Saturday, April 26, 2008
Other Items
His girlfriend, Angela Martini, said that Leif, 22, had gotten wind the military was after him and was planning to turn himself in to an Army office in Duluth after being AWOL for nearly 16 months.
The Carlton County Sheriff's Office saved him the trouble, arresting him about 7 a.m. on a desertion warrant.
Kamunen is one of three brothers from northern Minnesota who went AWOL from the Army at virtually the same time about 16 months ago, not returning to basic training after a Christmas break in 2006.
His twin brother, Luke, was spotted during a traffic stop in spring 2007 and arrested on a desertion warrant. He was flown to Fort Knox, Ky., where he was given an "other than honorable discharge" last year. He is now working and attending Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College in Cloquet.
The whereabouts of the third brother, Leo, remained a bit of a mystery on Friday night.
That's the opening to Randy Furst's "Deputy nabs second of three AWOL Minnesota brothers" (Minnesota Star Tribune). The Kamunen brothers self-checkedout in December of 2006 and quickly went public about it. If you never heard of them in all this time, take it up with the lousy 'independent' media in this country. Amy Goodman never interviewed or mentioned them. In fact Joel Bleifuss (In These Times, June 2007) was the only one to cover about them. All the outlets and only Joel?
The Kamunen brothers were class of 2007 and class of 2007 was completely ignored.
Charlie notes "HUBdate: 'A Rock Star Welcome'" (HillaryClinton.com):
"A Rock Star Welcome" Hillary received "a rock star welcome" from more than 3,000 supporters gathered last night in East Chicago, IN. "Amanda McKinney...said she entered Friday's event as a skeptic and left as a believer. 'I thought it was very informative. It wasn't just about charm and charisma,' McKinney said, officially renouncing her former support for Obama." Read more.
"Talk is Cheap" Yesterday, Sen. Obama renewed false attacks on Hillary for not standing up to the oil industry while he is the only candidate to have voted for the Bush-Cheney energy bill and has taken more money from oil company executives than any other candidate in the race. Hillary's response: "When it came time to stand up against the oil companies and stand against Dick Cheney's energy bill, my opponent voted for it and I voted against it. And that bill had billions of dollars in giveaways to the oil companies. It was the best bill that the energy companies could buy." Read more and read Hillary's response.
"It's Time for Leadership" Yesterday, Hillary launched a new ad airing in NC and IN highlighting her plan to take on oil companies and lower the cost of gas for Hoosier families: "These days it costs fifty bucks to fill up the tank. How can Indiana families afford that? ...With gas this expensive, talk is cheap. It's time for leadership." Watch it here.
The Tide is Turning: A new Gallup poll shows "support for [Hillary] is significantly higher in…post-primary interviews than...just prior to her Pennsylvania victory...Obama's lead dwindled steadily all week, falling from a high of 10 percentage points." Hillary and Sen. Obama are statistically tied, and Hillary now leads nationally against Sen. McCain (47-45). Read more.
Striking a Chord in NC: Hillary’s NC economic solutions have "struck home in the mountains, where working people feel the pinch from the state’s highest housing and fuel costs, thousands of workers have lost high-paying manufacturing jobs, and scores of local soldiers have served multiple tours in Iraq or Afghanistan...'I don’t know how anybody who listened to her tonight could vote for anybody else,' said Madison County resident Charles Tolley." Read more.
Previewing Today: Hillary campaigns across Indiana, holding "Solutions for the American Economy" rallies in South Bend, IN and Fort Wayne, IN.
On Tap: Hillary will meet with voters across North Carolina this Sunday evening through Tuesday morning. Monday, Hillary will attend a Club 44 event in Charlotte, NC.
The following community sites have updated since yesterday morning:
Rebecca's Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude;
Cedric's Cedric's Big Mix;
Kat's Kat's Korner;
Betty's Thomas Friedman is a Great Man;
Mike's Mikey Likes It!;
Elaine's Like Maria Said Paz;
Wally's The Daily Jot;
Trina's Trina's Kitchen;
Ruth's Ruth's Report;
and Marcia's SICKOFITRADLZ
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
randy furst
leif kamunen
leo kamunen
luke kamunen
like maria said paz
kats korner
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
trinas kitchen
the daily jot
cedrics big mix
mikey likes it
thomas friedman is a great man
ruths report
sickofitradlz
Iraq
CNN reports on the continued assault of Sadr City:
Overnight in Baghdad's Sadr City killed eight people -- including two children -- and wounded 28, Iraqi officials said, and insurgent attacks across Iraq killed six people and wounded 26.
A U.S. military spokesman denied an Interior Ministry official's report that airstrikes and clashes involving U.S. forces caused the casualties in Sadr City.
"There were no 'fierce' clashes between 8 p.m. and 8 a.m. involving U.S. forces or those Iraqi security forces we are partnered with," said Lt. Col. Steve Stover, a U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad. "So we do not know who killed those women and children."
U.S. and Iraqi forces have been battling Shiite militias in Sadr City for a month.
Saturday saw a wave of suicide and car bombings across Iraq.
BBC notes: "A fire which broke out at an Iraqi oil pipeline south of Baghdad injuring at least eight security guards was accidental, the US military has said." And they note: "A series of co-ordinated bomb attacks has killed at least seven people and injured more than 20 in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul."
Lewis notes "HUBdate: Fair is Fair" (HillaryClinton.com):
Fair is Fair: In an op-ed in the Washington Post, Clinton campaign strategist Geoff Garin writes: "The bottom line is that one campaign really has engaged in a mean-spirited, unfair character attack on the other candidate -- but it has been Obama’s campaign, not ours. You would be hard-pressed to find significant analogues from our candidate, our senior campaign officials or our advertising to the direct personal statements that the Obama campaign has made about Clinton." Read More.
$$$: "Hillary Clinton raised $10 million in the 24 hours after winning the Pennsylvania primary, aided by contributions from 80,000 new donors." Read more and keep it going at http://www.hillaryclinton.com/.
An Open Letter From Dr. Maya Angelou: Poet and activist Dr. Maya Angelou wrote an open letter about her commitment to Hillary’s candidacy. "Hillary does not waver in standing up for those who need a champion.... I am supporting Hillary Clinton because I know that she will make the most positive difference in people's lives and she will help our country become what it can be." Read More.
In Case You Missed It: Paul Krugman writes in today's NYT: "From the beginning, I wondered what Mr. Obama’s soaring rhetoric, his talk of a new politics and declarations that 'we are the ones we've been waiting for' (waiting for to do what, exactly?) would mean to families troubled by lagging wages, insecure jobs and fear of losing health coverage. The answer, from Ohio and Pennsylvania, seems pretty clear: not much. Mrs. Clinton has been able to stay in the race, against heavy odds, largely because her no-nonsense style, her obvious interest in the wonkish details of policy, resonate with many voters in a way that Mr. Obama's eloquence does not." Read more.
Bringing Troops Home with Honor: Yesterday, Hillary highlighted policies for veterans at "Solutions for America" events in Fayetteville and Asheville, NC. It’s rare for a former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs to endorse a candidate but General Hugh Shelton is backing HRC. In NC yesterday, he said: "Unlike any other candidate, [Hillary] understands that maintaining a well-prepared armed forces goes beyond providing dollars....She is the only candidate who has offered a responsible plan for bringing our troops home with honor." Read more.
Electable...Without FL or OH? The Obama campaign released a memo yesterday on electability, but as Chris Cilizza highlights, "two states that are not mentioned in the Obama memo are Florida, the key battleground in the 2000 presidential race, and Ohio, the Florida of the 2004 contest." Read more.
Debate Watch: Hillary is willing to debate Sen. Obama in North Carolina, Oregon, and Indiana while Sen. Obama continues to resist. His excuse today: "It's not clear that another debate is going to be the best use of our time." Meanwhile Sen. Evan Bayh said this yesterday: "We have thousands of people in Indiana who...deserve an opportunity to see both candidates stand side by side...We in Indiana don’t want to be treated as second-class citizens." Read more and more.
Today on the Trail: In North Carolina, Hillary hosts a "Solutions for America" event in Jacksonville, NC. In Indiana, she hosts "Solutions for the American Economy" events in Bloomington, East Chicago, and Fort Wayne. She also meets with steelworkers to discuss creating and protecting jobs in Gary.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
iraq
paul krugman
the new york times
geoff garin
the washington post
Friday, April 25, 2008
Iraq snapshot
I get my Conscientious Objector packet approved. I'm alone. I'm free, I'm done. It's all gone now, right?
No! I still swerve at trash bags
fireworks. I'm looking at everyone's hands and faces [tonight] to see who's going to want to shoot me.
I can't express anything, I can't express love. All my relationships are falling apart because they can't f**king understand me. How do they know the pain that I've gone through or the sights that I've seen, the dead bodies? The innocence gone, stripped, dead?
I couldn't do it myself. I couldn't stand the pain. People were leaving me. I was alone. I couldn't cut my wrists. So I called the police. They come stomping through my door. I have my knife in my hand. "Shoot me. Shoot me".
All of a sudden I was the man with the RPG, with all the guns pointed at him. Misled, miseducated, thinking that "Yes, we can solve all the world's problems by killing each other". How insane is that?
