theroot | American empires are built on the little white lie that rests on the
premise that people of color are scary and dangerous. There is a long
history of white people gaining money, power, influence, sympathy or a
few more Twitter followers by using the currency that is the
dark-skinned demon. It buys white fright, and in America, with white fright on your side, you can get anything you want.
There are countless white-fright stories of white men coercing women
into accusing black men of rape to initiate lynchings and retake
valuable land from newly freed slaves in the post-Reconstruction South.
In 1918, when black sharecroppers in Phillips County, Ark., decided to
unionize and combine resources, farmers spread the word as far as
Mississippi of a black conspiracy to murder white planters. The result
was 237 dead black men, women and children in one of the worst mass lynchings in U.S. history. Lying-ass dogs.
America’s war on drugs began when newspaper baron William Randolph Hearst decided
that hemp production might endanger his pulp and paper empire, so one
of his papers editorialized the now famous quote, “Marijuana influences
Negroes to look at white people in the eye, step on white men’s shadows
and look at a white woman twice.” That the drug war was a black thing
always sounded like a tinfoil-hat conspiracy theory until last year,
when an aide from the Nixon administration—who invented the term “war on drugs”—revealed to CNN:
You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make
it illegal to be either against the [Vietnam] war or black, but by
getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks
with heroin. And then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those
communities. […] We could arrest their leaders[,] raid their homes,
break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the
evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we
did.”
One of the reasons accusations of racism seem so inflammatory is that
there is widespread belief that pointing out a racist act automatically
means the person who did it hates people of color. Contrary to popular
belief, racism does not necessarily equal hate. Racism sometimes
manifests itself in the privileged apathy that does not consider people
of color a lower, lesser form of humanity. Instead, people of color
aren’t considered at all. To some people they are just brown props on a
white stage—to be manipulated and used as needed. We are step stools and
tools. They don’t always shoot black people in the face or string them
from trees; sometimes they just carelessly toss us under the bus of
their choosing.
vox | Contrary to Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society, welfare had created chronic dependence
on subsidies like Aid to Families With Dependent Children (AFDC). But
rather than adjust the policy or address the core reasons so many people
were stuck in the cycle, the conversation focused largely on vilifying
welfare recipients as corrupt drains on society, leeching off
hard-working American’s tax dollars.
And even though white and black families made up similar numbers of AFDC cases
between 1983 and 1995, black women were the face of both welfare’s
failure and the culprits who corrupted it, and an indictment of the
Democratic Party that supported them.
Clinton, however, offered a different vision. After some
back and forth with the GOP, the AFDC was effectively renamed the
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. Through block grants,
the policy required recipients to find a job two years after they began
seeking benefits, and put a five-year lifetime limit on receiving
benefits. Also among its goals was a push to promote two-parent
households and marriage, drawing heavily from dubious ideas that women were using out-of-wedlock births to cash in on welfare checks.
PWRORA helped Clinton effectively dismantle a social
safety net for the poorest Americans with a program that incentivized
them to seek work because there was little money invested in supporting
them otherwise.
Clinton also found a way to rebrand the political party
he led by putting an end to the system championed by Democratic
presidents before him. But he did so by following Reagan and other
Republicans.
Clinton drew the ire of liberals, including
Mary Jo Bane, Wendell Primus, and Peter Edelman — prominent officials
at Health and Human Services under his administration who resigned in
protest.
In a 1997 Atlantic
essay titled "The Worst Thing Bill Clinton Has Done," Edelman, a
longtime friend of Clinton, lambasted just what was wrong with PRWORA:
"The bill closes its eyes to all the fact and complexities of the real
world and essentially says to recipients, Find a job. That has a nice
bumper-sticker ring to it. But as a one-size-fits-all recipe it is
totally unrealistic."
A part of this was simply politics. Clinton entered the White House as a Democrat appealing to "white flight Democrats,"
or those voters prepared to leave the party out of resentment for its
growing alignment with the concerns of racial minorities. And like his
infamous "Sister Souljah moment," welfare reform helped him capture racial resentment to his advantage.
In the 1990s, Clinton sought to champion both
hard-working Americans and nonworking Americans alike by gutting
government subsidies for the nation’s poorest, who, due to welfare, had
little if any reason to work like their counterparts.
But with Harden, Clinton did what his GOP counterparts
couldn’t: advocate for welfare reform without completely alienating
black constituents. By pushing personal responsibility, Harden helped
Clinton chastise welfare without completely vilifying black
women. Harden showed that the "welfare queen" could be redeemed,
transforming the face of welfare’s alleged problems into the same fare
of welfare reform’s promise.
thiscantbehappening | While I periodically have written commentaries dissecting and pillorying news articles in the New York Times
to expose their bias, hypocrisy half-truths and lies, I generally
ignore their editorials since these are overtly opinions of the
management, and one expects them to display the elitist and neo-liberal
perspective of the paper’s publisher and senior editors.
That said, the August 17 editorial about Wikileaks founder
Julian Assange, who has spent four harrowing years trapped in the
apartment-sized Ecuadoran embassy thanks to a trumped-up and thoroughly
discredited political rape “investigation” by a politically driven
Swedish prosecutor and a complicit right-wing British government, moves
far beyond even the routine rampant bias and distortion of a Times editorial into misrepresentation and character assassination. As such it cries out for criticism.
Headlined “A Break in the Assange Saga,” the editorial starts off
with the flat-out lie that “Ecuador and Sweden finally agreed last week
that Swedish prosecutors could question Julian Assange at the Ecuadorean
Embassy in London where he has been holed up since 2012.”
The casual reader fed only corporate media stories about this case
might logically assume from that lead that such an interview has been
held up by a disagreement of some kind between Ecuador and Sweden. In
fact, Ecuador and Assange and his attorneys have stated their
willingness to allow Swedish prosecutors to come to London and interview
Assange in the safety of their embassy for several years now. The
prosecutor in Sweden, Marianne Nye, who has been pursuing Assange all
that time like Ahab after his whale, has not only never taken up that
offer, but by her refusal to go to London in all this time, demanding
instead Assange’s enforced presence in Stockholm, has allowed any
possible rape charges, if any were even appropriate, to pass the statute
of limitations. The paper doesn’t mention this. Nor does the editorial
mention that the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights Working Group on Arbitrary Detention last February found
that Assange is effectively being held in arbitrary detention by the UK
and Swedish governments, and called for his release, and for the lifting
of British government threats to arrest him and extradite him if he
leaves the safety of the embassy.
RT | The President of the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte, has threatened
that the country could leave the UN, after the organization urged the
Philippines to stop executing and killing people linked to drug business
and threatened that “state actors” could be punished.
"I do not want to insult you, but maybe we'll just have to decide to separate from the United Nations," Rodrigo Duterte told journalists on Sunday. "Why do you have to listen to this stupid?"
“I don't give a sh*t about them,” he added. “They are the ones interfering. You do not just go out and give a sh*tting statement against a country.”
Calling the UN “inutile",
Duterte said the Philippines could invite China, African nations and
other countries to create a rival international body. He went further,
slamming the UN’s response to other global issues.
“Look at the iconic boy that was taken out from the rubble and he was made to sit in the ambulance and we saw it," Duterte said. The picture of Omran Daqneesh, a five-year-old Syrian boy has recently gone viral around the globe.
"Why
is it that [the] United States is not doing anything? I do not read
you. Anybody in that stupid body complaining about the stench there of
death?"
The Philippine leader also attacked the US for more members of the public dying as a result of police violence.
"What do you think the Americans did to the black people there? Is that not rubbing off also? And (critics) say what?"
The
angry tirade at the news conference in Davao City came after the UN’s
special rapporteur on summary executions, Agnes Callamard, urged the
Philippines to stop extrajudicial executions and killings, saying “state actors” could be punished for the “illegal killings.”
NYTimes | Mr. Duterte has not commented on the case, which has been widely reported in the local news media. In a speech
on Wednesday, he said that the police should not use excessive force,
but he showed no sign of backing down from his call to kill drug
suspects.
“The
fight against drugs will continue unrelenting until we have destroyed
the apparatus operating in the entire country,” he said.
Senator
Leila de Lima, the former Philippine secretary of justice, called the
killing a “summary execution” and said the evidence was so clear-cut
that the authorities had “no choice” but to bring charges.
The
case is one of several expected to be the focus of potentially
explosive hearings next week before the Senate Committee on Justice and
Human Rights, which Ms. de Lima oversees.
Mr.
Duterte lashed out at Ms. de Lima in his speech on Wednesday, accusing
her, without providing evidence, of having an affair with her married
driver, who he said collected drug payoffs for her.
Ms.
de Lima called the accusation “foul” and added, “If this is his way of
stopping the Senate’s investigation on the extrajudicial killings, he
can try,” but she insisted that she would not call off the hearings.
Although
the killings have dispensed with what Mr. Duterte has called “the
rigmarole” of due process, his drug war has proved wildly popular in a
country plagued by crime.
Since
Mr. Duterte has taken his campaign nationwide, more than 600,000 drug
dealers and users have turned themselves in to avoid being killed, the
authorities say. The result, they say, has been a visible reduction in
drug use and petty crime.
guardian | As the Republican-led state legislature has slashed funding to
reproductive healthcare clinics, the maternal mortality rate doubled
over just a two-year period. About half of Texas lacks ready access to OB-GYN care, making it
difficult for women to obtain contraception or for pregnant women to
confirm the health of their babies.
The rate of Texas
women who died from complications related to pregnancy doubled from
2010 to 2014, a new study has found, for an estimated maternal mortality
rate that is unmatched in any other state and the rest of the developed
world.
The finding comes from a report, appearing in the September issue of
the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology, that the maternal mortality rate
in the United States increased between 2000 and 2014, even while the
rest of the world succeeded in reducing its rate. Excluding California,
where maternal mortality declined, and Texas, where it surged, the
estimated number of maternal deaths per 100,000 births rose to 23.8 in
2014 from 18.8 in 2000 – or about 27%.
But the report singled out Texas for special concern, saying the
doubling of mortality rates in a two-year period was hard to explain “in
the absence of war, natural disaster, or severe economic upheaval”.
Understanding of each topic is broken down as Official Story, Limited Hangout, Best Evidence, and Disinformation and Distractions. This analysis technique helps one to make sense of topics where someone is deliberately blowing smoke. The Limited Hangout is a professional Information Warfare method of which Rabinowitz provides a number of examples.
On the topic of *Limits to Growth* the Official Story is that Growth is Always Good, the Limited Hangout is that technology will solve the Limits to Growth problem, the Best Evidence is that Limits to Growth are already biting and will result in Collapse, while the Disinformation pertaining to *Limits to Growth* includes Climate Change Denial.
On the topic of *Oil and Energy*, the Limited Hangout is that we are addicted to oil but can kick the addiction with windmills and solar panels, the Best Evidence is that Industrial Civilization is utterly dependent upon oil for such basics as food, while the Disinformation teaches that the energy crisis is a scam to make money.
On *Peak Oil* the Official Story is the world can keep increasing oil extraction for decades, the Limited Hangout is that we may have a problem but technology will save us, the Best Evidence is that collapse is likely, while the abiotic oil theory is an example of Disinformation.
On the topic of *9/11*, the Official Story is that Al Queda attacked us because they hate our freedom, the Limited Hangout is that mistakes were made which might have prevented the attacks, the Best Evidence is that the 9/11 attacks were allowed and assisted as a pretext to invade Iraq and establish Homeland Security, while the Disinformation includes stories like "no plane hit the Pentagon".
On the topic of *Election Fraud* in the USA the Official Story is USA elections are honest and fair, the Limited Hangout involves 'fixing' the existing laughably insecure voting system, the Best Evidence is that paper ballots counted by hand remains the most secure and effective voting system, while the Disinformation includes mostly true claims about Election Fraud by unsavory organizations whom no one wants to be seen agreeing with.
On the topic of the *JFK Assasination* the Official Story is that the president was murdered by a lone gunman, the Limited Hangout is that the Mafia or Cubans killed JFK, the Best Evidence is that JFK was killed by his own security apparatus, while the Disinformation is so expansive that the term 'conspiracy theorist' became media short hand for 'crackpot'. Fist tap Woodensplinter.
alt-market | There is an interesting disconnect with some people when discussing
the concept of global centralization. Naturally, the mind reels in
horror at the very idea, because many of us know, deep down at our core,
that centralization is the root of tyranny. We know that when
absolute power is granted into the hands of an elite few over the lives
of the masses, very bad things happen. No small group of people has
ever shown itself trustworthy, rational, empathic or wise enough to
handle such a responsibility. They ALWAYS screw it up, or, they
deliberately take advantage of their extreme position of influence to
force a particular ideology on everyone else.
This leads to resistance, resistance leads to sociopolitical
crackdown and then great numbers of people are imprisoned, enslaved or
even murdered. This leads to even more resistance until one of two
possible outcomes emerges — chaos and revolution or complete
totalitarianism and micro-managed collectivism.
There is no way around this eventual conflict. As long as the
centralists continue to pursue total power, men and women will gather
to fight them and the situation will escalate. The only conceivable
way that this fight could be defused is if the elites stop doing what
they do. If they suddenly become enlightened and realize the error of
their ways, then perhaps we could escape the troubles unscathed. Or,
if those same elites all happen to meet an abrupt end and their
influence is neutralized, then the world might have a chance to adjust
and adapt in a more organic fashion.
Unfortunately, there are people who refuse to believe that a fight
is unavoidable. They desperately want to believe there is another way,
and they will engage in an amazing display of mental gymnastics in
order to justify this belief.
First, I think it is important to note that I have always argued
that the globalists will eventually fail in their pursuit. I find that
some folks out there misinterpret my position when I outline the
strategies of globalists and they assume I am presenting global
centralization as a “sine qua non.” I do not argue that the elites
will win the fight, I only argue that there is no way to avoid the
fight.
charleshughsmith |Addiction and drug use are medical/mental health issues, not criminalization/ imprisonment issues.
It's
difficult to pick the most destructive of America's many senseless,
futile and tragically needless wars, but the "War on Drugs" is near the
top of the list.Prohibition of mind-altering substances has not just
failed--it has failed spectacularly, and generated extremely
destructive and counterproductive consequences.
What was the result of the Prohibition of alcohol in the 1920s? Prohibition instantly criminalized 40+% of the adult populace and created hugely profitable criminal organizations.
What was the result of the "War on Drugs"? This
modern-day Prohibition instantly criminalized large swaths of the adult
populace and created hugely profitable criminal organizations.
If
you want to increase drug use, criminalize innocent citizens and spawn
gargantuan criminal organizations, then by all means declare "war" via
Prohibition. The results of Prohibition/War on Drugs are so visibly
perverse and so destructive that the entire enterprise is sickeningly
Orwellian.
The well-paid apologists for Prohibition/War on Drugs claim that imprisoning millions of people "helps" them avoid drugs. If you think being tossed in prison for a few years "helps" people, then step right up and accept a fiver (5-year
sentence) in an American prison, which is essentially a factory that
produces one product: people damaged by imprisonment, deprived of their
full citizenship, hobbled by a felony conviction--ex-con beneficiaries
of years of tutorials by hardened criminals.
This is as Orwellian as the Vietnam War's famous "It became necessary to destroy the town to save it."
If
you think throwing millions of people in prison "helps" them or
society, you are either insane or you're making a living in the gulag or
our sick system of "justice".
Forbes | The difficulty in finding an appropriate schedule for marijuana
reflects a broader problem with the CSA’s classification scheme. If a
controlled substance does not have an accepted medical use (however
that’s defined), it has to go in Schedule I, even if it has a low
potential for abuse and is safer than over-the-counter drugs such as
aspirin, acetaminophen, or diphenhydramine. The only alternative is to
take the drug out of the schedules entirely, which in the case of
marijuana can be done only by Congress, given the CSA’s deference to the
Single Convention, which allows medical use of cannabis but calls for
strict regulation.
Although the DEA has the power to move marijuana from one schedule to
another, it was Congress that put it in Schedule I to begin with. The
CSA was not intended to regulate recreational intoxicants, which are
banned unless Congress omitted them from the law’s schedules, as it did
with alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine. The DEA’s assumption that all
nonmedical use of marijuana constitutes abuse may be absurd, but it’s an
absurdity that Congress demanded.
NYTimes | On Wednesday, the Vera Institute of Justice and a program called the Safety and Justice Challengereleased a report
that found that the number of women in local jails in the United States
was almost 14 times what it was in the 1970s, a far higher growth rate
than for men, although there remain far fewer women than men in jails
and prisons.
The
study found that the number of women held in the nation’s 3,200
municipal and county jails for misdemeanor crimes or who are awaiting
trial or sentencing had increased significantly — to about 110,000 in
2014 from fewer than 8,000 in 1970.
(Over all, the nation’s jail population increased to 745,000 in 2014 from 157,000 in 1970.)
Much
of the increase in the number of jailed women occurred in counties with
fewer than 250,000 people, according to the study, places where just
1,700 women had been incarcerated in 1970. By 2014, however, that number
had surged to 51,600, the report said.
And
even as crime rates declined nationally, the trend toward jailing women
in rural counties continued: Incarceration rates for women in sparsely
populated counties rose to 140 per 100,000 in 2014 from 79 per 100,000
in 2000, the study found. During the same period, incarceration rates
for women in the nation’s largest counties decreased to 71 per 100,000
from 76 per 100,000.
“Once
a rarity, women are now held in jails in nearly every county — a stark
contrast to 1970, when almost three-quarters of counties held not a
single woman in jail,” the report said.
The
counties with the highest rates of jailed women are nearly all rural
and include Nevada County, Calif.; Floyd County, Ga.; and St. Charles
Parish, La. Each has a population of fewer than 100,000 people but a rate of incarceration for women of more than 280 per 100,000, according to the Vera Institute.
WaPo | “This is a huge deal. It is historic and groundbreaking,” said David
Fathi, director of the ACLU National Prison Project. “For the last 35
years, the use of private prisons in this country has crept ever upward,
and this is a startling and major reversal of that trend, and one that
we hope will be followed by others.”
The Justice Department’s inspector general last week released a critical report
concluding that privately operated facilities incurred more safety and
security incidents than those run by the federal Bureau of Prisons. The
private facilities, for example, had higher rates of assaults — both by
inmates on other inmates and by inmates on staff — and had eight times
as many contraband cellphones confiscated each year on average,
according to the report.
Disturbances in the facilities, the report said, led in recent years
to “extensive property damage, bodily injury, and the death of a
Correctional Officer.” The report listed several examples of mayhem at
private facilities, including a May 2012 riot at the Adams County
Correctional Center in Mississippi in which 20 people were injured and a
correctional officer killed. That incident, according to the report,
involved 250 inmates who were upset about low-quality food and medical
care.
“The fact of the matter is that private prisons don’t
compare favorably to Bureau of Prisons facilities in terms of safety or
security or services, and now with the decline in the federal prison
population, we have both the opportunity and the responsibility to do
something about that,” Yates said.
unz | Middle Eastern, North African, and Pakistani populations are even more extreme. You can see it in the figure above. Across short runs of homozogosity the results converge onto what you’d expect, roughly. But Middle Eastern populations are a huge anomaly at long runs. That’s because of this:
From 20–50% of all marriages in the GME are consanguineous (as compared with 0.2% in the Americas and Western Europe)1, 2, 3, with the majority between first cousins. This roughly 100-fold higher rate of consanguinity has correlated with roughly a doubling of the rate of recessive Mendelian disease19, 20. European, African, and East Asian 1000 Genomes Project populations all had medians for the estimated inbreeding coefficient (F) of ~0.005, whereas GME F values ranged from 0.059 to 0.098, with high variance within each population (Fig. 2c). Thus, measured F values were approximately 10- to 20-fold higher in GME populations, reflecting the shared genomic blocks common to all human populations. F values were dominated by structure from the immediate family rather than historical or population-wide data trends (Supplementary Fig. 8). Examination of the larger set of 1,794 exomes that included many parent–child trios also showed an overwhelming influence of structure from the immediate family, with offspring from first-cousin marriages displaying higher F values than those from non-consanguineous marriages (Fig. 2d).
For me this was the most interesting, and sad, result:
Despite millennia of elevated rates of consanguinity in the GME, we detected no evidence for purging of recessive alleles.Instead, we detected large, rare homozygous blocks, distinct from the small homozygous blocks found in other populations, supporting the occurrence of recent consanguineous matings and allowing the identification of genes harboring putatively high-impact homozygous variants in healthy humans from this population. Applying the GME Variome to future sequencing projects for subjects originating from the GME could aid in the identification of causative genes with recessive variants across all classes of disease. The GME Variome is a publicly accessible resource that will facilitate a broad range of genomic studies in the GME and globally.
The theory is simple. If you have inbreeding, you bring together deleterious recessive alleles, and so they get exposed to selection. In this way you can purge the segregating genetic load. It works with plants. But humans, and complex animals in general, are not plants. More precisely the authors “compared the distributions of derived allele frequencies (DAFs) in GME and 1000 Genomes Project populations.” If the load was being purged the frequency of deleterious alleles should be lower in the inbreeding populations. It wasn’t.
Middle Easterners should stop marrying cousins to reduce the disease load.
ICH | The entirety of the August 14 print edition
of the New York Times Magazine is dedicated
to a series titled “Fractured Lands: How the Arab World Came Apart,” by Scott Anderson. The series is
60 pages long and includes detailed sketches of the
lives of six people from various parts of the Middle
East dating back to the years before the 2003 US
invasion of Iraq, through the Arab Spring, the rise
of ISIS in 2014-15, and the migratory outpouring
from the war-torn region.
The
magazine’s editor-in-chief, Jake Silverstein, notes
in a foreword to the series:
“This is an
issue unlike any we have previously published…the
subject of this book is the catastrophe that has
fractured the Arab world since the invasion of Iraq
13 years ago, leading to the rise of ISIS and the
global refugee crisis. The geography of this
catastrophe is broad and its causes are many, but
its consequences—terror and uncertainty around the
world—are familiar to us all.”
Silverstein
concludes his editor’s note: “It is unprecedented
for us to focus so much energy and attention on a
single story and to ask our readers to do the same.
We would not do so were we not convinced that this
is one of the most clear-eyed, powerful and human
explanations of what has gone wrong in this region
that you will ever read.”
The
publication of “Fractured Lands” has an objective
significance. The presentation, the content and the
tone of the series express the American ruling
class’ sense that it faces a catastrophe of
historically unprecedented proportions in the Middle
East. When Anderson asks in his preface: “Why did it
turn out that way?” he is asking on behalf of a
ruling class that is dazed by the catastrophic
outcome of its own reckless and shortsighted
policies.
For the
last 25 years, US imperialism has laid waste to a
span of territory stretching several thousand miles
from North Africa to Central Asia, leaving over 1
million dead. A new vocabulary of words like “shock
and awe,” “extraordinary rendition,” “black site
prison,” “disposition matrix” and “Terror Tuesday”
has emerged as the language of the US wars. A
significant portion of the region’s 200 million
people has been left homeless or have fled for safe
haven abroad. Next January, Barack Obama will leave
office as the first president in US history to serve
his entire two terms while the country was at war.
“Fractured
Lands” is an apologia for the record of American
imperialism. Its author has served as a war
correspondent for 33 years and has worked for the
New York Times for the last 17. He is a
prolific, educated writer and recently published a
historical book on the post-World War One
imperialist carve-up of the Middle East. Whatever
Anderson’s intentions, “Fractured Lands” is a “human
interest” story that serves to justify “human rights
imperialism” and pave the way for new wars.
“Fractured
Lands” makes the argument that the nation-state
system established in the aftermath of the First
World War failed to conform sufficiently to the
various tribal, ethnic and religious divisions in
the region. Anderson concludes that the collapse of
the bourgeois nationalist governments in Syria,
Egypt, Iraq and Libya proves the necessity for
racial and ethnic groups to fill the political
vacuum and fight among themselves to establish
fiefdoms and zones of tribal influence. “Fractured
Lands” acknowledges that this may involve ethnic
cleansing. The author concludes by contemplating
whether pogroms and genocide may be necessary to
establish order in the region.
ICH | No one paying attention with even one eye and half an ear can be ignorant of the fact that when it
comes to this year’s election the MSM are lying
shills for Hillary. But now it seems they’re all
suffering from amnesia too.
The latest “OMG, Trump said that!” moment
is The Donald’s claim that Barack Obama and Hillary
Clinton are, correspondingly, the “founder” and
“cofounder” of ISIS. True to form, the media
reaction has been to shriek in outrage that he would
cast aspersions on such august personages.
As of this
writing, not one American media source of which this
writer is aware has brought up in relation to
Trump’s claims the August 2012 report (declassified
and released in 2015 under a FOIA request from
Judicial Watch) from the Defense Intelligence
Agency (DIA) stating that “there is the possibility
of establishing a declared or undeclared Salafist
principality in Eastern Syria, and this is exactly
what the supporting powers to the opposition want,
in order to isolate the Syrian regime.” The
“supporting powers” are identified as “western
countries” (no doubt including and led by the United
States), “the Gulf States” (presumably including and
led by Saudi Arabia), and “Turkey” (just Turkey).
In August 2012 the Secretary of State at the time
was one Hillary Rodham Clinton. The President was
and still is one Barack Hussein Obama.
The DIA report said, in essence, that if we (the
U.S. and our local cronies) keep aiding al-Qaeda,
the Muslim Brotherhood, and other such sterling
democrats, something really nasty would arise in
eastern Syria. Several months later, it did, when
ISIS declared itself a state straddling the
Syria-Iraq border.
tomdispatch | One day recently, I was getting ready to hit the Oakland streets in search of a witness to a murder when I found in my email Justice Sonia Sotomayor'sdissentin the Supreme Court Case ofUtah v. Strieff. It had been forwarded to me by a psychologist with whom I once worked on a death penalty case.
Anyone lulled into thinking thenew coalitionof liberals and conservatives who hope to reform the criminal justice system will actually get somewhere should readStrieff. The facts are the following: a Salt Lake City cop was watching a home rumored to house methamphetamine dealers. When Edward Joseph Strieff left the house, the cop stopped him, questioned him, and checked his record. When the cop found a warrant for an unpaid parking ticket, he searched Strieff, found meth in his pockets, and arrested him for possession of drugs. InStrieffand other cases leading up to it, the Supreme Court has now decreed that evidence gathered in an illegal search isn’t "the fruit of the poisoned tree" as Justice Felix Frankfurterput itin 1939, and so no longer must be suppressed. Even though gathered illegally, evidence can be used at trial against a defendant.
In short, stop-and-frisk policing and racial profiling, key targets of thenew civil rights movement, just got a stamp of approval from the highest court in the land.
Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan also dissented. But it was Sotomayor who sounded the alarm in an opinion evoking nothing less than James Baldwin'sThe Fire Next Timeand adding quotations from W.E.B. Du Bois, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Michelle Alexander for good measure.
She wrote:
"The Court today holds that the discovery of a warrant for an unpaid parking ticket will forgive a police officer’s violation of your Fourth Amendment rights. Do not be soothed by the opinion’s technical language: this case allows the police to stop you on the street, demand your identification, and check it for outstanding traffic warrants -- even if you are doing nothing wrong. If the officer discovers a warrant for a fine you forgot to pay, courts will now excuse his illegal stop and will admit into evidence anything he happens to find by searching you after arresting you on the warrant. Because the Fourth Amendment should prohibit, not permit, such misconduct, I dissent."
And she concluded:
"This case tells everyone, white and black, guilty and innocent, that an officer can verify your legal status at any time. It says that your body is subject to invasion while courts excuse the violation of your rights. It implies that you are not a citizen of a democracy but the subject of a carceral state, just waiting to be catalogued.
“We must not pretend that the countless people who are routinely targeted by police are 'isolated.' They are the canaries in the coal mine whose deaths, civil and literal, warn us that no one can breathe in this atmosphere."
Sotomayor's dissent describes daily existence for my defendants. Too poor to buy car insurance, fix broken tail lights, pay parking tickets, or get green cards, they are always on high alert for the police. (Alice Goffman's brilliant study,On the Run: Fugitive Life in an American City, describes just how it works in one of Philadelphia's poorest neighborhoods). My defendants have been sentenced to life in a war zone even before they find themselves charged in court. They have been sentenced to a life without parole or sometimes to death, caught as they are in a crossfire between cops and warring neighborhood gangstas.
A warrant for, say, unpaid parking tickets discovered in aStrieff-approved stop gets you a search of yourself and your car by police and maybe a bust for weed, the intoxicant of choice for many of the poor. If you object or run or the arresting officer is having a bad day, it may get you dead. (Refusing to pay protection money to your neighborhood punks or standing on the wrong corner at the wrong time may do the same.)
Once you're arrested, if you say you want a lawyer, you get a public defender with so many cases she or he may not even be able to meet you or read the complaint against you before you appear in court. You may serve weeks or months in jail, even if you're innocent, before your case is heard, and years before you are tried.
kcur | A standoff in Kansas City, Kansas, ended Tuesday afternoon when law enforcement officers at the scene decided the risk of injury to bystanders outweighed serving an arrest warrant.
The standoff began around 8:20 a.m. with a man at 5701 Parallel Parkway refusing to come out of a house.
KCK Police Chief Terry Zeigler tweeted shortly before noon that his officers had come to the assistance of U.S. Marshals trying to serve a warrant to the man, who had failed to register as a sex offender.
Had a warrant for his arrest. When Marshal Service went to get him, he threatened them. We were asked for help.https://t.co/eWJ7NyDW07
— Terry Zeigler (@KCKPDChief)August 16, 2016
The man was later identified as convicted sex offender and gospel singer Greg Andrews, whose yard is full of homemade signs accusing Wyandotte County District Attorney Jerome Gorman of corruption.
Andrews’ wife and two of his sons were home at the time. Speaking through a bullhorn, Andrews and his wife Renee repeatedly stated their willingness to die if police didn’t leave. As the standoff dragged into the afternoon, a crowd gathered across Parallel Parkway.
Around 2 p.m., police commanders determined the best course of action would be to stand down.
ipsnews | Today the global ratio for the world’s 7.4 billion people has been
halved to about three children per elderly person. While Africa’s
population continues to have the highest ratio with nearly 12 children
per elderly person, the ratios for Asia and Latin America are close to
the current world average. In contrast, the population of Europe, which
just recently experienced the Historical Reversal, has slightly less
than one child per elderly person.
By 2075 the world’s projected
population of 10.7 billion is expected to pass through the Historical
Reversal with elderly persons becoming increasingly more numerous than
children (Figure 1). The only major region that will not experience the
Historical Reversal during the 21st century is Africa, which is
projected to have 1.5 children per elderly person in 2100 with some
countries, such as Niger, Nigeria and Somalia, having more than twice as
many children as elderly. At that time, all the other major regions of
the world are expected to have about twice as many elderly persons as
children.
engenderhealth | The unintended pregnancy rate in the United States is significantly
higher than in many other developed countries. Currently, about half
(51%) of the 6.6 million pregnancies in the United States each year are
unintended. Unintended pregnancies among adolescents are particularly
high in Texas. Today, Texas teens are less likely than their national
peers to use condoms, oral contraceptives, or any other method of
contraception during sexual intercourse. Each year, more than 76,000
Texas girls between the ages of 15 and 19 become pregnant, giving the
state the third highest teenage pregnancy rate in the United States.
Despite these growing numbers, many public schools in Texas teach an
abstinence-only curriculum, leaving a large number of teens without the
sexual and reproductive health information they desperately need.
EngenderHealth is working to change this. In Travis County, where the teen pregnancy rate exceeds that of the state’s, we work directly with young people between the ages of 14 and 16 who are at a high risk of becoming teen parents. And in both Austin and Dallas, we are partnering with Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas
to educate young people about how traditional gender norms and intimate
partner violence can influence their risk of pregnancy. Our work in
Texas equips teens with the tools they need to make smart decisions
about their sexual and reproductive health and to determine their own
futures.
RealClearPolitics | "Black Lives Matter is endangering the fairness of our legal system. Because they're rooting for outcomes based on race. Started a long time ago. Started with the O.J. Simpson case."
BostonGlobe | To support an organization or movement that promotes anti-Semitism
because it also supports good causes is the beginning of the road to
accepting racism. Many racist groups have also promoted causes that
deserve support. The Black Panthers had breakfast programs for
inner-city children, while advocating violence against whites. And the
Ku Klux Klan organized summer camps for working-class families, while
advocating violence against blacks.
There must be zero tolerance
for anti-Semitism, regardless of the race, religion, gender, or sexual
orientation of the bigots who promote, practice or are complicit with
it. Being on the right side of one racial issue does not give one a
license to be on the wrong side of the oldest bigotry.
To give
Black Lives Matter a pass on its anti-Jewish bigotry would be to engage
in racism. Black anti-Semitism is as inexcusable as white anti-Semitism
or white racism. There can be no double standard when it comes to
bigotry.
I write this column both in sorrow and in anger. In
sorrow because I support the goals of the Black Lives Matter movement — I
have long been involved in efforts to expose and prevent police abuses —
and worry that this obnoxious and divisionary platform plank may
destroy its credibility with regard to police abuse in America by
promoting deliberate lies about Israel. It is also alienating Jewish and
other supporters who could help them achieve their goals here at home —
as many such individuals have historically done in actively supporting
all aspects of the civil rights movement.
WSJ | Residents in Sherman Park and other African-Americans in Milwaukee blamed the city’s extremely segregated communities for the eruption of tensions over the weekend, said their neighborhoods are seeing social services being cut and residents moving away. Sherman Park and areas immediately surrounding it have few commercial businesses except for liquor stores and fast food restaurants, and residents here say they have little by way of opportunity. Foreclosed homes dot the street, and almost every other car is badly dented.
The Brookings Institution, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, described Milwaukee earlier this year as “the most segregated metro area in the United States,” with 260 of its 296 census tracts having one demographic group account for 60% of the population. Nearly a fifth of the tax base is in 3% of thecity’s land area. While a new office tower is rising downtown here, slated to be the city’s second tallest, homes here in Sherman Park are crumbling.
“The only thing we can hope for after something as shocking as this is that there will be a new sense of togetherness and a realization that we must do better,” said Mr. Southerland. “We have to move forward.”
Guardian | A few months ago, a well-publicised paper claimed that the great beasts
of the Americas – mammoths and mastodons, giant ground sloths, lions and
sabretooths, eight-foot beavers, a bird with a 26-foot wingspan – could
not have been exterminated by humans, because the fossil evidence for
their extinction marginally pre-dates the evidence for human arrival.
I have never seen a paper demolished as elegantly and decisively as
this was at last week's conference. The archaeologist Todd Surovell
demonstrated that the mismatch is just what you would expect if humans were responsible.
Mass destruction is easy to detect in the fossil record: in one layer
bones are everywhere, in the next they are nowhere. But people living at
low densities with basic technologies leave almost no traces. With the
human growth rates and kill rates you'd expect in the first pulse of
settlement (about 14,000 years ago), the great beasts would have lasted
only 1,000 years. His work suggests that the most reliable indicator of
human arrival in the fossil record is a wave of large mammal
extinctions.
These species were not just ornaments of the natural world. The new
work presented at the conference suggests that they shaped the rest of
the ecosystem. In Britain during the last interglacial period,
elephants, rhinos and other great beasts maintained a mosaic of
habitats: a mixture of closed canopy forest, open forest, glade and sward.
In Australia, the sudden flush of vegetation that followed the loss of
large herbivores caused stacks of leaf litter to build up, which became
the rainforests' pyre: fires (natural or manmade) soon transformed these
lush places into dry forest and scrub.
In the Amazon and other regions, large herbivores moved nutrients from rich soils to poor ones,
radically altering plant growth. One controversial paper suggests that
the eradication of the monsters of the Americas caused such a sharp loss
of atmospheric methane (generated in their guts) that it could have
triggered the short ice age which began about 12,800 years ago, called
the Younger Dryas.
Is this all we are? A diminutive monster that can leave no door
closed, no hiding place intact, that is now doing to the great beasts of
the sea what we did so long ago to the great beasts of the land? Or can
we stop? Can we use our ingenuity, which for two million years has
turned so inventively to destruction, to defy our evolutionary history?
FP | If there is any singular feature that characterizes how many
Americans understand our national relation to violence, it is our
ingenuity at looking the other way, at siloing problems away from one
another, and at disavowing, sublimating, or repackaging our complicity
in the most easily observable patterns.
Signs of supposed progress in expressions of American violence often
disguise profound continuities. For example: The era of highly visible
public lynchings, which is estimated to have claimed some 5,000 lives,
has passed. Yet since then we have moved on to an institutionalized
death penalty regime, wherein states that previously had the highest numbers of lynchings
now have the greatest numbers of black people on death row. Both per
capita and in raw numbers, America’s prisons warehouse more human beings
than any other country on the planet, and its police demonstrate a clear pattern of racial bias in killing their fellow citizens at a rate stratospherically higher than that of any of its supposed peer nations. U.S. soldiers are deployed in some 135 countries, and the number of troops actually engaged in combat is almost certainly much higher than authorities are willing to admit. Meanwhile, America is far and away the world’s largest exporter of weapons, with the global arms industry’s largest and most profitable players based in the United States and reaping booming markets in conflict zones while being heavily subsidized by federal and state tax dollars.
Everyday Americans may not be “inherently more prone to violence,”
but our way of life is certainly structured around violence and around
selectively empowering, quarantining, directing, and monetizing it at
home and abroad. The majority of Americans apparently find no cognitive
dissonance in this arrangement, if we even perceive it at all. Instead,
we express bafflement and outrage that we are not something other than
what we are and what we have always been. Plumbing what lurks within the
“essential American soul,” a cynic might suggest, is a self-indulgent
exercise, a red herring. The better question might be whether we even
have one in the first place.
marketwatch | Poor economies impact countries in a number of detrimental ways
including higher rates of poverty, unemployment and chronic disease.
Now, a new study shows the bad economy is to blame for another unfortunate trend: the rise of #swoleness.
Skim
through any fitness enthusiast’s Instagram, and you’ll find allusions
to being “swole” — or in Herculean shape. Since the 2008 economic
crisis, more men have taken to social media to post images of their fit
bodies, according to the Journal of Gender Studies report. The trend,
which experts have dubbed “spornosexuality,” reflects men attempting to
seek validation through their bodies, instead of more conventional
means, such as their work.
“Austerity has eroded young men’s
traditional means of value-creation so they have become increasingly
reliant on their bodies as a means of feeling valuable in society,” said
study author Jamie Hakim, a professor at the University of East Anglia
in the United Kingdom. “In theoretical terms, so-called
‘spornosexuality’ is an embodied response to material changes brought
about by neoliberal austerity.”
WaPo | When Gaye Clark prayed to God to send her daughter Anna a “godly, kind” husband, she got exactly what she asked for.
Glenn
was a devout Christian who volunteered at church, mentoring kids in an
after-school program. By day, he worked as an applications developer for
Blue Cross and Blue Shield, and he was well on his way to becoming “a
great dad and a good provider,” Clark said.
Glenn was a
gentleman, too. Clark noticed that he’d hold doors open for Anna, even
at the grocery store. Her daughter seemed happy, she said.
But there was one thing the 53-year-old mother was hung up on: Glenn was a black man with dreadlocks.
Clark,
a white freelance writer and cardiac care nurse from Georgia, confessed
in a blog post Tuesday on the website the Gospel Coalition, or TGC,
that she initially struggled with the idea of her daughter marrying an
African American man. In it, she explained how she ultimately came to
embrace her daughter’s decision, and offered some advice for parents
like her to consider if they, too, are hesitant about a child’s
interracial marriage.
NYTimes | In late July, The American Conservative ran an interview with J. D. Vance that drew so much traffic it briefly crippled
the central nervous system of the magazine’s website. The interviewer’s
last line implored readers to have a look at Mr. Vance’s publishing
debut, “Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis.”
Ever since, his book has hovered at high altitude on Amazon, seldom
dipping below No. 10.
After
reading “Hillbilly Elegy,” you can easily understand why. This is a
historically peculiar election cycle, boisterously disrupted by
outsiders, one of whom found the perfect host body in the Republican
Party and became its presidential nominee. An investigation of voter
estrangement has never felt more urgent, and we’re certainly not getting
one from the lacquered chatterers on the boob tube.
Now,
along comes Mr. Vance, offering a compassionate, discerning
sociological analysis of the white underclass that has helped drive the
politics of rebellion, particularly the ascent of Donald J. Trump.
Combining thoughtful inquiry with firsthand experience, Mr. Vance has
inadvertently provided a civilized reference guide for an uncivilized
election, and he’s done so in a vocabulary intelligible to both
Democrats and Republicans.
Imagine that.
On the checklist of modern privilege, Mr. Vance, 31, has the top four in the bag: He is white, male, straight and Protestant.
unz | Among the many factors that contribute to death is one that is
scarcely noticed: a deadly self-conception. The classic example is the
person who defines himself as a fearsome, brave warrior anxious to risk
everything—including almost certain death—for personal glory. The
pursuit of pleasure can also be self-destructive. For example, in the
1970s and 80’s thousands of young gay males came to believe that being
authentically gay entailed engaging in promiscuous unprotected anal sex.
Unfortunately, a similar death-inviting self-image currently
flourishes among countless young, underclass black males. Central is
resisting police authority, energetically fighting back, or at least
fleeing if arrested regardless of circumstances. Eric Garner was the
classic example. Surely he must have realized the futility of escape
since he was surrounded by multiple police officers and even if he did
manage to momentarily break free, he would have been quickly apprehended
(and the resisting arrest effort would compound his punishment). Did
Michael Brown reasonably expect that wrestling with Officer Wilson and
shooting him with the policeman’s own gun was a prudent strategy to
escape the relatively minor charges of robbery and obstructing traffic?
What is the benefit of taunting and mocking police officers when they
try to arrest you? In other words, rational calculations in such police
encounters cannot justify the risky misbehavior. Rather, a cultural
ethos exists, perhaps comparable to WW II Japanese banzai charges where certain death in battle outshined cowardly surrender.
This “resistance” mentality might even be viewed as an anti-law
enforcement “lifestyle.” It is reflected in today’s “ghetto look” where
youngsters purposely imitate those who’ve been arrested–beltless
trousers, untied shoes, and a scowling angry demeanor. Popular
tee-shirts now declare “Snitches Get Stiches.” The anti-cop message
is ubiquitous in rap and hip-hop music. Twenty-five years ago the group
N.W. A. released what became a classic—“Fuck tha Police” and it has
created a multi-million dollar musical genre ever sensitive to the
latest incident of alleged police brutality. Following Ferguson
anti-police songs were released by G-Unit, Public Enemy, the Game among
several others. Indeed, some blacks in Ferguson now celebrate Michael Brown as a hero. And, of course, there’s the anti-cop Black Lives Matter—fry them like bacon–Movement ever anxious to portray those killed by resisting arrest saint-like martyrs.
WaPo | In other countries, workers
organizing to defend their rights not only formed unions to protect them
on the job, but also labor or socialist political parties to protect
them as a class — the working class. Building off surges of worker
protest, these parties won pro-labor reforms, either by winning office
or posing enough of a political threat to get ruling parties to act.
More broadly, they expanded notions of democratic citizenship
to include many of the social welfare benefits like health care and old
age security that are now taken for granted. Overall, this wove
workers’ rights more tightly into the fabric of democracy, making it
harder to unravel them.
This
didn’t happen in the United States. More precisely, it didn’t happen in
the same way. American workers fought for labor rights for decades, in
some cases tying their workplace struggles to broader political
movements and parties. Despite the many barriers to third parties in the
U.S., these parties managed to capture a small but significant part of
the vote in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, even holding some
state-level offices.
But that changed in the 1930s.
Although he came into office as a budget-cutting deficit hawk,
President Franklin Roosevelt’s advisors convinced him that responding to
growing worker and farmer protest with reforms could bring these groups
into the Democratic Party coalition. FDR’s rhetorical appeals to the
“forgotten man” and policy offerings like the National Labor Relations
Act absorbed key parts of these protest groups while dividing and
excluding others. On the one hand, this consolidated the liberal
coalition that characterizes the Democratic Party to this day. On the
other, it decisively undermined any left alternative to the Democrats.
Again,
looking at Canada is instructive. Despite fewer barriers to third
parties there, they had limited success until the 1930s. At that point,
both the mainstream parties, the Liberals and Conservatives, responded
to worker and farmer protests not with reforms, but with repression.
This drove the excluded groups to form an independent party, the
Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, which took root and lives on today
as the New Democratic Party.
U.S. unions seemed to get the better deal at the time, but the New Deal coalition was ultimately a “barren marriage.“ As
a junior partner within the Democratic Party, labor focused on its
“inside game” of influencing sympathetic allies to win reforms. Whatever
bargains it could win thus appeared not as broad gains for workers, but
as payoffs to a narrow Democrat “special interest.” By contrast,
Canadian labor’s electoral threat combined with worker mobilization
created a bargaining process to enforce industrial peace, one that even
labor’s opponents understood the value of maintaining. This ensured a
more legitimate Canadian labor law regime that strengthened over time.
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