In Iraq today? XINHUA reports, "The Iraqi Health Ministry reported on Friday 1,140 new COVID-19 cases, bringing the total nationwide infections to 589,943." AFP notes, "Pope Francis in his Christmas message on Friday called for 'vaccines for all, especially the most vulnerable and most in need in all regions of the planet' for the coronavirus, which he said had exacerbated existing global crises."
Meanwhile, at IRISH TIMES, Michael Jansen offers, "Although Baghdad would welcome US return to the nuclear deal, Biden’s election has had a mixed reaction in Iraq. He is viewed with suspicion for supporting the 2003 US war on that country and for calling in 2006 for its division into Shia, Sunni and Kurdish regions as this could would lead to massive ethnic and sectarian cleansing."
2020 is winding down and a few e-mails are asking about 2021? What are we going to be doing here, etc? We'll presumably do what we always do. That would be cover Iraq.
A community member who is an activist in Iraq writes to say that he believes the Trump pardons on Blackwater get the attention they get in the west because the west likes to pretend it cares and that it's wonderful (he's correct there) so when something from "over a decade ago" comes up they get to grandstand and pretend. He wonders if they get how pathetic they look to the Iraqi people?
I doubt it. But I also doubt that they'd care one damn bit. Self-stroking is about self-stroking, it's not about caring what others think about you. The community member is correct, though, this is a decades old event that was heavily covered in real time. Many didn't express any regret at all in real time. We were the only ones, let's be honest, in this country that called out Gwen Ifill for laughing about this assault on PBS. We called her out. She thought it was funny. Bottles of water tossed out the window of a car, that's what she compared it to.
So I agree, save me the pretend caring. You didn't care then, you don't care now. You just want to pretend that you're somehow up to date on the news and it's a Trump thing so you want to spew.
You didn't say a word about Abeer all those years. You haven't said a word as the protests in Iraq have now lasted over a year and over 600 have been killed. You haven't said a word as the government has persecuted the protesters and you ignored the government's attack on the protesters that has expanded to tearing down their tents, to setting them on fire, in the last weeks.
So, yeah, America, you're a fraud and the Iraqi people aren't fooled.
It's the fraud characteristic that made a hero out of a racist like Rukmini Callamachi. It's this same fraud that allows you to invent this or that spin each day to try to justify Rukmini's racism and her 'reporting.'
There's no real concern for the Arab world in the US. Jane Fonda might have been forced to apologize for Vietnam but she was never forced to apologize for any of her anti-Arab remarks. One example, she stated, "If we aren't afraid of Arabs, we'd better examine our heads. They have strategic power over us. They are unstable. They are fundamentalist, anti-woman, anti free-press."
At what point does promoting a film (ROLLOVER) justify your preaching hatred at an entire group of people?
At what point does an 83-year-old woman grasp that she needs to apologize for her hateful remarks about Arabs?
Now I get it, I know Jane, this was her being an idiot for Tom Hayden who was up the ass of the government of Israel and who intended ROLLOVER to turn the world against Arabs. Maybe that's why it flopped? Maybe hate really doesn't sell tickets? But she said those statements and more. And it's past time that she apologized for them.
Does she not get that the anger at John Wayne over his homophobic statements is going to be similar when she's gone to anger over her anti-Arab statements? Does she not get that her laughable claim when she grandstanded in DC at an Iraq War protest in January of 2007 made Arabs laughs because they were aware of these statements?
I wasn't aware. It was Arab community members who made me aware.
There's a lot of hatred of the Arab world and there's a lot of ginned up hatred on the parts of certain politicians and performers who want to please Zionist zealots.
Rukmini tapped into the hatred of Arabs that's always there on the surface in American popular narratives. It's not hidden. Let's not pretend that it is. I watched WONDER WOMAN 1984 today, it was right there on HBO MAX. Time to show the true evil? Let's go to the Arab world.
That's what sells, it's what always sells in the US.
We need to take a hard look at ourselves. We are not the caring, good people we hope to be as a nation. We regularly demonize whole groups of people.
The supposed 'liberal' NEW YORK TIMES has demonized Arabs for decades and gotten away with it. Jane Fonda, a noted and talented actress, has still not been held accountable for her offensive and racist remarks about Arabs. These were public remarks. They are out there and they exist. Scholars like Michael Parenti have noted these remarks over the years. She will apologize for some of the actions she took in protesting the illegal war on Vietnam but she won't apologize for her anti-Arab remarks made to promote a film that she conceived of and that she produced as well as starred in.
Right now, we're hearing that the worst US crime in Iraq was a drive-by shooting by Blackwater. The reality is, Blackwater (and other US companies) did this all the time. This one got some attention because the US government stonewalled the media. When the story broke, the press was interested in finding out what US dignitary was being protected. It's what forgotten in the story today, by the way. Supposedly, Blackwater had to protect some US dignitary. But that name's never come forward and the press no longer cares to ask. But these events were common. They're criminal, don't think I'm saying that they're not. But they were common.
They happened regularly.
To this day, the US media and the 'caring opiners' have still not given Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi even a 100th of the attention they've given the Blackwater drive-by. And noted 'good people' like Mark Cuban (he's not a good person) have been embraced by the left despite the fact that he went out of his way to harm Brian De Palma's REDACTED -- a fictional film that dealt with an Abeer type crime.
No surprise, Mark Cuban polices his own WIKIPEDIA entries. I just went to the one on REDACTED and his handlers have lied very well. Very, very well. Here's some reality from the September 4th, 2009 snapshot:
2009 is when Steven D. Green went on trial and was convicted. It's cute of Mark and his assholes to lie in the CRAPAPEDIA entry that when the 2007 film was released Steven was on trial and facing the death penalty. And if you're going to lie, the place to do it is CRAPAPEDIA.
As disclosed before many times, Brian De Palma is a friend. Mark Cuban is scum.
Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "The Grinch Who Stole The Stimulus and Christmas" went up earlier. The following sites updated: