| Friday, September 16, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri still can't  play nice with others, a boom in housing construction doesn't lead to lower  prices (hmm), peace efforts gear up for next month, and more.     Scott Horton: I think that Come Home  America is the most important thing in the whole world, why  don't you tell everyone about it.   Kevin Zeese: Well Come Home America is an  effort to bring people across the political spectrum together if they oppose  war, militarism and empire. We don't care what your political views are on other  issues, whether you're a Libertarian or a progressive, a liberal or a  conservative, a Republican or a Democrat, or an independent or a third party  member.  We just want to bring people together who oppose war and militarism.   We look at the power of the military industrial complex, the control of the  Congress and we see that in order for us to be successful in challenging that  military machine, we need to unite and put aside our other differences and unite  to really work to reduce the political power of the military industrial complex  and their minions in Congress.   Scott Horton: It occurs to me that you could probably use millions  and millions of dollars, am I right?   Kevin Zeese:  I think that's very true. You know the military  industrial complex certainly spends hundreds of millions of dollars to control  the political process.  And we can't compete with them dollar for dollar but I  think we can compete with them person for person. I think the more we get out  the message about US empire and its negative impact on our national security, on  people's lives around the world and on our economy, the more people who will  support our views and the stronger we'll -- the quicker we'll end this  militarism of our foreign policy.      Let's stay with peace for a bit more. DC Blogger (at Corrente) has  justified one hundred one useless politicians over the years, had a real  struggle coming to grips with the realities of Barack Obam (Corporatist War  Hawk) and is most infamous for useless, "Call this 1-800 number and tell them .  . ." I've never said a word about DC Blogger here (or elsewhere).  I consider DC  Blogger highly inept but that's my opinion and it wasn't necessary to share it.   Unless and until DC Blogger becomes the problem.  Such as Tuesday when DC Blogger did an offensive post at  Corrente where he or she whined and stomped their feet over the actions  of real activists. And what appears to have bothered DC Blogger the most was  skin color.  White was offensive, to DC Blogger who hated the activists because  of their skin color.  In 2011, if you have to bring in skin color to explain why  you don't like someone, I'd argue you have some issues. DC Blogger's attack was  joined by trashing from Twig and Lex in the comments.  What the hell's going on  at Corrente?     The video is street theater.  And it has a point and purpose which is to  make people think about the Iraq War.  They were never rude, the activists, to  anyone.  They were polite and they smiled. (They could have been rude and it  still would have been street theater.  I'm sorry but Miss Manners doesn't rule  in a movement.  A movement is a group of people from all walks of life who  will rarely agree 100% on anything other than core statements.)  Watch the video here.   Activist: Remember when Barack Obama was a candidate and he  inspired so much hope for change by saying things like this?   Barack Obama October, 2007: If we have not gotten our troops out by  the time I am president, it is the first thing I will do.  I will get our troops  home. We will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the  bank.   Screen shot of a check 'from' Barack Obama for payment of  "Priceless" to be made to "Citizens of the World."     INT. BANK OF AMERICA - DAY   Activist: Congratulations Bank of America, Cambridge branch. We  come in peace to let you know that you are the winners of a promotion -- a  promotion being held by the president of these United States of America who said  on the campaign trail --   Barack Obama: We will bring an end to this war. You can take that  to the bank.   Activist: Today we are at the Bank of America taking this to the  bank.  Is there any manager available who's like to pose for a photo op?  We  just want to know who we should give this to --   Bank employee: Come upstairs, I'm the banking center manager. I'd  be happy to take it for you.  So take all the pictures you'd  like.   Activist: Is the Bank of America not the place to redeem this  check?  Bring the troops and the money home.  Who should I --   Bank employee: Sir, could you please stop disturbing our  customers?   Activist:  So you're not willing -- you're not willing to bring --  the customer here all have the same check in their hands.   EXT. CITIZENS BANK - DAY   Activist: We went to Bank of America and they could not cash this  check.  We'd could establish an account here at Citizens Bank, the poetry of  that for this priceless amount paid to Citizens of the World, bring the troops  hom and redirect money towards human and environmental needs and could I have  some popcorn?   Woman's voice: Yes, you can.    Activist: Alright!   INT. CITIZENS BANK - DAY   Bank employee2: We cannot have this.   Camera Operator: Yeah, yeah, we'll just be a minute.   Activist: So who should I give this check to?  Who wants to bring  the troops home and redirect that money towards human and environmental needs?   Is there a local community bank we could go to?   Bank employee2: No, we cannot suggest anything.  But you cannot  stay in here.   Bank employee 1: Can you please? [He covers camera with his  hand.]   INT. CITIBANK - DAY   Bank employee: We could not allow that in the  branch.   Activist: We've been to several banks.  We've been trying to make a  deposit but now we realize that we need to make a withdrawal.    He signs the check on the back.   