Lucky enough I lived through that episode as well. See, you can't wash your hands when they're covered in blood with more blood. It's impossible; the wounds carry on. Families are destroyed.
There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Matt Mishler, Josh Randall, Robby Keller, Justiniano Rodrigues, Chuck Wiley, James Stepp, Rodney Watson, Michael Espinal, Matthew Lowell, Derek Hess, Diedra Cobb, Brad McCall, Justin Cliburn, Timothy Richard, Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Peter Brown, Bethany "Skylar" James, Zamesha Dominique, Chrisopther Scott Magaoay, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Jose Vasquez, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Clara Gomez, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Abdullah Webster, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Stephen Funk, Blake LeMoine, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Logan Laituri, Jason Marek, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Dale Bartell, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Kjar, Kyle Huwer, Wilfredo Torres, Michael Sudbury, Ghanim Khalil, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, at least fifty US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.
Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline [(877) 447-4487], Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. Tom Joad maintains a list of known war resisters. In addition, VETWOW is an organization that assists those suffering from MST (Military Sexual Trauma).
[. . .]
A second factor has been the employment of Coalition and Iraqi Forces have grown significantly since September, and over 540,000 individuals now serve
in the Iraqi Security Forces. The number of combat battalions capable of taking the lead in operations, albeit with some Coalition support, has grown to well over 100 [Slide 10]. These units are bearing an increasing share of the burden, as evidenced by the fact that Iraqi Security Force losses have recently been three times our own. We will, of course, conduct careful after action reviews with our Iraqi partners in the wake of recent operations, as there were units and
leaders found wanting in some cases, and some of our assessments may be downgraded as a result. Nonetheless, the performance of many units was solid, especially once they got their footing and gained a degree of confidence, and certain Iraqi elements proved quite capable.
Underpinning the advances of the past year have been improvements in Iraq's security institutions. An increasingly robust Iraqi-run training base enabled the Iraqi Security Forces to grow by over 133,000 soldiers and police over the past 16 months. And the still-expanding training base is expected to generate an additional 50,000 Iraqi soldiers and 16 Army and Special Operations battalions throughout the rest of 2008, along with over 23,000 police and 8 National Police battalions.
The day before this ad went on the air, David Axelrod, Barack Obama's chief strategist, appeared with me on "Meet the Press." He was asked whether Hillary Clinton would bring "the changes necessary" to Washington, and his answer was "no." This was in keeping with the direct, personal character attacks that the Obama campaign has leveled against Clinton from the beginning of this race -- including mailings in Pennsylvania that describe her as "the master of a broken system."
So let me get this straight.
On the one hand, it's perfectly decent for Obama to argue that only he has the virtue to bring change to Washington and that Clinton lacks the character and the commitment to do so. On the other hand, we are somehow hitting below the belt when we say that Clinton is the candidate best able to withstand the pressures of the presidency and do what's right for the American people, while leaving the decisions about Obama's preparedness to the voters.
Who made up those rules? And who would ever think they are fair?
Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now.
Other Items
The study says some Iraqi soldiers and police who were killed or wounded in action remain on the payroll so their families can receive financial compensation, skewing the statistics. The study was done by the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.
Reinforcing earlier findings, Special Inspector General Stuart W. Bowen Jr. and other officials said the data being provided to the U.S. military were inaccurate.
Reinforcing earlier findings, Special Inspector General Stuart W. Bowen Jr. and other officials said the data being provided to the U.S. military were inaccurate."If you say you have 10 people ready to fight but three are injured or killed, you don't have 10 people ready, you have seven," said Kristine R. Belisle, a spokeswoman for the inspector general. "So it is a very misguided and misleading number."
That is because they're dead.
And thousands of others counted as present for duty are not showing up for work because they’re injured, on leave or absent without leave, according to a new audit of the Pentagon's most recent quarterly report on Iraq by the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, a temporary federal agency created by Congress to provide oversight of U.S. dollars spent for Iraqi relief and rebuilding.
All told, the review of the March report and earlier quarterly reports on Iraq indicates, the IG said, "uncertainty about the number of Iraqi personnel who are present for duty at any one time [and] uncertainty about the capabilities of the police force because the police have greater capacity to recruit than to train." The latter limits the number of police on the rolls who have been trained, the IG said.
"The number of assigned and trained personnel presented in the [quarterly] reports does not present a complete picture of force capabilities," the IG said.
If you're not grasping why it matters consider the snow job earlier this month. Gen David Petraeus testified to Congress. What was one of his selling points? The numbers, the Iraqi security forces numbers! April 8th, US Senate Foreign Relations Committee:
A number of factors have contributed to the progress that has been made. First, of course, has been the impact of increased numbers of Coalition and Iraqi Forces. You are well aware of the U.S. surge. Less recognized is that Iraq has also conducted a surge, adding well over 100,000 additional soldiers and police to the ranks of its security forces in 2007 and slowly increasing its capability to deploy and employ these forces.
[. . .]
A second factor has been the employment of Coalition and Iraqi Forces have grown significantly since September, and over 540,000 individuals now serve
in the Iraqi Security Forces. The number of combat battalions capable of taking the lead in operations, albeit with some Coalition support, has grown to well over 100 [Slide 10]. These units are bearing an increasing share of the burden, as evidenced by the fact that Iraqi Security Force losses have recently been three times our own. We will, of course, conduct careful after action reviews with our Iraqi partners in the wake of recent operations, as there were units and
leaders found wanting in some cases, and some of our assessments may be downgraded as a result. Nonetheless, the performance of many units was solid, especially once they got their footing and gained a degree of confidence, and certain Iraqi elements proved quite capable.
Underpinning the advances of the past year have been improvements in Iraq’s security institutions. An increasingly robust Iraqi-run training base enabled the Iraqi Security Forces to grow by over 133,000 soldiers and police over the past 16 months. And the still-expanding training base is expected to generate an additional 50,000 Iraqi soldiers and 16 Army and Special Operations battalions throughout the rest of 2008, along with over 23,000 police and 8 National Police battalions.
Actually, he gave that song and dance at every committee hearing (the 7 page prepared statement, read word for word, over and over) except the US House Committee On Foreign Affairs where chair Howard Berman noted at the start of the afternoon hearing, "Our witnesses are in the home stretch of a congressional testimony marathon; to some, this hearing may even seem like the fourth time around an endless loop. That's why we are asking both Ambarassador Ryan Crocker and General David Petraeus more or less to summarize the main points of their testimony, at their discretion, a report to Congress that has been heard once in the House and twice in the Senate already. This way, we'll move along more quickly to the questions posed by members of the committee." Petraeus' claims depend upon the numbers being correct and, it turns out, they weren't.
Marci notes Howard Wolfson's "HUBdate: The Tide is Turning" (HillaryClinton.com):
Today on the Trail: Hillary highlights policies for veterans at "Solutions For America" events in Fayetteville and Asheville, NC. Hillary will be joined on the campaign trail by American hero and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Hugh Shelton, Ret.
$$$: USA Today reports "One day makes $10 million difference for Clinton." Keep going to www.hillaryclinton.com. Read more.
Superdelegate Watch: Congressman John Tanner announced his support of Hillary: "in my opinion, the best person to lead this critical effort is Hillary Clinton...Hillary is a smart, pragmatic leader who understands the grave situation our country faces" Read more.
"No Brainer" OH Gov. Ted Strickland said on a conference call yesterday: "This is for me a no-brainer...If we're going to plan to win in November, we need to choose the candidate that has the greatest strength in the states that are necessary to get us the electoral votes we need...I hope the superdelegates are paying attention." On the same call, NY Gov. David Paterson said "I don't think the tide is turning, I think the tide has turned. Read more and more.
Sen. Obama Calls Debates a "Game:" The Indianapolis Star is calling on Sen. Obama to accept an invitation to debate Hillary in the Hoosier State....In OR, Clinton "proposed two debates, including one on the challenges facing rural Oregonians." Sen. Obama responded "call[ing] Clinton’s challenge 'an old, Washington game.'" Since when did debating the issues and giving voters a choice become a "game?" Read more and more. Watch the challenge here.
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs: Yesterday in Indianapolis, Hillary said: "This campaign for me in Indiana is about jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs…This is not about speeches. It is about solutions." Read more.
Oregon Compact: Yesterday, Hillary "issued the most detailed, on-paper description to date from any of the presidential candidates on their intentions for Oregon. The 13-page document gave specific descriptions of how she intended to deal with each issue." Read more.
Montana Momentum: "Montana for Hillary announced the endorsements of seven more Montana legislators, leaders and Democratic activists, demonstrating [Hillary’s] growing support throughout Montana." Read more.
Trina notes Paul Krugman's "Self-Inflicted Confusion" (New York Times):
Let me offer an alternative suggestion: maybe his transformational campaign isn't winning over working-class voters because transformation isn’t what they’re looking for.
From the beginning, I wondered what Mr. Obama's soaring rhetoric, his talk of a new politics and declarations that "we are the ones we’ve been waiting for" (waiting for to do what, exactly?) would mean to families troubled by lagging wages, insecure jobs and fear of losing health coverage. The answer, from Ohio and Pennsylvania, seems pretty clear: not much. Mrs. Clinton has been able to stay in the race, against heavy odds, largely because her no-nonsense style, her obvious interest in the wonkish details of policy, resonate with many voters in a way that Mr. Obama's eloquence does not.
Yes, I know that there are lots of policy proposals on the Obama campaign's Web site. But addressing the real concerns of working Americans isn’t the campaign’s central theme.
Tellingly, the Obama campaign has put far more energy into attacking Mrs. Clinton’s health care proposals than it has into promoting the idea of universal coverage.
During the closing days of the Pennsylvania primary fight, the Obama campaign ran a TV ad repeating the dishonest charge that the Clinton plan would force people to buy health insurance they can't afford. It was as negative as any ad that Mrs. Clinton has run -- but perhaps more important, it was fear-mongering aimed at people who don’t think they need insurance, rather than reassurance for families who are trying to get coverage or are afraid of losing it.
No wonder, then, that older Democrats continue to favor Mrs. Clinton.
The question Democrats, both inside and outside the Obama campaign, should be asking themselves is this: now that the magic has dissipated, what is the campaign about? More generally, what are the Democrats for in this election?
julian e. barnes
the los angeles times
william h. mcmichael
paul krugman
the new york times
trinas kitchen
What the VA's concerned about
Kussman said 35 percent of troops who are screened by the VA after returning from Afghanistan or Iraq show symptoms of possible depression or other mental conditions. But he said the problem shouldn't be exaggerated.
"The number of patients who have adjustment reactions to the experience that they have in Afghanistan or Iraq is very important, but we don't believe that's mental illness," Kussman said. "It would be unfair and inappropriate to stigmatize people with a mental health diagnosis when they are having what most people believe are normal reactions to abnormal situations."
The US military announced today: "A Multi-National Division -- Center Soldier was killed in an improvised explosive device attack south of Baghdad, April 24." The announcement brings to 4052 the number of US service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war.
The day before this ad went on the air, David Axelrod, Barack Obama's chief strategist, appeared with me on "Meet the Press." He was asked whether Hillary Clinton would bring "the changes necessary" to Washington, and his answer was "no." This was in keeping with the direct, personal character attacks that the Obama campaign has leveled against Clinton from the beginning of this race -- including mailings in Pennsylvania that describe her as "the master of a broken system."
So let me get this straight.
On the one hand, it's perfectly decent for Obama to argue that only he has the virtue to bring change to Washington and that Clinton lacks the character and the commitment to do so. On the other hand, we are somehow hitting below the belt when we say that Clinton is the candidate best able to withstand the pressures of the presidency and do what's right for the American people, while leaving the decisions about Obama's preparedness to the voters.
Who made up those rules? And who would ever think they are fair?
Billings, MT -- The Clinton campaign today announced that Lena Belcourt, a Chippewa Cree Tribal member, is the new Indian Affairs Coordinator for Hillary Clinton's campaign in Montana. Belcourt is a health policy analyst and consultant who advises elected Tribal Leadership on local, state and national policymaking.
Belcourt makes her home on the Rocky Boy Reservation in north central Montana.
"Indian people need a candidate who will hit the ground running, who has links to Indian Country and has supported legislation important to Indian Country. We need someone who knows who we are. That's Hillary Clinton."
In 2004 Belcourt served on then Governor-Elect Schweitzer's transition team as a policy advisor, and in 2005 she was detailed by the Chippewa Cree Tribe to the Office of the Governor of Montana, serving as the Governor Schweitzer's Policy Advisor on Health and Disability. Belcourt also staffed Alvin Winy Boy, Sr., former Chairman of the Chippewa Cree Tribe, on his health policy agenda.
Belcourt intends to make Indian healthcare a focus of her work for Montana for Hillary.
"We as Indian people have been left out of the American dream by our lack of access to accessible, affordable healthcare. I believe in accessible, quality healthcare for Montana Tribes and I know that Hillary Clinton will work her hardest to make it a reality."
Belcourt assisted the Northern Arapaho Tribe in the planning and development of their SAMHSA Indian Country Methamphetamine Initiative in 2006-2007. She has also worked on the development of the Chippewa Cree Tribe's Medicaid Eligibility Determination contract, the CCT Medicaid Administrative Match Cost Allocation Plan and the CCT's SAMHSA Indian Country Methamphetamine Initiative.
Belcourt attended the University of Montana and the University of North Dakota.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
bob egelko
geoff garin
adrienne kinne
Thursday, April 24, 2008
I Hate The War
Which is how we come to the current issue of Ms. magazine (I don't know if it's onsale yet or not, I packed it Sunday, it's the Spring 2008 issue). Ms. magazine has no business publishing the homophobe Donna Brazile. I know, I know, Andrew Sullivan outed her as a lesbian. If she is one, she's a self-loathing one and Ms. doesn't need to send that message to women, it doesn't need to endorse it by printing her bad writing (that is bad on the most basic level: it's not worth reading, it's dull and plodding).
