Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Angela Walker



That is Howie Hawkins and Angela Walker.  I believe that's their first joint appearance in the media since, on Saturday, they became the Green Party's presidential ticket.  Howie is the presidential nominee, Angela is the vice presidential nominee.

This is from their campaign, issued on Saturday:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Kevin Zeese, Press Secretary, 301-996-6582, kevin@howiehawkins.us
Robert Smith, Media Coordinator, 304-707-2824, robert@howiehawkins.us

Howie Hawkins Wins Green Party Nomination, Angela Walker His Running Mate
‘Put Two Workers In The White House’ General Election Campaign Begins
(Syracuse, NY – July 11, 2020) Today, Howie Hawkins was nominated by the Green Party of the United States for president of the United States. Hawkins has selected Angela Walker as his running mate as the vice presidential nominee.
Hawkins thanked the Green Party for its support and said “Our campaign will reach out to the tens of millions of voters who are not represented by the two parties of the millionaires and billionaires, to the independent voters who have rejected both parties and to the ‘hold your nose’ voters who reluctantly vote for candidates they do not like, from political parties they do not trust.”
Hawkins is a retired Teamster from Syracuse, NY with long experience in popular movements on civil rights, environmentalism and opposition to war and imperialism. He is joined by Vice Presidential candidate Angela Walker, a veteran working-class activist with decades of experience, starting from her youth, working for racial and economic justice in social movements, unions, and as an independent socialist candidate. Howie and Angela are running to put two workers in the White House at a time when workers are underpaid, mistreated and not provided the essentials needed for economic security.
“The US is a bi-partisan failed state. We need real solutions to the life-or-death problems we face: Covid-19, racism, economic inequality, climate change and the new nuclear arms race,” said Hawkins. “The mishandling of the COVID pandemic has resulted in more than 135,000 deaths. The collapse of the economy has 47.2 percent of working-age people without work while the bi-partisans are bailing out their wealthy friends and families. The people are rising up against racism and police violence but Trump and Biden respond with violence. Neither party will confront the climate crisis but instead continue building fossil fuel infrastructure that heighten the crisis. And, the nuclear arms race is escalating while never-ending wars continue.”
Hawkins/Walker are running on a platform that includes 
  • To address systemic racism, we call for democratic community control of the police, legal adult use of marijuana and  ending the war on drugs, and reparations for African Americans. As a down-payment on reparations, we call for a Marshall Plan for the cities – sustained federal investment in jobs, schools, homes and healthcare to rebuild the racially oppressed communities who suffer from generations of discrimination and exploitation.
  • For Covid-19, our campaign demands a federal test, trace, and isolate program and emergency protection of people’s incomes, employment, homes, and healthcare during the crisis. Pandemic policy should be based on science-based public health measures.
  • The Ecosocialist Green New Deal will create 30 million good-paying jobs so a federal jobs guarantee becomes the engine for getting out of the economic collapse. And, it puts in place policies consistent with climate science to transition to a clean, sustainable energy economy by 2030.
  • An Economic Bill of Rights that ends poverty and economic despair through a living wage job, an income above the poverty level, lifelong public education, comprehensive healthcare,affordable housing and a secure retirement. 
  • Improved Medicare for all with a community-based national health service is the path to providing high quality healthcare to everyone in the United States. This transforms healthcare from an approach designed to create profits for a few into one that  guarantees healthcare to everyone.
Angela Walker, who ran for vice president with the Socialist Party in 2016, said “Voters are confronted with a choice of two unpopular candidates backed by capitalist parties who put the 1% first. We must break this cycle because most of us are not in a position of privilege to afford the so-called lesser evil.”
Howie and Angela immediately challenged Trump and Biden to debates. Hawkins said “I am ready to debate Trump and Biden on these issues, but are they ready to debate me? Trump likes to attack socialists but does he have the courage to debate a real socialist? The Democratic and Republican owned Commission on Presidential Debates sounds like a government agency but is in fact a private corporation designed to keep their competition out.”
The Green Party presently has ballot access in 25 states including D.C., and is in the process of seeking ballot access in all 50 states. The party is already qualified in states with over 300 Electoral College votes, enough to win the election.
###



Here's an interview with Angela.




That interview is conducted by Jared Bell.  He's a Green Party member who has previously (2008) sought the Green Party's presidential nomination.  Here's a video about Angela.



I think she's a strong choice for a running mate. 


This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

 
Tuesday, July 14, 2020.  Secret prisons exposed in Iraq, Kanye's run or 'run' for president, the lack of leadership in the duopoly parties, and much more.


Starting with this video regarding Iraq.



For any with streaming issues, here is the transcript of the video:

In Iraq, there are 60,000 detainees including 1,000 women in 13 government prisons and dozens of secret prisons by militias and political parties based on testimonials collected by the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor. Some prisons of armed groups are repurposed houses where detainees are kept in the basements and their families are blackmailed to pay money or have their children killed.  Some prisons are . . . increasingly overcrowded due to the escalation of arrests and mostly lack hygiene.  Thus prisons become a fertile environment [for] the spread of diseases.  However, the Iraqi government did not take serious measures during the outbreak of the novel coronavirus in Iraq.

Tariq al-Liwa, legal advisor in the Euor-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor: Detainees should be released if there is no clear legal basis for their detention, or if the Iraqi government is unable to address the inhumane and degrading conditions in which they are held.

