Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Leslie Jordan

 





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


Tuesday, October 25, 2022.  Pimping a candidate when they aren't worth it, an arrest takes place in Iraq, potable water and farming impacted by climate change, and much more.


The garbage never gets picked up -- it just stays out there and stinks everything up.  Steve Early and  Suzanne Gordon prove that with the parcel they left by the side of the road at COUNTERPUNCH.  They tell you how rotten this Democratic candidate and veteran is and how awful this veteran and Republican candidate is and then, at the end, they offer even more garbage:

To find a veteran willing to challenge the military-industrial complex, one has to look outside the two major parties in this election cycle. In North Carolina, his name is Matt Hoh, a former Marine and ex-State Department official with a very impressive resume and record of anti-war activism. Hoh is campaigning for an open US Senate seat against Democrat Cheri Beasley, a former state supreme court justice, and a Trump-backed Republican, Congressman Ted Budd.

The national Democratic Party invested heavily in a failed legal effort to keep him off the ballot. He’s been excluded from debates and ignored in national press coverage of the race. And if Hoh, as a Green Party candidate, contributes in any claimed way to a narrow defeat of Beasley by Budd on November 8, he will be forced to endure the same lasting opprobrium heaped on Ralph Nader and Jill Stein, past GP presidential candidates.

But, like both of them, Hoh is defending democracy by adding to the range of electoral choices in his own state-wide race, while demanding major election reform that would protect the right to vote and reduce the role of big money in politics. Sadly, that’s a “unique perspective” not shared by most military veterans seeking votes this fall, whether as centrist Democrats or right-wing Republicans.


I don't see him changing a damn thing mainly because I don't see him getting eleected.  But I see him as a clear danger to the left.  If you don't, you're not paying attention.


Ava and my "TV: The media that begs for criticism" covers some of the media failures last week -- including Joe Biden apparently falling asleep in the middle of an interview with Jonathan Capehart.  It also covers a very disturbing segment regarding Matthew Hoh.


Hoh is about defending democracy?  We didn't see that.  We saw him talking about his buddy Grover SMASH GOVERNMENT Norquist and holding their relationship as a model of what he wants the left to do.  Sorry but those who parrot the false talking point of 'welfare queens' should not be our friends unless we despise the safety net.  Grover wants to do away with Social Security even.  Is Matty Hoh aware of that?  Is he also endorsing that?


He may not be aware of it.  He's not a very smart person.  He decided to tackle media criticism in that video segment and didn't feel the need to know a damn thing.  How does media consolidation hurt a society?  That's not a new topic.  Yet Matty Hoh would probably respond, "Consolawhat?"


It takes a real idiot to argue that what the left needs is to all get in line after they aired their 'problems.'  No, you stupid idiot, the answer is never to become more like (how you see) Republicans.  And if getting in line is your goal for success, then you get your little ass and drop out of your election race.


It's cute how these men -- and it's usually a man -- think they can tell everyone what is important and what isn't based on their limited lives.


Everything he says in that segment is repugnant and wrong.


Serving in the Iraq War was apparently his grad school and, he believes, taught him everything he knows or needs to know.


It clearly didn't teach him a damn thing or he wouldn't try to do a lengthy segment offering his 'media critique' that only demonstrated he didn't know a damn thing and thought he could bluff his way through a topic that he himself choose to speak about.

The left doesn't need to 'fall in line.'  That's never going to be the answer and how appalling that the notion is proposed by a supposed third party candidate.  Equally true, the Iraqi people suffer to this day.  And Matthew Hoh didn't just go over to Iraq.  He was part of the stateside team planning and executing the Iraq War for Bully Boy Bush.  How telling that Grover's cock-knocking buddy made a showy resignation . . . months after Barack Obama was president but never felt the need to do so when Bully Boy Bush occupied the White House.  Barack was no saint and this site has never pretended that he was.  But Bully Boy Bush was one of the great War Criminals of the 21st century.  Matthew Hoh could and did work with Bully Boy Bush.  It was only Barack that offended Hoh's delicate sensibilities.

And his Afghanistan remarks that he's so famous for?  They're not worth being famous for, not in a good way.  


Hoh has had a very limited life and he's obviously not reflected on any of it.


Instead of glorifying people who idolize Grover and demand that the left "fall in line" behind whatever he orders -- is that what he took away from his military service? -- I support people with lived lives, some woman who struggled to raise a family and grasp the real realities and the real network that holds this country together.  


Next Matthew Hoh feels the need to speak, maybe it can be to take accountability for is part in planning and executing the Iraq War on behalf of Bully Boy Bush.  I don't want his simpering 2021 remarks again about how the media is putting so much attention into covering Afghanistan but they will forget it in a few months until he can point out that this long ago happened to Iraq.


Matthew Hoh did serious damage to the Iraqi people.  


And shame those idiots who eat up his remarks 'on Afghanistan' -- remarks like, "This war is a living legacy of the cold war. I was born in 1973; that’s the year the king was deposed."  He always centers everything around himself, doesn't he?  His scope is that limited and that's really sad for a man who's about to be 50.


Turning to Iraq where last week's big story was the discovery that $2.5 billion was stolen by government officials.  RUDAW reports this morning:


Iraq’s interior ministry on Monday announced the arrest of one of the main suspects in the theft of $2.5 billion in tax funds as he was attempting to flee the country from Baghdad International Airport.

An investigation by the Iraqi finance ministry earlier this month concluded that $2.5 billion dollars in tax funds were stolen from a bank by five companies during the tenure of former finance minister Ali Allawi.

Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council issued arrest warrants and travel bans for three individuals suspected of involvement in the colossal theft on Thursday. One of the suspects, Noor Zuhair Jassim, the managing director of an oil services company, was arrested by security forces on Monday evening.

 

AFP adds:


A security unit "arrested Nour Zuhair Jassem at Baghdad International Airport while he was trying to flee the country on a private jet," Interior Minister Othman al-Ghanemi said in a statement.

The state's anti-corruption agency described the suspect as "the director general... of a petrol services company", according to a separate statement.


Sinan Mahmoud (THE NATIONAL) offers:


Legislator Mustafa Sanad, who has been following the case, described him as "the main accused" in the case, saying he hired a private jet and planned to head to Istanbul Ataturk Airport.

The businessman is one of four who are sought by the authorities over the case. The whereabouts of the others is unknown.

Trading companies and people who have dealings with the government are required to deposit a specific amount of money, from which taxes will later be deducted.

Afterwards, the companies and people can apply to withdraw what is left from their deposits.

According to the findings of internal investigation conducted by the Finance Ministry, the companies, at least three of them established last year, submitted fake documents for their claims.

The money was paid through 247 cheques between September 9, 2021, and August 11, 2022, from the commission's account at the state-run Rafidain Bank.


In other news, Wladimir van Wilgenburg (KURDISTAN 24) notes:

Farming communities in Iraq have seen their wheat, vegetable, and fruit harvests decline for the second year in a row because of severe drought conditions, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) warns in a new survey.

The survey was published  ahead of the UN climate change conference (COP 27) in Egypt next month.

A quarter of the 1,341 households surveyed by NRC across five governorates this year said they witnessed over 90 per cent of wheat failure this season, a direct result of water shortages according to those interviewed.

A further 25 per cent said they had made no net profit out of their wheat crop for the entire year. "Prolonged drought spells have forced one-quarter of farming families to rely on food assistance amid a lack of harvest," the NRC said.

“We are seeing the continued damage from Iraq’s climate and water crisis,” said NRC’s Iraq Country Director James Munn in a statement. “People are witnessing their fertile land and crops vanish year after year. The lands that have fed a nation are drying up fast.”

