While exploring the possibilities of the new studio contributed to the sprawling format of the record, Rundgren also admits that being referred to as ''the male Carole King'' was not a title he was striving to achieve.
''I like Carole King. I listened to Tapestry just like everybody else, but I never wanted to be Carole King, someone who sits at the piano crooning songs all day long,'' he said. ''I came from being a guitar player and whatever I imagine will also involve a lot of screaming guitar, so just trying to get those two things to co-exist on a record is hard enough. So I opted neither to be a stylist on the guitar nor a stylist as a songwriter, I'm more an explorer of styles.''
That's from Malcolm X Abram's "Todd Rundgren: A wizard and a true star" (Beacon Journal) and if you just asked, "Todd who?"?  I may cry.
Click here to learn more about Todd Rundgren.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Thursday:
| Thursday, September 3, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces more deaths, at least 15 Iraqis are reported dead today and 120 are  reported injured, a British hostage missing since 2007 is confirmed dead, the US  military -- according to a military official -- has little power in Iraq now due  to reduced size, the Iraqi government continues to target the press, Cindy  Sheehan provides input on a recent NYT article, and more. Yesterday a British corpse surfaced in Baghdad.   A somber UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown faced the cameras to issue a statement.   Via ITN News (video link): Gordon Brown: It's with the deepest regret that the body passed to  the British embassy today is now discovered to be that of Alec Maclachlan. My  thoughts, and I believe the thoughts of the whole country, are with the  Maclachlan family at this time of great grief.  No family should have to endure  what they have gone through. The loss through the hostage taking, then the  period of silence and not knowing what was happening and now to find that their  loved one is lost -- Our thoughts are also with the families of those people who  are the other hostages.  We are demanding of the hostage takers that they now  give us information about the whereabouts of  Alan McMenemy and return Peter  Moore who we still believe to be alive as soon as is possible.  We will pursue  these hostage takers.  There is no justification for what they've done.  And we  are working with the Iraqi government at every point to ensure that we get  information to the relatives, we get the return of the others and, at the same  time, we bring the hostage takers to justice.  That is what every family should  expect of us and that is what we are going to do. May 29, 2007 the League of Righteousness kidnapped five British citizens in  Baghdad.  Three are known to be dead: Jason Creswell, Jason Swindlehurst and  Alec Maclachlan.  Alan McMenemy is assumed dead (but that is not known) and  Peter Moore is thought alive. Yesterday Colin Freeman (Telegraph of London)  explained, "The men were abducted by gunmen posing as policemen by a group  calling itself League of the Righteous, a group of Shia militants. They were  recently understood to have been seeking to enter mainstream politics in Iraq,  but attempts to release the hostages through dialogue have proved fruitless."   The Daily Mail noted that the League of the  Righteous had earlier attempted to use the five hostages to broker a release of  "nine Iraqi militants" at Camp Cropper (the leader and his brother were two and,  again, they were released in June) and that this "is Britain's longest running  hostage crisis since Terry Waite and John McCarthy who were held for nearly five  years in Lebanon in the 1980s."  Nouri is very close with the League and last  week Eli Lake (Washington Times) reported  that Ahmed Chalabi was as well.   Today Oliver August (Times of London) reports,  "Mr MacLachlan, who is from Llanelli, south Wales, died from multiple gunshots  in what appears to have been an execution. According to sources close to the  investigation, the killing took place quite some time ago, possibly last year,  given the partly decomposed state of the body."  BBC News' Frank Gardner states, "When I last met the men's  families, they were still hoping reports of more deaths were untrue."  He's  referring to the announcement a month and a half ago by the British government  about their believing Alec Maclachlan and Alan McMenemy were dead.  The families  remained hopeful due to the fact that there were no bodies. The League of Righteous is now responsible for the murders of three British  citizens and is assumed to be holding 2 more and they are also responsible for  an attack on US forces in which 5 US soldiers (Brian S. Freeman, Jacob N. Fritz,  Johnathan B. Chism, Shawn P. Falter and Johnathon M. Millican) were  slaughtered.  Because the League of Righteousness is Nouri's best buddy, the UK  and the US apparently have decided to humor the organization. Deborah Haynes (Times of London)  reported on the release by the US military of Laith al-Khazali (the  ringleader of the group) and his brother.  At the end of July BBC News' Humphrey Hawksley (link has video and text) filed this  report: Humphrey Hawksley: Alan [McMenemy] from Dunbarton, Alec  [Maclachlan] from South Wales believed to be two more victims in this long  running Iraq hostage tragedy. Security guards whose colleagues Jason  Swindlehurst from Lancaster and Jason Creswell from Glasgow were shot dead,  their bodies recovered last month.  There's hope that Peter Moore, the IT  specialist they were protecting, is still alive.  This is the fortified Finance  Ministry in central Baghdad from where the five men were kidnapped more than two  years ago in May 2007 in a highly organized operation.  Forty men wearing the  uniforms of the Iraqi police drove up surrounded the building and took the  hostages off to a secret location.  For moths there was no news then, in  November, there came a video from Jason Swindlehurst and, three months later,  another from Peter Moore.  He called for the release of nine Shia Iraqis being  held by the Americans, release them so we can go, he said.  And a year ago Alan  asked the British government to try to get them home as soon as possible. The  Foreign Office has adopted a low profile, softly-softly approach  although the  families did speak out from time to time hoping their voices might lead to the  freedom of their loved ones.  But nothing until last month.  Thousands of  suspected insurgents are being held in Iraq but are slowly being released.  On  June 7th, one of the nine referred to in Peter Moore's appeal was freed.  Twelve  days later, the two bodies were recovered.  They'd been shot some time earlier.   It's not know if there was a connection.  The hope now is that somewhere in the  dangerous world of Iraqi militias, Peter Moore is alive with a chance of being  released.  Humphrey Hawksley, BBC News. Oliver August includes an interesting aside deep  in his report, "The staggered return of the hostages is part of a quid-pro-quo  deal brokered by the Iraqi Prime Minister, who met representatives of the  kidnappers two months ago. The League of the Righteous has apparently renounced  violence and is seeking to enter the open political process ahead of  parliamentary elections next year."  Nouri and his friends are so very close.   Some say it was this close nature that allowed them to successfully kidnap 5  British citizens to begin with.   July 29th, the families of the hostages held a  press conference. Haley Williams is the mother of Alec's child and she spoke at  the press conference noting the British government's statements that Alec and  Alan were thought to be dead. Haley Williams:  These reports are the worst possible news for us  but we continue to hope that they cannot be true.  But whatever Alec's  condition, he no longer should remain in Iraq.  We appeal to those holding him  to please send him home to us.  I speak to you as the mother of Alec's son.  We  are not the people holding your men but I do understand your feelings cause  you're going through the same pain we are going through. If we had any influence  over the release of your men we would release them to you  but we don't. Please  send him home because as a family we can't cope with this  anymore." Yesterday Martin Chulov (Guardian) reported: The release of the third body had been widely anticipated since  members of the Righteous League were hosted by the Iraqi prime minister, Nour  al-Maliki, in July. The group, which has strong links to the Lebanese Hezbollah,  has been campaigning for political legitimacy in the run-up to national  elections in January.Britain has maintained a policy of not negotiating with the  hostage takers and moves towards the release of the captives have been handled  by Iraqi mediators, who have attempted to convince them that legitimacy will  remain out of reach as long as they hold hostages.         In one positive sign, the group promised in August to lay down its  weapons and join the political process. Over the past three months, up to 15  high-profile members of the Righteous League have been freed from American  custody in Iraq. Today the US military issued the following announcement:  "CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE SPEICHER, TIKRIT, Iraq -- Two Multi-National  Division - North Soldiers were killed and five wounded in a vehicle rollover  accident in the Diyala province of northern Iraq Sept. 2. The names of the  deceased are being withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by  the Department of Defense. The names of service members are announced through  the U.S. Department of Defense official website at http://www.defenselink.mil/. The announcements are made on the  website no earlier than 24 hours after notification of the service member's  primary next of kin. The incident is under investigation." ICCC is currently  down [they note a server crash and that they are working to get the site back  up] but the announcement should bring the number of US service members killed in  Iraq since the start of the illegal war to 4338. (It was 4336 on Sunday.)  We'll stay with today's reported  violence. Bombings? Mohammed al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports a Baghdad roadside bombing which injured three people, a second  Baghdad roadside bombing which resulted in five people wounded, a Baghdad sticky  bombing targeting the Sahwa ("Awakenings" or "Sons Of Iraq") which resulted in  eight people being injured (four were Sahwa), a Mosul roadside bombing which  claimed the life of 1 police officer, another Mosul roadside bombing which  injured two people, a third Mosul roadside bombing which claimed the life of 1  police officer, a fourth Mosul roadside bombing which injured three people, a  Babil car bombing and four other Babil bombings which claimed 4 lives and left  sixty-five people wounded, a Baquba car bombing which wounded four people, a  roadside bombing outside Karbala which claimed 2 lives and left three people  injured and, dropping back to yesterday, a Tal Afar suicide bomber who invaded a  home and killed the wife and husband and then detonated his bomb when the police  showed up wounding seven of them and an Iraqi soldier.  Reuters notes a Mussayab bombing at a mosque which  claimed 4 lives and left twenty-four people injured and, dropping back to  yesterday, a Ramadi suicide bombing that left five people wounded (four were  police). July 28th was when the assault on Camp Ashraf by  Nouri al-Maliki's 'troops' began. During Saddam's time, Iranian exiles were  allowed safe harbor in Iraq. The exiles were leftists who were opposed to the  religious fundamentalist leaders following the toppling of the Shah (the exiles  did not favor the Shah). They utilized violence and are known as the People's  Mujahedeen Organization of Iran or the MEK. They remained in Iraq in the 80s,  the 90s and this decade. The European Union and England are among the  organizations and countries that listed the MEK as a terrorist group -- past  tense. The MEK has renounced violence and was removed from the terrorist  listing. The US still has the MEK listed as a terrorist organization. There were  efforts to remove it from that listing by Congress beginning in 2008; however,  the previous administration wasn't interested in that or anything else to do  with MEK. It is a hot button issue and it was ignored repeatedly by the Bush  administration. This is one of the hot potatoes dropped into the current  administration's lap. Repeating (for friends in the administration who have become whiners), Camp Ashraf is a hot potato that was dropped into the lap of the current administration. The outgoing administration made promises to Nouri and promises to Camp Ashraf. They also declared it protected under the Geneva Conventions. While it was a hot potato and unexpected, they were aware of how serious it was following the election. (To be clear, it was an obvious problem prior to the election and any observer could have known that. It was only after the election, during the weeks of information being passed on and relayed from outgoing to incoming, that they realized just how explosive it was due to a lot of empty promises made to both sides by the Bush administration. As that became clear, it was tasked to two people who were supposed to lead on the issue. They did not lead. They carved it out and removed it from the State Dept -- long before Hillary was asked to be Secretary of State -- and were supposed to lead on the issue. They did not lead. That is among the reasons -- there are at least four primary ones -- that Vice President Joe Biden was recently put in charge of Iraq.) As happened with the Bush administration in the fall of 2008, Nouri promised that he had no intention of assaulting Camp Ashraf. (To its credit, the Bush administration strongly suspected Nouri was lying. They were right.) AP's Kim Gamel files an in-depth report on Camp Ashraf and notes the video of the US military (who protected Camp Ashraf prior to the start of 2009) near the camp as the assault begins, with bloodied camp residents pleading for help to US "soldiers [who] get into a white SUV and roll up their windows as the bloodied men plead for help." Well they bellowed, and they hollered And they threw each other down Down in this valley This cruel and lovely valley Oh it should have been an alley In some low down part of town As the lights came up There was no sun And brandy splattered all over the ground As this woman with her head held high Yelled love and why oh why You're killing me, oh follow me As I watched safe and clean From the frosted windows of my limousine -- "Memorial Day," written by Carly Simon, from her album Spy. [Spy features the classic "Never Been Gone" and it is among the songs she's redone for Never Been Gone, Carly's latest (and mainly acoustic) album which will be released October 27th. (The album also contains two new compositions.)] Gamel quotes an anonymous "senior US military official" stating, "We could not become decisively engaged with a situation that really is up to the sovereign Iraqi government to settle in a peaceful manner as they have assured us that they would do. Even in a situation that allowed engagement, we didn't have nearly the amount of forces present to jump in the middle of this fray." So why is the US military still in Iraq? Why is a long 'withdrawal' of "combat" troops planned when that will only create more moments where the US military can't step forward and watches as an assault takes place. Which is one of the