From Sunday, Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Joe Biden discovers his voting record."
Joe Biden will lead us into the past -- and an ugly past at that. We need new dreams, new visions. We don't need Joe Biden.
Meanwhile Ann Powers (Pitchfork) writes about Joni Mitchell:
Mitchell is a painter, and she creates in shades and planes of perception; she is a cinematic thinker perfecting every detail in her mise en scène. In the 1970s, when she defined the singer-songwriter position, plenty of people were mining their love affairs for lyrics, or trying new guitar tunings, or blending plain conversation with high-flying metaphor; they might’ve also been thinking, however casually, about how their songs might add up to something bigger than just radio jingles. But no one—except, perhaps, in nearby worlds, Nina Simone or Stevie Wonder or David Bowie—did all of these things with such depth and commitment and inventiveness.
Mitchell’s early work, especially 1971’s Blue but also the uncategorizable masterpieces that soon followed it—Court and Spark, The Hissing of Summer Lawns, Hejira—inspire the kind of deep identification that makes a listener feel like a song is reaching inside her and digging out what she’s left unspoken. She also found her stride just as second-wave feminism emerged, politicizing the notion that, as the great critic Vivian Gornick once put it, women can and must take their brains seriously. Mitchell’s songs do this work, detailing the inner life of someone risking unbound thought: the high-flying dreams and the crashes into sadness, the struggles between “the power of reason and the flowers of deep feeling”—the way, as she sang in Hejira’s “Song for Sharon,” these ruminations “seem to serve me, only to deceive me.” What makes Mitchell’s exploration of the inner life so powerful, though, is that it’s not simply centered in femininity, or in her own experience. Her lyrics unravel the conventional structures of the self, her vantage point shifting from male to female to animal to angelic with a phrase’s turn.
This “multiphrenic” way of being, as Mitchell calls it, manifests as powerfully in the music she’s embraced. Her submersion into jazz, beginning with Court and Spark and reaching an apex on Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter and Mingus, was controversial in the ’70s; some accused her of playing at a serious (aka boys’) game. She’s been vindicated since, over and over, not only in celebration by her jazz peers but in new generations of listeners. Her 1980s explorations of synthesizer-driven rock and her Grammy-winning 1993 recalibration at midlife, Turbulent Indigo, have fared the same. In recent years, she has focused on building her legacy in her own, singular way. Revisiting her catalog alongside jazz standards on 2002’s lushly orchestrated Travelogue, she unveiled a new voice. Gone were the swooping high notes with which she’d dazzled her early admirers; instead, here was a lived-in voice, tempered by heartache and cigarettes.
Even half-wit Ann Powers realizes Joni is a legend. She's not wise enough to grasp that For The Roses is a classic (For The Roses is the album that immediately followed Blue).
Half-wit Ann also 'forgets' Shine -- despite the fact that Joni won a Grammy for that 2007 release (best instrumental for "One Last Summer").
Ann Powers used to be in The Boston Globe (my local paper) all the time so I never fell into the cult of Ann. There are a lot of people who tired to make her into 'our great rock critic.' And that was probably possible, as long as you never read her work. It's simplistic and, no, it's not pro-woman, it's often not even women-friendly.
That she is unable to explore Joni's work at this late date goes to how insipid Ann Powers truly is. And, no, stringing together single sentence references to albums is not exploring Joni's work.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Monday:
Monday, May 6, 2019. The US prepares to bury another service member who
died in Iraq, co-president of the United States Marco Rubio issues a
proclamation, and much more.
Today, a US service member will be laid to rest. Alexia Walters (LEX 18) reports:
The funeral for a soldier who died while serving in Iraq will be held Monday in Madison County. It follows a day of mourning, as family and friends gathered for the visitation for Specialist Ryan Dennis Orin Riley at the Richmond Church of Christ on Sunday.
According to the Department of Defense, the 22-year-old died while serving in Iraq in a non-combat related incident.
Family and friends say they’re devastated, but they’re holding on tight to their memories of Riley.
The governor's office issued the following statement last week:
Ryan Dennis Orin Riley died serving in Iraq, serving in the Iraq War. The 22-year-old died in year sixteen of the Iraq War. The Iraq War never should have started to begin with and it certainly should have ended long ago.
Why, in the United States, do we not have politicians who can actually lead and end these wars? We're in yet another endless presidential election cycle and where are the leaders?
Betts J. Gorsky is concerned about the voters and writes THE PRESS HERALD:
L.D. 211, “An Act to Open Maine’s Primaries,” is a common-sense proposal that would improve our electoral process by boosting civic engagement and increasing voter turnout, especially among young voters and veterans, many of whom have not enrolled in any political party. I encourage all voters to support this reform.
I strongly believe that democracy works best when more people are encouraged to participate. Maine’s closed primary law expressly prohibits 35 percent of registered voters from participating in primary elections because they have not chosen to become part of a political party. This is particularly discouraging for young voters. Fifty percent of millennials “describe themselves as political independents,” according to Pew Research, and, as such, are disenfranchised by our closed-primary law.
Maine is one of only 11 states with “member-only” elections that limit participation in primary elections to voters who register with a political party. Voters who have lived in other states are even more likely to be stymied by our “closed primaries” system. This inconsistency disproportionately impacts those voters, such as veterans, who move states frequently. Similar to millennials, 49 percent of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans aren’t enrolled in either major party and so are disenfranchised by Maine’s current closed primary law.
Where are the leaders? Kevin Hardy (DES MOINES REGISTER) reports:
Campaigning in Iowa on Sunday, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders sought to distinguish his legislative record from that of former Vice President Joe Biden.
Today, a US service member will be laid to rest. Alexia Walters (LEX 18) reports:
The funeral for a soldier who died while serving in Iraq will be held Monday in Madison County. It follows a day of mourning, as family and friends gathered for the visitation for Specialist Ryan Dennis Orin Riley at the Richmond Church of Christ on Sunday.
According to the Department of Defense, the 22-year-old died while serving in Iraq in a non-combat related incident.
Family and friends say they’re devastated, but they’re holding on tight to their memories of Riley.
The governor's office issued the following statement last week:
Gov. Bevin Orders Flags to Half-Staff Monday in Honor of Kentucky Soldier Killed in Iraq
Media Contact: Nicole Burton
502-564-2611 Nicole.Burton@ky.gov
FRANKFORT, Ky. (May 2, 2019) – Gov. Matt Bevin has directed that U.S. and Kentucky flags at all state office buildings be lowered to half-staff on Monday, May 6, 2019, in honor of a Kentucky soldier who died in Iraq while supporting Operation Inherent Resolve.
According to the Department of Defense, Spc. Ryan Dennis Orin Riley, 22, of Richmond, Kentucky, died April 20, 2019 in Ninawa Province, Iraq, in a non-combat related incident.
Spc. Riley was assigned to 2nd Battallion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
Services for Spc. Riley will be held at 1 p.m. EDT on Monday, May 6, 2019 at Richmond Church of Christ (1500 Lancaster Road, Richmond), with burial to follow with full military honors at Madison County Memorial Gardens (210 West Rice Lane, Richmond).
Gov. Bevin encourages individuals, businesses, organizations and government agencies to join in this tribute of lowering the flag in honor of Spc. Riley.
Flag status information is available at http://governor.ky.gov/flag-status.
502-564-2611 Nicole.Burton@ky.gov
FRANKFORT, Ky. (May 2, 2019) – Gov. Matt Bevin has directed that U.S. and Kentucky flags at all state office buildings be lowered to half-staff on Monday, May 6, 2019, in honor of a Kentucky soldier who died in Iraq while supporting Operation Inherent Resolve.
According to the Department of Defense, Spc. Ryan Dennis Orin Riley, 22, of Richmond, Kentucky, died April 20, 2019 in Ninawa Province, Iraq, in a non-combat related incident.
Spc. Riley was assigned to 2nd Battallion, 32nd Field Artillery Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
Services for Spc. Riley will be held at 1 p.m. EDT on Monday, May 6, 2019 at Richmond Church of Christ (1500 Lancaster Road, Richmond), with burial to follow with full military honors at Madison County Memorial Gardens (210 West Rice Lane, Richmond).
Gov. Bevin encourages individuals, businesses, organizations and government agencies to join in this tribute of lowering the flag in honor of Spc. Riley.
Flag status information is available at http://governor.ky.gov/flag-status.
Ryan Dennis Orin Riley died serving in Iraq, serving in the Iraq War. The 22-year-old died in year sixteen of the Iraq War. The Iraq War never should have started to begin with and it certainly should have ended long ago.
Why, in the United States, do we not have politicians who can actually lead and end these wars? We're in yet another endless presidential election cycle and where are the leaders?
Betts J. Gorsky is concerned about the voters and writes THE PRESS HERALD:
L.D. 211, “An Act to Open Maine’s Primaries,” is a common-sense proposal that would improve our electoral process by boosting civic engagement and increasing voter turnout, especially among young voters and veterans, many of whom have not enrolled in any political party. I encourage all voters to support this reform.
I strongly believe that democracy works best when more people are encouraged to participate. Maine’s closed primary law expressly prohibits 35 percent of registered voters from participating in primary elections because they have not chosen to become part of a political party. This is particularly discouraging for young voters. Fifty percent of millennials “describe themselves as political independents,” according to Pew Research, and, as such, are disenfranchised by our closed-primary law.
Maine is one of only 11 states with “member-only” elections that limit participation in primary elections to voters who register with a political party. Voters who have lived in other states are even more likely to be stymied by our “closed primaries” system. This inconsistency disproportionately impacts those voters, such as veterans, who move states frequently. Similar to millennials, 49 percent of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans aren’t enrolled in either major party and so are disenfranchised by Maine’s current closed primary law.
Where are the leaders? Kevin Hardy (DES MOINES REGISTER) reports:
Campaigning in Iowa on Sunday, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders sought to distinguish his legislative record from that of former Vice President Joe Biden.
At
a town hall event in Spencer, a woman in the crowd told the Vermont
senator that she was trying to decide between Sanders and Biden.
"I like what I heard today," she said at the Clay County Regional Events Center. "How are you different than Biden?"
Sanders smiled and promised to "answer that in a couple ways."
[. . .]
- He said international trade agreements have been "disastrous" for American workers and farmers, particularly pointing to NAFTA and the United State's agreement to normalize trade relations with China. "I led the effort against those trade agreements," Sanders said. "Joe voted for them."
- Echoing his critique of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from the 2016 contest, Sanders also held up the vice president's vote to authorize the war in Iraq, which he said was one of the most significant Congressional votes in recent years. "I voted against it," he said. "Joe voted for it."
- Sanders also pointed out the vice president's vote to deregulate Wall Street by supporting the Gramm-Leach-Billey bill in 1999. "I voted against it," Sanders said.
Bernie Sanders is clearly a leader as is US House Rep Tulsi Gabbard. Joe Biden? Not so much.
Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Joe Biden discovers his voting record" went up last night.
Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Joe Biden discovers his voting record" went up last night.
Yes, Joe's voting record is a piece of crap. Glen Ford (BLACK AGENDA REPORT) explains:
Even
if Obama openly endorses him at some point, Biden has his own record,
and it’s that of a consistent corporate stooge. particularly of the real
estate and banking industries, and as one of the architects of the mass
incarceration state.
Joe Biden didn’t just cast a vote for the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act , also known as the Clinton Crime bill. Joe Biden wrote the bill, including but not limited to provisions that created
-
no less than 60 new federal death penalty offenses
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a ban on Pell grants for prisoners, from which states took their cues and enacted similar bans on higher education for prisoners.
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$9 billion in new funding for prisons
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sex offender registries to ensure lifelong stigmatization of the convicted
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3 strikes provisions
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new funding for “boot camps” and juvenile prisons
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funding for 100,000 new police officers
Biden’s
bill resulted in a spike in mass incarceration which of course affected
African American and Latinx communities more profoundly than any
others. The damage to families and lives of course continues today.
For
many years, Joe Biden was known as the Senator from MBNA, the giant
credit card entity that was bought by Bank of American in 2006 and
re-sold to Lloyd’s Bank UK in 2016. Biden was responsible for the
provisions that made it impossible to discharge student debt via
bankruptcy, thus shackling millions of people with ballooning student
debt that lasts till their forties and fifties. Student debt of course
weighs heaviest upon black women.
Joe
Biden is an unwavering supporter of apartheid Israel, just like his
buddy Barack, and an unrepentant warmonger like just about all of his
Democrat colleagues in the House, the Senate, and among presidential
candidates. Until Biden’s entrance, Bernie Sanders was the clear
Democratic front runner. That’s over. The polls haven’t broken Biden’s
black support by age, but it’s safe to assume that Bernie still leads
among younger black voters, while Biden’s voters tend to be older.
The truth's all over Twitter as well:
Check out this Biden 2020 parody page (it's outperforming his own campaign page)
Joe Biden -
AGAINST Gay Marriage
FOR Mass Incarceration
AGAINST Abortion Rights
AGAINST School Busing
FOR Iraq War
FOR Death Penalty & Harsh Drug Sentences
Joe Biden: “I Like Dick Cheney”
A war criminal who lied to the American people about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq to start an illegal war that killed thousands of American soldiers and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. And why? To enrich himself.
youtube.com/watch?v=uuzBMU…
Barack Obama criticized Hillary Clinton in 2008 over her ties to lobbyists and corporate donors, Wall Street, Walmart, unfair trade deals, the bankruptcy bill, and her support of the Iraq War.
Joe Biden shares a lot of those same vulnerabilities.
JOE BIDEN
Wrote Crime Bill
Wrote Patriot Act core
Anti Medicare4All
Anti legalizing pot
Anti Net-Neutrality
Pro TPP
Voted for NAFTA
Voted for DOMA
Voted for Iraq War
Known as “senator from MBNA”
Anita Hill
Plagiarized
Gaffe factory
Creepy Videos
NOPE
Under no circumstances would I vote for handsy Joe Biden. The guy is a Republican lite with a D next to his name.
-Voting for the Iraq war alone is disqualifying
Joe Biden tried to run away as quick as possible once
.
The DNC wants you to vote for a candidate who:
-was once against gay marriage
-passed a harsh crime bill
-once believed in segregation, sought out racist support
-was all for the Iraq war
-helped pass legislation to spy on Americans
-was once against abortions
His name, Joe Biden
“We need better judgment when we decide to send our young men and women into war…they can’t turn around and say: ‘You supported this.’ That’s part of the reason why I think I would be the strongest nominee.” -Barack Obama, 2008
Joe Biden voted for the war in Iraq.
Joe Biden’s embrace of war criminal Dick Cheney shows that he lacks the moral compass to be POTUS. Bernie Sanders voted AGAINST the Iraq War when it was unpopular to do so, demonstrating true moral leadership.
Joe Biden is a scary politician. He's not the only one. Check out the kook from Florida.
I didn't realize that Marco was also co-President of the United States. Apparently he is. He didn't even win his party's primary last go round in 2016 but, somehow, he ended up co-president of the United States.
RUDAW reported:
Armed actors not under state control are one of the greatest threats to Iraq in the post-ISIS phase, argued a top US Department of State official on Thursday.
"To ensure durable stability, we must support Iraqi-led efforts to bring undisciplined armed actors that are not under the control of the state under full state control," said Denise Natali, the assistant secretary for the Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Efforts.
She was speaking at an event at the Washington, D.C.-based think-tank Hudson Institute on Post-ISIS Stabilization and Reconstruction in Syria and Iraq.
Militias through the conflict with the Islamic State (ISIS) had strong links to Iran-backed groups and their loyalty to Baghdad has been a question for successive prime ministers — Haider al-Abadi and now Adil Abdul-Mahdi.
Militias are not the biggest threat, Marco Rubio is. And his remarks come as JSA reports, "The Trump administration is deploying air and sea strike forces to the Middle East in response to what it described as “troubling and escalatory indications and warnings” from Iran."
XINHUA reports:
Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Iraq Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert extended on Monday her greetings to all the Iraqi people, particularly Muslims, on the onset of the holy month of Ramadan.
"Ramadan is a month of peace and reflection, where families and friends get together. It is when Muslims give and forgive, turn their thoughts to the less fortunate and those who are suffering," Hennis-Plasschaert, who also heads the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), said in a statement.
Hennis-Plasschaert said that she, in particularly, sympathizes with "those Iraqis who live in the holy month without their loved ones who lost them in the conflict or who are waiting for the return of the missing. We feel for those who remain displaced, living in camps or unable to return home," according to the statement.
Of course, over the weekend, Shi'ite cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr declared that Ramadan would kick off on Tuesday. And, of course, over the weekend, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani also declared that Ramadan would start on Tuesday.
The following sites updated:
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Iowa Cozy1 hour ago
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Joe Biden is not the answer1 hour ago
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Venezuelan Stand-Off9 hours ago
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Sunday Reads16 hours ago
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The greed23 hours ago