Iraq is battling several years of drought, the governments of both Iran and Turkey are blocking the flow of the two big rivers running through Iraq (the Tigris and the Eurphates), everyone is expected to be effected by climate change; however, Iraq has been named the fifth most vulnerable country in the world.  Dust storms are increasing in frequency and in force.  Speaking to the United Nations at the start of the month, the US Deputy Rep to the UN, Ambassador Richard Mills, noted that climate change was one of the challenges Iraq is facing, "Complicated challenges face the next government – including passing a budget, developing oil and gas legislation that is acceptable to the Government of Iraq and the Kurdistan Regional Government, improving the provision of electricity, combatting climate change, promoting private sector development and job growth, and increasing women’s participation in the workforce."  Also this month, the International Organization for Migration pointed out, "Displaced families are likely to be among the most vulnerable to climatic and environmental changes that can impact livelihoods, food security and social cohesion. Sustainable return and rein-tegration can be determined by many factors but the role of climatic change and environmental degradation in return dynamics is insufficiently understood."


AFP notes:


The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), an aid group active in the oil-rich but war-scarred country, surveyed 1,341 households in August in five provinces including Basra, Nineveh and Anbar.

“We are seeing the continued damage from Iraq´s climate and water crisis,” said James Munn, the NRC´s country director, in a statement released alongside the survey findings. “People are witnessing their fertile land and crops vanish year after year.”

The NRC study found that “the crisis has had an immediate impact on access to drinking and irrigation water as well as on the production of crops,” causing 35 percent of households to reduce the amount of food they consume.

Turning to the US and the film BROS which is now available on streaming platforms, we'll note this discussion with Harvery Fierstein.




And we'll note this interview with Billy Eichner and Luke Macfarlane.

















The following sites updated: 



  • Monday, October 24, 2022

    Tired of celebrities

    I'm really tired of celebrities and this article doesn't help.  10-year-old spoiled brat Blue Ivy bid $80,000 for ear rings at an auction.  At least Tatum O'Neal earned her own money.  Talk about spoiled rotten.  Talk about out of touch.  Most Americans are struggling.  It's estimated that inflation has cost most families at least $6,000 this year and some little piece of trash punk is bidding $80,000?  She's as shameless and disgusting as her parents.

    And on celebs I'm sick of . . . Matthew Perry.  Unless he's finally coming out of the closet, I don't want to hear from him or about him.  Post-Friends, he's starred in one bad show after another.  Now he's pimping a book.  He was a drunk, he wants you to know.  Well he was also a coke head -- when does he plan to get honest about that?  I also don't need to hear how close they were on Friends.  They weren't close.  Don't believe the lie.  Not one of the other five would do a guest spot on Joey -- Matt LeBlanc's spin-off.  They talk a good game and fake one as well.  But they're not that close and they really never were.  

    About the only one I can take right now is Angela Bassett who is on the new issue of Essence. 

    Please read Rebecca's "we'll miss you big time, leslie jordan" about Leslie Jordan who played Phil on Call Me Kat.  He passed away this morning

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


    Monday, October 24, 2022.  Oh, look, Emmanuel Macron just noted Iraq more in two days than US media does in three months, ALJAZEERA offers a documentary on the protest movement, and much more.






    Yesterday, Emmanuel Macron was in RomeThe President of France insisted that Ukraine should not make people forget "the conflicts in Armenia, Syria, Iraq, Somalia and the Middle East."  Forget Iraq?  It's forgotten.  The only time it gets mentioned on US media is when some idiot -- Joy Behar last Tuesday on THE VIEW -- mentions it back accident -- she confused Ukraine with Iraq before correcting herself.




    And Friday, in Brussels, Macron again spoke of Iraq.



    Despite all the garbage chat and chews on American television, Macron said more about Iraq in two days than they say in three months.  But let's continue to pretend that these failed comedians are informing us.




    That's a new documentary from ALJAZEERA.  Of the documentary directed by Karrar al-Azzawi, they note:


    Tiba joins Iraq’s youth protests where she braves bullets and tear gas with the hope of reclaiming her nation.

    After a lifetime of conflict in Iraq, 20-year-old Tiba joins the October 2019 protests. She is amazed to see so many young men and women gathering from across the nation.

    Regardless of class and religion, the youth stand side by side in a fight to reclaim their country.

    Tiba forms new friendships, ideas and dreams. When the peaceful protests are met with violence, she becomes a medic tending to the wounded. But she could never have imagined the heartache one fatality brings.

     

    Tiba is part of The October Revolution.  Two weeks ago, THE NEW ARAB noted this movement:

     

    'Cowards will not create freedom', a slogan from Iraq’s 2019 October protests, can still be seen on a building near the capital’s Tahrir Square.

    Three years later, however, those responsible for the killing of Iraqi youths during the nationwide anti-government demonstrations have yet to be held accountable.

    On 1 October 2019, thousands of angry Iraqis held large demonstrations in Baghdad, Basra, Nasiriyah, and several other provinces in the western and southern parts of the country.  

    Demonstrators were calling for an end to corruption among Iraq’s ruling elites and the hegemony of Iran and its affiliated political parties and militias in the country.


    Soon, the peaceful demonstrations turned violent, with more than 800 protestors killed as Iraq’s security forces and militias used lethal force to silence them. Thousands of others were injured.

    Earlier this month, Iraqis commemorated the third anniversary of the protests in two different squares in Baghdad. One group read a statement at al-Nusur Square, while others gathered in Tahrir Square. New protests are scheduled for 25 October.  

    Zaid al-Asaad, an activist from the October protests, admitted that there is a division inside the protest movement, however, he stressed that the revolution’s goals are still mobilising the different groups.   

    “Since 2019, the demands of the protestors did not change, including prosecuting the killers and those who were behind the bloodshed, the corrupt people who wasted Iraqi public money, the legislation of a fair election law, and passing a law regulating Iraqi political parties,” al-Asaad told The New Arab.

    Demonstrators, mostly the younger generation, had camped out in the capital's Tahrir Square and other public squares from October 2019 until early 2020, decrying endemic corruption, poor services, and unemployment under the former Iraqi government led by Adil Abdul-Mahdi, who was forced to resign and was replaced by Mustafa al-Kadhimi. 


    Mohammed Shia' al-Sudani is now the prime minister-designate in Iraq.  Though not yet prime minister, already he's receiving visitors.



    Two more visitors are noted by INA:

    Prime Minister-designate Muhammad Shia Al-Sudani affirmed on Sunday,  that his work priorities are to form a strong government capable of facing challenges, the most important of which are economic.

    "The Prime Minister-designate, Muhammad Shia Al-Sudani, received the Ambassador of the European Union to Iraq, Ville Varjola, the head of the European Union Advisory mission (EUAM), Anders Wiberg, and the accompanying delegation," The media office of the Prime Minister said, in a statement received by the Iraqi News Agency (INA).

    During the meeting ,They discussed strengthening relations between Iraq and the European Union to achieve the aspirations and interests of Iraq and the European Union countries.



    Since his appointment as the prime minister-designate on Oct. 13, Al-Sudani has conducted several meetings with members of the diplomatic community.

    Following over a year-long political deadlock, Iraq overcame the stalemate when the parties elected a new President of the Republic Latif Rasheed, who later named Al-Sudani as prime minister-designate.

    He said he would announce his picks for the ministerial positions after he checks their backgrounds. Al-Sudani has until Nov. 12 to present his cabinet.


    On the efforts at formation, RUDAW reports:

    Mohammed Shia' al-Sudani, Iraq's prime minister-designate, on Sunday said that the names of the candidates for the country’s next cabinet line-up will be announced once they have completed reviewing their legal background.

    Sudani was tapped to form Iraq’s next government on October 13, after more than a year of political bickering since the parliamentary elections in October 2021. The PM-designate will have 30 days to name all ministers of his cabinet, or risk losing the position if he fails to do so.

    The Running the State Coalition on Tuesday invited MPs of the Iraqi parliament to hold a session on Saturday aimed at voting on the new government's ministers, but the session was ultimately postponed as haggling continued over the allocation of the cabinet’s posts.

    A statement from Sudani’s office on Sunday said that the PM-designate continues his talks with the political powers that have decided to participate in the new government, adding that interviewing the candidates for the ministerial positions will be conducted by a “specialized committee” of advisors.

    “The official announcement for the candidates that have been selected to take on the responsibilities will be made once the interviews are concluded and the legal background of the candidates is ensured,” the statement added.


    The giant friezes of the biblical King Sennacherib carved into the sides of a canal in northern Iraq have taken 50 years to reveal. But it has been a disruptive 50 years of invasion, civil war and insurgencies.

    In 2014 the fighters of Islamic State came within 15 miles of excavations on the canal. These restarted in 2019 only to pause again for the pandemic.

    Now the canal, part of the greatest man-made water management system of the ancient world, has been uncovered.  At is heart are reliefs cut into the mountainside showing Sennacherib, the greatest monarch of the Assyrian empire, paying tribute to the seven chief god's of his universe. 


    Here's a Tweet.



    and

    Ancient rock carvings that are believed to be more than 2,700 years old have been unearthed by a team of archaeologists in Iraq's northern city of Mosul.

    The marble slabs were found during restoration work on the Mashki Gate, an ancient monument that was partially destroyed by Islamic State militants when they captured the city in 2016.

    The relief carvings show scenes of war from the rule of Assyrian kings, in the ancient city of Nineveh, the Iraqi State Board of Antiquities and Heritage said in a statement Wednesday.

    The gray stone carvings date to the rule of King Sennacherib, in power from 705 to 681 B.C., the statement added.

    Sennacherib was responsible for expanding Nineveh as the Assyrians’ imperial capital and largest city — siting on a major crossroads between the Mediterranean and the Iranian plateau — including the construction of a palace.

    The discovery was made last week by an Iraqi team, alongside American experts from the University of Pennsylvania who are helping to lead the reconstruction effort.

    The “discovery consisted of eight marble slabs carved with a relief representing scenes of Assyrian soldiers, in addition to palm trees, grapes, pomegranates and figs belonging to the palace of King Sennacherib,” Ali Shalgham, the director general of Iraq’s Investigations and Excavations Department, told NBC News on Thursday.

    And Tiffany Wertheimer (BBC NEWS) notes:

    It is believed the relics once adorned his palace, and were then moved to the Mashki Gate, Fadel Mohammed Khodr, head of the Iraqi archaeological team, told AFP.

    The Mashki Gate was one of the largest in Nineveh, and was an icon of the city's size and power. The gate was reconstructed in the 1970s, but was destroyed with a bulldozer by IS militants in 2016.


    But who will note the reality?  That if it were found sooner, it would have been taken out of Iraq and put in some European museum?  Like the following that illegally remains in a London museum?



    In other news, Karwan Faidhi Dri (RUDAW) notes:

    Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has claimed multiple times that the Turkish forces have conducted chemical attacks against its fighters in the Kurdistan Region’s mountainous areas since April. Turkish authorities denied this on Friday, saying their army follows international laws.

    The Turkish army has carried out several military operations against the PKK, an armed group struggling for the increased rights of Kurds in Turkey, in the Kurdistan Region in recent years, with the latest one being launched in April. Ankara sees the PKK as a terrorist organization. The Kurdish group has recently published several videos which purportedly show Turkish soldiers targeting its fighters with chemical substances. 

    On Tuesday, the PKK-affiliated Firat News Agency (ANF) published footage which it claimed showed Turkish soldiers putting chemical substances into a cave in Duhok province’s Warkhal area through a tube. The news outlet added that a couple of PKK fighters, who were in the cave, have been affected by the substances - suffering from memory loss and breakdown of nerves.  

    The PKK said a day earlier that Turkey had used banned bombs and chemical substances for at least 2,476 times since April. On Tuesday, the PKK also published the identities of 17 of its fighters whom it claimed had been killed in the alleged chemical attacks by Turkey.  


    ANF adds:


    Reactions continue to pour in over the latest images and information exposing the employment of chemical weapons by the Turkish state in the guerrilla-held Medya Defense Zones in southern Kurdistan (northern Iraq).

    Iraqi Parliamentary Security and Defence Commission member Hadi Amirli said they were aware of the reports on the use of chemical and banned weapons by the Turkish state in its ongoing military campaign in northern Iraq.  

    “We are following the Turkish state’s attacks on civilian settlements in Iraq closely. We have been informed that Turkey has been using chemical and banned weapons, which is against neighborhood principles and international law,” he said.


    Reminder BROS is on streaming platforms in the US. 







    The following sites updated: