Tuesday, April 03, 2018

NYT attacks free speech and gets caught lying

The attack on free speech never ends and The New York Times will always be one of the most violent attackers.  Andre Damon (WSWS) reports:



Since late 2016, the New York Times, working together with the US intelligence agencies and the Democratic Party, has been engaged in a campaign to promote internet censorship in the guise of targeting “fake news” and “Russian propaganda.”


In waging this campaign, the Times’ motives are both political and pecuniary. Speaking for a ruling elite that sees the growth of social opposition on all sides and expects far worse, the Times has promoted censorship to remove opportunities for the working class to organize outside the framework of official politics.


In addition, the Times, for the most part a clearinghouse for staid and predigested state propaganda, is seeking to carve back market share it has lost to online publications that carry out genuine investigative journalism and oppose the lies peddled by the US government and media.


In recent months, this campaign has entered a new and malignant phase. Increasingly dropping the pretext of “Russian meddling,” the Times is now directly attacking its main target: the fact that the internet, and in particular social media, helps empower the population to access oppositional sources of news and have their voices heard in public.


Among the Times’ latest broadsides against freedom of expression is an article by its “State of the Art” columnist Farhad Manjoo headlined “For Two Months, I Got My News From Print Newspapers. Here’s What I Learned.” The piece, supposedly written as a first-hand account of a journalist turning off social media and only reading the news from print newspapers, is—in an unusually literal sense—a piece of lying propaganda from beginning to end.


As the Columbia Journalism Review pointed out, during the period in which he supposedly stopped using social media, Manjoo managed to post on Twitter virtually every day. “Manjoo remained a daily, active Twitter user throughout the two months he claims to have gone cold turkey, tweeting many hundreds of times, perhaps more than 1,000,” the Review pointed out.


Manjoo’s blatant falsifying of his own social media use is hardly the most sinister aspect of his piece. However, it expresses something essential about the Times’ notion of “reporting”: its writers feel they can say anything and get away with it, so long as their claims conform to the dictates of the establishment and the intelligence agencies whose interests determine what is and what is not reported in the US media.


The columnist’s dishonesty about his own activities provides much needed context for his article as a whole, which is little more than a long-form denunciation of a reading public that feels compelled to obtain its news from sources not massaged by the CIA-vetted hacks at the New York Times. In the process, Manjoo gives his unqualified blessings to the pronouncements of his own publication and castigates anyone who would question them as a member of an ignorant “herd,” whose opinions ought to be suppressed.









Manjoo should be fired.  He lied in an article and CJR proved it. 



So why isn't he fired?



Because he's telling the lies NYT wants.  They won't fire him for that.  They are all behind the silencing of the masses.  NYT has served as a megaphone for the government since day one (specifically the State Dept.).  It is an embarrassment and its attacks on the public go to the fact that they have been caught lying too many times.



These are people who think 'covering' Mitt Romney's campaign is repeating over and over that his dog was in a kennel strapped to the top of a car for a family vacation.  They thought that making jokes repeatedly about that was covering politics.  They didn't feel the need to examine his proposals (many of which needed to be called out) because they were too busy wasting everyone's time with 'jokes.'


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


Tuesday, April 3, 2018.  Elections in Iraq are approaching and predictions are being made.



This morning, WORLD BULLETIN reports:

A total of 374 would-be candidates will be excluded from Iraq’s upcoming parliamentary polls due to previous associations with the now-defunct Baath Party, according to Iraq’s Justice and Accountability Commission.
In a Monday statement, the commission said it had finished vetting the names of 7,367 potential candidates, 374 of whom had been found to have links with the outlawed party, which ruled Iraq under deposed President Saddam Hussein.

The Justice and Accountability Commission was supposed to have been sent packing long ago.  In fact, ending de-Ba'athification and moving to national reconciliation was one of the benchmarks the Iraqi government was supposed to meet in order to continue receiving US financial and military support.  But that was when Bully Boy Bush was in the White House.  These days, they don't even pretend.  And, let's be clear, the benchmarks were a pretense.  The only one who took them seriously in the US Congress was US House Rep Lloyd Doggett.  He expected them to be met or support to be cut off.  Others in Congress didn't even pretend to care.