An Iraqi policeman . . told/said that Brigade 30 has a secret prison in the Nineveh Governorate where 1,000 people are detained on sectarian grounds and based on fabricated charges


The Switzerland-based Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor issued the following:
Geneva – Testimony documenting inhumane conditions in Iraqi prisons have been collected by the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, which warns of an imminent humanitarian catastrophe.
The outbreak of the novel coronavirus is a particular threat to the thousands of detainees, since the prisons are overcrowded, unsanitary and lack even minimum health care.
More than 60,000 people, including about 1,000 women, are detained in 13 government prisons. In addition, there are dozens of secret prisons run by militias, political parties, and various tribal and other factions.
Iraqi authorities refuse to disclose the number of detainees, their health condition or recorded deaths, although multiple testimonies report poor health overall, rapid disease spread and medical neglect. A basic lack of hygiene makes the prisons a fertile environment for the spread of diseases such as asthma, tuberculosis and hepatitis. Inadequate ventilation exacerbates the crisis, along with an absence of sanitizers.
At the same time, Iraqi prisons are increasingly overcrowded due to the escalation of detention and judicial delays.
Testimonies collected by Euro-Med indicate that these and other government practices are systematic and deliberate, not merely individual or random.
For example, A.A. is an Iraqi policeman who told Euro-Med about a secret prison in the Tahrawa area in the Nineveh Governorate that is run by a unit known as Brigade 30. It houses about 1,000 detainees arrested on malicious, sectarian charges. Leaders of Brigade 30 force families of the detainees to pay large sums of money in exchange for the release of their relatives.
K.TH.F., another Iraqi policeman, told us that Brigade 30 has other secret prisons in Nineveh. These prisons are mainly repurposed houses, in the Al-Qaraj area of the Kokjali neighborhood, where civilians from Mosul are kept in the basements. Their families are blackmailed for money.
On June 2, Jassem al-Samarrai, a resident of the Mukeshefah area of Samarra, reported that 50 civilians had been arrested by the Saraya Al-Salam militia, run by movement leader Muqtada al-Sadr. The arrests continued for three days, without any interference from government security services. Homes were raided, with militia members blasting doors open with bombs and live bullets—terrorizing children in the process.
“Authorities should allow detainees to hire lawyers, including during interrogation,” says Tariq Al-Liwa, Tariq Al-Liwa. “Authorities also should transfer detainees to facilities where government inspectors, independent observers and lawyers have unimpeded access to them. Detainees should be released if there is no clear legal basis for their detention, or if the government is unable to address the inhumane and degrading conditions in which they are held.”
Al-Liwa adds that Iraqi authorities must control the actions of their forces to ensure the legality of their practices, as well as prevent illegal armed militias from kidnapping and hiding people in secret prisons.
Finally, he concludes that the ministries of justice and the interior should expedite investigations, assure that everyone in pretrial detention has a speedy and fair trial or is released, improve detainees’ living conditions and provide them with all necessary health care.
Background
Over 60,000 people are detained by Iraqi authorities in prisons that do not meet the minimum requirements guaranteed by international conventions. These prisons are over-crowded and unhealthy. Last June, Euro-Med Monitor launched a petition signed by 30 human rights organizations, calling on the authorities to put an end to enforced disappearance and arbitrary detention.

Secret prisons -- just like when Nouri al-Maliki was in charge.  Instead of being punished for running secret prisons, the US government rewarded thug Nouri.  The Iraqi people voted him out as prime minister in March of 2010.  But Nouri refused to step down.  For a little over eight months, the government came to a standstill -- this is known as the political stalemate.  Instead of insisting that Nouri step down and honor the wishes of the voters, Joe Biden (who Barack Obama put in charge of Iraq) gave Nouri a second term as prime minister via the legal contract known as The Erbil Agreement.  This second term led to the rise of ISIS in Iraq. 

The notion of Joe Biden's 'accomplishments' are a joke -- if you're an Iraqi citizen, they're a dirty joke.

And now secret prisons again.  

There is no progress in Iraq.

The US military remains there to prop up an unpopular and unresponsive government.  Now I mean unresponsive to the Iraqi people.  It is an illegitimate government.  But equally true, for all those War Hawks who just knew the Iraq War would be a success, the puppet government in Iraq has been unresponsive to US demands as well.

There are no measures for success.  The US military just remains in Iraq, year after year, to prop up the illegitimate government.  At one point, there were measures for success.  The so-called benchmarks that never were met.  Remember Nancy Pelosi, the newly installed Speaker of the House, in 2007, insisting that if these benchmarks were not met, no more US tax dollars would go to support the Iraq War.  That never happened, did it?  They didn't meet the benchmarks but, to this day, US tax dollars continue to flood into Iraq.

Nancy Pelosi has okayed billions in Iraq but she didn't believe that, in the midst of a global pandemic, US citizens didn't deserve a $1200 a month stipend?  

That tells you where her priorities are.

Raising big money.  That's all she cares about.  When Iraq was the way to raise money, she was all in on end the war! end the war! end the war!  When she couldn't raise money off it anymore -- failure to actually do anything goes a long way towards why she could no longer raise money -- she lost interest.  The story of her life, the story of her political career.  David Dayen explains all about Nancy in the RISING video below. 




