Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Anthony Rapp's story is falling apart

Marcia usually covers Kevin Spacey but she's doing La Brea tonight.  I saw some coverage because they were talking about the case -- Anthony Rapp is claiming Kevin did something to him -- at work and I talked about it with Marcia.  She said go for it, so I'm going to write here about it.  (But it's Marcia's topic so I don't plan to make this a regular feature.)

At my work, people don't believe Anthony Rapp.  And these aren't Spacey fans.  (I honestly do not remember seeing anything he's been in other than Working Girl, sorry.  Not a fan but not an enemy.)  

I also think Rapp suing for $40 million is more than ridiculous.  Does he think his claim is worth that amount?  Women (and men) have been raped.  Even if his story is true, it doesn't warrant forty million.  I'd say it really doesn't warrant anything except maybe his suing his parents if his story is true because they shouldn't have allowed their son at an adult's apartment after midnight.

Okay, so here's one of my big sticking points, from AP's coverage:


During the direct examination, Rapp recalled that when he was still in high school, he went to see a movie starring Spacey and realized how much he was traumatized. He said he felt like he’d been “stuck with a cattle prod. Like I jumped out of my seat. Adrenaline. Sweaty palms.”



If he truly was a year ahead in school, he would have graduated in the spring of 1988.  (Press materials pre-Spacy allegations -- such as this 2017 report from The Chicago Tribune have him bragging that he was a year ahead in school.)  So, help me out, what film did Kevin star in at that time?  He wasn't a lead until the 90s.  I do remember him from Working Girl.  He has one scene.  He's Bob from arbitrage and Melanie Griffith is led to believe he's got a real job opportunity for her.  So she gets into the limo -- his only scene is in the limo -- and he comes on to her and she sprays him with champagne and gets out of the limo.  Alec Baldwin has a small role in that film as Melanie's boyfriend.  "Small" is generous to describe Kevin's scene -- which is one scene and a very short one at that.

Anthony Rapp has never come across as honest to me.  Sorry.  He was picked up, he says, by Kevin in Kevin's bedroom.  There was no kissing, no genitals were touched.  I don't get it.  Has he never dated?  I mean, we all have the right to say no.  But I've said no.  And all he's described to me is that he was -- trauma -- forced to say "no."  

I don't get the big deal.  You're 14 and you shouldn't be at an adult's apartment to begin with.  But he went to a party.  Then he ended up the only one there because he let himself into Kevin's bedroom -- this is Anthony's story.  I'm sorry, kid, but if you were my son or daughter and came home with your story, I would have told you that you're lucky you got out of there and told you that you never go into an adult's bedroom by yourself, let alone end up the only person left in the apartment besides the adult.  That's not victim blaming, that's common sense.  And where the hell were his parents?


His stories just don't add up.  This is from Wikipedia:

In October 2022, it was revealed that Rapp gave an inaccurate description of the apartment where the alleged sexual abuse took place during his 2021 court deposition, with floor plans revealing that Spacey's home at the time was actually a one-room studio rather than a larger apartment with a bedroom.[46][47] Rapp would again allege that Spacey had a bedroom at the time, and that he spent most of the evening watching TV in Spacey's bedroom before the alleged sexual abuse occurred in it, when he testified during Spacey's civil trial.[48][49] Other portions of Rapp's claims against Spacey, such as his original reason for coming forward with the sex abuse accusation, would be discredited during the civil trial as well, with text message evidence showing that Rapp first contacted BuzzFeed News reporter Adam B. Vary and that he claimed, among other things, that he wanted to "wanting to speak out about someone else very powerful in the industry" eight days before the New York Times article where Lupita Nyong'o detailed her sexual harassment claims against Weinstein was published.[10] Rapp had previously claimed that reading this particular New York Times article inspired him to make his accusation against Spacey.[10][27] His testimony of only visiting Spacey's apartment during the night of the alleged sexual abuse would also be contradicted by John Barrowman, a high school friend and fellow actor who claimed during his deposition testimony that they both visited Spacey's apartment after meeting him at New York City's Limelight nightclub on a different occasion.[11][10]

During his civil trial testimony, Rapp's account of the being approached by Spacey before the alleged nightclub meeting also differed from what he told Adam Vary in the 2017 BuzzFeed News article, where he alleged that he and Barrowman where approached by Spacey at one of the "late-night, post-show gatherings at which many different Broadway casts would eat and mingle."[10][11] During his testimony, Rapp claimed he and Barrowman were approached by Spacey while trying meet with Long Day’s Journey into Night actor Jack Lemmon and that Spacey approached them while they were in Lemmon's dressing room.[10][11] In contrast to claims made by Rapp that Spacey was “picking out two underage boys,” Borrowman was also acknowledged that have been four years older than Rapp at the time.[11]




This is from The Los Angeles Times:

Rapp said he was 14 when Spacey invited him and the friend to a nightclub after meeting them backstage at a Broadway play starring Spacey. He testified they went home without incident immediately after the nightclub outing.