May 12th is when Iraq is supposed to hold the latest round of elections.

Dropping back to last Friday's CSIS podcast, where Anthony Cordesman and pollster Dr. Munqith Dagher discussed Iraq's upcoming elections. Using the data pool of those who intend to vote (likely voters), Dagher predicts that Hayder al-Abadi's Al-Nasr will win 72 seats in the Parliament, al-Fath (the militias) will get 37 seats, Sa'eroon (Moqtada al-Sadr's new grouping) will get 27 seats, Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law will get 19 seats, al-Salam will get 18 seats (KDP and PUK parties for the Kurds), Ayad Allawi's Wataniya will get 15 seats. There are others but Dagher did not predict double digits for any of the other seats.  The number are similar for the group of those who are extremely likely to vote (Hayder's seats would jump from 72 to 79 seats).

These are predictions and the election's over a month out (May 12th).  Even if the predictions are accurate, many things could change by the time elections roll around.  In 2010, many pollsters were predicting a big victory for Nouri al-Maliki.  Not only did he not have a big victory at the polls, he did not even have a victory.  Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya won in 2010.

If Dagher's current predictions should prove to be accurate, no single party will win enough seats to form a government and will have to enter arrangements with other parties.

Who will?

That's where it always gets confusing.  There's the law and then there's the Iraqi courts.  The party with the most seats in Parliament is supposed to get first crack at forming a government.  After the 2010 March election, Nouri pulled out a court verdict that none of the other parties knew about and presented it as law.

If the laws and rules are followed this go round and if Dagher's predictions ended up accurate, Hayder al-Abadi would have first crack at forming a government.  He would need to enter alliances with other groups.  You need 163 seats in the Parliament to govern.

And for 2018, what's expected?  Per Dagher, forming the government after the election will not come quickly, "It will take a long time.  It will take quiet a long time."  He did not reference 2010 but he did say he was basing this on the 2014 post-election process.  2010, of course, took eight months following the election for a government to be formed.

Corruption and jobs are the two biggest issues potential voters cite for how they will determine whom to vote for.  That explains Hayder's low turnout.  (Low?  In 2010, Ayad Allawi's group won 91 seats.)  Hayder has not reduced -- let alone ended -- corruption and job creation has not been present in Iraq.  Of course, many who do have jobs in Iraq have a different problem: getting paid for their work.

Ferhad Dolemeri (RUDAW) reports, "Kurdish farmers filed a complaint at Iraq's administrative court in Baghdad against the trade minister as part of their continued demands for not providing full compensation for their last four years of crops sold to Baghdad."


Dagher is not the only one making predictions about the upcoming elections.


will lose at least 13 seats, retain presidency in elections: official







There is a lot of energy vested in the US State Dept -- therefore also in the US press -- for this round of elections to be seen as a success and a confirmation of something.  But the spin suffered a blow this week when Mohamed Haidar resigned as Vice Chair of the Elections Committee.




Hi This is what your representatives are going in Iraq. There were fairer Iraq FA elections under Saddam & his son Uday. How about FIFA do something about these violations? Setting up their own elections and omitting any nominees they want!









Let's move over to Kurdistan.



Turkey is destroying what little infrastructure we have here in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq with almost daily air strikes






Turkey is not offering repayment for their bombings.  That the Iraqi government is not speaking out about the destruction of northern Iraq goes to a lack of will and a lack of support.  RUDAW reports:

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned Baghdad that Ankara will not wait for permission to extend its war against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) into Iraqi territory.

Erdogan, speaking at the opening ceremony for a number of new schools and gymnasiums in Istanbul on Monday, said PKK fighters may flee across international borders, but they cannot hide from the Turkish armed forces.



What is he talking about?  He's stating he will not coordinate with the Iraqi government and, specifically, he is rebuffing the US government.

At last Thursday's US State Dept press briefing, spokesperson Heather Nauert voiced the position of the US government:


QUESTION: Could you clarify the situation in Sinjar? The PKK says it’s left. Turkey is still making threats. What’s the situation there, as far as you know?




MS NAUERT: Right. We’ve certainly seen reports that there are those groups in Sinjar. And many of us will remember Sinjar from the Yezidis, the Yezidis who were there who then had to be rescued, some of them, and some of them were brutally murdered by ISIS. We’ve seen the reports of those groups in Sinjar. We understand that Turkey has expressed some of its concern over the presence of them in northern Iraq. Sinjar and the United States expect that any operations in Iraq would be done with the approval of the Iraqi Government. So if Turkey is coming into Sinjar, they need to coordinate that with the Government of Iraq. 

Erdogen is rejecting that.  He is stating he will not respect the government of Iraq, he will not make requests to it.


Let's move to a different topic.



The entire Republican Party operationalized against the Dixie Chicks when they spoke against Bush and the Iraq War.

Suddenly, the GOP wants to cry “censorship” because advertisers in the free market don’t want to pay Laura Ingraham to bully a teenage mass shooting survivor.





No wonder Hillary lost.  She had idiots like Kaivan working for her.

Do they really think they can say whatever s**t they want and get away with it?

He's lying.

I was at the hearing where John McCain -- a Republican -- called out the silencing of the Dixie Chicks.  Do not say "the entire Republican Party."  Nor do I believe that the reluctant voter for the Iraq War Olympia Snowe was part of an attack on the Dixie Chicks.

I'm really tired of the lies from the Hillary crowd.  They don't care about Iraq, they never have.  And now they think they can say whatever they want and facts don't matter.

Is this really to be Hillary's legacy?  This crop of liars?  Since they identify themselves as workers on her campaign, you would think they would work twice as hard to be accurate.


On the topic of dishonesty, let's note this:



PRESIDENT OBAMA WAS THE LAST PRESIDENT TO VISIT  OUR TROOPS IN IRAQ AND AFÄ¢HANISTAN.

FACTS: 4/7/09,  3/28/10,  12/3/10, to name a few. 

       






Barack Obama was president for two terms.  During those two terms, he visited Iraq once and only once.

He was not propelled to the Democratic Party's 2008 presidential nomination by his words on Afghanistan, he was propelled by his words on Iraq and his promise -- which Samantha Power explained wasn't really a promise -- to end the Iraq War.

He visited Iraq only once as president.

The lying woman who Tweeted knew she was lying and tried to conflate the two.

Iraq?  If Trump gets two terms and doesn't visit Iraq, she can complain.  Until then, there's not really any point in comparing the two.


I love how these trashy people who never try to stop the Iraq War love to jump on it when they think they can use it as political football.


The following community sites -- plus Jody Watley, BLACK AGENDA REPORT and LATINO USA -- updated:























  • Monday, April 02, 2018

    Here's a Tweet

    1. What happened to Hillary Clinton saying, “Anyone not willing to accept the results of an election is a danger to democracy”?

      Oh, that’s right...SHE LOST. The Democrats LOST. Stop whining & get on w/ your lives now. Ya’ll look pathetic.

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


    Monday, April 2, 2018.  In 2010, the US government overturned the results of Iraq's election.  The effects of this decision are still felt today.


    "We often, in the United States, focus too much on human rights and democracy," declared Anthony Cordesman last week at War Criminal Henry Kissinger's CSIS think tank.  "Not because they're not important but because they're not the primary process of government."

    Thereby explaining how the US government has held hands with Saudi Arabia for all those decades.  In the case of Bully Boy Bush and Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, they literally held hands.





    In last Friday's CSIS podcast, Cordesman insisted, "The primary purpose of government is to serve citizens in the areas that are shown in these charts [government effectiveness, rule of law, control of corruption, etc]."  I'm not really sure how you can serve citizens if one of your areas does not include human rights.  But we'll move on.