Nancy Pelosi was upset. Her blitz of cable news appearances as a high-profile counterpart to Donald Trump had taken her to CNN in late April. And Jake Tapper had the temerity to question that which is not typically questioned: Pelosi’s legislative acumen.
Congress had just passed its fourth bill responding to the coronavirus crisis. Republicans wanted more money for forgivable loans for small businesses. Democrats had a host of liberal priorities left out of prior legislation that could have been paired with the extension. But Pelosi and her Senate colleague Chuck Schumer chose to go along with the Republican framework, leaving everything else for later.
Immediately afterward, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell hit the pause button on future legislation. It felt like the Democrats were played. And governors were sounding alarms about the lack of federal aid to cover massive state and local government revenue shortfalls, which triggered a loss of 1.5 million jobs in April and May alone.
“Was this a tactical mistake by you and Senator Schumer?” Tapper asked Pelosi.
“Just calm down,” she replied sternly, pivoting to tout getting more small-business money than McConnell even wanted. (As of mid-June, about $130 billion in authorized funding had not been claimed, and a May survey found that half of all small businesses expected to fail, even with federal support.) Pelosi vowed to obtain state and local fiscal relief eventually. “There’s no use going into what might have been.”
It was an interesting exchange, because it highlighted a Pelosi critique that rarely makes it into conventional accounts. Molly Ball’s biography Pelosi emphasizes more-common narratives, which throughout her accomplished career the Speaker has been able to surmount: whether a woman can compete in the typically male terrain of high-stakes politics, or whether she can withstand the caricature of a “San Francisco liberal.”
Ball, a national reporter for Time, also tries to make the case that Pelosi, underestimated by official Washington, constantly fleeces her foes at the negotiating table. Much of this is true. She stopped a newly re-elected George W. Bush from dismantling Social Security, a strategic masterstroke. Willing the Affordable Care Act forward when Democrats wanted to pull back was a signature achievement. During the interregnum between speakerships when John Boehner and Paul Ryan ran the House, she was consistently relied on for votes when they faltered, protecting liberal social programs and obtaining additional funding. And Pelosi always did it with remarkable caucus discipline, bringing together a disparate set of legislators to strengthen her hand.
But the past few months of hurried legislative output, long after Ball completed her draft, frustrate that analysis. In our endlessly gridlocked politics, real governing occurs mainly in the crucible of crisis, which forces urgent action beyond the usual game of inches. What you do in those moments matters infinitely more than how sassy you look clapping during the State of the Union address, or how you rip up that address after it’s read.

Nancy is eighty-years-old.  And she's failed to deliver anything --as House Minority Leader or as Speaker of the House.  When the politically uneducated -- I'll be kind, you know which celebrity I am especially refer to -- take to Twitter hissing as AOC or anyone else that calls out Nancy, they only flaunt their lack of intelligence.  Nancy has achieved nothing.

Take covid.  She and her kind -- unethical Democrats (not all Dems are unethical, I'm referring to a certain group) -- did nothing.  Not one damn thing.  They're thrilled that Donald Trump's polling numbers are harmed currently but, let's be clear, they haven't done a damn thing.  The American people need a monthly stipend during this pandemic.  It would help mental health, it would help general health (allowing stress levels to drop).  It would certainly help the economy.  But even with Bernie Sanders giving lip service to this idea (he wouldn't fight for it, of course), Nancy delivered nothing.

She doesn't plan to.  The average American cannot see any benefit from Donald or from Nancy.  (Some might quibble on that and if they're citing the one time $1,200, fine.  Donald Trump has taken credit for that. )

We need leaders and we don't have them.  Not on either side.  I would agree The Squad, for example, are leaders.  But they do not have the power that they should.  Nancy needs to retire and we need Democrats who are going to fight for We The People.

Currently, leadership in both of the duopoly parties is a failure.

So let's all vote Kayne?

There are e-mails from people telling me I'm anti-Kanye.

You don't know me.  I know Kanye.  I've known Kanye for years.  That's been noted here repeatedly for well over a decade.  I didn't call out Kanye for his support of Donald Trump.

I did do a blind item right after the election calling out a mutual friend who was attacking Kanye.

Do I agree with Kanye regarding his support -- sometime support -- for Donald?  No.

But I don't have to agree with everyone I know nor do they have to agree with me.  

Kanye could make a very interesting president.

I am not noting his 'run' currently because I don't see it as one.

The Greens, the SEP and other political parties are fighting for ballot access across the United States.

Do we grasp that?

So how is Kanye planning to run?  I haven't spoken to him about it.  

You can write in anyone you want on a ballot.  But for the vote to go for whomever you wrote in, most states have requirements.  Kanye hasn't met them and I don't know that he can at this late date.

Especially if we move towards vote by mail due to the pandemic, I don't know that he can because ballots will soon have to be printed.  The SEP has had to go to court in Michigan in their attempt to get on the ballot.

So I'm not understanding how Kanye runs for the White House.

If he's serious, he may just want to be a protest vote.  If so, that's fine.  And if that's what people want to do with their vote, that's fine.

The only 'wrong' vote is a vote you don't believe in.

You can make a mistake, we all can.  But if you're voting in a way you don't believe, that's a wrong vote.

You own your vote, no one else.  Though Debra Messing forgets this is a democracy and thinks the 'democratic' and 'Democratic' thing to do is to bully people into voting her way, she's wrong.  Your vote is your vote.

You give it meaning by how you use it.

That may be voting for Biden or voting for Trump or voting for Kishore or voting for La Riva, or voting for Hawkins or voting for Jorgensen or voting for Kanye or some other candidate.  That may be by not voting.  That may be your statement or your choice.

Whatever your choice is, as long as you believe in what you are doing, it's not a 'wrong' choice.

And it's your vote and it's really no one else's business how you choose to use it.

No matter what a balding idiot like Debra Messing says.

