conservativetreehouse | Several new developments happening today center around the FBI’s use
of the Christopher Steele Dossier in gaining FISA warrants to wiretap
and monitor the 2016 campaign of Donald Trump; ie. “The Trump
Project”. Doug Ross continues to update the ongoing conspiracy Timeline –
SEE HERE. And that timeline just gained a big addition from a recently discovered visitor to the White House.
Before going to the White House visitor angle, it’s important to express appreciation for Tablet Mag who did a deep dive
into the Fusion-GPS connection to the creation of the Steele Dossier,
and more specifically how Fusion-GPS head Glenn Simpson and his wife
Mary Jacoby were instrumental in getting the dossier assembled and into
the hands of the White House prior to the DOJ and FBI applying for the
FISA warrant – SEE HERE.
Tablet Mag outlines how Mary Jacoby even bragged about getting the “Russiagate” narrative started:
A Tablet investigation using public sources to trace the
evolution of the now-famous dossier suggests that central elements of
the Russiagate scandal emerged not from the British ex-spy Christopher
Steele’s top-secret “sources” in the Russian government—which are
unlikely to exist separate from Russian government control—but from a
series of stories that Fusion GPS co-founder Glenn Simpson and his wife
Mary Jacoby co-wrote for TheWall Street Journal well before Fusion GPS existed, and Donald Trump was simply another loud-mouthed Manhattan real estate millionaire.
Understanding the origins of the “Steele dossier” is especially
important because of what it tells us about the nature and the workings
of what its supporters would hopefully describe as an ongoing campaign
to remove the elected president of the United States.
[…] In a Facebook post from June 24, 2017, that Tablet
has seen in screenshots, Jacoby claimed that her husband deserves the
lion’s share of credit for Russiagate. (She has not replied to repeated
requests for comment.) “It’s come to my attention that some people still
don’t realize what Glenn’s role was in exposing Putin’s control of
Donald Trump,” Jacoby wrote. “Let’s be clear. Glenn conducted the
investigation. Glenn hired Chris Steele. Chris Steele worked for Glenn.”
This assertion is hardly a simple assertion of family pride; it goes
directly to the nature of what became known as the “Steele dossier,” on
which the Russiagate narrative is founded. (read more)
The Tablet-Mag outline shows the distinct trail of the finished
Steele Dossier entering into the White House and how President Obama
likely saw and reviewed the content. However, missing from the this
report is an origination angle even more nefarious.
Remember, previous media reporting -in conjunction with Clinton
campaign admissions- have confirmed the DNC and Clinton Campaign
financed Fusion-GPS through their lawyers within Perkins Coie. Fusion
then sub-contracted with retired British MI6 agent Christopher Steele to
write the dossier.
The dates here are important because they tell a story.
The origin of the Clinton effort with Fusion-GPS was April 2016.
That’s the same month Fusion hired Nellie Ohr, wife of DOJ Deputy Bruce
Ohr, to gather opposition research on candidate Trump. It would be most
likely that Nellie Ohr was in contact with Christopher Steele. DOJ
Deputy Attorney Bruce Ohr was later demoted for his unreported contacts
with Christopher Steele and Fusion-GPS founder Glenn Simpson.
However, there was another event in this April 2016 timeline which enhances the trail of the Dossier origination. [Hat Tip Katica] Check this out:
In April 2016 Mary Jacoby shows up on White House visitor logs
meeting with President Obama officials. In April 2016 the Clinton
Campaign and DNC hired Fusion-GPS to organize the Russia research, that
later became known as the “Steele Dossier”.
project-syndicate | The Anglosphere’s political atmosphere is thick with bourgeois outrage.
In the United States, the so-called liberal establishment is convinced
it was robbed by an insurgency of “deplorables” weaponized by Vladimir
Putin’s hackers and Facebook’s sinister inner workings. In Britain, too,
an incensed bourgeoisie are pinching themselves that support for
leaving the European Union in favor of an inglorious isolation remains
undented, despite a process that can only be described as a dog’s
Brexit.
The range of analysis
is staggering. The rise of militant parochialism on both sides of the
Atlantic is being investigated from every angle imaginable:
psychoanalytically, culturally, anthropologically, aesthetically, and of
course in terms of identity politics. The only angle that is left
largely unexplored is the one that holds the key to understanding what
is going on: the unceasing class war unleashed upon the poor since the
late 1970s.
In 2016, the year of
both Brexit and Trump, two pieces of data, dutifully neglected by the
shrewdest of establishment analysts, told the story. In the United
States, more than half of American families did not qualify, according
to Federal Reserve data, to take out a loan that would allow them to buy
the cheapest car for sale (the Nissan Versa sedan, priced at $12,825).
Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom, over 40% of families relied on either
credit or food banks to feed themselves and cover basic needs.
William of Ockham,
the fourteenth-century British philosopher, famously postulated that,
when bamboozled in the face of competing explanations, we ought to opt
for the one with the fewest assumptions and the greatest simplicity. For
all the deftness of establishment commentators in the US and Britain,
they seem to have neglected this principle.
Loath to recognize
the intensified class war, they bang on interminably with conspiracy
theories about Russian influence, spontaneous bursts of misogyny, the
tide of migrants, the rise of the machines, and so on. While all of
these fears are highly correlated with the militant parochialism fueling
Trump and Brexit, they are only tangential to the deeper cause – class
war against the poor – alluded to by the car affordability data in the
US and the credit-dependence of much of Britain’s population.
True, some relatively affluent middle-class voters also supported Trump
and Brexit. But much of that support rode on the coattails of the fear
caused by observing the classes just below theirs plunge into despair
and loathing, while their own children’s prospects dimmed.
theatlantic | It isn’t just chain stores in
economically distressed suburbs that are going belly up, but high-end
luxury-goods purveyors along the retail corridors of America’s leading
cities, such as New York’s Madison Avenue, Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills,
and Chicago’s Miracle Mile. All told, roughly 100,000 retail jobs
were lost between October 2016 and April 2017. In the next five years,
one out of every four malls is projected to close, according to an analysis by Credit Suisse. The square footage of America’s already dead malls covers more land than the city of Boston.
But painful as this retail retrenchment may be, it creates real opportunities that cities and suburbs can take advantage of.
First
things first: Brick-and-mortar retail is not going away. Even as it
sheds workers, the sector is still growing at a rate of 3 percent per
year. The IHL Group, a research- and advisory-services firm, estimates
that retail sales are up by more than $100 billion this year, and 4,000
more chain stores will have opened than closed in the U.S.
Much of the retail apocalypse is in fact a long-overdue correction. The United States devotes
four times more of its real-estate square footage to retail, per
capita, than Japan and France; six times more than England; nine times
more than Italy; and 11 times more than Germany.
The way Americans shop is also
undergoing a fundamental reset. As more and more people shop online, the
stores that are drawing in customers are those that emphasize
experiences. Customers want to sit on that new sofa, feel the weight of a
stainless-steel skillet in their hands, and try out new gadgets.
In
fact, the line between e-commerce and physical retail is not as
traceable as most people think. The most successful virtual stores are
currently increasing their physical presences. Amazon is opening up
bookstores, and with its acquisition of Whole Foods, it has gained a
footprint in hundreds of affluent cities and suburbs. As the physical
embodiment of Apple’s brand proposition, Apple stores showcase
cutting-edge designs, provide service and advice, build community, and
are a big part of what differentiates the company from its competition.
While
there can be no doubt that the lost jobs and diminished tax bases that
accompany the retail retrenchment hurt, the shift has an upside as well.
WeWork’s
takeover of Lord & Taylor could be a good portent for urban
economies. Work, not shopping, is the key to urban productivity and
growth. When asked why rents are so high in cities like New York and
Chicago, the Nobel Prize–winning economist Robert Lucas famously
answered that it had nothing to do with the availability of high-end
shopping; higher urban rents, he said, are a function of higher urban
productivity.
melmagazine | Dale Baker was introduced to simulation theory
five years ago as an 18-year-old freshman at the University of Iowa.
The idea that our reality may be nothing more than a computer-generated
simulation was first presented to him in his Religion vs. Science class.
Later, he discovered the work of Oxford University philosophy professor Nick Bostrom, one the world’s leading simulation theorists.
Still, Baker didn’t believe in simulation theory outright; he merely considered it plausible. The Earth, as we know it, is 4.5 billion years old, he reasoned. That’s enough time for a civilization to evolve to the point where they could create such a simulation.
That
all changed last November, though, when the Chicago Cubs, the most
futile franchise in the history of professional sports, won the World
Series, and Donald Trump, the most unqualified candidate in the history
of the U.S. presidency, won the Electoral College.
I come to the reality that this entire world is fake. We don't really exist. The Cubs and Trump in the same year?? This is a simulation.
The
tweet was part-joke, part-truth. “I was dumbfounded at the events that
occurred,” Baker says. “If Trump and the Cubs can win, anything is
possible.”
Few
would argue his point that the past year has been strange. Apart from
the two examples above, there’s been a constant barrage of natural
disasters; the New England Patriots’ improbable comeback victory in
Super Bowl LI; a possible nuclear war with North Korea; the
reality-distorting effects of fake news; the sudden deaths of Prince,
David Bowie and other legendary pop culture figures; and most recently,
the spate of sexual abuse and harassment charges that have upended
industry power structures that once seemed indestructible.
Some
have welcomed the changes, but for others, they’ve been so drastic and
swift that they defy all logic. Rather, they’re proof that the
simulation is real — and that whoever is at the helm has started fucking
with the levers.
BostonGlobe | Belief that alien life exists on other planets is persuasive,
sensible; nearly 80 percent of Americans do believe it, according to a 2015 poll.
But belief that the aliens are already here feels like something else,
largely because it requires a leap of faith longer than agreeing that
the universe is a vast, unknowable place. Abduction and contact stories
aren’t quite the fodder for daytime talk show and New York Times
bestsellers they were a few decades ago. The Weekly World News is no
longer peddling stories about Hillary Clinton’s alien baby at the
supermarket checkout line. Today, credulous stories of alien visitation
rarely crack the mainstream media, however much they thrive on niche TV
channels and Internet forums. But we also still want to believe in
accounts that scientists, skeptics, and psychologists say there is no
credible evidence to support.
The abduction phenomenon began with strange case of Betty and Barney Hill.
On Sept. 19, 1961, the Hills were driving from Montreal to their home
in Portsmouth, N.H. Betty spotted a UFO following them. Barney stopped
the car on the highway, near Indian Head in the White Mountains, and got
out to look at the craft through binoculars. Seeing humanoid figures in
Nazi-like uniforms peering through its windows, he ran back to the car,
screaming, “Oh my God, we’re going to be captured!” They drove off, but
two hours later, they found themselves 35 miles from the spot where
they’d first seen the craft (there is now a commemorative marker at the
site), with little memory of how they’d gotten there. Soon after, Betty
began having nightmares.
In 1964, the Hills underwent hypnotherapy. Under hypnotic regression —
hypnosis with the intent to help a subject recall certain events with
more clarity — the couple said that they had actually been pulled on
board the vessel by aliens and subjected to invasive experiments. The
Hills’ story, revealed to the public in 1965 with an article in the
Boston Traveler and a year later in the book “The Interrupted Journey,”
launched a flurry of public fascination with abductions.
Barney
died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1969, but Betty went on to become a
kind of sage of paranormal experiences. Their story became the blueprint
for alien abduction experiences in the years that followed, especially
after the airing of the 1975 made-for-TV film “The UFO Incident,”
starring James Earl Jones as Barney Hill. Subsequent experiencers would
describe similar missing time or have bizarre dreams and flashbacks of
things they couldn’t understand. Many would use hypnotic regression to
recall their experiences.
