Saturday, March 11, 2023

Call Me Kat

Thursday's Call Me Kat was a big improvement.  We didn't have to put up with Jack McBryaer bringing down the quality level for one thing.   Wendy e-mailed to note she can't stand him either:

He mugs way too much and his delivery is off.  I think it's because he was on those stupid single-camera sitcoms.  He doesn't fit on Call Me Kat and he brings the whole show down.  It's like when Delta Burke and Jean Smart were off Designing Women and no one they brought on worked.  Jack McBryaer is a bad actor and can never be the new Phil.

Agreed.


Sheila needed a job this episode.  Kat hired her even though Max rightly objected.  It did not work out and I blame Kat.  She should have had a talk with her mother before hiring her.


She got angry with the disrespect Sheila brought to the job.  That's a conversation before you hired your mother who insults you every time she's around.  


Sheila's story, by the way, makes no sense.  She's in assisted living and her accountant tells her she needs to cut back on expenses and should give up her country club membership.  She won't.  She wants to get a job instead.


Does no one remember why she moved into assisted living?  She's losing her eye sight.  Seems like someone should have raised the issue of cutting costs.  I don't imagine that her expenses are going to become less as her vision gets worse. 


At least Sheila added to the story.  She found a stray and dropped him in the cafe.  She didn't realize that cat policy was the any new cat joining the others had to be sprayed first.  The cafe ended up with a problem: Fleas.


Meanwhile, Randi and Carter were talking about condoms and decided to take a more permanent option.  But then it was discovered Carter might have a problem.  I don't know why this sitcom needs Sheila going blind and Carter maybe with cancer.  Sheila going blind was more than enough drama for one season.  Phil moving off was bad -- but here was little else they could do with Leslie Jordan passing away.  We don't now need Carter with cancer.  It's too much.  Just stick to making us laugh.


Be sure to read Rebecca's "why is mayim bialik making nice with a transphobe."  It's a question Mayim needs to answer. 


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


Friday, March 10, 2023. While the Iraqi government bans booze, the US Congress holds one of the most embarrassing hearings of this century.  


I am not a fan of The Twitter Files.  I've referred to them repeatedly as The Twitter Dumps.  I do not see it as reporting.  A series of Tweets is not reporting in my opinion.  The Twitter Files, for any unaware, are internal communications within Twitter and external requests -- from various government figures -- coming in to Twitter.  They seek to explain how censorship took place.

There is no question that censorship took place prior to Elon Musk purchasing Twitter (and Elon has censored since purchasing Twitter).  Elon appears to be censoring due to vanity and on his own whim whereas The Twitter Files are addressing issues of government figures and agencies attempting to censor free speech.  

A number of journalists have dropped Tweets and it's been about as attractive and desirable as US House Rep Gerry Connolly dropping trou.


My objections have been that you need to write an article.  I don't need your Tweets and I don't have time for them.  I'm not the only one who feels that way.  Yes, the devoted fan base of various writers can go through hundreds of Tweets.  That's not the reality for most of us who have full lives and things to do.  In addition, and I'm not sure this has gone up here in relation to this multitude of Tweets, I don't have the eyes for it.  I'm not seeing multiple eye doctors, having injections and lasers, having surgeries because my eyes are doing great.  Since the pandemic started, I've tried to have a ton of stuff up here and that's because it was a depressing, sad, scary time for all of us.  (I'm not trying to imply that COVID 19 has ceased to exist.  Just noting that most of us have calmed the f**k down.)  There are times when there's a stoppage in that here.  An hour or two, sometimes three.  And that's because I've reached a point where the eyes have given out.  That happens very frequently with my vision now.  Especially on Sundays which is why I'm no longer in the mood to work forever on THIRD.  I reach the point where my vision is going and I say, "That's it, I've got to go write the Sunday night entry at THE COMMON ILLS and that's all I've got left."   So, no, I don't have time to read over a never-ending series of Tweets that are unfocused and unformed and are not anything like what people expect from reporting.  

Yesterday morning, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing entitled "The Weaponization Of The Federal Government On The Twitter Files."  A badly worded title but a very clear one except to members on the Democratic Party side of the aisle who kept trying to interject that they (Republicans on the Committee and the two witnesses) were saying it was just censorship against conservatives.  No, they weren't saying.  They didn't even say that, as Committee Chair Jim Jordan pointed out near the middle of the hearing.  

The Democrats on the Committee -- let me stop there.  I was going to say they embarrassed themselves in the hearing.  Actually, they embarrassed themselves prior to that.