While we're on the topic of covid and politicians, let's note two Tweets from SEP presidential candidate Joseph Kishore.  First:

The #coronavirus pandemic is spiraling out of control. A social crime has been committed. Those responsible are the representatives of the rich, Democrat and Republican. Their motive is defense of capitalism. The working class must respond through socialist revolution.
9:53 PM · Jul 13, 2020




A social crime is being committed. However, in the countless hours devoted to discussions of the #pandemic in the news programs, no one seriously asks: Who is responsible? And what social interests have dictated policy?





James and Noah Kulwin are the creators and cohosts of a new podcast on the war and the pathologies that emerged in its wake, aptly titled Blowback. Over the course of ten episodes, the two sketch out what they describe as a “counter-history” of America’s forays into Iraq. Listeners working their way through the series will hear clips from CNN and MSNBC broadcasts, and anecdotes drawn from the reportage of mainstream journalists, like George Packer and Bob Woodward. What emerges from the synthesis constructed by the hosts is a criticism of these conventional secondary sources. James and Kulwin paint a portrait of a deluded and venal elite convinced that the exercise of American power today will solve the problems created by the exercise of American power in the past.
The hosts include liberals among that elite, taking aim at Democratic politicians who voted to authorize the use of military force against Iraq, as well as celebrities and media figures who supported the invasion. Kulwin, whose essays on foreign policy and technology appear in the gaggle of young or revivified publications associated with the Bernie Sanders left, is a contributing editor to Jewish Currents. James also writes for publications like the Baffler and Jacobin, but he is perhaps most well known for his past role as the producer of the sardonic podcast Chapo Trap House.
It is no surprise, then, that the comical tone of the aforementioned program finds its way into Blowback — an episode describing insurgents in occupied Iraq is titled “The #Resistance,” and the historical narrative is occasionally interrupted by the voice of Saddam Hussein, played by comedic actor H. Jon Benjamin, renowned for his roles in Archer and Bob’s Burgers. But in spite of these occasional fits of humor, Blowback is not frivolous. The writing, facilitated by James’s deft scoring, shifts registers where appropriate. For example, the trauma and tragedy of the civil war unleashed by the invasion of Iraq is imparted to listeners by an account of a father searching for his missing son among the corpses in Baghdad’s overflowing morgues. The podcast’s levity comes at the expense of the unaccountable political and military figures that either negligently enabled or perpetrated atrocities in Iraq. Faced with epochal crimes for which there may be no redress, laughter becomes “a kind of sovereignty, a triumph over one’s own powerlessness.”
The substance of Kulwin and James’s critique of conventional histories of the war in Iraq is also serious. To begin with, there is the matter of chronology. Typically, the start of the war is dated to George W. Bush’s invasion in March 2003. Barack Obama’s troop withdrawal in December 2011 marks its conclusion. In Blowback, the start and end dates are hazier. They fold into a broader history of Anglo-American marauding in Mesopotamia from the 1920s to the present. Special attention is paid to the inconclusive first Gulf War and the unprecedentedly severe sanctions regime of the 1990s, both of which hollowed out Iraq’s economy and political institutions long before Bremer began issuing his ruinous decrees.
Accounts of the war with wider historical lenses often bring into focus the sectarian polarization that marred Iraq in the aftermath of the invasion. But James and Kulwin do not dwell on the topic of sectarianism. Instead, they pay an unusual amount of attention to another social cleavage that runs through both Iraq and the United States today: class. This shift in emphasis has its downsides. Blowback fails to convey the malleability of sectarian identity, and to record the myriad of ways in which American interventions in Iraq reified and exacerbated communal tensions along this axis. The widespread view, echoed by even Barack Obama, that contemporary sectarian conflicts “date back millennia,” absolves American policymakers of responsibility for destructive decisions, like creating a quota system on the Iraqi Governing Council.
On the other hand, the authentically socialist portrayal of Iraq as a flash point in a global class war casts the beneficiaries and victims of empire in a fresh light. In the first episode, the hosts explain that the British Empire’s exploitation of Iraq’s oil resources weakened restive coal miners’ unions back in the UK. In the final episode, listeners learn of Iraq’s extensive poverty — around 20 percent of the residents of the oil-rich country lived off of $2.20 a day for many years after the invasion — and of the vast fortunes of the architects of the war — Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, and Dick Cheney are all multimillionaires. The inchoate suggestion borne by these snippets is that somehow global inequality and perpetual interventions in the politics of the Middle East are bound together.






The following sites updated:






Howie

sisterhood


Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Sisterhood" went up Sunday night.  And my post would have gone up last night; however, Blogger was down for some reason.  Stan wasn't up with anything new at that time so I called him and he said he couldn't get in either. Then I called C.I. and she said she was about to post a video but couldn't log in either.  So I gave up and went to bed. 

Earlier last night, my husband Cedric and Wally did one of their joint-posts so let me note that:


And now?

Howie Hawkins.  Lauren Smith (LA PROGRESSIVE) reports:


Knowing that without truth there can be no justice and without justice there can be no peace, the Green Party Action Committee (GPAX) endorsed a trailblazing world peace platform, on July 6th, that aggressively fights back against the militaristic corporate hijacking of the United States domestic and foreign policy, and its methods of imperialist oppression through open and covert warfare. With this new platform and ballot access in over 44 states – as of the 2016 presidential election, the Green’s national party is uniquely positioned to rightfully snatch political victories throughout the United States from the clutches of the decrepit, racist, sexist, homophobic, warmongering duopoly – otherwise known as the Democratic & Republican parties.

On Saturday, Howie Hawkins became the Green Party's presidential nominee though you wouldn't know it from the press. Outside of Syracuse, his home town, the press largely ignored it for Saturday and Sunday. C.I. covered it "Howie Hawkins declared Green Party presidential nominee as US military convoy attacked in Iraq." I can't believe the way so much of the press have ignored the news. It's news. I don't care whether you plan to vote for Howie or not, his getting the nomination is news.

I love how the press, even more so than in 2016, has enlisted in the Democratic Party's campaign -- as opposed to practicing journalism.

We're told -- as every ethical standard crumbles -- that the most important thing is to defeat Donald Trump.

No, the most important thing is to be true to ourselves. Shame on any hack who tells you otherwise.



This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

 
Monday, July 13, 2020.  A documentary series is about to kick off in the UK, Turkey has grand plans for the Middle East, Howie Hawkins is the Green Party's presidential candidate, and much more.


Starting the United Kingdom where a new documentary series is set to debut:

Once Upon a Time in Iraq

9pm, BBC Two

The film-maker James Bluemel, whose powerful 2016 series Exodus told the story of the European refugee crisis, turns his attention to documenting the legacy of the Iraq war. Told through first-person testimony, this series interviews Iraqi civilians, soldiers and journalists, who recount their histories of the war. We open with the story of Waleed Neysif, who was only 18 when the war began in 2003 and who initially supported it in the hope the country would be westernised. Ammar Kalia
iNEWS also notes the program:

Pick of the day:  Once Upon A Time In Iraq

9pm, BBC Two
The 2003 invasion of Iraq is given a fresh perspective in a series from James Bluemel, the director of the acclaimed Exodus: Our Journey, which put camera phones in the hands of refugees fleeing to Europe. His compelling new documentary is a mosaic of individual witnesses to the US-British conquest and its Isis-infested aftermath, but instead of the usual gamut of politicians and generals, these are “normal” Iraqis ranging from comedians, formerly West-obsessed teens, a farmer’s wife from Saddam Hussein’s home town, Tikrit, and a Saddam loyalist. We also hear from Americans, including a chilling ex-Marine who seems to have modelled himself on Rambo.



Um Qusay, dressed in a black, sequined abaya and hijab, takes a slow drag on her cigarette as she recalls the execution of Iraqi men in her village who tried to assassinate their president. A Rambo-esque former US marine readies himself with a swig of tequila before sharing his violent tale.
Once Upon a Time in Iraq, a new documentary series airing on BBC Two from tonight, conveys the complex road to the Iraq war through the eyes of civilians, journalists and soldiers, 17 years on from an invasion that has fractured the world.
The documentary begins tonight and, on July 16th, the book ONCE UPON A TIME IN IRAQ will be published in England and in the US -- not to be confused with Basil Balian's 2012 book by the same name.  


Let's move over to a country that shares a border with Iraq: Turkey.  Amberin Zaman (AL-MONITOR) reports:

Mark Alan, a retired schoolteacher from Fort Collins, Colorado, is something of a late developer. He was 42 when he "came to faith” and 65 when he married for the first time, with Duygu, a Protestant convert from Turkey. “It was love at first sight,” Alan, now 73, recalled in a telephone interview with Al-Monitor. The couple settled into a comfortable life in the Aegean port city of Izmir. “I always felt safe in Turkey, I had a real heart for the Turkish people,” Alan said. Then in a single day, their whole world fell apart. Alan was on his way back from the United States last June when he was pulled aside at the airport by Turkish police and told he was banned from entering the country ever again. “They didn’t explain why,” Alan said. He insisted that he had no role in the local church in Izmir where his wife served as a book keeper.
Alan is among more than 50 foreign Protestants, including Finns, Germans and South Koreans, who have been summarily banned from Turkey as recently as June 26 on the grounds they present “a threat to Turkey’s public order and public health.” Some 26 are US citizens.
The wave of deportations began soon after Andrew Brunson, a pastor from North Carolina, was freed from a jail near Izmir in October 2018 after serving two years on outlandish terrorism charges linked to the failed July 2016 attempt to violently topple Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The evictions are continuing full throttle and tearing families like Alan’s apart.
On June 5 of this year, Joy Anna Crow Subasiguller, the American wife of a Turkish pastor in Ankara, was notified by Turkey’s Interior Ministry that her residence permit was not being renewed. She was given 10 days to leave. No reason was offered to the 39-year-old mother of three. She is still breastfeeding the couple’s 4½-month-old daughter, Derin Mercy.
“I am sad at the prospect of my family having to leave our home, my husband’s precious family, and our friends and church family,” Subasiguller told Al-Monitor. She is appealing the decision in a Turkish court. Subasiguller has lived in Turkey for the past 10 years. She said she expected an answer within one or two months. Similar appeals have all been rejected.

Is Turkey being unreasonable with regards to religion or is this about spying?

Missionary is often a cover for spying.  In the US, I became acquaintances in July of 2014 with a woman we'll call M.  She was and remains a nice person.  Her older brother does "God's work."  He does it in places that seemed rather strange to Ava.  I shared with Ava that there was no way M's brother was a missionary, he was most likely a spy for the US government and to be careful of what she said to M in case M's meeting us was not a chance event.  The brother being a spy was confirmed six months later when M's younger sister let that fact slip out.  

So this could be Recep Tayyip Erdogan's latest bout of religious intolerance or it could be his attempt to address foreign spying on his country.


Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has plunged his country into a series of economic, political, and military crises. As he becomes unable to justify his mistakes and to push his dubious designs—which include the reviving of the Ottoman Empire, playing the Sultan, and using the Muslim Brotherhood to that end—he points fingers at countries such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE, accusing them of directing “black propaganda” against Turkey.



AL-MONITOR notes, "In the next three years, Erdogan said, Turkey will be an unstoppable power in the region."  Does that happen by attacking Iraq?  Turkey has been bombing Iraq and has sent foot soldiers into the country in violation of international law and Iraq's national sovereignty.  The Turkish government loves to issue announcements claiming that they've killed X number of terrorists but they've yet to issue an announcement -- or apology -- when they kill civilians.  The true terrorist is the Turkish government.  RUDAW reports:

Turkish artillery pounded Bedihe village in Duhok province on Saturday, causing damage to civilian homes and lands, a local official told Rudaw.

"The bombing started around 6pm. They have so far targeted the village with six mortars, causing damage to 10 households," Sarbast Sabri, head of nearby Kani Masi town in the Amedi region of Duhok province, told Rudaw. "The artillery has also damaged groves and orchards of locals in the area."

Iraq faces many problems -- problems that appear to indicate they need a better prime minister than the one they have.  AP reports, "Iraq’s Prime Minister took a first step on Saturday to combat cross-border corruption that has long plagued the country’s frontiers as part of a reform plan to grapple with unprecedented financial shortfalls."  Since May 7th, Mustafa al-Kadhimihas been the prime minister and, again, the corruption predates him becoming prime minister -- by nearly two decades.  ARAB WEEKLY points out, "Every Iraqi premier has pledged new measures to fight corruption but few have been able to make a dent in the deep-rooted practices across the public and private sector."  His talk about ending corruption comes after his promise to hold the military members who have killed protesters accountable.  How's that going by the way?

Thus far, no one's been held accountable.  Worse?  Fazel Hawramy (RUDAW) reports:

Security forces fired upon a group of demonstrators in southern Baghdad on Sunday lunchtime, killing two and wounding over a dozen, according to a protest spokesperson.

Thousands of people travelled from several southern Iraqi provinces to Baghdad in the early hours of Sunday morning, protesting an end to monthly, government-allocated compensation as part of an economic reform package announced by Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi.

“They fired on us upon direct orders from Kadhimi and killed two of us,” protester spokesperson Sheikh Amer Shalan Rafawi told Rudaw.


Doesn't sound like anyone's been held accountable by the prime minister, does it?  No, not really.  Not really at all.  In fact, the protesters are still being targeted.  Different prime minister, same targeting.  


Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Sisterhood" went up last night.  It's important to note that a woman was raped and Gloria Steinem looked the other way.  The woman was her friend Phyllis Chesler.  It wasn't something to raise, it wasn't important to Gloria who first worked to get Phyllis to wait on saying anything -- with the promise of joining her for a public statement -- and then went from avoiding the issue entirely.

This isn't feminism.  Gloria needs to be called out and whatever luster is left to her name needs to be removed.  She is not a leader.  She made a craven choice and it's not a choice any second wave feminist would have supported.  (Although her roll dog Robin Morgan did support Gloria.)

Gloria made political calculations and put them ahead of what was done to one woman and what could be done to many more -- rapists rape, that's what they do.  And Gloria was comfortable letting a rapist run free through the world, she was okay -- what a feminist! -- with other women being raped.  Gloria's not a feminist -- she's someone who saw a job opportunity and took it.  She let down the movement from the start and that was obvious by the time the DNC nominated Jimmy Carter for president in 1976 when Gloria showed up to tell women not to press for any advances, it was more important to get Jimmy elected.

Second wave feminism was all about actions and then Gloria made herself a leader and actions stopped, real ones anyway.  If she didn't intentionally set out to destroy feminism, she did her part to water it down because she is so weak and so pathetic. 

And the fact that her defense of the CIA has not been called out more is appalling.  What the CIA did to Americans as well as foreigners during the time Gloria worked for them is a travesty.  For her to be blithe about it and, to this day, refuse to take accountability goes to why she should be escorted off the national stage for good and forever.

But there's more than just Gloria.  When Gloria refused to treat rape as rape but instead as political calculation, she did what so many do today.  It's not feminism.  David Walsh (WSWS) is no fan of the Me Too movement.  He's been a critic all along.  In his latest, he notes:



[Ronan] Farrow, who has the distinction, along with Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor of the Times, of receiving a Pulitzer Prize for witch-hunting, is relatively quiet these days. The last article of his New Yorker lists was posted February 25.
It may well be that the immediate electoral concerns of the Democrats, once Weinstein was disposed of, loom large in this. The charges of sexual misconduct leveled by former staffer Tara Reade in March against Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic Party presidential campaign, were received coldly by the Times and the media generally (except for its openly pro-Trump wing). Unquestionably, in that case, the #MeToo campaign and its slogan of “Believe women” cut across the plans and politics of the Times, the New Yorker, Time and the sections of the American ruling elite for whom they speak.
Reade’s claims have been treated with skepticism, as they may well deserve, and she has more or less disappeared from the headlines.
Alyssa Milano, Jessica Valenti and other #MeToo promoters have made clear that whether they believe Reade or not, that will not stand in the way of their supporting Biden. Valenti’s comments on Medium (“The Importance of Believing Women—Even When It’s Politically Inconvenient”) were remarkable for their sophistry and anti-democratic spirit. She argued it was the responsibility of feminists “to come to the aid of a woman [Reade] who accuses a powerful man. We can listen to her story, believe her, and speak out about what Biden has done—not just to Reade, allegedly, but to the many women he has made feel uncomfortable or diminished over the years. Doing all of this doesn’t mean we can’t vote for Biden. We can be loyal to our feminist values while recognizing the moral obligation we have to reduce harm and oust the dangerous bigot who currently sits in the White House.”
Valenti manages to combine disregard for the presumption of innocence (“allegedly” seems thrown in here just for decoration), ridiculous concern for women made “uncomfortable” by Biden and subservience to “lesser of two evilism” and the big business Democrats. The worst of several possible worlds …
Farrow too presumably belongs to this #MeToo/pro-Biden camp. His silence may in part be self-censorship: “Let’s keep everything under wraps until after November.” Or he may simply have been given the word to keep his mouth shut.


Swiping from THIRD's "Howie Hawkins is the Green Party's presidential nominee" Howie Hawkins in the Green Party's presidential nominee.  Prior to yesterday, the declared presidential candidates in the US included  Gloria La Riva, Joseph Kishore and Jo Jorgensen.  Howie, like the Democratic Party's Joe Biden, was the presumed nominee but he was not officially the nominee.  Last night, Howie moved from presumed to official.  Teri Weaver (SYRACUSE.COM) reports:

It’s official: Howie Hawkins, a tireless and perennial Green Party candidate in Syracuse and across New York, is running for president.
Hawkins officially won the designation today during the Green Party’s virtual convention. The selection marks the 25th time Hawkins has run for office, and his first national campaign.
Howie is the only new presidential candidate for this month.  Next month, at the Democratic Party's convention, Joe Biden is expected to be declared the party's presidential candidate. 
Howie is not just a longtime Green Party member, he co-founded the US Green Party in August of 1991.  WSYR TV notes, "Hawkins has run for the governor of New York three times, a seat in the Senate, a seat in the House of Representatives, and he ran for Syracuse Mayor in 2017.  Hawkins never won any of these elections, but he has helped the Green Party gain popularity throughout New York State in recent years."  Robert Harding (THE AUBURN CITIZEN) notes:

On Saturday, Hawkins officially became the Green Party's nominee for president. He received 210 of the 355 votes on the first ballot to win the nomination at the party's convention, which was held online due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 
The presidential bid is the culmination of a lifetime of activism and nearly two dozen political campaigns. Hawkins, a retired UPS employee and Teamster who lives in Syracuse, was asked to run for president eight years ago. He declined because of his work obligations. 
[. . .]

As the Green Party's presidential nominee, one of Hawkins' main goals is to appear on the general election ballot in every state and the District of Columbia. That's important, he explained, because it could give the Green Party ballot access for future elections. 
So far, Hawkins and his running mate, Angela Walker, are on the ballot in nearly 30 states. He admitted it has been challenging because of the COVID-19 pandemic. While some states eased their rules for securing a spot on the ballot, others did not. 


You might not think ballot access would be an issue in a democracy, but it is.  The US offers the illusion that Americans can freely choose who to vote for but even when you cut through the online bullying by the Debra Messings of the country, you're still left with the reality that the so-called 'presidential debates' are controlled by the Democratic and the Republican Parties (not the people of the US) and they exclude all other candidates.  As for ballot access, earlier this week, SEP presidential candidate Joseph Kishore wrote about the fight to get on the ballot in the so-called democratic state of Michigan in "Michigan court rules that SEP must gather signatures despite pandemic" (WSWS).
Many reforms are needed in US elections -- including ranked choice voting.  The news of Howie Hawkin's victory may be ignored by the press because it goes to just how unfair 'democracy' in the US is when candidates have to fight for ballot access.  Or it could just be part of the corporate press again refusing to do their job: Inform the American people.  At any rate, a search of AP's website shows, as of Sunday afternoon (one day after he secured the presidential nomination), not one story about Howie Hawkins in 2020 -- let alone one of him winning the nomination.
Instead of providing actual news, the corporate press prefers to shape opinion.  That's not their job.  But as the late Edward S. Herman repeatedly documented over the years as a media critic, it is what they perceive as their role.  
Friday, CSPAN did what it was created by Congress for and, on WASHINGTON JOURNAL, interviewed Howie.