scenarios then-Senator Joe Biden tossed out during an April 2008 Senate Foreign Relations committee hearing he chaired. Another was that the US military remaining on the ground in Iraq would be utilized to prop up Nouri's government and attack Iraqi civilians. So why is the US not leaving immediately and quickly? Exactly how long will thug of the occupation Nouri be humored? Oliver August (Times of London) reports on the 'plan' to  withdraw US "combat" troops from Iraq and he paints it as incredible difficult,  "a logistics feat," when it is no such thing. There were more US service members  in Vietnam in 1972 than are in Iraq now and George McGovern ran for the  presidency with a plan to withdraw all in six weeks. It was  possible. When tensions at home required Georgia (country, not US state) to withdraw their military at the start of 2008, they did so quickly demonstrating that the US could, in fact, do a complete and full withdrawal in six weeks. Anyone who tells you it's not possible is either uninformed or a liar. As commander in chief, all Barack has to do is give the order and the US military would make it happen. "A more difficult task is the removal of 100,000 vehicles, including tanks," August writes. But then goes on to note: "After six years of heavy use, much of the US military's equipment is in a bad state. Bases are littered with broken air-conditioners, leaking generators and discarded barbecues." Exactly. The bulk of the machinery does not need to be brought back and, check out the military's wishlist, you'll see that a large number of things being brought back are due to be replaced shortly. Give it to Iraq. Give it to Kuwait. Over half the equipment and machinery can easily be transported out of Iraq (with all US troops, ALL) in six weeks. A little over third of the equipment and machinery does not need to be brought back. Which really means that the inventory would have to be reviewed and some choices to do a FULL withdrawal in six weeks. Barack's not doing a withdrawal. He's removing "combat" troopos. We've long noted that more than 50,000 US troops would remain in Iraq -- we've noted that since the election. And that's because, as repeatedly pointed out, that's what the White House has been saying privately. Oliver August doesn't address the fact that the press began whispering in sotto voice in the last 13 or so days that, golly, 75,000 US troops may remain in Iraq. (After the 'withdrawal' of 'combat' troops.) George F. Will (Washington Post) has a column calling for withdrawal today. We'll go into that tonight in "I Hate The War." Unlike Peter Hart, I promise not to go off topic to snark on Will and we'll instead focus on reality and what's taking place (which we've noted repeatedly in the Thursday night entries was coming). July 28th, a Baghdad bank, Rafidain Bank, was robbed and eight security guards were killed as millions were taken out of the bank. Yesterday, four of the nine robbers were sentenced to death by hanging. Some of the robbers were body guards for Abdel Mahdi, Iraq's Shi'ite vice president. Today Rod Nordland and Riyahd Mohammed write a major piece for the New York Times entitled "In Bank Killings, Highs and Lows of Iraq Justice" filled with details that haven't made it into the paper before. Possibly, they can be so free with the information because they tie a ribbon around it? They note one of the nine was aquitted and four are missing. But then they get to that you-see-Timmy moment (see Speechless starring Michael Keaton and Geena Davis where he explains a speech needs a you-see-Timmy moment, end of the episode of Lassie where an episode and life lesson is quickly summed up): But the suspected ringleaders, with well-known ties to the Shiite political elite, have escaped. Even so, the Zuwiya robbery also demonstrated in some rickety way that Iraq's young institutions, the judiciary, the news media and its increasingly democratic politics, make it difficult for even the country's most powerful people to snap their fingers and make an embarrassing case go away. As details emerged, the vice president and his party, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, the largest Shiite grouping, would suffer a public relations body blow, one that may well affect Mr. Abdul Mahdi's ambitions to become the next prime minister in elections in January. "I am sure Adel Abdul Mahdi was not involved," said Ahmad Abdulhussein, a journalist threatened for an article he wrote on the case. "But the Iraqi people have to think, do they want a leader who has bodyguards who rob banks and kill?" Possibly because the verdict and (limited) trial can be spun as "Iraqi justice on the move!" the readers of today's paper can finally learn some of the efforts on the part of Abdul Mahdi to stop the proceedings? Strangely, the paper continues to avoid the attacks on the press. For example, they included Mahdi and his party threatening Iraqi newspapers that printed stories of the robbers connections to the vice president (and in one case, they sued a paper for such reporting). The reporters tell you that five of the nine robbers were Mahdi's bodyguards. That lawsuit? It involves details like that. Details that the Times was silent on in real time while an Iraqi paper struggling to report was under attack. And it involved bullying journalists who write opinion pieces. Ahmed Abdul Hussain wrote "800,000 blankets" for Al Sabah and it was social satire. A concept that members of the Shi'ite vice president's political party especailly refused to grasp. Maybe noting the lawsuit and the bullying and blustering wouldn't have allowed a you-see-Timmy moment? But it would have meant that (a) readers could get the truth and (b) an Iraqi paper struggling to utilize freedom-of-the-press got some backing from a heavy weight who could well afford to toss some support into the ring. Another thing harming the life lesson is the fact that the judge in the case refuses to be identified in any reporting. If things were progressing as brightly and shiningly as everyone keeps saying, that wouldn't happen, now would it? If you go to Al Jazeera, you'll see the names of the four convicted (Ali Eidan, Basheer Khalid, Ali Ouda and Ahmad Khalaf) as well as this detail: Most of the money was later recovered in the office of a newspaper owned by Adel Abdul-Mahdi, the Iraqi vice president and a senior member of Iraq's largest Shia party, investigators said. Abdul-Mahdi has denied any involvement saying one of those charged in the robbery worked as part of his security team. He has said any suggestions of wrongdoing on his part were a politically motivated attempt to sabotage his bid to be re-elected in next January's polls. Last week Agnes Callamard (Guardian) tackled the proposed draft-law  in Iraq which is seen as an effort to destroy a free press and among the points  she explained was this one:         When local media workers express their  concerns about the draft journalists' protection law, one of the issues they  point to is the extremely narrow definition of a journalist as "one who works for press … and who is affiliated  with the Iraqi Journalists' Syndicate". This specifically excludes editors,  commentators, bloggers, citizen journalists and freelancers who may also be in  the business of providing information and comment to the public  sphere. Friday August 21st, Inside Iraq's Jasim  Al-Azzawi addressed the topic of press freedom in Iraq with panelists Jane  Arraf (Christian Science Monitor), Saad al-Muttalibi (Ministry of  National Dialogue) and Freshta Raper (Iraqi reporter). Jassim al-Azzawi: Jane Arraf let me start with you, in light of the  powerful bombs in Baghdad yesterday [Black Wednesday, August 19th] killing  scores of people, is it still relevant for us to discuss an issue like freedom  of the press in Iraq? Jane Arraf: That's a great question and certainly as journalists I  think we definitely have an interest in discussing this.  But for the rest, I  think, what that attack does, that horrifying attack which really shook so much  that we thought was at the heart of the improving security here, it shows what  the stakes are.  That these are life and death stakes and that journalists are  part of that and that's the atmosphere they're not only trying to cover but the  events they are trying to convey and the threat that the government feels in  responding to journalists. Jassam al-Azzawi:  And yet, Saad al-Muttalibi, in the package we've  just seen we saw Jalal Talibani, the Iraqi president, in a way sniping at the  Iraqi journalists and the Iraqi media for somehow covering the Rafidain robbery  and there are enough circumstantial evidence to implicate the Iraqi vice  president Abdul Mahdi.  Why Jalal Talabani being so super sensitive?   Saad al-Muttalibi: Well start with we're in the process of building  a stable state and that requires legislation and that requires that even at the  darkest moments to look at the press, freedom of the press, and to look at other  aspects of the state of Iraq.  And I'm not here to defend anybody, I'm just  saying that there were no evidence. For somebody to write a piece, an article in  a state-owned newspaper and claim that he knew in advance that somebody, anybody  has the intention of doing the robbery and buying blankets and distributing the  blankets through -- during the elections, that sounds to me like going out of  the norm, this is not media reporting, this is accusation and without any  evidence.  I mean the journalists didn't have any evidence for his case. A  journalist's job is uh to produce the news uh to convey the news and events that  happen in the country and as truthfully and honest as possible and but not to  make interpretation, their own interpretation of events.  Thank you.   Jassim al-Azzawi: Freshta Raper, of course that journalist is in  hiding right now fearing for his life.  The article he wrote pretty much is a  tongue-in-cheek, political satire if you will, rather than a direct accusation.   But let me talk to you about yourself.  You are one of the Iraqi journalists, if  I'm not mistaken, whose name is on a list.  Tell us about it. Freshta Raper: Last year, last year exactly, just July to say of a  year ago, I -- the paper has leaked from the KRG [Kurdistan Regional Government]  official offices that 14 journalists are the most wanted and has to be take care  of and we even -- again we make sure that this was a genuine statement.  I  personally sent a letter e-mailed to Nechirvan Barzani personally sent to the  Iraqi the embassy, we sent a letter to everyone of them to make sure this is  genuine or is this a joke because if this is a joke, this is a sick joke to  threaten people with killing.  They have been doing it for many years and Jalal  Talabani has to condemn this because he has a lot for himself to cover up, a lot  of dirty secrets what are they doing against the journalists.  The only thing I  have done in the past four or five years, I'm writing more as criticizing the  abuse of power, the corruption, and there are billions of evidence over there of  how they misuse the power and how they are abusing people and abusing the system  in a daily light.   So I am -- I am one of those who could become a victim and  at the time I was a lucky one.  The person in Baghdad, I feel sorry  for. Jassim al-Azzawi: And you are remarkably lucky in the sense that  you live in London and you contribute to the news and you appear on the news  but, Jane Arraf, not everybody is as luck as Freshta. Iraq has been for the last  few years perhaps the most dangerous place on earth.  More Iraqis as well as  foreign journalists have been killed in Iraq than in any other war zone and you  have covered many of these war zones.  Jane Arraf: Absolutely I think they're some of the bravest people  on the earth and one of the amazing things about this past six years has been  that throughout the tragedy Iraqi journalists really keep coming out and trying  to tell the news.  Now they are working in a very difficult background.  This is  a new industry.  Press freedom here is not developed as we're talking about.   There also aren't a lot of entrenched standards for the press but one of the  things that you see over and over is just an absolute proliferation of  journalists who, despite the fact that almost 200 journalists and media workers  have been killed here, still feel that they are going to go out, go out on those  streets, stand up to those officials and it's -- it's absolutely  amazing. Jassim al-Azzawi: And yet Saad Muttalibi, this proliferation Jane  Arraf is talking about, you cannot help but seeing a tinge of sectarianism in  it.  Most of the newspapers and most of the TV stations and the radios somehow,  one way or another, they are affiliated by or financed by this political  party and that political party and they take a life of their own.  They pretty  much attack the others based on sectarian, on ethnicity and other  calibrations. Saad al-Muttalibi: Absolutely right.  Hence we require  regulations.  We require laws to define rights and to define limitations.   Journalists jobs in Iraq is probably the hardest job to do, the most dangerous  job -- Jassim al-Azzawi: What will laws do if you have militias assigned  to a political party?  They do the actual on behalf of that political party if  they're politicians are attacked. Saad al-Muttalibi: I must interrupt you -- I must interrupt you.   There are no militias anymore. [The two journalists on the panel react in  disbelief to the statement.]  The militias were crushed in a very bloody way  last year and we have now remnants of gangs that could be -- Jassim al-Azzawi: Hold that statement for a second.  Jane Arraf: That's an extraordinary statement.  Jassim al-Azzawi: Jane wants to say something. Jane Arraf: I'm sorry. Jassim al-Azzawi: Go ahead Jane.  Jane Arraf: I was just going to say that would really be wonderful  if that were the case but that's not the evidence that we are seeing, that we  are hearing from Iraqis when we go out in the street.  They're -- I think the  consensus is that there are militias.  There certainly are not the militias  there were a year ago that is certainly true but there are places where militias  are creeping back and a lot of it depends upon how you define militias.   Saad al-Muttalibi: Yes, you are -- yes, you are absolutely right.   As I said --  Freshta Rape: Exactly Saad al-Muttalibi: -- as I said there are still criminal elements  and gangs roaming certain parts of-of Iraq.  Including al Qaeda, including uh uh  from this party or that party that is all possible.  I'm sure Freshta could tell  us more about the things in Kurdistan but -- but the case is that regulation is  required.  We do require to make sure that we safeguard the journalists. As I  said, the journalist job in Iraq is very-very tough. So is the soldiers so  is every individual living in Iraq now. I mean people who died yesterday in the  explosion, they weren't journalists, they weren't soldiers, they were just  passers-by.  So things here in Baghdad are very, very dangerous and journalists  know that.  But journalists also need to know the limitation of journalism.   They need to know that they cannot accuse any citizen in Iraq -- Jassim al-Azzawi: Indeed, indeed they should, Saad Muttalibi, but  when it comes to the ultimate sacrifice -- hold on -- by somebody going after  them and killing them, that is not the way to settle the political atmosphere,  Freshta, is it? Saad al-Muttalibi: Of course, of course, of course --   Freshta Raper: No, it's not -- Saad al-Muttalibi: I'm saying  Jassim al-Azzawi: Saad Muttalibi, hold on just a second   Freshta Raper: Sorry.  It's caused more violation.  I-I totally  agree with Jane.  It's what sort of militia we're talking about.  It is  different.  But the militia of today in the street -- especially if I look at  the north part of Iraq -- is-is almost an enormous number of youths, unemployed  and skillful, they are deprived from job, deprived from basic rights.  And they  are angry, they are upset.  They are -- these are the people contributing the  violence because they have been ignored and they don't feel they are part of  there.  They are not brutal murders.  They are not bad people.  But they can't  get a basic right like the son and the daughter of people in power.  They've got  all the privilege in the world and there is no equality.  There is no equal  opportunity between the normal people and the people's children in power.  That  is what causes all these violations.  People are very, very angry.  And the  government officials mainly, they don't listen to poor people.  The people  outside their zone and outside their border  And  that is -- I'm 100% sure  yesterday's bombing is  caused from -- it's not al Qaeda but anger of people  anger of people that they are crying and screaming for some sort of security or  basic life or imporving that poverty. You go to Baghdad you look like a stoneage  village, is just feel some  area of Baghdad you just feel disgusted with the  country of an ocean of oil and a region of such poverty. "I'm standing on the banks of the Tigris River where the water is so low  the banks are cracked and dry," declares NPR's Deborah Amos (Morning Edition). "There's been a two year  drought decades of war and mismangement. But Iraq once had the most fertile  lands in the region. The Tigris is a reminder that's there's an environmental  disaster." It's an important report at any time but it's especially important at a time when Nouri's created an international incident with the Syrian government. Nouri's attempting to force them to hand over to guests in their country, former Ba'athists. And since the law isn't on Nouri's side, he's resorted to bluster. As the tensions have risen, Turkey was presented as a broker in the dispute. A broker? Iraq and Syria will listen to Turkey why? As Deborah Amos pointed out, Iraq's suffering from a drought. Turkey has water. Some say it has water as a result of damns. Some in Iraq say that. Ivan Watson and Yesim Comert (CNN) report ministers of the three countries met in Anakara today and the topic was water: "Baghdad and Damascus want Turkey, where the source of the Tigris and Euphrates is located, to increase the flow of water passing through its network of dams." Ibon Villelabeitia and Diana Abdallah (Reuters) report, "Turkey has failed to meet a pledge to release more water down the Euphrates and Tigris rivers to Iraq, an Iraqi minister said on Thursday, and called for a coordinated water policy in the region." Monday's snapshot included comments on the  hideous article in the New York Times Sunday.  Tuesday, Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan  offered her critique of the article: The New York Times ran an article on Sunday claiming that after a  long period of dormancy, the "anti-war" movement was getting "restive" and  planned to do some actions in October around the 8th anniversary of the invasion  of Afghanistan. Well, some of us have been restive and working for years and the  groups that are now becoming "restive" are the very ones that let the War Genie  out of the bottle, and will have a lot of problems putting it back in, if that  is really the intention of these groups.                  The "restive anti-war movement" is planning "teach-ins" and "memorials" but not planning on surrounding the White House and demanding that their leader bring the troops home from all theaters of war and then threatening to withhold support if he doesn't. The "restive anti-war movement" will not do anything it thinks will compromise Democratic chances in the 2010 midterms. I have two questions to ask of the "restive anti-war movement." 1) How did the people of Iraq/Afghanistan lose value as human beings when the Democrats took over power in 2007? 2) How did the people of Pakistan lose their value as humans when Obama became president at the beginning of the year? The born-again "restive anti-war movement" allowed the Democratic Party to suck the wind out of our sails in 2007 and it is almost like we will have to start from scratch. "Give Him a chance," they say. "He's better than McCain," they say. "If you question Him then you're a racist," they say. I say "go to Iraq-Af-Pak and tell these things to the people who are being drone bombed for simply having the nerve to want to get married." Give Him a chance for what? No thanks, keep the change! That's an excerpt, read the whole thing.  We will include all the resource  links Cindy notes: Go here for more information about the October 5th  protests. Go here to view a great interview that Cindy did with Russian TV this past week in Martha's Vineyard. Go here to listen to last week's Soapbox with attorney, Ellen Brown who talks about monetary policy. Go here to donate to our continuing efforts for peace. | 
 