Over the next two decades, the alien
abduction narrative wound its way into the American consciousness, fed
by science fiction films like “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” and
breathless news reports of mysterious incidents. In 1966, a Gallup poll
asked Americans if they’d ever seen a UFO; 5 percent said they had, but
they meant it in the literal sense of an unidentified flying object —
only 7 percent of Americans believed that the UFOs were from outer
space. By 1986, a Public Opinion Laboratory poll found that 43 percent
of respondents agreed with the statement: “It is likely that some of the
UFOs that have been reported are really space vehicles from other
civilizations.”
Some experiencers said the aliens were here to save us and study us,
some said they were here to harvest our organs and enslave us. But by
the late 1980s, people whose stories would have been dismissed as
delusional a generation earlier were being interviewed by Oprah
and “true stories” of alien experience, such as Whitley Strieber’s
“Communion” and Budd Hopkins’s “Intruders,” were bestsellers. By the
1990s, those who believed in the literal truth of alien abduction
stories gained an important ally in John Mack, a Harvard professor and
psychiatrist who compiled his study of the phenomenon into a 1994 book
titled “Abduction: Human Encounters with Aliens.” He later told the BBC,
“I would never say there are aliens taking people away . . . but I
would say there is a compelling, powerful phenomenon here that I can’t
account for in any other way.”
FP |Last month, the first space nation left the International Space Station.
That space nation, Asgardia-1, is
actually a satellite containing personal data from some of the
“nation’s” 300,000 “citizens,” launched into space by billionaire Igor
Ashurbeyli.
Asgardia is as yet unrecognized by the
United Nations, and its citizens are people who filled out an
application form. The goal “is to provide permanent presence of humans
in space,” Ashurbeyli told Foreign Policy in a recent interview.
Ashurbeyli isn’t the only billionaire with unusual ideas about what humanity should be doing in space. On Saturday, Politico and the New York Times both
published articles revealing that another tycoon, Robert Bigelow, had
convinced lawmakers to secretly appropriate money to have the Pentagon
look for UFOs.
In fact, a number of private
individuals of great wealth are charting the future of space policy,
whether through money or influence. Some are in it for commercial
interests, others for scientific curiosity. But whatever the reason,
their new space race will change the rules of the game — space is
currently the realm of governments (the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 was
written for countries, not business magnates), and so the involvement of
wealthy individuals is changing the nature of all that’s out of this
world.
In contrast, Mars
One, a private Dutch initiative to settle
Mars by 2026, has raised eyebrows for seeming to select
its astronauts using a format akin to reality TV. And while National Geographic’s upcoming docu-drama miniseriesMARS
features an internationally, racially and gender diverse crew in 2033 aboard
the Daedalus, it’s noticeable that
they are led by an all-American white male mission commander who will “be
the first to walk on Mars”.
In addition, if we are to colonize Mars or any other
planet or space station for that matter, then genetics and population dynamics
call for the largest and broadest sample of who we are to be included among the settlers. As
Sun Ra highlights, the worlds of art, music, philosophy, science and literature
are created by all of us. In space as on Earth, there is a deep value to
embracing and maintaining the plurality of our existence: it celebrates our
empathy and love for one another.
As Ra presaged, Space
Is The Place for us to take this love—the best of Earth’s legacy—to Mars
and beyond.
“Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we
should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that
public policy could itself become the captive of a
scientific-technological elite.”
Here again the warning is of fascism. But instead of the
military-industrial fascism that dominated so much of the 20th century,
he was describing here a new fascistic paradigm that was but barely
visible at the time that he gave his address: a scientific-technological
one. Once again, the threat is that the industry that grows up around
this government-sponsored activity will, just like the
military-industrial complex, begin to take over and shape the actions of
that same government. In this case, the warning is not one of bombs and
bullets but bits and bytes, not tanks and fighter jets but hard drives
and routers. Today we know this new fascism by its innocuous sounding
title “Big Data,” but in keeping with the spirit of Eisenhower’s
remarks, perhaps it would be more fitting to call it the
“information-industrial complex.”
The concept of an information-industrial complex holds equally
explanatory power for our current day and age as the military-industrial
complex hypothesis held in Eisenhower’s time.
Why is a company like Google going to such lengths to capture, track and database all information on the planet?
The information-industrial complex.
Why were all major telecom providers and internet service providers mandated by federal law to hardwire in back door access to American intelligence agencies for the purpose of spying on all electronic communications?
The information-industrial complex.
Why would government after government around the world target
encryption as a key threat to their national security, and why would banker after banker call for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies to be banned even as they plan to set up their own, central bank-administered digital currencies?
The information-industrial complex.
The effects of this synthesis are more and more felt in our everyday
lives. Every single day hundreds of millions of people around the world
are interfacing with Microsoft software or Apple hardware or Amazon
cloud services running on chips and processors supplied by Intel or
other Silicon Valley stalwarts. Google has become so ubiquitous that its
very name has become a verb meaning “to search for something on the
internet.” The 21st century version of the American dream is
encapsulated in the story of Mark Zuckerberg, a typical Harvard whizkid
whose atypical rise to the status of multi-billionaire was enabled by a
social networking tool by the name of “Facebook” that he developed.
But how many people know the flip side of this coin, the one that
demonstrates the pervasive government influence in shaping and directing
these companies’ rise to success, and the companies’ efforts to aid the
government in collecting data on its own citizens? How many know, for
instance, that Google has a publicly acknowledged relationship with the NSA? Or that a federal judge has ruled that the public does not have the right to know the details of that relationship? Or that Google Earth was originally the brainchild of Keyhole Inc., a company that was set up by the CIA’s own venture capital firm, In-Q-Tel,
using satellite data harvested from government “Keyhole” class
reconnaissance satellites? Or that the former CEO of In-Q-Tel, Gilman
Louie, sat on the board of the National Venture Capital Association with
Jim Breyer, head of Accel Partners, who provided 12 million dollars of seed money for Facebook? Or that in 1999, a back door for NSA access was discovered in Microsoft’s Windows operating system source code? Or that Apple founder Steve Jobs was granted security clearance by the Department of Defense for still-undisclosed reasons while heading Pixar in 1988, as was the former head of AT&T and numerous others in the tech industry?
The connections between the IT world and the government’s military
and intelligence apparatus run deep. In fact, the development of the IT
industry is intimately intertwined with the US Air Force, the Department
of Defense and its various branches (including, famously, DARPA),
and, of course, the CIA. A cursory glance at the history of the rise of
companies like Mitre Corporation, Oracle, and other household
electronics and software firms should suffice to expose the extent of
these relations, and the existence of what we might dub an
“information-industrial complex.”
But what does this mean? What are the ramifications of such a relationship?
frontiersin | Does neuroaesthetics have a problem? Sherman and Morrissey (2017)
criticize the field for focusing narrowly on how art elicits
pleasurable responses, and for neglecting its social relevance and
impact. Neuroaesthetics, they argue, reduces the experience of art to
isolated individuals' ratings in artificial lab settings, and ignores
“socially-relevant outcomes of art appreciation or the social context of
art creation and art appreciation.” Consequently, it fails to “capture
or appreciate the social, cultural, or historical situatedness of the
art-object or the person whose experience is being studied.”
There is no question that we know little about the
social aspect of art behavior and its underlying psychological and
neurobiological mechanisms. Because art is often a transient phenomenon
created as function of a social act, as in music, dance, or
performance, the features of collective settings surely modulate
cognition and affect. Dance, for instance, can coordinate emotional
responses to promote social cohesion (Vicary et al., 2017).
Nevertheless, the precise way in which social settings influence brain
activity when experiencing art remains largely unknown.
We know of no neuroaestetician who would not welcome
research on the psychology and biology of art behavior in social
contexts. Yet, Sherman and Morrissey (2017)
portray neuroaesthetics as dismissing such research topics and
promoting an a-social conception of art experience. They fault
neuroaesthetics for “conflating the art with aesthetics,” for having
“privileged investigating individual judgments of beauty or preference,”
for construing art appreciation as a “passive reception of perceptual
information from art-objects,” and for discounting “what many would
consider the very essence of art: its communicative nature, its capacity
to encourage personal growth (…), to challenge preconceptions (…), and
to provide clarity on ambiguous concepts or ideas.”
counterpunch | The end of Net Neutrality is as odious to us as the British Colonial
government’s monopoly on salt was to the Indians. Salt was an essential
ingredient for preserving life and health in humid, pre-refrigeration
India. Net Neutrality and classifying the Internet as a public utility
is essential for fair, affordable, and equal access to the Internet, and
thus, the life of US citizens, as well as our innovation, creativity,
information, education, research, marketplace, exchange, dialogue,
organizing, and so much more.
Telecom giants like Comcast and Verizon have sought the end of Net
Neutrality for years. This allows them to create a two-tiered system of
Internet access, charging people for “fast lanes” and relegating
everything else into “slow lanes”. The chilling effect this will have on
our economy, research, movements, and society is incalculable. It is a
massive advance for the corporate state’s takeover and privatization of
all sectors of our nation. With it, they can control everything we see
(or don’t see) through their greed. Money buys society in the capitalist
world. For years, the Internet has opened up arenas of public space
beyond what money can buy. The sheer volume of non-commercialized
creativity and information online is staggering. It matches the
incredible resources of the early commons. And, like the commons, the
greedy have found a way to enclose them and charge us more and more for
access.
Gandhi’s Salt Campaign offers us a model of how to get out of this
mess – not just from the odious injustice of the end of Net Neutrality,
but also from the tyranny of corporate rule. In 1930, salt was a
keystone, yet stealth issue. When the Indian National Congress tasked
Mohandas K. Gandhi with planning a new campaign against the British
Empire’s colonial rule, no one expected the Salt Satyagraha would
unravel the empire that the sun never set upon. Even Gandhi’s buddies
were skeptical about salt. As for Lord Irwin, Viceroy of India, he
famously stated that he wouldn’t lose any sleep over salt.
Instead, he lost the country.
Salt was an unexpected issue, but it touched every Indian citizen’s
life. And, when Gandhi announced that he was going to use civil
disobedience to directly disobey the “odious salt laws” and render them
unenforceable through mass noncooperation, millions of ordinary Indians
cheered. In defiance of the salt laws, they made, sold, and bought salt.
Even more importantly, they openly refused to obey the British Empire
and thus ousted the Brits from authority. This showed the Indians what
Gandhi had been saying for decades: a paltry hundred thousand British
cannot rule over 320 million Indians without the Indians cooperation.
Deny your support, and British rule will crumble.
Fast forward to contemporary United States, which also has 320
million people and faces a parallel of colonial rule in the corporate
state. In the case of telecom giants like Verizon and Comcast, well,
they’re enjoying a monopoly on our modern-day salt of Internet access.
With the repeal of Net Neutrality, they’re positioned to do like the
British and start charging us for something we need for everyday life
and survival.
Guardian |Ta-Nehisi Coates’ We Were Eight Years in Power,
a book about Barack Obama’s presidency and the tenacity of white
supremacy, has captured the attention of many of us. One crucial
question is why now in this moment has his apolitical pessimism gained such wide acceptance?
Coates and I come from a great tradition of the black freedom
struggle. He represents the neoliberal wing that sounds militant about
white supremacy but renders black fightback invisible. This wing reaps
the benefits of the neoliberal establishment that rewards silences on
issues such as Wall Street greed or Israeli occupation of Palestinian
lands and people.
