Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Hawaiian Macaroni Salad in the Kitchen



Ingredients


8 oz elbow macaroni
1 1/4 c. mayonnaise
1/4 c. whole milk
1 tbsp. apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. granulated sugar
1 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. ground black pepper
1 large carrot, shredded
1/2 c. chopped celery
1/3 c. chopped green onion, plus more for serving
1/4 c. grated yellow onion

Directions

    1. 1Cook the macaroni according to the package directions. Drain and rinse under cold water until cool. Set aside.
    2. 2Whisk together the mayonnaise, milk, vinegar, sugar, salt, and pepper in a large bowl. Add the macaroni, carrot, celery, green onions, and grated onion. Gently stir the mixture until well combined.
    3. 3Cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Gently stir, and top with more green onion, if you like.

As with most pasta cold salads, this is tasty if you can chill for an hour or more and you can even make it the night before.

Tamara asked if I still watched Ree on The Pioneer Woman.  Yes, but not live.  I would watch her and Valerie on Sunday mornings.  But then Valerie became so irritating about her now-ex husband in real life and made herself look like a fake ass in all the previous episodes of her show.  So I stopped watching live.  I do still record Ree's show and will often watch an episode or two on Saturday afternoon.

She does a great show.  

Dan Gooding (The Messenger) reports:



Pope Francis has spoken out against divisions within the Catholic church in the United States, saying some more socially conservative groups have a "very strong reactionary attitude."

Speaking at a private event in Portugal on August 5, the Pope was asked about U.S. clergy's criticisms of his leadership. The transcript from the event was released Monday.

He told the Portuguese members of his Jesuit religious order that the situation in the U.S. "is not easy," adding that some aspects of the American Catholicism have been too influenced by ideology instead of faith, where "membership of a sector of the Church replaces membership of the Church."

"I would like to remind those people that indietrismo (being backward-looking) is useless and we need to understand that there is an appropriate evolution in the understanding of matters of faith and morals," the Pope said.

He told those gathered that doctrine, or church beliefs, can progress, expand or consolidate with time.

"Let us get to specifics," Francis continued. "Today it is a sin to possess atomic bombs; the death penalty is a sin. You cannot employ it, but it was not so before.

"As for slavery, some pontiffs before me tolerated it, but things are different today. So you change, you change, but with the criteria just mentioned."

The Daily Beast also notes the story.


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


Tuesday, August 29, 2023.  A third French soldier dies in Iraq this month, climate change impacts are felt around the world, Ronal DeSantis climate of hate results in more hate and violence, and much more.


As the month of August winds down, a third French solider is killed in Iraq.  AFP reports:

A member of an elite French commando unit was killed Monday in Iraq while "supporting an Iraqi unit in an anti-terrorist operation", French President Emmanuel Macron's office said Tuesday.

Sergeant Nicolas Mazier, an air force paratrooper, "fell in combat while carrying out his mission", the Elysee Palace said in a statement, expressing Macron's "profound respect" for his "sacrifice".


THE NEW ARAB adds, "It said other soldiers from the unit were also wounded."  KURDISTAN 24 reminds, "Mazier is the latest French causality in Iraq following two other deaths among the troops in August."




Iraq, the cradle of civilisation, is facing an existential challenge: Drought and severe water shortage that threaten to turn the “land of the two rivers” into a parched desert.

Climate change and regional politics are turning this once fertile country, fed by two great rivers, into a desolate and arid land where the fate of over 43 million inhabitants hangs in the balance.

Time is not on Iraq’s side. Failing crops, drying rivers, poor rainfall rates, weather extremes, and political squabbling are playing havoc with the country.

Never before have the residents of Baghdad seen the water level in the Tigris and the Euphrates so depleted. People now cross the dry river bed of both rivers on foot. This is how catastrophic the current crisis has become.


On the topic of climate change, Brett Wilkins (COMMON DREAMS) reports:

  Climate campaigners on Friday condemned the violent takedown of activists during a demonstration at the annual Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium in Wyoming, an elite gathering where U.S. Federal Reserve officials, central bankers from around the world, economists, and policymakers meet, mingle, and craft financial policies that critics say are exacerbating the planetary emergency.

Multiple videos posted on social media by the direct action group Climate Defiance show law enforcement officers slamming a pair of activists on a hard floor as they chant, "End fossil finance" at the conference, which is hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. This year's theme is "Structural Shifts in the Global Economy."

One activist—25-year-old Teddy Ogborn of the group Planet Over Profit—was arrested, while other demonstrators were cited for criminal trespass, according to Eren Can Ileri, a policy advocate at the Stop the Money Pipeline coalition.

"I'm feeling a little sore but in pretty high spirits just thinking about the fact that someone has to be confronting these financial regulators who are actively choosing to fuel the climate crisis and burning the Rocky Mountains, where I'm from," Ogborn told Common Dreams.

"I am part of a global movement of young activists who see the world around us and know that progress is not being made fast enough on climate change," he continued. "People are climate laggards, they are climate delayists, they're climate deniers, and all that together means death in the near term for our futures and society as we know it."

"People want to do business as usual," Ogborn added. "Financial regulators have billionaire friends who want to watch the world burn from space. And so we have no choice but to take direct action to put our bodies on the line because petitions, sign-waving, and chanting—we tried that for the past 50 years and it hasn't worked, and we're out of time."

Ileri, who was also at the protest, told Common Dreams: "We tried to exert our democratic rights today. We tried to peacefully, nonviolently, and constructively engage the Federal Reserve on policy positions we believe are needed to save our futures. They showed us they were not open to conversation through their violence toward our activists but also by whisking the Fed chair away when we tried to approach him conversationally."

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell once again took a hawkish stance during a speech in which he said that "although inflation has moved down from its peak—a welcome development—it remains too high," and that the Fed is "prepared to raise rates further if appropriate."

Powell did not address the climate emergency or the role central banks play in fueling it. Ileri asserted that "by isolating themselves from communities facing the real economy impacts of the climate crisis," Powell and other central bankers "are allowing themselves to define risk in a way that doesn't match the risks that normal Americans face on a day-to-day basis due to the climate breakdown."

Stop the Money Pipeline co-director and San Francisco Board of Supervisors candidate Jackie Fielder responded to the heavy-handed police tactics by telling Common Dreams that "it's absolutely horrendous how security and law enforcement would assault young climate activists who are simply calling out climate denialism at the Fed." 


J L'Heureau (WSWS) zooms in on the state of Louisiana:


As part of the ongoing global trend of worsening environmental conditions as a result of capitalist-induced climate change, the state of Louisiana has experienced highly abnormal weather patterns throughout the summer. Typically recognized as the wettest state in the contiguous US, it is witnessing an unusually prolonged period of drought and wildfire activity, fueled by extreme heat.

Multiple high temperature records, some of which date back to the nineteenth century, have been broken throughout the state. The month of July, while being the hottest recorded month globally thus far in human history, was also the hottest for the capital city, Baton Rouge. Triple-digit temperatures have been the norm, not the exception throughout the state, with heat advisories issued around the clock by the National Weather Service (NWS).

In conjunction with the effects of the current El Niño weather pattern, a persistent heat dome has been one of the factors exacerbating temperatures. Caused by a stationary area of high atmospheric pressure trapping in warm air blown from the Gulf of Mexico and other large bodies of water—where surface temperatures have been 90-or-more degrees Fahrenheit (32-plus-degrees Celsius)—and preventing the formation of rain clouds, large swathes of the US have endured this phenomenon throughout the summer, as have parts of Mexico, Europe, North Africa and South Asia.

Meteorologist-in-charge for the NWS in New Orleans, Benjamin Schott, told local news, “No person alive in the city has ever experienced a summer like this.”

Children, the elderly, the homeless population (including those on the verge of homelessness) and workers that have to work outside are the most vulnerable to extreme heat.

Ben Broussard of the Catholic Charities of Acadiana described the impact the heat is having on the homeless, saying, “It is, at the best, uncomfortable. At the worst, is dangerous, depending on available shade and hydration.” He revealed, “We’ve had folks coming in with third-degree burns. It’s seriously dangerous outside for folks who don’t have any way of getting out of it.”

The Louisiana Department of Health has recorded 16 heat-related deaths since the month of June. Addie Duval, vice president of the Greater Baton Rouge chapter of the non-profit Start Corporation, said, “We’re definitely aware of at least a couple of heat-related deaths.”


At FAIR, Robin Anderson analyzes how the press divorces realities and cause when covering the clear effects of climate change:

When wildfires tore across Maui on August 9, devastating the Hawaiian island gem, media covered the disaster extensively. Broadcast news featured dramatic photographs that showed the horrors of the island’s destruction, with online videos shared everywhere from the Weather Channel to Inside Edition. Reporting carried testimonial descriptions like “war zone” and “apocalyptic.” On Twitter, before-and-after pictures of Lahaina confirmed that the town, home to Indigenous communities and historic sites, no longer existed.

Most of the corporate press focused on the island’s sensational visual destruction, official responses, body counts and destroyed structures. Meanwhile, news reports largely confused or denied the climate crisis’s contribution to the fire, and ignored the connections between fossil fuel use, increased CO2 levels and planetary heating.

A long Washington Post piece (8/9/23) described Maui’s power outages, cell phone blackout, clogged roads and evacuations. It made no mention of the climate crisis.

The following day, the Post (8/10/23) reported that “the fires left 89 people dead and damaged or destroyed more than 2,200 structures and buildings.” Headlining the article, “What We Know About the Cause of the Maui Wildfires,” the paper didn’t include “climate change” or its synonyms in the text. Instead, the Post identified three “risk” factors: “months of drought, low humidity and high winds.” What caused the months of drought on a tropical island not previously prone to wildfires? The Post didn’t seem interested in pursuing the question.

The piece also offered no information for understanding the similarities to the fires that had raged across Canada and turned the skies of the Northeast an eerie color of orange only two months earlier (FAIR.org, 7/18/23). The only reference point the Post gave for comparison was Hurricane Lane, which hit the Hawaiian Islands in 2018, causing heavy rains and later burning 3,000 acres of land—yet the reporters made no connection between climate instability and stronger, more intense storms.

The San Francisco Chronicle (8/10/23) published a stand-alone photo essay with captions, many taken with drones or aerial photography, that included a series of before-and-after images of Lahaina and the loss of historic sites, including the scorching of the banyan tree planted in 1870 to mark the 50th anniversary of the arrival of missionaries on the island. Though under the heading of “Climate,” no mention was made of the changing climate.

Some in the press did draw connections to the climate crisis. For instance, Axios (8/10/23), in a piece headlined, “The Climate Link to Maui’s Wildfire Tragedy,” framed the disaster within a climate discourse: “Researchers say climate change has likely been a contributing factor to the deadly wildfires in Hawaii.” Axios also drew correlations to the “summer of blistering, record-breaking heat, that puts climate in focus,” referencing the wildfires destroying Canadian forests and creating a health hazard across the US.

Importantly, Axios went further, admitting that climate change is a consequence of human activity: “Increased wildfire risk is also a symptom of human-caused climate change, scientists say.” A link took readers to previous Axios reporting (5/16/22) on research that tracks wildfire risks to the built environment, writing, “Climate change will cause a steep increase in the exposure of US properties to wildfire risks during the next 30 years.” Yet even while making these connections, Axios failed to include fossil fuels and CO2 in the text.

A New York Times piece headlined “How Climate Change Turned Lush Hawaii into a Tinder Box” (8/10/23) seemed focused on climate disruption: “As the planet heats up, no place is protected from disasters.” It documented the “long-term decline” in annual rainfall,” matter-of-factly citing multiple causes such as El Niño fluctuations, storms moving north and less cloud cover. But like Axios, the Times remained silent on what’s at the root of all this: fossil fuel combustion, and the gas and oil industries.


Meanwhile in Florida where Governor Ronald DeSantis and his goons have fostered a climate of hate, Greg Owen (LGBTQ NATION) reports:


Murals at the Orlando, Florida LGBTQ Center were defaced on Friday night with Nazi and Christian Nationalist hate speech including, a swastika, “Gay is not okay,” and the infamous Bible verse about homosexuality being an “abominiation” punishable by death. A police investigation is underway.

The LGBTQ+ youth organization Zebra Youth created the colorful artworks celebrating gay Pride and transgender joy.

“The Center’s beautiful murals were vandalized with hateful homophobic and transphobic messages and n*zi symbols,” the group said in a statement. “We appreciate all of the community support and are doing everything to ensure the safety of our youth and staff. We will not allow hate to win.”

Volunteers worked Saturday morning to clean up the damage.

State Rep. Anna V. Eskamani (D-Orlando) shared pictures of the defaced murals on Twitter along with her resolve to track down the vandals: “These were shared by the ED (executive director) of our LGBTQ+ Center — absolutely disgusting. Will do what we can to identify who did this and hold them accountable.”


The hate being stoked -- and sold by hate merchants like Ronald -- saw its intended outcome over the weekend with the deaths of three African-Americans.





In Jacksonville, Florida, a gunman shot and killed three Black people Saturday in a racist attack which the U.S. Justice Department is investigating as a hate crime. The three victims, who were killed in front of and inside a Dollar General store, were identified as 52-year-old Angela Michelle Carr, 19-year-old Anolt Joseph “AJ” Laguerre Jr. and 29-year-old Jerrald De’Shaun Gallion. The shooter was identified as Ryan Palmeter, a 21-year-old white man, who died by suicide after his rampage. This is Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters.

Sheriff T.K. Waters: “The shooter had authored several manifestos: one to his parents, one to the media and one to federal agents. Portions of these manifestos detailed the shooter’s disgusting ideology of hate. Plainly put, this shooting was racially motivated, and he hated Black people.”

The gunman had no criminal history and legally purchased the two weapons he used earlier this year: a Glock handgun and an AR-15-style rifle. The guns had swastikas drawn on them. Before the attack, the shooter was seen at Edward Waters University, a historically Black college. He drove away after a security guard saw him.

On Sunday, Governor Ron DeSantis spoke at a vigil, where he was booed by the crowds. One attendee shouted out, “Your policies caused this!” DeSantis and Florida Republicans have imposed racist laws including rolling back diversity and inclusion policies and attacking African American studies. DeSantis also opposes gun law reform.



Attendees of a vigil for the Black victims of a white supremacist shooting in Jacksonville, Florida booed Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) on Sunday as he tried speaking. DeSantis signed laws loosening gun laws and blocking anti-racist education from schools, leading at least one state legislator to blame him for the shooting.

On Saturday, a self-avowed 21-year-old white supremacist killed three Black patrons of a local Dollar General store before killing himself. The victims were 52-year-old Angela Carr, 19-year-old Anolt Laguerre, Jr., and 29-year-old Jerrald De’Shaun Gallion. The shooter had published racist manifestos online.

The gunman wore a mask and tactical vest and carried a semi-automatic Glock pistol and an AR-15-style assault rifle with swastikas drawn upon it, Jacksonville Sheriff TK Waters said, according to CBS News. The gunman initially appeared at the historically Black college, Edward Waters University, before beginning his shooting elsewhere.

[. . .]

DeSantis has signed laws seeking to ban racially inclusive diversity training and anti-racist “critical race theory” from schools, businesses, and government. In April, he signed a law allowing Floridians to carry guns without a permit or training even though local police officers and anti-violence activists opposed it. In May, he signed a law making it more difficult to track firearm purchases.

Racial justice broadcaster Reecie Colbert commented via Twitter about DeSantis’ heckling. She wrote, “I need Black folks to stop being more worried about offending company than about speaking truth to power. To placate DeSantis in a moment like this after he has targeted Black folks with his zealous [white-colored circle emoji] supremacist agenda is gross. Let him hear every boo and jeer he deserves!”

We'll note this Tweet from Paul Rudnick.



New content at THIRD:



The following sites updated:


Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Famous Roman Pasta (Pasta alla Gricia)

 

That's Matteo Lane's Famous Roman Pasta (Pasta alla Gricia). And let me note some other video recipes people have e-mailed about.

Sheet pan pizza alla vodka.


Chicken wings.


Greek Lemon Chicken


 

3 Ingredient Dump and Go Crockpot meals



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


Monday, August 28, 2023.  Reporters Without Borders issues a statement on Julian Assange, Iraq's rivers aren't just drying up because they're also polluted, THE NEW YORK TIMES continues to lie about transgendered people, and much more.


Reporters Without Borders issued the following this morning:

As calls to #FreeAssange continue to grow around the world, diplomatic negotiations also appear to be heating up between the United States (US) and Australia over the fate of WikiLeaks publisher and Australian citizen Julian Assange. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) urges the two states to commit to finding a solution to the case as an urgent priority, preventing a situation of extradition and allowing for Assange’s immediate release with no further time in prison.

With Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese set to be hosted by US President Joe Biden for an official state visit to Washington DC from October 23 to 26, the ante has been upped in the ongoing diplomatic negotiations between the US and Australia regarding the case of WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange. This visit could mark the last chance to prevent a lengthy period of imprisonment for Assange, whose fate hangs in the balance with his possible extradition only a matter of weeks or months away, meaning efforts on his behalf are now more crucial than ever. 

RSF has been intensely engaged in public and private advocacy urging both governments to prioritize finding a diplomatic solution to the case involving no further time in prison for Assange. RSF has written letters to both sides ahead of recent high level meetings in San Diego and Brisbane, and engaged in a week of targeted advocacy with the US government and Congress in Washington DC in July, urging the US to act in the interest of journalism and press freedom by finding a political solution that prevents extradition and ensures Assange will spend no further time in prison. Albanese’s state visit to Washington DC presents a savvy opportunity for precisely that solution.

“Now is a more crucial time than ever with Julian Assange’s extradition possibly looming in just a matter of weeks. If the US and Australian governments mean what they say when it comes to press freedom, they simply cannot ignore the elephant in the room during Prime Minister Albanese’s state visit to Washington DC. We urge both governments to commit to reaching a diplomatic solution as an urgent priority before the visit, preventing a situation of extradition and allowing for Assange’s release from prison without further delay.

Rebecca Vincent
RSF’s Director of Campaigns

Since the electoral victory of the Australian Labour Party in May 2022, the Albanese administration has been slowly and steadily advocating on behalf of Assange, with the Prime Minister and other officials often repeating the refrain that Assange’s case has gone on for too long and needs to be resolved. Albanese’s commitment to finding a solution to the case marks a sharp departure from the hands-off approach of his predecessor, former Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who had stated Assange would be “free to return home” after the matter had made its way through the justice system. 

It was recently acknowledged that US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong discussed Assange’s case when the two met for Australia-US Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN) in Brisbane in July. Blinken’s comments in a press conference afterwards, emphasizing that Assange was accused of “very serious criminal conduct,” drew public criticism in Australia for his seemingly hardline approach, although he had not said anything that differed from the US government’s longstanding position on the case. Significantly – perhaps in reaction to the backlash – two weeks later, US Ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy made comments to the press indicating “there absolutely could be a resolution to the case,” such as through a plea deal.

At the same time, Australian public opinion is heavily in Assange’s favor, with the cry to #FreeAssange growing across the country. Calls from Australian MPs for Assange’s release have gained traction, while journalists’ groups such as the MEAA (Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance) continue to speak out in solidarity. The pressure is growing for Albanese to secure Assange’s release, and he would almost certainly face a strong backlash if he returned home from his state visit having failed to do so.

Assange’s fate may indeed depend on the outcome of the diplomatic negotiations. With only one final step remaining in the UK courts – a hearing by a panel of two judges yet to be scheduled, dubbed “Day X” – he has few legal means left to prevent his extradition to the US. If extradited, Assange faces up to 175 years in prison cumulatively for the 18 counts against him. The bulk of this case – 17 counts – rests on Espionage Act charges, which itself is facing calls from reform in the US Congress to address its lack of a public interest defense and other deficiencies. The remaining Computer Fraud and Abuse Act charge – the initial charge brought against Assange before the Espionage Act charges were added in May 2019 – would carry a potential maximum sentence of only five years.

For his part, Assange has already spent nearly four and a half years in London’s Belmarsh prison, where he has been held on remand since April 2019. Assange has been arbitrarily deprived of his liberty through various means since December 2010, including 10 days of isolation at Wandsworth Prison, 550 days of house arrest, and seven years in the Ecuadorian Embassy, where he sought refuge out of fear of extradition to the US.

In the run-up to Prime Minister Albanese’s visit to Washington DC, RSF will continue to mobilize its entire international network in support of the #FreeAssange campaign. RSF campaigns for Assange’s release as a global priority because of the alarming implications his case has for journalism and press freedom. RSF defends Assange because of his contributions to journalism through the publication by WikiLeaks of leaked classified documents that informed public interest reporting around the world, exposing war crimes and human rights violations that have never been prosecuted. 

The US and UK are respectively ranked 45th and 26th out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2023 World Press Freedom Index. Australia is ranked 27th. 


Julian remains persecuted for the 'crime' of journalism.  

Turning to Iraq, FRANCE 24 reports on the rivers in Iraq. 


Over the past few months, temperatures in Iraq have reached 50 degrees Celsius and water levels in the country’s rivers are dropping fast. Despite having two big rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates, Iraq suffers from desertification and there are concerns about the water disappearing - mainly from Iranian and Turkish dams upstream and the excessive use of water resources, particularly within agriculture. But despite this, Iraq is doing little to protect its rivers. From the north to the south, industrial, chemical, medical and biological waste flows untreated into the water, effectively poisoning it. From Kirkuk to Basra and Baghdad, the water is contaminated. Marie-Charlotte Roupie and Josh Vardey report.









Meanwhile, THE NEW YORK TIMES sold the war on Iraq with lies so we shouldn't be surprised it's also used lies to sell their ongoing war on the transgender community.


Evan Urquhart (ASSINGED MEDIA) does a major take down on the paper for its latest garbage:

Earlier this week the New York Times published a biased and misleading story by Azeen Ghorayshi on the allegations of Jamie Reed, a former employee of the Washington University Pediatric Transgender Center at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. 

One paragraph in Ghorayshi’s story stood out. It claimed that while at least one of Reed’s claims contained factual inaccuracies, others had been corroborated. Based on the contents of the allegations and of the NYT piece, this didn’t seem to accurately reflect either what was in the allegations or what had been found in the reporting for the NYT piece.

screenshot from the New York Times

Accusing the NYT of not accurately representing what their reporting found is a big swing, and something we know many people will find difficult to believe. That’s why Assigned Media went through every claim made by Reed and coded them as either corroborated, uncorroborated, or refuted by reporting in either the NYT or other outlets. We believe this shows, conclusively, that none of Reed’s allegations of wrongdoing at the Center have been confirmed, and that the NYT misled readers by implying that they had.

A spreadsheet containing every claim and our coding of them is available in a view-only link at the bottom of this story.


Read the article in full.  THE MAJORITY REPORT covers it in the segment below.




 The following sites updated: