As I noted last week, a friend with KPFA asked me to note that it was pledge week and if I would encourage people to donate. The station needs money badly. I did do that little pledge here -- with caveats. If you are a community member and you donated to KPFA because of the Libyan War coverage, the now non-existant Libyan War coverage, e-mail me what the amount was and where you'd like a check sent. Ideally use one of the two private e-mail accounts. I'll ask Shirley and Eli to just work those today and tomorrow so we can get this issue taken care.
I am very, very sorry that I pitched KPFA for the Libyan War coverage -- coverage I was promised would be continuing -- and some of you donated and now there's no Libyan War coverage. They're so uninterested in the region that last night Voices of the Middle East and North Africa didn't even air so that one of the disgruntled regime that nearly brought KPFA to bankruptcy could yack on the airwaves in between a movie being played. (Don't you love movies played on radio?)
A number of you are expressing outrage about the crap Dennis has offered instead: Catherine Austin Fitts. A number of e-mails refer to her along the terms of "Reagan administration refugee." She was not of the Reagan administration. She served in George H.W. Bush's administration.
There's an economic crisis. It's the crisis of now for many Americans. The crisis of now. When you're already talking above people's heads because you think your insider baseball chatter makes you (Dennis and Catherine) look smart, you risk losing the audience. When this country is dealing with a crisis of now and your forever going back a two decades (at least), you're losing the audience. It's bad radio on every level: A failure to connect with the listener, a failure to make the issue contemporary and timely and a failure to grasp how dull the two of you sound droning on for an hour (with 'questions' from the listeners if and when you get around to them).
As I understood the problem yesterday, it was the lack of Libyan War coverage everywhere. That's why yesterday's snapshot started with Libyan War coverage. Reading over e-mails this morning (usually the only time I go into the e-mails during the week), I see it much more than that, it is a specific complaint about Flashpoints walking away from the Libyan War. I am responsible to the community. If you are a community member, e-mail me how much you donated and where you want the check sent to. (I'm not responsible to the world. If you're not a community member, this doesn't apply to you, you're listening in on a private conversation in a public space.)
Yesterday it was still news in Australia that the last 33 Australian soldiers were finally leaving Iraq. Yes, Kevin Rudd lied and said "Elect me and all soldiers come home." Why do you think it was so easy to defeat Kevin Rudd in the first place (Rudd didn't even make a full three years in the post). Jeremy Thompson (Australia's ABC) reports that John Howard's words may come back to haunt him. Howard was prime minister before Rudd. As Tony Blair and Bully Boy Bush lied to their own nations in the lead up to the war, so Howard lied to Australians. Now MP Andrew Wilkie wants Parliament to launch an inquiry into the war and wants Howard to testify before it. The article notes of the start of the illegal war, "At the time, Mr Wilkie was an intelligence officer with the Office of National Assessments (ONA) and resigned his post because he said the Government had no evidence Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction." David Ellery (Canberra Times) explains, "Mr Wilkie said yesterday that Mr Howard and former Coalition foreign minister Alexander Downer must be made to explain why they took Australia to war based on a lie in 2003. He wants an inquiry similar to the one being conducted by Sir John Chilcot in Britain." AAP adds, "No light had ever been shone on the behaviour of Mr Howard and former foreign minister Alexander Downer." News9 reports that Tony Abbott, opposition leader in Parliament, is already shooting down the idea of an inquiry. Meanwhile Dennis Jett (McClatchy Newspapers) notes that the US has had no inquiry:
The following community sites -- plus Cindy Sheehan, On The Wilder Side, Antiwar.com and Random Thoughts -- updated last night:
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- THIS JUST IN! HE ATTEMPTS COMEDY!7 hours ago
- An audition7 hours ago
- The Libyan War7 hours ago
- London and Acorn7 hours ago
- 5 men, 1 woman7 hours ago
- The wacky economy7 hours ago
- History7 hours ago
- Libyan War7 hours ago
- Senator Patty Murray7 hours ago
- the fake7 hours ago
- Nothing for us7 hours ago
- Verizon Strike7 hours ago
Turning to the US, Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and she has an event with veterans today:
(Washington, D.C.) -- On Thursday, August 11th, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, will hold a listening session to hear from area veterans on local challenges and to discuss her efforts to improve veterans care and benefits nationwide. This will be Senator Murray's first discussion with local veterans as Chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Committee. Senator Murray will use the struggles, stories, and suggestions she hears on Monday to fight for local veterans in Washington, D.C.
WHO: U.S. Senator Patty Murray
Local veterans
WHAT: Veterans listening session with Senator Murray
WHEN: Thursday, August 11th
9:00 AM PT
WHERE: VFW Post 239
190 S. Dora Avenue
Bremerton, WA 98312
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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abc
jeremy thompson
the canberra times
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mcclatchy newspapers
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