Wednesday, March 18, 2020

They put lives at risk

What Jill Stein Tweeted.


DNC's refusal to postpone primaries in a pandemic is worst #VoterSuppression yet. Countless people stayed home to protect themselves & most vulnerable. Dems endangered their own voters, all to protect the 1% from modest reforms. We need a party not run by sociopaths. #DemExit2020





Agreed.


By refusing to postpone the #PandemicPrimary until protections are in place for voters & vulnerable poll workers, the DNC is throwing the election into disarray & delegitimizing the results. Are Tom Perez & the DNC taking marching orders from the Kremlin?
🤔


They really should be ashamed of themselves.  They really should be.

They put lives at risk for greed and to ensure that We The People lost out.


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


Wednesday, March 18, 2020.  Bernie Sanders continues to address the needs of the nation, if we need to address the economic hardships in this country during this troubled time why does the opinion journal THE NATION continue to have a paywall, the Iraq War continues even though Medea Benjamin seems unaware of that reality.



Starting in the US where business-as-usual-Biden went about demonstrating yet again that he drives with his eyes on the rear view mirror, Senator Bernie Sanders spoke about coronavirus and how we go forward.




Senator Bernie Sanders: So this is a moment that we've got to be working together in going forward together.  What I wanted to do tonight, along with you, is to talk about a series of proposals that we are working on right now and that we'll introduce to the Democratic leadership as to how we can best go forward.  And in this unprecedented moment, this will require an unprecedented amount of money and my own guess is that we'll be spending at least two trillion dollars in funding to prevent deaths, joblessness and avoid an economic catastrophe.


John Queally (COMMON DREAMS) notes:

The plan would guarantee that all healthcare needs related to the coronavirus would be free and available to all, including testing, any treatments, and ultimately—when available—the vaccine. The plan also calls for a dramatic investment in the public health system—including an urgent overhaul in terms of testing for the virus—and increased preparedness and support for frontline medical workers, hospitals, clinics, and community health centers. It would also mobilize the National Guard, Army Corps of Engineers, and military resources to build healthcare capacity nationwide.
On the economic front, Sanders' plan would issue direct cash payments, in the form of $2,000 check to every American each month for the duration of the crisis. The plan would also establish what the Sanders campaign calls the "Emergency Economic Crisis Finance Agency," which would be charged with handling the financial downturn unleashed by what is now a global pandemic.


"We must guarantee that everyone who needs care can get it for free, ensure that all workers continue to receive paychecks so they can make ends meet," Sander said, "and stop giant corporations and Wall Street from profiting off the outbreak."


Bernie wants you to visit the campaign site to review the plan and to offer your input.


Senator Bernie Sanders: We want to hear from you not only your ideas about how we can best go forward, talk about your experiences.  In every state, there is a different level crisis in every occupation there is a different level of concern.  Please communicate with us so that we can get the best understanding possible of what's going on in our country and how together we can come up with some effective remedies.


Here's some input, Bernie.  Stop sending floats into clinics when they may have been exposed to coronavirus.  May have been.  A community member in Kentucky is furious because yesterday, at the front desk, she worked with a float who was informed, via e-mail, that the clinic she was at the day before -- a float doesn't have a fixed clinic, they float to various clinics based on need -- had a possible coronavirus patient and they were waiting on the results.  After reading that e-mail and telling the others at the front desk, that float was allowed to stay and remain working.  The only thing that changed is she put on a mask.  It was 2:00 pm.  She'd been there since 8:00 am.  That mask wasn't helping anyone at that point.

Floats are going to spread coronvirus from clinic to clinic.

What, I e=mailed back, would have been the policy if it was known the patient she was around the day before had coronavirus?  She would need to self-monitor for 48 hours, checking her temperature every two hours.  If fever came up, she would not be allowed to work at a clinic.

And if she's one of those who doesn't develop fever?  Everyone at each clinic is just screwed.

There needs to be a better system.

Kentucky community member wanted to share that her clinic was one of those we were noting the other day that has everyone mask up except for the front desk staff.  She said if everyone on the front desk masked up, there would no chance of the float having spread anything before she received her e-mail yesterday afternoon.

At Bernie's website, go to this specific page to read what he's proposing.  At the bottom of that page, it's noted: "To leave feedback, send an email to info@berniesanders.com."

There were primaries yesterday because public health is not a real concern obviously.  Jake Johnson (COMMON DREAMS) reports:

Ignoring urgent pleas from medical professionals and other health experts to postpone primary elections amid the coronavirus outbreak, Democratic National Committee chairman Tom Perez late Tuesday encouraged states to go ahead with their scheduled contests, claiming "we can in fact have voting and protect our workers, our voters, our candidates."
"I think it's a false choice to suggest we either have to protect safety or protect and ensure our democracy," Perez said in an interview with NPR late Tuesday as voters in Arizona, Florida, and Illinois went to the polls despite widespread calls for a delay. Former Vice President Joe Biden swept all three states.

