Wall Street Journal - 
By
 SHAYNDI RAICE And JOHN LETZING RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif.—Wall Street 
is still reeling from Facebook Inc.'s initial public offering, which 
left investors with financial losses and dimmed hopes for stocks.
But here are my thoughts (opinions) on the Facebook fiasco.
The people running it are seen as greedy and ruthless.  There was the lawsuit going back to college where, the best you can say is, the people who invented it forgot to copyright it.
The people running it were seen as thinking they were better than Wall St.  Mark Z. whatever wearing his casual wear to presentations.
The people running it were seen as too big for their britches.
The people running it had a product that seemed amazing . . . if Yahoo had never happened . . . or MySpace . . . or any of the many failed internet businesses.
Exactly who was supposed to root for these characters?
Not people who value privacy because Facebook has  a real problem honoring privacy.
They had no one.  They had no core support.
They had an iffy product that may be the wave of the future but has thus far not shown any real ability to do much of anything.
Their users in the US have declined and the trend has been when a social media starts to decline, it continues to.  Remember all those people convinced in 2008 that MySpace was here to stay?
So they were brought down by their own inflated egos.
And it didn't help that they had no real product to speak of, just how they were going to use Facebook users to make money off of the people.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Wednesday:
Wednesday,
 May 30, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, empire gets discussed, 
Marcy Winograd has an announcement, Talabani doesn't want Nouri to face a
 vote of no confidence, Tareq al-Hashemi feels the continued drama 
surrounding him is about to wrap up, I offer my thoughs of (and support 
for) Chris Hayes, and more.
The 
Honorable Jonathan Sumption is not only a judge (Justice of the Supreme 
Court of the United Kingdom), he's also a historian.  Earlier this 
month, he delivered a [PDF format warning] speech to the London School of Economics' Department of Government
The
 extreme case is of course the choice between peace and war.  In 
reviewing the military interventions of the English government, the 
courts have arrived at a position practically indistinguisable from the 
old non-justiciability rule, although justified on a different basis.  
The legality of the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq in 2003 was, to put 
it mildly, a matter of some controversy everywhere outside the United 
States.  The great majority of international lawyers of repute 
considered it to be contrary to international law, in the absence of the
 United Nations authority and did not accept that any of the relevant 
resolutions conferred that authority.  The United States was inclined to
 respond to this difficulty in the way that the British had done at the 
time of the Suez crisis of 1956, by simply ignoring it.  In 1956, the 
Attorney-General, Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller and the 
Solicitor-General Sir Harry   Hilton-Foster, both supported the invasion
 politically although both believed and told the Prime Minister that it 
was illegal.  The Chief of Imperial General Staff, Sir Gerald Templer, 
issued the deployment orders without troubling himself with the legal 
issue.  These are attitudes characteristic of an imperial power, and we 
should not be particularly surprised to find them adopted by the United 
States.  It is a sign of how far the climate of British opinion had 
changed by 2003 that the Chiefs of Staff  required an assurance from the
 Attorney-General that operations in Iraq were lawful.  They famously 
received one that had been prepared on a basis not wholly consistent 
with his previously expressed views and supported by reasoning which 
provoked the resignation of one of the Foreign Office legal advisers and
 was rejected by every serious authority on international law.  
And on empires, we'll move to the latest broadcast of David Swanson's Talk Nation Radio which features Marcy Winograd.  Excerpt.
David
 Swanson: You have left the fold of the Democratic Party and gone to the
 Green Party and after having been a candidate for Congress in 
Democratic primaries and done remarkably well against a well funded 
incumbent as a peace candidate.  Why the -- Why the decision to go to 
the Green Party?
Marcy
 Winograd: David, it wasn't an easy decision and it was one I wrestled 
with for probably quite some time.  But at the end of the day, the short
 answer is that I really didn't want to be aligned with a War Party any 
longer.  Even if you're an insurgent in that war party, you're still in 
it.  And as an insurgent,  I challenged Jane Harman she was a big Hawk, 
supporter of the military industrial complex,  I was on the floor of the
 Democratic Party convention in California introducing resolutions to 
end the war, the assault on Iraq.  I was shut down, quoroms were called,
 quorom called, I introduced resolutions to censure senators like Dianne
 Feinstein when she waffled on whether water boarding was torture. There
 are many struggles to engage in as an insurgent within a party and I'm 
not saying that they're not worthy and that they're not of great 
value but at this point in my life, I   really want to live inside my 
skin.  I want to be authentic. And I also want to look towards the 
future.  Face it, the American Empire is declining.  This is it.  We are
 collpasing.  And we are watching the collapse of the US Empire. How 
long did it take other countries?  Well ou know for some it took a 
century.  For others it took just a few years.  Look at the Soviet 
Union.  Two years for the Soviet Union to collapse.  A year for 
Portugal, 8 years for France.  17 years for Great Britain.  There are 
historians. I interviewed one on [KPFK] Connect the Dots, Dr. Alfred McCoy who wrote in The Nation
 magazine who predicts that by 2025 it's over.  Just 15 years from now, 
the empire will be over. So given that, the US Empire, with its military
 bases in 3/4 of the countries in the world is just not sustainable.  
It's imperative that we look to our future and embrace   something 
positive. We know what we don't want. What do we want?  And that's what 
attracted me to the Green Party.  
David
 Swanson:  Well clearly the US Empire could end in a variety of ways -- 
some softer and easier than others.  Do you think that the Democratic 
Party and, in particular, President Obama are better or worse or about 
the same in relationship to the Republican Party and George W. Bush in 
terms of the manner in which the empire is over-extending itself and 
moving towards its collapse? In other words, would we be better off in 
these final years of empire to have the Democrats doing it or the 
Republicans?
Marcy
 Winograd: That's a very tough question, isn't it?  I know that I will 
not be voting for Barack Obama for president. And I did support him when
 he ran previously.  But this time I am going to be voting for the Green
 Party nominee because I really do want a different vision for our 
country and now's the time for us to speak out and say this is the 
alternative vision:  a party of non-violence, a party that opposes 
weapon sales  to other countries, a party that wants to build 
sustainable communities and invest in our communities, not extract 
wealth and send jobs to other countries. I think, at the end of the day,
 that it's very dangerous to have somebody in the White House who people
 don't necessarily who people don't necessarily know or understand and 
who may project an image of concilation and partnership but in reality 
is escalating what began under former President George Bush.  I'm 
talking about this "war   on terror."  Right after Obama took office, he
 escalated the drone attacks on Pakistan.  We now have an increase 
in Joint-Special Operations Command Forces in other countries -- from 60
 countries under Bush to 75 countries.  We have codified indefiniate 
detention, extraordinary rendetion and targeted assassination.  We have 
moved beyond what was considered under the Bush administration as an 
order for hot pursuit.  In other words, if somebody attacked us or an 
ally, we could cross a border in hot pursuit.  Now the whole world is a 
war theater under Barack Obama. So I'm afraid that under the Democratic 
leadership -- both in Congress and in the White House -- we are not 
seeing what we think we want to see or what we think we are seeing.  
Instead, we're seeing increased militarism.  So I think it's very 
dangerous to think that this is an alternative path.  In fact, I think 
under President Obama,   we've seen the Democrats able to advance a 
Republican agenda, at least on the foreign policy side, at least better 
than the Republicans could. 
"Download or get embed code from Archive.org or AudioPort or LetsTryDemocracy or RadioProject." 
 I really am surprised by Marcy's news and will assume others are as 
well.  Who's running in the Green Party for the presidential 
nomination?  A press release from the Green Party of Michigan answers that question:
For Immediate Release:
Green Party of Michigan Presidential Nominating Convention Saturday
Mt.
 Pleasant) - This Saturday marks the beginning of the Green Party's 
nominating convention at the university's campus in Mt. Pleasant which 
will last through Sunday afternoon. Excitement for the event has been 
building for months as the presidential candidates have been 
particularly exciting among members this year.
Dr. Jill Stein of Massachusetts has been travelling throughout the country to stand in
solidarity
 with Occupy movements, to speak at Green conventions and events and has
 most recently walked with those protesting the PGA in Benton Harbor. A 
long-time activist and dedicated member of the Green Party, Dr. Stein is
 currently the forerunner in the nomination pool.
Comedienne and activist Roseanne Barr of California has likewise been a long-time   
supporter of grassroots movements. Her rallies in California have drawn hundreds of
supporters. Although she was the last candidate to announce her running, she has made a
strong showing in state polls.
Dr. Kent Mesplay of California was the first to announce his candidacy and has   
remained a strong contender as a long-time Green. Having also vied for the presidential
nomination
 in 2008, he is the candidate with the most experience. As the son of 
missionaries, he grew up alongside native peoples in a nature-centered 
environment. This has shaped the focus of his message.
The three contenders for the presidential nomination will be speaking remotely at the   
convention on Saturday afternoon. Candidates for state and some local offices will also be
nominated this weekend. The straw poll for the presidential nomination will take place on
Saturday
 with the results being announced on Sunday. The decision of the straw 
poll will guide the choice the delegates will make at the National 
Convention in Baltimore, MD on July 12-15.
Highlights of the convention will also include entertainment Saturday evening by musical
acts Stephen Colarelli, a singer/songwriter, Rope and the Rulers, and Poor Player.
The Members of the Green Party of Michigan have been active in petition drives to have   
several
 critical issues placed on the November ballot including the Emergency 
Manager repeal which was thrown out on a questionable technical 
objection and the current ban on fracking petition gaining strength and 
support throughout the state.
If you are interested in becoming a member of the Green Party or want to learn more   
about our key values, see our webpage: www.migreens.org.
###
For more information, please contact
Convention organizer and Green Party Co-chair Fred Vitale: freddetroit@sbcglobal.net
  
or Green Party Elections Coordinator John A La Pietra: jalp@triton.net
Your
 vote is your vote.  Use it as you want.  Like Marcy, I cannot vote for 
Barack Obama.  I don't reward War Hawks.  As I've stated before, I think
 I'll just sit out the voting for that office.  That's what I'm doing, 
you do what you want, if you're voting you're an adult so you should be 
able to figure out who speaks to you (if anyone does) and vote (or vote 
by not voting) accordingly.  (And for more on the Green Party race, you 
can refer to this post by Ian Wilder at On The Wilder Side.)
Today the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) released "Report on Human Rights in Iraq: 2011."  As with the Iraq section of the US State Dept's 2011 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices released last week, UNAMI's findings weren't pretty.
But
 it's difficult to tell who's the bigger joke: Nouri al-Maliki or the 
UN.  Martin Kolber is UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Special Envoy 
to Iraq.   Having sat through Martin Kobler's presentation to the UN Security Council April 10th
 and seeing the single sentence that couldn't use the term "gay" but 
hinted that the targeting of Emo and LGBT youth (and those perceived as 
such) would be addressed in the report (the one released today), this 
report's an embarrassment.  That section is the smallest section of 
today's report, it's buried deep.
10. Attacks on persons for reason of their sexual orientation
The
 topic of homosexuality is largely taboo in Iraq. Members of the 
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community usually keep 
their sexual orientation secret and live in constant fear of 
discrimination, rejection by family members, social exclusion, 
intimidation and violence.  While the Iraqi penal code does not 
expressly prohibit homosexual relations between consenting adults, a 
variety of less specific, flexible provisions in the penal code leave 
room for active discrimination and prosecution of LGBT persons and feeds
 societal intolerance.
During the reporting
 period, UNAMI continued to receive reports of attacks against 
individuals based on their perceived or actual sexual orientation.  In 
one case, a 17 year old boy was relocated with assistance from an NGO 
after his family tried to kill him on the basis of the boy's perceived 
homosexuality.  The Government takes no action to protect people from 
violence or discrimination based on sexual orientation, and there are 
few social services available.
And that's it.
That's it?
As we noted April 11th:
Of course, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon declared last month, "To
 those who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender, let me say -- you 
are not alone. Your struggle for an end to violence and discrimination 
is a shared struggle. Any attack on you is an attack on the universal 
values the United Nations and I have sworn to uphold."
What
 pretty words.  What a shame his Special Envoy to Iraq spits on those 
words, betrays Iraq's LGBT community, stays silent as they're targeted 
and killed, ignores the persecution.  
As we noted yesterday, the
 Special Envoy Martin Kobler appeared Tuesday before the United Nations 
Security Council where he yammered away for approximately 20 minutes and
 also handed in a written report/statement which was 17 pages long.  
Though he was supposedly concerned about violence and targeted groups 
and though he made his focus the first three months of the year, he 
couldn't bring himself to mention the targeting of Iraq's LGBT 
community.  He could talk about the so-called 'honor' killings but not 
in relation to gay men or lesbians.  Ban Ki-moon assured the world's 
LGBT community just last month that they were not alone.  Just 
yesterday, his Special Envoy to Iraq, made clear that, in fact, Iraq's 
LGBTs are very much alone.    Martin Kobler made very clear that the 
United Nations, as represented by him in Iraq, will gladly and always 
look the other way while thugs go on killing sprees.  One of the slogan 
of the United Nations is, "It's your world." But apparently that doesn't
 apply for LGBTs.  Someone with the UN to address whether Ban Ki-moon 
was lying or if Martin Kobler just doesn't understand how offensive what
 he did yesterday was?
Excuse
 me, I though Ban Ki-moon was saying LGBT rights were human rights.  But
 that's not what I got from Kobler's presentation or from this report 
released today.  Either UNAMI intends to seriously address the targeting
 or it intends not to.
For those who missed 
it, Emo and LGBT were lumped together.  LGBT is, of course, a sexual 
orientation.  Emo is more of a social scene.  In Iraq, the two were 
lumped together and worse.  Worse?  The Iraqi youth were supposedly also
 practicing witchcraft and also they were vampires as evidenced by the 
fact that they drank blood.
Did they drink blood?
Years
 and years ago, have I told this story, there was a presenation on gangs
 to a group of concerned lawmakers (state lawmakers).  A friend who 
works with gangs couldn't make it and asked if I'd fill in.  That's not 
my area but I was adequate if not good.  But what stood out to me was 
the guy who had never spoken to a teen in a gang but 'knew' everything. 
 It was that "Calvin Kline" who was making people gang members because 
it helped sell his clothes.  It gets better (or at least more humorous),
 rap artists "like Cindy Lauper" (Cyndi Lauper) were also glamorizing 
gangs.  This man was completely serious.  He thought he had studied and 
arrived at logical conclusions.  (Calvin Klein was pushing underwear and
 baggy jeans at that time, if he was pushing anything.  Cyndi Lauper is 
not now and never has been a rap artist.)  This man was so uninformed 
that he made my adequate presentation seem like an   informed lecture.
And
 the point here is two-fold.  First, this isn't ha-ha, we're so much 
smarter than the Iraqis.  No.  Humanity's all basically on the same page
 with some people in every area reading just a little bit ahead of the 
others.  Second, a lot of people (in every country all over the world) 
hear a topic mentioned and think they're an expert.  Emos have been 
demonized around the world, not just in the MidEast, in Mexico as well. 
And that panic mind set allows some really stupid things to be said by 
supposed experts.
In the case of Iraq, it was 
the Ministry of Interior that went into the schools and demonized Emos 
(who again are also wrongly said to be gay -- you can be Emo and gay, 
you can also be Emo and straight).  Let's drop back to March 9th:
Meanwhile Kitabat notes
 that the Interior Ministry is declaring there have been no deaths and 
this is all a media creation. That would be the same Ministry of 
Interior that, please note, was declaring earlier this week that Emo was
 the number one threat to Iraq. Guess someone got the message about how 
badly this was making Iraq look to the rest of the world? Now the still 
headless ministry (Nouri never appointed a minister to head it) wants to
 insist that it is only a small number of Iraqi youth who are even into 
Emo. The ministry insists that the only truth on the subject of Emo is 
that which the government tells. But the Parliament's Security and 
Defense Commission also spoke to the media on Thursday and they spoke of
 the discovery of   15 corpses of young Iraqis -- Emos or thought to be 
-- discovered in one Baghdad neighborhood. Activist Hanaa Edwar also 
speaks of the large number of Iraqi Emo youths being targeted. Al Mada notes the Parliament committee stated that the security forces have failed to protect the Emo youth. Dar Addustour reports
 that activists Mohammed al-Kazimi has pointed out that the constitution
 of Iraq guarantees Iraqis the right to freedom of expression and that 
Emo youth are not   unconstitutional.
When
 this was going on, Iraqi youth were pretty much on their own.  Iraqi 
groups and activists did speak out but internationally you had a lot of 
silence.  (Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International were not 
silent.) And the US State Dept refused to speak of it but was kind 
enough to leak an e-mail when pressure was coming to bear on the 
administration.  If that e-mail had not been treated like something 
amazing (it wasn't) by the LGBT press in America, the administration 
might have been forced to make a public statement.  And as silent as the
 State Dept was the United Nations.
Iraqi 
youths were being killed.  To be really clear, if you are a gay Iraqi 
youth, that doesn't mean you can be killed.  That's not acceptable.  
That's not something the world should ever look the other way on.  But 
damned if they didn't try, these supposed groups and governmental 
agencies there to help. 
There are things in the report that will be noticing this week.
But
 here, I called out Martin Kobler repeatedly for his silence at the UN 
briefing.  And I heard from UN friends about how it's 'referred' to in 
the written report.  No, it's noted that this issue will be dealt with 
in an upcoming report.  That report was the one released today.  Two 
pathetic paragraphs is not dealing with it.  Failure to even use the 
term "Emo" is pretty sad. Failure to note the Ministry of the Interior 
went into schools and asked for names is shameful.
I
 took Kobler to task several days in a row here and only stopped when UN
 friends swore the report would go into what was taking place.  The 
report's out today and yet again, YET AGAIN, the United Nations has 
failed the LGBT in Iraq (as well as those perceived to be).  In failing 
them, it failed every LGBT.  Because it sent the message that though the
 UN will give lip service and pretend that they give a damn about LGBT 
rights, the reality is they'll only mention it in a report if they're 
forced to and, even then, they'll rush through it and ignore most facts 
and events.
What I've written isn't all that 
damning (though I'll get phone calls for it).  What's really damning is 
that the United Nations is supposed to help those in need, those in 
crisis but, read their report, the only one who got helped was a 
17-year-old who was helped not by the UN but by an NGO.  That pretty 
much says everything that needs to be said about where the United 
Nations stands today on LGBT issues.
Alsumaria reports Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi states he will return to Iraq soon and that the targeting of Baghdad provincial council member Laith al-Dulaimi (arrested on Nouri's orders by Nouri's forces who tortured him) confirms much of what al-Hashemi has stated about being targeted. Specifically, al-Hashemi states it confirms what he has stated about human rights, about the lack of justice, about the judiciary being politicized and about torture being a key characteristic of Iraqi imprisonment. In protest of the proceedings, al-Hashemi's attorneys walked out May 20th on the trial against him. Like Laith al-Dulaimi, the Vice President is accused of terrorism. Like Laith al-Dulaimi, the Vice President is a member of Iraqiya.
Iraqiya's big 'crime' appears to be coming in first in the March 7, 2010 elections. For months before the election, Nouri al-Maliki attempted to demonize them, had them arrested, had them kicked out of the race and someone -- Nouri? -- was also having the assassinated in the lead-up to the elections. Nouri 'promised' -- the media swore to us -- that there would be no third term. But as we have repeatedly noted, that line has been walked back and walked back. And, no, we didn't fall for the claim when he made it. We questioned it even then pointing out that in the original assertion, he'd left himself wiggle room.
Among the current issues that various blocs can agree upon is that Nouri should have no third term. The one that can't agree with that is Nouri.
If you'll think back to the lead-up to the 2010 elections, you'll remember Nouri was convinced his State of Law would win overwhelmingly. But the reality was they didn't even win by a hair. It's possible that the attacks currently are part of his attempts for the next round of parlimentary elections (which are now supposed to take place in 2014) or even to influence the provincial elections (scheduled for next year currently). Nouri does have problems with the provinces. He's got a war going on with Ethyl al-Nujaifi who is the brother of Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi. Ehtyl is also the Governor of Nineveh Province and Nouri -- who is so shocked that people are calling for him to step down -- has twice called for al-Nujaifi to step down as governor.
Al Rafidayn notes the real purpose of Nouri's holding the Council of Ministers meeting in Mosul (as opposed to Baghdad) yesterday: He met with tribal leaders in Nineveh in an attempt to shore up support for him as moves are made to push for a no-confidence vote which would, if succeessful, remove him from the post of prime minister. Nouri also again launched an attack on Osama al-Nujaifi. Which really doesn't seem smart in the province that elected his brother governor. But Nouri's not know for his wisdom.
To distract from the push for a no-confidence vote in him, Nouri and flunkies recently announced there was a push for a no-confidence vote in Osama al-Nujaifi. However, the National Alliance (a Shi'ite grouping of political parties which includes Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc, Ibraham al-Jaafari's group, Nouri's State of Law and the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq among others) publicly dismissed that. They noted that the National Alliance was not calling for a move against al-Nujaifi. They noted that State of Law had not even made a proposal to the National Alliance about such a move. And the press kindly let the matter die instead of pointing out that Nouri had been caught in yet another lie.
Today a new reason for the ongoing political crisis is given: Jalal Talabani.  Alsumaria reports
 that State of Law states Osama al-Nujaifi attempted to call for a 
no-confidence vote but Talabani stopped it.  If true, that conditional 
is always needed when speaking of State of Law, it's time for Jalal to 
go.  Qassim Abdul-Zahra (AP) also reports that Jalal Talabani rejected the call for a no-confidence vote and cites Kurdish MP Mahmud Othman as the   source.  
 Press TV reported
 Saturday that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani was calling for a national
 conference again.  He's been calling for that since December 21st.  How
 long he'll continue to call, who knows?  
His
 son, of course, just spent over a million dollars on a DC home (the six
 bedroom and six bath house -- not all six baths are full bathrooms -- 
is on Daniel Road in Chevy Chase, Maryland and they closed on it January
 27th agreeing to the price of $1,155,000).  I guess if I were a child 
of Talabani's and I was seeing exactly how ineffective he had become, I 
think I'd probably decide to spend money on a home in another country as
 well.  It is interesting that a public servant like Talabani can afford
 to purchase a home in that neighborhood.  You wouldn't assume that 
being the KRG lobbyist in the US would pay enough to warrant a 
million-dollar home.  
I think someone should ask Talabani why his son purchased a home in the US -- you can lease in that area -- and how large of a salary his son draws?
He's swearing to Kurds that he's going to stand with them but even PUK (the political party he heads) doubts that. They're starting to point out the obvious: Is Jalal really in a position to demand that Nouri not seek a third term? If he takes up that position, doesn't that mean that Talabani can't seek a third term as president of Iraq?
Without that position, he's just the aged head of political party he's led to lower and lower turnout. The PUK needs new leadership.
Talabani
 is just Nouri in a ceremonial post.  Why did Iraq have elections?  To 
get a new speaker of Parliament?  That's really all that changed despite
 the results.  
In news of violence, Alsumaria reports that a roadside bombing today in Ramadi claimed 1 life and left two other people injured.  In addition, Al Rafidayn notes that a bridge connecting Anbar Province and Salah ad-Din Province was blown up today.  In addition, Alsumaria notes 1 person was shot dead as he left his southern Baghdad home yesterday.
Lastly, I'm offering my opinion on Chris Hayes. 
 The short version is, he didn't do anything wrong.  He's apologized for
 what he stated and I believe that was sincere, he's generally a sincere
 person.  But what he said before his apology?  If that was a shock to 
you, you don't really know a wide cross-section of people who've lost a 
loved one to war.  You may know many, but you apparently only know one 
grouping.   Chris Hayes' comments weren't at all shocking to me.  I 
speak to pro and anti and in-between veterans groups and there's a wide 
range of opinions out there.  I'll assume that those who objected online
 to what Chris said on his MSNBC program were being sincere.  But I 
think they would have been better served -- and our national dialogue 
would have been -- if they'd grasped that their opinion   isn't the only
 one out there.  I'm not the voice of veterans, I don't present myself 
as such.  
Would I have said what he did?  
No.  I wouldn't have ventured an opinion on the topic and don't believe I
 ever have.  I'm more interested in hearing what people think than 
sharing my own opinions (and I don't have an opinion on everything or 
rush to form one). I'm mainly weighing in today on Chris because a 
writer slammed me in an series of e-mails today on how I hadn't come to 
his (the writer's) defense.  And my reaction to that is, "I don't know 
your soap opera.  I don't have time to research your last three years 
and all the people you've pissed off.  But I do know that woman at the New York Times
 that won't take your calls anymore?  Your rage frightens her.  And 
she's not the only one."  But being read ___'s attacks over the phone by
 Martha (who got the 'joy' of being the one to open 
those foul e-mails -- thank you, Martha for all you do) with their f-you
 and the   rest attacking me for not coming to his defense (over 
problems I wasn't even aware of -- I didn't even know he was lying about
 me -- which he also admits in his e-mails -- in 2011 online until 
today), I thought finally, "You're on your own."  And that made me 
think, the people who really do care and really don't try to hurt 
people, those are the ones who deserve support.  And that's the type of 
person Chris Hayes is.
There are a lot of 
people who don't care.  They go on TV and they really don't care.  It's a
 party and a game, they say their piece and they go home and don't even 
think about it again. (For those who take that as a slam on the right --
 I know many people on TV on the left and in the center.  I can't speak 
to the right-wing TV pundits and wouldn't presume to being unfamiliar 
with them and their lives.)  Whether you agree with Chris or not, he 
does give a great deal of thought to not only events but to how he 
impacts them and whether or not he said the right thing or communicated 
correctly.  He does not set out to be controversial or to hurt anyone.  
He's not trying to 'play with the format.'  He's honestly attempting to 
communicate.  He meant no harm and he was speaking -- whether he knew it
 or not -- for a group of people around the country who were mourning 
the fallen and whose feelings   about their loved one are just as valid 
as those who disagreed with Chris.
If you were
 honestly bothered by Chris' opinion -- which he identified as such -- 
he's offered a sincere apology and if the attacks on him continue, I'll 
assume you're not sincere but working some political angle or trying 
to.  He's done everything he can and then some at this point so if 
you've got a problem, it's beyond Chris and on you.  There are a lot of 
people I wouldn't vouch for.  When I was making a list of that as Martha
 read the series of e-mails from ____, I immediately thought of Chris 
Hayes and how he's someone who is worth vouching for.

 
