Monday, August 08, 2022

Low Carb Chocolate Cheesecake in the Kitchen



Introduction

Lovely Chocolate
Minutes to Prepare: 15
Minutes to Cook: 40
Number of Servings: 12

Ingredients

    16 oz Cream Cheese1/2 cups of heavy cream
    1 pkg Sugar Free Chocolate Instant Pudding mix
    1/2 cup Splenda (reserve 3 tbls for sauce)
    1 tsp Vanilla Extract
    2 Eggs

    Sauce
    2 tbls Butter
    4 tbls Cocoa
    3tbls Splenda

Directions

Sauce
In microwave or stove top melt together Butter,Cocoa,and Splenda (3 tbls), use this to drizzle over cake after it comes out of oven.

Cake

Mix cream cheese, splenda, vanilla, and eggs together. Set aside.
Mix the cream and pudding together in a seperate bowel. When mixed add it to the cream cheese mixture. Mix on high until completly blended.

Take a pie plate and spra with Pam. Place cheese cake mixture in pan, bake uncovered for at 350 for 35 to 40 minutes. Remove from oven and drizzle Chocolate mixture oer top. Refrigerate and serve cold.


There are 12 slices and each slice if 5.3 grams of carbs.

 


I don't often note desserts.  And tonight, I'm noting an older WSWS article, this is from Tom Carter's 2020 obit for RBG:


The real Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a more complex figure than the national saint being presented in the media.

At the time of her appointment to the Supreme Court in 1993, Ginsburg was not considered a “progressive icon” but a “moderate-to-conservative” judge, occupying “center” positions acceptable to both Democratic and Republican parties of the time. On her nomination, President Bill Clinton stated, “Ruth Bader Ginsburg cannot be called a liberal or conservative. She has proved herself too thoughtful for such labels.” She was confirmed by a Senate vote of 96-3.

The New York Times, which is now hailing Ginsburg as a hero of radical and trailblazing reformism, was far more restrained in its own coverage of her nomination. In an article published in the Times on June 15, 1993, journalist Richard L. Berke presented Ginsburg as occupying a “center” position between Republicans and Democrats: “In her 13 years on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the 60-year-old Brooklyn-born judge has occupied an unpredictable center on a panel that has grown into rigidly hostile ideological camps. She has ruled in favor of abortion rights, but has also criticized the 1973 Supreme Court decision that made abortion a Constitutional right [i.e., Roe v. Wade], saying it went too far, too fast.”

As a Supreme Court justice since 1993, Ginsburg proved herself a reliable steward of the longterm interests of American imperialism, with her jurisprudence conforming to that same “moderate-to-conservative” inclination for which she was known on the D.C. Circuit.

In 2014, for example, Ginsburg joined a 9-0 unanimous Supreme Court decision granting qualified immunity to the police officers who killed Donald Rickard and Kelly Allen.

Police had attempted to pull over Donald Rickard in July 2004 because he had only one working tail light. Rickard unsuccessfully attempted to flee, his car eventually spinning out into a parking lot where police tried to box him in with their cruisers. When Rickard maneuvered his car in an effort to drive away, police opened fire with a hail of 15 bullets, causing the car to crash. Rickard was struck by gunfire and killed, and so was Kelly Allen, who was seated in the passenger seat.

Rickard’s daughter sued the police for wrongful death, alleging that the use of lethal force was excessive and unreasonable. The police claimed “qualified immunity,” but both the federal district court and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Rickard’s family in allowing the case to proceed.

When the police appealed to the United States Supreme Court, the Obama administration sided with the police, with Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli, Jr. filing a brief arguing for immunity.

In May 2014, the Supreme Court unanimously granted qualified immunity to the police, and Rickard’s daughter’s case was thrown out of court without a trial. In the context of already endemic police brutality, the decision was a green light for more police killings. Together with supposed “progressive icon” Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the unanimous decision was also joined by Obama appointees Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

In addition to the Rickard case, Ginsburg joined a decision in 2014 expanding the doctrine of qualified immunity from police to paid agents of the state who are not full-time employees, and in 2017, signed off on a decision permitting Donald Trump’s anti-Muslim travel ban to go into effect.

In February 2012, Ginsburg traveled to Egypt on behalf of the State Department. At that time, Egypt was ruled by a US-backed military junta, which had been installed in the wake of mass protests that deposed dictator Hosni Mubarak.

Ginsburg’s role, which she discussed with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and which was announced by State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland, was to lend credibility to the junta’s promise to develop a new constitution and make a “transition to democracy.”

In reality, what followed was not a “transition to democracy” but mass executions of dissidents and political opponents. In just one day in 2014, 700 death sentences were handed down.

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

Monday, August 8, 2022.  Amnesty International tells some unpleasant truths about Ukraine, Joe Biden plans to send a billion more in US tax dollars to Ukraine, real protests spring up in Iraq, and much more.


Clara Weiss (WSWS) reported last Friday:


The human rights organization Amnesty International released a report Thursday showing that “Ukrainian forces have put civilians in harm’s way by establishing bases and operating weapons systems in populated residential areas, including in schools and hospitals.”  

Amnesty International’s findings corroborate an earlier report by the United Nations which also provided evidence that the Ukrainian army has been using civilians as human shields in the conflict. Both of these recent reports come on top of extensive documentation of war crimes committed by the Ukrainian army and its neo-fascist paramilitary forces, particularly against Russian prisoners of war.

Written in cautious language, Amnesty International’s report is a damning exposure of the criminal character of the imperialist proxy war in Ukraine in which the civilian population is but a pawn for the imperialist powers and their lackeys in the Ukrainian oligarchy and military.

As one resident of the city of Bakhmut told Amnesty International, “We have no say in what the military does, but we pay the price.”

The report was compiled by researchers investigating Russian strikes in the Kharkiv, Donbas and Mykolaiv regions between April and July. In the words of Amnesty International’s Secretary General Agnès Callamard, “We have documented a pattern of Ukrainian forces putting civilians at risk and violating the laws of war when they operate in populated areas.”

This pattern includes the use of hospitals as de facto military bases—a clear violation of international law—which Amnesty International has confirmed for five locations. According to the report, “In two towns, dozens of soldiers were resting, milling about, and eating meals in hospitals. In another town, soldiers were firing from near the hospital.”

The report also found that the Ukrainian army “has routinely set up bases in schools in towns and villages in Donbas and in the Mykolaiv area.” While not entirely prohibited by international law, the use of schools and residential buildings by the military is only deemed legitimate when the army has no other options. Moreover, the military is obliged to do everything in its power to minimize civilian casualties, including through evacuations and by giving effective warnings of attacks that might endanger civilians.  

However, the researchers found evidence that Ukrainian forces had launched “strikes from within populated residential areas as well as basing themselves in civilian buildings” that were, in most of the documented cases, kilometers away from the actual front lines. According to Amnesty, there were “viable alternatives … that would not endanger civilians.” Moreover, the organization was “not aware” that the armed forces had asked or assisted civilians to evacuate nearby buildings, which constitutes a failure to take all feasible precautions to protect civilians.  

The report noted, “At 22 out of 29 schools visited, Amnesty International researchers either found soldiers using the premises or found evidence of current or prior military activity—including the presence of military fatigues, discarded munitions, army ration packets and military vehicles.”

The report continues, “In a town east of Odesa, Amnesty International witnessed a broad pattern of Ukrainian soldiers using civilian areas for lodging and as staging areas, including basing armoured vehicles under trees in purely residential neighbourhoods, and using two schools located in densely populated residential areas. Russian strikes near the schools killed and injured several civilians between April and late June—including a child and an older woman killed in a rocket attack on their home on 28 June.”

The response by the Ukrainian government to the report has been nothing short of hysterical. Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky denounced the report in an address to the nation, claiming that it turned the “victim” into the “aggressor.” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba fumed on Twitter that the report “distorts reality, draws false moral equivalence between the aggressor and the victim, and boosts Russia’s disinformation efforts.”

In reality, Amnesty International denounced Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in the report but insisted that this “does not exempt the Ukrainian military from respecting international humanitarian law.” 


Does this meen Zelensky won't speak at the September 12th Emmys?  If you've forgotten, the despot was glorified -- as was his nazi regime -- by some members of the Academy Awards (Sean Penn, Amy Schumer, et al) and they brought a little trollop up on stage to let her speak a bunch of garbage.  If she'd spoken about three ways, she might have been on firmer ground.  Instead, she wanted you to go rah-rah for the illegal war.  Now this was sad for the Sean Penns who'd advocated that Zalinsky himself should be on stage.  But the Academy showed some restraint.  None was present at the Grammy presentation and they were all in on Ukraine.  


This latest news will put a damper on the tribute the Emmys could have done.  


A lot of idiots who damn well should have known better cheered on this war and they need to be held accountable for it.  


Some idiots have tried to attack Amnesty for the report but the organization isn't retracting it.  Dave DeCamp (ANTIWAR.COM) noted yesterday:


Amnesty International has come under pressure after releasing a report last week that said Ukraine’s fighting tactics are endangering civilians. The group said Sunday that it’s sorry for the “distress and anger” the release caused but said it “fully stands” behind the findings.

“Amnesty International deeply regrets the distress and anger that our press release on the Ukrainian military’s fighting tactics has caused,” Amnesty told Reuters.

“Amnesty International’s priority in this and in any conflict is ensuring that civilians are protected. Indeed, this was our sole objective when releasing this latest piece of research. While we fully stand by our findings, we regret the pain caused,” the group added.


Despite reality, more US tax dollars are about to be stolen from the American people and sent to Ukraine.  Kyle Anzalone (ANTIWAR.COM) notes, "Reuters reports unnamed officials in the Biden administration say a new $1 billion weapons package is waiting for the president’s signature. The next arms transfer will be the 18th since Russia invaded Ukraine in February."  And you can't keep throwing away US tax dollars without cutting and gutting the safety net.  Andre Damon (WSWS) reports:

 

Last week, Republican Senator Ron Johnson called for ending Social Security and Medicare as entitlement programs, instead transferring them into the discretionary budget where they would be gutted.

Johnson’s proposal follows a similar call by Florida Senator Rick Scott, who earlier this year called for putting Social Security and Medicare up for renewal every five years.

Social Security and Medicare spending is allocated as mandatory spending, funded by workers’ payroll taxes, to prevent them from being pillaged.  Transferring these programs to the discretionary budget would mean their abolition, slashing US life expectancy as millions of retirees die in poverty and from preventable disease.

“If you qualify for the entitlement, you just get it no matter what the cost,” Johnson said. “And our problem in this country is that [mandatory spending takes up] more than 70% of our federal budget, of our federal spending.”

Yes, retired workers are “entitled” to these benefits, because they have been paying for them their entire lives. Out of every dollar workers have earned, they paid eight cents to finance their Social Security and Medicare benefits, matched by equal payments from their employer.

But Johnson and Scott, lackeys for the billionaires that rule over America, are demanding that these funds that workers have been paying into over a lifetime of toil and struggle be stolen from them to make the oligarchy richer and to fund America’s new “forever wars.”

Social Security was created in 1935 as part of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, in response to a wave of social struggles during the Great Depression. Medicare was created in 1965 during President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society reforms, against the backdrop of the Civil Rights movement and a strike wave gripping large portions of the country.

With both of these programs, the leaders of American capitalism sought to convince workers that the capitalist system was capable of providing for the needs of society and preventing the mass poverty and early death of millions of elderly people.

Johnson, Scott and their co-conspirators are making the opposite clear: Capitalism means social misery for the workers and the unending enrichment for the capitalist class.

These senators have articulated as a positive proposal what has been a goal of generations of Democratic and Republican politicians, military strategists and leading think tanks. In 2010, Democratic President Barack Obama formed the bipartisan “National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility,” chaired by former Republican Senator Alan Simpson and Democrat Erskine Bowles, a former chief of staff in the Clinton administration.

The commission called for slashing funding for Social Security and Medicare. On the basis of its proposals, the federal government oversaw a squeeze on social spending at the federal, state and local levels, together with significant cuts to Medicare and Social Security.  

Now, amid the social crisis triggered by the pandemic, the eruption of war with Russia and the conflict with China, America’s financial oligarchy is renewing its calls for the dismantling of these bedrock social safety net programs.



Meanwhile, in Iraq, a country the US government spent close to a trillion dollars destroying, RUDAW reports:


Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi on Sunday met with Shiite cleric Ammar al-Hakim, head of Iraq's National Wisdom Movement, discussing a variety of subjects including the country’s current political and economic status, according to a statement from the cleric’s office.

The two highlighted the importance of “keeping the interests of citizens and state institutions away from the disputes of political forces,” and “the reformation of the political system” as recent calls for new parliamentary elections amid mass protests of Muqtada al-Sadr supporters cast further doubt on the political stability of Iraq.



While breasty Moqtada al-Sadr and his goons continue their faux-test, real protesters -- young Shi'ites -- took to the streets over the power crisis.  Mina Aldroubi (THE NATIONAL) reports:


Iraqis on Monday protested for the third consecutive day against power cuts, water shortages and poor water quality in the south as temperatures soared above 50°C across the country.

The blackout was caused by the failure of a power line and a fire at a power plant, which affected southern provinces and the oil-rich city of Basra. Groups of young Iraqis set fire to tyres to block roads as they demanded the return of electricity to the city.

Power had been reportedly restored in some districts of the port city by Monday afternoon.

Basra governor Asaad Al Eidani said the third power cut in a short space of time was "due to a fire at Khor Al Zubayr station".

Khor Al Zubayr produces up to 500 megawatts of Basra's 3,000MW electricity demand.

Mr Al Eidani said the fire was put out and the damage repaired.

The country's Electricity Ministry last week announced a state of "general alert" in the face of rising temperatures, as it predicted an increase in demand for services.

At the weekend, protesters tried to storm one of Basra's largest power plants after the blackout and similar protests were reported near power stations in nearby Maysan province.


Some Tweets on the protest:

People in Basra and Dhi Qar took to the streets over frequent power outages. #Iraq #Power #Protest



Protests continue in #Basra today, as environmental conditions worsen & power grids collapse. say Ahwari protesters demanding water + an end to the humanitarian crisis were met with force from Iraqi security forces yday, defending the province's rich oil ports. #Iraq
Quote Tweet
Marshescollective
@MarshArabs
·
security forces are besieging the Mu'ail area of Hawiza Marsh and arresting The Ahwari protesters who are demanding water and an end to the humanitarian crisis in Ahwar, The Iraqi army is closing all of the area's ports in concrete, setting up checkpoints
Show this thread


National Grip (British company that supplies electricity and gas) collapsed in the south from Iraq. Dozens of citizens took to the streets to protest against the deterioration of electricity, blocking several routes in the city of Basra. #Iraq #Basra #Protest



#IRAQ Several dozens of protesters on Monday staged a demonstration on a main highway in Iraq’s southern city of Basra to protest lack of electricity and public services while the country experiences an extreme heatwave.



The following sites updated: