I don't watch much on Netflix. The whole family would gather to binge Sense8. My husband and I watch Grace & Frankie. Sense8 got cancelled. Grace & Frankie goes off after the next season airs.
That leaves Aytpical -- Jennifer Jason Leigh's show. I really enjoy it.
So I'm not thrilled that Netflix just announced they're giving it a fourth and final season of ten episodes.
Does Netflix not get that they piss people off when they cancel a show and that their entire business model is built around keeping people happy?
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Monday:
Monday, February 24, 2020. Bernie Sanders wins Nevada, Joe Biden is
desperate for a win in South Carolina -- actually, for a win anywhere,
the Iraqi Parliament moves to vote on the prime minister designate's
Cabinet, and much more.
Over the weekend, the front runner for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, Bernie Sanders, won another caucus -- Nevada. Jake Johnson (COMMON DREAMS) reports:
In an appearance on MSNBC Sunday morning just hours after Sen. Bernie Sanders' decisive victory in the Nevada Democratic presidential caucus, author and political commentator Anand Giridharadas said the senator's win could represent the dawn of "a new era in American life" and called out establishment forces—including MSNBC—for reacting like "out-of-touch aristocrats in a dying aristocracy."
"Last night was a historic win that I think a lot of us are still struggling to understand," said Giridharadas. "Something is happening in America right now that actually does not fit our mental models. It certainly doesn't fit the mental models of a lot of people on TV."
Over the weekend, the front runner for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, Bernie Sanders, won another caucus -- Nevada. Jake Johnson (COMMON DREAMS) reports:
In an appearance on MSNBC Sunday morning just hours after Sen. Bernie Sanders' decisive victory in the Nevada Democratic presidential caucus, author and political commentator Anand Giridharadas said the senator's win could represent the dawn of "a new era in American life" and called out establishment forces—including MSNBC—for reacting like "out-of-touch aristocrats in a dying aristocracy."
"Last night was a historic win that I think a lot of us are still struggling to understand," said Giridharadas. "Something is happening in America right now that actually does not fit our mental models. It certainly doesn't fit the mental models of a lot of people on TV."
Liza Featherstone Retweeted
Nevada entrance polls: @BernieSanders won “men & women, whites & Latinos, voters 17-29, 30-44 and 45-65, those w & w/o college degrees, liberal Dems (by a lot) & moderate/conservatives (narrowly), union & non-union households.”
The idea that Bernie only speaks to a few is dead.
Bernie took 47% of the votes in Nevada. The distant second was Joe Biden who took 21% of the votes. It's not going well for Joe. Igor Bobic (HUFFINGTON POST) observes:
It’s come to this: Former Vice President Joe Biden badly needs a
primary victory to keep alive his chances of winning the Democratic
nomination, and his firewall state of South Carolina is finally heading
to the polls later this week.
But in a place where he once looked unassailable (with support as high as 46% at one point),
Biden is suddenly facing a competitive fight as other candidates in the
race continue to make inroads with Black voters, his core constituency.
A disappointing finish here would be devastating to his campaign and
his path forward, especially after repeated assurances from his staff
that he was positioned to do best in more diverse communities like those
in the Palmetto State.
“It’s not looking great. He has the opposite of momentum,” South
Carolina Democratic strategist Tyler Jones told HuffPost. “He’s gotta
win South Carolina convincingly to stay in the race. Expectations are
also very high for him, which they set for themselves. It’s win or go
home for him.”
At THE ATLANTIC, Ibram X. Kendi takes on the myth that moderates win. Lies are all that prop up Joe Biden's campaign. Becket Adams (WASHINGTON EXAMINER) notes one lie that should be front and center at the next debate:
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s penchant for misstating the facts is so severe his opponents often question his mental acuity.
Biden told an audience at a recent campaign event in South Carolina that he was arrested decades ago in South Africa for attempting to meet with then-imprisoned Nelson Mandela.
“This day, 30 years ago, Nelson Mandela walked out of prison and entered into discussions about apartheid,” the former vice president said. “I had the great honor of meeting him. I had the great honor of being arrested with our U.N. ambassador on the streets of Soweto, trying to get to see him on Robbens Island.”
Biden has told this story at least three times this month, including a version that pegs the year of his alleged arrest at around the time he proposed to his wife in 1977.
There is only one problem with the former vice president’s story: No one seems to have any idea what he is talking about, least of all the aforementioned U.N. ambassador, Andrew Young, who told the New York Times, “I was never arrested and I don’t think he was, either.”
The Times scoured for evidence of the supposed Soweto incident. It came up empty-handed, which is astonishing considering Biden was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1973, four years prior to his alleged arrest in South Africa. It should not be difficult to find evidence of a member of the U.S. Congress being forcibly detained in a foreign country during an overseas trip in the late 1970s. Also, there is the fact that Soweto is roughly 900 miles away from Robbens Island.
The Biden campaign declined to respond to five separate requests for comment from the Times, which obviously does not bode well for the credibility of the anecdote.
It never happened. Never. He's a liar. He's a liar who will say anything. He is not to be trusted. He is a War Hawk and, as he flounders, the other War Hawks rush forward to protect him. Tyler MacDonald (INQUISITR) reports:
After Bernie Sanders‘ victory in Nevada, conservative commentator Bill Kristol called on former President Barack Obama to hit the campaign trail in South Carolina for his former Vice President, Joe Biden, and help him take down the Vermont Senator.
Bill Kristol is a raging idiot who should be barred from public discourse due to the blood on his hands. We should also grasp that any candidate who can't win a state without Barack stepping in to campaign for them isn't someone we need on the ticket.
In other news, Joe Biden has claimed that Russian bots are attacking him on Facebook. Then it was pointed out to Joe that he was holding an Etch-a-Sketch.
Jon Queally (COMMON DREAMS) notes:
Now running as the presumptive frontrunner in the Democratic presidential primary, Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday morning unveiled a sweeping new proposal that would guarantee high-quality child care and then pre-kindergarten education to every child—regardless of income or status—in the United States.
Citing figures that show the average American family with young children spends $10,000 per year on childcare—a burden that eats as much as 35 percent out of the annual budget of low-income families' annual budget—the detailed early childhood plan released by the Sanders campaign seeks to address the crisis and economic hardship by providing free child care starting at infancy and pre-K beginning at age three.
"Childcare must be guaranteed for every child regardless of their parents' income, just like K-12 education," said Sanders in a statement. "We know that the first four years of a child's life are the most important years of human development, so it is unconscionable that in the wealthiest country in the world, we do not properly invest in early childhood education." Sanders said.
Sanders—who has achieved frontrunner status in the Democratic 2020 race on a platform of universal programs like Medicare for All and denouncing "grotesque" levels of inequality—releases his early childhood plan just two days after a landslide win in the Nevada caucus and with Super Tuesday just over a week away on March 3.
In a study released last month, the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) found that American families spend approximately $42 billion annually on child care for their children. That figure does not include the $34 billion spent by federal and state governments on child care support systems, services, and subsidies. According to EPI, parents of young children forgo $30 to 35 billion each year in income due to the high cost of early childhood care and education, a figure that translates into an estimated $4.2 billion in lost federal tax revenue.
Corporate media is excited that, on Wednesday, Jim Clyburn will endorse Joe Biden. At a certain point, it just doesn't matter. Barbara Boxer was popular in my state while she was in the Senate but with each re-election, she meant less and less to new voters. Clyburn's endorsement would help Joe sew up the elderly -- but I thought he already had a grip on them? Clyburn is the establishment and has been that for years. His endorsement will not drive any young voters to Joe.
Really Quid Pro Gropin’ Joe? Where’s yours and your sons true tax returns at you goon!? Don’t lecture us when you lie and cheat to save on yours there big guy!!
In Iraq, the protests continue. And the protesters continue to be targeted.
Anti-government protests continued in Iraq on Sunday, with over 1,000 students marching through the centre of Baghdad.
"Our soul and blood, be sacrificed to you Iraq" was chanted one day after at least two protesters were injured in confrontations with riot police
Hannaa Jassem, a 24-year-old nurse, works as a nurse in a hospital in Iraq’s capital during the week, and volunteers at its main protest site at weekends.
#Iraq #IraqProtests
Iraqi nurse spends her weekends stitching wounds at protest site - Iraq News - Local News - Baghdadpost
Lastly, AFP reports:
Iraqi lawmakers on Monday scheduled
a confidence vote for the government of prime minister-designate
Mohammad Allawi later this week, as the US called for the premier to
protect its troops.
Allawi, who was named as a consensus candidate by Iraq’s divided
political parties on February 1, had called for a Monday vote, following
months of protests demanding a complete government overhaul.
His request was backed by his predecessor Adel Abdul Mahdi, deputy
parliament speaker Hassan Karim Al Kaabi, and Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr
who threatened to organise mass rallies outside parliament unless
lawmakers back Allawi’s government in a confidence vote this week.
Lawmakers decided to schedule the vote for Thursday, according to a statement from parliament.