Who are these Democrats at the hearing?  It's March.  They were sworn in back in January.  It's March.  Go to their website -- even just the Democrats website -- for the House Judiciary Committee and you'll see that several of the people making asses of themselves yesterday are not even on the Committee.   I'm looking at, for example, the worthless post that Stacey Plaskett has.  Worthless because it's a non-voting post.  She's representing the Virgin Islands.  She can't vote in any session because she doesn't have voting rights.  But damn, can she hijack a hearing and be nasty and rude.  

But look at her assignments.  That's the official Congressional page for the Committees she's assigned to.  I don't see the House Judiciary Committee on there.  And Ranking Member -- as she was billed in the hearing.  In what crazy world does the Democratic Party make a non-voting member the Ranking Member of a Judiciary Committee?  Not a Subcommittee, a Committee.  As fake as her hair, Stacey is nothing but an opportunist.  That's why the Brooklyn born and raised Stacey represents the Virgin Islands.  She moved there to establish residency to get the Congressional seat.  It's why she's a Democrat today.  She switched political parties as she embarked on her plan to be elected to Congress -- switched after the Iraq War had been going on for five years, switched after the age of forty.  A fake ass.  And a loud mouth.  She was raised by parents but you'd never know it from yesterday's performance.  And maybe someone actually from the Virgin Islands should represent that territory in Congress and not the Brooklyn born and raised Stacey who went to college in France?


We're focusing on Matt's testimony and this is a collection from the first hour and a half of the hearing.  


I would say I spent ten years covering the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis.  That was obviously a very serious issue, but -- uhm -- this Twitter files story and what we're looking at now and what we're investigating now?  I don't think there is any comparison.  This is by far the most serious thing that I've ever looked at and it's -- it's certainly the most grave story that I've ever worked on personally. 


[. . .]


Mr. Congressman, my disagreement with the issue [the unproven allegation that Russia interfered with the 2016 US election] [US House Rep Stephen Lynch cuts him off] -- Okay, then well I'm going to answer not in the sense that you're putting it.  I think all countries engage in offensive information operations.  It's a question of scale.  And The Twitter Files [cut off again by Lynch].  I don't know and I'd say it's irrelevant [cut off again by Lynch].


[. . .]


So a great example of this [scale mattering] is a report that the Global Engagement Center sent to Twitter and to members of the media and other platforms about what they called "The Pillars of Russian Disinformation."  Now part of this report is what you would call -- I think you would call traditional, hardcore intelligence gathering where they made a reasoned, evidence-based case that certain sites were linked to Russian influence or linked to the Russian government.  In addition to that, however, they also said that sites that "generate their own momentum and have opinions that are in line with those accounts are part of a propaganda eco system . Now this is just another word for guilt by association.  And this is the problem with the whole idea of trying to identify which-which accounts are actually INTERNET RESEARCH AGENCY [Russian trolls] and which ones are just people who followed those accounts or reTweeted them.  Twitter initially did not find more than a handful of IRA accounts.  It wasn't until they got into an argument with the Senate Select Intelligence Committee that they came back with a different answer.

[. . .]


I've done probably a dozen stories involving whistle-blowers.  Every reported story that I've ever done across three decades involved sources who have motives.  Every time you do a story you're making a balancing test between the public interest -- [cut off by US House Rep Debbie Wasserman Schultz]. 

[. . . After Wasserman Schultz refused to allow him to answer and after she told him what he thought and how he acted and what his income was -- none of which was probably right -- US House Representative Dan Bishop gave Matt a brief moment to respond.]

Sure, just quickly, that moment on THE JOE ROGAN SHOW, I was actually recounting a section from Seymour Hersh's book REPORTER where he described a scene where the CIA gave him a story and he was very uncomfortable. He said that "I who had always gotten the secrets was being handed the secrets."  Look, again, I've done lots of whistle-blower stories.  There's always a balancing test that you make when you're given material.  And you're always balancing newsworthiness versus the motives of your sources.  In this case, the newsworthiness clearly  outweighed any other considerations and I think everybody else who worked on the project agreed. [. . .] I would like to clear up some things that have been misrepresented.  Not one of us has actually been paid to do this work [The Twitter Files].  We've all traveled on our [dime], we've hired our personnel on our own.  And I've just hired a pretty large team to investigate this issue out of my own pocket. 

[. . .]


I think it's none of the government's business which journalists a private company talks to and why.  I think every journalist should be concerned about that and the absence of interest in that issue by my fellow colleagues in the mainstream media is an indication of how low the business has sunk. There was once a real Esprit de Corps and comradery within media.  Whenever once of us was gone after, we all kind of rose to the challenge.  [. . .]  That is gone now.  We don't protect one another.  


