the neighborhood, said it was a “huge surprise to look out last night and see the emergency lights.”

Although Tarpey did not know Stelzer, he said he passes by the Church Street home every day when walking his dog.

“It’s a very quiet neighborhood,” he said.....

Except for the screaming.

--more--"

He is fortunate this isn't Georgia.

UPDATE: Family sought help for man tasered by police while he allegedly stabbed woman

The irony is he was killed by police who were most likely trained in Israel.

Notice how the stabbing is alleged (probably because of the religious persuasion of the perp). I thought you were supposed to believe the woman.

Speaking of quiet neighborhoods:

"‘Better dead than coed’: Deerfield Academy confronts its male-only past" by Kay Lazar Globe Staff  December 28, 2018

DEERFIELD — The slick, student-produced video could be a recruitment tool: a sun-washed campus, nestled in rich Western Massachusetts farmland, featuring students dancing, singing, and living a seemingly idyllic life.

“There is so much to learn here,” says a young man in a green Deerfield Academy cap, looking into the camera. “I’d send my son here for sure.”

Then he pauses, and looks down. “I’d have to think about sending my daughter here, but I’d definitely send my son.”

Another young man states matter-of-factly: “It’s a pretty toxic place for girls.”

Thirty years after boys chanted“better dead than coed” in protestof the school’s decision to admit girls, one of the nation’s oldest and most elite boarding schools remains a place where female students have a sense this is not their Deerfield.

I know someone who works there, and they say it is a great place!

It’s a place, students say, where boys get away with breaking rules that girls can’t. Where girls have been shunned from prime seating at hockey games, and where a letter of apology was punishment enough for groping a girl.

I was going to say maybe they are gay, but the groping disproved that theory.

So female equality is about hockey seats, huh?

Many of these issues are laid bare in a federal sexual discrimination lawsuit, in which a popular former teacher said young women faced unequal treatment in disciplinary hearings and when they filed sexual harassment and misconduct complaints. The ex-teacher, Sonja O’Donnell, alleged she faced administrators’ wrath for years for standing up to the school’s unwritten rule that “boys will be boys.”

Oh!

Separately, a 2015 graduate told the Globe she is still stunned that a male student who groped her several times in class was only made to apologize in a letter.

“Deerfield had many great professors and I learned a lot,” said the woman, now a senior at an Ivy League college. “But the culture is really backwards.”

The elite don't live in the same world as we do.

Though the student body is split nearly equally along gender lines, inequityis spread across campus and woven into the way of life, according to 17 current and former students, most of whom asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal from Deerfield and classmates.

Then they are getting a good ejewkhazion in regard to the world that awaits their leadership and management skills.

Until recently, girls were not welcome in the sought-after upper bleachers at hockey games, long a males-only seating area, and hadn’t been considered for the coveted position of Captain Deerfield, the school’s mascot.

I am glad you girls got your priorities in order. 

I suppose wealth isn't really a concern, huh?

Students and alumni are still chafing over a message earlier this year from Deerfield’s top administrator to “Deerfield girls,” with the subject line of “self worth.” It suggested female students more “carefully consider [their] clothing choices” after visitors to campus were shocked by some girls’ short skirts and high-heeled boots.

The girls are dressing like women of ill repute?

“I wish there was more of an acknowledgment that being a girl at Deerfield is tough,” said one 2017 graduate.

It's not easy being green, either.

The 300-acre campus of red brick buildings and rolling fields, book-ended by a tiny village of 18th-century houses along Old Main Street, seems a quaint outpost. Or as some students describe it, a bubble separated from the outside world.

It's an elite school!

Leaders of the 220-year-old academy say they are trying to shed the vestiges of an all-boys school and deny the allegations in the lawsuit. Drawing on its $590 million endowment, Deerfield hired an inclusion officer and has ramped up antibias initiatives to tackle these issues.

In a statement to the Globe, Deerfield denied O’Donnell’s allegations and said its actions against her — including cutting her pay, barring her from serving as an advocate in student discipline hearings, and not renewing her contract — were “entirely legitimate.” It called discrimination and retaliation “antithetical to who we are and what we teach.”

So she was a troublemaker?

In legal filings, Deerfield said O’Donnell engaged in “multiple incidents of unprofessional and inappropriate conduct,” including aggressively criticizing colleagues and violating school rules in student disciplinary hearings.

A federal court judge ordered portions of the lawsuit, filed last year in US District Court in Springfield, unsealed in the spring, and word of the legal action trickled out until it was featured last month on the front page of the student newspaper, The Deerfield Scroll.

“It’s a big step forward for Deerfield to have this in the open and set a precedent of being transparent,” said senior Joshua Fang, a co-editor-in-chief who wrote the story. “We can’t shy away from uncomfortable conversations if we want to make our school better.”

O’Donnell, an English teacher at Deerfield for 18 years until administrators opted not to renew her contract this year, said the school offers students incredible educational opportunities. She and her husband, Michael O’Donnell, a Deerfield teacher who resigned in August because he said the situation had become untenable, sent their son there and he graduated in May.

“I love Deerfield,” Sonja O’Donnell said. “I have never stopped believing in the potential for that community.”

And she wanted to stay! 

I think we just found the motivation for the lawsuit!

On campus, pictures of Abraham Lincoln and other historic figures line the reception area of the administration building. Two statues, a confident “Deerfield Boy,” books casually slung under an arm, and a “Deerfield Girl,” clutching her books at her chest, still stand in the library.

They need to start reevaluating those guys for racism, sexism, and any other moral, legal, or ethical transgression at any point in their entire lives, and if they are found to have transgressed beyond the bounds of contemporary proprieties their pictures should be removed and their names banished for eternity.

In a 2009 survey, conducted by a consortium of private schools, nearly 90 percent of Deerfield’s 12th-grade girls said boys enjoyed more influence than girls at the school. Some students say things haven’t changed much in the nine years since.

One frustration repeatedly shared by current and former Deerfield students is disparity in discipline.

One 2016 graduate said she and three friends witnessed from her dorm window two drunken, rowdy male classmates, out after curfew, trashing a tent used for graduation luncheons. She said they saw two school administrators march the young men to the campus health center for drug and alcohol testing, but two days later, the boys strode up to accept their diplomas, she said, despite a rule that forbids senior scofflaws from closing ceremonies if they break school rules within 16 days of graduation.

Busybodies that have to ruin the fun, huh?

Shortly after that, an anonymous flier plastered around campus urged young women to stand up against a litany of inequities.

“Rich white boys drank, puked, and broke school property, with video evidence, but were allowed to walk two days ago at graduation,” the flier said.

It described a “cycle of white male power” at Deerfield, unequal punishments for male and female students, and the silencing of female students and teachers who object.

The 2016 flier concluded, “Would you send your daughter to Deerfield?”

That spurred Alexander Guo in his 2017 class video to ask classmates a similar question — one that prompted hesitant answers.

Guo, now a student at MIT, said school administrators tried to confront the concerns, organizing gatherings and classes to combat discrimination.

“I think the school tried to make it more inclusive,” Guo said, “but I guess many felt that didn’t change the fundamental culture of the school.”

Deerfield said it has taken robust steps to tackle these issues, including housing ninth-graders exclusively in a village of dorms to foster healthier male and female friendships from the get-go.

The kids are at least 18 years old, and if that's true, then elementary and secondary schools have failed tremendously in their function of social interaction.

It also said it has added extensive gender sensitivity training and reviewed the selection process for student leadership and faculty positions, with an eye toward gender balance.

“These efforts — and our ability to learn from events like [the 2016 flier and 2017 video] — have allowed us to quicken the pace of positive change at the school,” Deerfield’s statement to the Globe said, but quickening the pace isn’t enough, some students said. A 2017 alum recently wrote a searing letter to school administrators about a male classmate who posted sexually crude, aggressive statements about other female classmates on social media in 2016. She said the young man then sexually assaulted her at a prominent East Coast college in April. She blamed Deerfield’s “toxic” cultureand previous hands-off treatment of the young man as directly contributing to her assault.

Why did Bill Clinton just come to mind?

He didn't go to DA, did he?

In her lawsuit, O’Donnell alleges Deerfield has been dismissive of many sexually charged complaints. She lists several between 2011 and 2016 — the details redacted, under court order — in which boys accused of sexual assaults, stalking, bullying, or harassment were allowed to retain leadership positions on campus and escaped punishment, or were quietly issued letters of reprimand.

The secret courts enabled them to flip the script, and it's a good thing there was no sexual predation by professors on campus, 'eh?

Should have gone to Northfield Mount Hermon instead. 

That is where they groom leaders.

One young woman who reported a 2015 sexual assault to the school was told by an administrator that the outcome — no discipline for the boy — was based on “the very difficult choice” between “a boy’s future and her feelings,” according to O’Donnell’s suit.

“I believe a lot of the culture at Deerfield is connected to the way these cases are adjudicated,” O’Donnell told the Globe.

Deerfield’s reckoning has come later than others. As a wave of boys-only prep schools started opening their doors to girls in the 1970s, Deerfield’s trustees twice voted to stand firm, but in the fall of 1989, faced with a declining pool of applicants, Deerfield acquiesced.

It's ALWAYS ABOUT THE FUCKING $$$$$$$$$!!!!!!!!!!

Today, Deerfield enrolls about 650 students in grades 9 through 12. Its $590 million endowment is the fourth largest among more than 300 US and foreign schools tracked by Boarding School Review, a clearinghouse for boarding schools.

With tuition and fees about $60,000 a year, Deerfield draws from a largely affluent applicant pool. Fewer than one out of every five applicants is accepted, according to the school’s website.

Even with the declining pool?

Polished, but pleasant, students may be the images highlightedinDeerfield class videos going forward. After the 2017 video featured several boys and girls voicing hesitation about sending their daughters there, the producer for 2018 said she was told by administrators to keep things upbeat.

“They said remember to make this positive,” said Maya Rajan. “Your [class] wants to go out on a good note.”

--more--"

Class dismissed!

Sunday Globe Special: Surfing Rockaway

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Just a notion, readers:

"On beaches in New York’s Rockaways, there’s a new look among the surfers" by Michael Adno New York Times   December 22, 2018

NEW YORK — Three years after Hurricane Sandy lashed the Rockaways, the boardwalk marched down the beach in broken segments as the public housing built under Robert Moses was hemmed in by condos. Out in the surf, not much changed as the bathymetry returned to normal, but the predominantly white, male crowd of surfers had.

Part of that shift happened when Louis Harris, 46, founded the East Coast chapter of the Black Surfing Association in 2016.

Surfers like Harris are carving out a space for themselves in the Rockaways, and are challenging the notion that surfing belongs to white men.

In 2014, 14-year old Marcell Dockery set a mattress on fire in his Coney Island apartment building. The blaze killed one responding officer, critically injuring another. When asked why, Dockery cited boredom. The response haunted Harris. That same year, Harris read in The Surfer’s Journal about Tony Corley, who founded the Black Surfing Association in 1975 in California. Corley’s departure point was assembling some sense of belonging as he felt like the sole black surfer in central California, and then in 2015, Corley’s story coupled with Dockery’s moved Harris to the point where he proposed creating an East Coast Chapter.....

Just lost my board as I got bored.

--more--"

I suppose they will have an article on an all white man's hoop league next week. 

Whatever.

Did you give the money back to FEMA yet?

Sunday Globe Special: Pigeon Shit

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0
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"A city in Spain plans to exile 5,000 pigeons. Will they stay away?" by Raphael Minder New York Times  December 08, 2018

MADRID — The exile solution to pigeon overcrowding is being presented as a more animal-friendly approach than that taken in other places, where pigeons are treated like flying rats to be culled or fed contraceptive pills that may also be consumed by other species.

Horeca, a regional federation of hoteliers, argued that pigeon excrement presents a health risk for waiters and other employees who have to clean pigeon-occupied dining and drinking areas.

“Nobody here has anything against pigeons or other animals, but something must be done when they proliferate to the point of presenting a health risk,” said Antonio De María Ceballos, a restaurant owner and the president of Horeca.

“Of course,” he added, “we want to avoid losing some revenues from tourists, but this issue is really about whether we believe it is important to keep Cádiz’s image as a clean and healthy city.”

Álvaro de la Fuente, the city official in charge of environmental policy, argued in a statement that fighting pigeon overpopulation can also helped avoid the spread of “other plagues like rodents.”

--more--"

Related:

"Teenage hunter wields ancient, living weapon" by Hannah Reyes Morales New York Times  December 22, 2018

BAYAN-OLGII, Mongolia —The training of the birds starts soon after an eaglet is captured from the nest, often after a hunter has made a rugged climb up a cliff. The resulting relationship between hunter and eagle is close and lasts years; some last more than a decade, with a few hunters even talking about the eagle as if it were their child.

Hunters will often sing to their eagles to get them used to their voice.

Female eagles, larger and stronger than males, are used almost exclusively in the hunt. Once grown to about 15 pounds, the eagles ride with their hunters on horseback into the mountains, where they are released to scan the landscape for prey, typically foxes and rabbits, but wolves are the true prize, even if the hunters fear for their birds’ safety when they go in for the dangerous, and brutal, kill.

Eagle hunting almost vanished in the last century. It was kept alive by the Altai Kazakhs in western Mongolia in Bayan-Olgii province, where at least 400 ethnic Kazakhs have formally registered as eagle hunters.

The province is the only one in Mongolia that is majority Kazakh, and majority Muslim.

Now, for perhaps for the first time in its history, the art, and its essential role in Altai Kazakh culture, is being shared with outsiders.

Hunters come together for the Golden Eagle Festival to compete in a two-day gathering open to tourists.

A popular 2016 documentary film about Aisholpan, a young eagle huntress who won the festival’s hunting competition in 2014, helped bring the Altai Kazakh culture to international attention.

Just gathering the hunters together is a logistical feat, since many are pastoral nomads, some without cellphones or a fixed mailing address. Many will arrive on horseback, clopping down dirt roads clad in wolfskin and fox fur.

During the festival, Soviet-era vehicles dot the steppe, with local vendors selling tapestries depicting Kazakh life, leather-bound books with Mongolian sayings and intricate bottles for Mongolian snuff. Children sit on the ground, playing games with shagai, sheep knuckle bones.

The number of foreign tourists coming to the festival is growing, with a record of more than 1,000 this year, according to government officials.

This year, 120 eagle hunters took part: From the top of a mountain, the eagle is released as its hunter waits on horseback in a makeshift arena set up at the mountain’s foot.

The goal is to have the bird meet its hunter within a targeted area some 20 yards wide. To prod the eagle, the hunter holds aloft a piece of meat, and makes a loud cry for the bird.

A reunion within the target area is no given: This year, just 18 eagles made it. For each successful convergence between hunter and eagle, gasps and cheers of awe erupted across the steppe.

The winning eagle is chosen after a second round, judged on how they hunt a mammal carcass tied to a galloping horse.

Some scholars worry that the festival presents eagle hunting as performance rather than showing it in its cultural context, as a search for fur and food, but many eagle hunters see the festival as a way to celebrate their heritage.

Asker, the father of another young hunter, said he welcomed outsiders and enjoyed the attention of photographers from around the world, but for Altai Kazakh youth, in a time of smartphones, photographs are just another fact of life, like wolfskin, eagles, and gers.....

--more--"

The eagle was let go.

Sunday Globe Special: This Blog Slowly Dying

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"It’s the kind of stuff that makes you ponder life, but emotionally, it’s hard to brace oneself for the realization that something that was once there is finally, completely gone....."

UPDATE:

"Sears is dying, but workers’ loyalty lives on" by Michael Corkery New York Times   December 29, 2018

The annual Christmas luncheon was called for noon, but many members of the Atlanta Sears Family had arrived at the church hall by 10:30 a.m.

There was a lot to catch up on: birthdays, illnesses, and news of club members who had died over the past few months. There was baked ham, green beans, and cherry pie for lunch. There was music — oldies and Christmas carols mostly. One club member, 84-year-old Herman Atwood, danced to “My Girl,” twisting and twirling in his Sears Roebuck sweater vest as if he were at a wedding.

Sears may be struggling to survive after filing for bankruptcy in October, its rundown and empty stores symbolizing a has-been company that failed to adapt, but across the country, legions of former Sears workers like Atwood, a retired truck driver, gather regularly to reminisce about their long careers in retailing. The brands like Kenmore and DieHard that lasted for decades. The limitless creativity of shoplifters. The impossible task of selecting the women’s shoe inventory.

For an older generation of Sears retirees, their former employer remains a central part of their lives, a throwback in an industry now known for high turnover, low wages, and costly health care. Today, there are dozens of Sears alumni groups, from Bangor, Maine, to Sioux Falls, S.D., forming one of the largest and most active retiree networks in the nation.

“It feels like family,” Mattie Hughey said as she sat with three friends she met packing catalog orders in the Sears warehouse in Atlanta 30 years ago.

I guess the turnout for the funeral will be huge, huh?

Long before it went bankrupt, before it was taken over by hedge fund manager Edward S. Lampert, and before Amazon pioneered internet shopping, Sears was the nation’s largest retailer, with about 350,000 employees near its peak.

They let Amazon eat their lunch, and they should have known better. Sears pioneered the mail order catalog!

In its heyday, a period stretching from the end of World War II to the 1970s, Sears offered many of its workers a clear path to the middle class. The company paid well, shared profits, and provided retirement benefits that have helped many former employees live in relative comfort.

Madison Price, 87, comes every year to the holiday luncheon to see old friends and soak in the music. He grew up working on a farm in Georgia, helping grow cotton and corn. His father split the proceeds from their crops with the man who owned the farm. Price didn’t finish high school and often missed school because he was needed on the farm.

The practice was known as sharecropping, and it was a way for the white owner to steal what black labor made, perpetuating Jim Crow and $outhern $lavery.

After returning from the Korean War, Price got a job as a janitor in a store in Atlanta in 1958. When he retired after 34 years, Price sold the Sears stock the company had granted him over the years and took his pension in a lump sum.

He reinvested the money only in things that he uses: shares in Georgia’s power utilities and municipal bonds of DeKalb County and the Atlanta airport. Today, Price said he drew enough in dividends and interest from his investment portfolio, along with Social Security, to live comfortably. He paid for his son’s college tuition, and his wife, Earnestine, has been able to take trips with her friends.

“I am blessed,” Price said.

Many of the retirees at the luncheon said they viewed their time at Sears as being part of something bigger than just working at a successful retailer. They worked for a force in American culture and business. Sears sold everything: feed for chickens, Whirlpool washing machines, as well as the nightgowns, watches, and erector sets in the Christmas “wish book.”

“One man came by looking for a wagon for his horse,” said Jerril Parker, who worked in security at Sears in the Atlanta area for 45 years.

Sears workers became experts in their fields— heating systems, kitchen appliances, cosmetics, and they were proud of what they sold. Elder Penny, who started at Sears after serving as a Navy supply officer in World War II, was a regional buyer of women’s shoes. Penny, 94, still has the same Kenmore refrigerator he bought at Sears in 1974.

“I think I will wear out before it does,” he said.

There was also a feeling of camaraderie and support. Decades ago, the Sears headquarters in Illinois were referred to as “parent” — a telling symbol of the way employees viewed their employer.

They were all gung ho!

Experienced workers took new recruits under their wing. When a manager relocated to a new store, other employees there helped him look for a new home.

Sears today is nothing like the company many retirees remember. The retailer stopped profit-sharing in the 1970s, and employees hired more recently no longer receive pensions. Under its chairman, Lampert, the company has been selling off many of its most valuable stores and laying off thousands of workers.

On Friday, Lampert, through his hedge fund, ESL Investments, made a $4.4 billion bid to acquire many of the company’s remaining assets, including its retail stores. Lampert said the proposal would keep 50,000 workers employed.

Retirees warned long ago that Lampert’s involvement with Sears would end badly. When his hedge fund acquired the company in 2005 by merging it with Kmart, a group of former workers hired a plane to fly over the headquarters in Illinois pulling a banner that read, “Sears Unfair to Retirees.”

The retirees’ pensions are expected to survive the bankruptcy largely intact thanks to a backstop from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp, but if Sears goes into a liquidation, which many analysts and investors say is likely, then the retirees would lose most of their life insurance benefits.

There was where my printed article ended, and WTF are they talking about?

The PBGC has been running out of money for years now (because of Bush's wars, doncha know?).

So they pass the pensions on to the already overburdened U.S. taxpayer, huh?

Time to start throwing rocks.

Oh, right, the incoming Democrats will fix it at least that is what they are serving up to you.

In the current incarnation of Sears, recruiting new members to the alumni groups has been difficult. Two decades ago, there were 250 clubs; now there are only about 45. More recent retirees, who did not receive pensions or profit-sharing, do not share the same allegiance as older generations.

Age is another challenge. The Atlanta club regularly updates its 160 members with a “bereavement report” listing local retirees who have died.

As the luncheon in Decatur finished, Lynn Walker Capland lingered in the church hall, helping clean off the tables and talking with friends. Capland, 66, is not only a former employee, she is what she calls a “byproduct of Sears.” Her mother and father met while working at the Christmas pickup window in the Atlanta store.

Walker left the company before reaching retirement age because she said she wasn’t suited for her final job in the collections department, but she still takes a day off from current work at an accounting firm to attend the luncheon every year.

“No one makes time for these types of things anymore. Everyone is so busy,” she said. “This way of life is almost gone.”

I hope you enjoyed this nonsensical trip down memory lane with all it's nostalgia.

--more--"

Also seeWith pay raise, state pension chief’s salary hits nearly $500,000

I'm about ready to put down the Globe, sorry. 

Just lost the fire for it, I gue$$.

At least the classics are coming back to life.

Maybe Gone

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I can't decide if I should stay or go:

Healey investigating trucking company tied to fatal N.H. crash

Westfield Transport Inc., the West Springfield trucking company under widespread scrutiny, has been cited 74 times by federal regulators in the past two years for a variety of infractions.

At a modest New York fund-raiser, ‘the Squad’ got its start

They “couldn’t wait.”

Boston Calling case begins with early mention of Mayor Walsh

They want to burn him down before the NAACP convention that Boston will host in 2020. 

[Flip to below fold]

Now for something really scary:

"Mueller hearing likely to turn heads, but not change minds" by Peter Baker and Sheryl Gay Stolberg New York Times, July 23, 2019

WASHINGTON — For all the anticipation, for all the fighting that it took to get to this day, many in Washington assume it will be more fizzle than sizzle. Robert Mueller, the famously stoic prosecutor and reluctant witness, has vowed to adhere strictly to the words of his 448-page report and no more, making it unlikely that he will serve as the dramatic accuser President Trump’s critics yearn to see.

MUELLER, Page A9

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

I flip open the paper and this is the National Lead:

Activists protested outside Chicago’s Marriott Marquis hotel Tuesday during a Customs and Border Protection event. <span class="web_fractions">(Scott Olson/Getty Images)</span>
Activists protested outside Chicago’s Marriott Marquis hotel Tuesday during a Customs and Border Protection event (Scott Olson/Getty Images

Once again, the stars make you understand who is ultimately at the bottom of the agenda and protests being covered by my pre$$. 

They certainly must mean it given all the Palestinians they have routinely put on the move (and as predicted, a one-day blip of coverage).

The co-lead was located below and to the left:

USDA proposes change that would push 3 million Americans off food stamps

At least they got a debt deal done!

Now working my way up the side column of briefs:

Miss America pageant leaving Atlantic City for Connecticut

‘‘The Miss America Organization is proud to partner with Mohegan Sun as we return to our longtime NBC home,’’ said Regina Hopper, president and CEO of the Miss America Organization. ‘‘We are looking forward to a fresh take on this historic competition that will showcase the incredible women vying for the job of Miss America 2020.’’

I thought #MeToo put an end to that stuff.

Zinke taking clients from industries he oversaw at Interior Department

Yeah, so?

Male nominees to service academies outnumber women 3 to 1

How about those white uniforms, huh?

Wray says FBI has seen uptick in domestic terrorism cases motivated by white supremacy

The article by Matt Zapotosky of the Washington Post tells us that "FBI Director Christopher Wray told lawmakers Tuesday that the bureau has recorded about 100 arrests of domestic terrorism suspects in the past nine months and that most investigations of that kind involve some form of white supremacy — though an FBI spokeswoman later clarified the percentage is smaller. The figure, which Wray conceded was imprecise, is similar to the number of arrests made in international terrorism cases and represents an uptick compared with the prior year."

Slowly turning the law enforcement tyranny tables towards domestic dissent and away from the terrorists in light of Trump's ultimatum

[Page A3 brought a full-page JUUL advertisement to combating underaged vaping]

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I wouldn't light that cigar just yet:

"As prime minister, Johnson faces the Brexit he championed" by Stephen Castle New York Times, July 23, 2019

LONDON — Prime Minister Theresa May and Boris Johnson, Britain’s brash former foreign secretary and standard-bearer for leaving the European Union, will visit Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday, for her assent to the transition. The short journey from Parliament to the palace will be the culmination of a colorful career for Johnson, a former journalist whose ambition as a child was to become “world king,” who wrote a biography of his hero Winston Churchill, and who has been praised by President Donald Trump.

So there is still a chance she could stay?

Johnson’s rare mix of charismatic bluster and absent-minded air— either charming or maddening, depending on the listener and the moment — and his unusual gift for communicating with voters have made him one of the country’s best-known politicians for years, and carried him to two terms as London mayor, but his support for Brexit, along with his penchant for pronouncements that do not always hold up under scrutiny, has also made him a highly divisive figure.....

--more--"

Well, the heat is on, and the first question he will have to answer is what he will do about ‘‘Iranian bravura.’’ 

If he backs down, I would expect some kind of Manchester-like event.

[Boris can light the cigar now, for there was a full-page Total Wine on page A5 that also offers 15% off cigars]

Picking things back up on page A6:

Trump sues to block House Democrats from getting his New York state tax returns

Right next to that article was this:

Jon Stewart (second from right) hugged 9/11 first responders as Senator Chuck Schumer of New York stood nearby after the Senate voted to ensure that the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund is funded for the next seven decades, with an estimated cost of $10.2 billion over the next 10 years.
Jon Stewart (second from right) hugged 9/11 first responders as Senator Chuck Schumer of New York stood nearby after the Senate voted to ensure that the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund is funded for the next seven decades, with an estimated cost of $10.2 billion over the next 10 years.(Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Look at the grinning Jews who have managed to bury any questions with this generational hush money (to be doled out by paymaster Feinberg?) with District Judge Hellerstein there to block any attempt at investigation. 

I must say, the guy on the far right looks like he finds Chuck's cat-that-ate-the-canary grin odd.

Here are a few notes that were left:

Biden unveils plan to reduce mass incarceration

Coal magnate to host Trump fund-raiser

Was that the fallout from the crash (assassination?) that has gone off the radar?

Sanders campaign workers agree on pay raise plan

MUELLER
Continued from Page A1

Former Senator Tom Daschle of South Dakota, who was the Democratic leader during the Senate impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton in 1999, said, “I think he’s going to stick to the script, and the Justice Department has told him to stick to the script, so I think it will be difficult for him to provide any more information.”

Mueller’s longtime right-hand aide will appear beside him at the witness table during the hearing with the House Judiciary Committee to assist as needed, people familiar with the hearing said.

The Judiciary Committee signed off on the unusual arrangement after Mueller asked that the aide, Aaron Zebley, be sworn in as a witness alongside him. If Democrats had agreed, lawmakers could have questioned Zebley directly, potentially upending carefully laid plans by Democrats and Republicans over how to use their scant time with Mueller. Instead, as a counsel to Mueller, Zebley will not be under oath or theoretically allowed to answer lawmakers’ queries, but he can confer privately with Mueller, 74, if the former special counsel needs assistance.

It's happening now, the TV is off, and it reminds one of Brendan Sullivan whispering into Olver North's ear during the Iran-Contra hearings.

Despite the low expectations of many, the hearing is unlikely to be free of fireworks. Democrats will use Mueller to argue that Trump benefited from Russia’s help in the 2016 election even if investigators did not establish a criminal conspiracy and that his efforts to impede the investigation amounted to obstruction of justice even if Justice Department rules bar indictment of a sitting president. Republicans will grill the former special counsel to press their case that the entire investigation represented an illegitimate, partisan coup attempt even though Mueller is a lifelong Republican.

I want someone to ask him why he was MIA at the Boston office while Whitey Bulger was running amok, or why the FBI ignored the memos from field offices regarding flight school lessons by the hijackers, or about the Israeli spy ring that was rounded up immediately before and after the 9/11 attacks.

Of course, no one will ask him about those things, and I doubt the name Kushner will come up much, if at all.

The resulting food fight could prove to be riveting television as cable and broadcast networks carry the proceedings live with back-to-back hearings before the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees, and Mueller may be compelling simply by virtue of his just-the-facts credibility after two years of near silence. The real question, however, is whether it changes anyone’s mind in a highly polarized country that has already digested Mueller’s findings and dug in on its conflicting views of Trump and his guilt or innocence.

Kenneth M. Duberstein, who took over as President Ronald Reagan’s chief of staff after the Iran-Contra scandal, said the hearing had become a sideshow. “I think the American people have moved on,” he said. “This is more for TV ratings. I would be shocked if Mueller would say something important that isn’t already out there. I don’t know a lot of people who are planning on listening in this town.”

I miss Kenny, God rest his soul.

Washington has seen plenty of dramatic hearings over the years, including John Dean testifying against his own president during the Watergate scandal that brought down Nixon and Oliver L. North in his Marine uniform explaining his role in Iran-Contra and making himself into a hero of the right.   findings mean. The delay in Mueller’s testimony and the ability of Attorney General William Barr to frame the results of his investigation on terms most favorable to Trump.

Did he, knowing that other interested parties would actually read the thing?

For their part, Republicans on Tuesday took on their best nothing-to-see-here demeanor, dutifully repeating the party’s Americans-have-moved-on talking points. While playing down expectations, Democrats were still hoping for a splash.....

Does a bellyflop count?

--more--"

Barr is being held in contempt but the office keeps working:

"Justice Department opens antitrust review of big tech companies" by Daisuke Wakabayashi and Katie Benner New York Times, July 23, 2019

The federal government has turned its full investigative powers on examining the world’s biggest technology companies, building on a backlash against the industry that has been growing for over a year.

The Justice Department said Tuesday that it would start an antitrust review into how powerful Internet companies had accumulated market power and whether they had acted to reduce competition. The announcement follows similar inquiries underway in Congress and at the Federal Trade Commission, which shares antitrust oversight responsibilities with the Justice Department.

Isn't that Liz Warren's position?

The Justice Department did not name specific companies in a news release announcing its review, but noted that it would look into concerns about search, social media and some retail services — presumably putting Google, Facebook, and Amazon on notice.

The pressure on tech giants has ended decades of deferential treatment toward the industry. In Congress, the House Judiciary subcommittee on antitrust is holding hearings and conducting its own investigation of the market power and behavior of the big tech companies.

Better up those lobbying checks.

At a hearing last week, with witnesses from Google, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple, Representative David Cicilline, chairman of the subcommittee, said that the government stance for too long was to celebrate the new tech economy rather than scrutinize its corporate leaders.....

He's new on the scene, but he is going to take care of your concerns and fix what is broken.

--more--"

Related:

Mass. moves to expand tax on online sales

Time to Barr the door:

"US attorney general says encryption creates security risk" by Tami Abdollah Associated Press, July 23, 2019 

Comey said the same thing.

NEW YORK — Attorney General William Barr said Tuesday that increased encryption of data on phones and computers and encrypted messaging apps are putting American security at risk.

Barr’s comments at a cybersecurity conference mark a continuing effort by the Justice Department to push tech companies to provide law enforcement with access to encrypted devices and applications during investigations.

‘‘There have been enough dogmatic pronouncements that lawful access simply cannot be done,’’ Barr said. ‘‘It can be, and it must be.’’

The attorney general said law enforcement is increasingly unable to access information on devices, and between devices, even with a warrant supporting probable cause of criminal activity.

Barr said terrorists and cartels switch mid-communication to encrypted applications to plan deadly operations. He described a transnational drug cartel’s use of WhatsApp group chat to specifically coordinate murders of Mexico-based police officials.

Where did they get their guns?

Gail Kent, Facebook’s global public policy lead on security, recently said that allowing the government’s ability to gain access to encrypted communications would jeopardize cybersecurity for millions of law-abiding people who rely on it. WhatsApp is owned by Facebook.

‘‘It’s impossible to create any backdoor that couldn’t be discovered, and exploited, by bad actors,’’ Kent said.

That's what the China and 5G argument is about, and whose fingerprints will be left behind!

Allowing government access to encrypted devices also wouldn’t prevent people from switching to any new services that may crop up around the world that US agencies can’t access, Kent said.

Encrypted communications are ones that are only available to users on either end of the communications. The increasing use of this technology has long been coined by the Justice Department as the ‘‘going dark’’ problem.

Barr’s remarks also acknowledged the need for encryption to ensure overall cybersecurity that has enabled people to bank relatively securely online and engage in e-commerce.

Barr said that to date, law enforcement in Garland, Texas, have been unable to access 100 instant messages sent between terrorists who carried out an attack there in May 2015.

‘‘The status quo is exceptionally dangerous, it is unacceptable and only getting worse,’’ Barr said. ‘‘It’s time for the United States to stop debating whether to address it and start talking about how to address it.’’

Time to hit the brakes.

It's a $tatu$ quo $ociety, and thus I am suspicious of the urgent danger.

Ex-FBI director James Comey championed the need for a law enforcement workaround to encrypted devices and communications. He led a highly publicized push to gain access to an iPhone belonging to a perpetrator of a terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., that killed 14 people in 2015.

You take a second look at that and you realize, same drill, different day.

From the Senate floor on Tuesday, Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, responded to Barr’s remarks in New York calling it an ‘‘outrageous, wrongheaded, and dangerous proposal.’’

Wyden said Barr wants to ‘‘blow a hole’’ in a critical security feature for Americans’ digital lives by trying to undermine strong encryption and advocating for government backdoors into the personal devices of Americans. He said strong encryption helps keep health records, personal communications, and other sensitive data secure from hackers.

Effectively banning encryption in the United States by not allowing companies to provide unbreakable encryption, doesn’t prevent it existing and flourishing elsewhere, and only makes Americans less secure against foreign hackers, Wyden said.

‘‘Once you weaken encryption with a backdoor, you make it far easier for criminals, hackers, and predators to get into your digital life,’’ Wyden said.

He said he fears and expects that Barr and President Trump would abuse the power to break encryption if they were allowed to do so. Given their records ‘‘it is clear to me that they cannot be trusted with this kind of power,’’ Wyden said.

Then why is he laughing?

As long as they don't infiltrate and spy on the opposing presidential campaign.

Noah Theran, a spokesman for the Internet Association, said ‘‘strong encryption makes us all safer and more secure’’ and protects Americans from daily cyberattacks that can compromise personal information. The trade association represents internet companies — including Facebook, Google, Twitter, and LinkedIn — on public policy. ‘‘Companies must not be required to engineer vulnerabilities into their products and services that could put us all at risk,’’ Theran said.

Critics of the Justice Department position also point out that law enforcement agencies have been able to use unencrypted metadata to solve crimes and hired a private contractor to ultimately gain access to the iPhone linked to the San Bernardino attacks.

‘‘There is no way to give the FBI access to encrypted communications without giving the same access to every government on the planet,’’ said Brett Max Kaufman, senior staff attorney with the ACLU’s Center for Democracy. ‘‘Technology providers should continue to make their products as safe as possible and resist pressure from all governments to undermine the security of the tools they offer.’’

--more--"

Meanwhile, the FBI just opened a forensic lab in Chelsea that they can sic on you.

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There is, of course, one group you can not resist:

"For Israel, the Netanyahu Era has been a good one" bJeff Jacoby Globe Columnist, July 24, 2019

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Isarael arrives to chair the weekly cabinet meeting at his office in Jerusalem, June 30.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Isarael arrives to chair the weekly cabinet meeting at his office in Jerusalem, June 30. (ODED BALILTY/AFP/Getty Images)

He's smiling like Schumer and Stewart, and why wouldn't he? 

9/11 was good for Israel!

As of this week, Benjamin Netanyahu is the longest-serving prime minister in Israel’s history. David Ben Gurion, the country’s first prime minister and legendary founding father, held the office for a total of 13 years and 127 days. Netanyahu surpassed that milestone on Saturday. If he wins the upcoming election in September — and if he survives several pending corruption investigations — he could theoretically remain prime minister until 2023.

I think he all but assured to win the election since Barak turned up in Epstein's flight logs (but that was news two weeks ago and has been properly dispatched down the pre$$ memory hole).

Such longevity in office would be an extraordinary achievement in any parliamentary democracy, let alone one as contentious and competitive as Israel’s, where the stakes are always high and the elbows always sharp. It is all the more remarkable in the case of Netanyahu, whose enemies are legion — and sometimes quite powerful, as in the case of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, both of whom tried to bring about his political downfall. Throughout his political career, Netanyahu has been bitterly resented by the left, both at home and abroad, and especially in the media. As he remarked tartly in a recent Time magazine interview, journalists have had “Netanyahu fatigue from Day One,” but Israeli voters haven’t.

Is he saying Clinton and Obama interfered in Israeli elections?

Netanyahu may be controversial, arrogant, and infuriating, but he has also been successful. On his watch, Israel has grown stronger and more prosperous. Despite a rising tide of global anti-Semitism, the Jewish state is more secure than it has ever been. The “nation that dwells alone” has never been less isolated diplomatically, and while the Middle East remains a notoriously violent, unstable, and fanatical region, the decade since Netanyahu’s 1999 return to power has been the most peaceful in Israel’s history.

Does he know that flies in the face of the endless war propaganda in his paper's pages?

To be sure, there has been no resolution of the conflict with the Palestinians. The “peace process” is moribund, and Netanyahu has shown no inclination to move heaven and earth to revive it. The prime minister has paid lip service to the eventual goal of a two-state solution, but he has also given voters his word that there will be no Palestinian state as long as he is prime minister.

And the Kushner Plan completely flopped, so much so that it has also been dispatched down the pre$$ memory hole.

The results speak for themselves.

For years, a large and vocal “peace camp” has insisted that Israel must reach a settlement with the Palestinians or be shunned as a pariah and targeted by global boycotts. Netanyahu has proved them wrong. His predecessors’ dramatic attempts to end the conflict — Yitzhak Rabin’s famous White House handshake, Ariel Sharon’s withdrawal from Gaza, Ehud Olmert’s offer of Palestinian statehood— ended up worsening Israel’s standing in the world. The longer Israeli leaders clung to a policy of concessions and appeasement, the more respect Israel lost. Under Netanyahu, the appeasement has largely stopped — and Israel’s international profile has risen dramatically.

In recent years, Netanyahu became the first Israeli prime minister to visit Latin America. He has traveled four times to Africa and welcomed numerous African leaders to Israel. He has achieved “better relations with all the leaders of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council than at any time since [Israel] was created,” writes Aaron David Miller, a longtime State Department adviser and Middle East negotiator.

They do want to send back the African immigrants, but at least they only built a separation barrier and not a wall.

Most important, he has expanded and strengthened Israel’s ties to Sunni Arab nations such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which share Jerusalem’s view of Iran as a deadly enemy.

Yes, that is most important for it entails the coming war on Iran.

Complementing Israel’s improved fortunes beyond its borders is plenty of good news at home, from the country’s emergence as a world-class high-tech powerhouse to an ongoing decline in terrorist attacks. To the extent that such things can be measured, Israel is one of the happiest nations on the planet. The Netanyahu Era has been a good one, and Israelis have been in no hurry to end it.

When Netanyahu’s first stint as prime minister ended in a 1999 election defeat, some made the mistake of writing him off as a political force. “He will be a footnote, if anything, in the history of Israeli prime ministers,” gloated one prominent Israeli journalist. Israelis return to the polls in September, and Netanyahu is running hard in hopes of winning a sixth election. There are no guarantees; voters may decide his time is up. But whatever happens, Netanyahu will never again be mistaken for a footnote. He is no beloved Ben Gurion, but his place in Israel’s pantheon is assured.

For good or ill.

--more--"

It's the world according to Pompeo’s law with Trump the modern George Wallace, and one can only ask if people of color will ever feel that they belong?


{@@##$$%%^^&&}

I must say that I never thought I would be here this long when I began this blog. 

"Saugus selectman facing charges of theft from nonprofit, misuse of campaign funds" by Danny McDonald Globe Staff, July 23

A Saugus selectman is among three former employees of the Boston Center for Adult Education facing criminal charges for allegedly stealing over $1.7 million from the nonprofit, Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins said Tuesday.

Mark Mitchell, who was first elected in a special election to recall the board in 2015, was also indicted on various campaign finance charges, Rollins said in a statement.

Mitchell, 49, a former comptroller of the center, faces a slew of charges including making false entries in corporate books, publishing of false or exaggerated statements, common law uttering, and four counts of larceny by scheme. He allegedly directed over $240,000 of the center’s money to a private youth baseball organization he runs, Saugus Wings, the statement said.

He has also been charged in connection with the misuse of campaign funds, specifically, improper campaign expenditures, making a cash campaign expenditure over $50, mixing political committee and personal funds, and a fifth count of larceny by scheme.

Mitchell is among two former executives of the nonprofit education center who are scheduled to be arraigned in Suffolk Superior Court on Wednesday for alleged thefts from the nonprofit.

Susan B. Brown, the center’s former executive director, and her partner, Karen Kalfian who briefly worked in marketing at the agency, are also due to be indicted.....

Don't expect this case to fizzle, and be prepared to stay around a while.

--more--"

Also see:

Rhode Island AG, state police to review 70 years of sexual abuse allegations from Providence diocese

Help is also being sent to West Virginia.

"Troopers seized more than 1,500 bags of heroin weighing about 30.4 grams during a motor vehicle stop early Saturday morning in Greenfield, State Police said. At around 12:50 a.m., the driver of the vehicle, Kenneth Demingware, 28, was pulled over for speeding, according to Lieutenant Thomas Ryan, a State Police spokesman. Demingware was driving north on Interstate 91 near Exit 28 when he was stopped. He then failed to provide a valid license to the officer, according to State Police. Demingware and his passenger, Kyle Dennis, 26, were found to be in possession of about 1,520 wax bags of heroin inside the 2017 Toyota Corolla, police said in a statement. Both men are from Barre, Vt., officials said. The men were arrested and taken to the State Police Shelburne Falls Barracks for booking. They were held at the Franklin County House of Correction before their arraignment Monday at Greenfield District Court. Demingware was charged with trafficking heroin, conspiracy to violate drug law, refusing to identify while operating a motor vehicle, providing a false name or social security number, unlicensed operation, and speeding, State Police said. Demingware also had a warrant out for his arrest from Lawrence District Court on charges of possession of a Class A drug, said Sarah Pinkerman, a clerk from Greenfield District Court. The warrant was posted after Demingware failed to appear for his pretrial hearing in Lawrence. Dennis was charged with trafficking heroin, conspiracy to violate drug law, tampering with evidence, and littering from a motor vehicle. Demingware and Dennis will both appear in Greenfield District Court Aug. 22 for their pretrial hearing. Demingware’s bail of $5,000 has not been posted, while Dennis has been released on $2,500 bail, Pinkerman said."

Related:

Three Boston residents killed amid deadly month on N.H. roadways

Bear That Broke Into Vermont Home Last Weekend Euthanized

Black visitors say they were repeatedly targeted by staff members at Angry Orchard location in New York

Was a bitter experience for them. The stuff tasted like pond water.

Bathroom is over there:

"State reports outbreak of foodborne illness" by Alison Kuznitz Globe Correspondent, July 23, 2019

More than 120 Massachusetts residents, many from Greater Boston, have contracted a foodborne illness since May 1 that can trigger severe gastrointestinal problems, the state Department of Public Health said Tuesday.

The outbreak of cyclosporiasis — caused by a parasite that is commonly found in the tropics — far outpaces the past three years, in which the state saw only between 18 and 33 reported cases. Just a “small number” of cases in Massachusetts have been connected to international travel, the department said.

“We know this is the tip of the iceberg, and there are plenty of more cases we’re probably not aware of,” said Dr. Larry Madoff, the medical director of the department’s Bureau of Infectious Disease and Laboratory Sciences, in a phone interview Tuesday. “This isn’t a life-threatening infection . . . I don’t think we’re alarmed, but it is something to notice.”

In New York City, public health officials are also warning of an outbreak that has resulted in more than 90 cases between Jan. 1 and July 15. Last year, the city had 56 cases within the same time span, according to a health alert.

How are those vaccinations for measles going in the Orthodox Jew areas anyway?

In 2000 and 2004, the illness was linked nationally to raspberries and snow peas from Guatemala. In 2013, the source was bagged salad mix from Mexico. The disease is often seasonal through late spring and summer, with bouts peaking in June and July, Madoff said.

To limit exposure to the infection, especially when eating imported leafy greens and other fresh produce, the Department of Public Health encourages people to practice basic food safety guidelines. That includes washing fruits, vegetables, and kitchen equipment during various phases of food preparation, as well as avoiding cross-contamination. Brushes should be used to scrub fruits and vegetables with thick rinds.

“We should be wary of [cyclosporiasis] till it starts getting better,” said Dr. Jason Harris, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

I'll stay away from the salads for a while.

It can take about a week for someone who’s consumed the parasite to begin experiencingsymptoms that include watery diarrhea, appetite loss, abdominal cramping, nausea, and fatigue, according to the DPH. A mild infection usually subsides naturally within a few days, though antibiotics can be prescribed for treatment in some instances.

Young children, in addition to patients who are elderly or who have compromised immune systems, could have complications that last up to several weeks.

“The symptoms and signs overlap with other germs that cause diarrhea,” Madoff said, but diagnosis is trickier, Harris said, since bacterial cultures — for instance, to detect E. coli or salmonella — won’t indicate the parasite’s presence.

Instead, a separate lab test will need to be ordered for stool specimens, he said.....

Then they have your DNA.

--more--"

They have brought the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the US Food and Drug Administration in an attempt to identify the type of food that spurred the outbreak.

Related:

FDA warns Curaleaf to stop marketing CBD with unfounded claims

CBD has also been declared illegal (in answer to your question), so be prepared for them to throw the book at you.

Also see:

If you don’t already own a home in Massachusetts, it may be too late

There are plenty of parking spaces, though.

Frequency Therapeutics raises another $62 million

I'm $orry, $ay again.

Look what is in front of you:

"The Forward, a 122-year-old Jewish publication, named a new leader of its newsroom Tuesday, appointing Jodi Rudoren, a veteran editor and reporter at The New York Times, as editor-in-chief. In hiring Rudoren, a former Jerusalem bureau chief for The Times, The Forward is taking another step past a tumultuous period. After moving from a weekly to a monthly schedule, the publication ceased its print edition this past spring. It also cut nearly 30 percent of its staff, including the previous editor-in-chief, Jane Eisner. Last week, the publisher and chief executive, Rachel Fishman Feddersen, announced the receipt of a $500,000 gift from Craig Newmark, the Craigslist founder and media philanthropist. Feddersen said the money would be used to revitalize The Forward’s website and expand its readership. Rudoren, who joined The Times in 1998, is an associate managing editor at the paper, developing strategies to better engage readers. She is expected to start her new job in September."

Looks like they are going backward to me!

Trump's Cold War

$
0
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Let's hope that is all it is:

"Chinese money in the US dries up as trade war drags on" by Alan Rappeport New York Times, July 21, 2019

WASHINGTON — Growing distrust between the United States and China has slowed the once steady flow of Chinese cash into America, with Chinese investment plummeting by nearly 90 percent since President Trump took office.

The falloff, which is being felt broadly across the economy, stems from tougher regulatory scrutiny in the United States and a less hospitable climate toward Chinese investment, as well as Beijing’s tightened limits on foreign spending. It is affecting a range of industries, including Silicon Valley startups, the Manhattan real estate market and state governments that spent years wooing Chinese investment, underscoring how the world’s two largest economies are beginning to decouple after years of increasing integration.

Congre$$ will be breaking them up soon.

“The fact that the foreign direct investment has fallen so sharply is symbolic of how badly the economic relationship between the United States and China has deteriorated,” said Eswar Prasad, former head of the International Monetary Fund’s China division. “The US doesn’t trust the Chinese, and China doesn’t trust the US.”

For years, Chinese investment into the United States had been accelerating, with money pouring into autos, tech, energy, and agriculture and fueling new jobs in Michigan, South Carolina, Missouri, Texas, and other states. As China’s economy boomed, state and local governments along with US companies looked to snap up some of those Chinese funds, but Trump’s economic Cold Warhas helped reverse that trend.

It's all over 5G and who will do the trapdoor data collection and spying.


Chinese foreign direct investment in the United States fell to $5.4 billion in 2018 from a peak of $46.5 billion in 2016, a drop of 88 percent, according to data from Rhodium Group, an economic research firm. Preliminary figures through April of this year, which account for investments by mainland Chinese companies, suggested only a modest uptick from last year, with transactions valued at $2.8 billion.

“I certainly hear in conversations with investors a lot of concern about whether the US market is still open,” said Rod Hunter, a lawyer at Baker McKenzie who specializes in foreign investment reviews. “You have a potentially chilling effect for Chinese investors.”

A confluence of forces appear to be at play. A slowing economy and stricter capital controls in China have made it more difficult for Chinese investors to buy American, according to trade and mergers and acquisitions advisers. Trump’s penchant for imposing punishing tariffs on Chinese goods and an increasingly powerful regulatory group that is heavily scrutinizing foreign investment, particularly involving Chinese investors, have also spooked businesses in both countries.

China, which has retaliated against US goods with its own tariffs, may also be turning off the investment spigot as punishment for Trump’s economic crackdown.

And yet the $tock market soars.

Concerns about America’s receptiveness to Chinese investment have been aggravated by a flurry of transactions that collapsed under heavy scrutiny from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. The group, which is headed by the Treasury Department, gained expanded powers in 2018 that allow it to block a broader array of transactions, including minority stakes and investments in sensitive technologies like telecommunications and computing.

Shortly after the new year, China’s HNA Group took a $41 million loss on a glass and aluminum Manhattan high-rise after US regulators forced it to sell the property because of security concerns about its proximity to Trump Tower, only a few blocks away.

In March, the Chinese owners of a gay dating app known as Grindr were told by regulators to find a buyer for the company. The Trump administration feared Beijing could use personal information as leverage over US officials.

They have an Epstein in the closet, too?

Those interventions followed prominent cases earlier in Trump’s term, such as Broadcom’s quashed bid for Qualcomm and the sale of MoneyGram to a unit of the Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba last year. An agreement involving Lattice Semiconductor and an investment firm with reported ties to the Chinese government was also rejected.

In some cases, the chill has benefited US companies. In June, UnitedHealth swooped in to buy PatientsLikeMe, a health care technology startup, after the committee said it was a security risk to allow the company’s Chinese owner to have access to health data. The purchase amount was not disclosed, but the increased scrutiny is also complicating efforts by US industries to team up with Chinese investors and leading to a retrenchment in certain sectors. The real estate sector, which has been buttressed by investors from China in the last decade, has had a steep falloff as relations sour and as Chinese officials clamp down on foreign real estate investment.

A May report from Cushman & Wakefield noted a “frenzy of disposal activity” among Chinese commercial real estate investors in the United States. In 2018, there were 37 property acquisitions by Chinese buyers worth $2.3 billion, but $3.1 billion of commercial real estate was sold off. The report said that the treatment of HNA and tough trade talk made Chinese investors feel unwelcome.

Same as when they built the railroads.

Chinese investors are also showing less appetite for residential real estate in the United States. Research released recently by the National Association of Realtors found that purchases of homes in America by Chinese buyers declined by 56 percent to $13.4 billion in the year to March.

And yet the price of properties keeps rising.

“The magnitude of the decline is quite striking, implying less confidence in owning a property in the US,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the Realtors group.

They are taking the One Road, One Belt out of town.

Weaker Chinese investment is unlikely to derail the US economy, as it is a small fractionof that from Britain, Canada, Japan, and Germany. China also continues to be the largest buyer of US Treasuries; however, its holdings have fallen in recent years to $1.1 trillion, according to the latest Treasury Department data, but the decline in investment could hurt areas that are already economically disadvantaged and that have become dependent on Chinese cash. States like Michigan have increasingly wooed Chinese investment, resulting in new factories and jobs in a part of the country that has struggled to recover from the Great Recession.

They invest here while our guys offshore and outsource or import illegals.

The BIG NEWS from above, though, is the pullback in the purchase of U.S. Treasuries. Thank God the Congre$$ lifted the debt limit and is sending the bill over Trump (food stamps will pay for it).

Craig Allen, president of the US-China Business Council, said the loss of Chinese investment would be felt predominantly in rural states where Chinese investors have bought factories and revived struggling businesses.

Trump is cutting the electoral college rug out from under himself.

“The not-so-welcome mat is out, and it is having a deleterious effect on relatively poorer areas in the United States that need jobs,” he said.

“The Chinese hear from our state and local officials that they’re welcome,” Allen said. “What they’re hearing from federal officials is quite different.”

--more--"

I was just wondering who will but the $callops:

"America’s harvest of scallops is increasing to near-record levels at a time when the shellfish are in high demand and the value of the fishery has surged in recent years. Sea scallops, harvested mostly by boats from the cold Atlantic Ocean, are the target of one of the most valuable fisheries in America. New data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says the harvest topped 58.2 million pounds last year, the highest total since 2011 and the fifth-highest in history according to federal statistics going back to 1945. The availability of scallops for consumers hasn’t changed much as the US harvest has long been supplemented by foreign sources. Prices to consumers have also held about steady. The value of the fishery itself, though, is rising. American scallops were worth $532.9 million at the docks last year. That’s the third-highest figure on record and more than $100 million higher than the 2014 total. The scallop industry is thriving as a result of years of conservative management that has allowed the valuable shellfish to grow undisturbed, said Jimmy Wotton, a scalloper based out of Friendship, Maine. The US scallop fishery is anchored by New Bedford. Massachusetts is the state where by far the most scallops come to the docks. Other states with significant scallop fisheries are New Jersey, Virginia, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Maine."

They are patting themselves on the back without a word regarding climate change!

And here she comes.....

"One day after she had been crowned Miss Michigan by the Miss World America organization, Kathy Zhu was stripped of her title. Racially and religiously charged comments Zhu had made on Twitter came to the attention of pageant organizers, who ruled that they violated the competition’s rules of “good character.” After a flurry of text messages and e-mails between Zhu, 20, and organizers, she was told the competition would no longer recognize her and she was to stop mentioning or using images of herself as the pageant’s winner. Zhu, a conservative activist who is a University of Michigan senior and the social media director for the national group Chinese Americans for Trump, shared on social media an e-mail she had received Thursday from the pageant’s state director, Laurie DeJack. “It has been brought to the attention of Miss World America ‘MWA’ that your social media accounts contain offensive, insensitive, and inappropriate content,” DeJack wrote. The first tweet that drew the scrutiny of the pageant came in response to criticism of police officers about the Black Lives Matter movement. “Did you know the majority of black deaths are caused by other blacks?” Zhu wrote on Twitter in October 2017. “Fix problems within your own community first before blaming others.” In February 2018, in a tweet she has since deleted, Zhu criticized a World Hijab Day awareness event at the University of Central Florida, where she had been a student before transferring. “There’s a ‘try a hijab on’ booth at my college campus,” Zhu wrote at the time. “So you’re telling me that it’s now just a fashion accessory and not a religious thing? Or are you just trying to get women used to being oppressed under Islam.” Zhu said in an interview Saturday that her tweets had been taken out of context and that she was punished for her conservative views“They just immediately assumed that I was a racist,” said Zhu, vice president of the College Republicans at the University of Michigan. “They should have let me explain myself.” DeJack declined to comment Saturday and referred questions to the Miss World America organization, an international competition that dates to 1951." 

You can eliminate her from the contest and send her back, right?

"Hong Kong police fire tear gas and rubber bullets; protesters target Beijing’s office" by Mike Ives New York Times, July 21, 2019

HONG KONG — Hong Kong police fired rounds of tear gas and rubber bullets Sunday to disperse protestersafter some of them vandalized the Chinese government’s liaison office in the city, a direct challenge to Beijing’s authority after a peaceful protest earlier in the day.

In a separate clash, recorded by a local television station, masked men dressed in white and wielding sticks assaulted antigovernment protesters in a train station late Sunday night in northwestern Hong Kong.

The unrest spiraled out of a march that called for an independent investigation into what protesters said was police brutality in earlier street clashes. The march was peaceful, but thousands of demonstrators later marched past where the police had said the official demonstration should end.

Protesters then occupied major roads and heckled police officers stationed outside government buildings. “Recover Hong Kong; it’s the time for revolution,” some chanted.

By nightfall, some protesters had defaced a crest of the Chinese government at the liaison office with eggs and black ink, and had sprayed the building’s exterior with graffiti.

You would have to scroll through my China coverage to get a feel for the mixed messages surrounding what increasingly looks like a covert destabilization campaign by the U.S. given the timing of it all and pre$$ push and focus.

Shortly after 8 p.m., about 100 riot police officers, some carrying guns with plastic rounds, approached the liaison office and dragged away metal barricades that protesters had placed in the road.

“Charge forward!” they shouted, as hundreds of protesters fled east through the streets.

Scuffles soon broke out nearby, with some protesters lobbing eggs and bags of liquid at the police during a standoff outside the Central Police Station. After a group of protesters charged forward and threw projectiles, riot police officers rushed them, shooting several rounds of tear gas.

Probably pee as the framing is all upside-down.

The separate attack by masked men occurred at the Yuen Long train station, said Jerming Zhang, a 16-year-old student and first-aid volunteer who was at the station.

He said in a phone interview that as civilians, including those with children, tried to flee the station, the masked men followed them onto an open train and continued beating people with wooden sticks.

“It was like a stampede,” he said. “They hit people indiscriminately, smiling as they beat them up.”

The implication is Chinese government goons.

In a statement Sunday night, the Hong Kong government condemned protesters who it said had “blatantly challenged the national sovereignty by maliciously besieging and storming” Beijing’s liaison office. It promised to “deal with these acts in a serious manner in accordance with the law.”

Would the U.S. stand for such a thing (exempting Israel, of course)?

A later statement denounced the attack at the train station, saying “some people congregated at the platforms” and attacked and injured commuters. “This is absolutely unacceptable to Hong Kong as a society that observes the rule of law,” the statement said.

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office of China’s State Council also condemned the actions of the protesters who blocked the liaison office and vandalized it, and warned of serious consequences.

“Such acts openly challenge the authority of the central government,” the statement said, calling the actions “absolutely intolerable.”

The developments Sunday were the latest chapter in the city’s worst political crisis since China reclaimed sovereignty from Britain in 1997. They signaled growing antagonism between the largely peaceful protest movement and the front-line officers patrolling it.

The Times just told you what side of like they are on.

“I hope that the police can take reasonable actions tonight,” Roy Kwong, a lawmaker who has been a driving force behind the protests, told reporters at the front lines early Sunday evening. “Otherwise, I fear that the anger of the people will erupt.”

How many citizens a day do they gun down? 

It's like 1.5 nationwide here.

The Civil Human Rights Front, which has helped organize the recent protests, said it estimated that 430,000 people had turned out for the officially sanctioned part of the march. A police spokeswoman said the estimated number of people who had marched along the permitted route during the “peak period” was 138,000. 

That is why it is getting so much pre$$.

Police also said they were investigating whether explosives found Friday at a “homemade laboratory” were related to the Sunday protest, but they did not have enough evidence to make any conclusion. Three men in their 20s were arrested in connection with the case. On Friday, police said, officers seized about 2 pounds of powerful explosives, 10 gasoline bombs, and bullets and knives from an industrial building.

Hong Kong’s mass demonstrations began in early June in response to unpopular legislation that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China, where the courts are controlled by the governing Communist Party. The bill has since been suspended but not fully withdrawn, one of the protesters’ key demands.

On Sunday afternoon, thousands of protesters dressed mostly in black T-shirts set off on a march, some carrying signs saying, “No extradition to China” and “Stop police brutality.”

“The government must withdraw the bill and set up an independent inquiry committee to investigate the police,” said Tommy Tsang, an 81-year-old retiree. He said he was particularly angered by the police violence. “If you don’t hit people, why would they hit you back?” he said.

I don't know, ask Iran.

Advisers to the territory’s embattled chief executive, Carrie Lam, say her administration did not intend to make further concessions to the protesters. That stance suggests the government is confident it can weather the protests, despite the risks of damage to the local economy or violence between demonstrators and police officers.

At this point the Globe's web version carried an advertisement for a look inside Rachel Maddows humble cabin where she lives with her partner, brought to you by FinancialAdvisorsHeroes -- proving that they are in bed together.

Police officials say they have largely acted with restraint and have used force only when attacked by protesters. They accused some protesters of rioting during recent demonstrations, including one in which a small group forcefully stormed the Hong Kong legislature.

Our cops say the same things!

Police and a watchdog that monitors complaints against them have said they plan to investigate officers’ actions at a June 12 demonstration that turned violent. Many people in Hong Kong, a city of about 7 million, say they believe that the police response that day — which included firing tear gas, rubber bullets, and beanbag rounds — was excessive.

Did they maim anyone like the Israeli snipers shooting over the sand berms into Gaza every Friday?

--more--"

A few weeks ago they hauled the mothers out to protest, and a couple of days ago they got the grandparents out there:

"Hong Kong elders march in support of young demonstrators" by Alice Fung Associated Press, July 17, 2019

HONG KONG — Thousands of Hong Kong senior citizens, including a popular actress, marched Wednesday in a show of support for youths at the forefront of monthlong protests against a contentious extradition bill in the semiautonomous Chinese territory.

There were more stoppages for rest.

The seniors also slammed the police for their handling of a protest Sunday in Hong Kong’s Sha Tin district. That protest was mostly peaceful but ended in mayhem when violent scuffles in a shopping mall saw dozens injured, including a policeman who had a finger bitten off, and more than 40 people detained.

Veteran actress and singer Deanie Ip, who joined Wednesday’s demonstration, said police shouldn’t use heavy-handed tactics against young protesterswho‘‘have no guns’’ and were peacefully expressing their frustrations. ‘‘They are young people and they are doing the right thing. Why are they being mistreated?’’ she said.

Where they, though? 

They broke into and entered the legislative chamber and the agent provocateurs among them threatened governmental authority with vandalism.

Ip and several others held a banner reading ‘‘Support youth to protect Hong Kong’’ as they marched through a financial district. Wearing white tops and black pants, marchers held placards that read ‘‘Never give up’’ and ‘‘Stay together.’’

Dozens of seniors carried a 20-foot-long black banner that read ‘‘Reject tyrannical rule.’’

Some elders in wheelchairs also joined the march. Organizers said about 8,000 people participated in the demonstration.

Had to wheel them down, too, huh?

Hong Kong has been jolted for more than a month by a series of large-scale and occasional violent protests amid widespread anger over a proposed extradition law.

Even though Hong Kong’s embattled chief executive, Carrie Lam, suspended the bill and declared the legislation ‘‘dead,’’ her moves failed to placate the protesters, who have demanded her resignation. Tens of thousands have continued to take to the streets, with the protests expanding into a bigger movement against China’s growing intrusion into the territory.

Well, it's technically their's now, but don't they mean she has failed to appease the protesters?

The senior citizens Wednesday repeated demands for the legislation to be formally withdrawn, for the release of dozens of people detained, and for an independent inquiry into alleged police brutality against protesters.

More protests have been planned, which could cause further instability in the global financial hub.

It's like I keep saying, a destabilization campaign. Hit 'em where it hurts the mo$t.

Phil Chan, a senior fellow at the Institute for Security and Development Policy in Stockholm, said violent clashes between protesters and police could intensify unless the government starts to engage meaningfully with the people in meeting some of their demands, including the move toward universal suffrage.

‘‘The government at present is merely engaging in verbal dissemblance,’’ Chan said. ‘‘As the political crisis drags on, it will become increasingly difficult for the Hong Kong government to resolve, and police-community relations will take a long time to heal. It will become a lose-lose situation for both Hong Kong society and the Hong Kong government, and instability in Hong Kong can never be good for Beijing.’’

So cui bono regarding the protests the pre$$ is pushing, and I'm sure there is a lesson for Americans in there somewhere.

--more--"

"Mob attack at Hong Kong train station heightens seething tensions in city" by Austin Ramzy New York Times, July 22, 2019

HONG KONG — A brazen overnight attack by a mob of men with sticks and metal bars who were apparently targeting antigovernment protesters raised tensions in Hong Kong to new levels Monday after weeks of demonstrations, prompting fears of violence spiraling beyond authorities’ control.

Maybe they weren't Chinese government goons. Could be destabilization forces introducing a third element, seemingly at cross-purposes, to raise things to a new level and help spiral events out of control by provoking the Chines to crackdown even more.

Dozens of people, including journalists and a prodemocracy lawmaker, were injured in the assault in and around a train station in Yuen Long, a satellite town in northwestern Hong Kong near the border with mainland China.

The violence followed clashes earlier in the evening between police and protesters near the Chinese government’s liaison office in Hong Kong, and raised questions about why officers did not protect demonstrators, who have been critical of the police’s use of force in recent weeks.

Protesters painted graffiti on the Chinese government’s liaison office in Hong Kong on Sunday, and threw ink on the crest of the Chinese state displayed there, an act that Chinese officials said “openly challenged the authority of the central government.” Earlier, demonstrators participated in a peaceful march calling for an independent investigation into accusations of police brutality.

On Monday, Carrie Lam, the Hong Kong chief executive, said she condemned both the vandalizing of the liaison office, which she said challenged China’s sovereignty and “hurt the nation’s feelings,” and the mob attacks in Yuen Long.

“Violence will only breed more violence,” she said at a news conference.

That's right.

Media outlets in mainland China, which had previously given little notice to the protests, carried stories Monday on the damage to the liaison office and Hong Kong and central government officials’ denunciations of that vandalism. A report from CCTV, the main state news broadcaster, showed graffiti on the exterior of the office, and comments on Chinese social media were full of criticism for the Hong Kong protesters.

There goes the pot hollering kettle again.

The People’s Daily, the mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, ran a front-page commentary Monday that said the damage to the liaison office “not only trampled on the rule of law in Hong Kong, but also openly challenged the authority of the central government.”

They call it the New York Times over here.

With the attacks in Yuen Long, the protests have entered a stage that many Hong Kong activists fear from past experience: the use of thugs to intimidate demonstrators. The injured said they believed the attackers were members of organized crime societies known as triads, and they have complained that the violence was encouraged by government supporters and ignored by police.

“I have strong reason to believe they were gangsters,” said Lam Cheuk-ting, a prodemocracy lawmaker who was hit on his arms, hands, and face, leaving his mouth with a cut that required 18 stitches to close. “I don’t think any ordinary citizens have done such sophisticated, organized attacks on this kind of level.” 

I suppose it is entirely possible; however, on the other hand, the fact that my pre$$ is suggesting such a thing causes me doubt and that suggest the finger of suspicion be pointed in another direction.

Lam said he learned that someone was being assaulted in the station around 9 p.m., and he warned the police in Yuen Long. He then went there by train, where he said thugs carrying batons and wearing white shirts were running rampant.

“They repeatedly went into the train and were using batons to indiscriminately attack all the people in the train,” he said. “Many journalists, even a pregnant woman, all ordinary citizens of Hong Kong, were attacked by those gangsters.”

The protests in Hong Kong began weeks ago over a proposal that would allow extraditions to mainland China, but have spread to encompass demands for direct elections for the city’s leader and complaints about the use of force by police against demonstrators.

Lam condemned the police response to the mob attack as woefully inadequate, saying that the group was seen gathering as early as 6 p.m.

Yau Nai-keung, an assistant district police commander in Yuen Long, said early Monday that officers had made no arrests and found no weapons, but in one encounter captured by photojournalists, riot police spoke with two masked men in white shirts holding metal bars or sticks, patting one on the shoulder before walking off.

“It’s unbelievable,” said Lam, the lawmaker. “The behavior of the police force is really disgusting and shameless.”

Stephen Lo, the Hong Kong police commissioner, suggested that the protests contributed to the slow police response to the violence at the train station.

“Our manpower is stretched because every time when there is a major event which will lead to violent confrontations, we have to deploy some manpower from various districts to Hong Kong Island,” he said.

On Monday evening, a day after the violence, police said they had arrested two men in Yuen Long on charges of illegal assembly.

The Hospital Authority of Hong Kong said 45 people were injured in Yuen Long, and one was in serious condition. Another 14 people sought treatment after clashes between police and protesters near the Chinese liaison office on Hong Kong Island, about an hour south by train.

Locals were angered by what appeared to be police complacency, saying authorities did not answer their phone calls or register their complaints at the station Sunday. Terry Lin, a 32-year-old designer, said that he was one of the first people to rush to the local police station after seeing the men in white approach the train station with sticks, but the police eventually closed the metal gates to a growing crowd of residents after registering a few complaints, citing security concerns.

Prodemocracy and establishment parties condemned the violence, but some government supporters were accused of playing down or even endorsing the attacks on the protesters. A proestablishment legislator, Junius Ho, was seen in a video circulating late Sunday with a group of men in Yuen Long carrying Hong Kong flags and dressed in white shirts, the uniform of the attackers.

“Thank you for your efforts,” he said. “You guys are my heroes.”

Ho denied any connection with the attacks and said he was simply talking with people who came up to him as he was walking past them.

--more--"

Related:

Hong Kong arrests men with gang links over mob attack

You happy now?

Also see:

Chinese company buys bigger share of Daimler

Made the Italians mad, but Germans care about their mothers and daughters.

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Now for the third member of the Tripartite Pact:

"Shinzo Abe’s party headed to victory in Japan elections, securing his place in history" by Motoko Rich New York Times, July 21, 2019

TOKYO — The projected result represented a striking moment for Shinzo Abe, who a dozen years ago was forced to resign in disgrace after one year as prime minister, following a humiliating defeat of his party in a parliamentary election. Now, Abe, who returned to power in 2012 and has presided over an extended period of political stability.

During the campaign, Abe did not emphasize his desire to revise the constitution. Rather, he focused on promising to secure the country’s finances and touted his personal relationship with President Trump.

Public broadcaster NHK reported that voter turnout, below 50 percent, was the second-lowest in the history of elections for the upper house of parliament.....

The turnout was described as lackluster because “they just don’t feel their vote makes a difference, and the opposition’s problem comes down to marketing and identity.”

So that's here, there, Hong Kong, and everywhere else.

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They talked to one voter who works at a film-production company and said she voted Communist because the ruling party seems to be arrogant and just does whatever they want to do.”

Related(?): 

"Kyoto Animation Studio Arson Kills 33, Shocking Japan" by Motoko Rich New York Times, July 18, 2019

TOKYO — The attacker screamed “Die!” and set alight flammable liquid he had splashed around an anime studio in Kyoto, police said, starting a blaze that killed 33 people Thursday in what appears to be Japan’s worst mass killing in decades.

Witnesses described scenes of horror: a man hanging from a ledge as flames licked the walls; a pile of bodies on a staircase leading to the roof; a barefoot woman so badly burned that all bystanders could do was spray her with water as they waited for help.

The attack shocked a nation considered one of the safest in the world and prompted a global outpouring of grief among the many fans of anime — a school of animation that has become synonymous with Japan.

Kyoto police said the suspect was a 41-year-old man, and Japanese newspapers reported that he had been detained and hospitalized for burns.

Although Japan has a very low rate of violent crime, there are eruptions of rare but extremely violent attacks. The fire, at the studio of Kyoto Animation, came just weeks after a man went on a stabbing rampage in a Tokyo suburb, attacking 17 schoolgirls, killing one of them and an adult.

That came on the day Trump was leaving.

Tokyo and its surroundings have suffered some of the worst violence. In 1995, members of a doomsday cult, Aum Shinrikyo, carried out a nerve-gas attack on the city’s subway system, killing 13 people and injuring thousands with sarin. In 2016, a mass stabbing at a center for people with disabilities outside Tokyo became the worst mass killing in Japan since World War II.

The death toll of the Kyoto fire was higher than in either of those attacks. Three dozen people were injured in the blaze.

The attack touched a nerve among the Japanese public, and many poured out their grief on social media. There was little known Thursday about the man believed to have set the fire or his motives. According to NHK, the public broadcaster, he was hospitalized with burns and had told police he had splashed flammable liquid at the studio building and set it alight.

Citing Kyoto police, the Asahi Shimbun, one of Japan’s largest mainstream daily newspapers, reported that the man had entered the building screaming “Die!” and then tried to escape but collapsed on the street outside. He was captured by members of the studio’s staff.

Arson is rare in Japan, and experts quoted by NHK said Thursday’s fire was the worst case in decades. In 2001, 44 people died after a fire broke out at a crowded gambling club in Tokyo’s busiest entertainment district. It was investigated as arson, but authorities could not confirm that the fire had been purposefully set.

The cultural reaction to Thursday’s fire reflected Kyoto Animation’s popularity among fans of anime, the category of Japanese cartooning that is a backbone of the country’s popular culture and one of its major soft-power exports. The devastation at the studio, said fans, would rip a hole in the anime world.

According to NHK, police are investigating a report by a clerk at a gas station about a quarter-mile from the studio who said a man in his 30s or 40s, wearing a red T-shirt and a backpack, bought about 10 gallons of gas at 10 a.m. Thursday. NHK reported that the man carried away the two gas cans on a hand cart, saying he would use them in a power generator.

NHK reported that an official at the Kyoto City Fire Department said that most of the 20 people who were found dead on the stairs that led from the third floor of the studio building to the rooftop were lying on top of one another right near the door to the roof. When rescuers reached the roof, the door was closed, though not locked.....

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Wow, why is the building still standing? 

Also see:

"Much was still unknown about the Thursday fire, which appeared to be Japan’s worst mass killing in decades. The police identified Shinji Aoba, 41, as a suspect in the case, based on statements they said he made when he was apprehended. They said Aoba was being treated for severe burns and had not been arrested. Japanese news reports, citing unnamed police sources, said the suspect had told police that he started the fire because he believed the studio, Kyoto Animation, “stole a novel” from him. NHK, the public broadcaster, reported that Aoba had served time in prison for robbery and that he was being treated for an unspecified mental illness. The arsonist is believed to have purchased about 10 gallons of petroleum at a gas station near the studio, about half an hour before starting the fire. According to police reports, the man brought it to the studio in two cans, on a hand cart, then poured it out on the building’s first floor and ignited it with a lighter. “We saw yesterday that anyone can cause mass killings and tremendous damage with cheap and easy tools anyone can obtain in daily life,” said Daiju Wada, a lecturer on security at Seiwa University in Chiba, Japan, and a security consultant. “It’s difficult not to sell gasoline to people.”

Like in China (in that case, as the fire spread, nearby houses collapsed, and windows were shattered as far as 2 miles away), and image the mass killings and damage you can do with a war machine behind you.

Suspect in Kyoto fire had criminal record and trouble with neighbors

The New York Times says the picture that is emerging is of Aoba as an unstable 41-year-old with a troubled past, and many are  “worried that after this kind of incident many people will fear people with psychiatric illness.”

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This time the Philippines will be on their side:

"Philippine police file sedition case against vice president" by Jim Gomez Associated Press, July 18, 2019

MANILA — Philippine police filed sedition and other criminal complaints Thursday against the vice president, three opposition senators, four Roman Catholic bishops, and other critics of President Rodrigo Duterte for allegedly plotting to destabilize his administration.

Vice President Leni Robredo and the others have long denied the allegations from a formerly detained crime suspect who alleged he plotted with them.

The Department of Justice said it received the complaints from the national police’s Criminal Investigation and Detection Group.

‘‘I will constitute the panel of investigating state prosecutors tomorrow,’’ Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra told the Associated Press in a cellphone text message. ‘‘They may start serving subpoenas on the respondents next week.’’

Unlike Duterte, Robredo does not have constitutional immunity, Guevarra said.

A legal group critical of Duterte, the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers, said the allegations ‘‘smack of political persecution and shotgun repression on its face using again the legal system as a potent political weapon through the law of rulers.’’

In the Philippines, the president and vice president are elected separately. Robredo, who has long criticized Duterte over his bloody crackdown against illegal drugs and his offensive sexist remarks, is next in the line of succession if Duterte loses the presidency before his six-year term ends in 2022.

The allegations center on a formerly detained crime suspect, Peter Joemel Advincula, who alleged that he plotted with the accused to discredit Duterte, his family, and other government officials by linking them to drug syndicates. With his face concealed, Advincula claimed he was the man who appeared in a series of videos posted online that detailed the supposed links of Duterte, his children, close aides, and other officials to illegal drugs.

When the police played down his claims and launched a search for him, Advincula suddenly surfaced and was presented in a news conference by top police officials where he denied the allegations he made against Duterte on video. He then made a new claim and implicated Robredo and other prominent Duterte critics in a plot to discredit the president and destabilize his administration.

Meanwhile, thousands of Philippine police officers have received administrative punishments with more than 2,000 dismissed for wrongdoings during raids where drug suspects were killed under the president’s crackdown, officials said Thursday.

Communications Assistant Secretary Marie Rafael Banaag told a news conference that 14,724 police were investigated for their involvement in police drug operations that led to deaths from July 2016 until last April. She said 7,867 of them received administrative punishments for unspecified lapses.

A tally presented by Banaag showed that 2,367 police officers have been fired, 4,100 suspended, while the rest were reprimanded, demoted, had their salaries forfeited ,or deprived of certain privileges.

Banaag did not say how many officers have been criminally charged for serious lapses or outright crimes committed while enforcing the crackdown, which was launched by Duterte as his centerpiece program when he took office in mid-2016.

Philippine police officials say about 6,600 drug suspects have been killed in raids carried out by the police mostly in gun battles that ensued after the suspects fought back and endangered the lives of law enforcers. Banaag and other officials reported a lower death toll, more than 5,500, saying authorities were still verifying other drug-related deaths.

Last year, a Philippine court found three police officers guilty of killing a student they alleged was a drug dealer in the first known such conviction under the crackdown.

Besides Robredo, those implicated in the complaint included opposition Senators Antonio Trillanes IV, Risa Hontiveros, and Leila de Lima, seven opposition senatorial candidates who lost in the May elections, Catholic archbishops Socrates Villegas and Pablo David, and a Catholic university president, Armin Luistro.

They were sued for alleged sedition, inciting to sedition, libel, harboring a criminal, obstruction of justice, a justice department statement said.

Duterte is known for his temper and expletives-laden outbursts against critics, especially those who have raised alarm over his deadly crackdown against illegal drugs.

Last year, Supreme Court justices ousted the then-chief justice, Maria Lourdes Sereno, after the government solicitor-general alleged that her appointment by Duterte’s predecessor was legally flawed and petitioned for her removal. Critics say the ousting undermined the court’s independence.

Another opposition senator, de Lima, has been detained for more than two years after being accused by Duterte of involvement in illegal drugs, a crime she has vehemently denied. A former human rights commission chief, de Lima investigated Duterte’s alleged role in extrajudicial killings in an antidrug crackdown when he served as mayor of southern Davao city for years.

Duterte’s allies dominate the House of Representatives and won a majority in Senate elections in May.

--more--"

Of course, we will also need New Zealand and Western Canada to complete the Pacific encircling of the Chinese -- along with the Venezuelan gas pump for the war machine.

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China would have no choice but to then turn east to put out the fire:

"Top Myanmar generals are barred from entering US over Rohingya killings" by Richard C. Paddock New York Times, July 17, 2019

BANGKOK — The United States has imposed sanctions on Myanmar’s top military commander, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, and three of his highest-ranking generals for their roles in the atrocities carried out against Rohingya Muslims since 2017, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced.

The four generals and their immediate family members will be barred from entering the United States, Pompeo said Tuesday. “With this announcement, the United States is the first government to publicly take action with respect to the most senior leadership of the Burmese military,” he said in a statement.

Two years ago, brutal attacks by the military and Buddhist mobs in Rakhine state in western Myanmar, which included killings, rape, and arson, forced more than 700,000 members of the Rohingya ethnic minority to flee across the border into Bangladesh, where they have been living ever since in squalid refugee camps.

The United Nations has labeledthe attacks genocide, saying that Min Aung Hlaing and other top generals should face trial in an international court, but until now, no action has been taken against them.

This is one of the instances in which the U.N. has actually condemned the abuse of Muslims, the other being Bosnia, while ignoring the wide abuses of Israel and its allies against same. What it does is provide the fig leaf of cover and is an attempt at credibility within the U.N. They can point to this and say we don't ignore crimes against Muslims, even though it is only a tool to flog Myanmar or the Serbs.

I mean, you haven't seen Bush or Bliar in front of the ICC, only tin-pot African dictators that received the old double cross.

The State Department imposed the travel ban because it could do so unilaterally and because it was a way to hold the individual generals accountable for the atrocities, senior officials at the department said, but Myanmar’s reclusive military leaders have not been known to travel to the United States, and a spokesman for the military said Wednesday that the ban would have little practical effect.

“It doesn’t matter that they banned travel to the United States for the generals,” said the spokesman, Brigadier General Zaw Min Tun. “But it does insult the Myanmar military’s dignity.”

That's the last thing you want to do to an Asian.

The military has ruled Myanmar, also known as Burma, since it gained independence from Britain in 1948, and it has waged war almost continuously against various ethnic groups.

Americans know that feeling.

Under the 2008 constitution drafted by the military, the senior general is Myanmar’s most powerful person and reports to no civilian authority. He controls the armed forces, the police, the border guards, two military business conglomerates, and a quarter of the members of Parliament, enough to block any constitutional change.

A civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, oversees social programs such as education and health care, but it has no control over the military.

Okay, I'm going to stop and comment here since they brought the CIA asset and globalist up. She was a hero when she was under house arrest and celebrated when she took control of the government. Obama even lifted sanctions and other such things as part of his Asian pivot.

The souring came when Myanmar began to go soft on China. That's when the Rohingya crisis arose, through no fault of their own. It was outside forces, in this case the Sunni Islam allies, that were in charge of establishing a beachhead in the province in order to gain a foothold from which to operate in the area while keeping Myanmar's military busy.

The end result was further driving Myanmar into the Chinese orbit. Suu Kyi was criticized for not speaking out forcefully enough before eventual being sidelined, and now we have an article that basically calls out the military junta of Myanmar. 

Min Aung Hlaing, a career army officer who rose through the ranks, became known for attacks on ethnic groups in various parts of Myanmar, which drove tens of thousands of people from their homes. As commander in chief since 2011, he has proved adept at using social media to build public support for the military, known as the Tatmadaw. He is seen as a strong candidate to become president next year.

It's just like the Fourth of July here, and were they demolishing homes like, you know?

Last year, Facebook removed his account along with hundrewwwds of others because of his role in enabling serious human rights abuses.

Pompeo noted that Min Aung Hlaing had ordered the release of soldiers convicted of participating in a massacre of Rohingyas after they had served only a few months in prison — far less time than the 16 months that two reporters for Reuters, Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, spent behind bars for exposing that massacre.

Pompeo called that an “egregious example of the continued and severe lack of accountability for the military and its senior leadership.”

Besides Myanmar’s top commander, the travel sanctions were also imposed on the deputy commander in chief, Soe Win; Brigadier General Than Oo; and Brigadier General Aung Aung, along with their family members. Pompeo said they were chosen “based on credible information of these commanders’ involvement in gross violations of human rights.”

State Department officials said the four generals, and two generals sanctioned earlier, were cited by a UN fact-finding mission as having had considerable command responsibility for the slaughter of the Rohingya.

“We remain concerned that the Burmese government has taken no actions to hold accountable those responsible for human rights violations and abuses, and there are continued reports of the Burmese military committing human rights violations and abuses throughout the country,” Pompeo said.

Mark Farmaner, director of Burma Campaign UK, a London-based advocacy group, said the travel ban was far too weak a response. He said the United States could have brought the generals before an ad hoc tribunal, backed an arms embargo, or imposed stronger sanctions on military-owned companies.

“Essentially this is a holiday ban,” he said. “Limiting Min Aung Hlaing’s holiday options is not a proportionate response to genocide.”

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Related:

"The UN special rapporteur for Myanmar said Thursday the United States didn’t ‘‘go far enough’’ in sanctions against four top Myanmar generals over the mass killings of minority Rohingya Muslims. Myanmar’s commander in chief and his deputy, two other generals, and their immediate families have been banned from traveling to the United States. On Tuesday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the four were responsible for ‘‘gross human rights violations’’ involving extrajudicial killings in an ethnic cleansing campaign against the Rohingya minority in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state. UN envoy Yanghee Lee said the US move was ‘‘better late than never’’ but was inadequate. She said a UN fact-finding mission had earlier identified six Myanmar generals, including the four men, who should be sanctioned. The United States should also ban the other two, and their assets should be seized, she said. ‘‘It doesn’t go far enough. It should go further, and the perimeters of the sanctions should go further,’’ she said." 

I imagine the U.S. is trying to hedge its bets with the strategically located country.

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We will then be fighting them in Africa:

"Congo’s Ebola Outbreak Is Declared a Global Health Emergency" by Denise Grady New York Times, July 17, 2019

The year-old Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo is now considered a global health emergency, the World Health Organization said Wednesday, in a formal declaration that many public health experts called long overdue.

Emergency declarations are issued sparingly, reserved for outbreaks that pose a serious threat to public health and could spread to other countries. They are meant to increase international attention and aid to help stop epidemics.

As of Monday, the Congo outbreak had infected 2,512 people and killed 1,676 of them. The disease has defied efforts to control its spread in the northeastern part of the country, a conflict zone under constant threat from warring militias. Dr. Tedros Adhanom Gebreyesus, director-general of the WHO, has described the outbreak as one of the world’s most dangerous viruses in one of the world’s most dangerous areas.

It is the second-largest outbreak in history after the one in West Africa in 2014-’15, which infected 28,616 people and caused 11,310 deaths. That epidemic was declared a global emergency.

The decision Wednesday was based on a vote by 11 members of an expert panel convened by Tedros to reassess the current outbreak after an infected man carried the virus to the city of Goma, a densely populated transportation hub close to Rwanda that has an international airport. That patient has died.

Wednesday was the fourth time that Tedros convened the expert panel to consider whether the outbreak met the criteria for a “public health emergency of international concern.” The first three times, the panel said no, drawing sharp criticism from many specialists in public health.

Global health groups had been calling for the declaration for months. Josie Golding of the Wellcome Trust, a research charity based in London, said the response in Congo was “overstretched and underfunded.” Giving the outbreak emergency status, she added, would “help raise international support and release more resources— including finance, health care workers, enhanced logistics, security, and infrastructure.”

The WHO said it had received $49 million from international donors from February to July, only half the money it needs. Officials who have visited the region saysupplies are running short, including the protective gear that health workers need to avoid becoming infected. At a United Nations meeting about the outbreak Monday, one official said he had seen syringes and gloves being reused because equipment was becoming scarce.

Tedros said that emergency declarations were not meant to be used as a means of raising money, but he added that if any countries had withheld donations because no emergency had been declared, “if that is the excuse” it “can no longer be used.”

AH!

The man who brought the disease to Goma was a pastor who had preached in seven churches in the epidemic zone, laying hands on the sick. He became ill and was treated by a nurse but got on a bus to Goma anyway. The bus stopped at three checkpoints meant to halt the spread of the disease by screening passengers for symptoms, but his illness was not detected. He gave a different name at each checkpoint, apparently hoping to avoid being detained, local health authorities said. Sick and feverish by the time he arrived in Goma, he went to a clinic there, where the disease was diagnosed.

He was the only patient in the Goma clinic, which was disinfected after his visit. Health authorities have been tracking the other bus passengers and the driver, as well as others who might have been exposed.

In this photograph taken Sunday July 14, 2019, an Ebola victim is put to rest at the Muslim cemetery in Beni, Congo DRC. The head of the World Health Organization is convening a meeting of experts Wednesday July 17, 2019 to decide whether the Ebola outbreak should be declared an international emergency after spreading to eastern Congo’s biggest city, Goma, this week. More than 1,600 people in eastern Congo have died as the virus has spread in areas too dangerous for health teams to access.
In this photograph taken Sunday July 14, 2019, an Ebola victim is put to rest at the Muslim cemetery in Beni, Congo DRC. The head of the World Health Organization is convening a meeting of experts Wednesday July 17, 2019 to decide whether the Ebola outbreak should be declared an international emergency after spreading to eastern Congo’s biggest city, Goma, this week. More than 1,600 people in eastern Congo have died as the virus has spread in areas too dangerous for health teams to access.

You can't argue with those guys. 

--more--"

The medical emergency could lead to martial law.

Related:

"Sudan’s ruling military council and pro-democracy movement signed a political document Wednesday that formalized the broad outlines of a power-sharing deal announced this month, but key details of the deal, including the powers of a transitional ruling council and Cabinet, have yet to be agreed on. The two sides have been wrestling for control of Sudan since the ouster of President Omar al-Bashir in April. General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo signed the deal for the military in a visible sign of the shifting balance of power in Sudan......"

Also see: Sudanese Spring

Coming soon to Kenya.


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Looks like the wars could be getting pretty hot:

"Donald Trump believes being president means he has the right to do what whatever he wants. That’s the message he delivered — not for the first time — on Tuesday while addressing a crowd of teenagers and young adults at the Turning Point USA Teen Student Action Summit in Washington. ‘‘Then, I have an Article II, where I have to the right to do whatever I want as president,’’ he said. Trump appears to be discussing Article II of the Constitution, which at no point indicates that the president has the power to what he or she chooses. Speaking to ABC in June about allegations that he wanted to fire Robert Mueller, the president said, ‘‘Article II allows me to do whatever I want.”

Apparently, Mueller got eaten alive up on the hill today, and Trump has got his new SecDef:

"Esper Confirmed as Trump’s Defense Secretary" by Helene Cooper New York Times, July 23, 2019

WASHINGTON — Mark T. Esper, an Army infantryman who fought in the Persian Gulf war of 1991 before becoming a lobbyist for the defense contractor Raytheon Co., now takes control of the country’s 1.2 million active-duty troops and one of the largest militaries in the world as the Trump administration is wrestling with the results of its so-called maximum pressure campaign of economic sanctions on Iran, which has prodded the two adversaries closer to military confrontation.

Esper will now add his voice to the senior Trump national security advisers seeking to influence the president on a range of issues, including how to end the war in Afghanistan, and how to negotiate with Turkey as the country, a longtime NATO ally, goes against US wishes in buying a missile system from Russia.

How influential Esper will be is one of the biggest questions facing the new defense secretary. Jim Mattis, who resigned in December during a dispute over pulling US troops out of Syria, was widely viewed as a voice of reason and global stability in a chaotic administration.....

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He will be working with some familiar faces.

Now about ending that war in Afghanistan:

"Afghanistan recoils at Trump’s comments about destroying the country" by David Zucchino New York Times, July 23, 2019

President Trump and Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan took questions from reporters during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday.
President Trump and Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan took questions from reporters during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday.(Anna Moneymaker/New York Times)

KABUL — Afghanistan demanded a clarification Tuesday of President Trump’s comments a day earlier that he could have had the country “wiped off the face of the earth” but did not “want to kill 10 million people.”

That would end it, I guess, and hopefully that view and restraint sticks with him as we go forward.

In a sharply worded statement, the government of President Ashraf Ghani noted that Afghanistan expected its relationship with the United States to be “grounded on common interests and mutual respect.”

Trump made the comments Monday during an Oval Office meeting with Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan. The president said he was referring to prepared military plans for Afghanistan, adding, “I could win that war in a week.”

Well, that place hasn't been subjugated since Alexander the Great, so..... 

Ghani’s government, facing a bruising reelection campaign this fall, indicated that it did not intend to let the matter drop.

“The government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan will keep the Afghan public posted on the issue,” its statement said.

Ghani has expended political capital by embracing Trump’s South Asia policy in the face of opposition in a complex region with competing rivalries. The president’s comments Monday seemed, to many Afghans, to be walking back his commitments to their country.

There was no immediate comment from the State Department early Tuesday.

While Americans may be accustomed to provocative statements from Trump, Afghans tend to interpret any comment by a US president about Afghanistan as an official declaration of policy.

In the meeting Monday, Trump said that Khan would help negotiate peace in Afghanistan and that Pakistan would help the United States “extricate ourselves” from the conflict.

We don't need their help. Declare victory and leave!

Former president Hamid Karzai, who during his tenure had a strained relationship with the United States over civilian casualties caused by US forces, said that Trump had insulted all Afghans.

Yeah, the casualties made the puppet look bad.

In a statement Tuesday, Karzai said that the president’s comments confirmed the suspicions of many Afghans that the United States had made “secret deals” with Pakistan to undermine Afghanistan’s sovereignty. Afghanistan has accused Pakistan of providing safe havens to the Taliban.

Karzai added that the United States “is not respecting our lives and human dignity at all.”

Not since the bombing began in October 2001.

Rahmatullah Nabil, a former Afghan intelligence chief and a current candidate for president, noted that Trump had made no mention of continuing the United States’s commitment to Afghanistan.

“Does this mean,” Nabil wrote on Twitter on Tuesday, that “other US officials are misleading AFG about long term commitments?”

Rangin Dadfar Spanta, a national security adviser for Karzai, told reporters Tuesday that Trump’s words were “a terrible, racist political message.”

Well, he's been doing that a lot lately.

“There is no need to brag that you can kill 10 million Afghans,” he added.

The State Department announced Tuesday that the US representative to peace talks with the Taliban, Zalmay Khalilzad, had returned to the region to prepare for the next round of talks with the militant group.

In a Twitter message Tuesday, Khalilzad appeared to try to repair the damage from Trump’s remarks by describing an “enduring” US relationship with Afghanistan. “I’m arriving in Kabul today, focused on achieving an enduring peace that ends the war, ensures terrorists do not use Afghanistan to threaten the US, honors the sacrifices that US, our allies & Afghans made, and cements an enduring relationship w/Afghanistan,” he posted.

That means some troops stay.

The seventh round of peace talks, in Doha, Qatar, was suspended July 9 to allow officials to consult with their leaderships. Khalilzad has said that the Taliban and the United States had agreed to a framework in which the militants would not allow terrorists to use Afghanistan soil and the United States would begin a phased withdrawal of its 14,000 troops in the country.

I'll believe it when there is not one U.S. boot left in Afghanistan.

Any final deal would also include direct negotiations between the Taliban and the Afghan government and a comprehensive cease-fire, Khalilzad has said. The Taliban has refused to negotiate with the government in Kabul, calling it illegitimate.

Separately, an Afghan delegation — which included government officials acting as private citizens — held two days of informal talks in Doha with the Taliban and issued a statement July 9 promising to work to reduce civilian casualties.

Abdul Latif Pedram, an Afghan presidential candidate who is opposed to the Taliban and who has met informally with Taliban officials, accused Trump of “shameless arrogance.” In a statement, Pedram called on the United States to withdraw its troops and for Afghans to fight Americans “until the withdrawal of your very last soldier.”

Addressing Trump, Pedram added, “Many occupiers have tried to capture this country, but they found only a graveyard. This country will be your graveyard.”

It's know as the graveyard of empires, and neither the British nor the Russians could subjugate them -- and we have been there far too long.

On the street and on social media, ordinary Afghans responded with a mix of fury and bewilderment.

“He is not a sane person,” Khan Ali, 35, a street vendor, said of Trump.

Mohammad Arif, 50, a shoemaker, said of the president’s comments: “This is in no way possible. Trump has a kind of madness.”

In a strange way, though, he is a sane genius given those around him.

On Facebook, Zakir Jalali wrote, “So the fight against terrorism was just a joke?”

Another Facebook user, Masoud Hemayat, posted, “Until there is not a single American in Afghanistan, we will not see a happy day in our country.”

And I want Afghans to be happy.

--more--"

Related:

"Indian opposition leaders on Tuesday angrily demanded that Prime Minister Narendra Modi clarify his position in Parliament about President Trump mediating in India’s long-running dispute with Pakistan over Kashmir. Trump said Modi recently asked him whether he would like to be a mediator or arbitrator on Kashmir. Trump spoke to reporters in Washington before Monday’s meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan. India and Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir, the Himalayan territory they both claim and which is divided between them. India accuses Pakistan of arming and training insurgents who have been fighting since 1989 for Kashmir’s independence from India or its merger with Pakistan. Islamabad denies the charge. About 70,000 people have been killed in the uprising and the ensuing Indian crackdown....."

Why can't the Kashmiris just have a referendum like Kosovo and South Sudan?

India now claims Pakistan violated their airspace with a rocket, but it was shot down and harmlessly splashed into the ocean (a movie by Damon and Affleck and starring Tom Hanks is already in the works. B.B. King is going to provide the musical score).

Time to turn that radar defense system off:

"Were US diplomats attacked in Cuba? Brain study deepens mystery" by Benedict Carey New York Times, July 23, 2019

In late 2016, dozens of US diplomats working in Cuba and China began reporting odd mental symptoms: persistent headaches, vertigo, blurred vision, hearing phantom sounds. Since then, scientists and commentators have groped for plausible explanations. Deliberate physical attacks, involving microwaves or other such technology? Or were psychological factors, subconscious yet mind-altering, the more likely cause?

The strangeness of the symptoms, and the spookiness of the proposed causes, have given the story a life of its own in the diplomatic corps, the Pentagon, and in assorted pockets of the internet where conspiracy theories thrive.

I'm tired of being insulted just for asking questions and pointing out absurdities, inconsistencies, and anomalies.

Now, researchers are reporting results from the first brain-imaging studies of 40 of those diplomats, who were carefully examined by neurologists after returning home from Cuba. The study, appearing Tuesday in the medical journal JAMA, concludes that the diplomats experienced some kind of brain trauma, but the nature and cause of that trauma were not clear, as it did not resemble the signature of more familiar brain injuries such as repeated concussions or exposure to battlefield blasts.

“The main thing we can do with brain imaging is ask whether something happened to the brain,” said Dr. Ragini Verma, a professor of radiology at the University of Pennsylvania Perlman School of Medicine and lead author of the new report. “And the answer we found is that yes, it did.”

Based on the findings, Verma said that a wholly psychogenic or psychosomatic cause was very unlikely. “But I don’t know the cause,” she said. “The imaging by itself cannot tell us that.”

Outside experts were divided on the study’s conclusions. Some saw important new evidence; others say it is merely a first step toward an explanation and difficult to interpret given the small number of patients.

“It’s good work, but there’s just not enough here to come to any conclusion,” said Dr. Mark Rasenick, a neuroscientist at the University of Illinois Chicago School of Medicine. Rasenick is a member of the Cuban Academy of Science and has close ties to scientists there who have beenskeptical that invisible weapons were involved.....

Maybe some sort of microwave machine is responsible.

--more--"

Might want to grab a flight out of country:

"South Korean jets fire warning shots toward Russian military plane" by Choe Sang-Hun New York Times, July 23, 2019

SEOUL — South Korea said its air force jets fired hundreds of warning shots Tuesday to ward off a Russian military plane that intruded upon what it considers its territorial airspace, the first such encounter between the countries in decades.

The incident came as Russia and China conducted what Russia called a joint air patrol in the Asia-Pacific. South Korea said that three Russian military planes, as well as two Chinese warplanes, entered its air defense identification zone off its east coast, where foreign military aircraft are expected to identify themselves in advance to South Korea, but South Korea said that one of the Russian planes, a Beriev A-50 early warning and control aircraft, flew closer and intruded twice into what the South regards as its territorial airspace, near a cluster of disputed islands that South Korea controls but Japan also claims.

Both times, the Russian plane violated that territorial airspace for a few minutes, prompting South Korean F-15 and F-16 fighter jets operating nearby to fire 20 flares and 360 machine-gun rounds as warning shots from a half-mile away, officials said. The South Korean jets took the action after the Russian plane did not answer repeated radio warnings, according to the South.

Japan said it had scrambled jets in response to the Chinese and Russian patrol, and Japan lodged formal complaints against both Russia and South Korea for their actions over what it called “our territory,” the Kyodo News agency reported.

Jonathan B. Miller, a senior fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs in Tokyo, said flying over the disputed islands “inflames tensions between South Korea and Japan, which is in a sense both in Russia and China’s interest because it weakens the alliance network with the United States.” Relations between Japan and South Korea have been deteriorating in recent weeks, largely over a trade dispute.

That doesn't make sense at all because this alleged incident does nothing but bring the bickering trading partners together on matters of security.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said there had been “no violations of airspaces of foreign countries” in its joint patrol with China.

The sad thing is, I'm inclined to believe the Russians over my own government or pre$$ these days.

A spokeswoman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Hua Chunying, told reporters in Beijing that China and South Korea were “friendly neighbors” but added that she was unclear about the incident and referred questions to the Chinese Defense Ministry. The Defense Ministry had no comment.

They are letting the Russians take the lead. Better chess players.

In recent years, long-range bombers and reconnaissance planes from the Russian and Chinese militaries have frequently entered South Korea’s air defense identification zone, though not together. South Korea has dispatched fighter jets to confront them, but in addition to the Russian-Chinese coordination Tuesday, the episode marked the first time in recent memory that a Russian warplane had entered not just the broader air defense zone, but what South Korea considers its territorial airspace.

Chung Eui-yong, national security adviser for President Moon Jae-in of South Korea, sent a warning to his Russian counterpart, Nikolai Patrushev, secretary of Russia’s Security Council, Moon’s office said Tuesday. It warned that South Korea would take “a far stronger action” if Russia tried similar maneuvers again. Seoul also summoned Russian and Chinese diplomats in South Korea to lodge protests, officials said.

Military planes that enter another country’s air defense identification zone are expected to notify that country in advance, but in recent years countries in Northeast Asia have often accused each other of violating that protocol, which is not governed or enforced by any international organization. If a military plane enters a country’s air defense zone without proper notice, the host country considers itself entitled to order it to leave, or to dispatch military jets to confront the intruding aircraft.

In 2013, South Korea expanded its air defense identification zone for the first time in 62 years to include airspace over the East China Sea that is also claimed by China and Japan. Since that expansion, the air defense zones of all three countries have overlapped over a submerged reef that South Korea calls Ieodo and China calls Suyan Rock.

South Korea’s expansion of its air patrol zone came two weeks after China unilaterally expanded its own air patrol zone to include airspace over the reef. The expanded Chinese zone also covers a set of East China Sea islands, called Diaoyu in Chinese and Senkaku in Japanese, which are at the heart of a territorial feud between Japan and China. The overlapping zones have raised the risk of military tensions in the region.....

It's all about who controls the resources of the area.

--more--"

Fortunately, the Russians have a sub in the area.

Related:

Tent camp fire in Russia kills 4 children

I wouldn't send an e-mail about it because the Kremlin has been tightening control over the Internet as support for President Vladimir Putin declines amid a groundswell of protests against the authorities on issues ranging from elections to trash collection and declining living standards.

Man, they are so ripe for invasion!

NEXT DAY UPDATES

"South Korea says Russia expressed ‘deep regret’ over plane incursion" by Richard Pérez-Peña New York Times, July 24, 2019

South Korea’s government said Wednesday that Moscow had expressed “deep regret” over the incident that prompted South Korean jets to fire warning shots near a Russian military plane, but a Russian spokesman countered that his country had not formally apologized.

The contrasting — if not quite contradictory — statements, and Russian objections to parts of the South Korean account, illustrated the tension over the most serious confrontation in years between the two nations.

I'm told there is the possibility that the Russians were apologetic in private, and I suppose it's also a possibility that they did not -- especially if they did nothing untoward or wrong and this is nothing but more pre$$ war hype fabrication. 

The Russian plane involved in the incident was a Beriev A-50 equipped with powerful long-range radar to track and coordinate the movements of multiple aircraft, [and] it was in a group of Russian and Chinese military planes conducting a joint operation over the Sea of Japan, an indication of growing cooperation between those two powers. The confrontation took place near a cluster of islands controlled by South Korea but also claimed by Japan.

Yeah, but it's okay because as I have stated this month, the plan is to tie the Chinese (and now Russians) up along the entire length of the Pacific while also opening an eastern front from the Arctic to the Caspian (keeps the Russians busy). Then the soft underbelly that is Iran can be gouged open, ridding us of that regime and soon pinning Russia and China in Mongolia and Siberia as winter sets in. It's a brilliant and fool-proof plan.

Moscow said Wednesday that it had been involved in a separate confrontation on the Korean Peninsula after North Korea seized a Russian fishing ship and its crew. A statement posted on Facebook by the Russian Embassy in Pyongyang said that North Korea had made the seizure July 17, claiming that the vessel had violated rules for entering the country. The crew members were said to include 15 Russians and two South Koreans. The Russians said that they had visited the Russian crew members and were working with North Korea to resolve the matter.....

It gets weirder and weirder, doesn't it?

I suspect that may be cover for Russian and North Korean coordination regarding the fast moving events.

--more--"

Related:

North Korea fires 2 unidentified projectiles into sea, South Korea says

New German defense minister backs higher military spending

Can't send the signals any clearer, and Poland should once again be a pushover!

"Iran’s president hints at quid pro quo for seized UK ship" by Nasser Karimi and Aya Batrawy Associated Press, July 24, 2019

TEHRAN, Iran — President Hassan Rouhani suggested on Wednesday that Iran might release a UK-flagged ship if Britain takes similar steps to release an Iranian oil tanker seized by the British Royal Navy off Gibraltar earlier this month.

His remarks could create an opening to reduce tensions as Boris Johnson becomes prime minister. It’s unclear how the new government will respond to Rouhani’s suggestion or the impasse with Iran.

‘‘We do not seek the continuation of tension with some European countries,’’ Rouhani said in comments carried on his website. ‘‘Should they be committed to international frameworks and give up their wrong actions, including what they did in Gibraltar, they will receive a proportional response from Iran.’’

Britain this week announced plans to develop and deploy a Europe-led ‘‘maritime protection mission’’ to safeguard shipping in the area after Iran’s Revolutionary Guard seized the Stena Impero in the Strait of Hormuz on Friday.

Rouhani said that while Iran does not seek a military conflict, it will not allow threats to its security in the important waterway. He described the Iranian seizure of the ship as ‘‘professional and brave.’’

Iranian officials have alleged the ship was seized after it violated international maritime law by turning off its signaling for longer than is allowed and passing through the wrong channels; however, Iranian officials have also suggested the ship was seized in response to Britain’s role in impounding an Iranian supertanker two weeks earlier off the coast of Gibraltar, a British overseas territory. The UK says the tanker was suspected of violating sanctions on oil shipments to Syria. Both sides have called the interception of one another’s ships ‘‘hostile acts’’ and ‘‘piracy.’’

Despite a UK government advisory that British-flagged ships avoid the Strait of Hormuz, a large British-flagged vessel transited the corridor and arrived at a port in Qatar on Wednesday. Maritime publication Lloyd’s List identified the vessel as the BW Elm and reported that a British warship, likely the HMS Montrose, closely shadowed the large liquefied petroleum gas carrier but that the Royal Navy did not provide a direct escort.....

The rest of the article deals with whether Iran shot down a US spy drone, or whether an Iranian drone crashed into the sea, or if that was a second Iranian drone.

Iran says ‘‘provide evidence,’’ and that's the thing. None is ever provided, or that which is proves to be unverified or fabrication. What we are left with is trying to make sense of things over a narrative and events that may be distorted or outright fictions. Wouldn't really matter were it not WWIII at stake.

--more--"

Maybe the new British head of government can put a stop to it:

"Boris Johnson becomes British prime minister" by William Booth and Karla Adam Washington Post, July 24, 2019

LONDON — The transition of power in Britain’s parliamentary democracy is brutal — and lightning quick.

Theresa May curtsied to Queen Elizabeth II on Wednesday afternoon and resigned. Minutes later, Boris Johnson, the tousle-haired leader of the Brexit campaign, bowed and was asked to form a new government.

The dance began earlier in the day, when May appeared in the House of Commons for her last session of prime minister’s questions. May offered tepid support for her successor. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn laid into her — saying that, under her tenure, child poverty was up, pensioner poverty was up, school class size was up, food bank use was up. May retorted that she was proud of her record. She then lowered her head, eyeballed Corbyn, and poked him with her horns: ‘‘As a party leader who has accepted when her time was up, perhaps the time is now for him to do the same.’’

I'll bet there was a great murmur and a few here, here's, 'eh?

May had a relatively short tenure for a British prime minister, [and] now returns to the backbenches of Parliament as an ordinary and not very influential lawmaker. This is far different from the tradition in the United States, where a former president scoots offstage to write memoirs, deliver speeches, and build a library......

Not this president. They are already sizing him up for a jail cell.

As for May, she will be able to join fired foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt, who was offered another job in the administration but decided to return to the backbenches, in asking questions of the new prime minister.

--more--"

Going to be tough to retake Hong Kong:

"China hints its troops could be used to quell Hong Kong protests" by Steven Lee Myers New York Times, July 24, 2019

BEIJING — China delivered its most explicit warning to date Wednesday that it was prepared to use military force in Hong Kong if protesters there threatened the central government’s authority.

The warning was a stark reminder of Beijing’s ultimate control over the fate of Hong Kong, the former British territory. The People’s Liberation Army has for years maintained a garrison of 6,000 soldiers in several bases around Hong Kong, but China has never before ordered them to intervene in the territory’s affairs, though several hundred did help clear trees and other debris after Typhoon Mangkhut battered the city in 2018.

No one was complaint then.

Appearing at a Beijing briefing on a government document outlining China’s defense strategy, the chief spokesman for the Ministry of National Defense, Senior Colonel Wu Qian, cited the protests Sunday outside the central government’s liaison office in Hong Kong, which protesters splattered with paint and defaced with graffiti, and strongly suggested that instances of destructive behavior were straining Beijing’s patience.

Responding to a question, he pointedly cited the specific article in a law detailing relations between Hong Kong and the People’s Liberation Army allowing the military to intervene, when requested by Hong Kong’s leaders, to maintain order or assist in cases of natural disasters.

Like a governor asking for federal help.

“The behavior of some radical protesters challenges the central government’s authority, touching on the bottom line principle of ‘one country, two systems,’” Wu said, referring to China’s model for governing the territory of 7.4 million. “That absolutely cannot be tolerated.”

The new defense strategy unveiled in the document did not mention Hong Kong, but it identified efforts to divide Chinese territory as the country’s most pressing security threat.

The defense strategy also refused to rule out the use of force against Taiwan, which China claims as its territory, in the event the self-governing island took any formal steps toward independence.

The document criticized “external forces” that support such independence moves, an oblique but clear reference to the United States, which has long provided support to Taiwan, including a new sale of more than 100 M1A2T Abrams tanks and other weaponry, worth $2.2 billion.

To follow up on what I said earlier, Taiwan is important because it can act as a forward staging area and launch point for invading the mainland as Japan once did. If nothing else, Chinese military occupation on the grounds of security could be used by the U.S. as a sign of aggression that needs to be countered, etc.

The warnings about what are, to China, core matters of sovereignty underlined growing concern about threats to the central authority of the Communist Party government under President Xi Jinping, whose pledges never to cede any territory are central to his image as the country’s most powerful leader in decades.

Look at the NYT turn him into an Asian Hitler! 

Yeah, no retreats (never mind that they haven't invaded anyone) and you must die on the ground that you stand (as the German generals ignored the order and buggered off anyway).

The new document on defense strategy — 69 pages in all — offered a detailed window into China’s rising military ambitions under the leadership of Xi. It accused the United States of undermining global stability and reflected China’s uneasy view of an increasingly uncertain world. It also acknowledged shortcomings still hampering the People’s Liberation Army, especially in the areas of artificial intelligence and what it called “informationized warfare.”

I've highlighted much of this article because this signal from the Chinese at this exact time is important. It's a calm shot across the bow and a quiet warning. They will defend themselves.

“Greater efforts have to be invested in military modernization to meet national security demands,” the strategy said, noting that Chinese military spending was lower as a percentage of gross domestic product than not only the United States and Russia, but also France and Britain.

If they spend it smartly, with little bloat and corruption, you can get more bang for the buck (while the ground forces are unmatchable).

The strategy, with a title that included Xi’s signature allusions to a “new era,” stopped short of explicitly identifying the United States as an adversaryas the Trump administration did with China (and Russia) in its own national security strategy in 2017.

It did accuse the United States of acting unilaterally across the globe by expanding US capabilities in nuclear weaponry, missile defenses, cyberwarfare, and in outer space. (President Trump last year ordered the creation of the US Space Force as a sixth branch of the US military.)

Can't really argue with that.

“The international security system and order are under attack,” Wu said. He went on to criticize those who have described growing tensions in the world as a clash of civilization akin to the Cold War.

Don't go down that road, and isn't it amazing how the ends of these posts connect to the beginnings?

China’s defense strategy — and the comments of the senior officials — made clear that China had its own red lines, particularly dealing with anything perceived to threaten its territorial sovereignty.

Or it could be an actual threat.

It singled out, for example, the deployment in South Korea of the US missile defense system called Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD.

Chinese officials have similarly accused the Americans of supporting the protests convulsing Hong Kong and, more broadly, for supporting Taiwan and its independence-minded president, Tsai Ing-wen, who visited the United States this month.

I don't think they are simply supporting them; I think they are a driving force. It's part of the CIA playbook, activate the activists. Many protesters probably have no idea they are being used or duped.

Regarding Hong Kong, the law Wu cited took effect when China resumed control of Hong Kong in 1997 and details the activities of the military garrison that was established there soon after. The forces there are headquartered in a former British military building in Admiralty, the area where many of the protests have unfolded.

Kind of ironic, huh, and I guess the protesters want the British back after flying their flag in the legislature.

In 2017, on the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule, Xi presided over a military parade that was the largest display of Chinese military force, with 3,000 soldiers in formation hailing their commander in chief. For the most part, however, the troops have largely kept a low profile.

They are waived in our faces here.

Although the law says the People’s Liberation Army will not interfere in “local affairs,” it allows authorities in Hong Kong to call on the military in extreme circumstances.....

--more--"

Looks like Trump's Cold War against China is just another Red Scare as stocks hit record highs, while lightning only strikes once in Afghanistan.

Mueller's Dementia

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Maybe his mind is gone, but they had to put him front and center anyway:

"Mueller sticks to script but shows flashes of indignation" by Julie Hirschfeld Davisand Mark Mazzetti New York Times, July 24, 2019

Had to go on a bit of a ‘witch hunt’ because the web version carried the Associated Press account while my printed paper led with this:

WASHINGTON — Former special counsel Robert Mueller offered no new revelations Wednesday into Russia’s interference in the 2016 elections or President Trump’s attempts to derail his investigation, but Mueller offered a stark warning on Russian election tampering— “They’re doing it as we sit here” — and a sober assessment of where politics are after the Trump campaign welcomed foreign interference in 2016.

“I hope this is not the new normal,” he told Representative Peter D. Welch, Democrat of Vermont, “but I fear it is.”

In seven hours of highly anticipated back-to-back hearings before the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees, Mueller, the special counsel who led the inquiry into Russia’s interference and whether Trump associates participated in it, hewed tightly to his script — the 448-page report he and his team produced in April. He declined repeatedly to offer his opinion on key questions or even to read directly from the document.

Democrats did get him to confirm the most damaging elements of his findings. Under intense questioning, Mueller said the president had not been cleared of obstructing justice, nor had he been completely exonerated, as Trump has so often declared; he said that the president had been untruthful in some of his responses during the investigation; and he called Trump’s encouragement of WikiLeaks “problematic,” to say the least.

WikiLeaks published e-mails stolen by Russian agents during the 2016 campaign, first from the Democratic National Committee, then from Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, but the former special counsel sometimes appeared confused or at a loss for words.....

That came immediately after the turn-in, and was a nice way of saying he looked like a doddering old fool! He didn't even know his own report! I'm thinking he was now just a feeble figurehead that would show up and putter around in his office with the crackers in his briefcase while the report was written by all the Clinton and Obama subversives. 

Btw, the Times even tells us that the performance drew concern from Democrats, with David Axelrod, the strategist who served as a senior adviser in Barack Obama’s White House, gently suggesting that Mueller wasn't up to his task and while it's “delicate to say, but he does not appear as sharp as he was in 2013.”

--more--"

After all the hype, too. 

The Globe does some analysis to try and clean Mueller up some more:

"In refusing to join the partisan fray, Mueller may have intensified it" by Jess Bidgood Globe Staff, July 24, 2019

WASHINGTON — His first and only appearance in front of Congress to testify about his findings was seen as a make-or-break moment for the restive group of Democrats demanding President Trump’s impeachment and a potential turning point for Republicans seeking to put the intrigue of the Russia investigation behind them. It put the understated prosecutor and a three-ring binder containing his 448-page report center stage in the partisan theatrics he has worked fastidiously to avoid, but as he spoke to two House committees in the middle of a wreath of cameras over six and a half hours, Mueller gave his questioners little to work with on partisan footballs like impeachment or the conspiracy theories about the origins of his investigation.

There they go again, protecting the Clintons and Obama and helping to obfuscate their criminality.

Related: 

"Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), one of Trump’s closest allies on Capitol Hill, said he was alarmed after seeing intelligence reports disseminated after the Nov. 8 election that made references to U.S. citizens affiliated with Trump, and possibly the president-elect himself. He appeared to be referring to relatively routine cases of surveillance on foreign individuals in which they communicated with or mentioned Americans, but Nunes’s refusal to disclose how he had obtained the documents and his unusual handling of the material — which he withheld from other committee members even while rushing to present it to the White House — were interpreted by some as a sign that his discovery was engineered to help the White House. Trump said he regarded Nunes’s disclosures as validation of his widely discredited claim that he was the illegal target of a wiretapping operation last fall ordered by President Barack Obama."

What they did was use a phony dossier contracted for by the Clinton campaign and compiled by a British intel asset with Russian and Ukranian contacts in order to get the surveillance warrant, then used that power in an attempt to infiltrate spies in the campaign. After loosing, they used the information to unmask transition team officials.

Nunes was backpedaling the very next day:

"The White House claimed vindication while the House intelligence committee chairman privately apologized in the wake of his decision to brief President Donald Trump on secret intelligence intercepts. Rep. Devin Nunes, a California Republican and member of President Donald Trump’s transition team, told reporters after his committee’s closed-door meeting Thursday that he had seen new information showing that the communications of Trump transition officials were scooped up through monitoring of other targets and improperly spread through intelligence agencies during the final days of the Obama administration. Nunes said the intercepted communications appeared to be legally obtained and were not related to the FBI’s Russia investigation. He said his concern was that the identities of the Trump officials were improperly revealed and the contents of their communications were “widely disseminated” in intelligence reports. It’s common for Americans to get caught up in U.S. surveillance of foreigners, such as foreign diplomats in the U.S. talking to an American. Typically, the American’s name would not be revealed in a report about the intercepted communications. However, if there is foreign intelligence value to revealing the American’s name, it is “unmasked” and shared with other intelligence analysts who are working on related foreign intelligence surveillance. Rep. Adam Schiff, the panel’s top Democrat, disputed Nunes’ suggestions that there was improper “unmasking.” He said that after speaking with Nunes, it appeared that the names of Americans were still guarded in the intercepts though their identities could be gleaned from the materials. Nunes said the information on the Trump team was collected in November, December and January, the period after the election when Trump was holding calls with foreign leaders, interviewing potential Cabinet secretaries and beginning to sketch out administration policy."

The revealers were none other than Susan Rice and Samantha Power.

Also see:

"In an interview on Fox News, when the host, Tucker Carlson, pressed him about why he had made his statements without offering evidence, Trump cited news reports that he said supported his assertion, including a Fox News segment on March 3 that discussed months-old reports that there had been a Trump-related surveillance orderin October; reporters from The New York Times have been unable to corroborate the existence of such an order. Trump also brought up a January article in The Times about surveillance data being used in an investigation into possible links between his aides and Russian officials. “I’ve been reading about things,” Trump said. “I think it was a Jan. 20 article in The New York Times — they were talking about wiretapping.”

Time to turn to Page:

"The counterintelligence investigation into Russian efforts to influence US elections began in July, based on a dossier compiled by a former British intelligence officer and cited at a congressional hearing by Representative Adam Schiff, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, as verified by US intelligence agencies." 

The Senate then asked for the records of Russian contacts, including Halper, Mifsud, Strzok, and Ohr.

Maybe Putin sarcastically offered Comey political asylum in Russia as Trump’s allies melted away on the wiretapping claims because he didn't offer any evidence or provide the source of his information as he still promotes the baseless claim.

Even the moment that seemed like the clearest victory for Democrats provided only fleeting, false hope. Mueller appeared to tell Representative Ted Lieu of California that he did not charge President Trump with obstruction because of a Justice Department rule that prevents the indictment of a sitting president, but Mueller later clarified that he meant that the rule was the reason he decided not to make any determination.

Republicans gleefully described the hearing as a death knell for impeachment that opened the door to the reelection of President Trump. “The American people are seeing that the entire origin of this investigation is so corrupt and so rotten, that even Robert Mueller wouldn’t answer questions about it,” said Matt Gaetz of Florida.

Mueller was much more willing, however, to answer questions about the threats posed by Russia and other countries to the nation’s election system, and he could barely veil his disdain for the way the Trump campaign handled entreaties from Russia in 2016.

Peter Welch, a Democrat from Vermont, asked Mueller if he thought future candidates would fail to tell the authorities if foreign powers reach out to them with compromising information on their opponents — as the Trump campaign apparently failed to do when Russians reached out to them in 2016.

“I hope this is not the new normal,” Mueller responded, “but I fear it is.”

Yeah, I saw that.

--more--"

Now, on the morning after:

(besides the Russian ambassador, Flynn, at the request of the president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, contacted several other foreign officials to urge them to delay or block a UN resolution condemning Israel over its building of settlements, says evidence from e-mails which were obtained from someone who had access to transition team communications -- meaning the Obama administration was spying on the opposition worse than Nixon ever did

.... but facilitating Israeli interference in the during the 2016 transition:

(According to prosecutors, he discussed with Kislyak an upcoming UN Security Council vote on whether to condemn Israel’s building of settlements. At the time, the Obama administration was preparing to allow a Security Council vote on the matter. Mueller’s investigators have learned through witnesses and documents that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel asked the Trump transition team to lobby other countries to help Israel, according to two people briefed on the inquiry. Investigators have learned that Flynn and Kushner took the lead in those efforts. Mueller’s team has e-mails that show Flynn saying he would work to kill the vote, the people briefed on the matter said. According to the filings, Flynn consulted with multiple senior Trump officials during the transition. One adviser, described in court documents as a “very senior member” of the transition team, directed Flynn in December to reach out to Kislyak and lobby him about a United Nations resolution on Israeli settlements. People familiar with the investigation identified the adviser as Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Kushner lawyer Abbe Lowell declined to comment.)

You know, Flynn sidestepped disclosure rules even after he was warned not to accept foreign government payments.

Then there are the chosen untouchables:

"Hope, and skepticism, as Kushner shapes Mideast policy He has strong ties to Israel, but little experience" by Jodi Kantor, New York Times  February 12, 2017

When Jared Kushner was 17 years old, he stood where 1 million Jews had been murdered and listened to Israel’s prime minister stress the country’s importance.

“The Holocaust could have been prevented. We know it could not have taken place had the Jewish state been established a few years earlier,’’ the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said in 1998, standing amid the ruins of an Auschwitz-Birkenau crematory.

Netanyahu had just led Kushner and thousands of other teenagers waving Israeli flags in a procession through the camp’s gates and past the barracks. As part of the commemoration, the group would soon leave Poland and fly to Israel, to complete the journey from slaughter to Zionist rebirth.

Back then, Kushner was a high school basketball player, a Billy Joel fan, a quiz team manager, and no one’s guess to become a negotiating partner with Netanyahu, but unlike other students on the trip, he knew the prime minister, who was friendly with his father, a real estate developer and donor to Israeli causes. Netanyahu had even stayed at the Kushners’ home in New Jersey.

Jared gave up his bed for him.

Even though Kushner has visited Israel since childhood, and more recently to do business, he is little known there. Though he holds strong views about the state of Israel, he has not been outspoken about them, save for editorials in The New York Observer, the newspaper he owns. His thinking on sensitive matters like settlements is not well understood.

Well, it is now after the Bahrain presentation.

“Israel wasn’t a political discussion for him; it was his family, his life, his people,’’ said Hirschy Zarchi, rabbi at the Chabad House at Harvard, where Kushner was an undergraduate.

Says he was never late for class.

Kushner has ties to Israel that are personal and religious. His grandmother survived the Holocaust by crawling through a homemade tunnel in Poland. His grandfather escaped the massacres by hiding in a hole for years. An Orthodox Jew, Kushner, who was educated at Jewish schools, was instructed to protect Israel, remember the genocide, and assure the survival of the Jewish people, those close to him say.

I don't know about those fables that I'm sure get embellished to the point of belief in the tellers. It's like the hoax book on Oprah or the lady who said she lived with wolves in the record-cold winter of 1941. Such things feed into the persecution and victimhood narrative that keeps Jews afraid and in line.

His family used its real estate fortune to donate millions of dollars to American Jewish and Israeli hospitals, schools, and other institutions, including a few in settlements, according to public records. In his classes, Palestinians were regarded at a distance, in part as security threats who committed acts of terrorism — including one that killed a sister of a classmate.

When Trump ran for president, his son-in-law’s stances on Israel helped shape the campaign. Kushner helped script a speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and consulted with Netanyahu officials behind the scenes. When he brought the candidate and the prime minister together for a meeting, he invited his father, Charles Kushner, to join them.

Sometimes I get the feeling it is the father working through the son.

Though he had been raised a Democrat, Kushner endorsed Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential race, in part because of disappointment with President Obama on Israel.

I would really miss him more if he hadn't given Israel everything they wanted before standing up as a lame duck while initiating regime change in Libya and Ukraine, attempted regime change in Syria, and collaborating in the mass-murdering slaughter that is Yemen.

Some observers see Kushner as a welcome counter to an unpredictable president and to firebrands like Stephen Bannon, the White House strategist, and David M. Friedman, the ambassador designate to Israel.

Well, Bannon is gone -- as is anyone and everyone who opposes Jared -- and Friedman flipped him off.

Kushner “could be a moderate voice,’’ said Dan Gillerman, Israel’s former ambassadorto the United Nations, who got to know Kushner in New York. “The strange thing is, that 36-year-old kid may end up being the grown-up in the room.’’

Or not after two-and-a-half years.

--more--"

Afterward, Kushner was named senior adviser and played a key role in coordinating Trump’s contacts with foreign leaders and talking with foreign government officials himself while growing close to Ron Dermer, the Israeli ambassador and a close confidant of Netanyahu.

Also see:

Kushner’s sister withdraws from presentation to Chinese investors

The deal went Anbang and she had to find a new partner.

"The information collected last summer was considered credible enough for intelligence agencies to pass to the FBI, which during that period opened a counterintelligence investigation that is ongoing. It is unclear, however, whether Russian officials actually tried to directly influence Paul Manafort and Michael Flynn. Both have denied any collusion with the Russian government on the campaign to disrupt the election. John Brennan, the former director of the CIA, testified Tuesday about a tense period last year when he came to believe that President Vladimir Putin of Russia was trying to steer the outcome of the election. He said he saw intelligence suggesting that Russia wanted to use Trump campaign officials, wittingly or not, to help in that effort. He spoke vaguely about contacts between Trump associates and Russian officials, without giving names, saying they “raised questions in my mind about whether Russia was able to gain the cooperation of those individuals.”

Brennan pedaled the Steele dossier to McCain and Reid so they could send it up through channels.

I was told Kushner was a focus in Russia investigation because he wanted a secret communications channel with Kremlin, but it is common for senior advisers of a newly elected president to be in contact with foreign leaders and officialsit is common and not improper for transition officials to meet with foreign officials, and “Jared has had meetings with many other foreign countries and representatives — as many as two dozen other foreign countries’ leaders and representatives.”

Besides, the Kennedys did it.

Then there is the question of why Mueller was probing Kushner's finances, but his private attorney, Clinton lawyer and 9/11 commissioner Jamie Gorelick downplayed the news as Jared proclaimed that he did not collude with Russians (how about that grin, huh? He knows he is untouchable).


Related: 

"Three months before the 2016 election, a small group gathered at Trump Tower to meet with Donald Trump Jr., the president's eldest son. One was an Israeli specialist in social media manipulation. Another was an emissary for two wealthy Arab princes. The third was a Republican donor with a controversial past in the Middle East as a private security contractor. At the time, the emissary was also promoting a secret plan to use private contractors to destabilize Iran. The meetings, which have not been reported previously, are the first indication that countries other than Russia may have offered assistance to the Trump campaign....." 

I'm sorry, NYT, SAY AGAIN?

The contractor is Erik Prince (brother of Betsy DeVos, and did you know she is 14th in line of succession to the president) of Blackwater fame, the specialist is Joel Zamel, whose company employs several Israeli former intelligence officers specializing in collecting information and shaping opinion through social media and was paid up to $2 million, and the emissary would be the infamous Israeli fixer and interventionist George Nader, a convicted pedophile with a shadowy past, who frequently met with Jared Kushner and Michael Flynn. 


"A crackdown on working from home is pushing the EPA’s workforce in Boston to the brink" by Katie Johnston Globe Staff, July 24, 2019

The Trump administration’s disregard for the Environmental Protection Agency’s mission has riled many agency veterans, particularly when it comes to sustainability and climate change, but a new crackdown on working from home is pushing the already beleaguered workforce in Boston to the brink.

“There’s a lot of things this administration has done that makes it difficult to work here, but this is the first thing that’s really hit staff on a personal level,” said a public liaison for superfund site cleanups who moved to Exeter, N.H. — a nearly two-hour train ride from Boston — in part because of her ability to work from home two days a week, which allows her to pick up her 2-year-old from day care.

Like other EPA employees who talked to the Globe, she asked that her name not be used.

The directive has left some staff members scrambling to find last-minute help with child care, the employee said. Others are looking for new jobs.

“This could be the last straw,” she said.

The limits on remote work, which was previously allowed two days a week, are part of a new contract that management refers to as a collective bargaining agreement and the union, which was not involved in any bargaining, calls an illegal “unilateral edict.”

EPA employees are well aware of Trump’s disdain for their agency. In the Boston office, union president Steve Calder, noting that some workers are blaming the union for the loss of remote work days because it refused to negotiate, said, “Morale is in the toilet. The Trump administration loves chaos. . . . That’s part of their MO: chaos, infighting, fear.”

Great, just as Baker is asking for federal disaster relief after the Cape tornado.

Anyone who has scientific evidence showing that climate change is caused by humans and is capable of causing significant harm, for instance, is a threat to Trump’s beliefs, said David Madland, senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for American Progress.

The founding principle of the Center for American Progress, established a decade ago by former Clinton administration officials, was to use policy studies to press a liberal agenda.

It's what is now known as advocacy journali$m, and the Globe is full of it.

Earlier this month, a State Department intelligence analyst resigned after the White House blocked parts of his written testimony to Congress citing evidence that climate change is a threat to national security.

Then shut down the war machine because that is by far the largest polluter.

“By weakening unions and undermining expertise, it gives Trump greater power to do what he wants without anyone having the ability to challenge him on it,” Madland said.....

He can already do whatever he wants, and based on the Mueller fiasco yesterday, we no longer have an opposition with the ability to challenge.

--more--"

RelatedBattery Wharf hotel workers poised to strike

Whatever happened with the Vineyard bus drivers that went on strike!?

Out of a job, huh?

Hey, it's not the company's fault.

"Not guilty pleas entered in theft from Boston Center for Adult Education" by Gal Tziperman Lotan Globe Staff, July 24, 2019

Bit by bit, check after check, $1.7 million vanished from the Boston Center for Adult Education over eight years. More than $565,000 went to the executive director’s partner, for marketing services that did not exist, prosecutors say. Almost $900,000 in checks allegedly were written by the comptroller to himself, and more than $300,000 to groups for his personal benefit, including a youth baseball team in Saugus that he managed.

It was a brazen job, prosecutors say, carried out by a pair of executives at the Bay Village nonprofit who allegedly falsified financial entries and lied to the board of directors, leaving them in the dark.

Being run more like corporations all the time.

Just blocks from the Public Garden, the center is an institution in the neighborhood, said Meg Mainzer-Cohen, president of the Back Bay Association. It gives residents the chance to transcend the day-to-day, to learn new things, and become closer to others, she said.

“It serves a very important service for the community. It brings people together, people meet each other, friendships grow out of it,” she said.....

I wish I could find that kind of friend$hip.

--more--"

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Court declines to block new Trump administration rule barring most Central American asylum petitions

Another win for Trump!

ICE releases 18-year-old US citizen wrongfully detained near border

Yellowstone bison launches girl, 9, into the air

The alarming scene was captured in a 12-second video that was first shared Monday to Twitter and has since gone viral, serving as the latest reminder of the danger that can arise when people venture too close to wild animals.

Pennsylvania high court declines to review Sandusky decision

They don't want to open that can of worms. A couple of them might even be in there somewhere.

Officials abandon idea of demolishing Columbine High School

Confederate statue vandalized with profanity against Trump

They profaned the patriot General Robert E. Lee.

Worldwide recall launched for textured breast implants linked to rare cancer

Federal judge blocks Arkansas antiabortion laws for now

At least you won that one at the eleventh-hour, ladies, although the repeal of the Affordable Care Act is nigh!

"Wanda Vázquez, in line to become Puerto Rico’s next governor, faces pushback" by Jose A. Del Real New York Times, July 24, 2019

SAN JUAN — After more than a week of political turmoil in Puerto Rico, calls are escalating for Governor Ricardo A. Rosselló to resign. In line to succeed him is Wanda Vázquez, the secretary of justice, but Vázquez has a number of powerful political opponents, complicating any succession, and the island was enmeshed in intense political machinations on Wednesday to determine who would lead it.

What does the Constitution say?

Vázquez worked as an attorney specializing in domestic and sexual violence before her appointment to the top post at the commonwealth’s Department of Justice. She was appointed to lead the office of women’s affairs in 2010. Some women’s groups opposed Vázquez during her seven years as the head of the island’s women’s affairs office.

“A lot of feminist groups were very critical of Wanda Vázquez,” said Saadi Rosado of the Feminist Collective, an advocacy group. “She failed to address gender violence issues and was another piece of government bureaucracy.”

Her relationship with the legislative branch is fraught, to say the least. Her time as secretary of justice has been punctuated by criticism that she has dragged her feet on investigating controversies involving members of her own party.....

Lot of bad blood down there, or so I am told.

--more--"

Demonstrators waved Puerto Rican national flags in front of the governor's mansion in San Juan on Wednesday as part of a protest calling for Governor Ricardo Rosselló to resign.
Demonstrators waved Puerto Rican national flags in front of the governor's mansion in San Juan on Wednesday as part of a protest calling for Governor Ricardo Rosselló to resign. (Dennis M. Rivera Pichardo/Associated Press)

Did you know that on this day in 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States, and based on the photo above they no longer want to stay.

Their leaders might consider making an appeal to Trump like this guy:

"Madoff asks Trump to commute his 150-year sentence" by Michael Gold New York Times, July 24, 2019

Years before he became president, President Trump expressed contempt for Bernie Madoff in an interview with The New York Times Magazine in 2009.

Trump told the Times that he had met the notorious financier several times, both at Mar-a-Lago, the president’s private, members-only resort in Palm Beach, Fla., and at Trump’s nearby golf course.

At one point, Madoff, who once owned a waterfront mansion in Palm Beach, asked Trump to invest in his fund, Trump said.

“I said jokingly, ‘No thanks, I can lose my own money,’ ” Trump said.

In 2008, in an interview with CNN, Trump referred to Madoff as a “sleazebag” and “a total crook.”

It's at times like these that I think Trump is the perfect president. If anyone can see through these Zionist Jew scoundrels, he can. He's been around them all his life and knows exactly how to play them.

Believe me, I'm just as alarmed as you that he could be a peacemaker and Christ-like figure.

--more--"

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Slighting RMV oversight hearing a losing strategy

The ticket’s in the mail, or did you not get the memo.

‘Conrad’s Law’ would criminalize suicide coercion

It's a newly filed bill inspired by the Michelle Carter case, and you will need to walk on eggshells around them while avoiding the horses**t.

State House clears $1.3B for towns to address climate change

Man arrested in N.H. killing of girlfriend with piece of furniture

Off-duty police officer spots car linked to Roxbury shooting scene

The driver was arrested on a gun charge.

Boston man pleads guilty to trafficking underage girl, two women

They are federal charges and he could serve more than 12 years in prison.

Man accused of trying to sexually assault Northeastern student held without bail

Neither one is an Epstein.

Whistleblower VA doctor who reported Manchester facility dies in car crash

HMM

I guess they finally caught up to him.


{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Necco dispute clears hurdle in bankruptcy court

There is a $weet $10 million at $take.

Sage Therapeutics to pursue high-risk, high-reward plan for experimental depression pill

Patients, backed by ‘dark money’ group, get ready to debate Duchenne drug prices

$hould be exciting.

Dunkin’ jumps on the faux-meat bandwagon

The dash is on to deliver it.

"Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Wednesday he supported the Justice Department’s efforts to look into Amazon because the tech giant has ‘‘destroyed the retail industry.’’ ‘‘I think if you look at Amazon, although there are certain benefits to it, they’ve destroyed the retail industry across the United States, so there’s no question they’ve limited competition,’’ Mnuchin said during an interview on CNBC. ‘‘There’s areas where they’ve really hurt small businesses.’’ Mnuchin made the comments one day after the Justice Department announced it was opening a wide-ranging antitrust review of ‘‘market-leading online platforms,’’ an unprecedented inquiry that could heighten calls for Amazon, Facebook, and Google to be broken up....."

That must be music to Liz Warren's ears!

Facebook agrees to extensive new oversight as part of $5b settlement

Dish agrees to $5 billion deal for wireless assets, setting up mobile service merger

Vineyard Wind CEO confident that federal review will wrap up shortly

Former Delta executive confirmed to become head of FAA

After quite a fight.

Boeing says it may halt 737 Max production

Boston Fed executive to retire

His last name is Fuhrer, and I'm not kidding.


{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Time to bid a final adieu to a pair who will live forever in film:


Who could ever forget the murderous android replicant Roy Batty on a desperate quest to prolong his artificially shortened life in post-apocalyptic, 21st-century Los Angeles in ‘‘Blade Runner’’ opposite Harrison Ford?

David Hedison, actor who found fame in a submarine, dies at 92

He was the doomed scientist in the original version of the horror movie “The Fly” and rose to fame as the by-the-book submarine captain on the prime-time series “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea,” but he is best remembered by me for his appearances on “The Love Boat” and “Fantasy Island.”

Speaking of which, they are making a reboot of Fantasy Island with Faye Dunaway as Mrs. Roarke and Adam Sandler as Tattoo. The new theme music is to be written by Meek Mill, and the first episode guest stars Casey Affleck and Elizabeth Banks as a married couple invited to dinner at the Fringe Festival.


NEXT DAY UPDATES

It's the Globe with the dementia today, and the word impeachment appears below the fold:

"4 more House Democrats — 2 from Mass. — now back impeachment" by Jazmine Ulloa Globe Staff, July 25, 2019

WASHINGTON — The day after former special counsel Robert Mueller’s long-awaited testimony, four more House members — including Massachusetts Representatives Katherine Clark and Lori Trahan — came out in favor of launching an impeachment inquiry into President Trump, despite resistance from party leaders.

I'm sure they were hoping for more than and handful.

Their announcements brought to nearly 100 the number of House Democrats who want to start impeachment proceedings, but that is still a minority of the 235 House Democrats.

The math means that, as lawmakers left Washington Thursday for a six-week recess, Mueller’s underwhelming performance had changed some lawmakers’ minds but had yet to produce the surge in support that many liberals hoped it would.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and many of her deputies have been resisting calls for impeachment out of fear that it will backfire politically given lukewarm public support and near solid Republican opposition.

“We do need to be realistic, and that is, the only way he’s leaving office, at least at this point, is by being voted out, and I think our efforts need to be made in every respect to make sure we turn out our people,” House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam B. Schiff, a close Pelosi ally, told CNN on Thursday. “Should we put the country through an impeachment? I haven’t been convinced yet that we should.”

The last hope for House Democrats pushing impeachment could be a groundswell of support from voters back home.

Which isn't out there on this particular issue, although I'm sure the activists will be activated and the narrative-provided pre$$ will cover the protests.

Representative Eric Swalwell of California predicted more House lawmakers would join him in favor of impeachment after taking the temperature of their constituents during the long summer break. “The way I see it is you’re not going to see fewer people calling for impeachment,” he said. “And no one who called for impeachment and then watched the hearing is going to say, ‘You know what — I made the wrong call.’ ”

Really? 

Go ahead then.

Appearing before two committees Wednesday, Mueller confirmed he did not exonerate Trump of obstruction of justice after a two-year investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, but Mueller did not deliver any new bombshellor viral moments — and as promised, he did not stray from the 448-page report he issued in April.

Still, Mueller’s testimony was enough for Trahan.

The Westford Democrat had already read the report, but she said Mueller’s testimony persuaded her to call for impeachment because he had made enough of a case to the public about potential obstruction of justice and confirmed that Trump had not been exonerated, countering the narrative from the president and administration officials.

“Delivering that message, which people just hadn’t received before, was important because you want impeachment proceedings to be self evident,” she said. “You want it to be where people understand what you’re doing is not partisan thing.”

She expects us to believe that, or is she just singing to the choir?

Trahan, who is in her first term, was a congressional staffer when President Bill Clinton was impeached in 1998, so she knows the disruption, distraction, and divisiveness that process can cause.

“There is a tremendous burden of history when you make decisions like this,” Trahan said in her Capitol Hill office Thursday. “But at the end of the day, we need to send a very clear and strong message that no president — not this one, not the next one — is above the law.”

There she goes again, with not the $lightest hint of $hame for the hypocri$y.

Clark’s move was surprising because she serves in the House Democratic leadership, but while she said the ongoing investigations are laying the necessary groundwork to start an impeachment inquiry, she felt compelled to do more in the face of the Trump administration’s “unprecedented stonewalling and obstruction.”

All this hyperbole is making them look ridiculous, but I guess that is what Globe readers need to see and hear; otherwise, they melt like a snowflake.

The Melrose Democrat also said she was “stunned” when Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, blocked a vote on an election security bill Thursday after Mueller had warned Russia was still trying to interfere with US elections.

Related: Election security divides Congress after Mueller’s testimony

My print copy was some NYT pos.

“We can’t allow Republican inaction to prop the door open for thieves to steal an election,” Clark said. “We must be relentless in exposing the truth, act to protect our national security, and ensure that every eligible American can vote without foreign interference.”

Democratic Representatives Peter DeFazio of Oregon and Lisa Blunt Rochester of Delaware also came out for impeachment after Mueller’s testimony. The nine-member Massachusetts congressional delegation had been split on the issue. Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey also came out in favor of impeachment Thursday.

Markey is obviously crapping his pants at the latest poll numbers.


Impeachment must start in the House, though, and there’s not even yet a majority of Democrats there who support it. A Washington Post/ABC News poll released this month showed 37 percent of adults wanted the House to start impeachment proceedings, while an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll also released this month found 21 percent support from registered voters.

Political experts did not expect the Mueller testimony to move the needle much in terms of public opinion, pointing to polling data that show previous revelations from the Mueller investigation have not had an impact on Trump’s approval ratings.

“I think Democrats are trying to use the Mueller report to keep it in the public’s mind,” said Kyle Kondik, communications director for the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.

The reaction came after House Democrats and Republicans on Wednesday painted opposing realities of Mueller and his testimony. Republicans characterized Mueller as unprepared and lacking a “firm grasp on the issues,” with House Intelligence member Devin Nunes referring to the second hearing as “the last gasp of the Russia collusion conspiracy theory.”

Which reality would you like to believe? 

(Blog editor then heaves a huge sigh of despair at the journali$m, if you can even call it that)

In her office on Thursday, Trahan said she felt relief in calling for impeachment — a decision she said was reinforced by the calls from constituents she has received.

“You want to work on all the things you campaigned on,” she said, as she rushed out for votes on the House floor. “At the same time, you are balancing that with protecting our democracy and standing up for what’s right. When they said that the job is not supposed to be easy, they are right.”

--more--"

I don't know how you make sense of that, and now what?

Better be careful if you lose, for it could mean the death penalty:

"Justice Department plans to restart capital punishment after long hiatus" by Devlin Barrett and Mark Berman Washington Post, July 25, 2019

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department announced Thursday that it plans to resume executing prisoners awaiting the death penalty, ending almost two decades in which the federal government had not imposed capital punishment on prisoners.

Attorney General William Barr ordered the Bureau of Prisons to schedule executions for five inmates currently on death row. The prisoners were convicted of murdering children.

Yeah, they always wave kids at you when they really want something.

The Trump administration’s push to resume capital punishment in the federal system, while not surprising, goes against the recent trend of declining executions across the country.

The last federal execution was in 2003. In the years since, there has been an informal moratorium on executions of federal prisoners, as Justice Department officials reviewed its lethal injection procedures. That practice was underscored during the Obama administration by then-Attorney General Eric Holder’s personal opposition to the death penalty, even while he approved prosecutors’ decisions to seek the death penalty in specific trials.

Barr said it was time for convicted killers sentenced to death by juries to receive that ultimate punishment. ‘‘The Justice Department upholds the rule of law — and we owe it to the victims and their families to carry forward the sentence imposed by our justice system,’’ Barr said in a statement.

We are reaching the point of absurdity when a Deep State creature that is a guardian of the secrets and arbiter of ju$tu$ is citing the rule of law.

The number of executions nationwide has plummeted over the last two decades, falling to 25 executions last year, down from 98 carried out in 1999. The number of states carrying out death sentences has also declined as some have abolished capital punishment, announced moratoriums, or struggled to obtain the drugs sought for executions.

New Hampshire abolished the death penalty earlier this year, making it the 21st state to formally abandon capital punishment. In some of the other states where it remains the law, the death penalty is effectively frozen, including by governor-issued moratoriums in California and Pennsylvania and a court order in North Carolina.

Supporters of capital punishment, who argue that it should be applied for heinous crimes, have said that delays in carrying out death sentences are unfair to the relatives of victims. Opponents of the practice have argued that the system is dangerously flawed, pointing to cases of people who have been exonerated after being sentenced to death.

Ruth Friedman, head of the Federal Capital Habeas Project, which seeks to improve legal representation for people on federal death row, said there were ‘‘troubling questions about the new execution protocol’’ announced Thursday.

‘‘A pervasive myth is that the federal death penalty is ‘the gold standard’ of capital punishment systems, applied only to the worst offenders for a narrow class of especially heinous crimes involving unique federal interests, with highly skilled and well-resourced lawyers on both sides,’’ she said in a statement. ‘‘This is false. In fact, the federal death penalty is arbitrary, racially-biased, and rife with poor lawyering and junk science.’’

Friedman called for ‘‘additional court review before the federal government can proceed with any execution.’’

This may surprise, but I'm totally opposed to the death penalty. The state does enough sanctioned killing by its self-appointed authority and we have enough mass-murdering exercises called wars. What you do with the war criminals and incorrigible looters and ruling cla$$ pedophiles is look 'em up for life in a black site. It's the dose of your own medicine solution.

Nationwide, most Americans support the practice, though the amount has declined significantly since the mid-1990s. At that time, when crime rates were far higher, four in five Americans backed capital punishment, while a Pew Research Center poll last year found that 54 percent of people supported it.

That doesn't surprise me. This country has been steeped in Zionist values and thought for so long they have us bloodthirsty.

According to Pew, most Republicans still back it, while Democrats oppose the death penalty. President Trump has been an outspoken supporter of capital punishment for decades, while Democratic candidates running against him have argued that it should be abolished.

The Justice Department’s decision to shift to a single drug for lethal injections — which remain the primary method of executions nationwide — mirrors a move that has taken place in states facing difficulties in obtaining the drugs officials have sought.

States still seeking to schedule executions have scrambled to obtain lethal injection drugs in recent years in the face of opposition from pharmaceutical firms that do not want their products used in carrying out death sentences.

This is after an executive at one of the nation’s largest drug distribution companies said under questioning recently that the business has no obligation to the public when it comes to the amount of prescription opioid painkillers it ships.

Nothing like pharmaceutical hypocri$y, huh?

In some states, authorities have moved to rewrite their execution protocols to rely on different drug combinations — in some cases, doing so multiple times — or expanded their ability to use other execution methods such as the firing squad, electric chair, and nitrogen gas. Nebraska last year became the first state to use the powerful opioid fentanyl in an execution.

Texas, Georgia, and Missouri — three of the 11 states that have carried out executions since 2017, and all among the country’s most active death-penalty states — have shifted their protocols from three-drug combinations to relying only on pentobarbital, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

The Justice Department has sought and won death sentences in two high-profile cases in recent years, sending both the Boston Marathon bomber and the Charleston, S.C., church gunman to death row.

When Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the surviving Boston Marathon bomber, was sentenced to death in 2015, the Justice Department was operating under a de facto moratorium on executions due to an ongoing review of its federal death penalty policy..... 

Oh, so that is what this is about. Execute the patsy before someone gets to him.


Btw, the Marathon Bombing was on Mueller's beat, and no one asked him about it.

--more--"

That's the guy who protects war criminal presidents and the office of the presidency, and he does look like one tough sob.

One who is not:

"A week after being denied bail, Jeffrey E. Epstein was found unconscious in his cell Tuesday at a federal jail in Manhattan with marks on his neck, and prison officials were treating the incident as a possible suicide attempt, a law enforcement official who had been briefed on the matter said. Epstein’s injuries were not serious, said the official, who requested his name not be published because he was not authorized to speak on the matter. A second law enforcement official, also speaking on the condition of anonymity, confirmed that Epstein had been discovered in his cell with “bruising around the neck.” The Bureau of Prisons, in an e-mail Thursday morning, would give no details about the incident, citing “privacy and security reasons.” The bureau said Epstein, 66, was not in a hospital but still at the jail, the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan. Epstein’s lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Epstein, the financier who is accused of abusing underage girls, has been housed in a special unit at the jail along with a man facing murder charges named Nicholas Tartaglione, according to Tartaglione’s lawyer, Bruce Barket. Federal prisons use the special units with strict security measures to separate some inmates from the general population."

This is either a pathetic attempt at gaining sympathy, or Epstein is in real danger. You have to remember that the Feds moved Whitey Bulger just before he met with misfortune. We could be seeing them laying the groundwork for some ill to befall Epstein.

"A mystery was afoot in Washington this week after an apparent audiovisual mix-up made for an unexpected jab at President Trump. The venue: a Washington hotel where Turning Point USA, the conservative youth organization, was hosting a conference for high school students, where Trump spoke Tuesday. The décor: a presidential seal on the onstage screen, a fitting background for a speech by the president of the United States. The problem: The presidential seal was not, in fact, the presidential seal at all. Instead of the customary bald eagle, the image showed a double-headed eagle, similar to that featured in Russia’s national emblem. Instead of arrows, the eagle clutches a set of golf clubs. Turning Point USA initially said it had no idea how it ended up there. Was it a prank or a political statement? Or was it a simple mistake by the audiovisual team, who perhaps pulled the wrong image off the internet? By Thursday, that seemed to be the explanation. In the hours after the image was circulated online, an aide at the organization was fired, a person with knowledge of the matter confirmed Thursday....."

I'm so glad they solved that mystery, aren't you?

" A divided House on Thursday passed a two-year budget deal that would raise spending by hundreds of billions of dollars over existing caps and allow the government to keep borrowing to cover its debts, amid grumbling from fiscal conservatives over the measure’s effect on the federal deficit. Republicans defected by the dozens, despite President Trump’s endorsement and pressure from key outside groups, including the Chamber of Commerce, to avoid a potentially catastrophic default on the government’s debt. Democrats were left to get the deal passed. The Senate is expected to approve the measure next week, and Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, said he would ensure that the department had money through the next two weeks. With spending levels set, the bare-bones budget deal will allow lawmakers to begin filling in the details of spending bills that would fund the government agency by agency and program by program beyond Oct. 1, when the new fiscal year begins."

It's demented to continue to read this slop every morning.

Major automakers strike climate deal with California

They rebuffed Trump, so at least someone did.

In Puerto Rico, uncertainty about who will be the new governor

It's a New York Times rewrite, so f*** it.

Aborted embryo suit rests on Alabama ‘unborn rights’ policy

The unborn have no rights, for they are not yet a citizen.

90,000 in Mass. could be affected by Trump’s callous food-stamp cuts

Including children with disabilities and the elderly in hospice.

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

"Governor Baker calls for $18b boost in transit, road funding" by Aidan Ryan Globe Correspondent, July 25, 2019

The so-called transportation bond bill would allow the state to borrow money for years of improvements to both the roads and rails, and includes many projects the Baker administration had already identified as priorities before the latest troubles.

In previous years, these measures rarely attracted much attention outside of Beacon Hill, but the recent crisis surrounding the T over the June derailment on the Red Line, as well as the seemingly worsening traffic congestion, has injected a sense of urgency to fix problems that have been building for decades.

Meaning the Globe's recent focus on the routine delays and derailments was nothing more than an agenda-pushing money and grab with a side slice of politics.

Baker has come under fire for his oversight of the T in particular and his refusal to entertain a tax increase or other new revenues to improve transit service.....

Oh, yeah, pu$hing the tax and fee increases now.

--more--"

Don't stand too close to the railing.

Related: 

"Governor Charlie Baker submitted a bond bill to the Legislature Thursday that would authorize $18 billion in transportation spending over 10 years. The package includes the usual Christmas list. Here’s a sampling of the items Baker wants under his tree....."

I can't take the eliti$t in$ults anymore, and the public-private partnerships they keep referring to have the whiff of pure fa$ci$m.

Also see: 

Baker encourages RMV officials to testify at legislative hearing

Baker activates National Guard to help Cape Cod after tornadoes hit

Mass. auto dealer caught in messy fight with N.Y. investor

Rosenberg accuses the New York investment firm GPB Capital Holdings of running a Ponzi-like scheme.

Running to Home Base got this Navy SEAL back home all the way

He says Home Base is the cutting-edge program operated by Massachusetts General Hospital and the Boston Red Sox that treats a very special corps of wounded warriors and the existential questions that the people we send to war face (I don't know if he meant that literally, but he is right when he says we, what with being part of the war-promoting advocacy journali$m and all).

At least it's for a worthy cause:

"The Red Sox had precious little to celebrate on the field in London over the weekend, but behind the scenes, team brass raised a toast to the arrival of baseball across the pond — and raised awareness about an important cause. Home Base — a Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital program — and the UK’s Walking With the Wounded hosted the Mission: Gratitude Gala at Kensington Palace, raising $1.3 million for veterans dealing with mental health issues, and their families. Aptly, the fund-raiser took place on June 27, which is National PTSD Awareness Day. The lavish bash drew a host of notables from Boston as well as some boldface Brits, including perennially youthful rocker Sting, who serenaded partygoers. On the guest list: Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker, his wife, Lauren, and daughter Caroline; Massachusetts General Hospital president Dr. Peter Slavin and his wife, Lori; VantEdge co-founder Paul Edgerley and his wife, Sandy; Bank of America vice chairman Anne Finucane; designer and diehard Sox fan Joseph Abboud; Member of Parliament Edward Miliband; Home Base executive director and retired Brigadier General Jack Hammond and his wife, Colleen; NESN host Tom Caron; and Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred. Many members of the Red Sox leadership made the fancy fund-raiser, including principal owner John Henry and his wife, Boston Globe managing director Linda Pizzuti Henry; team chairman Tom Werner; manager Alex Cora; president and CEO Sam Kennedy; president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski; Red Sox Foundation executive director Rebekah Salwasser; and foundation honorary chairman Tim Wakefield." 

What, no trip to Idaho this year? 

Here’s the story of the Great Western Mass. Yak Escape of 2019

Zoe Greenberg tells you all about it.

Yankee Candle founder Michael Kittredge dies at 67

That's all the talk out here.

Boston Calling promoter describes encountering a knotty permit process

Until agreeing to hire union workers anyway.

UMass tuition likely to increase 2.5%, president says

Not only that, the women’s basketball team needs a coach.

Related:

"Score one for gender diversity in the male-dominated biotech industry. Reshma Kewalramani, 46, will be the first female CEO at a top-tier US biotech company, a watershed moment for Vertex Pharmaceuticals. Vertex said in a securities filing Thursday that as part of Kewalramani’s promotion, her base salary was boosted to $800,000 and will rise to $1.15 million when she becomes CEO. Her first grant of stock under her CEO pay package will be made during the first quarter of 2021, with an estimated value of $11 million....."

I'm told it is a “milestone” by Jody Rose, president of the New England Venture Capital Association, who is working with Massachusetts companies to recruit more women and people of color into high-skill tech jobs, and diver$ity is important to the ruling cla$$ in that it may facilitate the $tatu$ quo but with a fresh and different face.

At least she will be able to land an apartment:

Welcome to Crazytown, a.k.a. the Greater Boston real estate market

And the home of the $925,000 designer studio as sparks fly:

A fireball was spotted over Mass. on Wednesday night

The Globe’s experts tell you what you saw.

People urged to avoid contact with water in Charles River because of toxic algae

Maybe that is what killed her:

"The body of a 24-year-old homeless woman was discovered in the Spicket River in Lawrence on Tuesday, and a Lawrence man, Giovanni Lebron, 24, was arrested Wednesday night and charged him with murder, the Essex District Attorney’s office said....."

Do you hear any frogs?

Museum of Science cuts staff by 29 positions

Rowley man dies after fall in national park

"Two Massachusetts men are facing a total of 82 criminal charges for allegedly sexually molesting a male juvenile while working as counselors at New Hampshire’s Youth Development Center in 1997 and 1998, officials said Thursday. The men were identified by New Hampshire Attorney General Gordon J. MacDonald’s office as Jeffrey Buskey, a 52-year-old Dorchester resident, and Steven Murphy, a 50-year-old Danvers resident. Buskey faces 56 indictments and Murphy has been charged in 26 for their alleged actions while at the Youth Development Center, a juvenile detention facility in Manchester, N.H. The victim was between the ages of 13 and 18 at the time. The AG’s office is also expanding the scope of the investigation and will examine circumstances at the Manchester, N.H., facility between 1990 and 2000, prosecutors said....."

Do they know Epstein?

"A man and a juvenile male were arrested on gun charges Wednesday evening in Roxbury, police said. Jefferson Baez, 21, of Boston was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm, unlawful possession of ammunition, and unlawful possession of a loaded firearm, the Boston Police Department said in a statement Thursday. A 17-year-old male from Roxbury was charged with being a delinquent for unlawful possession of a firearm, unlawful possession of ammunition, unlawful possession of a loaded firearm, and possession of a high-capacity feeding device, police said....."

The kid is a suspect in a killing in Dorchester.

Arlington statistician wins $1 million lottery prize

We should all be so lucky as Felsher.

Slow Saturday Special: $queezing North Korea

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"New North Korean missile sends angry message to South Korea’s president" by Choe Sang-Hun New York Times, July 26, 2019

SEOUL — When North Korea said Friday that it had tested a new, more advanced missile, it pointed the finger of blame at one man: Moon Jae-in, the South Korean president, who just last year embraced Kim Jong Un at their countries’ border.

The North said Kim, its leader, had personally arranged the missile test Thursday tocounter what it called Moon’s “double-dealing”: talking peace with North Korea even as he bought state-of-the-art F-35 stealth jets and planned joint military drills with the United States.

Some analysts said Kim, in singling out Moon, was venting anger over his failure to win relief from crippling economic sanctions over his nuclear program, with talks between his government and the United States having stalled. On the day the North made its announcement, bad economic news arrived: South Korea’s central bank said the North’s economy had shrunk by 4.1 percent last year, its worst contraction since 1997.

“Kim Jong Un is clearly frustrated,” said Ko Yu-hwan, a professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul, the South’s capital. “He had hoped that President Moon would be able to help persuade Washington to ease sanctions. He now seems to have concluded that South Korea is really at Washington’s beck and call.”

So South Korea is, at bottom, another vassal state much like those in Europe.

We are the 21st-century Rome, folks.

North Korea has been hit hardby a series of United Nations sanctions imposed since 2016, aimed at blocking all its key exports — like coal, textiles, and fisheries — and drastically reducing its oil imports as well. Its economy shrank by 3.5 percent in 2017, according to the South’s central bank.

If those figures are to be believed, then since Trump came into office the North Koreans have had a major contraction. I know this is a bargaining and negotiating tactic and all that, but the flip side of the purely for defensive nuclear weaponry -- the North Koreans saw what happened to Saddam and Ghadafi, and what Iran is going through right now. Their nuclear weapons arsenal is probably the only reason the U.S. hasn't already done a regime change -- is that, intended or not coming from the beacon of human rights and freedom (can you eat those things) is immense suffering on the part of ordinary North Koreans, who must be impoverished and hungry if these numbers are to be believed.

Perhaps that is minimized on purpose by the pre$$, for it would expose the iron hand of the United States and the suffering it causes, much like in Venezuela (can't even remember the last time I saw them in print).

The bank’s statement Friday also said that North Korea’s external trade declined 48.8 percent last year, with its exports plummeting by as much as 86.3 percent. Unsurprisingly, it attributed the North’s woes to the international sanctions.

Kim’s diplomatic outreach early last year to South Korea and the United States, after years of missile and nuclear tests and bombastic threats, was widely seen as driven by an urgent need to end the sanctions, but three meetings with President Trump and several with Moon have failed to win Kim the economic relief he has promised his people.

What will Trump do when the house of cards falls, if it ever will? 

I'm not so sure anymore. The money managers have turned it all into a $cience with a ma$$ media apparatus to $pread the word.

Since then, his indignation has been mostly directed toward South Korea and Moon, but Moon has agreed with the Trump administration’s position that ambitious inter-Korean economic projects that he and Moon agreed to pursue in meetings last year must wait until sanctions are eased as part of a nuclear disarmament deal.

And now his fighter jets are firing on Russian and Chinese war game patrols, great.

What, Moon surface in one of Epstein's flight logs? 

Moon was beset with serious foreign policy problems when the North launched its latest projectile, which the South said was a new type of short-range ballistic missile, potentially harder to track and intercept.

This is something new to me. 

What problems could they possibly be talking about?

South Korea’s relations with Japan are at their lowest point in decades, in part over Japanese export restrictions on chemicals needed to produce some of the South’s most lucrative exports. On Tuesday, a Russian-Chinese air patrol through nearby waters resulted in South Korean jets firing hundreds of warning shots to drive off a Russian plane, an unprecedented event, but the North’s latest missile test has done more than anything to highlight Moon’s quickly shrinking reputation as a regional peacemaker.

That whole plane incident is shrouded in vagueness, with no real context being provided by the pre$$ here. One is beginning to wonder if it happened at all, and was nothing more than a ruse to bring key vassals Japan and South Korea back into line.

Moon won global accolades last year for brokering the first summit meeting between the United States and the North, tirelessly preaching that Kim and Trump could end the decades-old crisis over Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program.

But no Peace Prize. Maybe he will win one this year.

At that June 2018 meeting in Singapore, Kim and Trump produced a vaguely worded agreement in which the North Korean leader promised to work toward denuclearization in return for “new” relations with Washington, but when the two met again in February in Hanoi, they parted with no agreement on how to implement the Singapore deal. Since then, the North has rained scorn on Moon.

The Hanoi talks broke down after Kim demanded that the most biting sanctions be dropped, in return for the dismantling of North Korea’s nuclear complex in Yongbyon, north of Pyongyang. Washington says the sanctions must stay in place until North Korea agrees to a more comprehensive breakup of its nuclear facilities and arsenal.

Trump seemed unfazed by the North’s latest missile test.....

Maybe he is demented, as some bloggers have suggested.

--more--"

Turns out he wasn't phased because it was a Russian missile:

"North Korea Tested New Ballistic Missile, South Says, Flouting U.N. Ban" by Choe Sang-Hun New York Times, July 25, 2019

SEOUL — The two projectiles North Korea launched off its east coast Thursday were a new type of short-range ballistic missile, the South Korean government said, acknowledging that the North was expanding its ability to deliver nuclear warheads as President Trump’s efforts to bring the country to the negotiating table remain stalled.

Now I'm scared, so why sit here and keep typing?

The assessment — the South’s first formal declaration that North Korea is testing a new missile — accused the North of violating United Nations resolutions that ban it from developing and testing ballistic missile technologies.

Israel has been doing it for decades so what's the big deal?

If validated, it also appears to undercut what Trump has repeatedly touted as his biggest diplomatic achievement in dealing with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un. The South Korea National Security Council, in a statement on Thursday, expressed strong concerns. A technical analysis is still underway with US officials.

Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said the door remains open for diplomacy with North Korea even after the missile launches, and said he hopes working-level talks between the two countries will begin in the next month or so.

Pompeo described the missile launches as more a negotiating tactic than a move that would create a rupture or lead Trump to reverse his commitment to talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

“Everybody tries to get ready for negotiations and create leverage and create risk for the other side,” Pompeo said in an interview Thursday with Bloomberg Television. “We remain convinced that there’s a diplomatic way forward, a negotiated solution to this.”

I don't even know where to begin with that rotund repugnancy that represents the United States. The North Koreans despise him, but he's convinced there can be a negotiated solution (sometimes delusional people are convinced of things, right?) and that Trump won't reverse his commitments -- despite the massive evidence that he won't keep any.

Analysts in South Korea said the North appears to have been testing a new solid-fuel, short-range ballistic missile during weapons tests May 4, May 9, and Thursday. After the North’s tests in May, South Korean and US officials shied away from publicly identifying the projectiles as a new ballistic missile, an apparent attempt not to give the North the attention it seeks through short-range missile tests.

Or they were concealing it for whatever purpose. 

One of the two missiles launched Thursday traveled 428 miles, indicating that the North was making quick progress on the new missile, yet it was not the range of the missile but its looks that alarmed analysts in the region.

After studying the photos North Korea released from the tests in May, South Korean and US analysts said the missile looked like a copy of Russia’s Iskander short-range ballistic missile. An Iskander-like missile would be a potent new addition to the North’s growing fleet of ballistic missiles.

Are those what were on that fishing boat?

Solid-fuel and road-mobile missiles such as the Iskander are easier to transport and hide, and they take less time to prepare for launching. The Iskander is capable of carrying nuclear warheads— the North is believed to have 30 to 60 — and can also be maneuvered during its ballistic trajectory.....

The next thing they will be telling us is Kim has mobile biological weapons labs and drones that can attack in 45 minutes, although it looks like the battle lines of WWIII are being nicely drawn.

--more--"

Maybe this will faze Trump:

"Iran fired a Shahab-3 medium-range missile Wednesday, a US military official said, playing it down by saying that it did not pose a threat to US or other Western shipping or military bases in the region. The missile was launched from the southern coast of Iran and landed east of Tehran, the official said Thursday, adding that it flew about 680 miles and stayed inside Iran for the entire flight. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence analyses, said that US officials had been closely monitoring the test site as Iran prepared the missile for launch. Despite the Pentagon’s effort to minimize the strategic importanceof the launch Wednesday, it appears to be a political statement by Iran, acting both as a carefully calibrated effort at escalationand as a message to Europe. Missile launches are not forbidden under the 2015 nuclear accord reached between Washington and Tehran, which is one of President Trump’s complaints about the agreement he abandoned last year, but a UN Security Council resolution, passed as the agreement was reached, says that “Iran is called upon not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using such ballistic missile technology.” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has demanded that Iran cease all missile launches and testing and give up its arsenal of the weapons. Iran says it is under no obligation to do so and notes that because it has no interest in nuclear weapons, it is not violating the wording of the UN prohibition....."

Leaving them defenseless and as easy prey, like Iraq and Libya, and I was further told that "the test Wednesday seemed meant to drive home the point that Iran had no intention of giving up its own missile fleet, and the missile launch in Iran came within hours of North Korea’s launching of two short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast Thursday."

I knew they were in cahoots, and the heat is now on Europe:

"Heat, then hail: Weather and travel woes hit Britain, France" by Natasha Livingstone Associated Press, July 26, 2019

LONDON — The temperature is dropping but Europe’s troubles aren’t over: A record-busting heat wave gave way Friday to thunderstorms and hailstorms, bringing the Tour de France to a dramatic halt and causing trouble at British airports and beyond on one of the most hectic travel days of the year.

In addition, travelers at London’s Heathrow and Gatwick airports faced delays because air traffic controllers grounded flights over a technical problem.

It marked the second day of travel disruptions in European capitals after one of the hottest days in memory, when many places in Western Europe saw temperatures soar beyond 104 degrees Fahrenheit. Compounding that, the weekend is a big travel moment across Europe as families head off for their summer holidays now that schools have breaked for the academic year.

I don't want to be picky, but isn't it supposed to be broke for the academic year? 

I know it's a simple point of grammar, but it's basic and shows you the sloppiness of the journali$t and the lack of editing by the managers. 

Of course, if I mistype something it shows how unqualified I am and renders any commentary or questions moot.

After several hours of flight restrictions over British airspace Friday, the national air traffic controller NATS said it had fixed the technical issue and would be able to safely increase traffic flow.

‘‘Weather is continuing to cause significant unrelated disruption across the country and more widely across Europe, which has further complicated today’s operation,’’ NATS said in a statement.

In France, suffocating heat turned into slippery storms Friday — including a hailstorm on the Tour de France route in the Alps that was so sudden and violent that organizers ordered a stop to the world’s premier cycling event.

As riders careened down hairpin turns after mounting a 9,000-foot peak, a storm lashed the valley below. A snowplow worked desperately to clear the route of slush, but organizers deemed it too dangerous to continue.

Weather almost never stops the three-week race, and the decision came on a day of high-drama in which race leader Julian Alaphilippe lost his top spot and accompanying yellow jersey just ahead of Sunday’s finale.

I know you are going to think I'm pedaling too hard; however, the last three paragraphs raise suspicions of geo-engineering or some type of weather weapon, and given France's softness on issues like Iran and Palestine, one really has to wonder.

France also faced a spike in fires in forests and farm fields that left a dozen firefighters injured, and a rise in drownings. Interior Minister Christophe Castaner linked the country’s 60 drowning deaths so far this month indirectly to the current heat wave, noting a rise in people drowning in unguarded bodies of water as they seek relief from high temperatures, some of whom suffer thermal shock when they jump from hot air into cold water.

I don't know what is in the water over there in France, but that last, lame excuse for whatever is going on over there is a jump-the-shark type of thing. Simple arson could explain the spike in fires.

Better get across the Channel to Britain:

British rail commuters were also facing delays after the heat wave prompted Network Rail to impose speed restrictions in case the tracks buckled. Engineers from the company have been working to get the network back to normal after the track temperatures soared to up to 20 C (68 F) more than the air temperature.

‘‘With the railway being made of metal and moving parts, the sustained high temperatures took their toll in places,’’ said Phil James of Network Rail. ‘‘Everything was done to keep trains moving where possible, and last night hundreds of staff were out fixing the damage and repairing the railway ready for today.’’

What was it, cheap 9/11 steel from China, and if not, why are tracks not buckling everywhere?

I mean, here the T sucks because of decrepitness and negligence, and each year is hotter than the last (or so I have been told; I know it's anecdotal, but that doesn't seem to be the case based on memory or even this blog).

Passengers using Eurostar services to and from Paris were also facing ‘‘severe disruption’’ due to overhead power line problems in the French capital, which on Thursday recorded its hottest day ever with the temperature rising to 42.6 C (108.7 F).

Are you sure they are not just using the heat to explain crappy service?

Britain, along with much of Western Europe, endured potentially its highest temperature ever on Thursday.....

What do you mean "potentially?" 

Was it or wasn't it?

--more--"

Related:

400 chickens die of heatstroke at N.H. farm after extreme temperatures last weekend

Those chicken carcasses must have reeked after the Globe waited an entire week before reporting (and on a Slow Saturday, no less), but at least the power has been restored to almost all customers on Cape Cod after the tornadoes.

Also see:

"Libya’s coast guard recovered dozens of bodies of Europe-bound migrants who perished at sea as search operations continued Friday, a day after up to 150 people, including women and children, went missing and were feared drowned when their boats capsized in the Mediterranean Sea. A top UN official described Thursday’s shipwreck as ‘‘the worst Mediterranean tragedy’’ so far this year. One of the survivors, from Eritrea, said his vessel started to capsize after an hour of sailing. Most of the migrants on board were women, he said, and most of them drowned. ‘‘All of them [who drowned] were ladies. . . only two girls rescued themselves,’’ he said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fears for his safety....."

It tops the one earlier this month, and how is that war in Libya going anyway?

Rescued migrants gathered in Khoms, Libya, on Friday.
Rescued migrants gathered in Khoms, Libya, on Friday.(AFP/Getty Images)

Looks like the dozen of the survivors at the hospital, one of whom is reported to have said that he ‘‘saw lots of bodies, dozens, in the water, and most of them were children and women who were not able to swim.’’

I hate to say this, but they all look like they could be ISIS™ or Al-CIA-Duh that are being evacuated and resettled in the West after the loss of some conflicts.

Related:

"A female suicide bomber who carried out the deadly al-Shabab attack in the office of Mogadishu’s mayor was aiming for the American who is the new UN envoy to Somalia and had left the office just minutes earlier, the extremist group and officials said. The new UN envoy, James Swan, was the bomber’s intended target, Abdiaziz Abu Musab, al-Shabab’s military spokesman, told local media. Captain Mohamed Hussein, a senior police officer, said the female bomber walked into a security meeting and blew herself up a few yards away from the mayor. It was just the fourth time the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab had used a female suicide bomber. Swan had paid the Somali capital’s mayor a brief visit and left the compound less than an hour before the bombing, an official at the mayor’s office said....."

Swan just escaped, huh, and the article seemed intent on emphasizing the female suicide bomber. 

That raises suspicion right from the beginning, but the printed article also came with this photograph:

Somalia bomb victim
Medical workers help civilian on stretcher who was wounded in suicide bomb, at Madina hospital, Mogadishu, Wednesday, July 24, 2019. A suicide bomber walked into the office of Mogadishu's mayor and detonated explosives strapped to his waist, killing several people and badly wounding the mayor, Somali police said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh)

I looked at the photo very closely, and I must confess it has all the hallmarks of a crisis drill. The alleged civilian who is wounded -- with a cast on the foot -- has nice, brightly colored clothing on without a whisp of soot, dirt, or dust. Then I noticed how clean the medical first-responders looked, right down to the immaculate white coats. Finally, who is that figure dressed all in black that is exiting the crime scene in the background?

"The Australian parliament on Thursday passed laws that enable the government to prevent suspected extremists from returning home for up to two years despite concerns it could be unconstitutional. The Senate passed the laws with the center-left Labor Party supporting the conservative government’s bill even though it worried Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton would have too much discretion to decide who was banished. The law will take effect in about two weeks. Dutton has said repatriations would be decided case by case, particularly where young children are involved. Aid groups estimate at least 50 Australian women and children are stranded in crowded Syrian refugee camps following the loss of Islamic State’s territory in the Middle East. The Law Council of Australia, the nation’s leading advocacy for lawyers, urged senators to refer the bill to committee rather than vote for it. The council said it was disappointed that a law that was open to constitutional challenge had been passed....."

At least they shut up the reporters down there. 

Eeny, meeny, miny, moe, eh?

"Enraged villagers in northern India used sticks, spears, and machetes to beat a tiger to death after it attacked several people in a national tiger reserve, authorities said Friday. A crowd encircled the tiger in a jungle clearing and hit it in the face as it lay on its back, groaning. The world has only about 4,000 tigers left in the wild, and most of them live in India. After a video of the incident spread on social media, many Indians expressed outrage, questioning how anyone could kill such an iconic and endangered animal. The tiger, a 5- to 6-year-old female, attacked a man who had entered the Pilibhit Tiger Reserve to fish....."

I wasn't outraged, I was saddened when I read that the "tiger slowly moved its paws in a futile attempt to block the blows," and she was only protecting her cubs:

Ten-month-old cubs at the Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve in Maharashtra State, India, in 2018. Enraged villagers in northern India used sticks, spears and machetes to beat a tiger to death after it attacked several people in the Pilibhit Tiger Reserve, authorities said.
Ten-month-old cubs at the Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve in Maharashtra State, India, in 2018. Enraged villagers in northern India used sticks, spears and machetes to beat a tiger to death after it attacked several people in the Pilibhit Tiger Reserve, authorities said. (Bryan Denton/The New York Times)

Kind of leads you back to Britain, doesn't it?

"UK’s new prime minister promises a ‘golden age’ — and a Brexit resolution" by William Booth and Karla Adam Washington Post, July 25, 2019

LONDON — Boris Johnson, on his first full day as the British prime minister, went to the House of Commons Thursday and pronounced ‘‘the beginning of a new golden age,’’ promising to make the United Kingdom ‘‘the greatest place on Earth.’’

It isn't already?

Punching the air with his fist and shoving his other hand in his coat jacket, just as his hero Winston Churchill did, Johnson vowed to slash knife crime, hire 20,000 more police, make home ownership affordable, protect Scottish fishing grounds, shrink school class sizes, cut taxes, care for grandparents, build railways, cut carbon emissions, provide high-speed 5G mobile to all, and bring the ‘‘best and brightest’’ to Britain, with ‘‘a radical rewriting of our immigration system.’’

If Churchill is hero, then Zionist Israel has nothing to worry about.

Johnson said Britain would host ‘‘a bioscience sector liberated from anti-genetic-modification rules’’ free of the shackles of Europe, launch its own galaxy of satellites, and soon be home to ‘‘electric planes’’ powered by British battery technology. ‘‘Our future clean, green, prosperous, united, confident, ambitious,’’ he said. ‘‘This, my friends, is the prize.’’

In Parliament, Johnson’s opponents nipped at the new prime minister’s ankles. They said it was ‘‘all mouth no trousers,’’ and ‘‘fantasyland.’’ Johnson swatted away the criticisms as the moans of ‘‘defeatists’’ and ‘‘gloomsters.’’ Taking a page from the Trump playbook, he asked why his critics did not believe in Britain as much as he did.

Britain is trying to figure out which Johnson has just became leader. Is it the liberal Conservative mayor of London who joined gay pride parades and talked up the benefits of immigration? Or the controversial newspaper columnist who has a loose relationship with the truth? Or the hardcore Brexiteer who aligns himself with those on the far right? Does Boris Johnson himself even know?

Does it even matter?

Some first answers were revealed with the shake-up of the Cabinet. Seventeen ministers were pushed or jumped from the government. Johnson reassembled much of the old gang that fought for ‘‘leave’’ in the June 2016 Brexit referendum. The appointment of political strategist Dominic Cummings especially raised eyebrows. Played by Benedict Cumberbatch in the HBO film ‘‘Brexit: The Uncivil War,’’ Cummings is credited as the evil genius running the Vote Leave campaign and coming up with its incredibly effective ‘‘take back control’’ slogan.

Other prominent figures from that campaign who got top jobs include Michael Gove, who is effectively the minister for preparing for a no-deal Brexit, Dominic Raab, the new foreign secretary, and Priti Patel, the new home secretary. Patel was forced to resign from the government less than two years ago after she held unauthorized meetings with top Israelis.....

That's obscene, but it tells you all you need to know regarding the direction Boris will take them.

--more--"

As his first act of business, he said he is going to take Gibraltar back:

"Prime minister Pedro Sánchez fo Spain lost a bid to form a government Thursday after failing to form a multiparty alliance, raising the chances that the country will be forced to hold another national election to try to break the political deadlock. Sánchez and his Socialist Party won a national election in April that was hailed as a victory for Europe’s embattled left but fell well short of an absolute majority in parliament at a time of deepening fragmentation and polarization in Spanish politics. While leading a caretaker administration, Sánchez has sought the support of some smaller parties, but the most recent talks with the other major left-wing party, Unidas Podemos, broke down overnight....."

He will then thrust up through Bulgaria to Russia, where "once a local low-key affair, the September vote for Moscow’s city council has shaken up Russia’s political scene as the Kremlin struggles with how to deal with strongly opposing views in its own sprawling capital as authorities ramped up the pressure on the opposition ahead of a major rally on Saturday."

I'm sure that protest will be featured somewhere in tomorrow's Sunday Globe, although they will take a while to catch up with those in Hong Kong:

"Hong Kong protests spread to airport as city fears more unrest" by Austin Ramzy New York Times, July 26, 2019

HONG KONG — Black-clad demonstrators rallied in Hong Kong’s airport on Friday, filling the arrivals hall of one of the world’s busiest terminals as the city braced for another weekend of potentially combustible protests.

Activists also signaled that despite objections from the police, they would continue with plans for a Saturday rally against mob violence in Yuen Long, a district near the mainland Chinese border where last weekend a group of men attacked people in a train station and on nearby streets.

So the mob violence that was initially implied to be Chinese government goons has now turned into an excuse to rally. Hmmmm. Cui bono?

That attack on Sunday, which left at least 45 people injured, was apparently meant to intimidate the protesters who have been holding demonstrations in the city for weeks, but the men, many of whom were masked and dressed in white T-shirts, also lashed out at train passengers who had no apparent connection to the demonstrations.

That is what you do because in either case, the police are blamed for not keeping order.

The police— who failed to stop the mob, and initially made no arrests — have since detained 12 people in connection with the train station attacks, including some accused of having connections to the criminal gangs known as triads. The authorities have said they object to the Yuen Long rally on Saturday because of the risk of clashes, with tensions running high between pro-democracy protesters and residents of the district’s villages, who are more conservative and supportive of the establishment.

The agenda-pushing pre$$ just tipped their hand with the pro-democracy description, and it's like I just said. The thugs were an attempt to weaken support for the government, and if they had to club a few of their own it was worth it.

The prospect of more violence this weekend poses another challenge for Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s embattled chief executive, who is under pressure from Beijing to restore order in the semiautonomous Chinese city.

Lam is also facing growing calls from civil servants sympathetic to the protesters, who have urged her to heed the demonstrators’ calls to set up an independent commission to investigate police conduct during the unrest. Several police unions released a letter Friday urging Lam to oppose such a move.

The protests in Hong Kong began weeks ago, over a now-suspended government proposal that would allow extraditions to mainland China. They have since expanded to include other issues, like accusations that the police have used excessive force, as well as demands that direct elections be held for chief executive and for more seats in the local legislature.

During the rally at the airport Friday, protesters, including some airline employees, chanted slogans and distributed leaflets listing demands, including a full withdrawal of the extradition bill. They also set up another of the many so-called Lennon Walls that have gone up around the city (named after one that sprung up in Prague under Communist rule), consisting of slogans and messages of support for the protest movement, most on Post-It notes. 

A Post-It note revolution!

To promote the airport rally, protesters created a video modeled on in-flight safety instructions telling visitors to beware of mob attacks in Hong Kong. It referred to the police’s failure to protect the train passengers in Yuen Long on Sunday: “It is a safety requirement that you remain alert and vigilant at all times, because the police will no longer answer your calls,” it said.

Yeah, if you see something, say something, and this thing gets stinkier by the paragraph. Now the propaganda is admitting the thug attack was meant to sway support for the government, and the mob could very well be the protesters who broke into the legislature and defaced Chinese government offices.

Jeremy Tam, a lawmaker and former pilot, posted on Facebook an unsigned letter attributed to a group of air traffic controllers that warned of a “noncooperation movement” unless the government responded to the protesters’ demands. “As we hear the people cry and witness the city descend into chaos, we feel that it is not right to continue to perform our duties silently as if nothing has happened and let the abusers get away with their evil deeds,” it said.

Where is that in AmeriKa, and I don't mean the controlled-opposition re$i$tance?

Yeah, he says go the Gandhi route, and you need to preach the nonviolence to the protesters first!

Concerns about Saturday’s protest were running high. Matthew Cheung, the second-ranking official in Hong Kong, warned that a rally held despite the police’s formal objection would be unlawful, but in a news conference Friday, he acknowledged that people were still likely to attend, and he called on them to be “peaceful and rational” and not enter villages in Yuen Long where clashes might occur. Cheung also apologized for the government’s handling of the violence in Yuen Long, where many have accused the police of being slow to respond.

Here is the thing: why would the police want to hurry and respond to people who are disparaging their every move?

A week before the attack at the train station, a representative of the Chinese government’s office in Hong Kong, known as the liaison office, had urged Yuen Long residents to drive activists away, Reuters reported Friday, citing a recording of his remarks.

“We won’t allow them to come to Yuen Long to cause trouble,” Li Jiyi, the director of the liaison office’s local district office, said at a community banquet, according to the report.

The liaison office dismissed any reports linking it to the Yuen Long violence as “malicious rumors,” according to a report carried on the liaison office’s website.

Started by who?

--more--"

Related:

"Trump escalates feud with Apple over offshore factories" by Jim Tankersley and Jack Nicas New York Times, July 26, 2019

WASHINGTON — President Trump said Friday his administration would deny a request by electronics giant Apple to avoid stiff tariffs his administration had placed on Chinese imports, the latest attempt by the president to force a multinational company to move its manufacturing to the United States.

The comments underscore how Trump, who has imposed tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods, is using levies to punish not only China, which he considers a top economic rival, but also US companies that manufacture goods there.

To help cushion the blow, the administration established a process that allows companies to apply for an exemption from the tariffs. Companies must demonstrate that the import cannot be obtained domestically. Administration officials have insisted the process is apolitical. Some of those requests have been approved.....

Meaning this is all bluster and when no one is looking he will back down.

--more--"

"Sprint, T-Mobile receive merger approval from Department of Justice" by Tony Romm Washington Post, July 26, 2019

WASHINGTON — T-Mobile, which is operated by Germany’s Deutsche Telekom, and Sprint, which is owned by the Japanese conglomerate SoftBank, announced their $26.5 billion merger last April, describing the deal as necessary to deploy 5G, the next generation of ultra-fast wireless broadband service. Absent such a combination, T-Mobile and Sprint said they could not muster the necessary investments individually, putting them at a major disadvantage against AT&T and Verizon.

How ironic that Germany and Japan are combining forces in the 5G fight, 'eh?

The two wireless carriers commenced their campaign to pitch the deal to the FCC, which reviews mergers to see if they benefit the public, and DOJ, which studies competition, at a moment when Democrats and Republicans alike in Washington had started sounding new alarms about the dangers of corporate consolidation. In recent months, the merger attracted heightened attention from a trio of Democratic contenders for the White House in 2020 — Senators Cory Booker of New Jersey, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts — who said it would result in ‘‘unacceptably high levels of concentration in an already consolidated wireless industry.’’

All of a $udden, they care!

Related:

"The drivers have been picketing daily since they walked off the job June 28, and on Wednesday they held a rally at the State House calling for a state audit and investigation of the VTA. They attracted support from a number of politicians, including senator and presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren. The strike was the latest in a string of work stoppages in the state over the past year. Last fall, Marriott hotel workers in Boston joined a national action against the hotel chain, picketing for six weeks and emerging with a contract that pioneered a number of significant protections for employees. In April, 31,000 Stop & Shop workers walked out and didn’t come back for 11 days, crippling the grocery store chain as it struggled to maintain food deliveries — and customers. Buses have continued to run on the island during the strike, including over the busy Fourth of July holiday, with replacement drivers running reduced schedules on some routes....."

What is odd is I just asked about their status, and this was the Vineyard drivers’ second attempt to get a contract since TCI took over the island bus service 16 years ago and the agreement would increase wages significantly for drivers but not the expanded health plan that would have covered spouses and children.

Consumer groups such as Public Knowledge echoed those concerns, arguing that a combined T-Mobile and Sprint would result in higher prices and fewer options for consumers. Many critics pointed to the fact that T-Mobile already had become a fierce competitor — offering more customer-friendly contracts, for example — precisely because the government had warded off a merger by the two companies in the past, but T-Mobile and Sprint offered concessions to reshape their deal in recent months in a bid to win over federal regulators.....

--more--"

So much for breaking up big tech.

"US economy slows in spring but remains healthy with little sign of a recession" by Heather Long Washington Post, July 26, 2019

The US economy slowed in the spring but continues to grow at a healthy pace that shows little sign of a recession, though many economists predict this year will be solid but not extraordinary.

‘‘Last year was a fiscal sugar rush. This year it’s starting to fade,’’ said Michael Feroli, chief US economist at J.P. Morgan.

Business spending dried up, however, turning negative for the first time since early 2016. Many executives blame uncertainty around Trump’s trade war for their hesitancy to spend as much as they did a year ago. Trump has increased military and domestic spending, scaled back regulations, and enacted the largest corporate tax cut in the country’s history.

The tax cut for businesses was supposed to spur companies to invest in new properties, equipment, and products, but after a bounce early last year, businesses have pulled back on spending. The White House argues that Trump’s policies have enabled millions more Americans to get jobs and receive higher pay through tax cuts and a strong labor market that has forced companies to boost wages. That, in turn, has helped raise consumer spending, said Larry Kudlow, Trump’s chief economic adviser.

Kudlow called consumers ‘‘heroes’’ on Friday and blamed the slowing economic momentum on the Federal Reserve. ‘‘We had to suffer through severe monetary tightening,’’ Kudlow said on CNBC, but he predicted a strong second half of the year. ‘‘We are the hottest economy in the world, and I expect us to stay that way.’’

As long as the dollar is the reserve currency.

Kudlow’s remarks echoed Trump’s tweet that growth was ‘‘not bad considering we had the very heavy weight of the Federal Reserve anchor wrapped around our neck.’’

The Fed is almost certain to lower interest rates at the conclusion of its meeting next week, but the central bank has been hinting since early June that the cut is coming, which many say is a key reason that stocks hit record highs again and business sentiment has rebounded somewhat.

‘‘In many ways, we’ve already reaped the benefits of a Fed cut,’’ said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton. She pointed to record stock prices, more mortgage refinancing, and a rebound in spending as evidence that the Fed’s more ‘‘dovish’’ stance has had an impact.

Few are predicting a recession anytime soon. The nation is in the midst of the longest expansion in US history, growing for more than a decade and exceeding even the 1990s boom, although some have questioned how much longer the expansion can last, it is showing little sign of weakness so far. Most experts say it will take a major event of some sort to knock the economy off course.

Like what, a false flag terror attack or some sort of cyberattack against the $y$tem, you know, “a major incident that may well occur at any time and that will galvanize public opinion?”

It's almost as if they are warning you beforehand!

‘‘Expansions don’t die of old age. I like to say they get murdered,’’ said Ben Bernanke, an economist and former Federal Reserve chair, earlier this year.

I've always believed the crashes were designed and engineered so that the elite could consolidate more wealth and property on the cheap before the market rises again.

Newly released data from the Commerce Department shows it is likely that growth peaked in the middle of last year and then momentum cooled heading into 2019. The White House has discussed ways to potentially boost the economy further, including possibly trying to devalue the US dollar to make American goods more competitive overseas, but Kudlow said that was ruled out.....

Yeah, it means yours would be worth less, American.

--more--"

Related:

"U.S. stocks pushed to record heights Friday following strong profit reports from Google’s parent company, Twitter and other big corporations. Companies are nearly midway through earnings reporting season, and results have generally been better than the dismal expectations that analysts had coming into it. All the reports are emblematic of an economy that’s strengthening but still shadowed by a pile of concerns. “Any time you hit a record high, you ask: Is this justified?” said David Joy, chief market strategist at Ameriprise. “Well, it’s justified based on the easing cycle that central banks are on, and the absolute level of earnings helps, but growth is sluggish and moderating, earnings are flattish and we’ve got this overhang of, let’s call it geopolitical uncertainty.”

He says be a little cautious because a one-day stock hit wiped out some $200 million in market value. Fortunately, it was Chinese investors that took most of the hit.

And at the bottom of it all:

"Former PM Barak, others join forces before Israeli elections" by Aron Heller Associated Press, July 25, 2019

JERUSALEM — A trio of forces on the Israeli left— including former Prime Minister Ehud Barak — united on Thursday ahead of the country’s upcoming elections, looking to pose a powerful contrast to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s conservative ruling Likud party.

The newly formed ‘‘Democratic Union’’ said in a joint statement it would be made up of Barak’s ‘‘Democratic Israel’’ faction, the dovish Meretz party, and senior Labor Party official Stav Shaffir.

With just a week left to present the final lists for the September balloting, all sides were concerned they might not get enough votes by themselves to cross the electoral threshold.

The move comes amid a flurry of machinations ahead of the ‘‘do-over’’ election in September, after Netanyahu failed to form a parliamentary majority following his victory in April’s vote. To avoid giving his opponents a chance to build an alternative government, he dissolved parliament and forced an unprecedented new election campaign.

Netanyahu’s various rivals have been seeking to seize on the rare opportunity to unseat him by putting their own differences aside. Barak, who in 1999 became prime minister by becoming the only person to date to defeat Netanyahu in a head-on showdown, dramatically came out of retirement last month with the stated ambition of toppling Netanyahu again by helping opposition forces create a large enough bloc to unseat Likud; however, his new faction has so far failed to make much of a splash in the polls. The former military chief’s main contribution seemed to be getting under the skin of Netanyahu and his family. Though Barak is headlining the maneuver, the 77-year-old will not lead the new list and does not appear to be a candidate to replace Netanyahu.

Not since his name turned up in Epstein's flight logs.

The joint list will be headed by Nitzan Horowitz, the newly elected, openly gay leader of Meretz. Shaffir, a rising star in Labor, bolted from the venerable party to be second on the new list, while Barak will be placed in the 10th slot.

At a press conference in Tel Aviv with Shaffir and Barak, Horowitz said the party aimed to ‘‘create significant political power the likes of which the left hasn’t seen in years.’’ The three leaders all spoke of ‘‘regime change’’ and ousting Netanyahu from office.

Wow, those are charged words!

With Labor announcing a joint run focused on social and economic issues with the small Gesher party, ‘‘Democratic Israel’’ looks to have seized the mantle of peacemaking with the Palestinians.

What are they going to do, help rebuild their houses and give them the land back?

Zionism with a human face?

--more--"


Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak (L) attends the launch of the Democratic Union list, which he formed with newly elected Meretz head Nitzan Horowitz (R) and Stav Shaffir (C) of the Labour party (AFP Photo/JACK GUEZ)

Do they look like winners to you?


NEXT DAY UPDATES

"Hong Kong protest hit by police tear gas as thousands gather in Yuen Long" by Austin Ramzy New York Times, July 27, 2019

HONG KONG — Across the masses of demonstrators, a chorus of banging could be heard as the crowd used sticks and umbrellas to strike road dividers and other metallic surfaces. The police said some demonstrators were throwing bricks and other hard objects at officers.

Most businesses along the protest route and in Yuen Long’s otherwise bustling malls shut down as the demonstrators marched through the area. Many protesters gathered around the town’s police station, throwing “ghost money” — a type of fake money usually meant for the dead — at the building.

The Hong Kong police have been criticized for their slow response to the mob attack last Sunday, and for not detaining anyone in Yuen Long that night. They have since arrested 12 men in connection with the attack, including some accused of having connections with the gangs known as triads.

Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung, the No. 2 official in Hong Kong, apologized on Friday for the police response, but in an unusually public sign of divisions between the police and the government, some officers posted images online late Friday saying that Cheung did not speak for them, and that his words undermined their work. A letter from the Junior Police Officers’ Association “severely condemned” Cheung’s comments.

“Hong Kong people have to unite and stand up for Hong Kong,” says Rita Tang, a 56-year-old health consultant who joined Saturday’s protest in Yuen Long. “We have neglected our rights. We must fight for our future generation for their rights that they deserve.”

Protesters started filling the main street of Yuen Long in the afternoon and marched peacefully for about two hours.

“We have come here because we still support all the actions of the people here today,” said Cary Lo, a 37-year-old compliance officer and community officer for the Democratic Party of Hong Kong. He held a yellow umbrella, a symbol of the pro-democracy protest movement.....

--more--"

At least others see the same things I do, and as predicted above:

"Moscow police arrest more than 1,300 at election protest" by Ivan Nechepurenko New York Times, July 27, 2019

MOSCOW — The protest in central Moscow, which was not authorized by the government, was the latest in a series of street demonstrations staged as President Vladimir Putin’s approval ratings have dipped amid economic hardship.

While the near-weekly demonstrations in the capital and other cities have pierced the image of unified support for Putin, the scale of support for such rallies is unclear.

“We love Russia! They love money!” protesters chanted, a reference to widespread anger over government corruption. Others sat in the streets, awaiting arrest and reading copies of the constitution.

The spark for Saturday’s protest was a decision by election authorities to bar several opposition candidates from running for Moscow’s City Council, asserting that they had falsified signatures on petitions to run — a charge the candidates denied.

Even before the election dispute, protests had broken out in provincial cities as Russia’s economy swoons under Western sanctions. Street actions began over bread-and-butter issues such as the placement of garbage dumps and the dismal wages of medical workers, which highlight growing frustration over gloomy standards of living.....

Wow, are they ever RIPE for an INVASION, 'eh?


--more--"

Like the Russians, we “will have nobody to choose from on Election Day.”

Time to pick up the trash:

"Less waste and more schools, one plastic brick at a time" by Anemona Hartocollis New York Times, July 27, 2019

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — A legion of women in Abidjan who make their living picking up plastic waste on the city streets and selling it for recycling. Now they are lead players in a project that turns trash into plastic bricks to build schools across the country.

They are working with a Colombian company to convert plastic waste — a scourge of modern life — into an asset that will help women earn a decent living while cleaning up the environment and improving education.

It's of Globe concern.

The project was the brainchild of Aboubacar Kampo, a medical doctor, who just ended a term as Ivory Coast representative for UNICEF. Mariam Coulibaly sees it as a chance to better her life, maybe even to rise into the middle class.....

That's funny, because in San Francisco it is a signpost of the extremes of US capitalism.

--more--"

Women gather and sell plastic castoffs in the Abobo neighborhood of Abidjan, Ivory Coast.
Women gather and sell plastic castoffs in the Abobo neighborhood of Abidjan, Ivory Coast.(Yagazie Emezi/The New York Times)

Arguing already, 'eh?

They then cut down the trees:

"Brazil’s far-right leader slashes Amazon protections, and forest begins to fall" by Letícia Casado and Ernesto Londoño New York Times, July 28, 2019

BRASÍLIA, Brazil — The destruction of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil has increased rapidly since the nation’s new far-right president took over and his government scaled back efforts to fight illegal logging, ranching, and mining.

That was back in October after the runoff, and Brazil’s main stock index staged its biggest rally in 2½ years, because business leaders and financial markets approved of his choice of an esteemed banker as head of his economic team, and they are opposed to the left-leaning policies of the Workers’ Party. Even gave him a medal for exposing the corruption of General Electric, and you will never guess who is his best friend.

Protecting the Amazon was at the heart of Brazil’s environmental policy for much of the past two decades. At one point, Brazil’s success in slowing the deforestation rate made it an international example of conservation and the effort to fight climate change, but with the election of President Jair Bolsonaro, a populist who has been fined personally for violating environmental regulations, Brazil has changed course substantially, retreating from efforts it made to slow global warming by preserving the world’s largest rainforest.

Obviously, cutting down the trees increases the carbon dioxide in the air with less being absorbed, and I am advocating for it; however, success in slowing the deforestation rate still means water is accumulating in the boat.

While campaigning for president last year, Bolsonaro declared that Brazil’s vast protected lands were an obstacle to economic growth and promised to open them up to commercial exploitation.

Seven months into his term, that is already happening.

Brazil’s part of the Amazon has lost more than 1,330 square miles of forest cover since Bolsonaro took office in January, a 39 percent increase over the same period last year, according to the government agency that tracks deforestation.

In June alone, when the cooler, drier season began and cutting trees became easier, the deforestation rate rose drastically, with roughly 80 percent more forest cover lost than in June of last year.

The deforestation of the Amazon is spiking as Bolsonaro’s government pulls back on enforcement measures such as fines, warnings, and the seizure or destruction of illegal equipment in protected areas.

A New York Times analysis of public records found that such enforcement actions by Brazil’s main environmental agency fell by 20 percent during the first six months of the year, compared with the same period in 2018. The drop means that vast stretches of the rainforest can be torn down with less resistance from the nation’s authorities.

The two trends — the increase in deforestation and the government’s increasing reluctance to confront illegal activity — are alarming researchers, environmentalists, and former officials who contend that Bolsonaro’s tenure could lead to staggering losses of one of the world’s most important resources.

“We’re facing the risk of runaway deforestation in the Amazon,” eight former environment ministers in Brazil wrote in a joint letter in May, arguing that Brazil needed to strengthen its environmental protection measures, not weaken them.

At least there will be more hamburgers to eat.

Bolsonaro has dismissed the new data on deforestation, calling his own government’s figures “lies” — an assertion experts called baseless. During a gathering with international journalists last week, the president called the preoccupation with the Amazon a form of “environmental psychosis” and argued that its use should not concern outsiders.

“The Amazon is ours, not yours,” he told a European journalist.

The Bolsonaro government’s stance has drawn sharp criticism from European leaders, injecting an irritant to a trade deal struck last month between the European Union and a bloc of four South American countries, including Brazil.

--more--"

At least it is not like Honduras or Nicaragua under Ortega, although "in 1986, the International Court of Justice at The Hague ruled the United States had broken international law and violated the sovereignty of Nicaragua by aiding the contras. (The United States had said it would not consider itself bound by the World Court decision.) The U.S. was the lead advocate for the key figure, Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North, when he began his long-awaited public testimony at the Iran-Contra hearing, telling Congress that he had ‘‘never carried out a single act, not one,’’ without authorization (one was missed).

That was before peace came to Guatemala and Colombia, and the embargo was lifted on Cuba.

Meanwhile, Mexico went in the opposite direction before he started backtracking in his rises to power in the wake of Trump, the new sheriff in town (it's a good thing MS-13 is a myth).

You might want to judge for yourself whether secret courts don’t have to be so secret or whether district attorneys have to turn over records of the cases they prosecuted, but in either case the judge should be pulled from the bench and is it just me, or do you detect a sense of supremacism in Newton?

Time to bang the gavel down in order:

"Britain’s new Commons leader issues very strict rules. Oops" by Palko Karasz New York Times, July 27, 2019

LONDON — His side-parted hair, his languid speaking style, and his baggy double-breasted suits give leader of Britain’s House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg, a longtime lawmaker, an incongruously prewar air, observers say. His studied eccentricities have inspired memes, online quizzes, and T-shirts. For many on the left, however, his highly conservative views on topics including welfare, climate change, and abortion are beyond a joke, and in the years since Britain voted to withdraw from the European Union, Rees-Mogg, chairman of a caucus of euroskeptic legislators, has become a force to be reckoned with. His name even came up among possible successors to Theresa May, when the previous prime minister’s Brexit plan began to unravel in Parliament.

In November, after Rees-Mogg called for May to resign, the prospect of his moving closer to power prompted Twitter users to shower him with very British insults. This spring, he capitalized on his growing fame by publishing a volume of history, “The Victorians,” to savage reviews.

Rees-Mogg has told The New York Times that journalists typically write about him when they have nothing else to report. That may soon change.....

Or not.

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Slow Saturday Special: Flirting With Impeachment

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The implication is that it is not to be taken seriously, of course:

"Raising prospect of impeaching Trump, House seeks Mueller’s grand jury secrets" by Nicholas Fandos and Charlie Savage New York Times, July 26, 2019

WASHINGTON — The House Judiciary Committee on Friday said it would ask a federal judge to unseal grand jury secrets related to Robert Mueller’s investigation and use the court filing to make the most explicit declaration yet that lawmakers are weighing whether to impeach President Trump.

In a significant escalation, Representative Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, the chairman of the committee, said at a news conference that the application to the court would declare that the panel needs access to Mueller’s grand-jury evidence — such as witness testimony — to decide whether to recommend articles of impeachment against the president.

“Because Department of Justice policies will not allow prosecution of a sitting president, the United States House of Representatives is the only institution of the federal government that can now hold President Trump accountable for these actions,” Nadler quoted the legal filing as telling the judge, Beryl A. Howell, who supervised Mueller’s grand jury.

For what actions?

I'm not defending the guy. He's just saying the president has to be held accountable for their actions (oh, how I yearned to hear those words for some 16-odd years now).

Referring to the part in the Constitution that gives Congress the power to impeachand remove a president, the application continues, he said: “To do so, the House must have access to all the relevant facts and consider whether to exercise all its full Article I powers, including a constitutional power of the utmost gravity— recommendation of articles of impeachment.”

I don't know what he is talking about and don't want to short-shrift whatever corruption of which Trump is guilty, but we had a guy lie us into a war, sign off on torture, and had subordinates out a CIA agent, and he is still walking around and this successor droning people down while regime changing Libya, trying it in Syria, assisting the slaughter in Yemen, and sponsoring a putsch in the Ukraine. Then there were the impeachable offenses of using the IRS against political opponents and the spying on the Trump campaign (worse than Nixon), the Fast and Furious debacle, Gulf Gusher negligence, and the assorted alphabet agency scandals.

Now they want to impeach over a staged and scripted set-up by the very people in law enforcement and intelligence that were placed on the special counsel's committee, when the Clinton campaign actually engaged Russian assets through a British intermediary for bogus information (Bushes actually sold it to 'em after Jeb heard about the research but shit-canned it soon before his campaign ended that way). The product was then funneled up through political and law enforcement channels to allow the Obama administration to begin monitoring and infiltrating the campaign. Talk about turning the tables in this topsy-turvy political shit show!

By styling the committee as already engaged in impeachment considerations as it carries out its investigations, Nadler was attempting to sidestep a debate raging inside his party over whether the House should hold a vote to formally declare that it is opening an impeachment inquiry.

“Too much has been made of the phrase ‘an impeachment inquiry,’ ” Nadler said. “We are doing what our court filing says we are doing, what I said we are doing, and that is we are using our full Article I powers to investigate the conduct of the president and to consider what remedies there are. Among other things we will consider obviously is whether to recommend articles of impeachment.”

Other members of the committee were more blunt.

“I would say we are in an impeachment investigation, and as to the results of the investigation, it could lead to articles of impeachment or something else,” said Representative Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat.

It's almost as if they are obsessed with the word, and if I were of a certain per$ua$ion, I would find the Time's words so very comforting.

Representative Veronica Escobar, a Texas Democrat, declared, “We’re now crossing a threshold with this filing, and we are now officially entering into an examination of whether or not to recommend articles of impeachment.”

Still, the move was as much about legal substance as it was about political optics. Democrats are hoping that Howell will agree that their request for the grand jury material falls into the same legal category as Nixon-era requests, even though the Watergate-era access to grand jury material was granted to a formally declared impeachment inquiry.

At this point in the article, it equates to the word no as far as going to far with the flirting.

The filing comes two days after Mueller testified before Congress for the first time about the findings of his 22-month investigation into Russian election interference and possible obstruction of justice by Trump. Republicans — and some Democrats — said Mueller’s lackluster appearance had all but ended the impeachment threat, and they were not convinced the committee’s actions Friday had changed that.

Related: Mueller's Dementia

The Democrats have it, too, and even Mueller admits there was no obstruction. They got every single document they asked for and the office was allowed to talk to anybody they wanted.

“Democrats want to convince their base they’re still wedded to impeachment even after this week’s hearing, but a baseless legal claim is an odd way to show that,” said Representative Doug Collins of Georgia, the ranking Republican on the committee, who predicted the legal maneuver would fail, but Democrats who control the panel are pushing forward and are seeking to add more evidence to the trove of information they are collecting about the case.

The chairman said the committee would keep up the pace of its investigation during the House’s six-week summer recess, calling additional witnesses and filing a lawsuit as soon as early next week to force Don McGahn, the former White House counsel, to testify unless he agrees to come voluntarily first. McGahn’s account of presidential behavior sits at the center of the Mueller report.

The Judiciary Committee has been flirting with the topic of impeachment for months, subpoenaing witnesses and holding hearings designed to potentially develop charges against Trump.

The article continues in the web version:

In a hearing focused on Mueller’s report earlier this month, Nadler said that “articles of impeachment are under consideration as part of the committee’s investigation, although no final determination has been made.”

By formally declaring that the panel is doing that in a court filing, Democrats are trying to get past the internal debate without forcing members from moderate districts to vote on whether to do so. Pelosi approved the language in the lawsuit, according to a person familiar with its drafting.

Yeah, it's time to downplay tensions.

The specific information at issue in the court filing are the portions in the Mueller report that were redacted because the information fell under a rule in the federal criminal code that makes information presented to a grand jury secret. That rule has only limited exceptions to share it with outsiders. Democrats want the House to gain access to the redacted portions of the report, as well as the underlying transcripts and documents that Mueller used a grand jury to gather.

So we don't even know if the information is another dud, but what this would allow is for Democrats to selectively leak things and have the pre$$ and ma$$ media distort out of proportion and context. Keeps the ball rolling, so to speak.

Mueller’s report showed the Trump campaign welcomed illegal assistance from the Russians in 2016 and expected to benefit from it, but investigators did not establish that he had conspired with them in the illegal hacking and dumping of Democratic emails. It also explored several episodes in which Trump tried to impede the investigation, but the special counsel decided not to render judgment about whether Trump should be charged with obstruction of justice, citing a Justice Department view that sitting presidents are temporarily immune from indictment while they are in office.

It wasn't a hack. It was a whistle-blowing thumb drive by a party apparatchik who was disgusted at the Clinton campaign corruption and theft of the nomination from Sanders, and if he could have rendered an obstruction of justice charge he would have!

Democrats have been divided about whether the House should formally declare that the committee is conducting an impeachment inquiry — a step that launched the proceedings against both presidents subjected to such proceedings in the modern era, Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton.

More than 90 House Democrats have said they support opening such proceedings, including Representative Ann McLane Kuster of New Hampshire on Friday, and some Democrats see such a step as a moral imperative to leave a black mark on Trump’s historical record, even if Senate Republicans are unlikely to remove him. Others fear it could provoke a backlash, firing up Trump’s supporters and endangering newly elected Democrats who won moderate districts in the 2018 midterm.

It's a real fine line, the flirting, and they didn't impeach Bush when they had the chance, either.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi has pressed caution. “We will proceed when we have what we need to proceed,” the speaker told reporters Friday, when asked if she was trying to run out the clock on impeachment. “Not one day sooner.”

Against that backdrop, some Democratic staff members and lawmakers have been arguing that it is unnecessary to gain the full chamber’s approval to launch an inquiry, in part because the Judiciary Committee chairman has already gained the power to issue subpoenas and take depositions— authorities that earlier impeachment inquiry resolutions had granted.

--more--"

Time to head for the border, and you can go one way or the other:

"Three students at the University of Mississippi were suspended by their fraternity on Wednesday after an Instagram photo surfaced of them brandishing guns in front of a bullet-riddled memorial sign for Emmett Till, whose brutal murder in 1955 served as a catalyst for the civil rights movement. The photo of the smiling Kappa Alpha members was the subject of a bias complaint filed with the university in March, according to Rod Guajardo, a spokesman for the university. Guajardo said in an email on Thursday that the photo was referred to campus police and the FBI, which declined to investigate the matter further because it did not pose a specific threat. The university said it took no disciplinary action because the students did not violate the school’s code of conduct, but the school’s chapter of Kappa Alpha, which the three students are members of, said in a statement on Thursday that it took swift action after it learned of the photo....."

Damn Southern Democrats!

"In a federal court filing, lawyers for election integrity advocates accuse Georgia election officials of intentionally destroying evidence that could show unauthorized access to the state election system and potential manipulation of election results. Election integrity advocates and individual Georgia voters sued election officials in 2017 alleging that the touchscreen voting machines Georgia has used since 2002 are unsecure and vulnerable to hacking. ‘‘The evidence strongly suggests that the State’s amateurish protection of critical election infrastructure placed Georgia’s election system at risk, and the State Defendants now appear to be desperate to cover up the effects of their misfeasance — to the point of destroying evidence,’’ Thursday’s filing says. A spokeswoman for the secretary of state’s office, which oversees elections, denied the allegations. In court Thursday, lawyers for the plaintiffs highlighted weaknesses identified in risk assessment reports by Fortalice Solutions, a cybersecurity firm hired by the secretary of state’s office. Fortalice CEO Theresa Payton testified that her team did find serious risks in their initial 2017 assessment but also said the secretary of state’s office had made progress toward fixing the problems by the time of a subsequent review last November."

They are sore losers, too, who just want to get back to Woodstock:

"Less than 24 hours after news broke that Woodstock 50 organizers had decided to move their troubled festival to Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Md., things have taken another turn for the worse. Both Jay-Z and John Fogerty have reportedly pulled out of the commemorative event — just three weeks before it is scheduled to take place. The artists were two of the biggest names on the eclectic lineup announced in March, which organizer Michael Lang, who co-founded the 1969 festival, hoped would have multigenerational appeal. Because their contracts are bound to the original location, other artists in the lineup — which includes Dead and Company, Santana, Miley Cyrus, and Janelle Monáe — could back out of performing at the new venue as well. Seth Hurwitz, chairman of I.M.P., which operates Merriweather, said in a statement Thursday that Woodstock 50 organizers were still working to secure artists, but will a crowd turn out? Woodstock 50 tickets, which were supposed to go on sale in April, have yet to do so....."

That's because the threat of nuclear war is no longer near.

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

"State Senate votes to ban child marriage" by Colin A. Young State House News Service, July 26, 2019

The state Senate has unanimously passed a bill outlawing all child marriage in Massachusetts, an occurrence that lawmakers and advocates have been drawing attention to for years on Beacon Hill.

Senator Harriette Chandler, chief sponsor of the bill that the Senate passed Thursday, said 1,231 underage youth were married in Massachusetts between the years 2000 and 2016. “While, fortunately, the number of child marriages approved in Massachusetts has decreased in recent years, any child marriage that is approved in our Commonwealth is, frankly, one too many,” the Worcester Democrat said.

There is an institutional sex abuse crisis riddling religion and education and these guys are busy with the rare instance of child marriage.

Chandler told the Senate about Tammy Monteiro, a victim of a coerced child marriage who earlier this year told the Committee on Children and Families about how a judge allowed her at age 16 to marry a 25-year-old man.

“Tammy lent her voice to tell all of us how the current laws allowed her husband to gain legal custody of her, which led to years of abuse, with no avenues for escape,” Chandler said. “Let me be clear: Minors who marry an adult are victims of an inappropriate balance of power. But today, we have the power to stop child marriage in this state.”

This is the same chamber that doesn't sanction Israel.

Senator Sonia Chang-Diaz said she heard some people questioning whether child marriage actually happens in Massachusetts and if a prohibition on child marriage is really necessary. She said that even in cases when the involved parents agree that marriage for a minor is acceptable, “there is no upside that anyone has been able to articulate to me.”

You are better off being aborted.

Also Thursday, the Senate passed a bill intended to increase consumer transparency by improving insurance provider network directories and unanimously passed a bill that would allow optometrists to diagnose and treat glaucoma and other ocular abnormalities and prescribe necessary eye-related medications with proper training.

Senator Michael Moore, the sponsor of the optometrist bill, said the other 49 states and Puerto Rico already allow optometrists to diagnose for glaucoma, but Massachusetts does not because of “outdated statutes.”

Bring your medical ID card with you.

--more--"

"SJC overturns murder conviction in Brockton slaying because state trooper gave ‘false testimony’" by John R. Ellement Globe Staff, July 26, 2019

A State Police trooper gave “false testimony” during a 2012 first-degree murder trial, creating a “miscarriage of justice” so severe that the state’s highest court on Friday ordered a new trial for the Brockton man now serving life without parole in a maximum security prison.

The Supreme Judicial Court ruled that the Plymouth Superior Court jury that convicted Darryene Ware for a 2009 fatal shooting of a teenager at a Brockton baby shower could have been misled by the testimony of State Police Trooper Robert F. Clements Jr.

Happens more often than you think.

Ware’s appellate attorney, Robert F. Shaw Jr., applauded the SJC for recognizing that Ware’s trial was unfair to him, and as a result, to the criminal justice system as a whole. “That’s really what this [ruling] was about,’’ Shaw said. “His trial was manifestly not fair.”

Shaw said that Clements has to be held accountable for testifying falsely, but he stopped short of saying the State Police trooper should be charged with perjury. He said that decision should be made by a judge or an investigator independent of Cruz’s office.

“There should be accountability and for good reason,’’ Shaw said. “Prosecuting people where their liberty for life is at stake and doing so based upon false testimony is repugnant to our system of justice.”

According to the SJC and prior Globe coverage, the victim was 16-year-old Chantel Matiyosus, who was struck in the head and abdomen as she and others were leaving a baby shower on April 25, 2009.

Matiyosus was a quiet, intelligent girl who went by the nickname ShyShy. She died at Brockton Hospital about an hour after two men opened fire, allegedly in an attempt to shoot her boyfriend, the Globe reported.

Ware, who wasn’t charged until 2011, was convicted of murder and other major felonies in November 2012, records show. On Friday, he was being held at the maximum security MCI-Cedar Junction in Walpole, state records show.

State Police were reviewing the SJC ruling and had no immediate comment. Clements remains on active duty, but is not currently assigned to Cruz’s office, according to State Police.....

--more--"

The decision comes too late for Aaron Hernandez, but they could retry him like in the Boston Calling case.

Too bad he didn't commit the crime in Suffolk County:

"Suffolk DA Rachael Rollins admits she used ‘not accurate’ information to defend her record" by Andrea Estes Globe Staff, July 26, 2019

Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins acknowledged on Friday that she used inaccurate information to publicly criticize a Globe story about her office’s handling of a brutal assault case.

Rollins accused the Globe of using the case— in which a woman walking her dog in the Charlestown Navy Yard was attacked and suffered a fractured skull — to try to make the new district attorney appear lenient toward violent criminals.

Rollins said in media appearances that her office had been just as tough on the defendant as her predecessor, Daniel Conley. In fact, she said, her office had secured greater accountability, including $5,000 in restitution for the victim, but, in fact, Conley’s office sought stiffer penalties than Rollins’s office. Conley’s prosecutors convinced the defendant, Rusbel Ruiz-Santana, to plead guilty last September to two felonies and recommended he be jailed for six months. Two months later, Ruiz-Santana withdrew his guilty pleas even when Boston Municipal Court Judge Tracy-Lee Lyons offered to reduce the penalty to a one-year suspended sentence.

When Rollins became district attorney in 2019, her prosecutors made a deal that allowed the defendant to avoid jail time as long as he got mental health counseling and met other conditions.

“I have previously stated that the plea offered under my administration was the same requested by a past administration. That was not accurate,” Rollins said in a statement late on Friday.

Rollins said the case “reflects the complex nature of each and every one of the approximately 35,000 cases my office handles annually.” She has said the assault was “egregious,” but the plea agreement was appropriate because Ruiz-Santana had a mental health disorder and no prior criminal record.

She said that the final outcome of the case, under which Ruiz-Santana pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault, included protections for the public; however, court records show that key conditions placed on Ruiz-Santana at a plea hearing in April — including the requirement for $5,000 restitution and GPS monitoring — were imposed by the judge, Boston Municipal Court Judge Eleanor Sinnott, and not requested by the assistant district attorney.

Before Rollins acknowledged that she relied on inaccurate information about the case, former district attorney Conley also made clear that his office did not offer leniency to the defendant. “Any suggestion by anyone in the current administration that this defendant was offered the same disposition as my office offered is inaccurate and incorrect and I would hope on further reflection they would correct the record,” he told the Globe on Thursday, stressing that he was not trying to second guess his successor.

The Globe reported earlier this month that Rollins is shaking up the district attorney’s office, vowing to dismiss low-level nonviolent offenses that clog up the courts and do little to make the city safer. She said her office plans to help stop a “freight train moving toward mass incarceration of poor people and black and brown people.”

The Globe review of her first few months in office showed that she is making good on that promise, but also found that some of the cases that were being dismissed or had charges reduced weren’t low level at all, including the 2017 assault by Ruiz-Santana.

Ruiz-Santana, who thought the victim was recording him smoking marijuana, knocked her to the ground and allegedly flung her dog into the air. She hit the pavement hard, suffering devastating injuries, from which she is still recovering today.

He's going to ruin it for everybody.

After the Globe story about the case was published, Rollins admonished the Globe for inaccurate reporting.

“Words matter, right?” said Rollins in a July 16 interview on WGBH’s Boston Public Radio with Jim Braude and Margery Eagan, referring to the Globe story. “Here’s my point — don’t be sloppy and make it fall on my lap. If you’re going to do your job, make sure you’re right.”

She should have let it fizzle out

--more--"

Maybe it will get her fired:

"This was no happy homecoming for Faye Dunaway. Instead, it was a demolition" by Don Aucoin Globe Staff, July 26, 2019

It was a weekend night two weeks ago, and movie legend Faye Dunaway had just taken several bows after her next-to-last solo performance in “Tea at Five’’ at Boston’s Huntington Avenue Theatre, when something odd happened.

As the curtain began to close, Dunaway suddenly reached out and touched it in a gesture that was half-grab, half-push. Was she trying to keep the curtain open so she could take one more bow? Or was she simply startled? Either way, the gesture by the 78-year-old actress drew snickers from the audience.

Now the curtain has come crashing down on Dunaway’s much-anticipated theater comeback, and in the most ignominious fashion imaginable. This week the Oscar-winning star of films like “Network,’’ “Chinatown,’’ and “Bonnie and Clyde’’ was summarily fired by the producers of “Tea at Five.’’ The announcement of her firing in a terse two-sentence press release was quickly followed by a story in the New York Post that Dunaway “slapped and threw things’’ at crew members who were attempting to put on her wig, forcing the cancellation of the July 10 performance moments before it was scheduled to begin. According to the story, that was part of a pattern of erratic behavior during the run. Matthew Lombardo, the playwright who rewrote “Tea at Five’’ specifically for Dunaway, posted a link to the story on his Facebook page, writing two words above that spoke volumes: “Ummm. Yup.’’

Perhaps it is senile dementia.

It’s probably premature to say we’re witnessing the downfall of a great star, but at a minimum, this episode represents a very dark chapter late in Dunaway’s storied career. One of the most-anticipated productions of the year in Boston theater circles, “Tea at Five’’ gave her the chance to portray a figure who looms even larger in film history than Dunaway does, and whom she greatly admires: Katharine Hepburn. It was designed to pave the way for Dunaway’s triumphant return to Broadway after a 37-year absence — and, more broadly, her journey back to the place she considers home: the stage, but it’s very hard to picture another theater producer taking a chance on hiring Dunaway anytime soon.

The Dunaway debacle could also deliver a sidelong blow to Boston’s fitful attempt to regain its status as a pre-Broadway tryout town, coming as it does on the heels of the cancellation of this fall’s tryout of “Magic Mike the Musical’’ at the Emerson Colonial Theatre. Boston was supposed to be the site of the sole pre-Broadway engagement for “Tea at Five,’’ but in announcing Dunaway’s firing, producers said that the play is going to be recast with a different actress for a run in London’s West End early next year. They said nothing about whether it will then go to Broadway. (As of Friday evening, the producers had not responded to Globe requests for elaboration on the circumstances of Dunaway’s dismissal and to questions about the possible Broadway prospects for “Tea at Five.’’)

And after we threw all that tax money at them!

Is the episode a cautionary tale about the kind of pressure cooker that an actor enters when performing live, especially in a solo show? Actors have to wage a constant battle against ageism, but Dunaway’s reported struggles with her lines at some performances are bound to raise the age issue in some circles. She reportedly had some lines fed to her through an earpiece— a tactic that Al Pacino also resorted to during the 2015 Broadway run of “China Doll,’’ according to New York Post theater columnist Michael Riedel, who was also the writer who reported this week on Dunaway’s alleged behavior in Boston.

It's time to retire, or is she flat out broke?

Her firing can be seen as a signal that theater producers are willing to play hardball, even with the biggest names. It’s worth remembering, too, the behind-the-scenes challenges that lower-ranking theater staffers can face when dealing with celebrities. Sometimes those staffers find themselves on the receiving end of a star’s whims or outbursts.

Or getting groped in a bar.

Staging “Tea at Five’’ in Boston was supposed to represent a happy homecoming for Dunaway. She went to Boston University in the early 1960s, got her professional training here before heading off to Broadway and film stardom, and then became visible in Boston again in the 1970s during her marriage to J. Geils Band singer Peter Wolf. “I have a great history with Boston,’’ Dunaway told me. “I love this city,’’ but this city did not appear to love her back, not this time. When I attended that July 13 performance of “Tea at Five,’’ the house was one-third empty, even though it was a Saturday night, prime time for theatergoers. Now, she might well have additional chapters to write in her amazing career. She recovered from the Academy Awards “La La Land’’-“Moonlight’’ fiasco, after all. At least for now, though, Boston is where it all began and where it fell apart for Faye Dunaway.....

--more--"

She once received top billing before falling down on the long path of $how bu$ine$$.

Where do you want to go eat after the show?

"Batali’s restaurant Babbo Pizzeria e Enoteca to close by September" by Kara Baskin Globe correspondent, July 26, 2019

According to an e-mail obtained by the Globe from B&B Hospitality, Babbo Pizzeria e Enoteca will close, laying off 62 employees by Sept. 15. The message from B&B Hospitality director Missy Andriazola notes that the closure of the Fan Pier restaurant is “expected to be permanent.” Boston manager Jeronimo Ramales confirmed the closure, noting that doors could shut slightly earlier than the September date.

Babbo opened to much fanfare in the spring of 2015, helmed by Mario Batali. Batali’s fortunes have changed in the wake of sexual assault allegations. In December 2017, three of Batali’s former employees and a chef who did not work for him accused him of inappropriately touching them, according to an article on food publication Eater. More accusations followed, including a 2017 incident at Towne Stove and Spirits on Boylston Street.

Four years ago, Batali was riding high at an opening party, spinning pizzas and sampling charcuterie. He toasted the crowd, shouting, “I’m bullish on Boston! I love this town!” He later told the Globe, “Boston is a sporting, artistic, energetic, wild place. Our challenge is to make sure Bostonians understand we want to be in their family. We’re not here to show them the Mario Batali and Joe Bastianich way. We’re here to share with them the experience and be a part of their lives.”

Batali has since stepped away from his restaurant and business ventures, which also include Eataly Boston..... 

I'm finished with my plate.

--more--"

Excuse me, where is the bathroom?

Sunday Globe Special: Wistful For Warren

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She is the foremost thing in their mind:

"Elizabeth Warren wants to break up big tech. Its workers don’t want to break up with her" by Jess Bidgood Globe Staff, July 27, 2019

WASHINGTON — Twenty years ago, Jeff Few joined Amazon when it was still an upstart, aiming to break the grip of behemoths such as Barnes & Noble and Blockbuster in the market for books and movies.

“I saw it as this force that would finally enable something closer to a direct democracy,” Few recalled.

Now, Amazon is a titan of e-commerce, and Few, who lives in Seattle and went on to work for Apple and Adobe, has embraced, and donated $300 to, a Democratic presidential candidate who has fiercely criticized his industry and called for the breakup of its biggest players — Senator Elizabeth Warren.

He is far from alone among tech employees. Although Warren has painted tech giants such as Google and Facebook as modern-day villains in her scathing picture of the American economy, she is emerging as a top choice for donations from tech workers, according to an analysis of campaign contributions by The Boston Globe.

With her denunciations of big tech and corporate greed, Warren has tapped into simmering discontent within the industry itself about the size, power, and ethics of its companies. So, while tech executives have often resisted calls from Washington to regulate the industry, employees are contributing to Warren and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, the candidates with the most aggressive positions on corporate oversight.

“I agree tech companies are becoming increasingly powerful,” said Vicki Tardif, who works on search products at Google and helped organize a major protest there last fall. She says she has contributed to Warren. “I’m a citizen first — I’m a Google employee second.”

Looking at just the big four tech companies that she wants to break apart — Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google — and some of their affiliates, Warren received some $144,000 in itemized donations from their employees over the first six months of the year.

She was second only to Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., who raised nearly $149,000 from those employees, in part by holding the kind of private Silicon Valley fund-raisers that Warren eschews. Sanders and California Senator Kamala Harris also raised more than $100,000 from employees of these companies.

The actual amount of donations from people in the tech industry is certainly higher, but campaign filings list information only about donors who give more than $200; moreover, the names of donors’ employers are not always reported consistently.

Her second-quarter finance report also showed Warren’s appeal more broadly across the tech sector, raising at least $142,000 from employees of the big four and seven other US tech giants, including Microsoft and Intel. Buttigieg was tops at $176,000, while Sanders was third, at $95,000.

She is burning through the cash quickly, too.

Warren has been a particularly vocal critic of big tech in recent months. In March, she detailed a plan that would require the biggest companies — those with annual revenue of $25 billion — to separate their technology platforms from their e-commerce activities. So Google’s massive ad-sales operation would split off from its ubiquitous search engine; Amazon could not have both an e-commerce platform and a sales business on it.

The DoJ just opened an investigation into their market power, so Warren was out front on this one.

She also called for the undoing of “anticompetitive” mergers, naming Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram and WhatsApp as an example.

The technology blog Recode greeted the plan with the headline, “Elizabeth Warren just lost the Silicon Valley vote,” and Warren herself promptly appeared at the technology conference South by Southwest to face her critics.

“Monopolists will make fewer monopoly profits,” she said then. “Boo-hoo.”

Warren looks to be setting the tone in a Democratic field that is generally taking a harder line toward the industry. Former vice president Joe Biden and Harris have said it is worth taking a look at her plan, but stopped short of a full-throated endorsement. Buttigieg has said he “potentially” agrees with it, but, during a town hall in March, raised questions about other aspects of big tech: “It’s not how big they are, it’s how they act.” In May, Sanders said he agreed Facebook should be broken up.

Warren and other candidates have also called for big corporations such as Amazon to pay significantly more in taxes, but she, in particular, has drawn the ire of conservative tech mogul and Trump ally Peter Thiel, who called her the Democratic candidate he is most scared of.

Is that ire? Looks more like respect and fear to me.

For the record, he supported Ron Paul and now lives in New Zealand.

In some ways, well-to-do tech employees backing populists such as Warren and Sanders are acting against their own interests. Both candidates are antitrust hawks who want to limit the reach of big corporations; both have supported job actions by low-wage workers at Amazon and drivers for Uber and Lyft.

Warren’s and Sanders’ success with tech workers is partially due to the industry’s liberal leanings, and many employees interviewed for this story emphasized her overall candidacy in describing her appeal, not her specific positions on big tech.

“She’s a wonk,” said Alex Whitworth, a data scientist at Facebook who kicked $250 toward her campaign. “That’s strongly appealing to me, as a wonk.”

For other tech donors, their willingness to back candidates critical of their industry may also be due in part to tensions with their bosses. The tech industry has been roiled by walkouts and protests over contracts with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other government agencies and the military. There is also lingering anger over the role social media networks played in the disinformation campaign Russians used in the 2016 elections.

“We have this tech-lash phenomenon that’s been building over the past few years,” said Ben Tarnoff, editor of Logic magazine, which covers technology. “There’s a large and vocal constituency in the tech sector that is making the case these companies have a responsibility for the tech they’re building.”

Interviews with tech employees who support Warren and Sanders reveal a well of reservations about the increasing power of big corporations and enthusiasm for candidates who are addressing it head-on.

“I like working at Amazon. It’s been the best job of my career,” said Michael Sokolov, a senior software development engineer who donated $250 to Warren. “However, I don’t like the fact that our economy is dominated by gigantic super-corporations.”

Many Democratic candidates have criticized the tech industry while mingling with its luminaries at fund-raisers. Warren’s success among its employees could undermine her image as a fierce critic, although her campaign pointed out it has a policy of not holding private fund-raisers or reaching out directly to members of any industry, and some of Warren’s tech-industry supporters acknowledged being wary about the specifics of her plans to break up their employers.

Sanders’ appeal among tech workers is not new. In 2016, he drew more donations from workers at Alphabet Inc., Google’s parent company, than from any other employer, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks campaign finance, and his class-based analysis of the nation’s economic ills still appeals to tech employees concerned about low-paid workers in their companies’ warehouses, and the insecurity that comes with working as an independent contractor in the gig economy, and some of Sanders’ tech supporters want him to drill down even further.

Well, the gig is up.

“I think we expect to see more — maybe see some politics about collective data regulation,” said Will Luckman, who is part of a tech-focused working group within the New York City chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, which supports Sanders. “We’d like to see some stuff about gig workers, and how they might be able to reclassify themselves and get collective bargaining rights.”

Some of Sanders’ 2016 supporters from the tech industry have switched to Warren.

“What I have seen from Sanders is mostly calls for a movement without a lot of detail,” said Annabelle Backman, a software engineer at Amazon who was a state delegate for Sanders in the 2016 primary but has contributed $2,700 to Warren in this cycle, and some of Warren’s long-held positions align directly with demands of tech workers scrutinizing their own industry. Last fall, thousands of Google employees walked out in protest of the company’s policy requiring workers to settle disputes in forced arbitration, instead of through lawsuits, which workers said has allowed Google to keep accusations of serious problems such as sexual assault secret. Warren has been a vocal opponent of forced arbitrationfor years and proposed prohibiting companies that use the practice from getting federal contracts.

“We’ve been advocating for an end to forced arbitration. We had to push our company for that,” said Tanuja Gupta, another organizer of the Google walkouts, who has donated $333.82 to Warren’s campaign. “I find it incredibly appealing that there’s a political candidate who’s willing to do that for all workers and end forced arbitration.”

Several donors expressed reservations about Warren’s plan to break up tech companies, including whether it would do enough to address the industry’s problems.

“There’s a lot of attention on social media companies failing to rein in fake posts and fake stories and bots and whatnot,” Backman said. “Breaking up the social networks is not going to do anything to help that,” but others, wistful for the days when the industry had fewer dominant players and thus more latitude for workers, said Warren’s plan was worth a shot.

“There’s a lot of people in this industry who are amenable to some sort of breakup of big tech,” Few said. “It’s the penance we must pay for allowing this to get out of control.”

--more--"

She also made the front page of the B-section:

"Elizabeth Warren’s pitch: pragmatism from the heart" by Jeremy C. Fox Globe Correspondent, July 27, 2019

BOW, N.H. — Gathered in a bucolic backyard with about 300 voters on Saturday, US Senator Elizabeth Warren retold a deeply personal story she has shared with crowds around the country.

Warren was a girl in middle school, living in Oklahoma City with her parents, when her father— the family breadwinner — had a sudden heart attack that left him unable to work.

The Democratic presidential aspirant recalled finding her mother, a 50-year-old homemaker who’d never held a paying job, pacing her bedroom floor in her slip and stockings, telling herself, “We will not lose this house.”

That day, Warren said in a voice cracking with emotion, her mother put on her best dress and interviewed for a position answering phones at a Sears department store.

“That minimum-wage job saved our house, and more importantly, it saved our family,” Warren told the rapt crowd, as some wiped away tears.

That story, Warren suggested to the standing-room-only crowd at the house party in her honor, isn’t just a tale of personal sacrifice and family cohesion. In her telling, it’s a reminder of a government that made her family’s American dream possible by ensuring “a minimum wage job would cover a mortgage, the utilities, and put groceries on the table.”

“Today a minimum-wage job in America, full time, will not keep a mama and a baby out of poverty. That is wrong, and that is why I am in this fight,” Warren continued, to robust applause.

Much of the Cambridge Democrat’s stump speech continued in that vein of economic populism, balancing detailed proposals with a personal, emotional plea for a fairer country, as the liberal firebrand focused on themes, if not always policies, that were largely bipartisan.

She pledged to attack government corruption, restructure the nation’s economy to provide more opportunities for working-class and middle-income Americans, and to protect democratic institutions from interference, both foreign and domestic.

Warren also bridged the personal and political when asked by an Epsom, N.H., resident how she’d reach out to Republican voters, citing two of her three older brothers as Republicans with whom she’s able to find common ground, and listing issues on which there is broad agreement.

“The idea that our kids should be . . . burdened with student loan debt — that makes no sense to anybody, Democrat or Republican,” she said. “These are places that we can start with. The access to child care. The idea that prescription drugs, the prices have gone through the roof. This outrages my brothers.”

She said President Trump had appealed to voters in 2016 — and plans to again in 2020 — by telling them, “Blame people who don’t look like you. Blame people who aren’t the same color as you. Blame people who weren’t born where you were born. Blame people who don’t worship like you. Blame people who don’t have the same sexual orientation as you.”

All that finger-pointing, she said, distracts citizens and allows “the rich and the powerful who are picking everybody’s pockets [to] get a free walk.”

I can do without the identity politics, but she is on to something there and doesn't have to reach too far for this registered Independent that leans Republican.

Kim Gillis, 55, who had asked the question, said she was satisfied with Warren’s answer.

“I think she’s ready to take that on,” Gillis said. “I really trust that when she hears people’s concerns, she is thinking, ‘How does that relate to the policy and what I’m doing as a politician in the world? And how can I try to meet that need?’ ”

Gillis said she had become a supporter after attending a Women for Warren event last weekend.

“She’s such a pragmatist and problem-solver,” she said. “That piece hadn’t come through as much to me in what I had seen online.”

Nancy Heffernan, 82, of Hanover, N.H., said she’d heard Warren’s stump speech before but felt the impact more deeply in person.

“I can’t say she said anything I disagree with,” she said, adding later that she especially appreciated the focus on corruption.

Her husband, Jim Heffernan, 80, said Warren had “a terrific personal story” and he is “strongly leaning” toward her as his preferred candidate in the crowded Democratic field.

Just don't bring up the DNA test.

“I’d sum her up by calling her a fiery pragmatist: head in the clouds, feet on the ground,” he said. “She wants to ignite a tremendous revolution, fighting corruption and so on, and so forth. But she has a set of specific ideas about how to do it. . . . Taking on corruption is like taking on the history of American politics, but if anybody could do it, I think she could.”

She very well may be the Democrat's choice and strongest candidate they have.

--more--"

What's odd was there was no mention of Mueller in either article despite the massive audience this week, and as usual, the Globe turned a blind eye to foreign policy.

Of course, here is what happens when a lady runs the house:

"‘Give the house back to the ladies’: Protesters fight for building owned by Catholic order" by Alison Kuznitz Globe Correspondent, July 27, 2019

A group of nearly 50 activists, wearing yellow shirts emblazoned with a rallying cry of “fight the power,” marched in the Fenway Saturday morning, chanting in unison: “Fight the evictions, fight the evictions.”

As they veered into the Symphony Community Park, the protest became increasingly animated and vocal about racial and economic injustice.

“Say no, fight back, what do we do when the nuns attack?” they cried, following by a round of: “Give the house back to the ladies!”

The early morning demonstration was the first of several rallies Saturday in Boston and in New Britain, Conn., as activists attempt to preserve the status quo of Our Lady’s Guild House, a single-room occupancy building in Kenmore Square historically intended for elderly, low-income women. It’s owned by an order of Catholic nuns, the Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception, in New Britain.

At around 10 a.m., the protesters boarded a coach bus for the roughly 130-mile trip to New Britain, where they staged another rally and speaking program Saturday afternoon.

What was the carbon footprint on that trip?

They had hoped to deliver a petition with more than 1,300 signatures to the head nun, Mother General Mary Jennifer Carroll, but weren’t allowed to enter the Osgood Avenue property, said Colleen Fitzpatrick, an organizer with the Fenway Community Development Corporation.

“We had to basically line up on this skinny sidewalk across the street and do a little chanting,” Fitzpatrick said in a phone interview Saturday afternoon, during the bus’s return trip to Boston. “We would have appreciated the chance to see her and give her a petition.”

In recent years, dozens of residents– some in their 60s, others in their 70s and 80s – have faced eviction notices, with the religious order seeking younger women, typically college-aged, who can afford to pay market rent values and sign yearly leases.

“Our demand is we want long-term, permanent affordable housing at this site,” said Helen “Homefries” Matthews, the communications coordinator for City Life/Vida Urbana, a grass-roots community organization, during an interview Saturday after the morning rally in Boston. “It’s an essential resource for people in the heart of the city.”

Dozens of protesters sat on benches in the park Saturday morning before boarding the bus, clutching handmade signs that decried what they called misuse of a charitable status and age discrimination by the nuns — a claim that Attorney General Maura Healey’s office said in March that it was investigating. Eviction proceedings have stalled under the investigation, with findings expected in the fall.

A spokesman for Our Lady’s Guild House said that the protesters’ claims were false and that the nuns were trying “to work collaboratively with the tenants.”

“OLGH is and always has been a home for women who are seeking transitional housing. It is important that the mission continues and that the building remains one where women can take advantage of the affordable rent and convenience of living in the heart of Downtown Boston as they look for long-term housing,” said Don Martelli in a statement.

The mission of the house, Martelli said in the statement, “is and always has been to provide short term residential housing to single women.”

Healey’s office could not be reached for comment.

The protesters, many of whom said they have experienced eviction attempts themselves, returned to the Fenway late afternoon.

Siobhan O’Connor , 57, who’s lived in Our Lady’s Guild House for about 15 years, said she did not think the head of the New Britain order would be swayed.

“She basically thinks she’s the female pope,” O’Connor said.

O’Connor, who wore a gold cross necklace, described herself as a devout Catholic who regularly attends Mass at the House. She said the nuns have forsaken their charitable mission by focusing on profits – instead of helping to find alternative living options for residents with nowhere else to turn.

The problem is they are not undocumented migrants, they are just old ladies.

Some of the single rooms are listed on Airbnb, and previous advertisements explicitly targeted women “between the ages of 18 and 50 years old.”

Marcy Wells, who’s lived in the House for 2½ years, said she has seen older women crying in the hallways, uncertain of their fate as the case remains entangled in housing court disputes.

“I’m a strong Catholic and that’s what breaks my heart,” Wells said. “My faith says it’s not right – being a Christian says this is not right. You cannot mistreat the elderly and think you’ll be blessed.”

Maybe you should excommunicate yourself like I did.

David Mynott, a City Life volunteer, said the morning protest in Boston forged an empowering and inspiring display of solidarity.

“It reminds us that we’re all together— if one of us is suffering, we all are,” he said. “Housing is a basic human right.”

Not if you are Palestinian.

--more--"

Looks like some people in Lowell will be needing a place to stay.

Related:

Flirting With Impeachment

Jess Bidgood of the Globe has a Q & A with Katherine Clark on the issue.

"Trump assails congressional critic, calling his majority-black district a ‘disgusting,’ rat-infested ‘mess’" by Peter Baker New York Times, July 27, 2019

WASHINGTON — President Trump lashed out at a leading African-American congressman Saturday, calling him “a brutal bully” who represents a Baltimore-based district that has become a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess” where “no human being would want to live.”

Trump’s attack on Representative Elijah E. Cummings, a Maryland Democrat and a leading critic of the president, parroted a segment that aired earlier in the morning on “Fox & Friends.” The president suggested that the congressman was a hypocrite for criticizing conditions in migrant detention centers at the southwestern border when his own district is blighted. Trump also made a vague and unsubstantiated insinuation of corruption.

“Rep, Elijah Cummings has been a brutal bully, shouting and screaming at the great men & women of Border Patrol about conditions at the Southern Border, when actually his Baltimore district is FAR WORSE and more dangerous,” Trump wrote. “His district is considered the Worst in the USA.” He went on: “Cumming District is a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess. If he spent more time in Baltimore, maybe he could help clean up this very dangerous & filthy place.”

Cummings responded on Twitter shortly afterward, saying that he was a vigorous advocate for his district. “Mr. President, I go home to my district daily,” he wrote. “Each morning, I wake up, and I go and fight for my neighbors. It is my constitutional duty to conduct oversight of the Executive Branch, but, it is my moral duty to fight for my constituents.”

The congressman pointed to a hearing he held Friday on his effort to legislate lower drug prices, which would help his Baltimore constituents. “You told me then that you supported the legislation and that you would work with me to make it happen,” Cummings said, still addressing the president. “I took you at your word.”

Trump’s blasts could revive the criticism that followed his attacks on four first-term Democratic congresswomen of color, who he angrily declared should “go back” to their home countries, even though three of them were born in the United States and the fourth is also an American citizen. The president’s use of racist tropes generated enormous anger on the part of Democrats and some Republicans, leading the House to pass a resolution, largely along party lines, condemning his remarks.

I've already seen this movie.

The Twitter assault came shortly after “Fox & Friends” aired a segment Saturday morning assailing Cummings for focusing on migrants more than his own urban constituents. As video footage showed boarded-up houses and trash-strewn areas of Baltimore, the Fox television host said that “living conditions at the border are better than most areas in his district.”

Cummings’s district is 53 percent African-American, according to the census, and includes much of Baltimore as well as vast suburban stretches. Baltimore has struggled with crime in recent years, recording more murders in 2017 than any other city of at least 500,000 residents — more even than New York, a vastly larger city.

Cumming's blames the mayor, and things could be worse. They could be Puerto Rico.

Trump has denied charges that he is racist, citing in his defense the low unemployment rates for Hispanics and African-Americans on his watch, among other things. In recent days, he has also made a point of pressuring Sweden to release rapper ASAP Rocky, who was charged with assault there, saying, “Sweden has let our African American Community down in the United States.”

Cummings, the chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, has been one of the president’s most persistent critics in Congress. Only two days ago, he was authorized by his committee to subpoena work-related text and e-mails sent on personal accounts by White House officials, including Trump’s daughter and son-in-law.

They are finally getting around to reading those, huh?

I would be surprised if that investigation goes anywhere.

The Maryland congressman has also assailed the administration’s handling of the border. At a recent hearing, Cummings confronted Kevin McAleenan, the acting secretary of homeland security, about conditions for detained migrants, sharply criticizing the secretary’s contention that his department was doing its “level best” to manage the situation.

“What does that mean?” Cummings demanded. “What does that mean when a child is sitting in their own feces, can’t take a shower? Come on, man. What is that about? None of us would have our children in that position. They are human beings.”

In his Twitter storm Saturday, the president said Cummings was distorting the reality, saying, “the Border is clean, efficient & well run, just very crowded.”

Trump did not explain one of his most explosive charges, that federal taxpayer money was somehow being stolen, nor did he detail what involvement he was suggesting on Cummings’s part.

“Why is so much money sent to the Elijah Cummings district when it is considered the worst run and most dangerous anywhere in the United States,” the president wrote. “No human being would want to live there. Where is all this money going? How much is stolen? Investigate this corrupt mess immediately!”

White House officials did not immediately respond to requests for clarification. A spokesman for Cummings had no comment and referred to the congressman’s Twitter posts.

--more--"

He's doing his best to  “fight back Jim Crow and Jane Crow Jr,” and hopefully there will be a settlement soon as to who qualifies as a person of color.

Turns out that Trump is the most consequential president of our time as he is focused on the fundamental challenges of the post-industrial, post-civil rights era, and he will probably save the world.

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

"Legislature considers action on local marijuana contracts" by Dan Adams Globe Staff, July 24, 2019

Massachusetts lawmakers are set to consider new limits on the ability of municipalities to demand fees from marijuana companies, following widespread complaints by businesses, activists, and state regulators that many local officials are unfairly shaking down the firms.

At a hearing Monday, the state Legislature’s joint committee on cannabis policy will take up a number of proposed bills that would tighten the rules around so-called “host community agreements,” the contracts every recreational pot operation must sign with the city or town in which it hopes to open before applying for a state license.

Current state law caps the value of those deals at 3 percent of a company’s annual revenue, for a maximum of five years, and says any payments must be “reasonably related” to the actual costs imposed by the marijuana facility, but many cities and towns have side-stepped those limits, asking for additional payments while arguing the law doesn’t explicitly prohibit them from requiring separate fees or mandatory “donations” to local nonprofits in exchange for local approval.

Critics — including legislators who helped draft the current rules — say such municipal rent-seeking is a key reason that small businesses are struggling to enter the state’s marijuana industry, while larger players who can afford to sweeten the municipal pot are moving ahead. They lauded the cannabis committee’s decision to take up several bills that would ban extra fees, standardize the deals, and impose state oversight of the contracts.

“In a word: finally,” said David O’Brien, the executive director of the Massachusetts Cannabis Business Association. “Three percent means 3 percent, and voluntary contributions should be offered, not asked for.”

It is somewhat of an extortion racket, but it's far from a unique situation.

Few operators have dared to challenge municipal demands, fearful of souring relations with the local officials from whom they must obtain permits., but advocates fret that smaller operators, especially participants in state programs meant to encourage the licensure of people from communities disproportionately affected by the war on drugs, are simply walking away.

Just say no.

Laury Lucien, an attorney and entrepreneur whose marijuana company has signed host community agreements in Attleboro and Worcester, said the variability of municipal expectations — and demands for up-front payments of $100,000 or more — drastically prolonged the process of finding a home for her business.

“It creates a barrier to moving quickly unless you have a lot of resources,” Lucien said. “I know a lot of people would have gotten discouraged by what we went through.”

That was the whole point. Maybe then you will give up.

--more--"

That should put you on the road to recovery, and UMass just got a $10M grant to treat overdoses.

Sure makes the public art in Boston look pretty, though, and a red state is plastering ‘In God We Trust’ on the walls as they touch the face of heaven (there is a rea$on to keep the myth going).

Also see:

Why sharks don’t seem to stop in Rhode Island on their way to Cape Cod

They are just scooting past Taylor Swift's house on their way to Hawaii.

How much you want to bet they make it?

Bored and Tired With the Bo$ton Globe

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Was feeling that way anyway after the last few days, but was planning to begin logging and working when I found that less than five minutes before logging in that a 6-year-old boy was among those killed in California festival shooting.

Honestly, I have become so tired of trying to figure out the false flag fakery, staged and scripted crisis drills, mix there within, or improbable reality as relayed by the media in the latest assault of the public perception in the endless mind-manipulating, agenda-pushing distortions and fabrications of reality as presented by the pre$$ that the default is hoax until proven otherwise. Enjoy chasing the rabbit before it runs down the memory hole and another is released.

A Moderate Rebellion

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It's called for in the center feature of today's front page:

"Warren and Sanders could be targets of moderates instead of each other in debate" by Liz Goodwin Globe Staff, July 29, 2019

Oh, that explains Sunday's Globe.

DETROIT — For the first time since the Democratic presidential campaign began, the race’s two leading liberal candidates — Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — will appear on the same debate stage here Tuesday night, but despite signs of tension between the campaigns in recent months, the debate is unlikely to feature a clash between the two for the mantle of the left. Instead, the self-proclaimed longtime friends may be too busy warding off attacks from five more moderate candidates they’ll also be sharing the stage with — all of whom are desperate for a breakout moment.

Those candidates, including Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar, former Colorado governor John Hickenlooper, and Montana Governor Steve Bullock, could try to push out of the lower tiers of the large pack by launching themselves at Warren, or — more likely — Sanders.

They are going to attack and devour the liberal old lion, 'eh?

Their goal is to avoid being cut from September’s debate because of low support in the polls or donations. With little to lose, those candidates could attack the two New Englanders for pushing liberal proposals that, they argue, could hurt the party’s chances in 2020.

“This debate is really important to all the candidates who are at risk of not being back on the debate stage and facing a sort of debate death sentence,” said Joe Trippi, a Democratic strategist who managed Howard Dean’s 2004 presidential campaign. “That’s why I think it’s going to be a much more aggressive debate than the first one.”

Instead of trying to subtly grab the title of most progressive candidate, Warren and Sanders may find themselves defending each other from criticism of their support for a Medicare for All health insurance plan, cancellation of student debt, and imposing higher taxes on the wealthy to pay for new programs.

Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which backs Warren, said he expects “a tag team act” against the moderates. “It’s mutually reinforcing for Sanders and Warren to make the case for bold progressive transformational policy — it makes them each look better,” Green said.

This shared goal may be enough to overcome signs of tensions between the Sanders and Warren campaigns that have recently surfaced. Unnamed Sanders advisers questioned Warren’s electability and past claims to Native American heritage in news reports. Sanders himself suggested in a tweet last month that he — not Warren — is the “real threat to the billionaire class.”

Related: "The only top-tier presidential candidate who seems eager to talk about foreign policy is also the only one with a consistent view: Bernie Sanders. He steadfastly opposes American military intervention and regime-change projects, and promises to end our foreign wars. Agree with him or not, it’s clear that Sanders has reflected seriously on global questions and has developed a consistent view of what American foreign policy should be."

That's why the nomination must go to anybody but him, and why I support him. I'm at the point where we need to fight fire with fire, and the way to fight the Lobby is with one of their own, one of the good ones who basically disowns the zaniness of Zionism and is more of a kibbutzer.

Sanders quickly appeared on CNN to clarify that he was not targeting Warren, but he has reason to be wary of her. Sanders has seen his standing in early-state polls fall as Warren’s creeps up and even surpasses him in some surveys, and the two share similar messages, sometimes even appearing to race each other to release their latest policy proposals, as Warren did with a plan to cancel student debt two months before Sanders unveiled his, but Sanders’ allies point out he does not appear to be personally behind the anonymous sniping from his campaign directed toward Warren, whom he considers a friend.

Jim Zogby, a board member of the Sanders-allied group Our Revolution, said he doesn’t expect the Vermont senator will go into the debate looking to target any of Warren’s weak spots. “They’re friends and he’s displayed no animus whatsoever and I don’t expect to see any on stage,” Zogby said.

Asked recently by reporters in Iowa what people should expect from him and Warren sharing a stage, Sanders responded, “Intelligence.”

Still, the two liberals have plenty of weak spots to press on each other, which could happen if the debate’s moderators ask pointedly about their differences. Warren could argue that she is a better standard-bearer for the party, since she is a Democrat while Sanders is an independent who identifies as a democratic socialist, and Sanders could make the case that he has been fighting for progressive values longer than Warren has, but the Democratic race appears to be overdue for a moderate rebellion, not lefty infighting.

Aside from former vice president Joe Biden, who is a front-runner in polls and will appear in Wednesday’s debate, more moderate candidates have largely failed to gain traction in surveys and media attention.

Sanders, the field’s oldest candidate at 77, could also face a generational challenge, as Pete Buttigieg — the race’s youngest candidate, at 37 — will be standing right next to him.

Oh, the AGEISM of the Globe!

If Sanders ends up as the debate’s lightning rod, the result may be a relatively quiet night for Warren, who has maintained her position in second or third in the polls since rising in the spring on the strength of a steady stream of progressive policy proposals.

Bernie can come roaring out of there saying they were picking on an old man, but seriously, I think he knows the knives are out like four years ago. He does deserve credit for being the only one who put his neck out against the Clinton machine.

“I don’t think the burden is on Elizabeth Warren here; I think she can keep her head down and get through it,” said Rebecca Katz, a Democratic political consultant in New York. “Since her launch, she very much has been the tortoise: slow and steady wins the race. She doesn’t have to have a breakout moment.”

There is definitely something to that, especially when you are campaigning directly to voters and accumulating delegates. The flip side is amount of donors, not donations, for each donation represents a vote.

Such a moment for Warren is far more likely when she eventually shares a stage with Biden, who has maintained his commanding lead over the field despite a shaky performance in Miami. Warren has already highlighted her differences in opinion with the former vice president on bankruptcy, while Sanders has poked at Biden’s fund-raisers targeting the wealthy and his more incremental policy approach.

“Everyone wants a piece of Biden,” said Brian Fallon, a former top Hillary Clinton aide and the founder of the liberal advocacy group Demand Justice..... 

Ugh, the ghost behind it all still.

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I flip below the fold to find:

"Where are they? It’s high summer in N.H., but the candidates are elsewhere" by James Pindell Globe Staff, July 29, 2019

Instead of campaigning intensely in the early voting states — shaking hands on Hampton Beach or eating pork on a stick at the Iowa State Fair — most Democrats running for president are much more focused on meeting the Democratic National Committee’s rules for making the cut for the third national televised debate.

You better have a good short game if you are on the lower-tier bubble.

To make the September debate stage in Houston, candidates must have at least 130,000 unique donors to their campaigns and receive at least 2 percent in four polls that the DNC deems credible.

So far, just eight have said they will qualify: former vice president Joe Biden; Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey; South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg; Senator Kamala Harris of California; former Texas representative Beto O’Rourke; Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont; Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts; and New York entrepreneur Andrew Yang.

It's called winnowing the field.

Everyone else must find a way to meet the two qualifications by the Aug. 28 deadline. For some candidates, that means flying to Los Angeles and New York to get on as many television programs and podcasts as they can. For others, it means spending their remaining money on social media campaigns aimed at improving name recognition and getting new donors, and so far they are not coming.

So what is the carbon footprint going to be for those candidates?

There are currently 25 candidates running for president. During the 26-day period that began last week, only two candidates had or were scheduled to have events in the state. Warren showed up Saturday for a pair of events, and on Aug. 1, author Marianne Williamson will spend a single day in the state.

“The formula for how to run for president has changed specifically because of the debate qualification hurdles,” said Democratic strategist Colin Strother. “It gives the front-runners an even greater advantage as they will be able to really zone in and protect their market share while the folks at the bottom are just trying to get noticed.”

In New Hampshire, without candidates visiting the state for weeks or months, campaign staff are forced to get creative to engage voters who expect attention every four years.

Booker’s campaign is inviting supporters and activists to movie nights to watch “Street Fight,” a documentary about Booker’s first campaign for mayor of Newark. They are also inviting supporters to “gardening mornings” with staff.

O’Rourke’s staff and volunteers hosted a cleanup at Wallis Sands State Beach in Rye last Sunday. Senator Amy Klobuchar called into three rural radio stations in the state while she was in Washington, D.C.

The Sanders campaign held volunteer workshops around the state, and Buttigieg’s campaign is handing out invites to bowling and poetry nights. (A hiking trip in the North Country is also in the works.)

“This is a campaign built around joy and community and fun,” said Buttigieg’s New Hampshire director, Michael Ceraso.

Even events devised to lure presidential candidates to New Hampshire aren’t necessarily working this season. The Hollis Democrats — among the most active party committees in the state — recently attempted to hold a presidential candidate night at a historic barn, but no candidate showed.

On Thursday night, roughly 60 people showed up for the Somersworth Democrats’ BBQ, but only two presidential campaigns were willing to pay the $250 fee for a staffer to speak for five minutes: Yang and former housing secretary Julian Castro.

Castro had his moment.

One Democrat who is far from qualifying for the September debate is Representative Seth Moulton, of Salem. His staff says he plans to spend “significant” time in New Hampshire in August.

“Other campaigns are making strategic decisions solely based on getting on a debate stage, while we are strategically focused on winning over primary voters,” said Moulton’s campaign spokesman, Matt Corridoni.

Globe is obsessed with him.

Campaign staffs and strategists argue the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary will still play a huge role in selecting the nominee. The Iowa caucuses are scheduled for Feb. 3, and the New Hampshire primary is expected to be held eight days later, but until then, the DNC debate rules have prompted a shift in campaign strategy for nearly every candidate in the field.

I agree. The field reduces significantly after that because campaigns are expensive and if it is a losing effort, you cut your losses.

“I have always said the threat to the New Hampshire primary isn’t some state that wants to jump ahead, but when the candidates stop showing up,” said pollster Andy Smith, who also teaches a presidential primary class at the University of New Hampshire. “And in this pivotal period, they aren’t showing up for very logical reasons because of the DNC rules. This is concerning to see for people who value the New Hampshire primary, but they will be back soon.”

Oh, okay, but they are not planning to release another poll before the deadline and “without a poll to help them make the debate, there really is no reason to go to New Hampshire.”

--more--"

Related:

The high cost of housing emerges as a presidential campaign issue

Warren calls for US trade overhaul as she pitches populism in the Midwest

Based on what the Globe editorialized yesterday, they may not agree:

"Democrats should set aside political qualms, approve new NAFTA deal

For years, the Democratic Party complained about NAFTA, the free trade deal between the United States, Mexico, and Canada, and called for changes to make it more friendly to American workers.
Well, now they have the opportunity, but it’s come courtesy of such an unexpected source — a Republican president, Donald Trump — that many elected Democrats suddenly seem to have second thoughts, and the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives has yet to schedule a vote on an updated free trade deal.

If Democrats thwart the revised deal, they’ll not only hurt the American economy. They’ll also hurt Mexico — even as many Democrats correctly point out that helping Latin America prosper is the best way to reduce the flow of immigrants and refugees that Trump capitalizes on to stoke fear.

The new trade pact was finalized and signed last year by the three countries. Officially called the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, the deal modernized key aspects of NAFTA. It includes stricter and enforceable labor and environmental standards, and some changes for automakers, such as requiring that a higher percentage of an automobile be made in North America to qualify for tariff relief. The agreement also upgrades intellectual property protections and adds a new chapter on the digital economy. It also includes a 16-year sunset clause and will be subject to a review every six years.

Democrats don’t like every part of the agreement, but it’s politics that seems to be the biggest stumbling block. With the 2020 election looming, Democrats are wary of giving President Trump a policy win.

The longer they wait, the harder it will get. The intensifying politics of the 2020 presidential election will inevitably influence the deal’s fate, and not in a good way, but the politics cuts both ways: If the deal goes down, the millions of Americans who benefit from free trade with Canada and Mexico could well blame Democrats.

The Democrats’ concerns about the revised deal have to do with drug pricing, environmental protection, and the new labor provisions and their enforcement. Those provisions are aimed primarily at Mexico. To comply, Mexico passed major labor reforms a few months ago, such as giving workers the right to representation by independent unions and establishing better mechanisms to enforce basic labor and health standards in workplaces. But House Democrats — and US labor unions — are still skeptical about how those new laws south of the border will work out. They’re demanding stricter rules on enforcement, but judged against the status quo, the deal is an improvement, and Mexico is already making good on its end. “Mexico made a commitment, and we followed through with it,” said Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, in late April after Mexican lawmakers passed the labor reforms. “Now it’s up to members of Congress in the US to finish it.”

The economic impact of scuttling the free trade zone would be severe, since the three economies are deeply intertwined, with supply chains that meander across the US-Mexico and US-Canada borders.

“NAFTA and the new USMCA agreement are really about shared production even more than they are about trade,” said Andrew Selee, president of the Migration Policy Institute, a think tank in Washington, D.C., and an expert on US-Mexico relations. “There is no US auto industry, there is only a North American auto industry. These are production processes in which American workers are making goods together with American and Canadian workers.”

Trade with Canada and Mexico supports more than 12 million American jobs, according to 2017 data from Business Roundtable. That includes more than 600,000 jobs in the six New England states, with half of those in Massachusetts alone (302,500, to be exact). Moreover, a report from the US International Trade Commission on the new deal showed that it will have a positive impact on the US economy and employment.

If the revised deal isn’t passed soon, then the issue will become fuel in the fire of next year’s presidential election. If House Democrats care about American workers and companies and the health of our Latin American neighbors as much as they say they do, they should approve the deal.....

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{@@##$$%%^^&&}

"After inflammatory attack, Trump accuses Democrats of playing ‘the Race Card’" by Peter Baker New York Times, July 28, 2019

WASHINGTON — President Trump denied Sunday that his attacks on an African-American congressman and his “disgusting, rat and rodent infested” district were racist even as he fired back at Speaker Nancy Pelosi by targeting her district as well.

As he has done repeatedly when challenged for inflaming racial tensions, Trump sought to turn the accusation around by alleging that Democrats were playing “the Race Card.”

He's angry because Cummings has been authorized to subpoena work-related e-mails and text messages on personal devices from Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and other White House officials, and because he questioned administration policy at a recent hearing about conditions for detained migrants. It also shows that Trump has been spending way too much time in the presence of supremacist Zionists. Tapper just did it to Tlaib.

The African-American congressman, Elijah Cummings, a Maryland Democrat, Pelosi, and other Democrats fired back, as did The Baltimore Sun, which published a blistering editorial defending its hometown.

“We would tell the most dishonest man to ever occupy the Oval Office, the mocker of war heroes, the gleeful grabber of women’s private parts, the serial bankrupter of businesses, the useful idiot of Vladimir Putin and the guy who insisted there are ‘good people’ among murderous neo-Nazis that he’s still not fooling most Americans into believing he’s even slightly competent in his current post,” the editorial said. “Or that he possesses a scintilla of integrity. Better to have some vermin living in your neighborhood than to be one.”

Democrats appearing on the Sunday talk shows came to Cummings’s defense and assailed Trump for playing racial games. Appearing on “This Week” on ABC, Representative Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, said the president was “disgusting and racist,” while Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, noted that Trump does not attack impoverished rural white districts.

“Our job is to bring people together to improve life for all people,” Sanders, who himself lamented conditions in West Baltimore in 2015 as resembling “a Third World country,” said on “State of the Union” on CNN. “Not to have a racist president who attacks people because they are African-American. That is a disgrace. And that’s why we’re going to defeat this president.”

So the pre$$ implication there is that Bernie is also racist?

On “Fox News Sunday,” White House chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney said Trump made a fair point about the state of affairs in Cummings’s district. “It has absolutely zero to do with race,” he said, adding: “Have you seen some of the pictures on the Internet? Just this morning from the conditions in Baltimore, Maryland. Have you seen them?” 

Isn't he just acting chief of staff?

During his campaign and at points during his presidency, Trump has insisted that “we’re fixing the inner cities,” but made no effort in his weekend tweets to explain what if anything he is doing to fix Baltimore. Instead, he went after Pelosi, herself a native of Baltimore and the daughter and brother of former mayors who chastised him for his original tweets, saying that her San Francisco district was “not even recognizable lately.”

“Someone please explain to Nancy Pelosi, who was recently called racist by those in her own party, that there is nothing wrong with bringing out the very obvious fact that Congressman Elijah Cummings has done a very poor job for his district,” the president wrote.....

--more--"

"Trump lashes out at Sharpton, saying he ‘hates whites’" by Peter Baker New York Times, July 29, 2019

WASHINGTON — President Trump, after a weekend spent assailing a leading African-American congressman from Baltimore, widened his war on critics of color Monday morning as he denounced the Rev. Al Sharpton, a longtime civil rights leader and MSNBC host.

“I’ve never heard him say anything racial,” Sharpton recently told The New York Times of his time with Trump in New York, but he noted that Trump did not surround himself with people of color in his business before becoming president. “I’ve never seen a black exec in Trump Organization,” Sharpton said. “I’ve never seen a black on his C-suite.”

I suppose he has a point there.

Sharpton has his own complicated history when it comes to race. He was an outspoken activist through a string of racially charged episodes in New York in the 1980s and 1990s, and was regarded in that era alternately as a champion of social justice or a self-promoting provocateur. He drew broad criticism as one of the most vocal supporters of Tawana Brawley, an African American teenager whose claims of abuse and rape by a gang of white men in 1987 were eventually exposed as a hoax.

Sharpton has reinvented himself over the years as a more measured and more mainstream national voice on civil rights and social justice, and he ran unsuccessfully for president in 2004. His National Action Network has become a force on the political left, and even Trump twice attended its conventions — indeed, he cut the ribbon at the 2002 gathering.

He's also an informant for the FBI, which is about where he lost me.

It means he is all part of the show, folks, and benefiting from the wrestling match.

Sharpton on Monday posted a picture of himself with Trump. “Trump at NAN Convention 2006 telling James Brown and Jesse Jackson why he respects my work. Different tune now.”

The flare-up with Sharpton came after Trump assailed Representative Elijah E. Cummings, the Democrat who represents much of Maryland’s largest city, over the weekend. In a phone interview with MSNBC after Trump’s initial attack on him Monday morning, Sharpton attributed it to the reelection politics of 2020.....

Oh, it's all politics, I see.

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Related:

"Academics, lawmakers, dignitaries, and President Trump will gather in Virginia this week for events celebrating the beginnings of American democracy four centuries ago. Tuesday marks the 400th anniversary of the first meeting of the House of Burgesses — the first representative legislative assembly in the Western Hemisphere — at Jamestown, the first permanent English colony in North America. The first meeting of the House of Burgesses, which took place at a church in Jamestown, laid the foundation for representative government in what would become the United States. Tuesday’s events are just one part of a yearlong commemoration called American Evolution meant to honor key milestones in the state’s Colonial history, including the 400th anniversary of the first enslaved Africans’ arrival in English North America....."

Look at that whitewash of the past (all those guys were slaveholders) as Cummings and Trump go at it, and I've seen this movie before. It's the same script as August two years ago, when the pre$$ and country was embroiled in Charlottesville and race.

"Virginia’s black state lawmakers announced Monday they will boycott an event this week commemorating the beginnings of American democracy because President Trump is scheduled to attend. The Virginia Legislative Black Caucus said its members would not attend a ceremony in Jamestown on Tuesday marking the 400th anniversary of the first representative assembly in the Western Hemisphere. ‘‘The commemoration of the birth of this nation and its democracy will be tarnished unduly with the participation of the president, who continues to make degrading comments toward minority leaders, promulgate policies that harm marginalized communities, and use racist and xenophobic rhetoric,’’ the caucus said in a statement. Caucus members said they will also boycott other parts of a weeklong series of events and have instead planned alternative commemorations Tuesday in Richmond. Trump, who event organizers say will give remarks Tuesday, is among the state and national leaders and dignitaries scheduled to attend the Jamestown ceremony......"

How odd that they are boycotting an event that they would never have been allowed into except as a slave.

I just can't imagine where all that racism is coming from, can you?

"A former top Trump administration appointee at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ‘‘may have abused his authority’’ and ‘‘misused his position for private gain’’ in an attempt to diffuse an article from The Washington Post about online posts in which he questioned whether the N-word was racist, according to an inspector general’s report. Before the article was published, Eric Blankenstein, a policy director at the CFPB responsible for enforcing the country’s fair lending laws, asked a subordinate to write a statement in support of him that also ‘‘created the appearance of a violation’’ of ethics rules, according to the report, which was obtained by The Post through the offices of Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Sherrod Brown of Iowa. The subordinate, Patrice Finklin, told investigators she didn’t feel she had a choice and was given little time to write the statement in which she described Blankenstein as ‘‘collegial, thoughtful and meticulous.’’

Looks like they discovered a mole, and it could be four more years of an authentically racist Trump.

Soon it will be a crime to give an illegal water.

Also see:

"US Senator Rick Scott said Sunday that he was never told by Homeland Security officials in 2016 when he was Florida’s governor that Russian hackers had gained access to voter databases in two Florida counties ahead of the presidential election. Scott said on NBC’s ‘‘Meet the Press’’ that he was never contacted by the Department of Homeland Security in 2016 about the infiltration. The Republican said he learned about most of the details this year. Current Governor Ron DeSantis said in May that the hackers didn’t manipulate any data and the election results weren’t compromised. DeSantis and other officials briefed on the matter wouldn’t say which counties. Scott made his comments when asked about a Senate report released last week that said all states were targeted to varying degrees by Russian hackers. Scott said he hasn’t yet read the report, though he was briefed on it. Last August, then-Democratic US Senator Bill Nelson, who Scott was running against, said that Russians had penetrated the systems of certain Florida counties and had ‘‘free rein to move about’’ before last year’s midterm election. Scott, who defeated Nelson in the November election, criticized Nelson’s allegations, saying they were sensational. The Senate report outlined efforts by Russian hackers to get into systems in Illinois and around two dozen unnamed states. It detailed attempts in Illinois and a state only referred to as ‘‘State 2’’ but widely believed to be Florida, according to newsreports."

Why didn't the Obama administration say a word, huh? 

Because that would have exposed the infiltration and spying on an opposing party's presidential campaign, and besides, Hillary was going to win anyway?

"As Donald Trump was preparing to deliver an address on energy policy in May 2016, Paul Manafort, his campaign chairman, had a question about the speech’s contents for Thomas J. Barrack Jr., a top campaign fund-raiser and close friend of Trump. “Are you running this by our friends?” Manafort asked in a previously undisclosed e-mail to Barrack, whose real estate and investment firm does extensive business in the Middle East. Barrack was, in fact, coordinating the language in a draft of the speech with Persian Gulf contacts including Rashid al-Malik, an Emirati businessman who is close to the rulers of the United Arab Emirates. The exchanges about Trump’s energy speech are among a series of interactions that have come under scrutiny by federal prosecutors looking at foreign influence over his campaign, his transition, and the early stages of his administration, according to documents and interviews with people familiar with the case. Investigators have looked in particular at whether Barrack or others violated the law requiring people who try to influence US policy or opinion at the direction of foreign governments or entities to disclose their activities to the Justice Department, people familiar with the case said. The inquiry had proceeded far enough last month that Barrack, who played an influential role in the campaign and acts as an outside adviser to the White House, was interviewed, at his request, by prosecutors in the public integrity unit of the US attorney’s office in Brooklyn. Barrack’s spokesman, Owen Blicksilver, said that in expectation of this article, Barrack’s lawyer had again contacted the prosecutors’ office and “confirmed they have no further questions for Mr. Barrack.” Barrack has not been accused of wrongdoing, and his aides said he never worked on behalf of foreign states or entities. Asked about the status of the inquiry, a representative for the US attorney’s office in Brooklyn declined to comment."

Yeah, try to get your mind around that one if you can.

"The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee said Sunday that he believes President Trump ‘‘richly deserves impeachment,’’ an explosive statement from the lawmaker whose committee has the power to launch proceedings to remove the president from office. Representative Jerrold Nadler, Democrat of New York, appearing on CNN’s ‘‘State of the Union,’’ said Trump ‘‘has done many impeachable offenses, he’s violated the law six ways from Sunday.’’ ‘‘But that’s not the question,’’ Nadler continued. ‘‘The question is, can we develop enough evidence to put before the American people?’’ The distinction illustrates a growing tension within the Democratic Party: Many members are convinced Trump ought to be impeached, but the consensus among party leaders is that they should try to secure more records and witness interviews through the courts before embarking on such a politically incendiary move, especially as the GOP-controlled Senate is likely to defeat such an effort.

That's where the print was cut off, but the web Globe kept flirting with the idea:

 Nadler’s comments come on the heels of former special counsel Robert Mueller’s congressional testimony on his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Nadler called the testimony ‘‘an inflection point, in that it broke the administration’s lie, the attorney general’s lie, that the president was fully exonerated by the Mueller report.’’ As the leader of the committee that would launch the impeachment hearings, Nadler is the most important Democrat yet to publicly state his personal support for the cause in no uncertain terms, but he has been loath to cross House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California in his official moves — and gave no sign Sunday that he intended to break with that pattern. ‘‘We’re investigating the corruption of the administration, the abuses of power . . . all the things that might cause us to recommend articles of impeachment,’’ Nadler said. ‘‘We now have to get further evidence and put it before the American people as we consider articles of impeachment.’’ Pelosi has regularly resisted the calls from her caucus for impeachment proceedings, but last week, she signed off on the House Judiciary Committee’s appeal to a federal judge to enforce its subpoenas seeking the redacted grand jury information contained in the Mueller report. Nadler also told reporters that the panel would go to court next week to enforce its subpoenas against former White House counsel Donald McGahn, whose testimony was key to the report."

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

NYC police seek 2 shooters in playground shooting

That has already been overshadowed by shooting in California (the photos have not convinced me), and thoughts and prayers’ aren’t enough anymore.

Family identifies victim of Dorchester shooting

At least Big Papi will be back soon!

"Woman set to replace Puerto Rico’s governor doesn’t want job" by Dánica Coto Associated Press, July 28, 2019

SAN JUAN — The woman who is supposed to replace Puerto Rico’s embattled governor announced Sunday that she doesn’t want the job as the US territory reels from political crisis.

She must be out of her mind!

Justice Secretary Wanda Vázquez said in a Twitter post that she hopes Governor Ricardo Rosselló will appoint a secretary of state before resigning Aug. 2 as planned.

Former secretary of state Luis Rivera Marín would have been next in line as governor, according to the US territory’s constitution, but he is one of more than a dozen officials who have resigned in recent weeks since someone leaked an obscenity-laced chat in which Rosselló and close advisers insulted people including women and victims of Hurricane Maria.

Rosselló on Wednesday announced that he would step down following nearly two weeks of massive protests amid anger over the chat, corruption charges against several former government officials, and a 13-year recession. In the chat, the 40-year-old Democrat and son of a governor called a female politician a ‘‘whore,’’ referred to another as a ‘‘daughter of a bitch,’’ and made fun of an obese man with whom he posed in a photo.

Rosselló became the first governor to resign in the modern history of Puerto Rico, a US territory of 3.2 million American citizens. He is more than halfway through his four-year term. Marín’s resignation had left Vázquez as next in line to be governor, but she said she has already told Rosselló about her wishes not to get the job, creating a chaotic scenario about who will be Puerto Rico’s next leader.

If Rosselló’s choice for a secretary of state is not approved by the island’s House and Senate, Puerto Rico’s law dictates the treasury secretary would be next in line if the justice secretary doesn’t become governor, but current Treasury Secretary Francisco Parés is too young at 31 years old. The constitution dictates the person would have to be at least 35, so that would leave interim Education Secretary Eligio Hernández next in line. He replaced former education secretary Julia Keleher, who resigned in April and was arrested July 10 on federal corruption charges. She has pleaded not guilty.

‘‘This is crazy,’’ political expert Mario Negrón Portillo said in a phone interview on Sunday. ‘‘We have no idea what’s even going to happen tomorrow. Societies cannot live with this type of uncertainty.’’

Time to leave.

Vázquez’s comments came less than an hour after Public Affairs Secretary Anthony Maceira resigned. The announcement comes a day before Puerto Ricans planned another march, this time against Vázquez, who is accused of not ordering an investigation into the alleged mismanagement of supplies for hurricane victims, among other things.

Vázquez said on Friday that there is a lot of misinformation but that she cannot speak publicly about certain cases.

‘‘The vicious attacks on my personal and professional integrity continue,’’ she said. ‘‘The desire and agenda of some to try to undermine my credibility at this moment of transcendental importance to Puerto Rico and to destabilize the governmental order is evident.’’

She sounds like a conspiracy theorist!

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RelatedShades of resistance, unity at Puerto Rican parade

She may be staying after all.

Ashamed to be an American

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It comes after a moderate rebellion that was placed below the fold?!

A clash of pragmatism against ideological purity dominates Democratic debate

It's the Globe's take on what I did not see one minute of except for a clip of Tim Ryan on Fox at 11 as a breezed through some channels before lights out.

My printed paper gave me an early round accounting by the Associated Press while the web provided a fact check by the The New York Times (ha-ha-ha-ha!)

"Many suburban women recoil as Trump dives into racial politics" by Marc Levy and Scott Bauer Associated Press, July 30, 2019

BROOKFIELD, Wis. — Carol Evans approves of President Trump’s immigration policy. She gives him credit for the strong economy, but the Republican from the affluent Milwaukee suburbs of Waukesha County, a GOP bedrock in the state, can’t commit to voting for Trump next year, as she did in 2016.

‘‘I just don’t like the way he talks about other people,’’ Evans, 79, a retired data entry supervisor, said as she walked through a shopping mall in Brookfield, days after Trump fired off a racist tweet at Democratic congresswomen.

The president’s recent return to racial politics may be aimed at rallying his base of white working-class voters across rural America, but the risks of the strategy are glaring in conversations with women like Evans.

Many professional, suburban women — a critical voting bloc in 2020 — recoil at the abrasive, divisive rhetoric, exposing the president to a potential wave of opposition in key battlegrounds.

In more than three dozen interviews with women in critical suburbs, nearly all expressed dismay — or worse — at Trump’s racially polarizing insults and what was often described as his unpresidential treatment of people.

Even some who gave Trump credit for the economy or backed his crackdown on immigration acknowledged they were troubled or uncomfortable lining up behind the president.

So he's what, dead in the water, a lame duck, Dems could run a clown monkey and still win?

Very reassuring. I'm kind of hoping a Sanders-Warren ticket (or vice-versa), but I'm sure whichever one is allowed on the ticket in whatever form will be next to a moderate.

The interviewsin suburbs of Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Detroit, and Denver — are a warning light for the Republican president’s reelection campaign. Trump did not win a majority of female voters in 2016, but he won enoughnotably winning white women by a roughly 10 percentage-point margin, according to the American National Election Studies survey — to help him eke out victories across the Rust Belt and take the White House.

Okay. So what we have here is the real reason Hillary lost, and she has no one to blame but herself. If the results are to be believed, which we are told they are, not tampered with in any way despite Russia's best efforts(?), then she lost it. 

Furthermore, since I am a firm believer in rigged elections and narratives, is that Trump won by much more. The fix was in, and Clinton rolled in the popular vote (or so we are told; map of counties is red except for urban areas and some coasts), but they couldn't really flip enough in the heartland to get away with it. I know that will ruffle some of you up, but I have been a student of presidential elections for decades now and I know I have enumerated of the two pillars of peace and prosperity and how the failure of one should, but seldom does, doom a president.

To thumbnail the current century, Gore had both prosperity and peace in 2000 and we all know how that ended up. Flippity-flop in Florida. Odd doings in 2004, too, when Bush had lost the peace pillar due to his lies leading to the invasion of Iraq. Kerry won all the exit polls, especially in critical Ohio, but the power went out for an hour and once it came back Bush, not Kerry, was up by 3. 

(As an aside, I'm not saying a different result would have been better in any of these cases. Maybe mitigating fringe factors and issues, but the basic plan stays in place. Kerry's main argument, if you remember, was I can manage the Empire better)

By 2008, Bush passes a torch with neither pillar. Still no peace and a financial crash at the end of his term. We get Obama, and rightfully so. By 2012, the people were tired of him and were ready for Romney. Still no peace, with Libya attacked and the start of the Syrian uprising. Obama had the operation, though, and was able to secure 2012. Then it was the Ukraine and Yemen, and by the end of his term wealth inequality had yawned. Both pillars had been knocked from under Hillary, a willing collaborator, and thus gave us Trump.

Since then, there are few signs Trump has expanded his support among women. The 2018 midterm elections amounted to a strong showing of opposition among women in the suburbs, registering in unprecedented turnout overall, a Democratic House, and a record number of women elected in state houses across the country.

A continuing trend of women voting against Republicans could prove exceedingly difficult for Trump to overcome.

‘‘It’s one of the more serious problems that the Republicans face,’’ said G. Terry Madonna, a pollster and director of the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Franklin and Marshall College in Pennsylvania.

In the Detroit suburb of Novi, where Democrat Hillary Clinton narrowly beat Trump in 2016, pet store worker Emily West saysshe probably would have cast her ballot for Trump if she had voted in 2016. Now, she’s primed to vote against him.

‘‘It was mainly when he got into office when my opinion started changing,’’ said West, 26. ‘‘Just the way he treats people.’’

West spoke days after Trump had fired off a tweet calling on four Democratic congresswomen of color to ‘‘go back’’ to their home countries, even though three of the four were born in the United States. Trump’s supporters later turned ‘‘Send her back!’’ into a rally cry aimed at the one foreign-born member of the group, Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, who came to the United States as a child, a refugee from Somalia.

Gave them an ultimatum.

Over the weekend, Trump picked up another racial trope, using Twitter to attack Democratic Representative Elijah Cummings and his majority-black Baltimore district by calling it a ‘‘disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess’’ where ‘‘no human being would want to live.’’

Pollsters say it is difficult to measure whether female voters will count Trump’s behavior against him more than their male counterparts will in 2020, but interviews with women reveal a clear discomfort with Trump’s character: It emerged again and again in the AP’s interviews and was a consistent objection cited by women across the political spectrum.

Oh, so the issue is going to be character come November. That's bad news for Joe

Good news for Liz.

‘‘I did not think it was going to be as bad as it is — definitely narcissism and sexism, but I did not think it was going to be as bad as it is,’’ said Kathy Barnes while shopping in the Denver suburb of conservative-leaning Lone Tree. ‘‘I am just ashamed to be an American right now.’’

There is the title of the post, and I guess you gotta leave.

I mean, I'm ashamed but not for the things the Globe constantly cites. I am ashamed over all the mass-murdering, war-criminal exercises they call wars that are based on lies bullhorn from my pre$$. The blood-spattered and the landscapes desolated by such endeavors, with sleight-of-hand deception and propaganda supplied the whole way along. With the still unrequited self-examination surrounding torture and indefinite detention lingering in the background, more war crimes for the ICC bar. 

Domestically, it's what the country has become regarding a police state and prison-industrial complex, all by policy design based on the same lies that undergird the wars. Citizens are blown away with no accountability from authority, the public is constantly subjected to endless mind-manipulating events both real and contrived, electronic data collection and surveillance is ever more ubiquitous, and the pocket-lining corruption has reached epidemic levels at nearly all layers.

That such a government would then hypocritically lecture the rest of the world on human rights, or any other matter, is embarrassing. I know it's not being carried out with my approval,  but it is being carried out under all our names; therefore, I feel I must at least offer some sort of apology to the world from the belly of the beast for its conduct. 

Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't see the warning light flashing.

Barnes, 55, a former insurance broker, left the Democratic Party years ago because she was open to voting Republican, but now she is one of the reasons that Colorado, once a competitive swing state, has been slipping away from the GOP.

In Novi, Mich., Yael Telgheder, 36, said she tends to vote Democratic and reluctantly voted for Clinton in 2016, ‘‘even though I didn’t like either, by the way.’’ Asked about Trump, the database manager lowered her voice.

‘‘I don’t think I should say those words in front of my daughter,’’ she said, her 3-year-old next to her. ‘‘To be honest, there are certain things that — he’s a businessman — so I understand the reasons behind them. But all of the disrespect and lies and stuff like that, it’s just too much for me.’’

That must be why my print copy chopped it there.

Such women are an electoral threat to the president in large part because women outnumber and outvote men, said Kelly Dittmar, a political science professor and a scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

‘‘They are especially vital because they are base voters for Democrats. They vote for Democrats in larger numbers than men, but for Republicans, they are also important because they have tended to be a larger proportion of swing voters,’’ Dittmar said.

It's really right there for Liz, isn't it?

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Maybe his support would increase if he apologized.

Well, it's off to Virginia:

"Trump hails African-American contributions to America amid battle with black critics" by Peter Baker and Katie Rogers New York Times, July 30, 2019

JAMESTOWN, Va. — The bitter, racial furor of recent days, punctuated by his latest comments assailing Representative Elijah Cummings, Democrat of Maryland, followed President Trump to Jamestown, where elected representatives first met in 1619. Virginia’s African-American state lawmakers boycotted his speech, calling the president an “emblem of hate” who does not represent the best ideals of the nation.

One state lawmaker, Ibraheem Samirah, stood and interrupted the president’s speech, holding up a sign that said, “Go Back to Your Corrupted Home” and “Deport Hate.” Samirah, a Democratic state delegate and a Palestinian American, shouted: “Mr. President, you cannot send us back. Virginia is our home.” He was led out politely by police officers.

Trump made no response nor did he reference the broader controversy during his speech but instead made a point of highlighting that this year is also the 400th anniversary of the first slaves brought to America.

“Today, in honor, we remember every sacred soul who suffered the horrors of slavery and the anguish of bondage,” he said, adding, “In the face of grave oppression and grave injustice, African Americans have built, strengthened, inspired, uplifted, protected, defended, and sustained our nation from its very earliest days.”

He was just reading from a script and didn't mean it. 

Just hours earlier, Trump again disparaged Cummings, whom he has accused in recent days of running a “disgusting” congressional district. “Baltimore is an example of what corrupt government leads to,” Trump told reporters as he left the White House. “I feel so sorry for the people of Baltimore, and if they ask me, we will get involved.”

Trump offered no evidence of corruption nor did he explain on what he based such an accusation, but he made clear he was unwilling to back down in a continuing war of words that has aggravated racial tensions and left many of his own advisers concerned that he was turning off suburban voters who could be a key to his reelection next year.

Give it a week. Then the ma$$ media will be focused on something else.

Facing questions about his apparent willingness in recent days to divide his supporters and opponents along racial lines, Trump insisted that he was “the least racist person there is anywhere in the world.” Then he called the Rev. Al Sharpton, another recent adversary, “a racist.”

He's also an informant for the FBI, which explains a lot of his activity.

This line of self-defense came a day after the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus, which represents elected members of the House of Delegates and the state Senate, said in a statement that its members could not “in good conscience sit silently” as a president who has promoted racial divisions is given such a prominent platform.

Think of what they are actually commemorating, and I know we have come a long way since they, but they are tearing down Robert E. Lee statues at the same time.

“It is impossible to ignore the emblem of hate and disdain that the president represents,” the caucus said in its statement. The statement added that Trump’s “repeated attacks on black legislators and comments about black communities” made him “ill suited to honor and commemorate such a monumental period in history, especially if this nation is to move forward with the ideals of ‘democracy, inclusion and opportunity.’ ”

This has gone from Trump is racist to you can't criticize a minority now!

The lawmakers’ protest came as Trump has employed racist tropes repeatedly in recent weeks. He told four Democratic congresswomen of color to “go back” to their home countries, even though three were born in the United States and the fourth was naturalized as a teenager. In the last several days, he has repeatedly assailed Cummings and his “rat and rodent infested” majority-black district and targeted other foes like Sharpton, who he said “Hates Whites & Cops.”

Print paper cut of the hate-filled, racist diatribe.

Cummings, chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, has emerged as a major foil for the president as his panel presses investigations into Trump’s administration. Last week, the committee authorized Cummings to subpoena work-related e-mails and text messages on personal devices of White House officials, including Ivanka Trump, the president’s elder daughter, and Jared Kushner, his son-in-law. “I think that Representative Cummings should take his oversight committee and start doing oversight on Baltimore,” Trump said.

Cummings is attacking the family and making things personal.

Aides said that the subpoena move last week riled Trump and helped fuel the anger that had been on public display since Saturday. The president has also bristled at criticism from Cummings of how detained migrants are being treated at the border, saying that the lawmaker should first worry about what Trump called the dismal conditions in his own district.

The ceremony Tuesday at the Jamestown Settlement Museum marked the first meeting of elected legislators in the New World. On July 30, 1619, a group of 22 representatives of plantations or settlements gathered in a church in Jamestown for the first time in what would be known as the House of Burgesses, the precursor to state legislatures and Congress in the centuries to come.

The event was already fraught for African-American lawmakers because of the anniversary of slavery. The caucus held alternative events in Richmond, including a wreath-laying at the Virginia state Capitol to honor African-American lawmakers who served after the Civil War, but Lieutenant Governor Justin E. Fairfax, Virginia’s only African-American statewide elected official and a Democrat, attended Tuesday’s ceremony, saying beforehand that the twin anniversaries “far supersede the petty and racist actions of the current occupant of the White House.”

Ironically, Fairfax himself has been accused of sexual harassment and the guy he works for, Northam, seems to have ridden out the blackface yearbook photos, as all that Democratic malfeasance is dispatched down the pre$$ memory hole and missing from the out-of-context narrative now being provided!

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RelatedTrump defends McConnell, attacks Washington Post

Looks like a gunfight at the D.C. corral:

2 dead, 2 wounded in shooting at Walmart in Mississippi

I'm told the shooter was a disgruntled employee. 

"Two women who worked with other mothers to try to stop gun violence in their South Side Chicago neighborhood were killed by bullets police do not believe were intended for them on the same corner where they would often hand out food and bring children to play. The gunfire on Friday night was instead meant for a man who is affiliated with a Chicago street gang and recently got out of prison, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said. The 58-year-old man, who was struck in the arm in the shooting and whose name hasn’t been released, is not cooperating with police, Guglielmi said. ‘‘We have no information to suggest they were the intended targets,’’ he said Tuesday, adding that police are still seeking leads in the case. No arrests have been made. The deaths of 26-year-old Chantell Grant and 35-year-old Andrea Stoudemire in the Englewood neighborhood served as a grim reminder of the kind of violence that prompted them to join Mothers Against Senseless Killings. The antiviolence group launched five years ago in the wake of the shooting death of another young mother at the same corner. ‘‘That’s why we’re out here seven days a week . . . trying to create a safe place where people can learn to be neighbors and not kill each other,’’ the group’s founder, Tamar Manasseh, said. She said she’s not willing to accept the notion that Grant, a mother of four, and Stoudemire, who had three children, were just in the wrong place at the wrong time. ‘‘They killed mothers on a corner where mothers sit every day,’’ Manasseh said. ‘‘You don’t have mothers killed in a place that is sacred to mothers and not take that as a message.’’ The drive-by shooting followed what has become a familiar pattern in Chicago, where more people are fatally shot than in any other city in the United States. During the same weekend, 48 people were shot in Chicago, eight of them fatally. A 23-year-old woman was shot in the leg, back, and face on June 25 by someone in a black vehicle in the same block where Grant and Stoudemire were gunned down, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. The woman survived, and police said there is no indication that shooting was connected to the one that killed the two mothers. Grant and Stoudemire were found lying on the sidewalk after a spray of bullets came from inside a blue SUV, police said. Manasseh said the women had been on the corner for hours Friday handing out food to other mothers and keeping watch over a vacant lot the group has turned into a play area for neighborhood children. She said Grant and Stoudemire had finished up for the day and had begun walking to a store to get food for themselves and their children when they were shot. ‘‘They can’t even walk to the store without getting killed,’’ said Manasseh, her voice rising. ‘‘They were killed for parenting.’’"

Of course, you can't say it's a Democrat city or criticize the mayor.

Besides, they care more about migrant families:

"More than a year after President Trump officially ended migrant family separations at the southern border, immigration authorities continue to routinely separate families for reasons as minor as a parent not changing a baby’s diaper or having a traffic citation for driving without a license, according to new documents filed Tuesday in federal court. More than 900 children have been removed from an adult — usually a parent — with whom they arrived at the southern border since June of 2018, according to tallies provided by the Department of Justice to the American Civil Liberties Union, which is challenging the separations. The latest separations are mainly based on crimes committed by the parent, according to the new documents, but ACLU lawyers argue that many of the violations are as minor as traffic tickets....."

I hope they are not DUIs or anything, and given the state of the motor records around here, maybe not a good idea.

Related: Two California college professors have installed seesaws along the U.S.-Mexico border so kids can play

See, the kids will have something to do while they confirm criminal status.

Speaking of California:

"California’s Democratic governor signed a law Tuesday requiring presidential candidates to release their tax returns to appear on the state’s primary ballot, a move aimed squarely at Republican President Trump, but even if the law withstands a likely legal challenge, Trump could avoid the requirements by choosing not to compete in California’s primary. With no credible GOP challenger at this point, he likely won’t need California’s delegates to win the Republican nomination. ‘‘As one of the largest economies in the world and home to one in nine Americans eligible to vote, California has a special responsibility to require this information of presidential and gubernatorial candidates,’’ Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom wrote in his veto message to the state Legislature. While the law is aimed at Trump, it would apply to all presidential contenders and candidates for governor. The major Democratic 2020 contenders have already released tax returns for roughly the past decade. Trump has bucked decades of precedent by refusing to release his....."

All Trump has to do to get delegates is call for a write-in campaign, and I'm glad they don't have problems in California like feces and needles in the streets of San Francisco or tent cities popping up everywhere (I know, racist to criticize).

What I did notice was the recent shooting was nowhere to be found in my paper today. The garlic must have left a bad taste in their mouth as the event was so quickly called out. Just another blip, blip, drip.

You know, with all the racial furor we have forgotten about the ladies:

"Two Republican senators split sharply in assessments of general accused of sexual assault" by Karoun Demirjian The Washington Post, July 30, 2019

WASHINGTON — Two survivors of sexual assault who serve on the Senate Armed Services Committee split sharply Tuesday in their assessments of whether President Trump’s pick to serve as the military’s second-highest officer was fit for the job amid accusations that he sexually assaulted an Army colonel when she was under his command.

‘‘Sexual assault happens in the military. It just didn’t happen in this case,’’ Senator Martha McSally, Republican from Arizona, said in defense of General John Hyten at his confirmation hearing, arguing that the case ‘‘wasn’t just a jump ball, not a he-said, she-said’’ but that ‘‘the full truth was revealed in this process.’’

‘‘The truth is that General Hyten is innocent of these charges,’’ she said, but Senator Joni Ernst, an Iowa Republican, said the facts of the investigation ‘‘left me with concerns regarding your judgment, leadership and fitness to serve as the next vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.’’

Hyten, who is currently in charge of the nation’s nuclear arsenal as the head of US Strategic Command, was nominated to serve as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in April. That prompted Colonel Kathryn Spletstoser to come forward with allegations that he repeatedly made unwanted sexual contact with her while the two traveled for work in 2017.

‘‘I’m intensely aware of the allegations made against me concerning one of the most serious problems we have in the military,’’ Hyten said Tuesday during his opening statement before the committee. ‘‘These allegations are false. There was a very extensive, thorough investigation . . . that revealed the truth: nothing happened, ever.’’

McSally and Ernst went public earlier this year with their personal stories of sexual assault and rape: McSally was the victim of a superior officer in the Air Force, while Ernst, who is also a veteran, was victimized in college.

Ernst did not defend Spletstoser’s allegations but focused her concerns on Hyten’s approach to the colonel, who was asked to leave his command after an internal investigation determined she had created a ‘‘toxic work environment.’’

McSally did not say how or why she reached the conclusion that she would support Hyten.

Both Hyten and Spletstoser said Tuesday that they would endorse a release of the report.

Several senators spoke in Hyten’s defense during Tuesday’s hearing, but no senators spoke out specifically in defense of Spletstoser.

Unlike in the Kavanaugh case.

--more--"

RelatedSexual assaults in the military spiked nearly 38 percent last year, Pentagon says

"A conservative lawyer and writer who argues for selling off the nation’s public lands is now in charge of a nearly quarter-billion acres in federally held range land and other wilderness. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt on Monday signed an order making Wyoming native William Perry Pendley acting head of the Bureau of Land Management. The bureau manages nearly 250 million acres of largely wild public lands and their minerals and other resources in vast holdings across the West. Pendley, a former midlevel Interior appointee in the Reagan administration, for decades has championed ranchers and others in standoffs with the federal government over grazing and other uses of public lands. He has written books accusing federal authorities and environmental advocates of ‘‘tyranny’’ and ‘‘waging war on the West.’’ He argued in a 2016 National Review article that the ‘‘Founding Fathers intended all lands owned by the federal government to be sold.’’ Pendley has welcomed Trump administration moves to open more federal land to mining and oil and gas development and other private business use, and he has called the oil and gas extraction technique known as fracking ‘‘an energy, economic, AND environmental miracle!’’ A conservation group called Pendley an ‘‘ideological zealot’’ and pointed to the federal agency’s announcement that it planned to move the BLM’s headquarters from Washington and disperse the headquarters staff among Western states. Pendley’s ‘‘ascending to the top of BLM just as it is being reorganized strongly suggests the administration is positioning itself to liquidate our shared public lands,’’ said Phil Hanceford, conservation director for The Wilderness Society conservation advocacy group. Interior spokeswoman Molly Block denied the accusation."

Looks like Trump just sealed up the Rockies and Southwest come election night 2020, and don't worry about prices at the pump. They will soon be handing the stuff out for you to drink.

Also see:

"Maine, “the colony of a colony,” kicked off a celebration Tuesday for the 200th anniversary of its statehood and independence from Massachusetts....."

Maybe it is time to secede.

UPDATE: 

I now think I know why the pre$$ and ma$$ media are hollering racist at Trump.

NEXT DAY UPDATES

The debate headline was slightly above my printed fold before the updated Bo$ton version turned it into the lead:

Health care, immigration emerge as points of division in second night of Democratic debate

Same drill as yesterday, with Jess Bidgood once again replacing the early round report today I received from the AP (not even going to waste the time to find, sorry). The Globe did give you an AP fact check that puts the Democratic debate rhetoric under scrutiny.

The general take is it was a mugging of the lefties, and when it comes to beating Trump, the far left will not hold and that will lead to nothing but loss.

The debate analysis was joined above fold by this:

Portland hurries to move asylum seekers out of sports arena before deadline

Related:

"Two New Hampshire judges who were lawyers for a woman convicted of lying about her role in the 1994 Rwanda genocide to obtain US citizenship are willing to testify on her behalf as she appeals her case. Beatrice Munyenyezi received a 10-year prison sentence in 2013. She was found guilty of lying about her role as a commander of a roadblock where Tutsis were singled out for slaughter. She also denied affiliation with any political party, despite her husband’s leadership role in the extremist Hutu party (AP)."

I wonder if she remembers Jean Teganya

That leads us to the page A2 National co-lead:

"Reagan called Africans ‘monkeys’ in call with Nixon, tape reveals" by Sarah Mervosh and Niraj Chokshi New York Times, July 31, 2019

Man, they are really diving deep, huh?

Ronald Reagan was the governor of California in 1971 when he phoned the White House to vent his political frustration to President Richard M. Nixon and, according to a newly released audio recording, called African people “monkeys” in a slur that sparked laughter from the president of the United States.

The previously undisclosed exchange took place after the United Nations voted to expel Taiwan in order to seat representatives from Beijing, a move that the United States opposed. Delegates from Tanzania celebrated with a victory dance in the General Assembly hall.

It means they have been sitting on it, waiting for just the right time to use it.

“To see those monkeys from those African countries, damn them,” Reagan said, to laughter from Nixon. “They are still uncomfortable wearing shoes.”

In other recordings, Nixon went on to recount his conversation with Reagan to others, describing the African delegates as “cannibals” as he sought to blame them for the UN vote.

The exchange between two former presidents of the United States on Oct. 26, 1971, was revealed in new audio released by the National Archives and published Tuesday by The Atlantic. The audio was the latest reminder of the long history of racism by American presidents and came as the current president faces fierce criticism for his attacks on prominent people of color.

“Reagan opens the door and Nixon runs with the racist tropes,” said Timothy Naftali, the former director of the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum who requested the recording and wrote the article in The Atlantic.

“This is not just a story about Reagan’s racism,” he said in an interview. “It’s also a reminder about how in the Oval Office, racism can beget racism” and “reveal latent racism in others.”

In other words, you are racist and you don't even know it (with supremacist Jews making the decision).

The National Archives originally withheld part of the recording to protect Reagan’s privacy, said Naftali, who requested a full version last year. He said the timing of the release this month was a coincidence that offered important historical context.

UH-HUH!

If you believe that one, I've got a bridge to sell you.

In recent weeks, President Trump has been under renewed criticism for comments that have been condemned as racist.

Gotta get that Iranian regime changed, man!

A poll conducted this month by Quinnipiac University found that half of voters believe Trump is racist, but voters are sharply divided along partisan lines. When separated by party, 86 percent of Democratic voters classified Trump as racist, while 91 percent of Republicans said he was not.

Race is expected to be a key issue in the 2020 election, as Democratic candidates seek to prove they can help America bridge its racial divide.

In other words, it's the flip side of Trump's gig and also identity politicking in an attempt to scare all the black voters into line.

Gee, the back-and-forth of the $elf-$erving wre$tling match is so compelling, huh?

From the beginning, the American presidency has been stained by racial prejudice, often a reflection of broader sentiment among white citizens. Such views have persisted well into modern times.

“If you dig deep enough you’ll find something like this in probably most presidents of the 20th century,” said Jelani Cobb, a professor of journalism at Columbia University and former director of the Africana Studies Institute at the University of Connecticut, who frequently writes on race, politics, history, and culture. 

Then remove the names, take down the statues, and by no means my mealy-mouthed puppet politicians refer to the glorious history of this hateful, blood-soaked nation of empire or revere its war criminal presidents. All the paintings must come down, and pray with me, Henry, pray with me.

Reagan died in 2004. “If he said that 50 years ago, he shouldn’t have,” Melissa Giller, a spokeswoman for the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute, said in a statement. “And he would be the first person to apologize.”

Wasn't he lionized in the eulogies by Billy C and George W?

Naftali said that the tapes revealing the private conversation between Reagan and Nixon were a “data point” to help understand their racial worldview and a prism through which to view their policies. At the same time, the legacies of some of the presidents who held such views are complicated, Cobb said.

“The fact that they said something racist doesn’t tell you everything about their politics,” he said. “And then sometimes it does.”

President Ronald Reagan poses for photographers in the Oval Office at the White House on June 23, 1986.
President Ronald Reagan poses for photographers in the Oval Office at the White House on June 23, 1986. (MIKE SARGENT/AFP/Getty Images)

Well.....

--more--"

Now about your politics:

"The Senate has confirmed Kelly Craft to become the next US envoy to the United Nations despite Democratic concerns about her inexperience and potential conflicts of interest. Craft, a longtime GOP activist from Kentucky, is currently US ambassador to Canada. She was confirmed 56-34, ending a more than seven-month vacancy in the key diplomatic position. She and her husband, Joe Craft, have donated millions of dollars to Republican political candidates, and she will be the first major political donor to occupy the top UN post for any administration. Joe Craft is the chief executive of Alliance Resource Partners, one of the largest coal producers in the country. In her confirmation hearing, Craft vowed to continue the efforts of Trump’s first ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, to push for reform at the world body and to fight against anti-Israel resolutions and actions by the UN and its affiliated agencies."

Not enough Democrats were concerned because she picked up three of them, and as you can see, amidst all this media-generated smoke about racism, it is Make Israel Great Again when it comes to Trump administration (the World lead, btw):

World lead:

"Israel is expected to approve surge in Jewish construction in West Bank" by Isabel Kershner New York Times, July 31, 2019

JERUSALEM — In a rare step, Israel approved plans late Tuesday to build 715 housing units for Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, though the government is soon expected to endorse 6,800 units for Jewish settlers there, too.

Rare indeed, for they are usually knocking their houses down!

About 3,700 settler housing units have already been approved this year, and the addition of 6,800 would push 2019 past the record for approvals in a single year. The news comes as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is campaigning for support from right-wing voters, including settlers, less than six weeks before a parliamentary election.

The land theft continues unabated along with all the other indignities inflicted upon Palestinians, but don't worry, help is on the way!

With Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, visiting the region to lay more groundwork for the administration’s plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the approval of Palestinian housing is seen in Israel as a gesture that will please the Americans, but it did nothing to placate the Palestinian leadership.

Oh, after the Bahrain summit fell flat and was quickly dispatched down the pre$$ memory hole.

The true scale of the approvals was unclear because some of them may be retroactive, authorizing homes that had already been constructed without permits. Settlement plans are also often “recycled,” going through several stages of approval.

Meaning Zionist Jews build illegally on Palestinian land, then the government retroactively legalizes it. Nice shell game and trick.

The Palestinian housing units would go up in what is known as Area C, covering more than 60 percent of the West Bank, where Israel maintains full civilian and security control. Only a few dozen permits for Palestinian buildings in that area have been approved in the last decade, the last in 2016, according to Peace Now, an Israeli left-wing advocacy group that tracks settlement construction.

Many settlers hope — and Palestinians fear — that Israel aims eventually to annex much of that territory.

Basically a given now, and it sure doesn't raise a ruckus like Crimea, does it?

Shani Sasson, a spokeswoman for the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, the Israeli security agency that deals with Palestinian civil affairs, said that an Israeli military planning committee would convene in the next week or two to promote plans for 6,800 units in the Jewish settlements.

Israeli political analysts said that the approval of housing for Palestinians appeared timed to Kushner’s visit and was meant to help him sell a long-awaited peace plan to Arab leaders.

By offering 715 crumbs while Israel approves 6,800 homes?

I don't know if you can top such arrogant chutzpah. They might as well say we have you by the balls.

David M. Friedman, the US ambassador to Israel and an architect of the administration’s plan, told CNN in an interview Tuesday: “We spent lots of time speaking to the Israelis about improving conditions in the West Bank and Gaza. A lot.”

“We care very much about the Palestinian people, about improving the quality of life,” he added. “We work with them extensively on it. We think it’s good for the Israelis and good for the Palestinians.”

Yeah, they care. That's why they shut down their offices and took away what miserly aid we offered as they plow billions upon billions into Israel war machine and supply it with weapons of mass destruction like depleted uranium munitions and white phosphorous bombs.

Fuck, 9/11 was good for Israel, or so I heard.

There has been speculation in Israel that the Trump administration might begin to roll out its plan before the election, possibly at a summit meeting to be attended by Arab leaders. White House officials said Wednesday that, as yet, no such meeting was planned.

If so, they are desperate! This means they are trailing badly in the polls, as all the pre$$ smokescreen and lies conceals the endless degradation of the environment, the ad nauseam continuation of the mass-murdering wars of empire, and the increasing yawn of wealthy inequality that seems to accelerate no matter who is president, with the end result being rural poverty and places like Baltimore (for the record, Bo$ton has its own sections but the Globe spends most of its time in Cambridge and the Seaport).

After an inconclusive election in April, Netanyahu was unable to form a governing coalition, forcing him to call another election Sept. 17. He has been urging right-wing voters, including settlers, to vote for his conservative Likud party, rather than smaller parties to the right, to ensure that he will be in a position to lead the next government.

I want to clear up something in that last paragraph. Netanyahu wasn't forced to call another election. His move to dissolve the Knesset and call for a new election was unusual. In the entire history of Israel, it had never been done. Instead, the president would ask the second-place finisher if they could form a government after Netanyahu failed to do so. This is based on the Globe's own reporting.

My point is, why the distortion from the New York Times reporter (who is also an Israel citizen with ties to the military)?

“No settlement and no settler will ever be uprooted,” Netanyahu pledged during a visit to the settlement of Efrat, south of Jerusalem, on Tuesday. That statement staked out a maximalist position that appeared to preclude both the establishment of a contiguous Palestinian state alongside Israel — a longstanding Palestinian and international goal — and the engagement of the Palestinian leadership in renewed peace talks.

No preconditions!

Friedman told CNN that the administration believed in Palestinian autonomy, short of independent statehood.

“We believe in Palestinian civilian self-governance,” he said. “We believe that autonomy should be extended up until the point where it interferes with Israeli security.”

What he is saying is it is all Israel.

In Efrat, Netanyahu toured sites where more than 1,000 new homes had already been completed or were under construction. He said an additional 8,000 homes would be built in Efrat in the coming years. Most Israelis believe Efrat will remain under Israeli control under any future peace deal with the Palestinians.....

But NO preconditions!

--more--"

Related:

"Facebook Inc. doesn’t have to face a lawsuit by victims of Hamas attacks and their relatives who claimed that the social network unlawfully assisted the terror group, a federal appeals court ruled. In a 66-page ruling issued Wednesday, a divided court upheld a judge’s decision to throw out the case, saying an interactive computer service is not the publisher of third-party information when it uses tools that are designed to match content with consumer interests. “Facebook does not edit (or suggest edits) for the content that its users — including Hamas — publish,” the US Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit said, noting that the company only requires users to provide basic information and therefore acts as a “neutral intermediary.”

Here is a tour of the Palestinian houses they plan to build, and you will never guess who has been contracted to build them:

"Trump ‘rodent’ tweets ring true at Kushner-owned apartments" by Regina Garcia Cano and Bernard Condon Associated Press, July 31, 2019

BALTIMORE — Jared Kushner’s family real estate firm owns thousands of apartments and townhomes in the Baltimore area, and some have been criticized for the same kind of disrepair and neglect that the president has accused local leaders of failing to address. Residents have complained about mold, bedbugs, leaks, and, yes, mice — plenty of mice, and they say management appears in no hurry to fix the problems.

Conditions got so bad two years ago that the Baltimore County government issued a release showing the Kushner Cos. had violated housing codes more than 200 times in just 10 months and only moved to fix the problems after being threatened with fines.

Yeah, threaten the money -- BDS -- and it gets their attention.

In a statement, the Kushner Cos. said it was proud of its Baltimore-area apartments and has worked to maintain a ‘‘high quality residential experience for our tenants’’ by investing ‘‘substantial amounts’’ in upkeep.

A  boasts of “amenities that amaze,’’ but many of the 181 comments posted by residents at the review site apartmentratings.com complain of rats, mold, bedbugs, roaches, and leaks. The reviews say management is generally unresponsive.

A 2017 report by the New York Times and ProPublica about residents at Kushner-owned developments echoed many of the online complaints, with one woman saying she found a mouse on her 12-year-old child’s bed. The Kushner Cos. told the Times at the time that it had spent $10 million on its properties, but their age means issues can still arise.

A Baltimore Sun story the same year found the Kushner Cos. used the courts to arrest tenants late on rent more than any other landlord in the state, and a lawsuit seeking class-action status for residents alleges Westminster Management, the Kushner subsidiary that oversees rental properties in Maryland and other states, often charges tenants illegal and excessive fees that keeps them in constant fear of eviction and guessing what they owe. Westminster has said it has broken no laws and denies the charges.

When you think about how involved in the Zettler movement he is, I suppose it is no surprise that he is just another Jewi$h slumlord. What is a surprise is that Baltimore is becoming like Gaza!

Jared Kushner took in $3.1 million from Westminster in the past two years, according to financial disclosure reports he filed with the federal government. He stepped down as chief executive of parent company Kushner Cos. when he and his wife, Ivanka Trump, joined the White House as senior advisers to the president, but he still retains a financial interest and draws money from many of its operations.

We hear a lot about emoluments and the Trump hotel, but the Democrats never bring this stuff up and the pre$$ often treats such things as a one-day wonder. It doesn't get the flogging that the advocacy issues and agendas do.

At the Kushners’ Dutch Village community in Baltimore, Ronald Newson says his 86-year-old mother, Carrie, has been asking maintenance staff for nearly a year to patch a hole in her ceiling from a leak on the second floor, and that someone has to come to kill all the mice she’s been living with.

As a stopgap measure, she jammed the leg of a chair against a hole in the corner of her living room, but they kept coming out anyway. They also come from behind her stove.

‘‘It takes them a long time to get repairs done,’’ the son said. He suggested that Trump, instead of blaming Cummings for the city’s problems, should look to landlords like Kushner, too.

‘‘He talks about everyone but his son-in-law.’’

Somehow the kid is above it all.

--more--"

Make that kids:

"Rape case that roiled Israel falls apart, with 12 suspects freed" by Isabel Kershner New York Times, July 28, 2019

JERUSALEM — An allegation of gang rape at a Cyprus resort that produced a bout of national soul searching in Israel took a dramatic turn Sunday with the release of the remaining teenage Israeli suspects and the arrest of the woman who accused them.

It's the official end of #MeToo.

A dozen Israelis, ranging in age from 15 to 18, had been arrested in the case, in which a 19-year-old British woman said they had raped her in a hotel room in the Cyprus resort town of Ayia Napa.

Five of the suspects were freed Thursday and returned to Israel. The others were freed Sunday without conditions, according to their lawyers and police.

The woman was charged with making a false accusation, according to a police spokesman. She was due to appear in court Monday, he said by phone. Neither the woman nor the suspects have been publicly identified.

So much for believe the woman. 

Now it is verify, don't trust! Just came too late for Conyers, Franken, Rose, Lauer, Moonves.

According to law enforcement officials, the woman said she was gang raped July 17, and the first details of the case emerged with the arrest of the Israelis and their subsequent arraignment in a Cyprus court July 18.

The 12 Israelis were investigated on charges of rape and conspiracy to commit a felony, said Yaniv Habari, a lawyer representing three of the suspects. Speaking by phone from Cyprus on Sunday, he added that the police conducted DNA tests and seized 11 cellphones to examine videos and other evidence.

DNA tests indicated that three of the suspects had had some form of sexual contact with the woman, according to the lawyers for the detainees, but their clients said the encounter had been consensual. It was not clear how or whether the other nine suspects were involved.

Habari said that one of his clients had an alibi and another said that he had not been in the room where the alleged attack took place.

The Accused.

Lawyers representing the suspects told reporters that the 12 had traveled to the resort in three separate groups that did not know one another.

The case has roiled Israel, where the reaction has revolved around concerns about victim shaming and about the pressures in Israeli society to prove manliness.

You prove your manliness by gang-raping a woman? 

What kind of sick, evil, satanic soul would even think such a thing?

Not only that, it appears that the Palestinians are in the same boat given the oppressive treatment at the hands of monsters like these.

--more--" 

I'm sure that one-day wonder will be just a blip, and at least Epstein and Weinstein can breath a bit easier now -- as can we all:

"The Senate Armed Services Committee voted Wednesday to recommend that President Trump’s pick to be the military’s second-highest officer be confirmed by the full Senate, despite an Army colonel’s allegations that he repeatedly sexually assaulted her while she served under him. The vote was 20 to 7, reflecting bipartisan support for General John Hyten, currently in charge of the national’s nuclear arsenal as the head of US Strategic Command. The vote reflected bipartisan opposition, after Senator Joni Ernst, Republican of Iowa, decided to vote against recommending Hyten’s confirmation....."

One Republican votes with six Democrats in a two-thirds vote and I'm told it is bipartisan opposition, wow!

"The ousted governor of Puerto Rico, Ricardo A. Rosselló, chose his successor Wednesday, nominating Pedro R. Pierluisi, who formerly represented the island in Congress, to serve as secretary of state. The move positions Pierluisi to take over as governor when Rosselló’s resignation becomes effective this week, but Pierluisi’s confirmation seems far from certain....."

Those are rather absurd optics. 

Maybe it is time to move to Detroit:

"Prosecutors are dropping an assault charge against a 10-year-old suburban Detroit boy who was accused of hitting a 9-year-old classmate in the face with a rubber ball similar to a dodge ball. Wayne County prosecutor Kym Worthy on Wednesday said there’s a ‘‘better way to go forward’’ than to take the child to juvenile court. She encouraged the families to find a solution. Students at a Canton Township school were playing a game on April 29 in which kids jump to catch a ball. Authorities said the older boy forcefully threw the ball, leaving his classmate with a concussion. The older boy’s mother claimed race was a factor in the investigation. Her son is black. Worthy, who is black, called that ‘‘categorically wrong.’’

Think of it as a schoolyard baptism:

"An Iowa seminary student honeymooning in Florida drowned when he was swept out to sea on his first time in the ocean, officials said. A St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office incident report said Dalton Cottrell, 22, of Malcom, Iowa, drowned while swimming Tuesday at Crescent Beach, south of Jacksonville, according to The Florida Times-Union. A beachgoer heard screaming from the water and grabbed a paddleboard, joining a lifeguard who went to the rescue. They found Cottrell and brought him back to shore but it was too late. Cottrell’s wife, Cheyenne, told St. Johns County sheriff’s deputies it was his first time in the ocean. She said the current pulled them out and ‘‘he started to freak out.’’ Faith Baptist Bible College and Theological Seminary in Ankeny, Iowa, said in a statement that the couple were seniors at the school and had married Saturday."

That tragedy must have been a terrifying experience, and I no longer feel the need to ever go into the water.

At the top of page A2 was a photo of the blast at an ExxonMobil plant in Texas where dozens were hurt, although the Globe did find it fit to print about the Kentucky gas line fire.

Related:

Rally calls for National Grid to repair gas leaks

They are getting $143 million in a settlement so what's the big deal?

Just blowing a bunch of hot air, huh?

You may want to wait until the tornadoes and thunderstorms pass before Rounding up the cancer awards.

Time to get back to Baltimore:

"US Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson traveled here Wednesday to defend President Trump’s harsh depiction of the city, saying ‘‘there are problems in Baltimore, and you can’t sweep them under the rug.’’ Carson, a pediatric neurosurgeon who has a long history at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, said the city has to be ‘‘willing to address’’ the problems it faces. ‘‘It’s sort of like a patient who has cancer: You can dress them up and put a nice suit on and try to ignore it, but that cancer is going to have a devastating effect,’’ he said standing outside of Hollins House, a federally funded housing complex for senior citizens located in the congressional district of US Representative Elijah Cummings, Democrat of Maryland. ‘‘You have to be willing to address that issue if you are ever going to solve it.’’ Trump has triggered a firestorm since Saturday by repeatedly attacking Cummings and his majority-black legislative district, which he described on Twitter as a ‘‘rodent infested mess’’ . . . where ‘‘no human being would want to live.’’ He called Cummings ‘‘a racist and a bully,’’ and tweeted that Baltimore, Maryland’s largest city, was a ‘‘very dangerous & filthy place.’’ No state or city officials appeared at the news conference, which was announced Tuesday night and was originally slated to be held on an open lot that belongs to a church, across the street from the eight-story housing development. Carson aides hastily moved the event to an alley behind the housing complex after Gregory Evans, a member of Morning Star Baptist Church, said no one asked permission to hold an event on the church property."

It's a firestorm of racism and Holocau$t™!

"President Trump on Wednesday renewed his attacks on CNN’s Don Lemon, one of the moderatorof the Democratic debate, calling him ‘‘the dumbest man on television’’ and suggesting he was ‘‘too dumb’’ to understand that he should ask fair questions. Trump’s latest ire directed at Lemon, an African-American whose intelligence he has publicly questioned before, appeared prompted by Lemon’s assertion at Tuesday’s debate in Detroit that Trump is pursuing ‘‘a reelection strategy based in part on racial division.’’

Trump did it in a dumb way, but what the pre$$ is now pushing is that you can no longer criticize a minority.

"In unusually forceful language, the leadership of the Washington National Cathedral condemned what it called the ‘‘racialized rhetoric’’ of President Trump and directly compared him to 1950s anti-Communist demagogue Senator Joseph McCarthy. The statement, released Tuesday, isn’t so much an appeal for Trump to retract or soften his statements as a call for the nation as a whole to reject them. It asks: ‘‘After two years of President Trump’s words and actions, when will Americans have enough?’’ The statement accuses Trump of deliberately fanning racial divisions for political gain in the same way that McCarthy used fears of Communist infiltration....."

The cathedral belongs to the Episcopal Church and is designated by Congress as a nondenominational National House of Prayer that is the site of four state funerals for deceased presidents — most recently George H.W. Bush in 2018, our hero leader. Thus the charges of racism by the WASPy Bushes are cleansed from memory.

"Democrats in Mitch McConnell’s home state are pitching ‘‘Moscow Mitch’’ merchandise to try and capitalize on a bitter dispute involving the Kentucky senator over election security legislation. The Kentucky Democratic Party said Wednesday it’s launching the ‘‘Moscow Mitch’’ Web store in a dig at the Senate majority leader. The party is selling red T-shirts for $25. They depict a picture of McConnell wearing a Cossack hat with the ‘‘hammer and sickle’’ symbol. The shirt declares ‘‘Just say Nyet to Moscow Mitch’’ in yellow, Soviet-style letters. A Washington Post columnist recently criticized the Senate Republican leader for blocking legislation aimed at protecting the nation’s political system against foreign attack. MSNBC host Joe Scarborough weighed in with the ‘‘Moscow Mitch’’ nickname. McConnell fired back in a speech comparing the attacks to ‘‘modern-day McCarthyism.’’

The terms have been so devalued they mean nothing anymore as they are tossed around like fertilizer with no context, and the first one who cites Hitler loses.

A rare do-over congressional election is a chance to battle-test 2020 strategies

It's North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District, and how do you rank 'em?

"Georgia’s passage of one of the country’s strictest abortion laws has triggered a nationwide competition to lure TV and film production from the state in the event of a boycott. Production in Georgia was responsible for an estimated $9.5 billion in economic impact last year, according to the state, so there’s plenty at stake. Georgia’s tax incentives and spending credits made it such a darling of Hollywood that the state surpassed California as the favorite setting for TV and film production in the United States. Several studios, including Walt Disney Co., lambasted Georgia for the legislation, but few have announced they’re moving out. Some individual productions have, though, including Kristen Wiig’s film for Lions Gate Entertainment Corp., “Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar,” which switched to Mexico and New Mexico. The Netflix Inc. hit “Stranger Things,” as well as successful movies “Black Panther” and “First Man,” were filmed at least in part in Georgia."

Did they give away more than $90 million like we did, and I guess some boycotts are okay, huh?

That gets us back to healthcare and the Democratic debate:

"Trump administration proposes allowing drug imports for cheaper prescriptions" by Katie Thomas New York Times, July 31, 2019

NEW YORK — The Trump administration said Wednesday that it was taking steps to make it easier for less expensive prescription drugs to be imported from other countries, particularly Canada, a move that has long been supported by progressives but has encountered fierce opposition from the pharmaceutical industry.

Is that going to be part of the trade deal?

Although the announcement signaled a major policy shift because Democratic and Republican administrations have generally opposed importing drugs from overseas, the proposal was also limited in nature.

No insulin.

Democrats and Republicans in Congress have been debating legislation that would allow importation of drugs to obtain cheaper prices, and other measures to try to rein in costs, but leading members of Congress have said that major proposals will not be fully prepared before September.

The rising price of prescription drugs has been a popular topic at the Democratic presidential debates, and the timing of the administration’s announcement fell in the middle of the Tuesday-Wednesday schedule of the July debates for the Democratic candidates.

On Tuesday night, Senator Bernie Sanders, a Vermont Independent, who has long supported the idea, said he traveled to Canada on Sunday with a group of consumers who were buying insulin at what they said was one-10th the price they usually pay in the United States. Higher prices are being charged by “the crooks who run the pharmaceutical industry in America today,” Sanders said.

Oh, I like him!

Many other countries are able to negotiate lower prices because their health care systems are run by the government, giving them more leverage. In the United States, private insurers typically negotiate with drug companies on prices. The drug industry has said that the prices overseas are artificially low and that people in those countries often do not get access to as many new drugs as Americans do.

Canadian officials have warned the US government that importation programs could jeopardize their own supply of drugs, leading to potential shortages, Reuters reported in July.

Charity begins at home. Any excess you export.

One wonders if China cut them off over Meng's arrest and detention.

Others have said drug companies could limit their supplies to those countries or raise their prices in response to any new US policy. Trump has railed against the idea that many countries pay less for drugs than in the United States, calling it a form of “global freeloading” because many treatments sold overseas were developed by US companies.

In July, Trump said he was planning an executive order, a “favored-nation clause,” which would allow the United States to pay whatever the lowest price is in other countries, but his comments were vague, and it was unclear whether he was referring to a more limited pilot program being proposed by his administration that would apply only to a small subset of drugs administered by doctors and in clinics. There were also questions about how far any executive order could go without congressional legislation.

Several of Trump’s other proposals to lower drug prices have faltered recently, including efforts to force drug companies to list their prices on TV ads.

It's the ads that make me sick, although a few have catchy classic jingle parodies.

--more--"

Tuesday Was Torture

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Every day is when you are trying to get through a morning Globe, and in this case it's a limited hangout with the narrative supporting the official story:

"Lawyers press case that 9/11 confessions given to FBI are tainted" by Carol Rosenberg New York Times, July 29, 2019

GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba — By the time the CIA delivered Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to the military prison at Guantánamo Bay in 2006, it had already extracted confessions from him through interrogations that included waterboarding, rectal abuse, sleep deprivation, and other forms of torture, but none of what Mohammed said during his 3 1/2 years in secret CIA prisons could be used in the military commission trial he would face on charges that he was the architect of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. So, within months of his arrival at Guantánamo Bay, the Bush administration had FBI agents question him and other al-Qaida suspects to obtain fresh, ostensibly lawful confessions. Prosecutors called the new interrogators “clean teams.”

Now defense lawyers in the Sept. 11 case — which has been stuck in pretrial hearings since 2012 and will not go to trial before next year — are stepping up their arguments that those teams were not so clean after all.

They say that they have growing evidence that the FBI played some role in the interrogations during the years when the suspects were in the secret prisons by feeding questions to the CIA and that the CIA kept a hand in the case after the prisoners were sent to Guantánamo. The result, they contend, is a blurring of lines that undercuts the assertion that the confessions extracted after torture could be legally separated from those given by Mohammed and his four alleged accomplices to the FBI at Guantánamo.

At one point I would have thought this was excellent journalism and a scoop. Now I view it as nothing but garbage from a government mouthpiece. What they are essentially saying is the allegedly legal confessions after torture are now called into question. Typical government incompetence sabotaging a trial, with the FBI and CIA taking the hit. The cover story stays in place, no questioned asked. He's an Oswald.

That would put these events under the purview of the now discredited Mueller, who was FBI director all this time and was head of the agency when the rounded up and then sent back the Israeli spy ring that was operating in country before 9/11, shadowing -- or setting up -- the alleged hijackers, while the current CIA director was elbow-deep in this kind of stuff during this time.

Oh, yeah, then there is the offhand and cavalier references to torture as if no big deal. If I remember correctly, they tortured his kids in front of him to get him to confess, and apparently his friends are planning another 9/11.

The defense teams cite documents turned over to them under court order showing that the FBI was involved in the case when the prisoners were being held by the CIA, from 2002 to 2006. Then, after President George W. Bush had them transferred to US military custody at Guantánamo, the CIA continued to control or influence the detention of Mohammed and the other men, the documents suggest.

The extent of the cooperation between the two agencies is a matter of dispute, some of it carried out in closed national security court hearings, but the intermingling of their work, defense lawyers say, means that the statements the suspects gave the FBI should be ruled inadmissible.

That way, none of this stuff is brought before anyone and all we are left with is the official narrative.

The intensifying battle over the confessions, which prosecutors say are critical to their case, is just one way that the legacy of torture continues to shadow the effort to get justice for the 2,976 people killed by the Sept. 11 hijackings, and it highlights how the military commission system has struggled to decide complex legal disputes, leaving the case unlikely to be decided even by 2021, two decades after the attacks.

“The clean teams were a fiction from the very beginning,” said Cheryl Bormann, the lawyer for Waleed Mohammed Bin Attash, a Saudi-born man accused of serving as a deputy to Mohammed in the hijacking conspiracy. “There was no separation. It’s all one big team.”

The official story of events that day is a fiction!

The first public information about FBI and CIA collaboration on interrogations involving the five alleged Sept. 11 conspirators emerged in a December 2017 pretrial hearing that challenged whether one of the defendants, Mustafa al Hawsawi, was subject to trial by a military tribunal rather than a federal court. Hawsawi, a Saudi man who was captured in Pakistan in March 2003 with Mohammed, is accused in the joint capital trial of helping the hijackers with travel and finances.

Abigail L. Perkins, a retired FBI special agent, said at the hearing that she had reviewed some of Hawsawi’s statements to the CIA before she interrogated him in January 2007 as a member of a clean team, four months after his September 2006 transfer to Guantánamo. She also said that while Hawsawi was held incommunicado at the CIA black sites, the FBI fed questions to CIA interrogators to ask their captives.

A partially redacted transcript of a national security hearing held last summer at Guantánamo also shows that FBI agents questioned Hawsawi during his time at a CIA black site but hid their affiliation from him. At that hearing, a prosecutor also disclosed that information the government had given defense lawyers to prepare for trial commingled FBI and CIA information that came from the Rendition, Detention and Interrogation Program, the formal name of the black sites, leaving the impression that it had all come from the CIA.

Prosecutors say the FBI agents who questioned the terrorism suspects at Guantánamo in 2007 did so independently of what happened during the period when the defendants were tortured.

That's where my print version stopped the torture, but the web version continued:

Even though the US government “put together the aspects of law enforcement, intel, and military, for the purpose of gaining information, and ultimately obtaining a criminal case against these men in military commissions,” Ed Ryan, one of the prosecutors, argued in court, the work of the clean teams is “legally defensible” because of the magnitude of the government investigation in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks.

Whether to accept the prosecution’s argument will be for the new trial judge, Colonel W. Shane Cohen of the Air Force, to decide.

Last summer, the first trial judge, Colonel James L. Pohl, forbade the use of the FBI interrogations at Guantánamo Bay, then retired from the Army. Another prosecutor on the case, Jeffrey D. Groharing, called the 2007 FBI interrogations “the most critical evidence in this case” and persuaded an interim judge, Colonel Keith A. Parrella of the Marines, to reinstate them.

Now the new judge, who took over the case in June, plans to consider again whether each of the five defendants’ FBI interrogations should be admissible. Hearings on the question could start in September and run until March.

First, however, the judge must decide the delicate question of how much testimony to take from former black site workers, including agents and contractors whose identities the CIA is shielding by invoking a national security privilege. The defendants want the judge to hold an exhaustive hearing on what went on in the CIA prison network between 2002 and 2006 as a basis for deciding whether the clean-team statements are admissible.

You know, like a Soviet trial before being sent to the gulag.

--more--"

Related:

"In 2001, Robert Mueller, President George W. Bush’s choice to head the FBI, promised the Senate Judiciary Committee that if confirmed, he would move forcefully to fix problems at the agency. (Mueller became FBI director on Sept. 4, 2001, a week before the 9/11 attacks.)"

That means he was also in charge of the Anthrax investigation and covering up where that led.

"In 2014, the CIA’s insistence that it did not spy on its Senate overseers collapsed with the release of a stark report by the agency’s internal watchdog documenting improper computer surveillance and obstructionist behavior by CIA officers."

See: CIA Spied on Senate

It was all over the Senate Torture Report and I guess they thought you wouldn't see the secret torture sites or Obama's Guantanamo.

"Appearing in the Rose Garden with more than 60 first responders from the 2001 terrorist attacks, Trump signed into law an extension of the fund through 2092, essentially making it permanent....."

Paul and Lee where given an ultimatum, and I'm told the president’s recollections about his own personal experiences that day cannot be verified, and that he played up his own personal connection on Monday to the World Trade Center site; however, his presence was confirmed by one source.

Also see: 

NY Fire Commissioners Call for New 9/11 Investigation, Citing “Overwhelming Evidence of Explosives”

The fireman knew from the very day something was wrong, but were told to clam up if they wanted their benefits.

"Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats is leaving his job next month, ending a two-year tenure marked by President Trump’s clashes with intelligence officials. Trump announced Coats’s departure on Aug. 15 in a tweet Sunday that thanked Coats for his service. He said that he will nominate Representative John Ratcliffe, Republican of Texas, to the post and that he will name an acting official in the coming days. Ratcliffe is a frequent Trump defender who fiercely questioned former special counsel Robert Mueller last week during a House Judiciary Committee hearing. Coats often appeared out of step with Trump and disclosed to prosecutors how he was urged by the president to publicly deny any link between Russia and the Trump campaign. The frayed relationship reflected broader divisions between the president and the government’s intelligence agencies. Coats’s public, and sometimes personal, disagreements with Trump over policy and intelligence included Russian election interference and North Korean nuclear capabilities. Trump had long been skeptical of the nation’s intelligence community, which provoked his ire by concluding that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election with the goal of getting him elected. A former Republican senator from Indiana, Coats was appointed director of National Intelligence in March 2017, becoming the fifth person to hold the post since it was created in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to oversee and coordinate the nation’s 17 intelligence agencies. Coats had been among the last of the seasoned foreign policy hands brought to surround the president after his 2016 victory, of whom the president steadily grew tired as he gained more personal confidence in Oval Office, officials said. That roster included Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and later national security adviser H.R. McMaster. Coats developed a reputation inside the administration for sober presentations to the president of intelligence conclusions that occasionally contradicted Trump’s policy aims."

The Deep State under coat, 'er, cover, and thing in common among the roster is they all crossed Kushner (as did John Kelly).

So what does he know that you do not that would cause him to bail at this crucial time?

"She robbed multiple banks in several states along the East Coast, armed with notes demanding money from tellers — and, the authorities say, a ‘‘distinctive pink handbag,’’ and now, the FBI says, the woman whom the bureau nicknamed the ‘‘Pink Lady Bandit’’ has been captured. Police in Charlotte, N.C., arrested 35-year-old Circe Baez and her suspected accomplice, 38-year-old Alexis Morales, on Sunday, the FBI said in a statement. Baez and Morales were apprehended at Charlotte Speedway Inn & Suites, nearly 100 miles from Hamlet, N.C., the site of the Pink Lady Bandit’s last robbery. The FBI had offered a reward of up to $10,000 for help capturing the mysterious woman who had robbed at least four banks along a 665-mile stretch over the span of a week, traveling from Pennsylvania to Delaware to North Carolina, according to an FBI ‘‘Wanted’’ poster. The Pitt County Sheriff’s Office posted triumphantly about the arrests on Facebook, congratulating police, FBI, and others for their work enabling the ‘‘quick outcome.’’ ‘‘The pink lady is changing her trademark to an orange jumpsuit,’’ the office wrote....."

They sending her to Gitmo, too?

RelatedPhoto raises questions over a confession

They mean in Italy:

"Italy: Teen held in officer’s death ‘illegally blindfolded’" by Frances D’Emilio Associated Press, July 28, 2019

ROME — An American teenager was illegally blindfolded before he was interrogated as a suspect in the slaying of a newlywed police officer in Rome, an Italian police commander said Sunday after the emergence of a photo showing the young tourist restrained with handcuffs and with his head bowed.

I don't think America is in a position to criticize.

Gabriel Christian Natale-Hjorth, 18, was blindfolded ‘‘for a very few minutes, four or five’’ on Friday just before he was taken to the interrogation in a police station about the fatal stabbing, Rome Provincial Commander Francesco Gargaro said.

Natale-Hjorth and another suspect from California, 19-year-old Finnegan Lee Elder, remained jailed while Italians lined up outside a chapel to pay respects to Deputy Brigadier Mario Cerciello Rega. The 35-year-old officer had recently returned to duty on the Carabinieri paramilitary police force after a honeymoon.

Oh, he killed a cop. 

That's the death penalty over here.

The officer was attacked with a knife on a street close to the teens’ upscale hotel in Rome. An autopsy showed he had been stabbed 11 times.

‘‘Whoever killed him is an animal,’’ said the mayor of the officer’s hometown, Somma Vesuviana. Mayor Salvatore Di Sarno spoke after leaving a wake for the officer in a chapel close to the police station in Rome where he had worked for years.

The coroner concluded that the policeman bled to death, according to Italian news reports.

Hundreds of Romans lined up in silence to file past the officer’s coffin. Among the mourners were his widowed bride, Rosa Maria Esilio, and Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte.

Cerciello was popular for warmly greeting residents of the neighborhood in historic Rome. He spent off-duty hours as a volunteer dishing out hot meals to the homeless in Rome’s main station and accompanied ailing faithful to religious shrines, including in Lourdes, France.

Investigators allege Elder knifed the policeman during a struggle after Cerciello Rega and his partner, both plainclothes officers, identified themselves as police. The officers were following up on a report of a drug deal that allegedly involved the teens.

Authorities contend Natale-Hjorth repeatedly punched the other officer, who was not seriously hurt.

Police said Saturday that both Americans confessed to their roles in Cerciello Rega’s death. Under Italian law, anyone who participated in a slaying can face murder charges.

Gotta throw it out, for it was under duress.

Italian newspapers on Sunday published a photo of Natale-Hjorth with what appears to be a scarf covering his eyes and with his arms handcuffed behind his back as he sat in a chair at a police station. Police and prosecutors are conducting separate investigations of the blindfolding.

Blindfolding of a suspect ‘‘is illegal. It’s not allowed,’’ Gargaro said. The officer who put the blindfold on committed a ‘‘mistake’’ but did so to prevent Natale-Hjorth from seeing documents related to the investigation, the commander said.

Natale-Hjorth had been brought in handcuffs to the station house from his hotel, Gargaro said. He was interrogated by police and prosecutors without a lawyer there since he had not been formally detained as a suspect and Italian law does not allow an attorney’s presence at that stage, the commander said, but Rome’s prosecutor general, Giovanni Salvi, said in a statement that there was indeed a lawyer present during the actual interrogation. It was not immediately clear if Gargaro might have been referring to the time spent while waiting for the interrogation.

Salvi, as Gargaro did, also stressed that the two suspects ‘‘were brought to the interrogation physically free, without blindfolds or handcuffs.’’ Salvi said the interrogation, by two magistrates, ‘‘was recorded and entirely transcribed. The defendants were advised of their rights.’’

The officer who placed the blindfold on was being transferred to a different unit, Gargaro said. The Carabinieri were also investigating who took the photo and how it was leaked.

Elder’s lawyer, Francesco Codini, did not reply to a request for comment. Natale-Hjorth’s lawyer could not be reached.

Italian media reported that Natale-Hjorth had recently been visiting, with his father and a grandfather, a town near Rome where they have relatives, then met up with his school alumnus Elder in Rome, staying in the hotel.

The teen had just completed his first year at Santa Barbara City College, according to the institution in Southern California.

With the slain officer being widely mourned as a hero, some Italians, such as center-right lawmaker Mariastella Gelmini, worried that the publication of the photo might aid the defense or thwart justice.

Another prominent politician, Pier Ferdinando Casini, said those who respect the sacrifice of officers such as Cerciello Rega ‘‘cannot justify the treatment of the young American, which goes contrary to every rule.’’

For others, the photo evoked the beating death of a young Roman who was jailed in a drug investigation a few years ago. Stefano Cucchi was severely beaten after his arrest and died several days later. After his family fought to find out the truth, several police officers were investigated for the beating and for attempting to cover it up.

His sister, Ilaria Cucchi, called the photo of the blindfolded Natale-Hjorth ‘‘terrible.’’

‘‘Certain things must not happen whatever the accusation is,’’ she said.

I see.

--more--"

At least it isn't a Russian prison:

"Fears of Navalny poisoning are rooted in previous attacks on Kremlin foes" by Neil MacFarquhar New York Times, July 29, 2019

MOSCOW — President Vladimir Putin has tried to build an image of a powerful, united Russia, and anyone who would undermine that strength or point out that much of the country lives in poverty is often the target of official ire.

Independent journalists, rights advocates, opposition politicians, government whistleblowers, and others are smeared in the media, jailed on dubious charges and, in some cases, killed. Russia’s most prominent opposition figure, Alexei Navalny, himself temporarily lost most of the vision in one eye when someone threw a caustic liquid into his face in 2017.

Analysts have described both Navalny’s medical emergency and the mass detentions Saturday, when police carted away almost 1,400 protesters, as possible signs of the Kremlin’s unease about Putin’s continued drop in the polls, with Russians grumbling about their stagnant incomes. They said that instead of doing the hard work of changing policies to woo those who are angry with Kremlin, the government is trying to silence them.....

OMFG, NYT!

The Russians may well be Americans, and I'm told the cause of the covert destabilization effort was anger over preventing opposition candidates from registering for the September election, and that hence the crackdown will feed more protests with the next one scheduled for Saturday.

--more--"

Meanwhile, Navalny says he started to improve after a doctor gave him a shot, but he was not told anything about his condition and only discovered some details from a hospital report given to a news agency, and asks “are they such idiots as to poison me in a spot where they would be they only suspects?” 

The short answer to that is NO!

This is all about squeezing the bear until he is dead.

Or a Brazilian one:

"At least 52 people were killed in a prison riot Monday in northeastern Brazil, authorities said, the second time since May that a clash between rival gangs exploded into a horrifying bout of violence. At least 16 of the victims were decapitated, authorities said. Others were asphyxiated. It took five hours for prison officials to quell the riot at the Altamira jail in Para state. The clash erupted early Monday after members of one gang infiltrated another part of the jail. Video and pictures aired by local media showed flames shooting out of the prison. Inmates took two prison officials as hostages. They were reportedly freed unharmed. Authorities did not immediately say which gangs were involved. The clash echoed a riot in northwestern Brazil on May 27, when a power struggle involving the Northern Family, Brazil’s third-most-powerful gang, led inmates to strangle or stab at least 55 people, some in front of visiting families. The violence illustrated the mounting insecurity in Brazil’s notoriously underfunded and overcrowded prisonsand the challenge facing officials as they struggle to restore order to the system. Brazil’s inmate population has swelled from about 500,000 inmates a decade ago to an estimated 800,000....."

Well, Bolsonaro was elected last year on promises to crack down on violent crime and he would ‘‘rather a prison cell full of criminals than a cemetery full of innocent people,’’ but Brazil office of Human Rights Watch said ‘‘it is really sad to see violence again, but not surprising.’’

"Miners kill indigenous leader in Brazil during invasion of protected land" by Ernesto Londoño New York Times, July 28, 2019

RIO DE JANEIRO — Several dozen heavily armed miners dressed in military fatigues invaded an indigenous village in remote northern Brazil this past week and fatally stabbed at least one of the community’s leaders, officials said.

The killing comes as miners and loggers are making increasingly bold incursions into protected areas, including indigenous territories, with the explicit encouragement of Brazil’s far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro. Officials warned that the conflict could escalate in the coming hours.

Bolsonaro has said that indigenous communities are in control of vast territories that should be opened up to industries to make them profitable.

Land invasions in indigenous territories are on the rise across Brazil, where indigenous leaders say they regularly come under threat by miners, loggers, and farmers. Yet assassinations of indigenous leaders are rare.

Leaders of the Wajãpi indigenous community made urgent pleas to the federal government Saturday, warning that the conflict between the miners and members of their community who live in remote villages in the northern state of Amapá risked turning into a blood bath.

“They are armed with rifles and other weapons,” Jawaruwa Waiãpi, a leader of the community, said in a voice message sent to one of the state’s senators, referring to the miners. “We are in danger. You need to send the army to stop them.”

Rodolfe Rodrigues, the senator, identified the slain indigenous leader as Emyra Wajãpi. He said the miners tossed his body in a river after stabbing him to death.

On Saturday night, an elite police force was en route to the area. The National Indian Foundation, a federal agency that was created to protect indigenous rights, said Saturday that its personnel in the area were trying to ascertain the facts surrounding the killing.

The Wajãpi, who have lived for centuries in the area that straddles northern Brazil and French Guiana, lived in isolation until the 1970s, when the Brazilian government built a road that made their areas accessible to miners and other outsiders.

Their territory was designated a protected area in 1996 as part of the process established by Brazil’s 1988 constitution. That charter, which was adopted after 21 years of military rule, set out to make amends for the brutality indigenous communities had endured since Europeans arrived on the continent in the 1400s......

--more--"

The last thing the Globe covered was the mass graves before burying it.

Or Chinese:

"China says most Muslims have been released from camps. Others say prove it." by Chris Buckley New York Times, July 30, 2019

BEIJING — China said Tuesday that most of the inmates in its reeducation camps for Muslim minorities — a vast network of detention centers estimated to have held as many as 1 million people or more — have been released.

Do they call them black sites?

The announcement appeared intended to blunt growing international condemnation of the camps, but specialists and members of targeted Muslim minority groups who have fled abroad quickly contested the assertion. Growing evidence from government documents shows the Xinjiang government wants to shift camp inmates and many other Uighurs into labor programs where they will work under the watch of the government and compliant factories, said Adrian Zenz, an independent researcher in Germany who studies the camps. 

Yes, they are implying Chinese concentration camps with the subsequent imagery that is to be conjured up -- and the article was my World lead on that day.

Xinjiang is home to more than 11 million Uighurs, a largely Muslim minority, and their treatment has become a global human rights controversy under President Xi Jinping. Western governments, United Nations human rights specialists, and advocates of Uighur self-determination have condemned the increasingly harsh restrictions on many Uighurs, especially the reeducation camps.

They are called rehabilitation centers here in AmeriKa.

Beyond describing them as vocational training facilities, Xinjiang officials said the camps offered classes that have effectively inoculated Uighurs against the temptation to embrace religious extremism or terrorism. Until several years ago, Xinjiang had experienced a string of deadly attacks by discontented Uighurs, but former camp detainees who have left China say they were subjected to a high-pressure indoctrination program with the goal of removing devotion to Islam and instilling loyalty to China and its ruling Communist Party.

They call them schools over here.

Kind of reminds me of the de-Nazification programs under Eisenhower.

This month, a group of 22 countries, including Australia, Britain, Canada, France, and Germany, issued a statement urging China to halt the mass detention of Uighurs and other Muslims. China struck back with a letter signed by 37 ambassadors from countries in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America who praised its human rights record, including the “de-radicalization” policies applied in Xinjiang.

The Chinese government’s assertion that the population in reeducation camps is shrinking appeared intended to stave off debate about Xinjiang before a meeting of the UN General Assembly in September as well as sessions of the UN Human Rights Council, said Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch, but she said that there was no reason to believe the assertion.

“They lied about the existence of the camps, they admitted the camps existed, and lied about what happens inside them,” Richardson said. “So one has to be awfully skeptical about a claim that — oops! — it’s all sorted out.”

--more--"

The American ma$$ media and pre$$, and in particular the New York Times, are now engaged in massive cases of projection. What they accuse of others is what they themselves are guilty of, and the source should be called Juman Rights Watch at this point due to their ever timely reports regarding all enemies or potential enemies or allies we must pressure. 

More on that later, but here is a reminder of where those God-awful lies regarding that God-awful day have led us:

"As Afghan election campaign opens, insurgents attack office of Ghani’s top running mate" by Pamela Constable and Sayed Salahuddin Washington Post, July 28, 2019

KABUL — Amid tight security and raucous cheers, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani launched his reelection campaign Sunday, telling several thousand supporters in a giant auditorium that he was running for another five-year term ‘‘to complete the unfinished project of building a democratic state,’’ but hours later, insurgents attacked the Kabul office of Ghani’s top running mate, Amrullah Saleh, a former national intelligence chief. No group immediately asserted responsibility for the assault on the headquarters of Saleh’s Green Trend party, but the Taliban has often targeted intelligence facilities and personnel.

Here we go again. The Washington ComPost is implicating the Taliban with no evidence. WaComPo is the flip side of the government mouthpiece coin. Beyond that, I have no reason to believe this even even happened given the initial particulars. Smells like a false-flag claim right from the start.

The violence on the opening day of Afghanistan’s presidential campaign underscored the confusion, uncertainty, and danger overshadowing the election plans, even as peace talks between Taliban and US officials continue. Many Afghans fear that threats and attacks by the Taliban, which controls or contests nearly half of the country’s 400 districts, may fatally disrupt the polls. Many, including some of the presidential candidates, also say that reaching an accord with Taliban leaders is a much higher priority and that an election campaign couldundermine peace talks.

And who benefits? The U.S. and its current puppet regime.

This propaganda that is being peddled these days isn't even any good anymore, and is as transparent as shi*!

In a report released Sunday, the independent Afghanistan Analysts Network noted that some specialists are of the view that a change of government should not take place until the Taliban can participate, although others argue that ‘‘sacrificing elections might mean they are never again held’’ under Taliban control. The report quotes an aide to one candidate as saying, ‘‘We prefer to have peace first and then conduct elections in a peaceful environment.’’

Then they will never be held in either case! 

Good Gawd!

US officials, who have held seven rounds of peace negotiations with Taliban leaders, are pressing for a partial peace settlement by early September, but progress has been stymied by the Taliban’s refusal to hold formal talks with Afghan officials and agree on a long-term cease-fire. The insurgents seek a full withdrawal of US troops and a dominant future role in power.

Like before?

"The U.S. government was well aware of the Taliban's reactionary program, yet it chose to back their rise to power in the mid-1990s. The creation of the Taliban was "actively encouraged by the ISI and the CIA," according to Selig Harrison, an expert on U.S. relations with Asia. "The United States encouraged Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to support the Taliban, certainly right up to their advance on Kabul," adds respected journalist Ahmed Rashid. When the Taliban took power, State Department spokesperson Glyn Davies said that he saw "nothing objectionable" in the Taliban's plans to impose strict Islamic law, and Senator Hank Brown, chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on the Near East and South Asia, welcomed the new regime: "The good part of what has happened is that one of the factions at last seems capable of developing a new government in Afghanistan.""The Taliban will probably develop like the Saudis. There will be Aramco [the consortium of oil companies that controlled Saudi oil], pipelines, an emir, no parliament and lots of Sharia law. We can live with that," said another U.S. diplomat in 1997."


Once you realize the inside job nature of 9/11, and the Taliban refusal to grant energy access as well as destroying the opium crop upon which CIA black budgets are bolstered, you can pretty quickly see that none of the narrative being provided by the pre$$ is true..... as the web version rolled on:

On Sunday, one of Ghani’s top rivals, Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, held a subdued campaign launch in a crowded wedding hall in the capital. Abdullah, who was also Ghani’s top rival in the 2014 election and is his estranged governing partner, said he had ‘‘come from the people’’ and would work to ‘‘take this broken ship to its desired destination.’’

Abdullah offered few policy ideas and refrained from directly criticizing Ghani, with whom he has clashed often since being persuaded to share power by US officials after a disastrous election, but a senior campaign adviser, former finance official Anwar Ahady, told the crowd that Ghani had run the country through ‘‘micromanagement and monopoly of power. That is what we will end if we win.’’

So which U.S. stooge would you prefer run the place?

Ghani, 70, said Sunday that he is determined to hold the election. He is considered the front-runner despite widespread public discontentwith the economy and the ongoing war. He has benefited from divisions among his rivals as well as incumbency advantages. Some critics have accused him of making high-level job appointments to buy electoral support. Ghani recently appointed a new ambassador to India who is under investigation by the attorney general over corruption allegations.

They are looking more like AmeriKa all the time when it comes to their political $y$tem!

No wonder they want us out!

At the elaborately scripted rally, Ghani’s clever sound bites, delivered in a raspy roar, were a departure from the former World Bank official’s usual policy prescriptions. The audience loved the performance, with many rising to their feet to shout encouragement.

‘‘People say I am mad, but I am mad for progress,’’ Ghani declared to cheers and laughter. He vowed to rid the country of dependence on foreign charity, and, in a line referring indirectly to President Trump’s recent comments that he could end the Afghanistan war in 10 days by massive bombing, Ghani vowed that ‘‘hundreds of bombs can’t destroy Afghanistan.’’

Oh, he didn't mean it, and I'm sure we have dropped more than hundreds on them over the last 18 years, with its consequent destruction and poisoning of the environment.

The one discordant moment came when a man rose and shouted that Ghani was a ‘‘liar’’ who had cheated the public. Plainclothes security personnel immediately grabbed the man and hustled him out of the premises. They then appeared to demand that journalists erase footage of the incident, provoking an altercation.

I love self-serving WaComPo slop!

Other major candidates in the race include Hanif Atmar, a former national security adviser to Ghani; Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former fugitive militia leader who returned to Kabul in 2017 under a peace deal; Rahmatullah Nabil, a former national intelligence chief; and Ahmad Wali Massoud, a brother of the slain anti-Taliban leader Ahmad Shah Massoud.

Hekmatyar is the CIA's ace-in-the-hole, and I'm almost positive all the others are on the payroll as well. After all, it's a WaComPo article! They have long been known as the CIA's newspaper.

No other candidates have held public rallies yet, and specialists predict it will be difficult for all candidates to campaign in much of the country because of Taliban threats. They also worry that voter turnout will be extremely low, jeopardizing credible results. During parliamentary elections last fall, violence was reported in many areas and polls were postponed in two provinces.

As if anyone would have thought they will be credible under U.S. auspices, etc. The paper assumes a credibility they do not have!

I'm surprised they haven't blamed Russian interference!

Public enthusiasm for the presidential election has been subdued, and partisan and personal bickering among Ghani’s opponents have added to voter disillusionment. After Ghani’s rally ended and delegates were pouring into the streets, a man behind the counter at a nearby grocery store watched with a grim expression.

‘‘There is only one thing that matters for Afghans, and that is peace. Too many people are being killed everyday,’’ said the shopkeeper, who gave his name as Neematullah. ‘‘Elections will not help. None of these candidates can bring peace, not Ghani or Abdullah. None of them.’’

I know how he feels.

--more--"

Related:

"An Afghan soldier shot and killed two American service members in Afghanistan, US officials said Monday. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak on the record about details that have not yet been made public. According to officials, the shooting took place in Kandahar in the country’s south. The US formally ended its Afghan combat mission in 2014 but still provides extensive air and other support to local forces battling both the Taliban and an affiliate of the Islamic State group. US and allied forces have faced increasing insider attacks in recent years. The last six months have seen the Taliban carry out near-daily attacks, mainly targeting Afghan security forces. The insurgent group effectively controls around half the country. The Taliban have rejected calls for a cease-fire even as they hold talks with the United States aimed at ending the 18-year war, America’s longest. The Islamic State, meanwhile, has launched attacks targeting security forces as well as minority Shi’ites. The United States has lost more than 2,400 soldiers in its longest war, and has spent more than $900 billion on everything from military operations to the construction of roads, bridges, and power plants. The Trump administration is trying to boost the capabilities of Afghan security forces and increase military pressure on the Taliban in the hope of forcing them to negotiate a peace....."

PFFFT!

You read something like that and your head spins from the shit-swirling spin of the pre$$. The U.S. is losing the war, has already lost the war, and the pre$$ tells me that Trump is boosting security forces (on the heels of an infiltrator attack, for God's sake) and putting on the military pressure (what does that mean, more bombing and kicking down of doors before dawn?) to force the Taliban to the peace table when it is the U.S. suing for peace (only on their terms, of course; otherwise, the lost cause continues. Looks like the Vietnam syndrome has indeed been kicked because we would have been out of Afghanistan long ago).

I sure hope the $1 TRILLION on Afghanistan alone was worth it, the lies that led to it, the torture that flowed from it, and the rivers of blood in this mass-murdering exercise that was promoted by the pre$$.

"Afghan soldier shoots 2 US troops dead at Kandahar army base" by Pamela Constable Washington Post, July 30, 2019

KABUL — Two American service members were shot dead and a third wounded Monday in a rare ‘‘insider’’ attack when an Afghan soldier opened fire on a group of American forces at a military base in a conflict-torn region of southern Kandahar province, Afghan defense and police officials said Tuesday.

How "rare?"

US military officials here confirmed that two American troops had been killedbut did not provide any details or identify the victims, saying they needed to wait until their families were notified. A statement from the US Resolute Support mission here said only that two service members had died.

According to Afghan officials, the shooter was wounded in return fire and taken into Afghan military custody. It was the first known incident, also known as a ‘‘green on blue’’ attack, since November, when Brent Taylor, a major in the Utah National Guard and the mayor of a town in Utah, was killed by an Afghan soldier in Kabul.

Rare enough for you?

No information was immediately available about the shooter except that he was an Afghan army soldier. In past ‘‘green on blue’’ incidents, the attackers have included both bona fide Afghan troops who were angry, disgruntled or influenced by Taliban propaganda, and insurgent infiltrators who enlisted to attack and sabotage foreign forces.

Whatever, WaComPo. Looks like an FBI operation backed up by the pre$$.

Insider attacks have been a problem for American forces in Afghanistan over the past decade, peaking in 2012 with several high-profile incidents, but they declined significantly after US military officials began placing ‘‘guardian angel’’ forces in the battlefield, Afghan security officials improved vetting of recruits, and a major US troop drawdown began in 2014. A total of 2,400 US troops have been killed in the 18-year conflict.

Where do you fucking start? Obama promised to gets us out and then insider attacks rose and rose. So much for all the money and training (earlier they mentioned reconstruction, and yet we never read of all the U.S. successes in rebuilding the country. the reason is because the rebuilding money was either stolen or spent on $elf-$erving and $hoddy projects, with nothing to show for it; otherwise, my pos, war-promoting pre$$ would be writing about it).

Then they say the "rare" instances declined once we reinserted U.S. forces into the fight or whatever. Makes one ask WTF this whole god-damn thing has been about other than geopolitics and war profiteering. Fu*king ashamed of it all.

Meanwhile, the UN mission said in a report released Tuesday that more civilians were killed by Afghan and international coalition forces in Afghanistan in the first half of this year than by the Taliban and other militants.

UH-OH!

That means WE are the PROBLEM and NEED TO GO NOW!

Must be the "guardian angels" and aircraft helping to liberate Afghanis!

The report apparently refers to civilians killed during Afghan and US military operations against insurgents, such as airstrikes and night raids on militant hideouts. Insurgents often hide among civilians.

Yeah, the cowardly Taliban are hiding where they live. 

I mean, this Jewi$h war slop has become so god-damned offensive I am nearly unable to read it anymore. I could change a few names around in this story and attach any dateI want from the last 18 years and you wouldn't even know it!

The UN report said 403 civilians were killed by Afghan forces in the first six months of the year and another 314 by international forces, a total of 717. That’s compared to 531 killed by the Taliban, an Islamic State affiliate, and other militants during the same period.

Oh, boy.

--more--"

Need something to take attention away from that:

"Bus hit by roadside bomb in Afghanistan, 32 killed" by Rahim Faiez Associated Press, July 31, 2019

KABUL, Afghanistan — A roadside bomb tore through a bus in western Afghanistan on Wednesday, killing at least 32 people, including children, a provincial official said.

I'm going to reserve judgement on whether this is an actual event or more propaganda being waved at us, especially with the children component. I'm not having Yemeni or palestinian children waved at me by this Jewi$h war organ.

Mohibullah Mohib, spokesman for the police chief in Farah province, said the explosion also wounded 15 people. Most of the wounded were said to be in critical condition, indicating the death toll could rise. The bus was traveling on a main highway between the western city of Herat and the southern city of Kandahar.

No one immediately claimed responsibility, but the Taliban operate in the region and frequently use roadside bombs to target government officials and security forces. The Islamic State group’s affiliate in Afghanistan is also known to have been behind attacks in the area. Islamic State militants frequently target civilians, especially the country’s minority Shiites.

Yeah, well, we all know ISIS™ is a U.S. proxy, and once again the pre$$ has implicated the Taliban with absolutely no evidence whatsoever. This is garbage journali$m, folks, complete war propaganda. That is why it is in the paper!

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres strongly condemned Wednesday’s attack and reiterated that ‘‘international humanitarian law explicitly prohibits indiscriminate attacks and attacks directed against civilians,’’ UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. The UN chief appealed to all parties to the conflict to uphold their obligations to protect civilians, Dujarric said.

This comes on the heels of their own report saying the government the U.N. recognizes and supports and its allies are killing more people than the so-called terrorists. Now he is strongly condemning the bus attack on children! How convenient this all is!

The Taliban have kept up a steady tempo of attacks even as they have held several rounds of peace talks with the United States aimed at ending the 18-year war.

So we have been told, anyway. Could be anybody, and I'm likely to think they are U.S. proxies raising hell for the very reasons enumerated above. No elections, puppet regime and U.S. forces stay indefinitely.

The attack came a day after the UN mission in Afghanistan released a report saying that most civilian deaths in the first half of the year were caused by Afghan forces and their international allies. The report apparently referred to civilians killed during Afghan and US military operations against insurgents.

The UN report said 403 civilians were killed by Afghan forces in the first six months of the year and another 314 by international forces, a total of 717. That’s compared to 531 killed by the Taliban, an Islamic State affiliate and other militants during the same period. It said 300 of those killed by militants were directly targeted.

The UN said the leading cause of civilian deaths and injuries was ‘‘ground engagements,’’ which caused one in three casualties. Roadside bombs were a close second, accounting for 28 percent. Afghanistan is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world — a legacy of decades of war.

We call it liberation around here!

A spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani on Wednesday disputed the results and methodology of the UN report, saying the government is committed to protecting civilians.

Sediq Sediqqi said the Taliban were the ‘‘major cause’’ of civilian deaths and accused them of deliberately targeting schools, mosques, and hospitals. He said ‘‘we are sorry’’ for civilian casualties during Afghan security operations, but accused the Taliban of using civilians as human shields. He also said the UN had drastically undercounted the number of civilians killed by the Taliban.

This is the rankest kind of crap that flows from governments, and his words could very well be coming out of Zionist mouths!

The Taliban, who effectively control half the country, have been meeting with US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad since late last year. They appear to be closing in on an agreement whereby American forces would withdraw from Afghanistan in return for guarantees that it would not be used as a launch pad for international terror attacks.

Khalilzad has been in Kabul for talks with Afghan officials over the past several days and is expected to go to Islamabad next.

The Afghan government has been largely sidelined in the Taliban-US talks, with the insurgents refusing to negotiate with Kabul officials.

When was the last time peace talks led to anything in a war paper?

--more--"

"US military and intelligence officials at odds over Islamic State in Afghanistan" by Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Julian E. Barnes New York Times, August 2, 2019

Oh, look, more government propaganda and garbage being transmitted by their top mouthpiece!

WASHINGTON — Senior US military and intelligence officials are sharply divided over how much of a threat the Islamic State group in Afghanistan poses to the West, a critical point in the Trump administration’s debate over whether US troops should stay or withdraw after nearly 18 years of war.

US military commanders in Afghanistan have described the Islamic State affiliate there as a growing problem that is capable of inspiring and directing attacks in Western countries, including the United States, but intelligence officials in Washington disagree, arguing the group is mostly incapable of exporting terrorism worldwide. The officials believe that the Islamic State in Afghanistan, known as Islamic State Khorasan, remains a regional problem and is more of a threat to the Taliban than to the West.

Once again, the underlying narrative behind the official lie is being promoted here with the CIA front being used to sow chaos to maintain the status quo.

Of course, if one were to believe this bulls*t, one would soon come to the conclusion that the Taliban are a friend and ally, right?

Differences between the US military and Washington’s intelligence community over Afghanistan are almost as enduring as the war itself. The Pentagon and spy agencies have long differed over the strength of the Taliban and the effectiveness of the military’s campaign in Afghanistan.

So we better just stay, right?

Whether to keep counterterrorism forces in Afghanistan is at the heart of the Trump administration’s internal debate over the future of the war.

Actually, he already said he is going to leave a robust counterintelligence effort behind while pouring in mercenary contractors. 

Ten current and former American and European officials who are familiar with the military and intelligence assessments of the strength of Islamic State in Afghanistan provided details of the debate to The New York Times. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to candidly discuss the issue and confidential assessments of the terrorism threat.

Just like they did with WMD in Iraq. 

Fu*k you, NYT!

A State Department envoy is leading negotiations for a peace deal that would give the Taliban political power in Afghanistan and withdraw international troops. For months, the Trump administration has been drafting plans to cut the 14,000 US forces who are there by half. On Monday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Trump had ordered a reduction in the number of troops in Afghanistan before the 2020 presidential election, but he did not specify a number.

“That’s my directive from the president,” Pompeo said. “He’s been unambiguous: End the endless wars. Draw down. Reduce. It won’t just be us.”

Yet at the same time, current and former officials, including retired Army general Jack Keane, are lobbying the Trump administration to maintain several thousand Special Operations forces in Afghanistan. Doing so, they argue, will keep terrorist groups from returning and help prevent the collapse of the Afghan government and its security forces.

He is already going to do that, and it is just great to see so many warhawk analysts in my pre$$.

“US troops in Afghanistan have prevented another catastrophic attack on our homeland for 18 years,” Keane said. “Expecting the Taliban to provide that guarantee in the future by withdrawing all US troops makes no sense.”

What a crock of crap, and by that logic we can never leave anywhere ever and must continue to expand occupations wherever we go. I suppose that all sounds fine to war-planners like Jack.

The Islamic State in Afghanistan surfaced in 2015 and was quickly dismissed by Pentagon officials merely as a breakaway group from the Taliban in Pakistan, but one with little ability to expand.

Four years later, the Islamic State Khorasan is made up of roughly 3,000 fighters and is well resourced, funded, and entrenched in the rural areas of eastern Afghanistan. 

They just confirmed them as a CIA front! 


Well resourced, funded, and entrenched, huh?

A United Nations report released this week concluded that the group was responsible for 423 of the 3,812 civilians who were killed or wounded in Afghanistan during the first six months of 2019.

OMG, the New York Times told you less than half of the story!

--more--"

Maybe this photograph that came with the article will convince me:

Displaced residents of Tangi Wazir, a village raided and burned by Islamic State group militants, gathered at a roadside camp near Khogyani in eastern Afghanistan, on Dec. 2, 2017. As officials debate whether to withdraw all western troops from Afghanistan, the power of the group emerges as a key question.
Displaced residents of Tangi Wazir, a village raided and burned by Islamic State group militants, gathered at a roadside camp near Khogyani in eastern Afghanistan, on Dec. 2, 2017. As officials debate whether to withdraw all western troops from Afghanistan, the power of the group emerges as a key question. (Mauricio Lima/The New York Times/File)

OMG, it's a 2017 file photo! That could be anything! All we know for sure is it is a bunch of guys standing around!

Related: Afghanistan: In Search of Monsters to Not Destroy

Yeah, the "terrorists" give the U.S. government an excuse to go anywhere they want in the Eastern Hemisphere in the name of the GWOT while enforcing even greater police and surveillance state at home. 

Cut bono?

Oh, I would be very, VERY WORRIED over the UPCOMING FALSE FLAG TERROR ATTACK coming at the end of the summer. 

All lights are blinking red and there is no one on the job:

"Ratcliffe withdraws from consideration for intelligence chief, Trump says" by John Wagner and Shane Harris Washington Post, August 2, 2019

WASHINGTON — President Trump announced Friday that Representative John Ratcliffe, his embattled pick to lead the nation’s intelligence community, was withdrawing from consideration and would remain in Congress.

They don't want to lose the seat.

The Texas Republican was facing intense questions about padding his résumé and a lack of experience, which led to a lukewarm reception on Capitol Hill.

Trump said he would announce a new pick for director of national intelligence shortly.

In tweets, Trump said that Ratcliffe was being treated ‘‘very unfairly’’ by the media.

‘‘Rather than going through months of slander and libel, I explained to John how miserable it would be for him and his family to deal with these people,’’ Trump wrote. ‘‘John has therefore decided to stay in Congress where he has done such an outstanding job representing the people of Texas, and our Country.’’

In a statement issued shortly after Trump’s tweets, Ratcliffe said that he remained convinced that if confirmed by the Senate, he would have served ‘‘with the objectivity, fairness, and integrity that our intelligence agencies need and deserve.

‘‘However, I do not wish for a national security and intelligence debate surrounding my confirmation, however untrue, to become a purely political and partisan issue,’’ he said. ‘‘The country we all love deserves that it be treated as an American issue. Accordingly, I have asked the president to nominate someone other than me for this position.’’

Trump made the announcement of Ratcliffe’s withdrawal shortly before appearing at a White House event to announce a new deal to sell more beef to the European Union. He ignored questions shouted by reporters about Ratcliffe’s withdrawal as he left the event.

One White House official, who requested anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, said that Ratcliffe got cold feet because of the lack of support among Republican senators, but inside the White House, at least some believed that although Ratcliffe would probably have faced a contentious nomination fight, Senate Republicans were ultimately unlikely to vote against a Trump nominee. Ratcliffe might have survived, and may have withdrawn too early, in the view of some.

More WaComPo speculation and slop.

Ratcliffe’s background has come under scrutiny since Trump announced Sunday that he planned to nominate the lawmaker to be the next director of national intelligence, replacing Daniel Coats, a longtime senator and diplomat who was often at odds with the president.

Although Ratcliffe had dialed back claims that he had won convictions in a high-profile terrorism case as a federal prosecutor, his planned nomination drew opposition from Senate Democrats and tepid support from key Republicans.

Some current and former intelligence officials have said Ratcliffe is the least-qualified person ever nominated to oversee the country’s intelligence agencies — previous directors have been former diplomats, senior intelligence officials, and military leaders — and questioned whether he would use the position to serve Trump’s political interests.

You mean the way Ridge used it to bolster Bush? Every time Bush was in trouble with some scandal we got a color-coded terror alert -- usually involving some retard patsy set up by an FBI instigator!

The post was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to coordinate the 16 other agencies of the nation’s intelligence community.

Ratcliffe has been a staunch defender of the president and has alleged anti-Trump bias at the FBI. Trump tweeted out his plan to nominate Ratcliffe several days after the lawmaker attacked former special counsel Robert Mueller during a hearing.

Congressional and intelligence officials have described Ratcliffe as a relatively disengaged member of the House Intelligence Committee and as little-known across the ranks of spy agencies he has been tapped to lead.

He wasn't a Deep State creature and was thus unacceptable.

Though Ratcliffe’s membership on the House committee is perhaps his most important credential for the top intelligence job, officials said he has yet to take part in one of its overseas trips to learn more about spy agencies’ work. The other new lawmakers on the panel have done so or are scheduled to travel in the coming months.

Will they take him to the black site torture centers, or..... ?

What those trips are what George Romney once called brainwashing (see video at end of article).

It is also unclear whether Ratcliffe has spent much time at the headquarters of the CIA, the National Security Agency, or other parts of the sprawling US intelligence community that he has been nominated to direct.

No wonder he is unacceptable. He hasn't had his mind poisoned by them yet.

On Thursday, The Washington Post also reported that a Ratcliffe claim of a massive roundup immigrant workers at poultry plants in 2008 as a federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of Texas was undercut by the court record and recollections of others who participated in the operation. Ratcliffe has often cited the arrests as a highlight of his career.

That disqualified him?

In a statement, Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Richard Burr said he respected Ratcliffe’s decision to withdraw from consideration..... 

And thanked him for getting them off spot!

--more--"

One almost forget that almost all the alleged hijackers were Saudi:

"Saudi Arabia chips away at oppressive system by granting women travel rights" by Ben Hubbard and Vivian Yee New York Times, August 2, 2019

BEIRUT — On the surface, the new regulations that Saudi Arabia announced early Friday did not seem like much. In dense, bureaucratic language, they granted all Saudis older than 21 the right to handle their families’ affairs, while officials said that all adults could obtain passports and travel on their own, but for gender relations in the kingdom, the new regulations were an earthquake, because for the first time, they granted women the kind of rights that had previously been under the control of male relatives.

“It is a great breakthrough,” Hoda Al-Helaissi, a member of the kingdom’s advisory Shura Council, said Friday. The new regulations that arrived under Saudi Arabia’s day-to-day ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, were the most significant weakening yet of Saudi Arabia’s “guardianship” system, a long-standing tangle of laws, regulations, and social customs that rights campaigners have long criticized as oppressing Saudi women.

Yes, let's all cheer the butcher of Yemen as he allegedly frees Saudi women!

As a practical matter, the changes will probably take time to trickle down to individual households and to women. As a symbolic matter, however, they are pivotal. Saudi women’s Twitter feeds crackled with jubilant posts. Memes of women praising the crown prince and ululating in celebration danced around the Internet.

Freedom is now the Internet and Twitter, and you have to love the New York Times going down on MBS like this, huh?

The guardianship changes were announced as part of a broader drive by Crown Prince Mohammed to overhaul the kingdom’s economy and to open up society. Since his father, King Salman, ascended to the throne in 2015, the crown prince, 33, has begun initiatives aimed at diversifying the economy away from oil, confronting Iran, and loosening the kingdom’s notoriously strict social customs.

Yeah, he is a REAL HERO!

In recent years, he has pushed for more women to enter the workforce, stripped the kingdom’s religious police of their power to arrest, and granted women the right to drive, billing the moves as essential for the insular Islamic kingdom to progress and to build its economy, but accompanying that wider social opening have been riskier moves that raised questions about whether Crown Prince Mohammed’s brash leadership style would destabilize the kingdom, and the Middle East as a whole. His forces are bogged down and accused of war crimes in Yemen. The murder of the dissident Jamal Khashoggi in a Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year drew global condemnation, and waves of arrests have scooped up clerics, intellectuals, royals, businessmen, and even some activists who had campaigned for an end to the driving ban and the guardianship system.

It's a Saudi shell game, and who cares about Yemen or Khashoggi (pre$$ cares more about their asset than the war they helped abet in Yemen)? 

Those arrests, and the wider intolerance of dissent or criticism under the crown prince, made it hard to fully gauge public reaction to the changes, but many Saudi women cheered them as liberating.

What more is there left to say, really?

Helaissi, the Shura Council member, said she did not expect the changes to have a great immediate effect on most families.

Although the regulations allowing women to register family matters may appear routine, they will make an enormous difference for some women, such as those who are separated from their husbands and those who need to navigate the bureaucracy on behalf of their children, said Adam Coogle, a Saudi expert at Human Rights Watch.

Oh, so now Human Rights Watch is liking and praising the Saudis, huh?

They should call themselves Juman Rights Watch like I noted above!

I mean, c'mon! They just destroyed any semblance of credibility by liking the most odious regime on the face of the planet.

--more--"

Related:

"The first female leader of the Naval War College has officially assumed command of the school. Rear Admiral Shoshana Chatfield became the 57th president Thursday. Chatfield, a helicopter pilot, previously led a military command in Guam. She has said she’s humbled by her selection as college president and looks forward to serving. Navy Secretary Richard Spencer has called her a ‘‘historic choice.’’ (AP)."

Well, we might as well end this post the way we began it, with a limited hangout that supports the official cover story and is transmitted through the government mouthpiece:

"US officials say Osama bin Laden’s son killed in strike" by Julian E. Barnes, Adam Goldman and Eric Schmitt New York Times, July 31, 2019

WASHINGTON — Osama bin Laden’s son Hamza bin Laden, who was viewed as an eventual heir to the leadership of al-Qaida and who had repeatedly threatened to attack the United States, is dead, according to two US officials.

Oh, he was the heir to Al-CIA-Duh, huh?

Details of the strike that killed him were scarce, including when and where. The US government played a role in the operation, but it was not clear how, according to the officials, who discussed his death on the condition of anonymity because it involved sensitive operations and intelligence gathering.

PFFFFFFFFT!

He was killed before the State Department announced a $1 million reward for information on his whereabouts in February, but US military and intelligence agencies had not confirmed his death by then.

Whatever. 

Though bin Laden carried a prominent name and lineage, the news of his death represented more of a symbolic victory for the US government than the removal of a threat. Al-Qaida has not carried out a large-scale attack in years, and though bin Laden was being groomed to eventually take over the group, that time appeared to be well into the future.

This post has been so tortuous that I am now laughing at the end.

After the 2011 death of Osama bin Laden in a SEAL Team 6 raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan, two of his top lieutenants began preparing Hamza bin Laden for a top leadership role. He married a daughter of one of them and pledged to avenge his father’s death.

Yeah, the whole 2011 raid was a complete fiction, something to help bolster Obama and his failing presidency and get the attention of other things at the time. The computer screens where they watched to operation get streamed were dark, and then they dumped the body into the sea so none of the story could be verified. We are just supposed to believe this war propaganda and garbage at face value after all the lies, ha-ha-ha-ha!

Bin Laden was introduced as a voice of al-Qaida in August 2015 as “a young lion to carry forth the cause.” The regular messages that al-Qaida released from bin Laden stopped months ago, although an article attributed to him was published in May.

Bin Laden was likely operating on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, said Thomas Joscelyn, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

OMG, they turned to a war-mongering Zionist Jew outfit for expert analysis of this huge pile of BS!

While Joscelyn said he doubted that bin Laden was next in line to lead al-Qaida, he said he had an important role, both in terms of ties to the Taliban and as a spokesman.

“They were building him up to potentially be the No. 1 someday; he was not thought of as the heir apparent today,” Joscelyn said.

The location of bin Laden had been the subject of public speculation. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, he and other members of al-Qaida fled to Iran, where they were detained. He was eventually allowed to leave Iran, then reportedly moved with his family to the Pakistan border region. At one point, intelligence showed that he had traveled to Syria in the past several years, former officials have said.

You know, Khan came and went and that was that.

The CIA has devastated al-Qaida, relentlessly targeting its operatives after 9/11. The agency killed another son, Saad bin Laden, in a drone strike in 2009 while he was operating in a remote area of Pakistan. Another son, Khalid, was killed in the 2011 Abbottabad raid.

Really? 

No more AL-CIA-Duh, huh? 

All ISIS™ now?

The CIA continues to hunt for Ayman al-Zawahri, who assumed the al-Qaida leadership mantle after Osama bin Laden’s death. Former intelligence officials said the agency launched a sophisticated effort in 2012 and 2013 to determine whether he was living in a village in Pakistan’s troubled North Waziristan region. Agency operatives had high confidence they had located al-Zawahri but were never able to identify his exact location within the village, one former official said.

Did they try Langley?


Ayman al Zawahiri - Star of David background. --source--"

You would think they would have been a little more careful when picking out the background.

Bin Laden appears to have worked closely with al-Zawahri, especially in maintaining ties to the Taliban in Afghanistan and shaping the organization’s message.

So now they are tying CIA-Duh into the Taliban.

What's next, they have a blood pact with Iran?

“If in fact he is dead, this makes the ranks of al-Qaida’s senior leadership that much thinner and the connection to Osama bin Laden even more attenuated,” said Nicholas J. Rasmussen, a former director of the National Counterterrorism Center.

Uh-huh.

What do you mean if?

Other key members of the organization remain alive, including Saif Al Adel and Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, who are wanted by the FBI in the bombings of two US embassies in East Africa in 1998. They are thought to be in Iran.

What did I just say? 

Oh, man, this is RANK ROT WAR PROP that has JUMPED the SHARK!

Bin Laden’s time in Iran has been the subject of controversy, and the presence of al-Qaida members in Iran prompted questions about what the Iranian government was doing with them. Iran is dominated by Shiite Muslims, whom the hard-line Sunnis of al-Qaida see as heretics.

Oh, now we will be told IRAN was involved in 9/11 -- just like Iraq was!

At times when the al-Qaida officials were out of detention, Hoffman said, Iran allowed them to stay to ward off potential attacks from al-Qaida. Both Iran and al-Qaida also have the United States has a common enemy.

“It’s a marriage of convenience,” Hoffman said. Anything that Iran “can do keep the United States off balance,” he said, “they’ll do it.”

Who Hoffman, hey?

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other US officials have stressed ties between al-Qaida and Iran in recent briefings to Congress. Concerned members of Congress from both parties have said that the administration officials are trying to lay the legal groundwork for any potential military action against Iran by arguing that the 2001 authorization of war against al-Qaida or any of its allies would allow the United States to attack Iran.....

OMG, it's an Iran was involved in 9/11 piece of government bullshit now troweled by the garbage government mouthpiece known as the Jew York Times, and is all about WAR on IRAN!!!

--more--"

RelatedMarathon bomber’s lawyers have Dec. court date to appeal death sentence

Gotta shut him up, too, because it turns out he's innocent.

Like Sheep to Slaughter

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It looks like New Golden Age is going to be brief:

"Pound slumps as Britain’s new prime minister reaffirms plan to exit EU by Oct. 31" by Jill Lawless Associated Press, July 30, 2019

LONDON — Britain’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, visited Wales Tuesday on a national tour to reassure voters his push to leave the European Union ‘‘come what may’’ won’t hurt the economy and rip apart the United Kingdom.

The move failed to persuade currency markets: The pound slid to a 28-month low amid rising concerns there will be a chaotic no-deal Brexit.

That is how you really cripple a politician, and we know who$e tools are tho$e.

A day after Johnson was booed in Scotland, he faced another tough reception from farmers — a group central to the Welsh economy — who fear economic havoc if Britain leaves the EU without a divorce deal. They say millions of sheep might have to be slaughtered if tariffs are slapped on lamb exports to the EU.

Being led as the British people, as it were.

After visiting a south Wales poultry farm, Johnson said that his Conservative government would support farmers if their markets become ‘‘tricky.’’

‘‘We will look after the farming sector,’’ he said. ‘‘We will make sure that they have the support that they need,’’ but the president of the National Farmers’ Union, Minette Batters, said Britain exports 40 percent of its lamb and mutton, most of it to EU nations. ‘‘[If] we’re tariffed out of the EU market, where does that 40 percent go?’’ she said.

Helen Roberts of the National Sheep Association accused Johnson of playing ‘‘Russian roulette’’ with agriculture.

I knew they were behind this somehow.

Britain’s 2016 vote to leave the EU divided the country and strained the bonds between the four nations that make up the UK: England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

A majority of voters in England and Wales backed leaving, while Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to remain. That has emboldened Scotland’s nationalist government to demand another vote on independence, arguing that Scotland should not be forced out of the EU against its will. In Parliament last week, a Scottish National Party lawmaker, Ian Blackford, mockingly welcomed Johnson as ‘‘the last prime minister of the United Kingdom.’’

Johnson also plans to visit Northern Ireland, the only part of the UK to share a land border with the EU. The status of that currently invisible frontier with the Republic of Ireland has become the main stumbling block to a Brexit deal.

Has it not always been thus?

RelatedRyanair could cut flights and jobs because of Boeing 737 Max delays

They are signaling deep job cuts despite the changes in software.

The pound has fallen sharply in recent days as businesses warn that no amount of preparation can eliminate the economic damage if Britain crashes out of the EU trading bloc without a Brexit deal.

It's called capital flight, and it is how monied interests cripple governments.

Johnson became prime minister last week.....

So much for the honeymoon.

--more--"

"Johnson presses EU to give way amid no-deal Brexit warnings" by Jill Lawless and Danica Kirka Associated Press, July 29, 2019

LONDON — The pound fell to a two-year low as business groups warned that neither Britain nor the EU is ready for a no-deal Brexit, and that no amount of preparation can eliminate the economic damage if Britain crashes out of the 28-nation trading bloc without agreement on the terms.

The $ky is literally falling.

The pound’s woes illustrate concerns in the markets over a no-deal Brexit. Economists warn that leaving the bloc without an agreement on terms would disrupt trade by imposing tariffs and customs checks between Britain and the bloc. The British government’s financial watchdog says that could send the value of the pound plummeting further and push the UK into recession.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, contradicting the opinion of most experts, has said leaving without a divorce deal will be ‘‘vanishingly inexpensive’’ if Britain is properly prepared. He says he will ‘‘turbo-charge’’ plans for a no-deal Brexit — including beefed-up border measures and a multimillion-pound information campaign for individuals and businesses — and has set up bodies including a high-level Cabinet ‘‘exit strategy committee’’ to oversee preparations; however, he faces strong resistance from Parliament, which has consistently opposed a no-deal Brexit.

Beyond Brexit, Johnson has made ambitious domestic policy promises, including more money for police and schools, and major infrastructure projects including high-speed trains, but independent think tank The Institute for Government said in a report that the effects of a no-deal Brexit would consume much of the government’s energy for years, pushing out other issues and sucking up large sums of money.

Much like the EU itself.

‘‘Rather than ‘turbo-charging’ the economy, as Johnson has suggested, the government is more likely to be occupied with providing money and support to businesses and industries that have not prepared or are worst affected by a no-deal Brexit,’’ it said.

Johnson’s hard line may be popular with Conservative Party members, but it is strongly opposed by pro-EU Britons, including some members of his own party. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon in Edinburgh, who leads the semi-autonomous Edinburgh-based government, says Scotland should hold a vote on independence from the UK if it is dragged out of the EU against its will. ‘‘I think that is extremely dangerous for Scotland, indeed for the whole of the UK,’’ she said.

At least we know which $ide the pre$$ is on.

The Confederation of British Industry, the country’s biggest business lobby group, urged both Britain and the EU to accelerate Brexit preparations. It made 200 recommendations, including new laws, new IT systems, and agreements to temporarily maintain some common regulations, but it said ‘‘the unprecedented nature of Brexit means some aspects cannot be mitigated.’’

‘‘It’s like putting sandbags down for a flood. Your kitchen’s still going to be underwater but maybe we can save the bedrooms upstairs,’’ said the group’s head of EU negotiations, Nicole Sykes.

Another warning came from French automaker Groupe PSA, which said it could move production of its Vauxhall Astra model out of Britain if Brexit makes it unprofitable. Chief executive Carlos Tavares told the Financial Times that would mean closing Vauxhall’s Ellesmere Port plant in Cheshire, which employs 1,000 people.....

What if it makes it more profitable?

--more--" 

Now he is off to Ireland:

"Boris Johnson visits Belfast as Brexit woes hurt UK economy" by Jill Lawless Associated Press, July 31, 2019

LONDON — New Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday finished his rocky debut tour of Britain in Northern Ireland, where he faces a doubly difficult challenge: restoring the collapsed Belfast government and finding a solution for the Irish border after Brexit.

Since he took office a week ago, Johnson has been touring England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, but it has not been a triumphal parade. After facing protests and political opposition in Scotland and Wales, Johnson met Wednesday with the leaders of Northern Ireland’s five main political parties in hopes of kick-starting efforts to restore the suspended Belfast administration.

Northern Ireland’s 1.8 million people have been without a functioning administration for 2½ years, ever since the Catholic-Protestant power-sharing government collapsed over a botched green-energy project. The rift soon widened to broader cultural and political issues separating Northern Ireland’s British unionists and Irish nationalists.

The energy project was then the catalyst, not the cause.

Why must my pre$$ always distort, obfuscate, or omit things?

Johnson said he would ‘‘do everything I can to help that get up and running again, because I think that’s profoundly in the interests of people here, of all the citizens here in Northern Ireland,’’ but a breakthrough did not look imminent. Opponents say Johnson can’t play a constructive role in Northern Ireland because his Conservative government relies on support from the Democratic Unionist Party, the largest of Northern Ireland’s pro-British parties. Without the votes of the DUP’s 10 lawmakers in London, Johnson’s minority government would collapse.

Critics say that gives the pro-Brexit DUP an oversized influence with the British government, unsettling the delicate balance of power in Northern Ireland.

They got a Lobby, too?

Mary Lou McDonald, leader of the Irish nationalist party Sinn Fein, accused Johnson of being the DUP’s ‘‘gofer.’’

‘‘He tells us he will act with absolute impartiality. We have told him that nobody believes that,’’ she said.

Britain’s 2016 vote to leave the European Union has strained the bonds among its four nations. A majority of voters in England and Wales backed leaving in the referendum, while those in Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to remain.

Scotland’s nationalist government wants to hold a vote on independence from Britain if Scotland is dragged out of the EU against its will. Similarly, nationalists in Northern Ireland argue there should be a referendum on unification with the Irish republic if there is a damaging no-deal Brexit.

Johnson insists Britain will leave the EU on the scheduled date of Oct. 31, with or without a divorce deal. Economists say a no-deal Brexit would be economically damaging for the whole of Britain and politically destabilizing for Northern Ireland, the only part of the United Kingdom to share a land border with the bloc.

DUP leader Arlene Foster downplayed the risk of a no-deal Brexit, saying Johnson was ‘‘focused on finding a deal and we’re here to help him find that deal.’’

She said Brexit must be carried out ‘‘in a way that does no damage either to the UK, the Republic of Ireland — our neighbors — or the wider European Union.’’

A divorce agreement between Britain and the EU has foundered largely because of the complex issue of the 300-mile border between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland. An invisible border is crucial to the regional economy and underpins the peace process that ended decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland.

Both Britain and the EU have promised there will be no hard border after Brexit, but they disagree about how to avoid it.

The EU and Johnson’s predecessor, Theresa May, came up with a solution known as the backstop— an insurance policy to guarantee an open border if no other solution can be found, but British Brexit-backers loathe the backstop because it locks Britain into EU trade rules to avoid customs checks, something they say will stop Britain from striking new trade deals.

Johnson is refusing to hold new talks with EU leaders unless they agree to scrap the backstop and sent Europe adviser David Frost to Brussels on Wednesday to deliver that message.

Johnson’s office said Frost would tell EU officials that ‘‘we will work energetically for a deal but the backstop must be abolished. If we are not able to reach an agreement, then we will, of course, have to leave the EU without a deal.’’

The bloc is equally adamant that Brexit deal won’t be reopened and the backstop must stay.

There will be no renegotiation!

The stalemate has sent the pound plunging to its lowest levels in more than two years, as economists warn a no-deal Brexit would disrupt trade and send Britain into a deep recession.

The currency was trading around $1.22 Wednesday, up slightly from a day earlier but still its lowest level since March 2017.

--more--"

"Special election defeat poses thorny problem for Johnson" by Stephen Castle New York Times, August 2, 2019

LONDON — Boris Johnson has been British prime minister for barely a week, and the honeymoon appears to be over. His Conservative Party lost a special election, cutting his working majority in Parliament to just one seat at a critical moment for the country.

Did he even have one?

The narrow defeat in a previously Conservative-held district, the Brecon and Radnorshire area of Wales, was a brutal reminder of Johnson’s weakness in Parliament.

It immediately fueled speculation that Johnson would seek to increase his majority by holding a general election sooner rather than later. The only question is whether it would be before or after Oct. 31, the deadline for the country to leave the European Union.

“The election campaign is effectively already underway,” said Anand Menon, professor of European politics and foreign affairs at King’s College London.

The results from Wales made clear that an election is needed, but they also suggested that Johnson cannot be confident of victory should one take place in the fall, and that is the quandary for Johnson.

Johnson has long been the cheerleader for pro-Brexit forces, and since becoming prime minister he has doubled down on his vow to leave the EU on schedule, with or without a deal governing future relations with the bloc.

Parliament has thrice rejected the Brexit deal pushed by Johnson’s predecessor, and most lawmakers oppose a no-deal Brexit. With European officials resolute that negotiations cannot be reopened, Johnson is preparing for a showdown over his plans. Even with the support of 10 lawmakers from Northern Ireland, a working majority of just one seat leaves the new prime minister especially vulnerable.

The defeat in Wales has also illustrated how Brexit is re-engineering British politics, cutting across traditional party lines with unpredictable consequences as voters focus on the tortured Brexit efforts.

That was on Tuesday.

Officials announced early Friday that Jane Dodds, the candidate for the anti-Brexit Liberal Democrats, had defeated the Conservative incumbent, Chris Davies, by 1,425 votes.

Dodds was helped by an experimental “remain alliance”: Two small parties did not contest the seat so as not to divide the anti-Brexit vote. She won even though a majority of voters in the region had voted for Brexit in the 2016 referendum.

Newly-elected Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson, right, and Welsh Liberal Democrat leader Jane Dodds celebrated in Brecon, Wales after Dodds won the district, which was a Conservative Party stronghold, spelling trouble for new Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Newly-elected Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson, right, and Welsh Liberal Democrat leader Jane Dodds celebrated in Brecon, Wales after Dodds won the district, which was a Conservative Party stronghold, spelling trouble for new Prime Minister Boris Johnson.(Ben Brichall/PA via Associated Press)

Johnson’s energy and upbeat, if blustery, rhetoric has cheered Conservative supporters and given his party a bounce in some opinion polls, which was reflected in the closer-than-expected result in Brecon and Radnorshire.

Normally, the Conservatives would expect to keep the seat, having won it comfortably in 2017 by about 8,000 votes, but the circumstances that prompted the election complicated matters for the Conservatives. Their chosen candidate, Davies, was unseated by a petition from local voters after he was convicted of making a false expenses claim. The party nonetheless chose him to fight for the seat, but the results also showed mounting challenges for all of the big traditional mainstream parties. The main opposition Labour Party, which is equivocal on Brexit, was pushed into an embarrassing fourth place, its vote share squeezed by the anti-Brexit alliance.

As long as Corbyn leads Labour, they will continue to be downgraded.

Nigel Farage’s populist Brexit Party placed third with around 10 percent of the vote, enough to suggest it remains a problem for Johnson despite his efforts to neutralize it by stuffing his new Cabinet with hard-liners.

Maybe Johnson should bring in Farage and ensure his prime ministership.

During a tour of the United Kingdom this week, Johnson also doubled down on his red lines for negotiations with Brussels, stoking anger in Scotland and Northern Ireland, which voted to remain, and rattling investors who sold the pound.

If he sticks to his word, striking a deal would require either him, or the EU, to reverse course.

Failing that, Johnson’s determination to leave the bloc anyway would face a rebellion in Parliament, where a majority of lawmakers oppose a potentially chaotic “no-deal” Brexit.

It is unclear, however, whether lawmakers can find a legally watertight way to stop Britain from crashing out of the EU come Oct. 31.

Holding an election after such an outcome could help Johnson scoop up Brexit Party supporters, having delivered on their overriding objective, but it could entail the serious risk of fighting an election against the backdrop of chaos.

British consumers’ reactionto possible shortages of food and pharmaceuticals is impossible to predictas are the wider economic, political, and constitutional ramifications of a sudden rupture.

Look at that. The evil rich fu*ks will deprive you of food and medicine if you don't do what they want.

“Holding an election after ‘no deal’ risks exaggerating the ability and willingness of the British people to keep calm and carry on,” said Menon, the political professor.

Well, they do have a reputation for stiff upper lips.

--more--"

More importantly for Johnson, he needs to figure out what to do about Iran before he goes golfing with Trump; otherwise, his term as prime minister is over.

The heat is literally on:

"Britain’s weather service said the country’s 10 hottest years since the 19th century have all occurred since 2002, as climate change makes the United Kingdom warmer and wetter....."

Actually, wetter means cooler by its very definition, and you are then told the 10 coldest years were all before 1964.

If you think it's hot now, just wait until you get to Kennebunkport.


{@@##$$%%^^&&}

"Emergency talks on nuclear deal constructive but inconclusive, Iranian minister says" by Adam Taylor Washington Post, July 28, 2019

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s deputy foreign minister said Sunday that an emergency meeting in Vienna between Tehran and its partners in the 2015 Iran nuclear deal had yielded positive developments but not ‘‘resolved everything.’’

‘‘The atmosphere was constructive, and the discussions were good,’’ Abbas Araghchi told reporters.

Araghchi said he and his partners from Germany, France, Britain, China, Russia, and the European Union remain determined to save the deal.

The fate of the agreement remains uncertain after the Trump administration pulled out of the deal last year and reimposed sanctions on Iran, prompting Tehran to scale back its commitments under the pact.

In early July, Iran said it had breached a stockpile limit for low-enriched uranium allowed under the deal and was enriching uranium at a higher level than permitted. Tehran has said it will continue to reduce its obligations under the pact if the remaining parties to the deal do not help alleviate Iran’s economic isolation.

Earlier Sunday, the head of Iran’s nuclear agency was reported to have told lawmakers that Iran has enriched 24 metric tons of uranium since the 2015 nuclear deal was reached.

The remarks by Ali Akbar Salehi of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization were reported widely by state-run and semiofficial media, which cited conservative lawmakers present at the closed-door meeting.

The claim, if confirmed, would suggest that Iran has produced far more enriched uranium than was previously known, exceeding the deal’s limit many times over; however, some experts expressed skepticism and suggested Salehi may have been talking about enriched uranium that was produced but subsequently diluted or ‘‘downblended’’ — a process that could be used to keep machines running while still ultimately yielding relatively low enriched uranium.

I was just going to say, none of the stuff is near nuclear bomb grade, and quite frankly, I'm sick and tired of WaComPo war pre$$ insinuations.

Salehi also said that Iran was moving to restart activity at the heavy-water nuclear reactor at its Arak facility, according to the accounts.

In his meeting with lawmakers on Sunday, Salehi was reported to have said that the developments were not indicative of an intent to produce nuclear weapons.

That is the impression my print copy left me with; hopefully, the web version additions will clear things up:

Iran’s uranium enrichment capabilities and its heavy-water nuclear reactor were placed under restrictions by the 2015 deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), for fear that they could be used by Iran to pursue a nuclear weapons program.

Uranium must be enriched to high levels for use in nuclear weapons. The JCPOA placed a limit on the amount of enriched uranium Iran could possess and the level to which enriched uranium could be produced.

The claim that Iran’s enriched-uranium stockpile had exceeded the 300-kilogram limit was subsequently confirmed by the International Atomic Energy Agency, but in Iranian media on Sunday, Salehi was reported to have said that it went further than this.

‘‘After the JCPOA, Iran enriched 24 tons of uranium, not 300 kilograms,’’ Gholamali Jafarzadeh, a member of the Iranian parliament, quoted Salehi as saying, according to Mehr News.

Twenty-four metric tons is 24,000 kilograms.

The IAEA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Experts had deemed Arak’s heavy-water reactor a risk for proliferation as it could allow Iran to produce weapons-grade plutonium. The nuclear deal required Iran to pour concrete into the pipes of the reactor’s calandria, or core, as part of a redesign.

Salehi had said last week that the redesign of the heavy-water reactor, which was being done in partnership with China and Britain, was making progress. Britain replaced the United States in the project after the Trump administration pulled out of the nuclear deal.

Now we know why Johnson is under pressure!

‘‘We do not intend to produce nuclear weapons because of religious reasons,’’ lawmaker Mehrdad Lahouti quoted Salehi as saying, according to the Iranian Students News Agency.

I believe them, and besides, if they were doing the world would know.

Though they are working together on the heavy-water reactor, relations between Iran and Britain have been tense in recent weeks, after British marines helped seize an Iranian-flagged tanker near Gibraltar and Iran seized a British-flagged tanker that was passing the Straits of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf.

I'm glad that tension has passed like two ships in the night.

--more--"

Please forgive the Iranians for believing the false promise of nuclear power, but the fractious elite re,member what happened after Iraq invaded Kuwait and threw babies out of incubators on on to the cold, hard floor!

Took Thatcher to buck up H.W., and Trump is simply returning the favor.


{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Once Iran has been recolonized, they can get Hong Kong back:

"Clashes with police turn Hong Kong’s downtown into tear gas-filled battlefield" by Austin Ramzy New York Times, July 28, 2019

HONG KONG — For the second day in a row, thousands rallied on Sunday in Hong Kong to protest mob violence and what they say is police brutality against peaceful marchers, and for the second consecutive day, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at the throngs.

This was the third straight weekend that violent clashes had broken out since the demonstrations began nearly two months ago.....

My pre$$ has been with them thew whole way, causing me to believe this is a U.S. government covert destabilization campaign.

--more--"

"China backs Hong Kong officials, but leaves protests for them to solve" by Chris Buckley and Austin Ramzy New York Times, July 29, 2019

BEIJING — The Chinese government on Monday laid down its firm support of Hong Kong’s embattled leader and police force but failed to offer any clear solutions after two months of rolling protests that have flared into violence and stoked opposition to Chinese rule.

Chinese officials made a strongly worded defense of the local Hong Kong authorities during a rare news conference in Beijing by the government office that oversees policy toward the city, but they failed to address the demonstrators’ demands for more accountability in the police force and a greater say in the city’s future, which could pave the way for more unrest.

The remarks by Chinese officials Monday came days after a People’s Liberation Army spokesman hinted that military force could be usedto bring to heel the antigovernment demonstrations that have become regular events in Hong Kong since June. The demonstrations have repeatedly spiraled into violent melees as smaller groups of more confrontational protesters have faced off with police officers who have used tear gas and clubs against them.....

Thank God the controlled protests over here are with the conjunction with authority and with the approval of the pre$$.

--more--"

Related:

Hong Kong charges dozens of protesters with rioting

The New York Times tells me the police were noticeably more aggressive.

Chinese military in Hong Kong labels protests ‘intolerable’

I'm told a "threatening speech coincides with the release of an extraordinary video showing Chinese soldiers practicing firing on demonstrators."

"Thousands of civil servants and backers rallied Friday in an unprecedented show of support for protests over Hong Kong’s handling of its worst political crisis in decades. The action came ahead of more unauthorized demonstrations planned for this weekend, when protesters and police are likely to face off again in potentially violent street battles. Friday’s rally marked the first time that government workers have protested openly, revealing the depth of anger in Hong Kong. Participants, who were authorized to rally only in a small square in central Hong Kong, spilled out onto surrounding roads. Many stayed despite pouring rain, handing out fliers for a planned general strike on Monday. ‘‘Hong Kongers, fight on! Civil servants, fight on!’’ they shouted. ‘‘Revolution of our times!’’ The protests began months ago over now-shelved plans to allow extraditions to mainland China, but they have grown to include demands for an independent investigation into police use of force and the resignation of Carrie Lam, the city’s leader, while reviving a movement calling for true democracy in Hong Kong. ‘‘Given the current political situation in Hong Kong, there are no options’’ to be neutral, said an open letter, purportedly from civil servants from the Hong Kong government’s information services department. ‘‘To remain neutral is to be an accomplice to acts of oppression, bowing to the reign of terror.’’ One 36-year-old demonstrator who wanted to be identified only as a member of the Hong Kong Disciplined Services — which includes police, firefighters and immigration, customs and correctional officers — said he hesitated to attend for fear of losing his job, but in the end, he said, he decided he would have felt ashamed of himself if he had stayed home."

Look at that! 

PROTEST SHAMING!

Also see:

"Lawmakers accuse Trump administration of delaying F-16 sales to Taiwan" by Edward Wong and Eric Schmitt New York Times, July 30, 2019

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers in Congress from both political parties have accused the Trump administration of delaying an $8 billion sale of F-16 fighter jetsto Taiwan, the self-governing democratic island off the coast of China that is supported by the United States.

Chinese officials have said they object strongly to the sale of 66 jets requested by Taiwan, which would be by far the largest such purchase by its government in many years. Lawmakers are now questioning whether the Trump administration is delaying approval of the sale, either to avoid upsetting Beijing while delicate trade negotiations are underway or to use it as a bargaining chip.

The large purchase would make one wonder whether something was in the works, wouldn't it

Any such move by the administration would ignite intense bipartisan opposition in Congress.

Oh, how wonderful. When it comes to war on China and arms sales, they are bipartisan. Makes you wonder if the Yemen war resolutions and complaining about war powers is just for show as they largely egg on the wars.

“Our support for Taiwan through arms transfers is not up for negotiation with Beijing,” Representative Michael McCaul of Texas, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told The New York Times on Monday.

“I will support the sale of F-16s to Taiwan as soon as the State Department notices them to our committee, which I expect to happen soon,” McCaul said.

Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the Trump administration “is possibly obstructing the sale of F-16 fighter jets to Taiwan so the president can use them as leverage in his failing trade war with China.”

“Taiwan’s defense cannot be a bargaining chip to be cashed in for a smile from China’s dictatorship,” Menendez said Monday.

Amazing how the scandal surrounding his trips to the Dominican Republic and liaisons with underaged prostitutes just faded into oblivion in the #MeToo era. He is obviously still very useful to the Zionist string-pullers as he protects their home base in the U.S.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Robert Lighthizer, the US trade representative, arrived in Shanghai on Tuesday to meet with Chinese negotiators. In Twitter posts Tuesday, President Trump criticized China and said it should enter a deal now. “We have all the cards,” he said.

Until they start dumping treasuries and demand payment. Then we are f**ked.

Lawmakers who oversee foreign policy in Congress had expected the State Department to sign off on the fighter jet sales by last week, before the House went on recess, but Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has not yet approved the official notification to allow the sales to move forward. The Senate leaves Washington on Friday and Congress is not scheduled to return until Sept. 9.

A Senate aide described hesitation by administration officials to move forward with the sales “in light of the ongoing negotiations with China.”

Jeff Emerson, a spokesman for the trade representative, said Lighthizer had not suggested delaying the arms sales or offered it as a bargaining chip in the trade talks.

The State Department declined to comment on the proposed arms sales. The Treasury Department and White House National Security Council also declined to comment.

After Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Jimmy Carter decided to normalize relations with China, Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 to set guidelines for nondiplomatic relations with Taiwan. The act requires the United States “to provide Taiwan with arms of a defensive character.”

China insists Taiwan is part of its territory and Beijing has for years objected to the sales. That has prompted the United States to try to draw as little attention to the arms purchases as possible by approving them in intermittent batches. Taiwan has had a long-standing request for new F-16s, which has provoked especially vehement objections from Beijing, given that the jets could be used to bomb mainland China.

How would we feel if China was setting up shop in Cuba, 'eh?

Some Trump administration officials have taken hard-line stands against China based on national security concerns. Others have argued that maintaining stable economic ties with Beijing is more important.

John Bolton, the White House national security adviser, has long been an outspoken defender of Taiwan and a proponent of arms salesIn a January 2017 opinion article, Bolton wrote that Trump should play the “Taiwan card” to counter China’s hegemonic moves in Asia. Bolton even suggested that the United States should restore diplomatic relations with Taiwan.

Pompeo has been less brazen on Taiwan policy, and his priority is to stay in step with Trump, but he has spoken about competing with China to keep it from spreading authoritarian ideas.

This as the NYT screams authoritarian Trump, blah blah. 

I mean, this slop is reaching such rank proportions I am simply wasting our time reading it. 

Economic advisers to Trump have refrained from taking tougher actions against China to avoid jeopardizing a potential trade deal, a goal that the president is eager to reach before the 2020 presidential election. The Treasury Department has objected to proposals to impose sanctions on Chinese officials for the detention of more than one million Muslims, according to administration officials.

That has to be a first even as the Muslims are tortured.

Three congressional officials said the F-16 sales were delayed after trade advisers appealed to Trump. One of the officials, who works for a senior Republican lawmaker, said he expected Bolton and perhaps Pompeo to press Trump this week to approve the sales, though Pompeo left for Thailand on Tuesday.

The dealfor the F-16s, which are made by Lockheed Martin, would be the second batch of arms sales to Taiwan by the Trump administration this summer; however, it is much larger and more sensitive than the earlier sale.

On July 8, the State Department notified Congress that it was moving ahead with a sale of 108 M1A2T Abrams tanks and other weapons to Taiwan, a package worth more than $2 billion. Unless Congress raises objections within one month of formal notification, the sale will go through.....

Why would Congre$$ raise objections? 

They are objecting to a delay!

--more--"

It's all about the trade deal:

US and China resume trade negotiations with slim hopes for a deal

Especially with the U.S. stirring things up in Hong Kong.

Former top economic adviser Gary Cohn says Trump’s trade war is hurting the US economy

Cohen also said the trade battle offered a ‘‘convenient excuse’’ for China to slow down its economy.

Trump says US will hit China with more tariffs

The decision came one day after the president’s top advisers returned from two days of trade talks with their Chinese counterparts in Shanghai. There were few signs of real progress, and both sides released perfunctory statements when the meetings concluded, saying there would be additional discussions in Washington next month. Talks have been complicated by the recent emergence of Zhong Shan, China’s commerce minister, as a lead negotiator for the Chinese, according to a person familiar with the discussions. Zhong’s role has signaled to some in the Trump administration that the hard-liners in China are winning the debate over the reformers, such as Vice Premier Liu He, who are more open to making structural economic changes that the United States wants. After little of substance was accomplished during the talks in Shanghai this week, officials in the Trump administration grew increasingly wary that China is retreating to its pattern of using mixed messages and delays to wait out Trump.

If that isn't ever the pot hollering kettle.

Stocks slump after Trump puts more tariffs on Chinese goods

It's not hurting the Chinese:

"A little over two months after Huawei’s chief executive began comparing his embattled company to a bullet-riddled fighter plane, the Chinese tech giant said its sales for January through June grew by nearly a quarter from a year earlier, a sign the Trump administration’s clampdown has hardly brought the company crashing to the ground. “Neither production nor shipment has been interrupted, not for one single day,” Liang Hua, chairman of Huawei’s board of directors, said Tuesday. Still, Huawei’s troubles with Washington have not left it unscathed....." 

Yeah, still (sigh), and their future is uncertain since Washington began ratcheting up efforts to undermine the company.

The article mentions the 5G reason behind it all; however, not one word about the Meng arrest at US behest.

The New York Times tells you what you need to know about the Capital One breach as consumers are warned of fake websites for the Equifax settlement (it's a $125 check you’re probably not going to get it), just another in a long li$t of $ettlement kickbacks (fraudulent foreclosures and student debt bilking immediately come to mid) that retroactively legalizes the criminality, and the regulating authorities share in the settlements as well.

Better that Geico track you by phone and send it to the cloud as Verizon beats estimates for profit and subscriber growth.

"China warns against bid to sow discord over South China Sea" by Eileen Ng Associated Press, July 31, 2019

BANGKOK — China on Wednesday warned outside nations against any attempt to sow discord between Beijing and Southeast Asian countries by playing up disputes over the South China Sea, saying differences can be resolved peacefully between the affected parties themselves.

How unreasonable.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, speaking after talks with his counterparts from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations at an annual meeting of the 10-member bloc, also reaffirmed Beijing’s commitment to conclude a Code of Conduct with ASEAN governing the South China Sea that will make the disputed region more stable.

China’s aggressive territorial claims in the South China Sea, which carries a third of global shipping, has drawn rebuke from the US and become a flashpoint for the region, with parts of the sea overlapping claims by ASEAN members Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei.

It's the U.S. driving the flashes, for the obvious reasons. If the Pacific becomes calm, we are out.

Tensions flared anew after Chinese naval boats rammed Philippine fishing boats and Vietnam accused China of violating its sovereignty by interfering with offshore oil and gas activities in disputed waters. The US State Department has said Chinese action in Vietnam undermined regional energy security and urged Beijing to ‘‘cease its bullying behavior’’ and refrain from ‘‘provocative and destabilizing activity.’’

I don't want another Southeast Asian war with those guys this time.

The US also regularly sails and flies military assets close to the disputed areas in what it calls freedom of navigation operations. On Tuesday, Philippine Defense Chief Delfin Lorenzana also criticized China’s ‘‘bullying’’ actions in the South China Sea and said Beijing’s peaceful assurances contrast with its behavior in the contested waters.

I think the Philippines guy is trying to have it both ways by paying lip service to the U.S., and U.S. actions are more like provocations.

Wang said Wednesday that Beijing and ASEAN nations can settle the disputes without any interference. ‘‘We think non-regional countries should not deliberately amplify such differences or disputes,’’ he said when asked about US involvement. ‘‘Instead they should support the efforts by China and ASEAN in having these differences properly addressed.’’

The South China Sea dispute has highlighted the growing rivalry between the US and China to assert influence in the region, putting ASEAN nations in a tight spot. At their summit in June, ASEAN leaders adopted an Indo-Pacific engagement framework that sought to find a middle ground and keep on the good side of both Washington and Beijing.

Wang also said China and ASEAN aim to conclude talks on the Code of Conduct within three years or even earlier, which will not only manage disputes more effectively but ensure the rights of non-regional countries in the waters are better protected. He said China is exploring plans to ‘‘institutionalize’’ joint military exercises with ASEAN countries in the region after two previous drills.

ASEAN and China have completed the first round of negotiations on the code, but experts said the next two rounds of talks are likely to be contentious because there is no sign that China will agree to anything that would undermine its maritime claims.

ASEAN foreign ministers, in a joint communique after their annual meeting earlier Wednesday, said some ministers had expressed concerns on ‘‘the land reclamations, activities, and serious incidents in the area which have eroded trust and confidence’’ and raised tensions. They didn’t name any country but repeated calls for ‘‘non-militarization and self-restraint in the conduct of all activities by claimants and all other states.’’

They also stressed the importance of upholding international law, including a UN sea treaty that Beijing has not followed, according to a 2016 international arbitration ruling.

Two-way trade between ASEAN members and China topped $580 billion last year, while Chinese investment in Southeast Asian nations hit nearly $10 billion, making the region its second-largest investment destination for the first time, Wang said, adding that China has infrastructure and transportation projects under its Belt and Road Initiative with every ASEAN member.

Beijing is attempting to project its influence globally through its Belt and Road Initiative, an ambitious development program of major infrastructure projects, while Washington is using the Free and Open Indo-Pacific strategy, which Beijing says is directed against it.

Washington is more interested in destroying things if you don't accept the diktat.

Also on Wednesday, the meeting’s host, Thailand, urged ASEAN members to be ‘‘more agile’’ amid increasing nationalism globally.

‘‘We must recognize that looking inward and being myopic is not our option and never will be,’’ Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai said in opening the annual ASEAN ministerial meeting. ‘‘Amid great turmoil, we must be more outward and forward looking than ever before.’’

He warned that the road ahead ‘‘could be treacherous’’ but said greater cooperation among ASEAN members and outside partners could help sustain long-term growth.

ASEAN, which is seeking to boost its own voice as a global player, is also playing host to a series of foreign ministers from key strategic and dialogue partners, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

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I would simply advise China to remember what happened in 1945 (anniversary coming up).

Checkmate, and it is no laughing matter (maybe Globe will stop printing and distributing them)!

This all comes on the heels of the Russian-South Korean airspace incident:

Pompeo says he was ready, but North Korea meeting unlikely

Why would they want to meet with him?

S. Korea says N. Korea has fired unidentified projectiles 

The early Wednesday morning launch was the second in a week, as North Korea is being slowly $queezed.

North Korea accused of launching ‘unidentified projectiles’

It’s North Korea’s third weapons tests in just over a week, South Korea says, and they look like Russian missiles.

Pompeo says US not asking Asian nations to take sides in rivalry with China

Pompeo said in a speech at an annual meeting with his ASEAN counterparts that US relations with ASEAN are guided by a shared commitment to the fundamental rules of law, human rights, and sustainable economic growth. Beijing has been attempting to project its influence globally through its ‘‘Belt and Road’’ initiative, an ambitious development program of major infrastructure projects. Washington, meanwhile, has been promoting what it calls a Free and Open Indo-Pacific, an all-encompassing vision that focuses on areas such as rule of law, freedom of navigation, and open markets that Beijing regards as directed against it. Despite Pompeo’s comments in Bangkok, he and other Trump administration officials have for months been raising the alarm about the dangers of countries allowing significant Russian and Chinese investment in their technology and infrastructure sectors. Pompeo’s comments Thursday came a day after China warned against any attempt to sow discord between Beijing and ASEAN countries by playing up disputes over the South China Sea. Pompeo also mentioned recent press reports that ASEAN member Cambodia had signed an agreement allowing the Chinese navy use of a naval base on the Gulf of Thailand. China is Cambodia’s closest political ally and main aid donor and investor, and in turn Cambodia supports China’s positions in international forums. However, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen denied the reports, pointing out that his country’s constitution does not allow foreign military forces on its soil. ‘‘The United States welcomes Cambodia’s strong defense of its national sovereignty in the region,’’ Pompeo said without elaborating. The US has been highly critical of Hun Sen’s authoritarian rule, and Pompeo appeared to be implying Washington would hold the Cambodian leader to his word.

Does this guy even hear himself? Blowhard spewing about fundamental law and human rights when his government is the biggest offender.

Related:

"Myanmar holds repatriation talks with Rohingya refugees" Associated Press, July 28, 2019

DHAKA, Bangladesh — A Myanmar government delegation has met with representatives of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslim refugees in Bangladesh to discuss creating conditions for their safe repatriation, officials said Sunday.

Myanmar’s permanent foreign secretary, U Myint Thu, led a 10-member delegation for the weekend talks in refugee camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar region. He said he told the refugees about the preparations being made for their repatriation and agreed to continue talks with them.

The long-simmering Rohingya crisis exploded in August 2017 when Myanmar’s military launched what it called a clearance campaign in Rakhine state in response to an attack by a Rohingya insurgent group. The campaign led to the mass Rohingya exodus to Bangladesh and accusations that security forces committed mass rapes and killings and burned thousands of homes.

The violence caused more than 700,000 Rohingya to flee to overcrowded refugee camps in neighboring Bangladesh and elsewhere for safety......

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That's only a concern because Myanmar is cozying up to China these days, and if the U.S. is not careful they could lose Australia.

This is all geopolitical, WWIII stuff, and gives me pause regarding the inevitability of U.S. victory with its three-pronged approach. More will come later, but as we tie up China all along the Pacific rim to keep it from coming to Iran's aid and to corner it with Russia in Mongolia and Siberia, there may be a long slog on the Malayan peninsula. It could open an avenue for China to spill into the Indian Ocean to the coast of Africa, where our troops would have to meet them.

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"Suspected Boko Haram attack on funeral in Nigeria leaves at least 65 dead" by Ibrahim Sawab, Anemona Hartocollis and Mike Ives New York Times, July 29, 2019

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — Villagers in northeastern Nigeria are fleeing their homes, leaving everything behind, after armed men on motorbikes roared into their area and gunned down funeral mourners Saturday, killing at least 65 people, officials said Monday.

Officials attributed the attack to Boko Haram, the Islamist extremist group that has terrorized the region for the past 10 years, although there was no immediate claim of responsibility for the assault.

Here we go again, another false flag or complete war propaganda fabrication, and is all about countering Chinese influence. That's why this just suddenly popped up.

The attack Saturday, in the area of Nganzai, north of the city of Maiduguri, was in retaliation for an earlier clash, officials said. Villagers have formed defense groups, armed with hunting guns and knives, to resist Boko Haram. People in the village that was attacked had repelled a militant assault two weeks earlier, said Mohammed Bulama, council chairman of the Nganzai area in Borno state. He said the villagers had killed 11 Boko Haram fighters and seized 10 AK-47 rifles.

Bulama said that Boko Haram gunmen had been moving freely around Borno state, rustling cattle, and “carting away foodstuff from our people.” Villagers who inherited their cattle and had spent all their lives herding them felt the “unbearable pain” of losing them overnight, he said.

Around noon Saturday, the Boko Haram fighters “came on a reprisal mission, attacking mourners at a graveyard in the area,” Bulama said. In addition to those who were confirmed killed, at least 10 people were injured and dozens were still missing, so the toll could rise.

The attack came just over a month after at least 30 people were killed in a triple suicide bombing in Borno that bore the hallmarks of a Boko Haram operation. Last week marked the 10-year anniversary of the emergence of the group, which has declared allegiance to the Islamic State group but has operated independently.

I'm sorry, readers, but the baaing of the war propaganda is no longer interesting and is quite sickening.

In a region devastated by violence, displacement, climate change, and the resulting widespread malnutrition, confrontations have occurred when Boko Haram fighters demand food from villagers who are themselves hungry and dependent on donations from humanitarian organizations, said Hamsatu Allamin, a Nigerian human rights advocate who has worked with foreign aid groups.

Food insecurity is an issue for everyone,” she said. “So these Boko Haram boys now go to these villagers demanding food, demanding money, demanding the animals. The pressure is all on the common man, and if you deny them, the government will not come to your aid.”

Beginning in 2015, Nigeria’s government and military have claimed repeatedly that Boko Haram was being subdued, even on the brink of defeat, its hiding places decimated, but human rights groups, aid organizations and local Nigerians have long disputed such claims, and attacks have persisted.

“People like us who have been operating in the field, we know that what the government is saying is far from the true reality on the ground,” Allamin said.

I feel like Americans have so much in common with the rest of the world.

President Muhammadu Buhari condemned the attack in a statement issued Sunday and ordered the military to hunt down those who carried it out.

Boko Haram, whose name is often roughly translated as “Western education is forbidden,” has been blamed for tens of thousands of deaths, and has prompted more than 2 million people to flee their homes in northeastern Nigeria and neighboring areas of Cameroon, Chad, and Niger.

The group has kidnapped women and girls, forcing them into marriage and slavery, and has used children as suicide bombers. It is perhaps best known for having kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls from the village of Chibok in April 2014, many of whom are still missing.

That whole event was proven to be a completely staged production.

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Not only is Nigeria the African oil pump, it's houses a U.S. drone base!

Oh, yeah, never mind the floods.

Related
:

Mozambique president and opposition leader sign peace accord, ending years of hostilities

Mozambique peace accord brings hope of economic growth

Mozambique’s president signed a permanent peace accord Thursday with the country’s main opposition party Renamo to end decades of hostilities that persisted after a devastating 15-year civil war that killed an estimated 1 million people in one of the world’s poorest countries, where an estimated 70 percent of the population lives on less than $2 per day.

It's their ‘‘moment of hope and reconciliation,’’ and wasn't Mozambique the place where there was no U.S. or U.N. presence until they had the strange pair of cyclones?

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Time to retreat back to Europe:

"The wine wars rage on. Last week, French President Emmanuel Macron officially signed into law a bill that allows the French government to levy special taxes on certain revenues that large American tech companies such as Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Apple earn in France. That incensed President Trump. ‘‘They shouldn’t have done this,’’ Trump said Friday, speaking to reporters. ‘‘I told them, I said, ‘Don’t do it because if you do it, I’m going to tax your wine.’ ’’ Trump — a self-proclaimed teetotaler — escalated the situation even further. ‘‘I’ve always liked American wines better than French wines — even though I don’t drink wine,’’ he said. ‘‘I just like the way they look, OK?’’ Needless to say, this particular value judgment did not sit well in France. ‘‘It’s absurd, in terms of having a political and economic debate, to say that ‘if you tax the GAFAs, I’ll tax wine.’ It’s completely moronic,’’ French Agriculture Minister Didier Guillaume said Tuesday....."

Once begins to wonder whether the French are with us. 

We all know Spain will be neutral, and this could mean that the Chinese could cross the Mediterranean and thrust up through Spain and France and attack the German spear point from behind!

"An 8-year-old boy was run over by a train and killed at Frankfurt’s main station on Monday after a man pushed him and his mother onto the tracks, German police said. The 40-year-old suspect fled the scene with passersby in pursuit and was arrested near the station. He was being questioned and there was no immediate information on his possible motive. Police spokeswoman Isabell Neumann said there appeared to be no connection between the suspect and the victims. The boy’s mother was taken to a hospital and also was being questioned. There was no immediate information on her injuries. Police said that the suspect is an Eritrean citizen but did not immediately release further information....." 

Probably because he is a migrant as Germany moves through Poland:

"President Trump will visit Warsaw from Aug. 31 through Sept. 2 to take part in observances marking the 80th anniversary of World War II, aides to Poland’s president said Tuesday. Washington recently decided to add 1,000 troops to its contingent of 4,000 troops based in Poland as a security enhancement for the country, which is wary of neighboring Russia’s military activity. Poland is planning the purchase of state-of-the-art US F-35 jets. It is also buying liquefied gas from the United States in a drive to cut its energy dependence on imports from Russia....."

Let the missiles fly:

"US-Russia arms control treaty dies; US to test new weapon" by Deb Riechmann Associated Press, August 2, 2019

WASHINGTON — The United States plans to test a new missile in coming weeks that would have been prohibited under a landmark, 32-year-old arms control treaty that the United States and Russia ripped up on Friday.

It's the U.S. that pulled out of it just as they did the Iran deal, and now we know why!

Washington and Moscow walked out of the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces treaty that former president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev signed in 1987, raising fears of a new arms race. The United States blamed Moscow for the death of the treaty. It said that for years Moscow has been developing and fielding weapons that violate the treaty and threaten the United States and its allies, particularly in Europe.

‘‘Russia is solely responsible for the treaty’s demise,’’ Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement released on Friday.

Russia pointed a finger at America.

‘‘The denunciation of the INF treaty confirms that the US has embarked on destroying all international agreements that do not suit them for one reason or another,’’ the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement Friday. ‘‘This leads to the actual dismantling of the existing arms control system.’’

Exiting the treaty, however, could have an upside for the United States. Washington has complained for years that the arms control playing field was unfair. US officials argued that not only was Russia violating the treaty and developing prohibited weapons, but that China also was making similar noncompliant weapons, leaving the United States alone in complying with the aging arms control pact.

This war propaganda has become so f***ing absurd it is useless.

Poor U.S. alone in complying! Good Christ!

Now, the United States is free to develop weapons systems that were previously banned. The United States is planning a test flight of such a weapon in coming weeks, according to a senior administration official, who was not authorized to publicly discuss the weapons development and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

Meaning they had this ready to go long before getting out of the deal!

The current Pentagon budget includes $48 million for research on potential military responses to the Russian violations of the INF treaty, but the options do not include a nuclear missile.

Now they are going to waste $48 million on countermeasures!!

The official downplayed the test and said it was not meant as a provocation against Russia. Because the United States adhered to the treaty for 32 years, the United States is ‘‘years away’’ from effectively deploying weapons previously banned under the agreement, the official said Thursday.

Arms control advocates still worry that America’s exit from the INF treaty will lead the two nations to also scrap the larger New START treaty, which expires in early 2021.

‘‘Pulling out of this treaty leaves New START as the only bilateral nuclear arms agreement between the US and Russia,’’ said physicist David Wright, co-director of the Global Security Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. If President Trump ‘‘pulls out of that treaty as well or allows it to lapse, it will be the first time since 1972 that the two countries will be operating without any mutual constraints on their nuclear forces.’’

Trump hasn’t committed to extending or replacing New START, which beginning in 2018 imposed limits on the number of US and Russian long-range nuclear warheads and launchers. Trump has called New START ‘‘just another bad deal’’ made by the Obama administration, and Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, said in June that it’s unlikely the administration will agree to extend the treaty for five years, which could be done without legislative action in either capital.

The Trump administration thinks talks about extending New START are premature. The administration claims that with China’s growing arsenal of nuclear warheads, Beijing can no longer be excluded from nuclear arms control agreements. Trump has expressed a desire to negotiate a trilateral arms control deal signed by the United States, Russia, and China.

‘‘We’ll see what happens,’’ Trump told reporters at the White House on Thursday. ‘‘I will say Russia would like to do something on a nuclear treaty and that’s OK with me. They’d like to do something and so would I.’’

As if your signature on a piece of paper meant anything.

The administration official said the United States has had regular discussions with the Russians and Chinese about the possibility of a three-way arms control agreement. Trump wants the agreement to address not just intermediate-range weapons, but ‘‘all nuclear weapons,’’ the official said.

Israel going to have to give up theirs, because if not I suggest you keep yours and we will keep ours.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov of Russia urged the United States to observe a moratorium in using intermediate-range weapons.

‘‘We invited the US and other NATO countries to assess the possibility of declaring the same moratorium on deploying intermediate-range and shorter-range equipment as we have, the same moratorium Vladimir Putin declared, saying that Russia will refrain from deploying these systems when we acquire them unless the American equipment is deployed in certain regions,’’ he said in an interview with state news agency Tass.

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US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was presented with flowers as he boarded his plane to depart for Australia from Don Mueang International Airport, in Bangkok on Saturday.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was presented with flowers as he boarded his plane to depart for Australia from Don Mueang International Airport, in Bangkok on Saturday.(Jonathan Ernst/Associated Press pool)

They were overjoyed that he was leaving their nation!

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That gets us back home:


Pentagon reexamines $10 billion JEDI cloud contract process

The 11th-hour Oval Office intervention comes just weeks before the winning bid was expected to be announced and has now left a major military priority up in the air. The JEDI contract aims at building a department-wide cloud computing infrastructure that will ease the sharing of sensitive intelligence across the Army, Navy, Marines, and Air Force. The Defense Department also sees it as an important steppingstone for incorporating artificial intelligence algorithms into how it wages war. Trump’s directive could deal a blow to the federal ambitions of Amazon Web Services, the market-leading cloud computing provider. AWS is the only company that has received the highest-level Defense Department IT certification, known as Impact Level 6, which allows it to handle top-secret data. That advantage stems in large part from a $600 million contract with the CIA that was awarded in 2013.

Made Bezos and his wife rich:

Jeff Bezos’s ex-wife now second-largest individual Amazon shareholder

MacKenzie Bezos is officially 23rd on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, a ranking of the world’s 500 richest people, and I am ashamed to be an American:

It’s the progressives vs. Biden

Biden fails to shine in second debate

Joe Biden redeems himself

Could those unwieldy Democratic debates boost Trump’s cause?

Trump again targets ‘Squad’ at rally

Growing support for an impeachment inquiry adds to pressure on Pelosi

The New York Times says the drive toward an inquiry seems to be driven as much by Capitol Hill politics as by any push from voters as impeachment was barely a whisper in two nights of Democratic presidential debate.

"A majority of House Democrats back impeachment, analysis shows" by Mike DeBonis, David Weigel, John Wagner and JM Rieger Washington Post, August 2, 2019

WASHINGTON — The movement to oust President Trump from office crossed a new threshold Friday, with a majority of House Democrats endorsing an impeachment inquiry, a development that ramps up pressure on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who continued to resist the move.

The push in the House to remove Trump has been accelerated by testimony from former special counsel Robert Mueller III confirming that the president could be charged with obstruction of justice after he leaves office.

OMG, it is as if he never appeared and the narrative goes on!

Those calls have come amid mounting pressure from liberal activists, applied in some cases by Democratic primary challengers who argue that incumbents, including four powerful committee chairmen, have been too reticent in taking on Trump.

The DCC has banned contracts for anyone who works with primary challengers.

As of Friday, 118 out of 235 House Democrats said they support at least opening an impeachment inquiry, according to an analysis by The Washington Post.

Representative Salud Carbajal, a California Democrat, pushed Democrats past the majority milestone with his announcement Friday. ‘‘We cannot ignore this president’s actions, and we cannot let him off the hook because of his title,’’ he said in a written statement.

Amid the growing support for impeachment proceedings, Pelosi on Friday issued a lengthy statement that recapitulated the progress of the House’s existing investigations and vowed that Trump ‘‘will be held accountable’’ without specifically mentioning the opening of a formal inquiry.

‘‘To protect our democracy and our Constitution, Democrats in the Congress continue to legislate, investigate, and litigate,’’ she said.

They are Trump's best argument for a second term.

Pelosi’s statement did note ‘‘a significant step’’ last week when the House filed a court petition seeking evidence underpinning Mueller’s report, citing the House’s need to determine ‘‘whether to exercise its full Article I powers, including a constitutional power of the utmost gravity: approval of articles of impeachment.’’’

House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, said last week that the filing was tantamount to launching an impeachment inquiry, even though there has been no vote of the committee or the whole House to open a formal probe.

So they are doing it anyway, even if they are not calling it that.

Pelosi in the past has cited the importance of public opinion and gaining at least some bipartisan cooperation in guiding any decision on impeachment. If the Democratic House were to vote for Trump’s impeachment, the charges would go to the GOP-controlled Senate for a trial to decide whether Trump should be removed from office.

No Senate Republican has backed ousting Trump, and an acquittal is the likely outcome.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll released last month showed 59 percent of Americans believe the House should not begin impeachment proceedings against Trump, while 37 percent believe it should, including 61 percent of Democrats.

Before leaving Washington last week for the six-week summer recess, Pelosi told reporters that her colleagues were free to chart their own course while also making clear that their decisions would not necessarily change her views.

‘‘I’m willing to take whatever heat there is,’’ she said.

Among those newly backing an impeachment inquiry are two prominent House committee chairmen from New York, Representative Eliot Engel of the Foreign Affairs Committee and Representative Nita Lowey of the Appropriations Committee. Both are facing liberal primary opponents in next year’s elections.

Engel said Trump’s ‘‘repeated abuses have brought American democracy to a perilous crossroads. Following the guidance of the Constitution — which I have sworn to uphold — is the only way to achieve justice.’’

In announcing her support for an inquiry, Lowey said in a statement that Mueller’s investigation showed ‘‘systemic deception that appears to be second nature for the president and his advisers.’’

Representative Rashida Tlaib, a Michigan Democrat, who rattled some Democrats in January when she used profanity to describe the president, said that the recesswould probably build support for impeachment.

‘‘They’re going to be hearing this from their constituents,’’ Tlaib said. ‘‘I’ve seen more and more support for impeachment at my own town halls.’’

Tlaib talked about impeachment at two Friday meetings in her district, starting with a town hall in Highland Park, where she said that ‘‘the Constitution demands’’ that a president ‘‘step away from conflicts of interest,’’ and Trump had not.

Probing Trump without the power of impeachment hearings was not enough, she said: ‘‘Going through the investigative process has been very draining, and it also hasn’t resulted in actual results.’’

You guys are a f***king joke!

Trump and his administration have refused to comply with most of the congressional requests, forcing the House to pursue a resolution in the courts.

Liberal activist groups, meanwhile, are planning to spend the recess applying pressure on the remaining House holdouts. A coalition of groups have organized an ‘‘Impeachment August’’ campaign to encourage voters to press lawmakers at town halls and their district offices.

Say goodbye to the majority. Hope you enjoyed your two years.

Sean Eldridge, founder and president of Stand Up America, one of the participating groups, called the majority support among House Democrats a ‘‘huge milestone’’ in the fight to hold Trump accountable.

‘‘It’s time for Speaker Pelosi to support a formal impeachment inquiry,’’ he said. ‘‘No more dancing around it. No more delays.’’

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Related:

Judge rejects Stone’s bid to dismiss Mueller indictment

Senate passes two-year budget and debt ceiling bill

The bipartisan vote, which had the support of President Trump, came amid growing calls from House members to impeach the president. The bill suspends the debt ceiling through July 31, 2021. The agreement stands as a rare example of bipartisan legislating in the Trump era, and is one of the few major votes Congress will take this year.

Corey Lewandowski says he’s interested in running for US Senate seat in New Hampshire

You didn't have to tell me twice.

Also see:

As Trump sits solidly on his perch, the issues smolder

Atlanta to add context about racism to historic monuments

Alligator in Chicago lagoon, cost the city $33,600 to remove

"President Trump on Friday denied he had made light of reports that the Baltimore home of Democratic Representative Elijah Cummings had been recently burglarized, telling reporters his comments earlier in the day were not meant to be ‘‘wise guy.’’ His denial came in response to a reporter’s question on Friday afternoon as he was leaving the White House for his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey. His earlier Twitter comments on the break-in had drawn a chiding response from his former UN ambassador, Nikki Haley, among a cascade of others, including some Republicans. ‘‘This is so unnecessary,’’ Haley wrote in a tweet that included an emoji with rolling eyes. Other Republicans weighing in Friday included Representative Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, who called Trump’s tweet was ‘‘so beneath the office you hold.’’ ‘‘It’s childish, and yet it’s getting really old,’’ Kinzinger said on Twitter. He has criticized Trump at other times. Trump was responding to news reports, including one broadcast on Fox News in the previous hour, that the residence of Cummings and his wife in West Baltimore’s Druid Heights neighborhood was burglarized early Saturday, just hours before Trump started attacking the House Oversight Committee chairman on Twitter. Haley, whom Trump praised as ‘‘a fantastic person’’ on the day in October that she announced her plans to resign, was to criticize Trump’s latest tweet directed at Cummings and the city he represents. Haley, a former South Carolina governor, served in Trump’s administration for its first two years. White House counselor Kellyanne Conway responded to Haley’s tweet with one of her own, writing: ‘‘THIS is so unnecessary.’’ ‘‘Trump-PENCE2020,’’ Conway added, highlighting Vice President Mike Pence’s role on the Republican ticket at a time when there has been speculation about the political futures of both Pence and Haley. Echoing other Democrats, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland said that he was concerned by Trump’s ‘‘racist & dangerous rhetoric, which divides our communities and could lead to someone getting hurt.’’ ‘‘Words have consequences,’’ Hoyer cautioned on Twitter."

So what is Al Sharpton up to these days?

I had my doubts all along. they killed a mentally ill man, and a father asks why do some cops act bad?

I wonder if Trump will get any credit for this:

"Rapper A$AP Rocky and two other American suspects were temporarily freed from a Swedish jail and planning to head back to the United States on Friday as judges mull a verdict in the assault case against them. The Stockholm District Court released the 30-year-old rapper, whose real name is Rakim Mayers, as well as David Rispers Jr. and Bladimir Corniel until Aug. 14 — when a verdict is expected in the case. They are accused of beating 19-year-old Mustafa Jafari on June 30 outside a fast-food restaurant in central Stockholm. The three suspects were seen hugging each other at the court after they learned they would be released as some of the public gathered inside the courthouse loudly cheered. A private plane was waiting at the Stockholm Arlanda Airport to transport the suspects and Black back to the United States Friday evening, according to the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet. Mayers’ mother, Renee Black, who was present throughout the court proceedings, was with her son when he was released. Mayers shared an emotional post on Instagram after he was released, thanking his fans for their support during this ‘‘very difficult and humbling experience.’’ President Trump, who had caused a stir in US-Swedish diplomatic relations after publicly offering support to the Grammy-nominated recording artist, celebrated Mayers’ release, tweeting, ‘‘It was a Rocky Week, get home ASAP A$AP!’’ Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven heard an appeal from Trump in July, but said he couldn’t interfere in a legal case. Robert O’Brien, a US special presidential envoy sent to monitor the court proceedings, stressed that Washington was ‘‘grateful that I got to attend and observe the judicial process’’ in Sweden."

Rocky will be back A$AP, while Assange languishes in obscurity.

If only he were a black woman.

R. Kelly to appear in NYC court on sex charges

Jeffrey Epstein’s bail bid hurt as court slams private guards for wealthy

Following Globe investigation, Bristol town leader loses job, faces backlash

A prominent local official accused of soliciting one boy and sexually abusing two others decades ago has lost his longtime job at a Catholic church, while the diocese has acknowledged that it had received complaints in the past about his conduct after a Globe story detailed the accusations.

Mother of boy found in Denver storage unit pleads to abuse

Citing ‘poor conditions’ at border, doctors urge probe of 6 child migrant deaths

John Dillinger relatives doubt body in grave is the gangster

FCC vote threatens free cable services municipalities have long enjoyed

The decision “risks grave harms” to municipalities, said FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, a Democrat.

LATE BREAKING NEWS:

At least 15 people killed in El Paso shooting

The 21-year-old suspect is in custody in what looks like another active shooter drill timed to distract and push the gun grab again, but at least it will help the O'Rourke campaign!
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