    Cordesman:  We keep hearing about oil wealth but the truth is by and large in most Opec countries, it does not exist.  It is essentally something that brings you to the edge of development incomes but it does so generally by moving money through a very narrow group of people at the top and not through broad, balanced development.  And, from the viewpoint of Iraqis, certainly, if you look at the income even assuming it was properly distributed, you would see that you had not had the same level of development that you have seen in other countries.

    This morning, REUTERS reports, "Baker Hughes and General Electric signed a contract with Iraq’s government on Monday to process natural gas extracted alongside crude oil at two fields in southern Iraq, the oil ministry said."


    Per Cordesman, this deal's not going to do much for the Iraqi people.  Why is that view not noted in the news report?  Cordesman was discussing economics and one of his visuals was a chart that included this fact: "over 30% youth real unemployment."  Cordesman noted that he believed the unemployment figure was actually higher than that number.

    Where are the jobs?

    The ongoing war has left Iraq decimated.  It's a land of orphans and widows, a country where, the United Nation notes, over 40% of the population weren't even born in 2003 when the war began.

    Iraq's prime minister Hayder al-Abadi has failed to deliver jobs.  He has failed to end corruption.


    May 12th, Iraq is set to hold parliamentary elections and no one's been bothered by the fact that Ramadan takes place from May 15th to June 14th.   Past elections in Iraq have resulted in many delays -- in the case of the 2010 parliamentary elections, many months -- to settle.  If the post-election process goes even 1/4 as poorly as it did in 2010, Ramadan will only compound that.  Holding the election three days before Ramadan was very poor planning.

    Hayder al-Abadi staked his future on the premature claim that he vanquished ISIS in Iraq.  That, of course, hasn't proven to be the case.   ISIS was supposed to be Hayder's big claim to fame. Supposed to be.  Borzou Daragahi (BUZZFEED) reports:

    Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared ISIS defeated last December, a call likely timed to give his coalition’s reelection prospects a boost ahead of the vote on May 12. US President Donald Trump claimed credit for devising a military strategy that forced ISIS into “giving up” in Mosul. On Thursday he claimed the US was “knocking the hell out of ISIS.” But ISIS persists as an insurgent group in both Iraq and Syria, and some of its remnants, including the White Flags, already appear to be building new militant factions.


    Cordesman, in his podcast, was speaking with Dr. Munqith Dagher about Dagher's polling which is predicting that 55% of Iraqis eligible to vote will turn out for the May elections -- Sunnis are, per his analysis, expected to vote at a 60% rate as are Kurds but Shi'ites are expected to see only a 51% turnout.  (This 51% will still allow Shi'ites to be the largest number of voters because they are a more populous group in Iraq than are Sunnis or Kurds.)  "The good news right now," Dagher said, "is that Sunni persons who will vote are more [percentage, not total voters] than Shias and this will be for the first time since 2010 like this election."

    Why was that?

    Dagher didn't bother to comment.


    Come May 12th, the pollster expects the total turnout will fall from the 55% that it would be today to around 40%.

    "Reason for election boycott?  Those that say we won't vote?"  he asked before explaining, "They don't trust the system. Different reasons because they don't trust the system. They don't believe it will make a difference."

    Why would they believe that?

    Again, Dagher ignored it.  But it's a basic question and one that demands an answer.


    In 2010, they turned out in large numbers.  Sunnis haven't turned out in numbers that large since -- but are expected to increase participation this year -- eight years later, two parliamentary elections later.  Why is that?  What about those who are planning to boycott because they don't trust the system and don't believe it will make a difference?

    Did Russia hack the 2010 Iraqi elections?

    No, that was the US government hacking Iraq's election.

    Ayad Allawi should have been prime minister per the 2010 elections.  But Nouri refused to step down for eight months and brought the country to a stalemate.  Let's review, Barack Obama, then president, refused to back the winner of the election and instead brokered The Erbil Agreement which, in November of 2010, gave Nouri a second term as prime minister -- in effect, nullifying the election results and overturning the will of the Iraqi people.


    March 7, 2010, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board noted in August 2010, "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as a success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that optimism in a cold shower of reality." 

    November 10, 2010, The Erbil Agreement is signed.  November 11, 2010, the Iraqi Parliament has their first real session in over eight months and finally declares a president, a Speaker of Parliament and Nouri as prime minister-designate -- all the things that were supposed to happen in April of 2010 but didn't.  Again, it wasn't smart to schedule elections right before Ramadan.

    This move was not minor, it was not insignificant.

    It was a blow, a serious blow, to democracy.

    Iraqis turned out and voted for Ayad Allawi -- a Shi'ite.  He was promising a non-sectarian government.  His party was created to be a place for all Iraqis, regardless of sect, regardless of religion, regardless of gender.  In fact, the most prominent Iraqi woman in 2010 was a member of Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya -- the party's spokesperson Maysoon al-Damaluji.  She and other elements of the party gave many the hope that Iraq could return to the vibrant society it had once been.

    Iraqiya also represented a parting with religious radicals and hope for the future.

    Somehow, then-US President Barack Obama didn't think that mattered.  Nor did then-US Vice President Joe Biden.

    In fact, Joe jabbered away about Ireland when he went to Iraq to explain to Ayad Allawi that the US government would not be supporting him, Iraqiya or the Iraqi voters.  He babbled on about Ireland, as Emma Sky described in her book  The Unraveling: High Hopes and Missed Opportunities in Iraq.

    Grasp that this decision had a huge impact on Iraq's security.  Granting Nouri his second term resulted in the rise of ISIS due to Nouri's persecution of Sunnis.

    But grasp the point we were making in real time: This was damaging for any hope of democracy in Iraq.  Overturning the voice of the Iraqi people would set back voting rights.

    And that was what happened.

    Serious damage was done.

    Let's again note the August 2015 broadcast of Kevin Sylvester's THIS SUNDAY EDITION (CBC) which featured Emma Sky discussing Iraq:



    Emma Sky: And that [2010] national election was a very closely contested election. Iraqis of all persuasions and stripes went out to participate in that election.  They'd become convinced that politics was the way forward, that they could achieve what they wanted through politics and not violence.  To people who had previously been insurgents, people who'd not voted before turned out in large numbers to vote in that election.  And during that election, the incumbent, Nouri al-Maliki, lost by 2 seats.  And the bloc that won was a bloc called Iraqiya led by Ayad Allawi which campaigned on "NO" to sectarianism, really trying to move beyond this horrible sectarian fighting -- an Iraq for Iraqis and no sectarianism.  And that message had attracted most of the Sunnis, a lot of the secular Shia and minority groups as well.

    Kevin Sylvester:  People who felt they'd been shut out during Maliki's regime basically -- or his governance.

    Emma Sky:  Yes, people that felt, you know, that they wanted to be part of the country called Iraq not -- they wanted to be this, they wanted Iraq to be the focus and not sect or ethnicity to be the focus.  And Maliki refused to accept the results.  He just said, "It is not right."  He wanted a recount.  He tried to use de-Ba'athification to eliminate or disqualify some Iraqiya members and take away the votes that they had gained.  And he just sat in his seat and sat in his seat.  And it became a real sort of internal disagreement within the US system about what to do?  So my boss, Gen [Ray] Odierno, was adamant that the US should uphold the Constitutional process, protect the political process, allow the winning group to have first go at trying to form the government for thirty days.  And he didn't think Allawi would be able to do it with himself as prime minister but he thought if you start the process they could reach agreement between Allawi and Maliki or a third candidate might appear who could become the new prime minister. So that was his recommendation.

    Kevin Sylvester:   Well he even calls [US Vice President Joe] Biden -- Biden seems to suggest that that's what the administration will support and then they do a complete switch around.  What happened?

    Emma Sky:  Well the ambassador at the time was a guy who hadn't got experience of the region, he was new in Iraq and didn't really want to be there.  He didn't have the same feel for the country as the general who'd been there for year after year after year.

    Kevin Sylvester:  Chris Hill.