Another victory that Howie's campaign had earlier this week was in meeting the criteria for matching federal funds.  July 9th, his campaign noted:
Federal law requires that campaigns raised $5,000 in 20 states in increments of up to $250 per individual. Today, Virginia became the 20th state and put the campaign over the top. Donations will qualify for matching funds up to the last day of the Republican Convention, August 27.
Matching funds must be spent for primary activities, including ballot access petitioning. For the general election, there are public campaign grants for parties that received over 5% of the popular vote in the previous election, which the Green Party did not do in 2016. The campaign will have to raise funds separately for the fall general election. No other campaign in 2020 has qualified for matching funds. The Democrats and Republicans reject matching funds because they can raise more money from the millionaires and billionaires who they represent, and no other third-party has achieved matching funds.
The campaign has raised nearly $220,000, from more than 4,000 people in more than 7,000 donations.
Hawkins/Walker plans to use the matching funds to get on the ballot in 50 states and Washington, DC by hiring ballot access petitioners. This is especially difficult during the COVID crisis. Attached are pictures of Hawkins/Walker petitioners gathering signatures. Hawkins/Walker will use much of the matching funds to hire petitioners.
The Green Party quotes Howie declaring in his acceptance speech:
 Our campaign will reach out to the tens of millions of voters who are not represented by the two parties of the millionaires and billionaires, to the independent voters who have rejected both parties and to the ‘hold your nose’ voters who reluctantly vote for candidates they do not like, from political parties they do not trust. [. . .]  The US is a bi-partisan failed state. We need real solutions to the life-or-death problems we face: Covid-19, racism, economic inequality, climate change and the new nuclear arms race.  The mishandling of the COVID pandemic has resulted in more than 135,000 deaths. The collapse of the economy has 47.2 percent of working-age people without work while the bi-partisans are bailing out their wealthy friends and families. The people are rising up against racism and police violence but Trump and Biden respond with violence. Neither party will confront the climate crisis but instead continue building fossil fuel infrastructure that heighten the crisis. And, the nuclear arms race is escalating while never-ending wars continue.
Cami Mondeaux (KSL NEWS RADIO) notes, "Hawkins was the first to propose the Green New Deal in 2010, advocating for legislation that addresses climate change and economic inequality. A decade later, Hawkins has used the deal as the central theme of his campaign."  The Green New Deal is now a plan advocated by many of various political stripes.  This is an example of the power of third parties outside the corporate duopoly -- they can raised needed issues and bring public attention to these issues.  This campaign could popularize other needed actions as well as increase awareness of the Green Party and help them move closer towards ballot access in all fifty states.  
This is what some see the purpose of the party to be in 2020, not actually winning the election.  We have argued in the past -- and continue to argue today -- that any presidential candidate should run their campaign as though they intend to win the presidency.  If they fail to do so, they aren't really a candidate for the presidency.
Some critics of Howie's argue that he's not a real candidate.  Dario Hunter, who also sough the Green Party's presidential nomination, lodged complaints against Howie and stated that the campaign was fixed by some Green leaders.  If the campaign was unfair, proof would be good to supply and not just accusations.  We're not calling Dario a liar, we are saying he made charges and didn't follow through.  The lack of follow through has been a real problem for Dario.  In fact, it's why those of us writing this piece who are Green switched from Dario to Howie.  We agreed and more closely aligned with Dario.  But long before COVID19, Dario failed to run a real campaign.  No, the corporate press is not going to cover third party candidates.  Thats why you better have a social media presence.  Dario had none.  He might go a week without Tweeting.  His campaign page -- on FACEBOOK -- rarely updated.  How could you get the word out on a candidate who did nothing?
By contrast, on Twitter, Howie and his campaign updated daily -- and, in fact, updated repeatedly each day.  They also had a campaign site that regularly posted new content.
It was clear that Howie was running an actual campaign.
Let's say Dario is accurate and the campaign was fixed. So what?  It's not like Dario was fighting for the nomination at the start of 2020 -- or even really trying for it.
Jimmy Dore is someone we respect and he has voiced serious concerns about Howie and his campaign.  Here's our problem with Jimmy's criticism -- criticism that may be valid.  When Jimmy's talking about how he doesn't feel Howie will push hard enough and he feels Howie echoes CIA talking points, we're on board.  But then he goes to Jesse Ventura.
A number of people wanted Jesse to seek the Green Party nomination and, earlier this year, he flirted with doing so.  Then the former governor of Michigan decided he would not campaign for it.  He did say, however, that he would accept the nomination if he was drafted.
If you're going to question whether the Green Party ran a fair campaign, that's fine, do so.  But you undercut your own argument when you then start saying that the nomination should have gone to Jesse Ventura.
Jesse chose not to run.  His choice.  To give the nomination to a candidate who didn't even run for the nomination?  That's going to look like a fixed race.
We harbor no ill will towards the former wrestler but we don't see how gifting him with a nomination -- over Howie, over Dario, over everyone that ran for it -- would look like a fair and transparent process. 
Howie is the nominee.  That doesn't mean he's above criticism.  That doesn't mean everyone has to rally behind him.  That doesn't mean he shouldn't be called out and pressured.  But if you're arguing that the process wasn't fair, you shouldn't also be arguing that the nomination should have gone to a person who didn't even run for it.
Following his victory, Howie Tweeted:
We are honored to officially be the
nominees for President & Vice President! Thank you to Greens around the country who voted for us in the Green primaries! Thank you to our donors and volunteers! Get involved in our #LeftUnity campaign at howiehawkins.us


While the Green Party now has a presidential candidate, the Democratic Party still does not. 

August 17th, the DNC is supposed to kick off the convention which is set to conclude August 20th.  It is expected that they will nominate War Hawk Joe Biden.  Raheem Williams (INFORUM) observes the War Hawks that are flocking to Joe Biden:
In the last few weeks, a slew of war hawks and Bush-era officials, including Colin Powell, John Bolton and John Bellinger III, have announced their support for Joe Biden. According to recent reports, more will soon follow. However, progressives should be careful. The enemy of your enemy may not be your friend. The growing list of so-called GOP defections reveals a very stunning commonality: they all (like Biden) promoted and supported the Iraq War.
Powell lamented Trump’s falsehoods before announcing his support for Biden. It is as if Powell expects you to forget his past and trust his judgment. Powell played a critical role in lying to the American people, Congress, and the world to garner support for the war in Iraq. Likewise, Bolton was another architect of the Bush administration's disastrous Middle East policy. Although these are some of the more infamous names in our disastrous and asinine wars, they aren’t alone. Bush-era intelligence officials assembled an orchestra of lies that led to the deaths of over 400,000 people. The destruction wrought by the fabrications of delusional Bush-era war hawks makes Trump’s fibs seem trivial.To be clear, there is nothing wrong with crossing the political aisles for the good of the country. However, it would be foolish to assume that’s what's happening here. Political endorsements are rarely spontaneous and almost always coordinated. It’s also naive to think the aforementioned people actually care about the common good. They didn't care when they promoted lies to send American troops to slaughter. They don't care about the crippling debt compiled from these endless wars and they don't care about the lives they've ruined throughout the Middle East. Their records show their concern for societal well-being is minimal to non-existent.



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