Saturday, September 03, 2011
The Turkish government, not the PKK, is losing
There are so many of levels of stupidity to his column that it's difficult to know where to start. Since August 17th, Turkey's been bombing northern Iraq in the latest wave of bombings that have been going on for years (with the US assisting by providing 'intel' since at least 2007). The backlash to the warplanes terrorizing innocent civilians and, yes, killing innocent civilians including children has led to more boasts from a bunch of stupid, stupid idiots.
Before we get into anything complex, let's just note two things. First, Iran's not bombing the PKK. How stupid is that man? How insane is he? Will people in Turkey reading his crap think he's telling the truth? Iran's targeting a different part of northern Iraq. And they are shelling the PJAK. Though both are Kurdish groups, PJAK is not PKK. What a stupid moron and how the hell did Today's Zaman allow that error into print?
The world has few saints but it abounds in dumb asses. And you have to be a real dumb ass to think that the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) will be able to publicly support Turkey over the PKK if "support" means anything other than a bunch of words. The KRG is majority Kurdish. It's made up of Kurds who know how the Kurds have been treated historically. They may or may not approve of violence (their feelings on it are probably as complicated as any other group of people) but they know that the PKK is fighting for an ultimate goal that they themselves agree with.
It takes a real idiot willing to be blind to assert, as Turkone does, that the KRG is against the PKK. And it's that blindness, that inability to see reality, that has pulled to Turkey to the point that it is now.
No "war" is being won today or tomorrow. A "battle" may or may not be won in the immediate future.
The Turkish better start facing some realities and stop listening to ass kissers like Mumtazer Turkone. He's an idiot who does know the first thing he's writing about.
Tomorrow, the Turkish military could kill every Kurd in Turkey, every Kurd in Iraq, every Kurd in Iran, every Kurd in the world. They could include those who were half or quarter Kurds and those who married Kurds. They could wipe out every connection to a Kurd and they still wouldn't win.
That's the lesson of history. And you can be a dumb ass or you can grasp reality.
If every Kurd was killed, there would still be people (non-Kurds) who remembered what went down (prior to the mass killings) and they'd take up the cause.
The Turkish government created the PKK by demonizing Kurds in Turkey. They refused to treat them in an equal manner. A few years back the government was supposed to be making a big shift. That ended up being token measures and even they weren't followed.
Until the Turkish government can realize that the PKK is a response to the treatment, they're never going to 'win.'
They could win a battle if the PKK over-reached or were implicated in an over-reach (such as civilians killed in either Turkey or Iraq and it blamed on the PKK). Even that would be a short term win.
Peace will not come and Turkey will not be safe as a country until it can reconcile itself with what it nees to do which is to provide full equality to all of its citizens. It's not a controversial concept and if the European Union (which Turkey wants to join) was smart, it would demand that the Turkish government show major steps towards that before letting it into the EU.
The PKK is not going away.
Brutal and repressive tacts in Turkey created the PKK. The only thing that ends the PKK is full rights for the Kurds in Turkey. Want to ease the tensions immediately? Announce some measures -- some meaningful ones -- to improve the lives of Kurds in Turkey. You will not "win" any other way.
And what's written about Turkey is true of Israel as well. And many other places around the world. Demography means you will address discrimination or you will be the discriminated against at some point as those you oppress move from a minority population to a majority one.
Even more importantly, the world's weary. Governments may (and many do -- including the US) support countries oppressing their own people but the world population doesn't. And there may come a time in the future (I'm sure I'd be dead by then) when governments oppressing a population are taken before a world court and punished. Again, the world is weary. We're sick of the bickering and the refusal of those in power -- who by the very nature of being in power have the ability to change things -- resorting to violence (which only inspires more violence) instead of utilizing democratic tools.
We close with this from Robert Kennedy's "Is the US Government Spying on Americans?" (Information Clearing House):
The rise of government surveillance is a troublesome legacy of the September 11 attacks. Today, video cameras are visible everywhere in public places, recording people’s every move. But what about spying that can’t be spotted?
Ten years after 9/11, new questions are being raised about what the US government is secretly doing on the internet and through satellites, using the Patriot Act and other national security law as justification.
Two American senators with access to top-secret intelligence raised the alarm in May, suggesting that the invasion of law-abiding Americans’ privacy was being carried out clandestinely - and that people would be shocked if they knew the extent.
“I want to deliver a warning this afternoon,” Senator Ron Wyden said on May 26 during a Senate debate. “When the American people find out how their government has secretly interpreted the Patriot Act, they will be stunned and they will be angry.”
Exactly what activities US agencies are carrying out remains unclear. Senator Wyden and Senator Mark Udall - also on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence - have been unable to elaborate on their accusations because of official secrecy law.
However, observers surmise that ordinary people may be caught up in an electronic dragnet searching for terrorists. Civil liberties advocates suggest that intelligence and law-enforcement agencies may be reading and cataloguing people’s e-mails in databases, as well as tracking their mobile phone locations.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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todays zaman
mumtzer turkone
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Nouri's upset -- at least publicly
If Nouri gave a damn, he would have done something about it years ago. He comes to power just after the incident takes place. As he comes to power the American government is insisting a review is being conducted. He is prime minister and in charge of the country when, June 2006, the US report is issued clearing US forces of any accusations. Nouri did nothing then. He did nothing for the last five years.
He makes a lot of noise right now but is careful to make sure none of it is by him. He doesn't want to be on video making these statements so he sends out his spokespeople. Video of him promising justice could be used against him if/when he fails to do anything.
Dropping back to Thursday's snapshot:
In Iraq, there's been another prison break, this time in Mosul. Bushra Jhui (AP) reports that 35 people ar said to have "tunneled their way out" with 21 being caught and 14 remaining at large. AFP provides this recent context, "Officials said on August 6 that four prisoners and a guard were killed in clashes at a prison in the central Iraqi city of Hilla, during which eight inmates escaped. Six Iraqi police and 11 inmates were killed in a Baghdad jail mutiny in May, while 12 suspected Al-Qaeda members escaped from prison in the southern city of Basra in mid-January. At least two of the Basra escapees have been recaptured." Alsumaria TV adds, "A similar incident occurred in Nineveh on April 3 as 23 prisoners escaped from Al Ghazalni prison in southern Mosul. On April 9 as well, 5 prisoners escaped a prison in Al Shifaa' region, eastern Mosul." Reuters notes it was "a temporary jail" and that the prisoners are said to have made their way out via "a sewage pipe." Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports, "A senior officer in the Mosul police department said the inmates had used metal plates and iron bars to dig nearly 150 feet out of the jail. He asked not to be identified because he wasn't authorized to discuss the escape." Aswat al-Iraq cites Abdul-Rahim al-Shimmary as stating the escapees "were charged according to the Iraqi Criminal Law's Article-4 - Terrorism."
14 remained at large. Yesterday Reuters noted that 13 were at large because one more had been captured. Al Rafidayn reports that Mohammad Mahmoud al-Sharabi was the one arrested and he was seen crossing a traffic intersection on foot in Mosul when police moved in to arrest him. Aswat al-Iraq reports that 12 remain at large because the corpse of one, Miqdad Bashir Hanash, was discovered "on one of the bank of Tigris River, with traces of bullet shots in his head and chest". CNN advises that the search for the 12 remaining at large continues and "A curfew had been imposed in Mosul as security forces searched for the prisoners."
Reuters notes today's violence includes 1 Kurdish shepherd killed by Iranian soldiers in Iraq'sHaj Umran, 1 Iraqi soldier shot dead in Baghdad and the assassination of Nasir Saad in Baghdad -- Saad belonged to Nouri's Dawa political party (not to be confused with Nouri's political slate of State Of Law).
Tim Arangon and Yasir Ghazi (New York Times) publish the strongest article in today's news cycle filed from Iraq:
It is hard to say which is a worse indignity to the thousands of Iraqi soldiers and police officers who have suffered crippling injuries fighting alongside the Americans in a war that continues today: receiving subpar medical care from the government they fought to preserve, or a new law that could slash their already paltry benefits.
"We are defending the Iraqi people," said Ali Mohammad Heaal, who was a police trainee when he lost his left arm in a car bomb attack in 2005 and now works at a nongovernmental organization that advocates on behalf of wounded members of Iraq's security forces. "Right now, we feel humiliated."
Meanwhile those predictions that the political blocs are all chummy and ready to move forward? Not so. Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani was correct in his assessment. Dar Addustour reports that the back and forth attacks between the blocs continue but that the attacks now thrive and flourish on Facebook.
9-11's approaching. With regards to the 9-11 Truth movement, our position has been and remains that we do not attack them, we do not mock them. They're citizen-scholars engaged in the pursuit of truth and they've dedicated themselves to something larger than tracking a celebrity's 'belly bump' or reality TV. So good for them.
Just as the JFK assassination researchers unearthed important findings, so will these citizen-scholars.
In the public account, ____ shows up wanting his piece on 9-11 noted. I'm not interested and ___ can go f___ himself. First off, the piece wants to express disbelief in the official 9-11 story. That's fine. But it then wants to attack the 9-11 Truth movement. So basically, it's saying, "I'm respectable, they aren't." I'm not interested in that garbage. Second, this stupid man who supposedly is so smart was among the loudest members of the Cult of St. Barack. He apparently thinks laying low for a bit meant the world would forget. I haven't and I won't. Until he renounces all those fantastical claims he made of witnessed miracles performed by St. Barack and future miracles to come from St. Barack, I'm not interested.
If a community member sees something they want highlighted on or from the Truth movement between now and 9-11, e-mail it and it will be. If a visitor wants to do the same, you'll need to e-mail the public account (address at the end of the entry) and it may or may not be noted. That will depend mainly on time (my time and I'm always rushing in the mornings). While I'm not noting what was sent in today to the public account, friends who support or are part of 9-11 Truth speak highly of Dr. David Ray Griffin and Kevin Barrett. I see nothing at Griffin's website (I hope I went to the right one) that's new but Kevin Barrett's website features an open letter to journalists that he posted September 1st:
Dear (name of journalist),
One of the approximately 50% of 9/11 family members who rejects the official story of 9/11 informs me that you are a journalist who is covering the 10th anniversary of 9/11.
You and other journalists preparing stories on the 10th anniversary of 9/11 will be guilty of crimes against humanity, specifically the crime of incitement to genocide, if you do not, in your stories, prominently mention two very important facts:
(1) The vast majority of scholarly literature devoted to critically examining the question of what actually happened on 9/11 has concluded, or tentatively concluded, that the official story that al-Qaeda and 19 hijackers did it is a lie; therefore the event was probably a false-flag attack designed and executed by the enemies of Muslims, for the purpose of launching an anti-Muslim genocide (and consolidating power for the perpetrators). If you contact me, I will be happy to provide you with a bibliography of the scholarship on this question, proving that in fact there is a scholarly consensus that 9/11 was almost certainly a false-flag attack.
(2) More than three-quarters of the world's Muslims, and around two-thirds of American Muslims, agree that the official story is a lie, and that the event was probably a false-flag attack designed and executed by the enemies of Muslims, for the purpose of launching an anti-Muslim genocide or "war on Islam." In Pakistan - the nation best-informed about "al-Qaeda" - only 3% of the population believes al-Qaeda did 9/11. Poll data:
http://m911t.blogspot.com/2009/09/only-3-of-pakistanis-say-al-qaeda-did.html .
Only about 10% of Germans believe the official story of 9/11: http://911truthnews.com/german-poll-89-question-911/
36% of all Americans - over 100 million people - think 9/11 a likely inside job designed to launch wars of aggression. http://www.scrippsnews.com/911poll
Given the poll data, it is clear that a majority of the world's population rejects the official story of 9/11.
Please take this opportunity to educate yourself about this issue, and to avoid complicity in one of the worst crimes against humanity in history.
I am at your disposal in this matter; please feel free to call me at (phone number) between the hours of 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. US Central Time.
Also, please consider interviewing 9/11's biggest first-responder hero, William Rodriguez, a Muslim convert who is fluent in Spanish, who works incessantly with family members, and who is an eyewitness to the controlled demolition of the North Tower. William may be reached at (phone number deleted) www.william911.com .
Sincerely
Dr. Kevin Barrett
Some friends of mine are ticked at an NPR show this week that practiced everything but fairness. Their complaints had me thinking of the 'celebration of mourning' (my term) that the media is preparing to wallow in next week. I can think of nothing more pathetic or useless. We were just going to ignore it here (hopefully, we'll work on a piece at Third tonight) but if the media wants to preach wallow and lies ("unity" is not a good thing in and of itself), then we'll counter it here with people who refuse to wallow or take easy answers. If that's not clear, the media's going to make us all feel sad and special. Rob us of our strength -- tomorrow morning that will be especially when a new host takes over a radio program. I'm not a big fan of passivity or encouraging victimazation or mistaking it for 'strength.' So we won't take part in that pity party. Instead, what better way to celebrate America than to note those who go against convention, who show strength to survive and endure countless attacks as they attempt to pursue the truth. Good for them, good for the 9-11 Truth movement. The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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al rafidayn
al mada
reuters
aswat al-iraq
cnn
the new york times
tim arango
yasir ghazi
dar addustour
kevin barrett
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Troy Yocum wraps up journey
(Troy Yocum photo taken by John Crosby)
Hike for our Heroes is a non-profit started by Iraq War veteran Troy Yocum who hiked across the country to raise awareness and money for veterans issues. He began his hike in April 2010 and he concluded it where it began, in Louisville, today. Lori Lyle (WAVE 3) reports:
An Iraq war veteran returned home today from a personal mission to raise money for military families in need. Troy Yocum spent the last 16 months hiking across the United States. He took off on foot from the Louisville Slugger Museum in April, 2010. Today he finished his last mile back at the museum with a crowd of people supporting him.
"What a journey!" Yocum said, "I've had a lot of time to think about what I was going to say today."
The 100th Army Band joined the hike for the last mile. And "hundreds" greeted him at the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory including Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer (who "proclaimed Saturday as Troy Yocum Day") and US House Rep John Yarmuth. Troy's Tweets today include:
What did he miss the most in the year and six months of hiking across America? He tells Joseph Lord it was home and watching basketball games on TV. Devin Katayama (WFPL -- link is text, photos and and a video essay) quotes Troy stating, "There was definitely times when I wanted to quit but I kept thinking about this day right here." Katayam notes, "Yocum raised just over $500,000 dollars by Thursday and around 34 sponsors will donate an undisclosed amount on Sept. 14 in New York City, he said. He'll continue working with Wish Upon a Hero, helping veterans in need. But first, he wants to take a month off before he prepares for his next trip, he said."
Along with Betty's "Somerby and other things," the following community sites updated last night and today:
- THIS JUST IN! THE REVIEWS ARE BRUTAL!2 hours ago
- On it's last legs?2 hours ago
- 4 men, 2 women3 hours ago
- Idiot of the Week23 hours ago
- Arianna's latest boondoggle23 hours ago
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- Carly23 hours ago
- The failure brewing23 hours ago
- Movie, movie23 hours ago
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- Candle shoe23 hours ago
We'll close with this from Sherwood Ross' "SALVADORANS STRUGGLE AGAINST MINING FIRM" (Veterans Today):
Farmers along the banks of El Salvador’s Lempa River believe tomatoes gleam brighter than gold. They would rather put the river to work for farming, fishing, and drinking than to allow the multinational Vancouver-based Pacific Rim Mining Co. of Canada use the river water to extract the rich veins of gold buried nearby---a process that involves applying toxic cyanide-laced water to separate gold from the surrounding rock.
Area farmers discovered that “only a tiny share of Pacific Rim’s profits would stay in the country, and that the El Dorado mine was projected to have an operational life of only about six years, with many of the promised jobs requiring skills that few local people had,” write Robin Broad and John Cavanagh in the August 18th issue of The Nation magazine. Broad is a professor at American University’s School of International Service and Cavanagh is director of the Institute for Policy Studies, of Washington, D.C.
The Lempa is the water source for more than half of El Salvador’s 6-million people and wends through Honduras and Guatemala as well. In Santa Marta, El Salvador, Broad and Cavanagh write, “citizen groups are building sustainable farming as an alternative economic base to mining. Their goal: a ‘solidarity economy’” centered on the life-giving river to feed and clothe them.
Vidalina Morales, an organizer for the Social and Economic Development Assn.(ADES), told the reporters, “initially, we thought mining was good and it was going to help us out of poverty...through jobs and development.” (The price of an ounce of gold has skyrocketed from $300 a decade ago to more than $1,500 today.)
The Salvadorans changed their views, however. As a study from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature found, area residents “living near mining exploration activities began to notice environmental impacts from the mining exploration---reduced access to water, polluted waters, impacts to agriculture, and health issues.”
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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wave 3
lori lyle
the courier-journal
joseph lord
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devin katayama
sherwood ross
anns mega dub
like maria said paz
kats korner
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
thomas friedman is a great man
trinas kitchen
the daily jot
cedrics big mix
mikey likes it
ruths report
sickofitradlz
oh boy it never ends
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Friday, September 02, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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