Activist: Listen the only reason I'm doing this today is because I  know there are people out there who know, who feel in their bones that the  representative democracy is not working the way it's supposed to.  A majority of  people want to tax the rich.  A majority of the people want the wars to end  bring those troops and those dollars home, spend them on environmental and human  needs.  That's not happening by who you vote for. So that's why I'm trying to  redeem Barack Obama's promise and take it to the bank.  Now imagine, just think,  if one person a day did that, they would just think that that person was crazy  and they would ignore him.  Imagine if two people a day did that, they might  think that they were lovers on a lark and they would have a little laugh.   Imagine three -- no, imagine 50 people a day walking to a bank with that check  and trying to withdraw all those troops based on Barack Obama, they might think  it's a movement.  That's what it is. The homecoming October 2011 movement  Bring The Troops Home, bring the dollar home, spend it on human needs.  Take  care of the poor, tax the rich.  All you have to do to join me is send me your  e-mail [at TheHomecoming 2011@Gmail.com],  join me in Freedom Plaza starting October 6th for the protests that will not go  home, for the protests that will not go away        It's not any different from what CODEPINK does with regards to the war, the FCC or  any number of issues.  So I'm not grasping the offense.  But I am grasping that  the Iraq War doesn't exist at Corrente.  They've got someone doing  recipes, they've got someone doing plants, they've got someone doing books from  time to time, they've got someone singing the praises of the state-owned (and  subdued -- see WikiLeaks as well as criticism of the Libyan War coverage) Al  Jazeera, they've got lots of stuff.  They just don't cover the wars and they  specifically refuse to acknowledge the Iraq War.  When 15 lives were lost in the Iraq War in the month  of June, Corrente didn't lead on the coverage or even do a single  post on that topic.  And I notice that DC Blogger refuses to tell people what  the video is about -- ending the wars.  There are a lot of people, please pay  attention, who have hearing issues.  They will never be able to enjoy a video  that is not closed captioned.  So all you blogger who think you're so wonderful  by posting a link to a video or posting a video, please grasp that we all get  that you live in a world where you are supreme and no one you know is challenged  or disabled.  We get it.  How very lucky for you that realities never touched  your circle.  But that's not how it is for everyone.   So when you post a video, how about grasping that you NEED TO SAY WHAT  HAPPENS IN THE VIDEO.  Or you need to put a message that says: "If you're deaf  or hearing challenged, this site doesn't welcome you and will not include  you."   In addition to the deaf and hearing challenged (which does include a huge  number of veterans of today's wars) there are people in rural areas who do not  have DSL, there are people all over the country who cannot afford DSL, there are  people who are still using computers with Windows 98 -- and some of those people  are glad to have those computers.  I realize that in the world of DC Blogger, no  one's ever sick or ill or has any condition and they buy any laptop as soon as  it rolls off the assembly line.  But considering how often Corrente  looks down on the "creative class" and tries to self-present as "of the people,"  I can't believe I'm having to offer this remedial in human abilities and  disabilities, in computers and economics, in rural disadvantages, etc.    Repeating: If you post a video you presumably want people to know what's  going on in it.  Failure to explain what goes on it cuts you off from a  significant part of the audience and that's an audience that does not come back  to you once the message is clear that only the well to do and non-disabled are  welcome.   It's not a minor point with me.  I learned to sign years ago and, as I've  noted before, if someone's at a Congressional hearing I attend and I know they  can't hear and there's no one there signing, I will sign throughout the entire  hearing (while I take notes, yes).  [The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee will  provide services for challenged and disabled attendees if they are informed the  services are needed 3 business days prior to the hearing -- this includes making  space for wheel chairs, as well as providing translators/signers, etc. And for  those e-mailing, we haven't covered the hearings in the House and Senate  Veterans Affairs Committees because there haven't been any.  They resume later  this month.]     And when we speak to groups about the wars, that includes groups where I  sign and speak and groups where I just sign. And while the bulk of the country  didn't watch, refused to watch, the strongest campus protest of the last decade  was at Gallaudet.  How dare anyone not grasp that,  regardless of physical abilities, everyone in this country can make a difference  and that, around the country, so many are making a difference but because they  don't you fit your filter of 'normal' or 'accepted' or 'just like me!,'  you  ignore them.  I do not believe in forced community service but I do believe a  lot of people, particularly those online, would do well to do some community  service that put them into contact with people who don't have all the breaks  they do.   Were that to happen, they might realize how stupid they looked slamming  people because of their skin color.  [And before someone e-mails that Betty, Stan or Marcia did it --  Ann or Cedric are more likely to use that technique in  roundtables at Third than at their own sites due to  what they cover at their sites -- when they call out a White person and make a  note of the skin color, it is because that White person has decided they know  more about African-Americans than, in fact, African-Americans do.  That's the  point of Betty, Stan and Marcia calling those people out.  It's not "They're  white!"  It's "that fool is saying this is what it's like to be Black and that  fool is White and we don't anyone to speak for us, we can speak for ourselves  thank you very much."]    The video was street theater.   It is supposed to attract attention as a video to get the word out on the  October protests.  Did it succeed?  I really wasn't planning to note them.  I'm  at a distance from a number of people who I feel have not taken accountability  for their past misdirections.  But I noted the actions today and that's entirely  due to that video.  Which was funny and to the point.  And which brought the  issue of the Iraq War into three different banks, forcing it on the employees  and the customers in those banks.   Good. The United States government continues the Iraq and Afghanistan  Wars.  If you are a US citizen I don't know where the hell you get off thinking  you've earned a pass from having to care or think about the wars your elected  government continues.   The video's not the problem.        Now I'm no diplomat, but from my foxhole it appears that the U.S.  is negotiating with the government of Iraq from a position of weakness. We are  deferring to every Iraqi government whim at the expense of our own safety. We  literally are permitted only to sit on our enclosed bases and hope that the  IRAMs -- improvised rocket-assisted mortars -- don't hit their mark. In other  words, we are sitting ducks. [. . ] I urge President Obama to take charge of this upside-down  situation. He should simply tell the Iraqi government that we are going to  operate the way we know how and that they are welcome to participate, or that we  are leaving tomorrow. Continuing to serve up Americans as targets while the  Iraqis play favorites between us and Iran is not an acceptable course of  action. 
 Let's stay on Iran for a moment. Iranian dissendents welcomed into Iraq  during Saddam Hussein's reign are currently residents of Camp Ashraf.  They are  protected persons under the Geneva Conventions.  The Tehran Times reports that Ammar Hakim,  Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq leader, has declared "that the members of the  terrorist Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) based in Iraq must leave the  country by the end of 2011. Hakim, who travelled to Iran to attend the fifth  meeting of the Ahl al-Bayt World Assembly, made the remarks during a meeting  with Grand Ayatollah Abdul Karim Mousavi Ardebill in the holy city of Qom on  Friday." Is he serious? One would assume so except Press TV  reports that he also declared he would "not allow any of them [US troops] to  stay in the country" beyond 2011 and "The occupiers must leave before the  deadline under the security pact."  The US Embassy will have troops in as do all  US embassies.  (The Marines guard the embassies.)  In addition, the  militarization of diplomacy means that some troops (maybe 300, maybe more) will  remain in Iraq under State Dept control.  There will of course be "security  contractors" (mercenaries) as well.  And the US may keep troops in Iraq under  the Defense Dept as well if Nouri and the White House can reach an agreement.   In other words, it's very hard to see Hakim's second state as remotely true or  even across the street from true.  So that calls into question his statement  about the Camp Ashraf residents.       Yet the embassy is turning out to be too small for the swelling  retinue of gunmen, gardeners and other workers the State Department considers  necessary to provide security and "life support" for the sizable group of  diplomats, military advisers and other executive branch officials who will be  taking shelter there once the troops withdraw from the country. The number of personnel under the authority of the U.S. ambassador  to Iraq will swell from 8,000 to about 16,000 as the troop presence is drawn  down, a State Department official told The Huffington Post. "About 10 percent  would be core programmatic staff, 10 percent management and aviation, 30 percent  life support contractors -- and 50 percent security," he said. As part of that increase, the State Department will double its  complement of security contractors -- fielding a private army of over 5,000 to  guard the embassy and other diplomatic outposts and protect personnel as they  travel beyond the fortifications, the official said. Another 3,000 armed guards  will protect Office of Security Cooperation personnel, who are responsible for  sales and  training related to an estimated $13  billion in pending U.S. arms sales, including tanks,  squadrons of attack helicopters and 36  F-16s.      In Iraq today, diplomats, military officials, and Washington  busybodies are involved in a complex game of maneuvering into place American  troops meant to remain in Iraq long past the previously 12/31/2011 negotiated  deadline for full withdrawal. Iraq will eventually agree, probably in some  semi-passive way, such as calling them trainers, or visiting students, or temps.  There will be endless argument over numbers -- should it be 3000 soldiers or  10,000? The debate over whether troops should stay on, or how many should stay,  begs the real question: What will all those soldiers do in Iraq? Iraq has its own governmental issues, to put it mildly. New Sabbah reviews the Kurdish  issues with Nouri's government (the failure of Nouri to implement the Erbil  Agreement, the proposed oil and gas law, etc.) and notes Nouri's raging that  Ayad Allawi (leader of Iraqiya) and Nouri's insistence that Allawi has no place  in the current government. Iraqiya's spokesperson tells Al Mada that Allawi is speaking not  for himself but for Iraqiya and has the political slate's support. She also  notes that the tensions between the blocs have always been present and that  current tensions have resulted from the failure to implement the Erbil  Agreement. (Iraqiya is a political slate made up of various groups -- primarily  Sunni and Shia.)
 
 Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq speaks with State of  Law MP Ali Al-Shalah who deems Allawi "a trouble maker" and insists Allawi is  plotting with Saudi Arabia. Aswat al-Iraq notes, "Vice-Premier  Saleh al-Mutlaq called on the Iraqi to adopt a national spirit and not follow  the rumors that destabilize the country among different Iraqi provinces." This  as Aswat al-Iraq also  reports, "Ex- Basra Governor Mohammed Musabih al-Wa'ili announced  today that the signatures of 20% of Basra population shall be gathered,  following Premier Nouri al-Maliki's rejection to establish a region there,  pointing out that such rejection is 'constitutional violation'."
  Reuters reports "hundreds" protested  throughout "Iraq's Sunni Muslim province of Anbar" today as  aresult of the  arrests of 8 men accused of the Monday killings of 22 Shia pilgrims. Nouri  expressed his dismay over the protestors and apparently was most offended by  their chant of "We will cut the hand of whoever reaches (across) our borders."  Moqtada al-Sadr's protests took place as well.  His admirers called it "a huge demonstration."   Of course, Prashant Rao (AFP) reports it was "thousands" and  that alone would be disappointing since we're talking about Sadr City in  Baghdad.  Where allegedly 2 million Moqtada supporters live.  That's where the  protest took place. A couple of thousand out of 2 million-plus isn't significant  at all. The Reuters photo with the AFP article demonstrates it  was Moqtada's armed militia marching through the streets.  Did the people  watching the march get (again) counted as protestors?  In downtown Baghdad,  Tahir Square saw NGOs demonstrating and calling out the attacks and perceived  attacks on Iraq from Iran and Kuwait, Aswat al-Iraq reports.   Turning to violence, Reuters notes a Haditha military raid  resulted in the death of two suspects and 1 Iraiq military officer (three Iraqi  soldiers and one police officer were wounded), a Garma drive by resulted in the  death of a police officer "in front of his home," a Jbela car bombing left three  people injured and a bomb that immediately followed (after help arrived) left  seven peopl injured and, dropping back to last night for the rest, 2 corpses  were discovered in Baghdad, a Baghdad attack on police resulted in 2 being  killed and two more police officers left injured, two Mosul roadside bombings  left nine police officers injured, a Mosul roadside bombing left one Iraqi  soldier wounded and 1 corpse was discovered in Mosul.       In July, I wrote about the plight of Iraqis who worked with U.S.  soldiers and civilians but face death as "collaborators" when we leave. Their  situation remains unresolved. Congress set up a special program in 2008 to grant these Iraqis  25,000 special immigrant visas (SIVs) over five years. Only 3,629 have been  issued thus far; at least 1,500 are pending. Yet, some Iraqis who have virtually completed the process have been  told they must wait an additional eight months while more security checks are  conducted.  
 
 Iraq's in its second consecutive month of inflation and Mayada Al Askari (Gulf News) interviews Iraq's  Undersecretary of the Iraqi Ministry of Housing and Construction to talk about  the construction boom in Iraq. (When you bomb a country repeatedly, you do  create the need for a construction boom.) Excerpt:
 GULF NEWS: How can you be so ambitious about  building housing when the infrastructure's main element, electricity, is not  available? Buildings  -- as an example -- require lifts, electric water pumps,  etc. How can communities live without electricity?
 
 Faleh Al Ammiri:  Certainly, the implementation of these projects requires time during which  infrastructure and providing the community with electricity will be completed.  As for major investment projects, electric power stations will be built to  provide such projects with electricity as well as water and sewage  systems.
 
 What about paving roads in Iraq, why are there so many projects  in this area?
 
 Road networks in Iraq were previously neglected and the  whole system is out-of-date as it was overused by the army, but we now have  plans to refurbish the system. A renovation of the roads network is currently  underway. Weigh stations across the country's provinces were officially  announced lately, as overloads are the main reasons behind the recent road  damages. There is also the intent to carry out a highway connecting Umm Qasr  with the Turkish border, along with other roads connecting the Iraqi cities.  Construction of bridges is also part of the plan, however maintaining roads and  bridges require users to abide by load limits, and the provinces need to carry  out their commitments in this regard.
 
 The minister's not  interested in housing people. It's a corruption scam waiting to be turned over  as he confesses that "the ministry-run corporation has dozens of factorizes  specialising in the production of concrete products including pipes, bridge  pillars as well as asphalt, stone breakers and ready-mix factories". That quote  right there also answers the question about why the ministry has placed so much  emphasis on building roads at a time when Iraqis continue to lack not just  reliable electricity but also potable water.
 
 It's a lot easier to keep  approving projects that enrich your own budget.
 
 If you doubt it, why is  South Korea winning a construction bid in Iraq? Why is any foreigner? Iraq's  never suffered from lack of construction workers.
 
 Iraq also suffers not  from a lack of concrete. In fact it's a big mob industry in Iraq. But the  Ministry's in it too. Hmm. Al  Sabaah reports on how Iraq's got all these new houses and  housing areas being built and yet the glut hasn't depressed market prices and  the homes are so expensive why? Due to the high cost of the construction  materials. Seems like that cost could be somewhat controlled if Iraq's Ministry  of Housing and Construction were doing it's job -- and that's before you factor  in the fact that the Ministry owns many of those construction material producing  businesses.
 
 And all of this comes as the Integrity Commission's finding  on Iraqi real estate has embarrassed Nouri and forced him to make a move. Al Rafidayn reminds that he's  stopped the sale of Iraqi property as a result of the Commission finding fraud  and price manipulation by government employees in the real estate market.  Nouri's quoted calling out the "corruption and abuse" in his government on this  issue. The Commission has also located over a hundred million smuggled out prior  to the start of the Iraq War, this would be under Saddam Hussein.
 
 
 In  related news, the Great Iraqi Revolution has  released "a document leaked from the Prime Minister's office which  orders the recruitment of 1000 nurses and 150 doctors from India and Bengaladesh  . . . while there are tens of thousands of unemployed Iraqis who are well  qualified for these jobs!!!"
 
    Turning to the US,  Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.  We'll close with this from her office: 
 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Murray Press Office -  (202) 224-2834
 Thursday, September 15,  2011 Burr Press Office – (202) 224-3154
 
 
 Chairman Murray and Ranking Member Burr Call on VA to  Provide Answers about Department's Budget Projections
 
 (Washington, D.C.) -- Today, Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee Chairman Patty Murray and Ranking Member Richard Burr sent a joint  letter to Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Secretary Eric Shinseki expressing  their concern that VA may not have sufficient resources to adequately address  increasing demand for veterans' health care in FY 2012. Chairman Murray and  Ranking Member Burr's letter asks VA for specific assurances that VA remains  ready and able to provide the health care upon which more and more veterans  depend.
 The full text of the Senators'  letter is below:
 
 
 The  Honorable Eric K. Shinseki
 Secretary  of Veterans Affairs
 810 Vermont Avenue  NW
 Washington, DC  20420
 
 Dear Secretary  Shinseki:
 
 In this time of economic  uncertainty, with an increasing number of our servicemembers returning home, the  demand for medical care at VA medical centers is certain to grow. This demand,  coupled with the lower than expected Medical Care Collections Fund (MCCF)  collection rate, and recent reports regarding staffing reductions and emergency  budget cuts at certain medical centers, underscores the critical need to ensure  resources are being maximized and Department appropriations requests are  accurately projected.
 We are therefore  writing today to confirm that VHA appropriations and carry-over for FY 2012 are  on-track to meet the needs of our nation's veterans, so that the care provided to our veterans  remains the highest quality.
 
 We understand from your July 21, 2011,  sufficiency review of advance appropriations for FY 2012 medical care that the  Department's appropriations request was based, in part, upon projected carryover  funds and revenues from the MCCF. MCCF collections, along with operational  improvements, and cost savings in acquisitions, fee care, and other programs,  are key components of budget and operations planning and must be accurately  projected.
 We also understand that  for the first quarter of FY 2011, VHA reported a 12.3 percent variance between  its planned and actual collections, in the amount of nearly $100 million. As of  second quarter FY 2011, MCCF collections were 8.5 percent below plan and 5.2  percent below the same period last year. Similarly, for third quarter FY 2011,  collections remain 5.7 percent below plan. In your July report, you stated that  "there remains an element of risk to the sufficiency of the FY 2012 budget" and  quoted a June 14, 2011, GAO report:
 
 
 
 If the estimated savings for fiscal years 2012 and  2013 do not materialize and VA receives appropriations in the amount requested  by the President, VA may have to make difficult trade-offs to manage within the  resources provided.
 
 
 
 Such  difficult trade-offs are evident throughout the VA health care system. We  understand, for example, that the Indianapolis VAMC faced an $18 million budget  shortfall at the start of FY 2011. Against this backdrop, and challenged by an  unprecedented demand for services from veterans, the medical center reduced  expenditures and slowed the hiring of additional and replacement staff.  Similarly, the Tampa VAMC continues to take steps to address a budget deficit  that is currently near $17 million and has been as high as $47.5 million this  fiscal year. Such steps have included a reduction in staffing through attrition  by 111 positions, and cuts from lab services, mental health programs and  education funds. Each of these actions, while fiscally sound, could have an  adverse impact on patient care quality.
 
 As we enter into FY 2012, it is imperative that VHA  remains ready and able to provide the quality medical care upon which our  veterans depend. Accordingly, we ask that you detail for us your plan to  increase MCCF collections, so that collections goals in FY 2012 are met.  Additionally, please address whether there are budgetary shortfall risks at  VISNs or medical centers for FY 2012. Are VHA appropriations and carryover  on-track to meet VHA needs? Finally, do you anticipate that VISNs and medical  centers will be able to meet budgetary obligations without having to  significantly draw upon reserve funds?
 
 Thank you for providing this information to us. Ours  is a shared mission to safeguard the health and well-being of our nation's  veterans and we look forward to working with you to this  end.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 Patty Murray
 Chairman
 
 
 Richard Burr
 Ranking Member
 
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 Meghan Roh   Deputy Press Secretary    Office of U.S. Senator  Patty Murray   @SenMurrayPress   202-224-2834   Get Updates from Senator Murray       |