But Ms. lets the homophobe waste an entire page every issue. That may not seem like much but try to find the Iraq War in the current issue. Equally true is Ms. now only publishes four times a year. That's four pages they don't have to spare.
This quarterly issue, Brazile choses to waste her space by lying and Ms.' senior editor is either too uninformed or just doesn't give a damn. Ms. is infamous for publishing articles that feminists disagree with and that has led to lively debates that have defined and shaped the feminist movement. That's not the issue here.
The issue here is no writer published by Ms. should ever be viewed by other feminists as a liar but Donna Brazile manages to pull off that feat. Her article is titled "Black. Woman." Donna wants the world to believe (not know, because she's lying) that she's impartial in the Democratic race and that she's there fighting on 'both' fronts (there are many fronts but Brazile just sees dualisms -- another reason her centrist, non-feminist ass should never have been allowed to stink up Ms. magazine to begin with).
Donna tells you she's no traitor. She's not. On that she's telling the truth. Donna has always sold out to whatever would benefit Donna. This is the trashy woman who ran to the press (souring the press on Dukakis before they completely turned on him) and started insisting that George H. W. Bush was having an affair! Now Michael Dukakis wasn't accused of having an affair. It's not as though Donna could claim that she was attempting to level the coverage and make it equal. It was just more trash from a woman known for so much trash.
She made ridiculous statements about the American people having a right to know whether or not Barbara Bush would be sleeping in the White House with her husband. Yeah, that's feminism, Donna. (NO, it's not.)
So trashy scribbles a lot of nonsense. Trashy wants you to know that that we should all demand that Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are treated the way any White, straight, male candidate would be. She then tries to crib from Sojourner Truth (almost word for word) but assumes she can steal a little without crediting. (That Ms. thinks a feminist pioneer like Truth can be ripped off indicates Ms. needs to regroup very quickly.) Donna explains that "we" -- don't you love writers who try to speak for you when they haven't earned the right? -- "must be very careful not to attribute all criticism of either candidate to base motives, or blame the media" blah, blah, blah. We must be careful not to blame the media? Donna's worthless columns always run the page before "No Comment" which is where Ms. has historically taken sexist advertisements to task. Donna's column appears to argue against that; however, suggesting that she is doing that would require believing that any real thought went into her latest scribbles and Donna Brazile exists solely to underscore that thought and writing do not need to have a close, or even working, relationship.
Donna Brazile wants us ("we"?) to know that she is offended by sexist attacks on Hillary. Well that's news. She certainly hasn't spoken out before. In fact, she's more than added to it with her own sexism. As Hillary Is 44 observed, "We assume that Donna is blaming the victim, Hillary, here when she confusingly writes 'no one who provoke this kind of anger in voters deserves to be President'." No, blaming the victim isn't feminism. But Donna's never been a feminist. She's just a bad writer who happens to be a woman and she got lucky that Ms. decided to publish her.
Possibly Michelle Kort (the current senior editor) will read the quote from Donna and say, "I never knew!" She should have. She damn well should have.
Does Kort have no idea of what Brazile's been saying. Is she unaware that Brazile's e-mails slamming Hillary have been printed online?
Does she think that doesn't matter and, as long as Donna scribbled a column, it's worth publishing? Does she have no respect for what Ms. is supposed to stand for, does she have no respect for the readership? It is so insulting that this crap got printed.
Brazile's wasting everyone's time trying to portray Obama's campaign as a feminist break through. Really? A man who votes "present" on abortion issues? A man who lies about it and gets a surrogate who left Chicago's NOW chapter and wasn't even there when the present votes were made to lie and slime Chiacog's NOW chapter? No, that's not feminism. Feminism also isn't putting homophobes (or even one) on stage at a South Carolina campaign event and then bragging that you got what you wanted out of the event (as Obama's campaign did).
Hillary's campaign? The one Brazile's trying to pretend she's happy about in Ms. magazine? Donna Brazile in November of last year reduced Hillary's campaign to her husband and her remarks were no different than Chris Matthews' insulting comments:
"I think it's going to come down to: Do you really want Bill Clinton back in the White House?" said Donna Brazile, who ran Democrat Al Gore's 2000 presidential campaign.
That ran in the Des Moines Register and is now a "page unfound" but you can search what's in bold and you'll find multiple sites and blogs that excerpted it. That's how Donna Brazile reduced Hillary's historic run last November. She then slimed futher with a lie I'm not even going to repeat here. But Kort is the editor and should damn well be aware of what columnists for the magazine are saying to other outlets. When they turn in lies for Ms., she should reject the submission. By not doing so, it's not just Donna Brazile insulting Ms. readers, it's Kort doing that as well.
Now in January, Donna was all over the place falsely suggesting racism (by Bill Clinton, Donna insisted) but where has Donna been anywhere calling out the very real sexism against Hillary? She hasn't. And that was the first clue (long before her unhinged e-mails were published) that Donna Brazile was not only in the tank for Obama (and she is) but that she didn't give a damn about the sexist smears against Hillary.
Kort also should damn well be aware of what ATLJay (MyDD) pointed out recently, Brazile accused Hillary of "not caring about the Democratic Party" in a column for the Wall St. Journal. In her published e-mail, 'feminist' Donna declares, "You cannot blame the media for Clinton being behind or running out of money." Actually you can blame the media. You can and you should. I have no idea what happened before Iowa. But the writers strike and all the attacks meant that Ava and I had to grab 'news' and public affairs programming and the reporters (MSM) were all falling over one another, week after week, to explain that Barack wasn't the front runner before but now he was and they were going to be just as tough on him as they were on Hillary. That still hasn't happened. He can lie and say he was eight-years-old when Weather Underground did their "detestable" actions. Who points out that Weather Underground existed from 1969 to 1976? If Hillary had said that, she would have been villified. As Ava and I noted Sunday, the man's an idiot when it comes to the law (when you don't grasp what "versus" means in a court title, you're a legal idiot) so we'll assume that he really didn't know the difference between "commuted" and "pardoned." But which did the press run with? And without checking it out?
As Ava and I wrote Sunday:
Despite Professor Patti Williams public orgasms over Barack's legal 'knowledge,' we've long noted the man's an idiot who can't even grasp what "verus" in the title of a court case means. We have no idea how he ended up president of the Harvard Law Review (not much of a credit in our eyes) but it was due to something other than a grasp of the law. So we'll assume that he wasn't trying to lie, he just truly doesn't know (idiot) whether Clinton pardoned or commuted the sentences of Linda Evans and Susan Rosenberg. He commuted them. They were not pardoned. We pointed that out Thursday morning. Sadly, it required pointing out again Thursday night. No pardons took place. But if you need a better example of the bias the press has in favor of Obama and against Clinton, you need look no further. Barack declared that Bill Clinton "pardoned or commuted" and the press ran with what? Pardoned. Given the choice to run with either, they went for the one that painted the Clintons badly and excused Barack's friendship with a domestic terrorist.
That tells you a lot. What a journalist actually does -- a real one -- is examine that charge, research it. In doing so, it would have been obvious that the two women had their sentences commuted, not that they were pardoned. But why bother to actually do your job when it's so much easier to repeat a lie -- one that benefits Barack and one that his campaign repeated on Thursday and as late as Friday. Barack's campaign is lying, there was no pardon.
David Corn, who used to pride himself on the facts, had a screaming meltdown when he took part in a media conference with the Clinton campaign. He insisted that "you guys obviously know, we all know, that President Clinton pardoned two Weathermen . . . uh . . . activists, terrorists, whatever you want to call them." No, David, we didn't all know that because it never happened. But when you're spoon-fed by the Obama campaign, when you're willing to publicly disgrace yourself to trade journalism in for campaign booster, you're prone to make mistakes.
Apparently not content to sound stark raving mad in front of his peers, David Corn then took to Mother Jones (aka Consumer Reports for the faux left) to brag, "I asked an obvious one: Did Hillary Clinton believe that it had been appropriate in 2001 for President Bill Clinton to have pardoned two members of the Weather Underground as he left office?" No, David, you didn't ask an obvious question, you embarrassed yourself by flaunting the fact that you've sold yourself out to the Obama campaign and are now letting them do the 'research' for you. It's nothing to take pride in.
It really was amazing to watch so many outlets -- presented with two possibilities of what Bill Clinton had done -- run with the more extreme and do so on the basis of the Obama campaign. Again, there bias was showing and they should all apologize.
Yeah, you can blame the media.
We saw Bill Moyers explore racism over and over. We never saw him explore gender. We did hear him tell Dr. Kathy that he wasn't sure Hillary's 'tears' (there were no tears) were sincere. We caught him replaying Jesse Jackson's smears suggesting Hillary only cried about her appearance (yes, that is the same Jesse Jackson Jr. who had surgery to lose fifty pounds -- vanity, they name is Junior). We saw that didn't make the transcript but it did make the broadcast. And it wasn't questioned on the broadcast, it was presented as 'fact.' (For those wondering, no action or statement by Obama has ever been questioned by Bill Moyers. We caught that show every week during the writers strike.) Even during Women's History Month, Moyers wasn't interested. Blame the media? Yeah and we'll get back to that topic. But let's return to Donna Brazile.
The woman who wrote "Blacks have been deeply wounded by the duplicity of the Clintons" and "It's personal and the Clintons have shown their darker demons" wants to show up in the new issue of Ms. pretending she's thrilled with both Democratic candidates. And Michelle Kort thinks this garbage is worth printing.
Brazile's e-mails do contain a bit of honesty: "And if I counted who has helped me since 2000, it's Republican men and not Democrats." Thereby explaining her partying at Dick Cheney's assistant's private home because what good Democrat doesn't let her hair down around Republicans?
Donna Brazile is a columnist at Ms. magazine and for what reason? Her writing is bad and lifeless. She's a woman who, if she is gay, is in the closet. That might fly at Newsweek, but Ms. has never been a publication that didn't include lesbians. What message is sent when they publish a woman whom many consider to be a closet-case? And are we really supposed to be overjoyed by her (bad) columns telling us about running to the drug store to get Right On! as a child? Isn't the next question whose photos she studied, who she fantasized about? But we can't go there because she's closed that section of her life off. It goes to a lack of authenticy and no columnist for Ms. should ever lack authenticity.
While they provide Donna Brazile's garbage, grasp what they don't provide. Susan J. Douglas is one of the finest media critics around. (Her column runs in In These Times.) Where's Ms. magazine's media critic or are we all supposed to be satisifed that they call out advertisements? Ms. used to call out a lot more. In the current climate and getting close to two decades after Susan Faludi's amazing Backlash was first published, how does Ms. excuse not offering media criticism each issue?
In the current issue, we can read about problems sleeping. Gee, that's helpful. My own biggest problem with sleeping is not having the time and I'd imagine that's true for most women. Ms. globe hops and it's doubtful a woman in India, for example, whoops with joy about the paragraph in an issue. By all means, have an international scope, but cover the home bases. Ms. is a US publication and that's where the bulk of its audience is.
Elaine recently wrote (actually more than once) about how lousy Ms. is today and I (of course) share her opinion. Publishing the homophobe Donna Brazile doesn't make it any better. Wasting a full page it doesn't have to waste doesn't make the magazine any better. Those who have been there for Ms. over and over, year after year, have every right to look in horror at the current version of the magazine. I agree with Elaine that, as it exists today, the only question to be asked is: "Why did we spend so much time and effort saving this magazine?" If this current stage continues much longer, Ms. should close shop. It could have a glorious history as opposed to the tepid present. One thing feminism should never, ever be is boring. Someone send a memo to Kort on that.
But when Donna Brazile can lie in the pages of Ms. magazine, when she can claim she's excited by both Democratic campaigns, and Ms. either doesn't care that she's trying to put one over on readers or they want to take part in that lie, you have the proof you need a culture where the media not only failed but continues to fail.
When the sisterhood's most famous magazine can't even strive for honesty, it's no surprise the country can't get it together to end the illegal war.
It's over, I'm done writing songs about love
There's a war going on
So I'm holding my gun with a strap and a glove
And I'm writing a song about war
And it goes
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Oh oh oh oh--
"I Hate The War" (written by Greg Goldberg, on The Ballet's Mattachine!)
Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 4037. Tonight? 4050. Up 13 since last week not that the press coverage indicates that. Just Foreign Policy lists 1,201,597 up from 1,199, as the number of Iraqis killed since the start of the Iraq War.
The following community sites have updated since yesterday:
Rebecca's Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude;
Cedric's Cedric's Big Mix;
Kat's Kat's Korner;
Mike's Mikey Likes It!;
Wally's The Daily Jot;
Ruth's Ruth's Report;
and Marcia's SICKOFITRADLZ
An e-mail from a visitor asked why Wally and Cedric didn't post yesterday or the day before? Tuesday was the Penn primary and Wally's working on getting out the vote for Hillary (he and Marcia are now doing that together and Marcia writes about that tonight). So that's Tuesday. (They also didn't post, I believe, the night of the Texas primary -- Cedric and Wally were both in Texas getting out the vote. When the results finally come in, it's draining.) As for last night, they actually did do a joint-post. They e-mailed it. It never hit their site so they posted it sometime today. (And shortly after they did, the e-mailed posts hit their sites -- both are still up currently.) The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
iraq
i hate the war
the ballet
like maria said paz
kats korner
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
the daily jot
cedrics big mix
mikey likes it
ruths report
sickofitradlz