    Emma Sky:  And he had, for him, you know 'Iraq needs a Shia strongman. Maliki's our man.  Maliki's our friend.  Maliki will give us a follow on security agreement to keep troops in country.'  So it looks as if Biden's listening to these two recommendations and that at the end Biden went along with the Ambassador's recommendation.  And the problem -- well a number of problems -- but nobody wanted Maliki.  People were very fearful that he was becoming a dictator, that he was sectarian, that he was divisive. And the elites had tried to remove him through votes of no confidence in previous years and the US had stepped in each time and said, "Look, this is not the time, do it through a national election."  So they had a national election, Maliki lost and they were really convinced they'd be able to get rid of him.  So when Biden made clear that the US position was to keep Maliki as prime minister, this caused a huge upset with Iraqiya.  They began to fear that America was plotting with Iran in secret agreement.  So they moved further and further and further away from being able to reach a compromise with Maliki.  And no matter how much pressure the Americans put on Iraqiya, they weren't going to agree to Maliki as prime minister and provided this opening to Iran because Iran's influence was way low at this stage because America -- America was credited with ending the civil war through the 'surge.'  But Iran sensed an opportunity and the Iranians pressured Moqtada al-Sadr -- and they pressured him and pressured him.  And he hated Maliki but they put so much pressure on to agree to a second Maliki term and the price for that was all American troops out of the country by the end of 2011.  So during this period, Americans got outplayed by Iran and Maliki moved very much over to the Iranian camp because they'd guaranteed his second term.

    Kevin Sylvester:  Should-should the Obama administration been paying more attention?  Should they have -- You know, you talk about Chris Hill, the ambassador you mentioned, seemed more -- at one point, you describe him being more interested in putting green lawn turf down on the Embassy in order to play la crosse or something.  This is a guy you definitely paint as not having his head in Iraq.  How much of what has happened since then is at the fault of the Obama administration?  Hillary Clinton who put Chris Hill in place? [For the record, Barack Obama nominated Chris Hill for the post -- and the Senate confirmed it -- not Hillary.]  How much of what happens -- has happened since -- is at their feet?


    Emma Sky:  Well, you know, I think they have to take some responsibility for this because of this mistake made in 2010.  And Hillary Clinton wasn't very much involved in Iraq.  She did appoint the ambassador but she wasn't involved in Iraq because President Obama had designated Biden to be his point-man on Iraq and Biden really didn't have the instinct for Iraq. He very much believed in ancient hatreds, it's in your blood, you just grow up hating each other and you think if there was anybody who would have actually understood Iraq it would have been Obama himself.  You know, he understands identity more than many people.  He understands multiple identities and how identities can change.  He understands the potential of people to change. So he's got quite a different world view from somebody like Joe Biden who's always, you know, "My grandfather was Irish and hated the British.  That's how things are."  So it is unfortunate that when the American public had enough of this war, they wanted to end the war.  For me, it wasn't so much about the troops leaving, it was the politics -- the poisonous politics.  And keeping Maliki in power when his poisonous politics were already evident was, for me, the huge mistake the Obama administration made. Because what Maliki did in his second term was to go after his rivals.  He was determined he was never going to lose an election again.  So he accused leading Sunni politicians of terrorism and pushed them out of the political process.  He reneged on his promises that he'd made to the tribal leaders who had fought against al Qaeda in Iraq during the surge. [She's referring to Sahwa, also known as Sons of Iraq and Daughters of Iraq and as Awakenings.]  He didn't pay them.  He subverted the judiciary.  And just ended up causing these mass Sunni protests that created the environment that the Islamic State could rear its ugly head and say, "Hey!"  And sadly -- and tragically, many Sunnis thought, "Maybe the Islamic State is better than Maliki."  And you've got to be pretty bad for people to think the Islamic State's better. 



    This was a major moment.  And yet few wanted to address it in the US press in real time or, really, even since.

    It's easy to scream about Russia supposedly interfering in an election in the US over US airwaves, Rachel Maddow -- such a good dog -- makes the topic her chew toy nightly on MSNBC.

    But overturning an actual election -- which the US government did?  No one on MSNBC appears to want to address that.

    Or the problems that resulted from the US overturning the 2010 election.


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