There were a couple of very telling e-mails that we published.  One was by a [Twitter] lawyer named Stacia  Cardille where the company was being so overwhelmed by - by requests from the FBI.  In fact, they gave each other a sort-of digital high-five after one batch, saying, "That was a monumental undertaking to clear all of these."  But she noted that she believed that the FBI was essentially creating, doing word searches keyed to Twitter's terms of service -- looking for violations of terms of service specifically so that they could make recommendations along those lines which we found interesting. [. . .] I think you cannot have a state-sponsored anti-disinformation effort without directly striking at the whole concept of free speech.  I think the two ideas are in direct conflict and this is a fundamental misunderstanding.  I think a lot of the people who get into this world -- some of them, I believe, in a well-meaning way, I think they're actually trying to accomplish something positive.  But they don't understand what free speech means and what happens when you do this.  It undermines the whole concept -- that truth doesn't come from -- it isn't mandated, that we arrive at through debate and discussion.  



I've presented the above that way to allow Matt to have his say.  We've also focused on big issues.  There are two exchanges I'm planning on carrying over to THIRD for the weekend.  


But my chief criticism has been that we do not have anything concrete from Matt.   So that is one effort to provide/address that.  It's also why we're ignoring Michael Shellenberger.  And it's why I posted Matt's opening statement last night and why we're including it below.


"Hearing on the Weaponization of the Federal Government on the Twitter Files"
Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government

Committee on the Judiciary

United States House of Representatives

March 9, 2023


Chairman [Jim] Jordan, ranking member [Stacey] Plaskett, members of the Select Committee,

My name is Matt Taibbi. I've been a reporter for over 30 years, and a staunch
advocate for the First Amendment. Much of my three decades have been spent
at Rolling Stone magazine. 

Over my career, I have had the good fortune to be recognized for the work I love. I’ve won the National Magazine Award, the I.F. Stone Award for independent journalism, and written ten books, including four New York Times bestsellers. I'm now the editor of the online magazine Racket, on the independent platform Substack.


Today, I'm here because of a series of events that began late last year, when I
received a note from a source online.

It read:


"Are you interested in doing a deep dive into what censorship and
manipulation... was going on at Twitter?"



A week later, the first of what became known as the Twitter Files” reports came
out. To say these attracted intense public interest would be an understatement.
My computer looked like a slot machine as just the first tweet about the blockage
of the Hunter Biden laptop story registered 143 million impressions and 30 million
engagements.


But it wasn’t until a week after the first report, after Michael Shellenberger, Bari
Weiss, and other researchers joined the search of the "
Files," that we started to
grasp the significance of this story.



The original promise of the Internet was that it might democratize the exchange
of information globally. A free internet would overwhelm all attempts to control
information flow, its very existence a threat to anti-democratic forms of
government everywhere.



What we found in the Files was a sweeping effort to reverse that promise and use
machine learning and other tools to turn the internet into an instrument of
censorship and social control. Unfortunately, our own government appears to be
playing a lead role.



We saw the first hints in communications between Twitter executives about
tweets before the 2020 election, where we read things like:


Hi team, can we get your opinion on this? This was flagged by DHS


Or: 

Please see attached report from the FBI for potential misinformation. This
would be attached to excel spreadsheet with a long list of names, whose accounts
were often suspended shortly after.



Following the trail of communications between Twitter and the federal
government across tens of thousands of emails led to a series of revelations. Mr.
Chairman, we've summarized these and submitted them to the committee in the
form of a new Twitter Files thread, which is also being released to the public now,
on Twitter at @ShellenbergerMD, and @mtaibbi.


We learned Twitter, Facebook, Google, and other companies developed a formal
system for taking in moderation
 "requests" from every corner of government: the
FBI, DHS, HHS, DOD, the Global Engagement Center at State, even the CIA. For
every government agency scanning Twitter, there were perhaps 20 quasi-private
entities doing the same, including Stanford'
s Election Integrity Project,
Newsguard, the Global Disinformation Index, and others, many taxpayer-funded.


A focus of this growing network is making lists of people whose opinions, beliefs,
associations, or sympathies are deemed to be misinformation, disinformation, or
malinformation. The latter term is just a euphemism for "true but inconvenient."


Plain and simple, the making of such lists is a form of digital McCarthyism.



Ordinary Americans are not just being reported to Twitter for "deamplification"
or de-platforming, but to firms like PayPal, digital advertisers like Xandr, and
crowdfunding sites like GoFundMe. These companies can and do refuse service to
law-abiding people and businesses whose only crime is falling afoul of a faceless,
unaccountable, algorithmic judge.



As someone who grew up a traditional ACLU liberal, this sinister mechanism for
punishment without due process is horrifying.



Another troubling aspect is the role of the press, which should be the people’s
last line of defense in such cases.


But instead of investigating these groups, journalists partnered with them. If
Twitter declined to remove an account right away, government agencies and
NGOs would call reporters for the New York Times, Washington Post, and other
outlets, who in turn would call Twitter demanding to know why action had not
been taken.



Wittingly or not, news media became an arm of a state-sponsored thought-
policing system.



Some will say, "So what? Why shouldnt we eliminate disinformation?"


To begin with, you cannot have a state-sponsored system targeting
"disinformation" without striking at the essence of the right to free speech. The
two ideas are in direct conflict.



Many of the fears driving what Michael calls the "Censorship-Industrial Complex"
also inspired the infamous "Alien and Sedition Laws of 1798," which outlawed
"any false, scandalous, and malicious writing against Congress or the president."
Here is something that will sound familiar: supporters of that law were quick to
denounce their critics as sympathizers with a hostile foreign power, at the time
France. Alexander Hamilton said Thomas Jefferson and his supporters were "more
Frenchmen than Americans."



Jefferson in vehemently opposing these laws said democracy cannot survive in a
country where power is given to people "whose suspicions may be the evidence."


He added:


It would be a dangerous delusion were a confidence in the men of our choice to
silence our fears for the safety of our rights: that confidence is everywhere the
parent of despotism.



Jefferson was saying something that was true then and still true today. In a free
society we don't mandate truth, we arrive at it through discussion and debate.
Any group that claims the "confidence" to decide fact and fiction, even in the
name of protecting democracy, is always, itself, the real threat to democracy.


This is why "anti-disinformation" just doesn’t work. Any experienced journalist
knows experts are often initially wrong, and sometimes they even lie. In fact,
when elite opinion is too much in sync, this itself can be a red flag.


We just saw this with the Covid lab-leak theory. Many of the institutions we’re
now investigating initially labeled the idea that Covid came from a lab
"disinformation" and conspiracy theory. Now apparently even the FBI takes it
seriously.



It's not possible to instantly arrive at truth. It is however becoming technologically
possible to instantly define and enforce a political consensus online, which I
believe is what we’re looking at.



This is a grave threat to people of all political persuasions.

For hundreds of years, the thing that's distinguished Americans from all other
people around the world is the way we don'
t let anyone tell us what to think,
certainly not the government.



The First Amendment, and an American population accustomed to the right to
speak, is the best defense left against the Censorship-Industrial Complex. If it can 
knock over the first and most important constitutional guarantee, it will have no
serious opponent left anywhere.



If there's anything the Twitter Files show, it's that we’re in danger of losing this
most precious right, without which all other democratic rights are impossible.



Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you and I would be happy to answer any questions from the Committee.


His opening statement and the testimony we highlighted earlier address my big criticism of The Twitter Files.  He's also apparently -- see his remarks above -- hiring staff to assist him with this so maybe we might get an actual report from him at some point.  


Some comments?  Gerry Connolly -- does he even sit on the Committee.  I didn't think so and I don't see him listed as a member.  But if he's going to ask questions of a witness, he needs to learn how to say "Taibbi."  There were two witnesses for the hearing that lasted over two hours.  He thought enough to bring along his ridiculous scarf.  He thought enough to bring up Chrissy Teigen -- even if he didn't know how to pronounce her last name either.  He's not a member of the Judiciary Committee.  He needs to retire.  He's been an embarrassment for years.  He's wept in Congress and wah-wahed and wah-wahed afterwards about us noting what a big crybaby he is.


He's ridiculous.  Gerry at his most bitchiest in the hearing: "Thank you for your understanding of our Committee, I have a different understanding."


Gerry, you big cry baby, it's not your Committee, you don't sit on it.  It's more Matt's Committee than it will ever be yours.  The only "our" is the US taxpayer.  Please stop wasting our money so you can play the soap opera queen diva.   And if you're going to be a diva, do something about that awful chin waddle -- or at least don't draw attention to it with a girlish scarf.  56 degrees yesterday but Gerry needed a  scarf.  All I'm doing is noting the ugly reality.  In fact, I think we have video of Gerry leaving the hearing.




And, Stacey, you shouldn't be a Ranking Member  if you're so ill prepared that when the witness you're questioning mentions Bari Weiss -- a former NYT columnist and someone who's been publishing The Twitter Files -- and you respond "Mr. Weiss," you really shouldn't be billed as Ranking Member and probably shouldn't be on the Committee. 

"I didn't ask a question, I didn't ask you a question, sir."  Rude ass Plaskett.  I've been at how many hearings and I have never, ever seen anything like that.  And I was at the hearing where then-US House Rep Steve Buyer stormed out of the chamber and slammed the door when a journalist was testifying.   


Dropping back to September 15, 2010:


The US House Veterans Affairs Committee held two hearings this morning, one -- more or less -- after the other (there was approximately a 12 minute break between the two) and they couldn't have been more different.  In the first one, Ranking Member Steve Buyer was (for the most part) beaming and playful, offering statements such as, to Chair Bob Filner, "You pass aquistion form and I will hug you.  I will hug you!"  In the second hearing, Buyer stormed out asking that Dr. Roe take his place, saying his integrity would be compromised if he stayed and "I'm not going to do it!"
 
Keep in mind that I am a Democrat and Buyer is a Republican, I've never seen anything like that. And that was only the culmination of Buyer's behavior in the second panel.
 
My impression, Buyer was not grandstanding, he was genuinely outraged (whether it was by the hearing or something outside of Congress, I have no idea).  But he can't back that outrage up.  He basically accused a witness of lying -- while dismissing the other on the first panel as useless -- and waived around a file of medical records implying that those documents proved the witness was lying, he lectured the witness and would repeatedly say he wasn't going to say more because he had too much integrity but then he would come back to the same issue.  Repeatedly.  His storming out had an immediate effect in that he insisted US House Rep David Roe sit in for him, which Roe did, however, Roe was not prepared -- as he more or less admitted.  In the room, people seemed on edge as a result of Buyer's outburst.  Again, it seemed genuine on Buyer's part.  Again, it was harmful to himself.  If he does have something -- if -- he can't reveal it so he is left looking like a hothead who lost it in a hearing and then stormed out.

 
It goes into more detail so look at that snapshot if you want to know more (Joshua Kors was the journalist).  But that was embarrassing, it was shameful and it was humiliating. 

I never thought I'd see something that bad again.

Then came The Little Bitches Four: Debbie, Gerry, Cynthia and Stephen were disgusting.  

Ava and I'll touch on that in our media piece that hopefully will go up Sunday.

But it was shameful and it was pathetic.  And to treat a witness like that? Shame on the four bitches.  I'd recommend that Stephen and Gerry not be allowed back to that Committee's hearing -- they don't serve on it and they demonstrated how immature and hostile they are.  And Stacey was asking for sources to be disclosed.  She get as loud as she wants to deny that reality, she can cut off the Chair of the Committee, she just looks like a liar and a bully.  We all heard it, we know what she demanded from Matt.  Shameful. US House Rep Hageman (Republican) was correct.  It was "abuse" and there is no excuse for that behavior in Congress.  A clip of that behavior as a campaign ad could allow the GOP to keep control of the House in the 2024 elections.  That's how bad it was and how ashamed the Democrats need to be.  


Turning to Iraq quickly and briefly, AP reports:


Only a few months into its term, Iraq’s government is suddenly enforcing a long-dormant law banning alcohol imports and arresting people over social media content deemed morally offensive.

The crackdown has raised alarm among religious minorities and rights activists.

Some see the measures as an attempt by Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani to head off potential political challenges from religious conservatives and to distract from economic woes, such as rising prices and wild currency fluctuations.

The ban on the import, sale and production of alcohol was adopted in 2016, but was only published in the official gazette last month, making it enforceable.


Sunday, AFP reports:

Iraq's customs department gave orders on Saturday to start enforcing a ban on alcohol imports that became law last month despite divisions over the legislation. But the specialist retail stores that dominate alcohol sales in the virtual absence of bars or licensed restaurants remained open for business, at least in Baghdad, an AFP correspondent reported. Public alcohol consumption is frowned upon in mainly Muslim Iraq but beverages can be readily purchased from liquor stores, many of them run by Christians or other non-Muslims.



Manis Joshi (WION) noted, "The new legislation, which bans the sale, import or production of alcohol, was originally approved by parliament in 2016 but only became law following its publication in the official gazette on February 20."  ANADOLU AGENCY reported:

The application of the law, however, drew fire from Christian lawmaker Farouk Hanna Ato, who said the legislation "contradicts the foundations of the Iraqi Constitution.”

“The Iraqi Constitution that emphasizes individual freedoms cannot be violated,” he said in statements. 



WION adds, "According to MP Duraid Jameel of the Christian group, five members of parliament filed an appeal with the federal Supreme Court earlier this week, claiming that the prohibition was illegal since it did not respect the rights of minorities."




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