As noted yesterday, the economy was on voters minds, heavy on their minds, as demonstrated by the results of the exit polls from CNN and ABC News. And speaking of ABC News, you might want to read . . .
Just One Year After Obama's Victory, a Different Kind of 'Change' Is in the Air
Okay and from that let's go to the latest mailing from Dennis Kucinich:
| Our Last Chance on State Single Payer Option 
 Dear Friends, 
 | |||||||||||||||
| PO Box 110475 | Cleveland | OH | 44111 | 216-252-9000 | 
And that's it for me tonight. This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Tuesday:
| Wednesday, November 4, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces deaths, the tag sale in Iraq continues, the Boston Globe's  editorial board begs for the plug to be pulled on the paper, no Iraqi election  law still, and more. Today the US military announced: "Contingency Operating  Base Speicher, Iraq -- A Multi-National Division -- North Soldier died Nov. 4  from combat related injuries. The name of the deceased is 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 [. . .] The announcements are made on  the Web site no earlier than 24 hours after notification of the service member's  primary next of kin. The incident is under investigation."  And they announced: "Contingency Operating Base  Speicher, Iraq -- A Multi-National Division -- North Soldier died Nov. 4 from  non-combat related injuries. The name of the deceased is being withheld pending  notification of next of kin and release by the Department of Defense. [. . .]  The incident is under investigation."  The announcements bring the number of US  service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war to 4359.  In addition,  Reuters reported this  morning that a Tuesday Baghdad mortar attack left 7 US service  members injured.  As the toll of dead and wounded US service members continues to climb, US  service members are still being sent to Iraq.  The war has not ended just  because so much of the press (and the Democratic Party) moved on (or  MoveOn-ed).  Sig Christenson (San Antonio Express-News)   reports on some members Fort Sam Houston's 418th Medical Logistics  Company soldiers preparing to deploy like Spc Justin Ralph whose wife Julie  states, "It hasn't hit me yet. I've just been kind of stressed-out. I don't want  him to leave. I've (tried) to talk him out of it, but he has to. He really wants  to."  Christenson observes, "They're headed to Iraq for the next year, marking  the unit's third deployment there since the invasion, and they won't be the last  to go. The Iraq war, contrary to popular opinion, isn't near over, and American  troops won't be out until 2011 -- and maybe not for years after that." Meanwhile Iran's Press TV informs, "Iraq has signed its biggest  oil deal since the US 2003 invasion with Britain's BP and China's CNPC to  develop the giant Rumaila oilfield. The 20-year contract is expected to triple  production at the southern oilfield, from the current one million barrels per  day (bpd) to around 2.8 million bpd within a six-year period."  British  Petroleum and China National Petroleum Company formed a consortium earlier this  year during bidding on Iraqi oil fields and, unlike many other oil companies,  they didn't bail out on the bidding right before it started. However, now other  companies are rushing to get their hands on Iraqi oil despite the fact that the  terms are the same ones so many foreign coporations found hard to swallow  earlier this year. Stanley Reed (BusinessWeek) explains,  "The big oil companies are reconsidering Iraq because they realize this may be among their last  opportunities to get large volumes of crude. Britain's BP (BP), for instance, typically turns up its nose at  anything below roughly 700 million barrels of reserves; Rumaila, about 30 miles  west of Basra, may have 20 billion barrels of recoverable oil, BP estimates.  Another field in the same class is West Qurna, located north of Basra, where a  group including Exxon Mobil and Shell is competing against a partnership of  ConocoPhillips and Russia's Lukoil (LKOH.RTS) for production rights."  Meanwhile Khalid al-Ansary, Jack Kimball and Simon Jessop  (Reuters) report that the country and Japan's Toyota Tsusho entered  into a contract for "1.23 billion yen ($13.60 million)" for which Toyota Tshusho  will sell Iraq "eight power transformers and six auxiliary units".  But the  really big 'growth industry' in Iraq? Quil Lawrence: The cemetery is called the Valley of Peace though,  for the living, it's crowded, dusty and almost always echoing with the sounds of  grief. The tombs and crypts extend for miles in every direction, large enough  that different Shi'ite political factions in Iraq have their own sectors  spanning several city blocks. Family members sing prayers over the dead and  spill water onto the new graves. As long as there have been funerals here, there  has been an industry to receive the dead and their families. Dakhil Shakir has  spent his eighty years here in the cemetery of Najaf, he says. His earliest  memories are helping his father and his grandfather with the business of  funerals and burials. Dakhil can count back his families five generations in the  trade. He's nearly blind now and, despite his thick plastic glasses, he calls  out to ask which of his sons are in the room with him? They will bury him some  day, he says, and then carry on the business. When Dakhil was a boy, he recalls,  desert caravans brought the dead to Najaf Dakhil Shakir [translated]: They used to bring the dead on mules. A  mule would carry two bodies with five mules in the caravan. I have seen that  with my own eyes. They would stay here for a few days and we used to offer them  a place to stay and, later, they would set off back home. Quil Lawrence: As early as the 16th century, the trafficking of  Shi'ite corpses from as far as India was big business. The Ottoman Empire taxed  and regulated the trade as did the first governments of modern Iraq. The coffins  came especially from Iran -- the majority Shi'ite state that shares  hundreds of  miles of border with Iraq. And today smuggling corpses into Iraq continues as a smuggle Lawrence  interviews explains the Iran-Iraq transportation continues and that there is  considerable money to be made in the 'trade.' As the corpse trade continues, so does the violence which creates ever more  deaths. Bombings? Jenan Hussein (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports a Baghdad sticky bombing injured five people, a second Baghdad  sticky bombing wounded seven, a Baghdad roadside bombing left four people  injured and a Mahmoudiyah car bombing left four injured.  Reuters notes a  Baghdad  home bombing which claimed the life of 1 police officer, his wife and their  daughter. Xiong Tong (Xinhua) adds that the police  officer was Col Shalal al-Zoubaie and reports an al-Miqdadiyah boming of a  generator which left two people injured. Shootings? Jenan Hussein (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports the US military shot dead 1 person in Mosul while arresting  'suspects' in a house raid.  Xiong Tong (Xinhua) reports a Jurf  al-Mileh shooting in which one person was injured by unknown assailants and a  Diyala Province shooting in which 1 person was shot dead and two more were  injured by unknown assailants. Corpses? Jenan Hussein (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports 2 corpses were discovered in Mosul. As the bombings continue, multiple reports have appeared in the last months  about the 'bomb detectors' and how they're so very good at detecting perfume and  cologne but worthless when it comes to bombs. At the end of October, an Iraqi correspondent for  McClatchy was exploring the subject at Inside  Iraq: Before starting telling you what happens in most of the checkpoints you should know about the "explosives detectors". The device is carried by security man who stops your car and walk beside it carrying the device. The device's pointer changes its direction when passed by a car that supposedly carries explosives. But the main flaw it points also if there is any chemical material like detergents or even medicine. The correspondent also addresses a multitude of other problems with the checkpoints, but staying on the issue of the 'bomb detectors,' in this morning's New York Times, Rod Nordland reports the 'wands' cost anywhere betweeen $16,500 and $60,000 a piece and quotes US Lt Col Hal Bidlack dismissing them and stating they work "on the same principle as a Ouija board". While the violence continues, there's still no election law.  Today Alsumaria reports, "Iraq High Election Commission  gave the parliament a timeline that ends on Thursday in order to enact an  elections' law or else it will not be able to hold elections as it is scheduled  on January 16. Chief of IHEC Faraj Al Haidari said that the commission and the  UN discussed elections' timeline and stressed that if he did not receive the law  in the two upcoming days the commission won't be able to hold the elections on  the scheduled date."  Gina Chon (Wall St. Journal) adds, "The  election commission said if parliament doesn't approve a law by the end of  Thursday, it will be impossible to hold the polls as scheduled on Jan. 16  because there won't be enough time to organize it. In meetings earlier this  week, United Nations officials also told lawmakers if a law isn't passed by  Thursday, the U.N. would urge postponement of the elections."  The Iraqi  Constitution mandates that the elections must be held before the end of January  2010; however, the Iraqi Constitution mandates many things -- such as resolving  the issue of Kirkuk or appointing a full cabinet by X date or requiring  Parliament's approval to extend a United Nations mandate -- and Nouri's always  managed to just ignore it.  Ernesto Londono and K.I. Ibrahim (Washington  Post) report US Ambassador Chris Hill is scrambling on the ground in  Iraq attempting to use his 'influence' to push for a vote.  The US' own manic  depressive ambassador has little-to-no influence especially if the press wants  to continue pushing the-hold-up-is-Kirkuk line.  Why is that?  Hill offended the  KRG with his very late first visit to their region.  Chris Hill offended them in  his remarks which were based on Hill's gross ignorance regarding the issue of  Kirkuk -- ignorance on full display when the Senate held his confirmation  hearing.  Hill came to Iraq with no knowledge of the KRG or Iraq.  He has no  pull. US Vice President Joe Biden and the top commander US commander in Iraq Gen  Ray Odierno have some pull (whether or not it's enough remains to be seen) with  the KRG but Hill has none.  He also has no influence over non-Kurdish MPs in the  Parliament.  So what's he's mainly doing is rushing around in an attempt to look  busy.  He'll no doubt (as has been his pattern throughout his time at the State  Dept) find a group to spill the beans to on whatever's hidden and supposed to be  hidden.  They'll agree to present whatever he wants them to because he shared  secrets and then they'll stab him in the back and he'll shrug and finger-point  at others.  In other words, his Korean 'leadership' all over again. Biggest idiot of the week? The editorial board of the Boston Globe  -- apparently begging for readers to pull the plug on the finacial crater that  is their paper.  In an appalling uninformed editorial they praise Nouri  al-Maliki and conclude, "In their own nihilistic way, Al Qaeda fanatics are  showing their true colors not only to Iraqis but to the rest of the Muslim  world. They are massacring children and other innocents in the name of a holy  war to replace all existing Arab and Muslim governments with the fantasy of a  multinational Islamic caliphate. The less Americans are caught up in this war  within the Muslim world, the harder it will be for the regressive forces of Al  Qaeda to survive." al Qaeda in Mesopotamia is a home grown group and has always  been a group of resistance.  The Boston Globe was awfully silent when  Steven D. Green and others were discovered to have gang-raped and murdered  14-year-old Abeer, murdered both her parents and murdered her five-year-old  sister.  The Boston Globe voiced no concern about the US soldiers  making it appear the War Crimes were done by 'insurgents.'  And the Boston  Globe was silent as each soldier entered a plea of guilty except for Green  who was a civilian when the crimes were exposed and was tried in civilian  court.  The Boston Globe couldn't be bothered with Steven D. Green's  trial and, even after the verdict (or for that matter, the sentencing), couldn't  say one damn word, NOT ONE DAMN WORD, about the War Crimes.  So their selective  efforts at playing editorial bully goes to the fact that they are the most  ignorant and uninformed editorial board in the nation.  Praise be to the  Boston Globe, doing their part to demonstrate that struggling papers  sometimes aren't worth the struggle to save them.  It should also be noted that  while condemning al Qaeda in Mesopotamia for violence that they have not claimed  responsibility for (despite headlines, a splinter group claimed responsibility  for the August and October Baghdad bombings that shocked so many, al Qaeda in  Mesopotamia did not claim credit), they've refused to condemn their hero and  crush Nouri al-Maliki strange choice of political bedfellows -- the ones who  have claimed responsibility for invading the US base and killing 5 US soldiers,  the ones who have claimed responsibility for kidnapping 5 British citizens -- 3  of whom are known dead, a fourth is assumed dead and the fifth is hoped to be  alive (by the British government -- the fourth assumed dead is hoped to be alive  by his friends and family but the British government has stated they assume he  is dead).  The Boston Globe has nothing to say about that and one  wonders exactly when they got in the business of covering for those who murder  US troops?  Those are Nouri's friends.  He got 'em released.  He may have  provided them with the Iraqi security forces uniforms they used in the attack on  the US base and in the kidnapping of the 5 British citizens.  He certainly  provided the group's leader and the leader's brother with a pass out of a US  prison this spring.  The Boston Globe wasn't at all worried about and  they continue to be a beacon for ignorance around the world.  What a proud,  proud moment. While the Boston Globe tongue bathes Nouri (aka the new Saddam),  UPI reports Nouri's latest planned  assault: doing away with minority representation.  The quota system for the  cabinet exists because Iraq's a diverse country.  But Nouri's never liked  diversity, Nouri's a radical, fundamentailist Shi'ite who oversaw the genocide  of the Sunni population because he loathes Ba'athists and sees every Sunni as a  high ranking Ba'athist or at least as one of the big, scary people that forced  coward Nouri to flee Iraq for decades until the US invaded and installed him as  a 'leader.'  Nouri really hates Ba'athists because they remind him all over  again what a meek, little, sniveling coward he is.  And that's why oversaw the  genocide -- gladly oversaw.  UPI notes the announcement by one of  Nouri's political party (State of Law) spokespersons "brought a wave of  criticism from Kurds, independents and Shiite members of the Iraqi National  Alliance who complain Maliki is trying to take greater control of the  government."  UPI also reminds how Nouri's road to  strongman has been littered with attacks on those who are supposed to provide  security such as his December 2008 assault on the Interior Ministry whom he  accused of plotting a coup -- a plan that never had any evidence to back it up  then or since but did allow him to push out a Shi'ite rival -- and how his  firings in August for 'security reasons' also can be seen as an attack on one of  his rivals, Shi'ite Jawad al-Bolani. UPI notes of Nouri: He has centralized power for himself to the extent that he has  formed two paramilitary forces, the Baghdad Brigade -- also known as "the Dirty  Squad" for its nocturnal sweeps arresting Maliki's critics, particularly Sunnis  -- and the Counter-Terrorism Force. Both report directly to him.           Maliki has cemented his control over the nation's security forces  by recruiting tribal militias funded by his office and seizing the power of  appointing or dismissing army officers, bypassing the chief of staff who should  have that authority.                         In the eyes of many, this has transformed the army into a  well-armed prime ministerial militia.                       And for what?  What is Iraq today?  After nearly seven years of war, what  is Iraq?  The University of Pittsburg's Haider Hamoudi visits and shares impressions at  The Daily Star: Appealing as these examples may be, the role of religion must be  greater in the view of the Najaf clerics concerning matters of law than merely  as a voice of conscience on behalf of the people against the powerful. Are we  truly to believe then that Najaf clerics are indifferent to potential reforms of  the Personal Status Law that challenge existing religious doctrine, such as, for  example, a ban on polygamy? Why did the Shiite Islamist parties who dominated  the Constitutional Committee and who were close to Sistani fight so hard for a  constitutional provision banning laws that violate the "certain rulings of  Islam," which now appears in Article 2 of the Constitution? Is the fact that  every woman within 50 miles of Najaf is covered by a headscarf and then a wide  black cloak on top of that really just a matter of personal choice, exercised  universally in precisely the same fashion, or does some form of public  regulation (state law or otherwise) have something to do with it as  well?                   I put this point to another of the four grand ayatollahs, Mohammad  Said al-Hakim, when the question was raised about the relationship of religion  to law. We heard again the Najaf mantra. I asked specifically about Article 2 of  the Iraqi Constitution and its requirement that law conform to particular  certainties in Islam. He described this as a "separate issue," and when I  suggested it might mean the marjaaiyya had a role in the legal apparatus of the  state, he replied, "we have a role in the clarification of the religion (bayan  al-din), not in the administration of the law."                
 This clarifies the position to some extent, in that it makes Najaf  responsible for indicating what the religious position is, and then leaves to  the legislator and the judge the determinations that the state is supposed to  then make on the basis of Article 2. Even Najaf's commitment to this separation  is fuzzy, in that its political allies in Baghdad have fought long and hard to  ensure a place for "religious experts" on the Federal Supreme Court for Article  2 questions. In the Constitutional Review Committee, the Shiite Islamist parties  have proposed an amendment that indicates that members of the court would be  nominated by the "relevant bodies." It is hard to imagine that they did not  imagine the marjaaiyya to be the "relevant body" responsible for nominating the  religious experts, or at least that number of them who were going to be  Shiite. And that's what Iraq can offer . . . after non-stop war and the US  installed puppets.  Elections?  The US had a few of them yesterday.  For the New  Jersey governor's race see Mike's post and also be sure to  read Betty's which expands on some of  the issues Mike touches on but sets aside the race.  And for Iraq related  coverage in the MSM?  Turns out your best chance of discovering the Iraq War is  still ongoing comes via "Hints From Heloise"  (Washington Post) and not 'reporting' (which long ago lost interest in  Iraq): Dear Heloise: Our church group has decided to start sending baked goods as CARE PACKAGES to military personnel in Iraq. We brainstormed several ideas, such as shoe boxes, etc., but found that the best way to send a cake to anyone overseas is to bake the cake in a small, metal coffee can. After baking, remove the cake to cool. Then repack it in the can, put on the plastic lid the coffee came with and pack the can in a postal box. Soldiers tell us that they love getting cakes this way for two reasons: 1. The cake arrives in one piece 2. The cake can be stored easily, with an airtight lid, if it's not eaten all at once. -- Gwen, via e-mail How wonderful to hear that your group is sending home-baked goodies to our troops! Nothing beats a treat from the heart and kitchen! Your group deserves a big Heloise hug, and I know the troops who receive the goodies are appreciative, too. I'd love to hear hints from other readers who send treats to troops. -- Heloise Staying with reading, earlier this decade Aimee Allison, David Solnit  authored the must read Army Of None. David Solnit  has now teamed up with his sister Rebecca Solnit, of   Courage to Resist, for a new book and there's a new  action. ACTION: A Global Day of Action for Climate  Justice on the ten year anniversary of Seattle WTO shutdown, Nov 30, 2009.  Yesterday African delegates walked  out  of pre-Copenhagen  trade talks in Barcelona demanding the US and rich  countries commit themselves to  deeper and faster greenhouse gas emission cuts and European activists blockaded the  talks. The key fight over  the future of the planet is taking place right now around climate; corporate  market solutions are the new WTO and the US and the rich countries are  undermining any efforts at climate solutions to avert even more catastrophic  impacts. What could shift things right now is people in the US (doing what we  did ten years ago) showing mass resistance to the US government and corporate  capitalism's obstruction and false solutions. Please join one of the regional  actions being planned in SF and around the  US (details here  soon) and sign  up to take or support  direct action and get your folks together  now! BOOK: AK Press asked me  to make a book reflecting on the Seattle WTO shutdown from an organizers view.  With my sister Rebecca Solnit,  Kate and the AK Press collective workers, designer Jason Justice and  contributions from fellow organizers we did it just in  time for the ten year anniversary. Please support  by buying a  book , get ten at  half-off, and pass on the announcement  below.                                         From dawn to dusk on  November 30, 1999, tens of thousands of people shut down the World Trade Organization meeting,  facing cops firing tear gas and rubber bullets, the National Guard, and the suspension of civil liberties. An unexpected  history was launched from the streets of Seattle, one in which popular power  would matter as much as corporate power, in which economics assumed  center-stage, and people began envisioning who else they could be and what else  their economies and societies might look like.The Battle of the Story of the Battle of  Seattleexplores how that history itself has become a battleground and  how our perception of it shapes today's movements against corporate capitalism and for a  better world. David Solnit recounts activist efforts to intervene in the Hollywood star-studded  movie, Battle in Seattle, and pulls  lessons from a decade ago for today. Rebecca Solnit writes of challenging  mainstream misrepresentation of the Seattle protests and reflects on official  history and popular power. Core organizer Chris Dixon tells the real story of  what happened during those five days in the streets of Seattle. Profusely illustrated, with a reprint of the original 1999 Direct Action Network's "Call to Action" broadsheet -- including key articles by Stephanie Guilloud, Chris Borte, and Chris Dixon -- and a powerful introduction from Anuradha Mittal, The Battle of the Story of the Battle of Seattle is a tribute to the scores of activists struggling for a better world around the globe. It's also a highly-charged attack on media mythmaking in all its forms, from Rebecca Solnit's battle with the New York Times to David Solnit's intervention in the Battle in Seattle film, and beyond. Every essay in this book sets the record straight about what really happened in Seattle, and more importantly why it happened. This is the real story. David Solnit lived and organized in Seattle in 1999 with the Direct Action Network, a group co-initiated by the Art and Revolution Collective, of which he was a part. He has been a mass direct action organizer since the early '80s, and in the '90s became a puppeteer and arts organizer. He is the editor of Globalize Liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World and co-author with Aimee Allison ofArmy of None: Strategies to Counter Military Recruitment, End War and Build a Better World. He currently works as a carpenter in Oakland, California and organizes with Courage to Resist, supporting GI resisters, and with the Mobilization for Climate Justice West. Rebecca Solnit is an activist, historian and writer who lives in San Francisco. Her twelfth  book, A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in  Disaster, came out this fall. The previous eleven include 2007's Storming  the Gates of  Paradise; A Field Guide to Getting Lost; Hope in the Dark:  Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities;Wanderlust: A History of  Walking;As Eve Said to the Serpent: On Landscape, Gender and  Art; River of Shadows, Eadweard Muybridge and the  Technological Wild West (for which she received a Guggenheim, the National Book Critics Circle Award  in criticism, and the Lannan Literary Award). A contributing editor to Harper's,  she frequently writes for the political site Tomdispatch.com. She has worked on  antinuclear, antiwar, environmental, indigenous land rights and human rights campaigns and movements  over the  years. We'll note the book again tomorrow but right now we'll close with this from  Sherwood Ross' "CHOMSKY SAYS PRESIDENT OBAMA  CONTINUES BUSH POLICY TO CONTROL MIDDLE EAST OIL" (Veterans  Today): Political activist Noam Chomsky says that although President Obama views the Iraq invasion merely as "a mistake" or "strategic blunder," it is, in fact, a "major crime" designed to enable America to control the Middle East oil reserves. "It's ("strategic blunder") probably what the German general staff was telling Hitler after Stalingrad," Chomsky quipped, referring to the big Nazi defeat by the Soviet army in 1943. "There is basically no significant change in the fundamental traditional conception that if we can control Middle East energy resources, then we can control the world," he said. In a lecture at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London Oct. 27th, Chomsky warned against expecting significant foreign policy changes from Obama, according to a report by Mamoon Alabbasi published on MWC News.net. Alabbasi is an editor at Middle East Online. "As Obama came into office, (former Secretary of State) Condoleezza Rice predicted he would follow the policies of Bush's second term, and that is pretty much what happened, apart from a different rhetorical style," Chomsky said. Chomsky said the U.S. operates under the "Mafia principle," explaining "the Godfather does not tolerate 'successful defiance" and must be stamped out "so that others understand that disobedience is not an option." Despite pressure on the U.S. to withdraw from Iraq, Alabbasi reported, Chomsky said the U.S. continues to seek a long-term presence in the country and the huge U.S. embassy in Baghdad is to be expanded under Obama. | 
 