Perez urged upcoming states to make vote-by-mail available to all voters, but it is unclear whether such a solution could be implemented in short order.

This isn't a federal election.  This is a political primary.  The DNC controls it.  They could have done that.  What they should have done is postpone the primaries.  Create, at each state's Democratic Party website, a place where you requested a mail-in ballot and a phone number for people to call for a mail-in ballot (not everyone has computers or internet access).  That does not take weeks and weeks to implement.  This could be done by each state in five working days.  The request would come in by phone or computer, the DNC worker would verify that the person was registered, a mail-in ballot would be sent out.

That is what should have been done.

This November, there will be a general election.  It needs to take place.  Even during the Civil War, we did not suspend elections.  We need to be using the primary to implement mail-in voting (which the state of Oregon already does -- everyone votes by mail there) across the US and we need to be prepared to do that in the general if the coronavirus is still an issue then (as it most likely will be).


The myth of electable is why the country's in another crisis.  The press tells us that their favorite, whomever it is at the moment, is the most electable.  In this cycle alone, we've seen them insist that Kamala Harris was electable and that Tiny Pete was though neither ever demonstrated any indication that they were -- at any point in the election.  Joe Biden is supposed to be electable.

He most likely is not.  A group of delusionals -- Cher, Vincent Tiny Penis and others -- have rushed to insist he is.  When is the last time Cher was ever in the majority?  When she recorded "Believe"?  That was last century.  She's not had a true hit since then -- not a hit song, not a hit film and, no, not even a hit fashion show masquerading as a Broadway play.  She's hardly in touch with the masses.






Bernie beats Trump


Bernie Beats Trump
✓ Only campaign with more donations than Trump
✓ Beating Trump in over 60 polls
✓ Fastest campaign ever to reach 1 million donors



Bernie is electable.


And the masses are who will vote.  That means leaving the zombie cult that is the Democratic Party.  Democrats alone will not deliver a victory.  You have to have a candidate who can reach beyond that.  Bernie can which is why he is seen as electable.  Joe, however, tends to run off most independents because he is so problematic, inappropriate with girls and women, unable to string together a coherent sentence, lying non-stop over and over.

The zombies of the Democratic Party will gladly overlook these things.  Voters not addicted to lies and distortions won't be so eager to do so.

And they see Joe's staff as problematic as well.  Anita Dunn, for example, donated her time to Harvey Weinstein as he was facing charges of rape and assault -- he has since been convicted and sentenced to over 20 years.  Maybe the Poster Gal for Rape and Harassment shouldn't be in your campaign?

Anita gets worse.  Jefferson Morely (COUNTERPUNCH) explains:

After Sunday night’s Democratic presidential debate, Anita Dunn, senior adviser to Joe Biden’s campaign, defended the vice president’s performance in a briefing with reporters.
Last year, Dunn, who served as communications director in Barack Obama’s White House, did a similar duty for NSO, the spyware firm founded by former Israeli intelligence officers. The NSO Group created the infamous Pegasus intrusion tool, which has been used to harass and disrupt journalists from India to Mexico to Saudi Arabia—and also to pick Jeff Bezos’ pocket.
As Avi Asher-Schapiro of the Committee to Protect Journalists noted on Twitter, Dunn is “Managing Director at SKDKnickerbocker, a firm that managed the US public relations work for NSO Group.”

Dunn’s work for NSO indicates a willingness to defend private power against the public interest. Her condescending remarks about Bernie Sanders’ performance evoke the arrogance that pervades the intersection of big government and corporate power in Washington. She represents the reasons why some of Sanders’ supporters are reluctant to support the former vice president. She embodies the difficulty of unifying the progressive and moderate wings of the Democratic Party going into the 2020 presidential election.


Let's gripe about trash.  Katrina vanden Heuvel, I'm looking at you.  THE NATION is not reporting.  It's opinion columns which are all over the internet already.  So this nonsense that you have a paywall is pure b.s.  That you would do so during a presidential election year is appalling.  That you would do so while your opinion columns promote the need to grasp the suffering that workers are going through right now is outrageous.

We were going to highlight Katrina's latest column.  I'm sure it's her generic rah-rah but we were going to highlight it.  The person I'm dictating the snapshot to says that the paywall notice tells them they have 2 free articles left for the month (you get 3 from Queen Katrina, "Let them read three!").  But he can't get around the paywall notice to copy anything from the column.

Garbage.  And Katrina for you, in a crisis, to claim to be a journalist and yet have a policy that readers can only read 3 articles a month without paying you?  Greed. You are deluded and out of touch.  You should be ashamed of yourself.  I'm embarrassed for you.


Also needing to take a slice of the shame pie?  Medea Benjamin and the man she writes with.  They give you 12 ways the invasion of Iraq 17 years ago have harmed.  Do we ever put Iraqis front and center?  No, that would require paying attention.  So Medea and her man note that Iraqis have died and been left injured.  That's it for the Iraqi people.  They live in greater poverty today than they did under Saddam but that's not noted.  Iraqi women have seen their rights stripped away but that's not noted by Medea and her man.  Birth defects have increased dramatically due to weapons the west used in Iraq but, again, Medea and her man look the other way.  Iraq is not a land of widows and children but they don't comment on that.  Iraq has a government that regularly attacks the Iraqi people but that's not noted.  It's a really funny way to look at the effects of the ongoing Iraq War -- by ignoring the Iraqi people.

Also strange, they don't seem to get that the Iraq War never ended.

MILITARY TIMES carries Andrew Milburn's column this morning.  It's entitled "The Iraq War is not over yet."  Readers of MILITARY TIMES are better educated about Iraq than readers of 'peace' 'activist' Medea Benjmain's scribbles.  And, hey, Medea, where's that Iran War?

You suddenly remembered Iraq in January, remember?  You ran around like Chicken Little "The sky is falling! The sky is falling!"  You told us all that the US would be at war with Iran in a matter of days.  We had to gather, we had to protest!

You couldn't recognize the brave Iraqi people who were already protesting -- had been since the start of August.

But you could scream that war with Iran was going to happen in weeks if not days.  As usual, you didn't know what you were talking about.

The following sites updated:





  • Tuesday, March 17, 2020

    Dario is the candidate we need

    Feeling down after War Hawk Joe Creepy Biden notched up three more wins on Tuesday?

    Remember, the Green Party is waiting and gladly welcomes.

    I'm supporting Dario Hunter.  This is from his campaign website:

    The Hunter campaign supports in full the Green Party's platform (available here). Some key (non-exhaustive) Hunter platform points are:

    Employment

    Together we will fight for the human right to food, water, housing and essential utilities.
    We will fight for the right to a living wage job with wages indexed to cost of living and inflation (but never less than $15/hr). 
    Under the REAL Green New Deal there will be full employment – with public works jobs and green jobs.
    We will protect workers rights and protect unions - ending firings without just cause.
    We will achieve equal pay and equal rights for women, finally passing the Equal Rights Amendment.

    Education

    There will be tuition free education from grade school through to college.
    And we will overcome the educational racism that plagues our schools, subjecting children of color to lessened educational opportunities and the racism of lowered expectations.
    We will fight to keep local voice and choice in education – and keep privatization out of our educational system. Our children are not to be used as pawns for corporate profit.

    Environment

    We will secure clean air, water and soil for future generations and end the environmental racism that plagues minority communities with pollution. We will transition away from fossil fuels, ending their harmful extraction.
    And we will set clear achievable goals to transition to 100% renewable energy.

    Economy

    Bought and paid for Republican and Democratic leaders will tell you that some banks are ‘too big to fail.’ There is no such thing. Break them up. And make corporations and rich pay their fair share. Corporations are not people - and we will no longer allow their interests to outrank the public good.
    We shall give grants to green businesses and support community coops in minority communities.
    We will democratize monetary policy, giving the public control of the money supply and the creation of credit.

    Healthcare

    There will be single payer health care for all Americans (i.e. Medicare for All), with no copays, deductibles or restrictions against pre-existing illness.
    We will end racism in healthcare that causes a lack of resources and access for minority communities.

    Immigration

    We will halt the unwarranted deportations and detentions, night raids and the abusive separation of undocumented immigrant families.
    We will create a path to citizenship for immigrants that is reasonable, achievable and appreciates the value immigrants bring to our country.

    Democracy

    Through ranked choice voting, proportional representation and open debates we will seek to perfect the revolution this country's founders started by bringing real democracy and real choice to America’s voters. We will remove the ballot access barriers put in place by the Republicans and Democrats (and their corporate masters).

    Equal Rights

    We will bring an end to the senseless killing of people of color by law enforcement – supporting the efforts of Black Lives Matter.
    We will affirm tribal sovereignty, affirm all treaties, and restore tribal lands to our indigenous peoples – protecting their sacred sites and fighting racism.
    Through targeted legislation, we will protect the rights and the lives of LGBTQIA+ persons.
    We will stand up against colonialism in Puerto Rico, supporting Puerto Rico's self determination and independence.
    We will fight for reparations for Americans of African descent who have been subjected to centuries of slavery and discrimination.