The disagreement between Coates and me is clear: any analysis or
vision of our world that omits the centrality of Wall Street power, US
military policies, and the complex dynamics of class, gender, and
sexuality in black America is too narrow and dangerously misleading. So
it is with Ta-Nehisi Coates’ worldview.
Coates rightly highlights the vicious legacy of white supremacy –
past and present. He sees it everywhere and ever reminds us of its
plundering effects. Unfortunately, he hardly keeps track of our
fightback, and never connects this ugly legacy to the predatory
capitalist practices, imperial policies (of war, occupation, detention,
assassination) or the black elite’s refusal to confront poverty,
patriarchy or transphobia.
In short, Coates fetishizes white supremacy. He makes it almighty,
magical and unremovable. What concerns me is his narrative of
“defiance”. For Coates, defiance is narrowly aesthetic – a personal
commitment to writing with no connection to collective action. It
generates crocodile tears of neoliberals who have no intention of
sharing power or giving up privilege.
When he honestly asks: “How do you defy a power that insists on
claiming you?”, the answer should be clear: they claim you because you
are silent on what is a threat to their order (especially Wall Street
and war). You defy them when you threaten that order.
wikipedia |Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff,
the founders of Philadelphia International Records, met in 1964 while
they were both playing as session musicians for various labels,
including Philadelphia based Cameo-Parkway Records,
whose building would later become home to Philadelphia International
Records recording studio. In 1965, Huff joined Gamble's band, The
Romeos, a popular moniker at the time, by replacing future Philadelphia
International Records producer and arranger Thom Bell
on piano. Kenny Gamble and The Romeos had seen little success up to
that point playing for their label, Arctic Records, and split up soon
after.
When the Romeos disbanded, Gamble and Huff went on to start one of
the first iterations of Philadelphia International Records (which they
named Excel and Gamble) after a visit to Motown Records in Detroit, to
scope out the Motown setup. The success of their biggest signing, The Intruders, brought attention to Gamble and Huff, which allowed them to create Neptune Records
in 1969. Neptune Records, a more ambitious project for the duo, was
financed by Chess Records Group, and allowed them to sign later
Philadelphia International Records artists The O'Jays and The Three Degrees.
When Chess Records Group's management changed hands in 1969, Neptune
Records folded. With the collapse of Neptune Records, Gamble and Huff
transferred their signed artists onto a new project, Philadelphia
International Records.[4] Looking to attract new black acts to their label, but without the in-house know-how, Columbia Records was convinced to sign an exclusive production contract with Gamble and Huff's new Philadelphia International Records.
The label was set up in connection with Mighty Three/Assorted Music,
the music publishing company run by Gamble, Huff and another
Philadelphia producer, Thom Bell, to showcase their songs.
The label had a distribution deal with CBS Records until 1984. Distribution of the catalog from 1976 onwards was then taken over by EMI, but CBS/Sony Music Entertainment continued to distribute material recorded up to 1976. In 2007, Sony's Legacy Recordings regained the rights to Philadelphia International's full catalog and the following year, PIR/Legacy released a box set titled Love Train: The Sound of Philadelphia.[5]
Most of the music released by the label was recorded and produced at Sigma Sound Studios
in Philadelphia, with chief engineer (later studio owner) Joe Tarsia
recording many of the sessions. More than 30 resident studio musicians,
known collectively as MFSB
"Mother Father Sister Brother", were based at this studio and backed up
most of these recordings. Some of these musicians also acted as
arrangers, writers or producers for Philadelphia International as well
as for other labels recording in the city. They included Bobby Martin,[6][7]Norman Harris, Thom Bell, Ronnie Baker, Vince Montana and later, Jack Faith and John Usry.
Gamble and Huff worked as independent producers with a series of
artists in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Jerry Butler, Wilson Pickett and Dusty Springfield. They also produced The Jacksons' first two albums for Epic/CBS after the group had left Motown in 1976. The first, titled The Jacksons featured the platinum-selling single "Enjoy Yourself", and a second album, Goin' Places followed in 1977. Although on CBS subsidiary Epic, both albums and the singles also carried a Philadelphia International logo.
In 1965, Gamble and Huff started an independent label, Excel Records. It was soon renamed Gamble Records and in 1972, was folded into Philadelphia International as a subsidiary. In 1974, the subsidiary's name was changed to TSOP Records, from the aforementioned 1974 hit single, "TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)". Artists for Excel/Gamble/TSOP included Dee Dee Sharp, and Archie Bell & the Drells. Later signings to the Philly International roster in the 1980s and 1990s, included Patti Labelle, The Stylistics, Phyllis Hyman, and The Dells.
Between 1973 and 1975, Gamble and Huff also distributed a boutique label called Golden Fleece, set up by musicians Norman Harris, Ronnie Baker and Earl Young, which released the second album by The Trammps.
G & H also had a short-lived subsidiary called Thunder Records.
Created by Thom Bell, it only had two singles from Derek & Cyndi
(You Bring Out the Best in Me/I'll Do the Impossible for You) who were
produced by Bell, and Fatback Band member Michael Walker whose single (I Got the Notion, You Got the Motion) was produced by The Spinners' member Philippe Wynne.[8]
yournewswire |John Homeston, a retired CIA agent, has admitted this week on
National Russian Television (NTV) that the CIA was behind the creation
of the 1980s hip hop scene and financed major hip hop acts including
NWA, Afrika Bambaataa, and Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five.
The government at the time spent “big money, serious money” on this covert operation destined to “further division” and “corrupt the American youth to nihilist, anti-establishment and anti-American ideologies”, he explained in a half hour interview broadcast on national television.
Famous hip hop songs of the legendary hip hop outfit NWA were even
scripted by a team of psychologists and war propagandists of the CIA. “F#ck the police,” and “When I’m called off, I got a sawed off / Squeeze the trigger, and bodies are hauled off,”
and other nihilist and anti-establishment lyrics were intended to
unleash a wave of cynicism towards authorities, promote the use of heavy
drugs, and entice the youth with revolutionary, counter-establishment
ideas.
The retired CIA agent claims the social engineering maneuver was “extremely successful.“
“We understood at the time that music was a powerful means of propaganda to reach the youth,” explained the 77-year-old man.
“Our mission was to use teenage angst to our advantage and turn
Generation X into a decadent, pro-drug and anti-establishment culture
that would create uprisings and further division within society. We even
infiltrated mainstream radio to promote their music and reach millions
of people everyday,” he admitted, visibly proud of the accomplishment.
“For many of us in the CIA, infiltrating the 1980s hip hop scene
was one of the CIA’s most successful experiments of propaganda to date,” he acknowledged during the interview.
“You could say Frankenstein’s monster got up off the table and started goose-stepping.”
vice |VICE: What exactly is the Black Speculative Arts Movement
Dr. Reynaldo Anderson: BSAM is an umbrella term that looks at several different positions [like] magical realism, Afrofuturism, black science fiction, black quantum futurism, Afro-surrealism, ethnography—different perspectives related to this movement. It's a collection of artists, intellectuals, and activists that we have in these conventions.
Later, while brainstorming with John, he connected me to Maia "Crown" Williams, the founder of MECCAcon, the Midwest Ethnic Convention for Comics and Arts [who] operates a film festival and is a founding member of Ava DuVernay's ARRAY out of Detroit. With her expertise in film and comic conventions, she was very valuable as a co-founder to forming an ongoing convention aspect of the movement.
How long ago did you start thinking about this movement?
We are in the second wave of Afrofuturism, and it's also sociopolitical. When you think about science fiction and what we are doing with Nightlife, a lot of these people who are addicted to drugs have similar behaviors to those of zombies. There is a connection there as a literary or critical theorist. The way I think about science fiction and speculative philosophy happens in real life when people are using all these chemicals and drugs on their body and how it impacts their behavior, as they react like some of these people that we read about in novels. I think it's because society is changing so quickly the only reference we have to understand what happens to us is science fiction or horror. Things that we read in science fiction books used to be unthinkable. Now, they are a reality.
Let's talk about your book, Afrofuturism 2.0. How did you come to be involved in that project?
The book was the result of several years of thinking about the term "Afrofuturism." Many people preceded me in its conceptual development, like Mark Dery, Alondra Nelson, Kodwo Eshun, and others. I first heard of the term in the 90s as a graduate student when I was working on my PhD focusing on the Black Panther Party. The 2.0 project came out of a couple of things. One, I thought about Afrofuturism being different than it was when it was formulated in the 90s.
Afrofuturism 2.0 is the era that we're in now, this era of social media, technological acceleration, globalization, and environmental stress that we are dealing with. I put together a call for papers to put a book around the ideas that really mattered to Afrofuturism from 2005 to now. The other difference is that Afrofuturism is now a transdisciplinary pan-African techno cultural movement. It's global. It's not just American. It takes place in Africa, Latin America—all over the world people are doing it. It was the spirit of those spiritual and intellectual currents going on that led to the book being developed that I co-edited with Charles Jones.
Counterpunch | In contrast, an ongoing exhibition at the Chicago Art Institute shows the early Soviet arts in all their bustling contradiction and coming-to-be. The CIA could not have produced anything on this scale, which required a world-shaking collision of forces and a belief uncomfortably close to the religious. Malevich, Dziga Vertov, El Lissitzky, Lenin, Mayakovsky… The US, too, had considerable forces at its disposal (Buster Keaton, first and foremost). The strange thing is that this exhibition, mounted in a refreshingly no-nonsense and rather cool style, still manages to inspire, as if the past was waiting for the present to catch up to it. This power lies not so much in the myriad forms of the works, which may be bound in time, but in the pure electricity of their still-disarming presence. Against the morose ideas of ends, the grand mortuary they call ‘history’, against the relegation of past works of art to nostalgia and price, something else appears beside the collages, constructivist paintings, fabrics and living spaces constructed for the great new socialist world. We are always told that Stalin was the culmination of this moment in time. Who says? And who paid him to say it? The answer is obvious. They say that here is only one modernism; that there is only one history (and one power able to declare that it is over); that there is only one self to express; that there is only one public and one art which can express it (sometimes fearfully, it has to be admitted). If this sums up the most banal kinds of socialist realism, it is equally applicable to the art the CIA promoted in the middle of last century. Behind the paintings was the logic of pacification.
Alan Dulles’ influence extends far beyond his admittedly meagre artistic output. The CIA’s most recent work of criticism is the destruction of San’a and Aleppo, where the Agency has taken to task outmoded theories of architecture in an imperial inversion of the Situationists’ support for the Watts riots. And TheIntercept informsus that Erik Prince, infamous Blackwater capo, and that old has-been Oliver North are setting up a parallel intelligence agency to defend the embattled President against a rogue CIA. Thus, the old rivalry between Classical and Romantic has returned with a swinging post-modern, mercenary twist. Although painting seems to be off the radar for now, the ideas behind the Abstract Intelligence school await resurrection in another form whose inelegance may delight or offend, depending on the myths necessary for the murder of both the Image and its reflection.
independent - 1995 | For decades in art circles it was either a rumour or a joke, but now it is confirmed as a fact. The Central Intelligence Agency used American modern art - including the works of such artists as Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko - as a weapon in the Cold War. In the manner of a Renaissance prince - except that it acted secretly - the CIA fostered and promoted American Abstract Expressionist painting around the world for more than 20 years.
The connection is improbable. This was a period, in the 1950s and 1960s, when the great majority of Americans disliked or even despised modern art - President Truman summed up the popular view when he said: "If that's art, then I'm a Hottentot." As for the artists themselves, many were ex- communists barely acceptable in the America of the McCarthyite era, and certainly not the sort of people normally likely to receive US government backing.
Why did the CIA support them? Because in the propaganda war with the Soviet Union, this new artistic movement could be held up as proof of the creativity, the intellectual freedom, and the cultural power of the US. Russian art, strapped into the communist ideological straitjacket, could not compete.
gizmodo -2010 | There's little more divisive than modern art—most take a staunch "brilliance" or "bullshit" stance. So it should come as a surprise that the straight-laced feds at the CIA leaned toward the former camp—or at least saw it as brilliantly exploitable in the psychological war against the Soviets. Reports from former agents acknowledge what was always a tall tale in the art world—that CIA spooks floated pioneering artists like Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Robert Motherwell, to drop an aesthetic nuke on Communism. What seemed like natural popularity of certain artists was, in part, actually a deliberate attempt at psychological warfare, backed by the US government.
But why modern art? At the time period in question—the 1950s and 60s—the artistic style of the moment was Abstract Expressionism. Abstract Expressionism (or AbEx, if you want to impress people at your next snooty cocktail party) stood for, above all else, self expression. Radically so. Take a look at a Pollock, for instance.
bbc - 2016 | In the immediate aftermath of World War Two, something exciting happened in the art world in New York. A strange but irresistible energy started to crackle across the city, as artists who had struggled for years in poverty and obscurity suddenly found self-confidence and success. Together, they formed a movement that became known, in time, as Abstract Expressionism. It is currently the subject of a major exhibition, featuring 164 artworks by 30 artists (including Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko), at the Royal Academy of Arts in London.
One of the most remarkable things about Abstract Expressionism was the speed with which it rose to international prominence. Although the artists associated with it took a long time to find their signature styles, once the movement had crystallised, by the late ‘40s, it rapidly achieved first notoriety and then respect. By the ‘50s, it was generally accepted that the most exciting advances in painting and sculpture were taking place in New York rather than Paris. In 1957, a year after Pollock’s death in a car crash, the Metropolitan Museum paid $30,000 for his Autumn Rhythm – an unprecedented sum of money for a painting by a contemporary artist at the time.
counterpunch | Reason number one is why we currently have Donald Trump for
president. The man cannot hold a train of thought for the ten or 15
seconds it takes to express it or to type it into a Tweet, lies so often
I don’t think he even knows when he’s doing it half the time, and has
no moral core. And yet a third of American voters think he’s just great.
And even though all his policies are damaging the very people — the
poor, forgotten white working class — that he likes to highlight as
being his main concern, those people, who are now at risk of losing
their subsidized health insurance available under Obamacare, their
Medicaid, their Supplemental Security Income checks (available to the
disabled and to children and young single parents left in need by the
death of a working parent/spouse) and the protection against
predatory lenders afforded by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
(CFPB), continue to back him, and will likely vote for him in 2020.
Reason number two is why, despite proof that the Democratic Party
leadership and its pre-annointed 2016 presidential candidate preference
Hillary Clinton, worked hand-in-glove to steal the nomination from
Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders and his tens of millions of
supporters last year, and despite the knowledge that that same corrupt
leadership is hard at work now blocking progressive efforts to
democratize the next Democratic primary, and to run real progressives as
candidates for House and Senate in 2018 instead of more of the same
corporatist mob, Democratic voters will submissively cave in as always
and vote for those same lackluster and corrupted corporatists, either
handing wins to Republican opponents, or electing/re-electing
ineffective, self-aggrandizing hacks.
There are other problems too, of course. To a certain extent, both
Republican and Democratic voters in the US are blinded to reality. In
the case of Republicans, who tend to be less well educated, or even if
they have higher degrees, to be in thrall to fanatic religious doctrines
that over-ride any scientific thinking they might once have learned,
this blindness to reality is celebrated. Among Democrats, who fancy
themselves to be the “reality-based” voters, however, there is also a
blindness to reality. Democrats refuse for example to see the larger
picture: for example that the US is absurdly over-militarized and badly
in need of being pacified and disarmed. No amount of calls for better
funding for social needs can succeed without first closing down the over
800 bases that the US operates abroad, terminating all the undeclared
foreign wars and military adventures in places like Syria, Pakistan,
Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, etc., shrinking the Army, Navy, Air Force,
Marines and Special Forces and the nuclear forces and slashing the
overall military budget by at least 75%. To fail to recognize this
reality is as stupid as your typical Republican yahoo’s refusal to
accept the reality of rampaging climate change. It is simply Democratic
yahooism.
nationalreview | Did the FBI and Justice Department use Steele’s information to get
the FISA warrant? One certainly hopes not, for two salient reasons.
First, the dossier, particularly as it relates to Page, is incredibly
far-fetched. I am assuming that, at the time it began receiving the
dossier reports, the FBI did not know that Steele was working for the
Clinton campaign — indeed, we do not yet know whether Steele himself
knew who, ultimately, was paying for his work. If the bureau were aware
of the Clinton campaign’s role, using the dossier would be indefensible.
We should assume for now, though, that if investigators were scrupulous
enough to resist seeking a warrant for Page while he was officially
connected to the Trump campaign, they would doubly have avoided using
one campaign’s information as a basis for spying on its opposition.
Nevertheless, the explosive information was unverified. There were
abundant reasons to doubt its veracity when it came to Page. And the FBI
could easily have taken measures less drastic than seeking
court-ordered surveillance; it could, for example, have interviewed
Page, who had cooperated with the FBI in the past.
The second reason to hope the dossier was not used is more alarming. If
the FBI and Justice Department relied on it, this would very likely mean
that they fell victim to an influence operation, based on false
information, by Russian intelligence services. Steele’s sources are
unidentified Russians, at least some of whom knew Steele to be a spy for
hire. It is possible, if not likely, that these Russians fed Steele
false information in order to see if Western intelligence services would
bite and, if the Kremlin got lucky, to sow discord and chaos into the
American political system.
I hope they did not succeed, but we need to find out. One more
disturbing fact: Because Page is a U.S. citizen, the Justice Department
and FBI would have had to show the FISA court not only that he was
acting as a foreign agent for Russia but that his activities involved or
may have involved violations of federal criminal statutes. (See Section
1801(b)(2) of Title 50, U.S. Code.) I don’t know of any basis for
attributing criminal activity to Page other than the Steele dossier —
but, of course, I don’t know everything the FBI knows.
Was the August 2016 decision to spy on a Trump associate based on a
Clinton campaign screed’s claim of a corrupt Trump-Russia deal? Did FBI
and Justice Department officials lose their professional objectivity
because Steele’s information fit their anti-Trump bias? Was the Steele
dossier, in effect, the “insurance policy” Agent Strzok had in mind?
President Trump can provide the answers to these questions: He just
needs to order the FBI and Justice Department, led by his appointees, to
cooperate with Congress’s investigations.
WaPo | In the federal complaint about sex discrimination and retaliation,
Funkhouser accused Ramsey, then Andrea Thomas, according to the Star, of
making “unwelcome and inappropriate sexual comments and innuendos” when
he was a human resources manager for LabOne.
Funkhouser
alleged that he had suffered consequences at work because he had
rebuffed an advance he said she made during a business trip in 2005.
“After
I told her I was not interested in having a sexual relationship with
her, she stopped talking to me,” he wrote, according to documents filed
in court. “In the office, she completely ignored me and avoided having
any contact with me.”
The EEOC closed its investigation in 2005,
saying that it was “unable to conclude that the information obtained
establishes violations of the statutes.” Though Ramsey was not charged
directly in the lawsuit, she had been named in the complaint. It was
settled by the company after mediation in 2006 and had begun to be
discussed in political circles recently, the Star reported.
Without
naming Funkhouser, Ramsey said that a man decided to bring a lawsuit
against the company after she eliminated his position.
“He named me in the allegations, claiming I fired him because he refused to have sex with me,” she wrote. “That is a lie.”
She said she would have fought to clear her name had the suit been brought against her.
“I
would have sued the disgruntled, vindictive employee for defamation,”
she wrote. “Now, twelve years later this suit is being used to force me
out of my race for Congress. Let me be clear: I never engaged in any of
the alleged behavior. And the due process that I love, that drew me to
the field of law, is totally denied.”
theatlantic | Earlier this month, the research firm PerryUndem
found that Democratic men were 25 points more likely than Republican
women to say sexism remains a “big” or “somewhat” big problem. According
to October polling data sorted for me by the Pew Research Center,
Democratic men were 31 points more likely than Republican women to say
the “country has not gone far enough on women’s rights.” In both
surveys, the gender gap within parties was small: Republican women and
Republican men answered roughly the same way as did Democratic women and
Democratic men. But the gap between parties—between both Democratic men
and women and Republican men and women—was large.
Since Trump’s
election and the recent wave of sexual-harassment allegations, this
partisan divide appears to have grown. In January, when PerryUndum asked
whether “most women interpret innocent remarks as being sexist,”
Republican women were 11 points more likely than Democratic men to say
yes. When PerryUndum asked the question again this month, the gap had
more than doubled to 23 points. A year ago, Democratic men were 30
points more likely than Republican women to strongly agree that “the
country would be better off if we had more women in political office.”
The gap is now 45 points.
Over the decades, a similar divergence has occurred in Congress. Syracuse University’s Danielle Thompson notes
that, in the 1980s, “little difference existed between Republican and
Democratic women [members of Congress] in their advocacy of women’s
rights.” In the 1990s, Republican women members were still noticeably
more moderate than their male GOP colleagues. That created a significant
degree of ideological affinity between women politicians across the
aisle. Now it’s gone. There are many more Democratic than Republican
women in Congress. But, Thompson’s research shows, the Republican women
are today just as conservative as their male GOP colleagues.
Why
does this matter? First, it clarifies why Democrats forced Al Franken to
vacate his Senate seat but Republicans didn’t force Roy Moore from his
Senate race. Republicans of both genders are simply far more likely than
Democrats of both genders to believe that women cry sexism in response
to “innocent remarks or acts” and that America has “gone far enough on women’s rights.”
It’s not surprising, therefore, that Democratic women senators took the
lead in demanding that Franken go while Republican women senators
reacted to Moore pretty much like their male colleagues.
Secondly,
this partisan divergence hints at the nature of the backlash that the
current sexual-harassment reckoning will spark: Anti-feminist women will
help to lead it. In part, that’s because anti-feminist women can’t be
labelled sexist as easily as anti-feminist men. But it’s also because,
given their conservative attitudes, many Republican women likely find
the current disruption of gender relations unnerving.
Rejuvenation Pills
-
No one likes getting old. Everyone would like to be immorbid. Let's be
careful here. Immortal doesnt include youth or return to youth. Immorbid
means you s...
Death of the Author — at the Hands of Cthulhu
-
In 1967, French literary theorist and philosopher Roland Barthes wrote of
“The Death of the Author,” arguing that the meaning of a text is divorced
from au...
9/29 again
-
"On this sacred day of Michaelmas, former President Donald Trump invoked
the heavenly power of St. Michael the Archangel, sharing a powerful prayer
for pro...
Return of the Magi
-
Lately, the Holy Spirit is in the air. Emotional energy is swirling out of
the earth.I can feel it bubbling up, effervescing and evaporating around
us, s...
New Travels
-
Haven’t published on the Blog in quite a while. I at least part have been
immersed in the area of writing books. My focus is on Science Fiction an
Historic...
Covid-19 Preys Upon The Elderly And The Obese
-
sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
arrived at the emergency room at the University of Vermont Medical Center.
He ...