However, the friend — who was in his late teens at the time — has said in a deposition that the pair actually went to Spacey’s apartment and described Spacey trying to lure the friend into a sexual encounter.

Considering the friend’s deposition, “You knew you had a problem with your story, correct?” Keller asked.



Again, Anthony's story doesn't seem plausible.  It happened in the bedroom -- but there was no bedroom -- Spacey came on to Anthony but the friend says Spacey came on to him -- on and on with one problem after another.  And Anthony admitted on the stand that he was angry with Kevin over the years because Kevin was in the closet.  Anthony even lied about why he came forward -- claiming that it was due to a story the NYT ran on one of the victims of Harvey Weinstein's abuse.  That's why, he said, he came forward.  Oops.  Text messages show he was in contact with Buzzfeed to do this story before that article ran.






At that point, Keller began to hit at Vary’s credibility. She showed the court texts between Rapp and Vary, one of which says BuzzFeed couldn’t verify that Spacey had been at the 2008 Tony Awards, where Rapp initially claimed to have had a surprise, momentary, wordless run-in with Spacey in the bathroom. Per the texts, Rapp later realized that it was 1999, but Keller focused on a part earlier where Vary said that if they can’t pin down the year, the article will “steer away from exactly specificity” on the date rather than “nail down a specific date that Spacey could then flatly deny.”


This wasn't reporting.  It was a coordinated effort to take Kevin Spacey down.  And the details didn't matter.  Rapp saw Kevin at the 2008 Tony Awards -- then the reporter Vary tries to verify it and can't.  So Rapp insists it was 1999.

Think about that.

We can all be off a year or two.  But we're talking nine years.  Almost a decade.  You're not that much off.


I want to note this video on candy from Matteo Lane.



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



Wednesday, October 12, 2022.  Joe Biden has time to push for Armageddon, to persecute Julian Assange, but no time to make the world a better place apparently.




A vault built on an Arctic island to preserve the world's crop seeds from war, disease and other catastrophes will receive new deposits on Wednesday, including for the first time from Iraq and Uruguay, Norway's Ministry of Agriculture and Food said.

The Svalbard Global Seed Vault, set in permafrost caves on Spitsbergen island halfway between mainland Europe and the North Pole, is only opened three times a year to limit its seeds' exposure to the outside world.


 And those seeds may be needed sooner than later as Joe Biden sets the GPS for Armageddon and puts the car on cruise control.  Andre Damon (WSWS) explains:

On Thursday, US President Joe Biden warned that the war in Ukraine could trigger “Armageddon,” i.e., a nuclear war between the United States and Russia. 

But within 24 hours of Biden’s warning, the Ukrainian Special Forces, after previously getting a public green light from US officials, staged an attack on the Kerch Bridge connecting Crimea to Russia, a provocation aimed at intensifying the war and making such an “Armageddon” more likely.

In response, Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized a series of airstrikes on civilian infrastructure throughout Ukraine Monday. Approximately 14 people were killed and 97 injured, according to Ukrainian officials, and power was disrupted in more than half the country’s regions.

The World Socialist Web Site condemns the actions of all parties involved in the conflict. The Putin regime is not engaged in a war to defend the Russian population but to defend the interests of the capitalist oligarchy that came to power after the dissolution of the USSR.  

But ultimate responsibility for the escalation of the war lies with the United States and its imperialist allies. By encouraging Ukrainian plans to forcibly retake Crimea and join NATO, the US sought to instigate a war on Russia’s borders, first to “bleed Russia white” and ultimately to carry out a regime change operation and break up the country.


[. . .]


The US media proceeds with a form of collective amnesia about the wars of American imperialism over the past 30 years, declaring that, despite the crimes committed by the US military in the past, its motives in the current conflict are purely altruistic. But the war is a continuation of earlier conflicts, only now involving nuclear-armed powers. 

The same ruthless indifference to the deaths of the peoples of the Middle East is driving the US efforts to escalate the war against Russia, using the Ukrainian population as cannon fodder and transforming the entire country into a proving ground. The US and its lackeys in NATO believe that they can achieve a military defeat of Russia which is only a prelude to the conflict with China.

The history of US imperialism reveals that it places no value on the lives of the people it wishes to subjugate and dominate through war. But the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed that it also does not put any value on the lives of the American population. The American ruling class fought tooth and nail against any measures to stop the pandemic, leading to the deaths of more than 1 million people in the US alone.

The relentless escalation of the war must be stopped! On Sunday, the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) and International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) held a meeting to initiate a global mass movement of workers and youth against imperialist war. We urge all of those who agree with this perspective to contact us today. 


Turning to Iraq, the political stalemate continues.  October 10, 2021 was the date Iraq held elections.  A year and two days later, still no prime minister, still no president, still no cabinet of ministers.  But, as noted in yesterday's snapshot, supposedly that's about to change on Thursday when the Parliament is going to try to name a president.


Iraqi Parliament Speaker Muhammad Halbousi announced today that the parliament will discuss the selection of the president on Oct. 13.

A year after the elections, Iraqi political parties have not been able to form a government.

On the anniversary of last year's elections, Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi called upon “all political parties to engage in constructive dialogue to resolve the current political crisis through comprehensive national solutions that strengthen our young democracy and support the pillars of stability and prosperity for Iraq and our great people.”

 
GULF TODAY explains, "According to the power-sharing system in Iraq after 2003, the presidency should be reserved for the Kurds, the Speaker's post for the Sunnis, and the Prime Minister's post for the Shias."  PRESS TV reports:

The Tuesday’s announcement by the Iraqi Parliament speaker came a day after he led a delegation to meet Masoud Barzani, the leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), as rival factions in parliament have been vying for influence and the right to select a new president and government.

Reports said the delegation included Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, the Coordination Framework Alliance’s nominee for the post, and Falih al-Fayyadh, Chairman of the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Units (PMU), also known as Hashd al-Sha'abi.

Halbousi stopped short of providing any details about the meeting in Erbil, in Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, and whether an agreement had been struck among the Kurds to put forward a candidate.

Barzani has previously refused to support Salih as president and is reportedly insisting on changing him and picking a "compromise candidate" for the post.




Mr Barzani is still insisting on removing Mr Salih and picking a “compromise candidate” for president, Mr Al Hayani said.

He said a number of names for compromise candidates were discussed at the meeting in Erbil, capital of Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdish region.

These included former water resources minister Abdul Latif Jamal Rasheed, Mr Al Hayani said.

He could not confirm on Tuesday if a deal between the Kurds had been reached.


After a president is named, that person then names a prime minister-designate.  And there's a least one person known to be in the running for that post: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani. RUDAW reports:

Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) leader Bafel Talabani on Tuesday met with the Coordination Framework’s candidate for Iraq’s premiership Mohammed Shia' al-Sudani in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, as the government formation process in the country shows signs of slowly moving forward. 

Talabani and Sudani discussed the latest developments in Iraq’s political stalemate, stressing the need to “unify the national efforts towards creating a powerful and serving government that would protect the rights of all,” according to a statement from the PUK leader’s office.



The inept Mustafa al-Kadhimi remains the 'caretaker' prime minister.  Some had hope when he came into office but he proved to be as lousy as the man he replaced.  Adil Abdul-Mahdi became prime minister in 2018 and was forced to resign by The October Revolution.  They took to the streets to protest at the start of this month. 

Dana Talib Menmy (THE NEW ARAB) takes a look today at The October Revolution:

'Cowards will not create freedom', a slogan from Iraq’s 2019 October protests, can still be seen on a building near the capital’s Tahrir Square.

Three years later, however, those responsible for the killing of Iraqi youths during the nationwide anti-government demonstrations have yet to be held accountable.

On 1 October 2019, thousands of angry Iraqis held large demonstrations in Baghdad, Basra, Nasiriyah, and several other provinces in the western and southern parts of the country.  

Demonstrators were calling for an end to corruption among Iraq’s ruling elites and the hegemony of Iran and its affiliated political parties and militias in the country.

Soon, the peaceful demonstrations turned violent, with more than 800 protestors killed as Iraq’s security forces and militias used lethal force to silence them. Thousands of others were injured.

Earlier this month, Iraqis commemorated the third anniversary of the protests in two different squares in Baghdad. One group read a statement at al-Nusur Square, while others gathered in Tahrir Square. New protests are scheduled for 25 October.  

Zaid al-Asaad, an activist from the October protests, admitted that there is a division inside the protest movement, however, he stressed that the revolution’s goals are still mobilising the different groups.   

“Since 2019, the demands of the protestors did not change, including prosecuting the killers and those who were behind the bloodshed, the corrupt people who wasted Iraqi public money, the legislation of a fair election law, and passing a law regulating Iraqi political parties,” al-Asaad told The New Arab.


When the protesters took place the first Saturday of October, some idiots tried to claim they were Moqtada supporters and credit Moqtada with the protests -- despite the signs decrying Moqtada.  But for those who still don't get it, let's also note this from the above article:

He also clarified that there is no coordination with the Sadrist Movement in organising the demonstrations.

“We do not think the Sadrists are trying to make real reforms, but they are working to achieve their own political gains similar to the CF. The protest movement is not interested in coordination with the Sadrists because they are part of the problem, thus they cannot be part of the solution.” 



Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden continues his ongoing persecution of Julian Assange.   Julian's 'crime' was revealing the realities of Iraq -- Chelsea Manning was a whistle-blower who leaked the information to Julian.  WIKILEAKS then published the Iraq War Logs.  And many outlets used the publication to publish reports of their own.  For example, THE GUARDIAN published many articles based on The Iraq War Logs.  Jonathan Steele, David Leigh and Nick Davies offered, on October 22, 2012:



A grim picture of the US and Britain's legacy in Iraq has been revealed in a massive leak of American military documents that detail torture, summary executions and war crimes.
Almost 400,000 secret US army field reports have been passed to the Guardian and a number of other international media organisations via the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

The electronic archive is believed to emanate from the same dissident US army intelligence analyst who earlier this year is alleged to have leaked a smaller tranche of 90,000 logs chronicling bloody encounters and civilian killings in the Afghan war.
The new logs detail how:
US authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers whose conduct appears to be systematic and normally unpunished.

A US helicopter gunship involved in a notorious Baghdad incident had previously killed Iraqi insurgents after they tried to surrender.
More than 15,000 civilians died in previously unknown incidents. US and UK officials have insisted that no official record of civilian casualties exists but the logs record 66,081 non-combatant deaths out of a total of 109,000 fatalities.

The numerous reports of detainee abuse, often supported by medical evidence, describe prisoners shackled, blindfolded and hung by wrists or ankles, and subjected to whipping, punching, kicking or electric shocks. Six reports end with a detainee's apparent death. 



Graham Elwood reports on the London rally for Julian that took place Saturday.












“So there are no individuals currently in federal prison solely for simple possession of marijuana.” 

Quote from a Senior administration official

Joe Biden’s announcement that he would pardon all federal convictions for possession of marijuana was quickly met with excitement. It isn’t hard to understand why that would be the case. Everyone knows that the United States is the world’s biggest jailer, with more than 2 million people behind bars, and that the various “wars on drugs” contributed to this dubious distinction.

But upon examination, the announcement was found to be meaningless. Anyone who thought that thousands of people would be freed from jail was in for a surprise. Most convictions in this country occur at the state level, not federal, so any Biden pardons would impact a small number of people. Also, very few people are convicted solely for possession of marijuana or any other narcotic. They are usually convicted for selling, distribution, or conspiracy as well. By definition, very few people would be eligible for a pardon.

Approximately 6,000 people have been convicted of marijuana possession in the last 30 years, but none of them are currently incarcerated. Biden’s announcement won’t free anyone from prison. Nor does a pardon expunge a criminal record. Those pardoned will still have convictions on their records that can make them ineligible for housing or employment. To use an overused expression, Biden’s marijuana pardon is a huge nothingburger.

This attempt to pull the wool over millions of eyes should be loudly condemned. Many of those 6,000 people convicted were victimized by the 1994 Crime Bill which was championed by a senator named Joe Biden. At the time he bragged that the legislation did “everything but hang people for jaywalking .” Or even send them to jail for marijuana possession.

Not only did Biden make a great show of doing absolutely nothing, but he also tacitly admitted that he has the power to end any possibility of federal marijuana convictions. Marijuana is currently categorized as a Schedule 1 drug on the list of controlled substances, just like heroin and cocaine. Now a few weeks before election day he claims he will look into making a change that he could have made as soon as he came to office.


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Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Jen Reads The Papers." and the following sites updated: