C.I.: Per Nicole Gaudiano and Fredreka Schouten (USA TODAY), the Democratic Party is suing Russia, Donald Trump’s campaign and WIKILEAKS. They say that
there was a conspiracy among the three parties to ‘influence
the election.’
Rebecca: I would
agree that’s very dumb but probably for a different reason than C.I. I
would say it’s very dumb because it’s 2018, the presidential election is
two years away, quit litigating the last election and
start focusing on this one.
Ruth: Agreed.
Ava: Anyone else before C.I.?
Trina: Just to
back up Rebecca on this, you look like sore losers if you can’t let go.
The country has moved on. Hillary’s popularity is something like 27% in the latest poll. She has a very vocal following but they
aren’t that big. The media amplifies them because they’re in the bag
for Hillary. But the country itself has moved on. Hillary and her
Vaginal Secretions haven’t but each month they refuse to move on, they
look more and more ridiculous.
Ava: All good points. So, C.I., that was your point? I’m guessing not. We’re all guessing not.
C.I.: No, that
wasn’t my point. But those are good points. My point was legal. The
DNC has refused to turn over their servers to the FBI while maintaining
they were hacked. They dealt with the e-mail leak by refusing
to address the content of the e-mails and acting as though they weren’t
confirming. Denial and obfuscate has been their pattern. Agreed?
Betty: Absolutely. They’ve refused to be transparent.
C.I.: And if that’s the position they want to keep, too bad, they just lost it. You can’t bring this lawsuit without being bound by discovery They are now subject to all normal legal processes. That’s how it works. Questions they have avoided will now have to be answered, evidence they claim to have will have to be turned over. This is bad from an image perspective as Rebecca, Ruth and Trina pointed out. But legally they’re now in a position where they just can’t make claims and be backed up by the media. What’s worse for them is that even evidentiary privilege will pretty much be null and void. It’s going to be really hard to bring a case, to be the filing party – and have the burden of proof on you, and then claim privilege on communications revolving around an election that is over.
Ruth: Over by nearly two years.
Rebecca: But
remember, it’s not over to them. It’s never over to them. They’ll keep
griping and whining about this election for another two years.
Betty: Try twenty years.
Rebecca: You are probably right.
Ann: Let me quote Aaron Mate "After losing Congress & 100s of statewide seats, losing to Trump should’ve been Dem leaders’ rock bottom. All of us have the capacity for avoiding self-reflection to the detriment of ourselves & those around us; their avoidance of self-reflection has become a driving force."
Ava: Okay, so staying with elections, let's move over to Iraq and, stealing from C.I., "May 12th, elections are supposed to take place in Iraq. Ali Jawad (ANADOLU AGENCY) notes, 'A total of 24 million Iraqis are eligible to cast their ballots to elect members of parliament, who will in turn elect the Iraqi president and prime minister.' RUDAW adds, 'Around 7,000 candidates have registered to stand in the May 12 poll, with 329 parliamentary seats up for grabs.' RUDAW also notes that 60 Christian candidates are competing for the five allotted minority seats." So any thoughts?
Marcia: Yesterday morning's snapshot noted a candidate from Hayder al-Abadi's slate, Ahmed Jassim, who dropped out of the campaign because a sex tape surfaced and they were saying it was her in the video. Last night, CNN picked up the same story and Mohammed Tawfeeq and Joe Sterling quote from her statement, "Everyone knows my family and knows my husband Dr. Saad Salih al-Hamdani, the professor at Dijla University. I am the daughter of your country, professor Intidhar Ahmed Jassim. Please, please don't listen to rumors." She was taken down by a sex tape.
Ann: Which may or may not have been of her.
Marcia: Right. A sex tape killed her campaign. In Iraq of all places. Talk about fighting dirty. Someone worked hard to destroy her -- fake tape or real -- they worked really hard to destroy her. And why her? Of all the candidates, the majority of whom are men, why her?
Kat: I would say because she is a she but this is Iraq. A sex tape of a male candidate could have brought him down. But it is interesting that someone wanted to take her down. Was it because she was a member of Hayder al-Abadi's political slate? Is it about preventing him from being prime minister? It just seems hard to think this is something that wasn't planned out.
Ann: And it could be a false tape. But it also could be that she is actually on the tape. It's weird for such a story to emerge from Iraq. Humanity's the same all over but, real or fake, a tape like this could be highly damaging in a society like Iraq. So-called 'honor' killings still take place in Iraq.
Trina: And US troops still remain in Iraq.
Betty: Which wasn't supposed to happen, remember? Barack Obama was going to end the war.
Elaine: His infamous campaign commercial of 2008, "We want to end the war and we want to end it now." Then he's elected to two terms as president of the United States. The war's still going.
Marcia: And they wonder why this con they pulled on the American people, the Democratic Party, couldn't last forever? The political parties promise this or that and they fail to deliver. Newt Gingrich, an example of the 90s, led a mini-revolution on the right but he was brought down for a number of reasons including his failure to deliver. That's the Democratic Party. They didn't just fail to deliver an end to the Iraq War, they failed to even try once Barack became president.
Betty: Faking and shaking Barbara Lee. She spent all that time, "If by next year, Barack hasn't ended the Afghanistan War, I'm going be saying something, I'll be saying something, you watch, you listen, I be doing something."
Marcia: She ain't done s**t.
Betty: Exactly. Faking and shaking.
Marcia: And you can't pull that off forever. You either deliver at some point or we know you're faking and shaking.
Ava: And, Marcia, what happens then? When they make promises they don't keep?
Marcia: People don't show up to vote. You've lied and you're a known liar. Why am I going to take time out of my busy day, dealing with my job I hate, raising my three kids by myself, looking after my parent at the same time, why am I going to make time to file on down to my voting district's polling place to vote for you? If you're the candidate, you're asking for our time. Unlike you, we don't have an entourage to make every little thing work out and massage us and our needs. So you need to be able to tell us how you're going to make our lives better.
Ava: And you didn't feel that with Hillary?
Marcia: In 2008, yes. In 2016, no. I think you and C.I. nailed it in "So, uh, we weren't with her? (Ava and C.I.)" -- she went from trying to be one of the people in 2008 to hob knobbing with the celebs as she galloped to what she thought would be her coronation. They're two different campaigns completely.
Ruth: Possibly influenced by her 2008 loss. In 2016, she tried to run a Barack 2008 campaign and that's not who she was and it was not a good fit.
Elaine: Who is she now? That's the story of her life.
Betty: Exactly.
Ava: And to be clear, because C.I. handed me a note, Marcia voted. Before someone does some angry e-mail, "How dare Marcia not vote in 2016," she voted.
Marcia: And I don't have three children. I was talking about what a lot of people face.
Ava: Okay. Going to Trina. Tell us, since you cover food, what we won't be finding at a lot of supermarkets.
Trina: Romaine lettuce. You're not going to find it on the shelves due to the E coli contamination. What can you do? You can substitute spinach, a healthy choice. You can fall back on iceberg which is a less nutritious choice. You can go with kale or Boston lettuce or butter lettuce. But what you should be doing, absolutely, is asking why it's considered acceptable, in 2018, that our food -- our basic food, a vegetable that's not even been cooked or processed -- is contaminated. We should be asking about that.
Ava: Good point. And that's related to another issue. Actually, that's related to the Iraq War, now that I think about it. Why are we settling for our food being contaminated? Why are we settling for this never ending war on Iraq? And that goes to something Ann wrote about earlier this week, the prison riot.
Ann: The state of South Carolina was in the news this week because of a riot at Lee Correctional Institute and 7 inmates were killed Eddie Gaskins, Joshua Jenkins, Corneilus McClary, Michael Milledge, Damonte Rivera, Corey Scott and Raymond Scott. In addition, at least 22 more inmates were injured. Now this was national media news at the start of the week. You and C.I. have done a great job critiquing the media in the last weeks with "TV: Neither humanity nor honesty factor into corporate news," and "TV: 60 MINUTES of gossip" and I saw again the feckless media with this story. The national media immediately moved on before the bodies of the dead were even cold. But that's not the story. The story is how this riot took place, the story is the conditions in this prison. The story is are there other prisons where populations are in danger. But the media is not interested in anything these days other than Lifestyle of the Rich and Famous.
Kat: Over 2.2. million people are incarcerated in the US. This supplies free labor for many -- not just for Hillary Clinton when her husband was governor. This is a societal problem with the secret being that these days the US government needs the prison population. We're not protecting people, we're not protecting them when they're on trial or when they end up in prison. We're certainly not protecting them when the first cry for help is heard. This is a scandal that will be as embarrassing and shameful in another century as slavery is today.
Ava: Good points. We need to wind down. One more topic, Scooter Libby was pardoned by Donald Trump. Valerie Plame is outraged, CNN reports. Comments?
Ruth: I am so very glad that the noted Jew hater Valerie Plame has come out of seclusion to share her thoughts -- her so very important thoughts. She is despicable and disgusting and really needs to go away.
Trina: She needs to find herself a hobby. I really don't care to hear her whinings. Scooter Libby was convicted -- but not of outing her. Richard Armitage leaked Plame's name. No great loss. But Armitage did it and admitted to doing it. As we all know, Plame had no need or desire to go after Armitage. She's a filth, which is why she worked for the CIA to begin with -- nothing but a gang of thugs who kill people all over the world. She might want to get honest about that.
Betty: She pretends to care, doesn't she? Every now and then she'll make a statement supposedly about Iraq but actually about herself. She's one of the worst attention whores around. She's done nothing to help end the Iraq War. She's done nothing to highlight the war -- the ongoing war -- in any of the last ten years. She's just a whore for attention. She thought she was going to be all important. Then her hatred for the Jews finally took her down. Now she's desperate to be somebody again. She needs to fall to her knees and beg for forgiveness for her work in the CIA. A trashy attention whore.
Marcia: I'm going to fall back on a point that C.I.'s repeatedly made -- we want more presidential pardons, not less. I'm not going to fret over a presidential pardon and say, "Oh, no!" There are people I want to see pardoned. It's a power the president is given. If he or she determines someone has suffered, so be it. I will not go into outrage theater over pardons. It's counter-productive and only harms us on the left in the end.
Ava: Okay. Good points. We're closing with this, October 20 and 21st Cindy Sheehan and others will be leading a Women's March on the Pentagon. Spread the word.