    Policing/Prisons

    We will end the war on drugs that feeds into our shameful system of mass incarceration – the new plantation system for African-Americans and people of color.
    We will establish community oversight of the police and end the quotas for tickets and arrests that create for profit policing.
    We will limit the use of force by the police and demilitarize policing.
    We will end the abusive surveillance, spying and violation of our free speech that has occurred under Republican and Democratic administrations alike. And we will fight the effort to violate our free speech rights through laws against boycotting Israel and its human rights abuses.

    Military/Wars

    We will stop funding interventionist activities and wars, closing over 700 military bases abroad. And we will stop aiding and abetting human rights abusers around the world – such as Saudi Arabia and Israel. [Click here for details on our pro-BDS, anti-occupation stance on Israel-Palestine.]
    We will cut most military funding, funding instead a Department of Peace. Our best defense is the pursuit of diplomacy, a strong educational system (i.e. a well educated public) and a strong infrastructure.
    And yet we will ensure the quality of veterans' health programs, raise base military pay and honor our military by dealing with the military sexual crime crisis outside of the broken military judicial system.



    Dario is a leader, he grasps the issues. 

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


    Tuesday, March 17, 2020.  Coronavirus demonstrates how ugly greed can be, Joe Biden has no plans to address anything, Iraq has a new prime minister-designate and much more.

    Starting in the United States and with the coronavirus.  At WSWS, The National Committee of the Socialist Equality Party (US) notes:

    The COVID-19 pandemic is a global disaster. In just three months, the coronavirus, since its initial detection in China, has spread across the planet. This virus combines a high rate of infection with a substantial lethality. It is wreaking havoc throughout Europe and North America, where every day brings reports of thousands of more confirmed infections. The number of dead is rising rapidly. The virus is now appearing in the Middle East, Africa and Latin America.
    The scale and impact of the pandemic has been intensified by the indifference and criminal negligence of capitalist governments, which have wasted precious time. At his press conference on Monday, US President Donald Trump, while heaping praise on his own leadership, stated repeatedly that the coronavirus pandemic had come as a complete surprise. “We have a problem that a month ago nobody ever thought about,” Trump claimed. “This came out of nowhere.” This is a lie. Scientists have warned of the danger of a global pandemic for years. The world already has the experience of the SARS coronavirus of 2002-2003 and the H1N1 (swine flu) pandemic of 2009-2010.
    The World Economic Forum has repeatedly ranked infectious diseases as one of its top 10 global risks. Its last report on security and related capabilities in 195 countries found that no country was prepared for an epidemic or pandemic. It wrote that “our collective vulnerability to the societal and economic impacts of infectious disease crises appears to be increasing.” This warning was ignored.
    Scientific studies show that an effective response to a pandemic demands rapid implementation of mass testing to slow its spread. However, even as the outbreak in China left no doubt about the scale of the danger, no effort was undertaken in Europe and the United States to detect the illness and stop its spread. But even if the government had wanted to initiate mass testing, the necessary kits hardly are to be found in the United States.

    The major centers of world capitalism, above all the United States, have proven so completely incapable of responding to this crisis as a direct consequence of the destruction of social infrastructure over the past half century. All considerations of social planning have been subordinated to raising share values on Wall Street and facilitating the accumulation of staggering levels of wealth by the ruling elites.
    To support and get involved in the SEP election campaign, socialism2020.org.

    As the essay continues, they note ways in which the workers are discriminated against.

    We'll note one not in the essay.  Right now there are discussions and calls for hazard pay for those working with the public and that usually translates as healthcare providers and retail workers, etc.  For example.


    I feel like everyone, from supermarket employees to nurses and hospital staff, should be receiving bonus hazard pay for continuing to work in these conditions.


    I've got seven different e-mails from across the country written by community members who are front desk staff at clinics.  You think we're treating everyone fair?  We aren't.  All seven explain that in the clinic they work at, everyone behind the door -- that mighty door you go through to see the doctor -- wears masks -- techs, nurses and doctors.  But those on the front desk, the people doing the screening -- asking the questions about travel and health, taking any payments, making sure all forms have been signed, etc -- are not provided with masks.  Even if they are at risk due to age or health conditions.  Apparently, we're all in this together but, at some clinics, some are in lifeboat while the rest float in the sea.  That's outrageous.

    There aren't enough masks, they are told.  But somehow, even a coder who is not even around any patient in the office, just sits at his or her computer all day, in the back, away from any patients, coding procedures warrants a mask.  Not the people greeting and checking in every patient and also checking them out after the visit.

    That's outrageous.

    That it's taking place in a medical environment makes it only more outrageous.

    Fran Quigley (COMMON DREAMS) points out:

    Last week, I listened as several Indiana workers in the hospitality industry gathered in southeastern Indiana to talk about their health. A cook in her 60s shared how she had gone months without her asthma inhalers because she couldn’t afford them. During that period, she was taken to the hospital by ambulance twice. A restaurant server talked about not being able to pay for tests her doctor recommended for potentially cancerous breast tissue. Another has seven prescriptions. She tearfully described her perpetual calculation about which to fill, because she can’t come close to affording them all.
    Each story was greeted by sad, knowing nods. Several workers spoke about skipping doctor visits, reluctant to add to the stack of unpaid medical bills already piling up on their kitchen tables. 
    Beyond their inability to get the care they need, they all had another thing in common: They all had health insurance.
    At least, they had what often passes for health insurance in the United States. Unique among other nations, we prioritize the interests of corporations making billions of dollars in health care profits over the goal of ensuring access to care. While 27 million Americans have no health insurance at all, four in ten working Americans have a high-deductible plan that forces them to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket before they get any benefit from the premiums taken out of their paychecks each week.
    Reams of academic medical studies confirm what the workers in Indiana tell us: Price tag barriers to accessing health care deter people from seeking the care they need. As recently as last month, most Americans may have seen this as a problem solely for the worker who could not afford to see a doctor about her high blood pressure or diabetes. This month, we know it is a problem for everyone.
    That same worker is unlikely to seek testing and treatment for the coronavirus, which means they may unknowingly spread it.
    “The reality is, there are a lot of people that are thinking, ‘I don’t want a couple-thousand-dollar bill to get tested or to get treated,’” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) told the Huffington Post. “That’s going to hurt all of us.”
    The fears of financial catastrophe coming from treatment are well-founded. Although President Trump in a primetime television address last week claimed that health insurance companies had agreed to waive copays for coronavirus treatment, those companies quickly walked it back. They were waiving copays for testing only, not treatment. And that treatment could be enormously expensive. As the New York Times reported, a father and young daughter quarantined after coronavirus exposure already face “a pile of medical bills” adding up to $3,918. 

    We don’t have to guess at the damage that will be caused by financial barriers to care. A Harvard Medical School study showed that 45,000 people in the U.S. die each year because of lack of health care coverage. In the case of an aggressive infectious disease like the coronavirus, where lack of testing and treatment will impact others, that total could mushroom.


    Medicare for All is what is needed.  That's during a pandemic and it's at other times as well.  Candidates like Joe Biden have repeatedly lied about Medicare For All and dismissed it -- no surprise, Joe and Tiny Pete and others are funded by the insurance lobby.  Jake Johnson (COMMON DREAMS) notes a new line of attack:

    As the coronavirus pandemic spreads across the United States, laying bare the myriad dysfunctions and inefficiencies of America's for-profit healthcare system, a powerful insurance industry front group is openly ramping up its campaign against systemic healthcare reforms that experts say would help mitigate the outbreak and guarantee essential care for all.
    Forbes Tate Partners, the lobbying firm behind the anti-Medicare for All group Partnership for America's Health Care Future (PAHCF), tweeted late Monday that while its employees have been working from home since last Friday, "our work on behalf of our strategic partners and clients continues full steam ahead."
    To that end, PAHCF last week launched a Facebook ad blitz against Connecticut's state public option plan and began laying the groundwork for propaganda efforts in other major states, including New York and California. PAHCF was formed in 2018 by major healthcare industry interests with the goal of squashing growing public support for single-payer.

    "While this is disturbing, it should not be surprising," tweeted Medicare for All NOW!, an advocacy group that is tracking PAHCF's activities. "The healthcare industry will fight any threat to its profits with force and gobs of cash, even in the midst of a global pandemic. They cannot be bargained with. And they must be defeated."


    Meanwhile alleged efforts at helping the people leave out huge groupings.  Sarah Lazare and Adam Johnson (JACOBIN) explain:

    In the rush — or at least the pretense of rush — to bring immediate economic relief to the millions of average workers gutted by the tanking global economy brought on by the coronavirus, Democratic Party elites and centrist papers of record Washington Post and New York Times are cementing the terms of the debate to a narrow, ineffective, and wholly inadequate discussion of paid sick leave.
    Over a forty-eight-hour period from Friday afternoon to Sunday afternoon, the New York Times has run twelve articles and op-eds online that substantively mention paid sick leave, including Associated Press and Reuters reprints. Not a single one of those pieces mentions the fact that informal economy and contract workers would not benefit from such protections, which are urgently needed — but ideally would just be one strand of a much larger safety net.
    piece published Saturday by the New York Times editorial board does criticize the legislation for paid sick leave passed by the House Saturday morning, shepherded by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, for not going far enough because it doesn’t apply to companies with 500 or more workers. “In fact, the bill guarantees sick leave only to about 20 percent of workers,” the piece notes. “Big employers like McDonald’s and Amazon are not required to provide any paid sick leave, while companies with fewer than 50 employees can seek hardship exemptions from the Trump administration.” Yet nowhere in this article will you find any mention of the informal economy workers who are entirely excluded from this legislation.
    This omission is glaring, because a significant portion of the US workforce is employed in the freelance and informal economies not covered by paid sick leave. According to some counts there’s over 56 million freelancers in the United States (though not all are economically precarious, many  almost certainly are.
    As for the informal economy, it is, by definition, difficult to determine the exact scale of this sector. The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimated in 2018 that 18.1 percent of total employment in North America is in the informal sector (the ILO didn’t look just at the United States). A 2011 Urban Institute report found “there are no precise estimates of the size of the informal employment sector in the United States, but it could range from 3 to 40 percent of the total non-agricultural workforce,” which means it could be as low as 4 million or as high as 53 million Americans.
    Many of these informal economy and freelance workers are already in crisis. “Sex work has given me a level of financial stability I’ve never had before, but I’m still just one rent payment away from crisis,” a New England–based sex worker told Jacobin. “Most sex workers don’t have a safety net and will almost certainly be left out of any formal systems put in place to make up for lost wages. I’m already worried about what I will do when I lose income and have nowhere to turn.”
    During the same forty-eight-hour period, the Washington Post published fifteen articles and op-eds that substantively mentioned paid sick leave, including Associated Press and Bloomberg Wire reprints. Of those, none gave a clear mention of informal economy workers. One opinion column by Adam Shandler discussed gig workers, but this brief mention provided the entire scope of coverage of the informal, freelance, and undocumented economy in the context of the coronavirus relief package.
    Reading the Times and Post coverage, and statements from both Republican and Democrat leaders, it’s clear that helping the vulnerable and precarious dig out from the economic conditions they face is almost incidental to the paid sick leave mechanism. “The House’s failure to require universal paid sick leave,” the aforementioned March 14 Times editorial concluded, “is an embarrassment that endangers the health of workers, consumers and the broader American public.”

    The urgent concern for our political and media leaders at the moment appears to first and foremost be containing the rate of the virus’s spread. A noble goal, of course, but one that is separate from making sure people don’t suffer economic hardship.

    Liza Featherstone has a good article at JACOBIN that's marred by its accusatory headline and a photo of shelves empty of toilet paper.  I keep hearing that people are 'hoarding.'  Are they?  Are there photos daily of people with buggies full of toilet paper?  There are no guidelines from the government -- a fact that Liza would probably agree with since she's calling for the government impose certain things.  There's no clear message.  Will we be able to go out next week?  The week after?  People are shopping for themselves and maybe their families and maybe their friends.  "I'm going to change it and go to the grocery store.  Do you need anything?"  I know those calls are taking place and those calls go to compassion and working together -- topics that are ignored when we blindly toss around the accusation of "hoarding."  There's no action plan.  There's no clear talk from the top of the government -- I'd include Congress in that, not just the White House.  I've yet to hear of people battling each other Mad Max Thunderdome style in supermarkets, so I'd suggest that writers back off from attacking people by using terms like 'hoarders' unless they have a specific example and not some free floating, trend story nonsense.

    How wonderful and how corporate media of all of us to make the issue that people are supposedly 'hoarding' with no proof at all when we no the grocery chains are raking it in and we're not focusing on that or other actors in the system who are corrupt and benefiting.

    For the record, I doubt Liza picked the illustration and I hope she had nothing to do with the headline.  Strip both of those away and you've got a very strong piece of journalism.

    In deeply unequal societies, nations where wealth and power have concentrated intensely, a few people do have the means to undercut the common good. These wealthy few can exploit the vulnerabilities of societies in crisis to make themselves even wealthier."

    And we're seeing it happen right now.


    In the race for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, you have Bernie Sanders who is calling for Medicare For All and solutions that address our needs and then you have Joe Biden who thinks that returning to the status quo of 2015 will solve everything.

    Did it solve climate change in 2015?  Nope.  Did it end deportations in 2015?  Nope.  What exactly did it accomplish? Glenn Ford (BLACK AGENDA REPORT) has repeatedly spoken of (on BLACK AGENDA RADIO) and written of how eight years of Barack Obama only accomplished the transfer of the country's wealth into the hands of a few billionaires and millionaires.  Here's Glenn in January of 2014:

    President Obama, the Grand Facilitator of the greatest consolidation of financial wealth in human history, began his sixth year in office declaring that income inequality is “the defining challenge of our time.” The Grand Bargainer who saved George Bush’s bank bailout and presided over the (ongoing) infusion of tens of trillions of dollars into Wall Street accounts, and who bragged less than two years ago that, “Since I’ve been president, federal spending has actually risen at the lowest pace in nearly 60 years,” now calls for government action to reverse the momentum of his own policies. The Great Pretender, who in 2008 called for an increase in the federal minimum wage to $9.50 an hour by 2011, and then did absolutely nothing to effectuate it when Democrats controlled both chambers of Congress, now proposes to raise the bar to $10 an hour in order to embarrass Republicans in an election year. The Daring Debt Buster who, on his own initiative, has frozen federal workers’ wages since 2010, and worked hand in glove with Republicans to gut social programs in the name of fiscal restraint, laments “growing inequality and lack of upward mobility” among the masses.
    The chief executive who lifted not a finger to pass “card check,” the Employee Free Choice Act of 2009, that might have given organized labor a fighting chance to survive, now pretends to be a born again champion of collective bargaining and yearns for the days when “you knew that a blue-collar job would let you buy a home, and a car, maybe a vacation once in a while, health care, a reliable pension.”

    Meanwhile, Obama’s Justice Department sided with the Republican-appointed Emergency Financial Manager of Detroit, who was seeking to impose bankruptcy on the mostly Black city and raid retiree’s pensions – revealing the administration’s true colors.

    Joe's not going to accomplish anything if he managed to get elected.  I doubt he would get elected.  Joe's bumbling and stumbling is being denied by his cult but we are in a time of crisis and there are independents who will look at Joe and realize he's not up for the job and vote for Donald Trump instead.  Joe only became 'electable' after the press was able to repeatedly attack Bernie (no one but Chris Matthews has been held accountable for their lies and insinuations) and after Barack pressured Amy Klobuchar, Tiny Pete and others to drop out ahead of Super Tuesday, Joe managed to look like a winner.

    But is Barack going to be able to press Donald Trump to drop out.  Is the press going to be able to smear Donald?  He's immune to press criticism because the press refused to play fair with regards to him.  They have lied about him repeatedly and the American people are aware of it.  There are valid critiques of Donald Trump and those could have been made.  Instead we got lies and conspiracies pimped as truth by the corporate press.  It will have no impact on the American people's opinion of Donald Trump.

    The senile imbecile Joe Biden muttering and making a fool of himself in a general election will ensure a second term for Donald Trump.

    The better candidate for the Democratic Party is Bernie.  And the DNC knows that, the polls show that, but it appears to be more important to deny the American people what they need then to win the White House.

    Jessica Corbett (COMMON DREAMS) notes the Biden campaign's latest attack on Bernie and his supporters via Anita Dunn.  Near the end of the article, she notes Dunn's work on behalf of Harvey Weinstein.  Her work for Harvey is not a minor issue.  Harvey's actions have resulted in a 23 year prison sentence.  In October of 2017, Steven Perlberg (BUZZFEED NEWS) reported:

    A former top adviser to Barack Obama was among the list of public relations professionals and lawyers consulting Harvey Weinstein over a major New York Times story, according to two people familiar with the matter.
    Anita Dunn, a top Obama campaign staffer and former White House communications director, helped offer damage control advice for the Hollywood mogul.
    On Thursday afternoon, the New York Times published a major investigation into Weinstein that features on-the-record claims of sexual harassment, including from actor Ashley Judd.
    The Hollywood Reporter and Variety reported Wednesday that the Times was working on the story on Weinstein’s personal “behavior." The two Hollywood trade outlets also reported that NBC News' Ronan Farrow is working on a piece about Weinstein for the New Yorker.
    Dunn was not paid by Weinstein for her help, according to one of the people familiar with the matter. But she did offer her PR advice, including in regards to a Sept. 23 Times story written by Megan Twohey. The story, about a controversy over Weinstein’s work with AIDS charity amfAR, was thought to be a precursor to the big investigation posted on Thursday.
    Sources said that Lanny Davis, former special counsel to Bill Clinton, has been central to the PR effort for Weinstein, who is a major Democratic donor. Davis is engaged as an attorney providing legal advice to Weinstein, according to a spokesperson for his law firm.
    Dunn, for her part, is the managing director of SKDKnickerbocker, a Washington public affairs firm with deep ties to Democratic politics. She was communications director for Obama’s 2008 campaign and served briefly in his administration.


    Well we all donate our time.  I like to help children's causes, I believe in them.  Anita Dunn likes to help rapists because she apparently supports rape.  That she could be a high level official in anyone's campaign right now goes to how little anything has changed since the hashtag.  Mark Penn on Hillary's 2008 campaign was an issue, why the hell isn't Anita being on Joe's campaign -- a campaign of someone notorious for invading women's spaces and boundaries -- an issue?

    Bernie's the clear choice for America.  Something that's not clear?  How to use YOUTUBE.



    That's Bernie's Fireside Chat from Saturday.  At least ten e-mails have come in saying there's nothing there to watch.

    Yes, there is.  It would have been smart for Bernie's crew to have let the video start with the chat but all you have to do is go minute 15 and that's where the chat starts.  You don't have to wait for that to load minute fifteen, you can use your mouse and advance the feed to the 15 minute mark.  Bernie's addressing real issues.

    Bernie Sanders: What does this mean for ordinary people?  What does this mean?  Say you are a waiter or a waitress, okay?  Business is cut in half.  What are you supposed to do right now? Your mortgage bill is coming due or your rent bill is coming due.  Maybe you have illness and you have to buy your prescription drugs.  Maybe your kid is sick from an illness and you have to go to the doctor.  Maybe you owe and you have to make your monthly payments on your credit card.  What happens to you if your income goes down?


    Meanwhile Bill Van Auken (WSWS) reports:

    US Secretary Mike Pompeo threatened the Iraqi government that the Pentagon will carry out fresh attacks in retaliation for rocket strikes on bases in Iraq housing US military personnel, according to a memo released by the State Department Monday.
    Pompeo held a telephone conversation Sunday with Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi, one day after the al-Taji base, north of Baghdad, was struck by 33 Katyusha rockets leaving three US soldiers wounded, two of them seriously. The attack is the latest in a series of retaliations and counterretaliations that are spiraling dangerously toward the eruption of another major US war in the Middle East.
    The threat of more US military action in Iraq comes as the country is reeling from the combined impact of the spreading coronavirus and a drastic fall in the price of oil, its virtually exclusive export.
    The latest attack on the al-Taji base followed US airstrikes that left five Iraqi regular army soldiers, two policemen and one civilian worker, a cook, dead, along with a number of others wounded. The US bombing raids, which struck a civilian airport under construction outside Iraq’s Shia holy city of Karbala were launched after an earlier rocket attack on Camp Taji, as the US military refers to the base, which killed two US and one British soldier. A separate strike against a base of the Kataib Hezbollah Shia militia in eastern Syria near the Iraqi border reportedly killed 18 fighters.
    According to the State Department’s readout of the call: “Secretary Pompeo reiterated that the Government of Iraq must defend Coalition personnel supporting the Iraqi government’s efforts to defeat ISIS. Secretary Pompeo underscored that the groups responsible for these attacks must be held accountable. Secretary Pompeo noted that America will not tolerate attacks and threats to American lives and will take additional action as necessary in self-defense.”

    The tone of this ultimatum expresses all the arrogance of a colonial occupier toward an oppressed country.



    By definition.. The state that invaded #Iraq on a lie; killed and displaced millions; occupies Iraq’s land; pillaged its resources; poisoned it with depleted uranium; gave rise to ISIS; and now refuses to leave while still dropping bombs on Iraqis.. Can never act in self-defense.
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    JUST IN: Pompeo warns US will act in self-defense in Iraq after attacks on troops hill.cm/QJ0MUQR


    In other news . . .


    Iraq ex-governor named PM-designate as Baghdad residents rushed to stock up on supplies ahead of a planned days-long curfew amid a global pandemic.


    Who are we talking about?  Adnan al-Zurufi.  From WIKIPEDIA:

    Adnan al-Zurufi was deployed to Iraq in April 2003 as a team member of Iraq Reconstruction and Development Council (IRDC), a US DoD financed group led by Emad Dhia. Later, he was appointed by Paul Bremer, the CPA Administrator as governor of Najaf Governorate appointed May 2004. 17 March 2020 Iraqi President Salih appoints Adnan al-Zurfi as new PM-designate [1] He accused Muqtada al Sadr of constantly violating his agreements to disband the Mahdi Army.
    As a result of his willingness to work with the Iraqi government and the coalition he and his family were targeted by insurgents and militias. His uncle was killed in April 2004,[2] and his brother was kidnapped in Kufra on 1 December 2005, just prior to the 2009 governorate elections, in which Zurufi was running.[3]
    A member of the Bani Hassan tribe, al-Zurufi earned a degree in Islamic law at Alfik College, the Islamic jurisprudence college, in Najaf. He was a sports hero as a youth, and also captain of the cheer leading team.[1]


    We've been noting the implosion of Moqtada al-Sadr for some time.  Despite this, many in the corporate media still insist Moqtada is a big player.

    No, he's a bit player.

    Before he turned on the protesters, he was a movement leader.  Then he turned on them and he's just a cult leader.  Many of his supporters -- adults in middle age -- walked out on him when he turned on the protesters.  This was not a minor deal.

    Before he turned on them?  He was able to insist that Mohammed Allawi be named prime minister-designate.  After he turned on the protesters?  Even Moqtada's threats were enough to make Parliament vote on Allawi's cabinet and Allawi had to announce that he was bowing out.

    And now?  The new nominee is a longterm foe of Moqtada al-Sadr's?  He was a big player.  He's currently a bit player.

    Never count him out.  He could rise again.  But at present, he has little influence in Iraq.


    The following sites updated: