Shared posts

28 Jul 00:36

Bernie Sanders Delegates Prepare to Confront Obama About TPP, Symbol of Corporate Control

by Zaid Jilani
Tom Roche

for more about how Hillary probably does *not* oppose TPP, will probably pass it eventually, see recent coverage of {gaffe, inconvenient truth-telling} by chief Clinton crony/surrogate Terry McAuliffe, e.g., https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/07/27/why-terry-mcauliffes-tpp-gaffe-is-so-damaging-for-hillary-clinton/

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders both now oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) — so why were so many Bernie Sanders delegates yelling about it Monday night and waving anti-TPP signs over their head?

The TPP has become a hot-button issue for a lot of progressives who want the party to take a more anti-corporate tone.

Some of the opposition comes from bad memories of the lost jobs that came in the wake of the NAFTA agreement in the 1990s. But the TPP is not actually a free trade pact. It won’t lower tariffs, the most common trade barriers.

In fact, the TPP is more focused on crafting regulatory regimes that benefit certain industries. It would expand corporate and investor rights at the expense of medical affordability, the environment, and labor rights.

For Bernie Sanders supporters — and some Trump supporters — the TPP has become shorthand for corporate control of the political process. Hillary Clinton was a late convert — and not particularly sincere at that.

So that’s why you saw Sanders delegates waving their sign around — and that’s why some of them plan to make their opposition known Wednesday night when the pact’s foremost proponent, President Barack Obama, speaks on the convention floor.

It’s not just a matter of principle either. Although Obama is leaving office, opponents of the pact worry that the next five months offer him an opportunity to seek a final vote on the agreement, including during the crucial lame-duck session after the election, but before inauguration.

Utah Sanders delegate Cheryl Butler told The Intercept that she anticipates the same raucous chants and sign-waving against the TPP that took place on the DNC floor on Monday.

“I think people that are very strongly against the TPP have a right and responsibility to make their voices heard,” she said.

Early Tuesday morning, during Oregon’s state party meeting, delegates broke out into chants of “No TPP!” during a speech by its Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden, who supports the agreement.

Jeremy Likens, a Sanders delegate from Oregon, explained that the campaign’s delegates came to the convention to move the party on issues, not just to support the Vermont senator.

“We’re here; we’re informed voters who care about things, like making sure to stop the TPP,” he said.

Carolanne Fry, another pledged Sanders delegate from Oregon, said she has met numerous Clinton delegates who also oppose the TPP, but that they didn’t appreciate the sign-waving tactics on Monday. “They were getting really frustrated that we were holding them,” she reflected.

Indeed, several Clinton delegates told The Intercept that they trusted Clinton’s judgment on the issue and would not take part in any protests of Obama’s speech.

Elena McCullough, who serves as the vice president of the Democratic Hispanic Caucus of Florida and as an at-large delegate for Clinton from Florida, said she prefers to trust her candidate over taking protest action.

“When [Clinton] takes the reins of the country, she is going to make a decision that she believes is best for the country. I’m very certain that whatever decision she does, … she will have analyzed it, she will have researched it, and she will do what is best for the country,” she said. “I don’t think we’re going to have any kind of scuffle in any way, shape, or form. I believe we’ve come together.”

Jamian Smith, a Clinton delegate from Washington state, said she’s “pretty sure” that delegates from her delegation, which is overwhelmingly made up of Sanders backers, will engage in some sort of protest during Obama’s speech. She, however, had no intention of joining them.

“I think the TPP could be improved. I don’t think that it’s necessary to completely scuttle it,” she said. “We prefer to go in the system. … holding up signs is great, you’re making your voice heard, but nothing’s really being done when you do that.”

Victor Quiroz, a Clinton delegate from California, sported an anti-TPP button. Yet he opposed making any sort of public statement during Obama’s speech. He was confident that Clinton would maintain her position.

“You don’t … embarrass your chief. You do not do that,” he instructed, opposing any protests. “Secretary Clinton, she opposes TPP.”

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The post Bernie Sanders Delegates Prepare to Confront Obama About TPP, Symbol of Corporate Control appeared first on The Intercept.

26 Jul 18:54

Democracy Now! 2016-07-26 Tuesday

Tom Roche

2 hours. Main event in each is a debate: should progressives support Hillary? Hour 1: Ben Jealous pro, Jill Stein con. Hour 2: Robert Reich pro, Chris Hedges con.

Democracy Now! 2016-07-26 Tuesday

  • Headlines for July 26, 2016
  • Chaos on Convention Floor: Protests, Boos and Chants of "Bernie" Mark Opening of DNC
  • Jill Stein vs. Ben Jealous: Should Progressives Reject Hillary Clinton & Vote Green?
  • "It's a Sad Day for Many of Us": Bernie Delegates Boo Sanders After Endorsing Clinton
  • Who Should Bernie Voters Support Now? Robert Reich vs. Chris Hedges on Tackling the Neoliberal Order

Download this show

25 Jul 03:40

With DNC Leaks, Former ‘Conspiracy Theory’ Is Now True––and No Big Deal

by Adam Johnson
Tom Roche

good neologism (though it certainly predates Snowden): 'Snowden Cycle: X is a flaky conspiracy theory → X is revealed to be true → X is totally obvious and not newsworthy.'

For months, Bernie Sanders supporters and surrogates have complained about unfair treatment from the Democratic National Committee—only to have these concerns dismissed by media observers as petulance and conspiracy-mongering:

This weekend, Wikileaks revealed thousands of hacked emails from within the DNC that showed what the New York Times described as “hostility” and “derision” towards the Sanders campaign from top party officials.

Debbie Wasserman Schultz (cc photo: Gage Skidmore)

Revelations that the Democratic National Committee was working behind the scenes to undermine Bernie Sanders led to the resignation of Debbie Wasserman Schultz. (cc photo: Gage Skidmore)

While it’s impossible to know whether systemic pro-Hillary Clinton bias at the DNC was decisive in the 2016 Democratic primary race, we now know beyond any doubt that such a bias not only existed, but was endemic and widespread. DNC officials worked to plant pro-Clinton stories, floated the idea of using Sanders’ secular Judaism against him in the South, and  routinely ran PR spin for Clinton, even as the DNC claimed over and over it was neutral in the primary. The evidence in the leaks was so clear that Debbie Wasserman Schultz has resigned her role as DNC chair—after her speaking role at the Democratic National Convention this week was scrapped—while DNC co-chair Donna Brazile, who is replacing Wasserman Schultz in the top role, has apologized to the Sanders camp.

Pro-Clinton pundits were quick to dismiss what was literally a conspiracy to railroad the Sanders campaign as nothing more than a yawn:

So what was once dismissed out of hand—that the DNC was actively working against the Sanders campaign—is now obviously true, but not a big deal. This is a textbook PR spin pattern seen time and time again, what might be called the Snowden Cycle: X is a flaky conspiracy theory → X is revealed to be true → X is totally obvious and not newsworthy.

Instead, Clinton partisans decided to focus on the alleged Russian links behind the DNC hack. Talking Points Memo editor Josh Marshall (7/23/16) released a rather paranoid rundown the day of the leaks on how Putin was conspiring with Trump (a fairly good debunking of which can be found here), soon after dismissing the substance of the leaks as Russian propaganda white noise. Many soon followed suit: The DNC leaks as Russian spy operation was the preferred talking point of the day, omitting or glossing over what the leaks actually entailed.

The actual culpability of Russia for those leaks, it’s worth noting, is still unproven. The only three parties that have audited the hack are contractors for the US government, and the DNC’s initial story has since changed considerably. At first the DNC (and by extension their security firm CrowdStrike) said ”no financial, donor or personal information appears to have been accessed or taken,” but this later turned out not to be true at all.

Six weeks since the hack was first revealed by the Washington Post (6/14/16), no one in the US government, including the FBI and White House (who have reportedly reviewed the situation in detail), have implicated or even suggested Russian involvement in the leak–neither on the record nor anonymously. Thus far, all suggestions to this effect have taken place outside the organs of the United States government — a common and deliberate conflation that even led to this correction in the Vox recap of the situation (7/23/16):

Correction: I misread the Washington Post‘s story on last month’s DNC hack and misattributed the Russia link to the US government rather than independent security researchers.

Thus far, the Obama administration has avoided any such claims. Indeed, if one reads carefully, so have the security firms in question. Buried in the followup report by the Washington Post (6/20/16) alleging “confirmation” of Russian involvement is the admission by the three firms (the “experts” Clinton’s camp refers to) that they cannot be sure WikiLeaksalleged source Guccifer 2.0 is Russian, let alone an agent of “Putin”:

Analysts suspect but don’t have hard evidence that Guccifer 2.0 is, in fact, part of one of the Russian groups who hacked the DNC….

It is also possible, researchers said, that someone else besides the Russians were inside the DNC’s network and had access to the same documents.

The evidence typically cited to counter this discrepancy is from an alleged chat Guccifer 2.0 had with Vice (6/16/16) showing fingerprints of a Russian plot. But the two pieces of evidence in question–that Russian metadata was left on the files and the person in question couldn’t speak native Romanian–raise more questions than they answer. If this was such a high-level FSB plot, why couldn’t the once legendary “KGB” scrub routine metadata, or find someone who speaks native Romanian? Either Russia is an omnipotent threat wielding its influence over the US and Europe’s otherwise pristine body politic, or they’re a bunch of incompetent bumbling idiots. Meanwhile, actual evidence for Russia’s involvement, as Vox notes, remains elusive.

The DNC’s interest in painting this as a Russian plot also bears mentioning. Around the same time this was going down, Bloomberg (6/22/16) suggested the DNC itself was looking to play up the Russian espionage angle as a means of obfuscating what they knew would be “embarrassing revelations”:

A spokesman for Baker & McKenzie didn’t respond to requests for comment. DNC spokesman Luis Miranda said the party worked only with CrowdStrike and the law firm Perkins Coie.

If the Democrats can show the hidden hand of Russian intelligence agencies, they believe that voter outrage will probably outweigh any embarrassing revelations, a person familiar with the party’s thinking said.

This strategy, as explained by a DNC insider a month ago, is now playing out exactly as predicted: The “outrage” over Russia’s “hidden hand” is being used to outweigh the damning substance of the leak itself. Parlay this with the recent uptick in “Trump as Putin puppet” conspiracy takes, and what you have is a clear picture of a partisan media that would rather float pitches for a Manchurian Candidate reboot than confront the repeated attempts by an ostensibly neutral DNC to undermine one candidate in favor of another.


Adam Johnson is a contributing analyst for FAIR.org. Follow him on Twitter at @AdamJohnsonNYC.

24 Jul 23:48

How technology disrupted the truth – podcast

Social media has swallowed the news – threatening the funding of public-interest reporting and ushering in an era when everyone has their own facts. But the consequences go far beyond journalism
24 Jul 04:13

Two King Edwards

Tom Roche

part of the decline of the British monarchy (falling soon hopefully)

Richard Davenport-Hines and Piers Brendon, authors of new biographies of Edward VII and Edward VIII, discuss the two kings’ contrasting lives and reigns and their impact on the British monarchy
23 Jul 18:05

The Modern Struggle For Voting Rights In America

Tom Roche

Ari Berman interview is a rerun.

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed racial discrimination in voting. But author Ari Berman says a 2013 Supreme Court ruling blocks the act's enforcement — and opened the door for new restrictions. His book 'Give Us the Ballot' is now out in paperback. Film critic David Edelstein reviews 'Star Trek Beyond.'
23 Jul 03:07

Behind the News – June 23, 2016

Tom Roche

C.J. Chance on authoritarian populism in the Philippines; Jonah Birch on working-class rebellion in France

23 Jul 03:06

Behind the News, 7/7/16

Tom Roche

misdated? this was actually broadcast 14 Jul show on KPFA

Behind the News, 7/7/16 - guests: Lester Spence on police shootings; Aaron Bastani on political anarchy in the UK - Doug Henwood
23 Jul 03:06

Behind the News – July 14, 2016

Tom Roche

Lester Spence on police shootings; Aaron Bastani on political anarchy in the UK

23 Jul 03:04

Behind the News – July 21, 2016

Tom Roche

Jodi Dean on "Crowds and Party" for the hour. When it's good--about why the Left needs organizations and institutions, not just feel-good, consensical spontaneity like Occupy--it's self-evident. Then Doug and Jodi get psychoanalytic and my eyes glaze over ...

23 Jul 03:04

Behind the News, 7/21/16

Tom Roche

Jodi Dean on "Crowds and Party" for the hour. When it's good--about why the Left needs organizations and institutions, not just feel-good, consensical spontaneity like Occupy--it's self-evident. Then Doug and Jodi get psychoanalytic and my eyes glaze over ...

Behind the News, 7/21/16 - guest: Jodi Dean on Crowds and Party - Doug Henwood
22 Jul 16:57

In Cleveland, Lonely Protesters Marched Through Empty Streets

by Alice Speri

Organizers for the Stand Together Against Trump rally in Cleveland had planned for 5,000 participants. The march, a peaceful demonstration that “America’s fundamental ideals of liberty and equality are greater than Trump’s incessant scapegoating and bullying,” was supposed to close out a week that some had predicted would overshadow the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, which came amid nationwide civil unrest and race riots and exploded in violence.

But there was no mayhem in Cleveland.

On Thursday, hours before Donald Trump took the stage to accept the nomination, a couple hundred people showed up for what had been expected to be one of the week’s largest events. The event did in fact turn out to be one of the largest in a series of relatively unimpressive ones — a fitting end to the massive protests that never were.

Those who made it to the rally — trekking out in scorching heat to a designated parade route a half-hour walk from the convention center — were unrelenting. On a long bridge overpassing a desolate industrial zone, nowhere close to the buzz of the convention center but also far from cars, passersby, or really any sign of life, they carried hopeful signs claiming “We’re better than this” and “Love trumps hate” and chanted “Vote your conscience” in a nod to Ted Cruz’s words the night prior.

But their physical isolation in a deserted section of the city sent a stronger message.

A line of bored police officers on bikes — a trademark of the convention — stopped the protesters, without too much enthusiasm, as soon as they came in sight of the city’s downtown skyline.

Surrounded by metal gates on one side and a dirt hill on the other, demonstrators shouted, unironically, “This is what democracy looks like.” Then they turned around and went back to where they came from — an empty lot that the ACLU, which sued the city over the remoteness of the official parade route, called an “industrial wasteland.”

Thanks to the ACLU lawsuit, which led to a settlement with the city easing up some of the restrictions on protest, not all rallies this week were confined to a highway in the middle of nowhere. But even those that took place downtown struggled to make a mark, and the drama on the convention floor far outdid that on the streets.

“Last night was a quiet night,” Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson told reporters at a Thursday morning press conference, repeating what he had said every other morning this week. “We don’t have much to report on.”

In total, 24 people were arrested in convention-related incidents as of Friday morning, most at a flag burning protest on Wednesday. But while legal observers denounced those arrests, and delays in the processing of arrestees, as “troubling,” the final count was significantly lower than what most expected, with the city having announced ahead of the convention that it was prepared to “handle upwards of 1,000 arrests per day.”

With hours to go to the official nomination, the mayor and Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams seemed both relieved the week had passed without major incidents and mindful not to jinx their good luck before it was really over. “We still have an entire day to go through,” Williams said. But in a sign that the fear of chaos had largely passed, he spent the rest of the time talking about the heat expected in the city for the last day of the convention — well into the 90s.

“If you’re a protester, bring some water with you,” he said. “It’s going to be hot.”

The heat didn’t stop a few last attempts at resistance. On Thursday afternoon, a small group of protesters, including a handful with masks and bandanas over their faces, briefly spilled into the streets, chanting, “Our streets,” while a couple of rival protesters shouted back at them, “Socialism sucks.”

The arguing group circled around one of the downtown areas designated for protest a couple of times, swarmed by dozens of reporters and followed closely by even more officers on bikes. A few verbal confrontations ensued, as journalists, protesters, legal observers, and even a handful of police officers recorded every move on dozens of cameras and cellphones.

Then, as quickly as it had erupted, the last short-lived burst of protest ended at a nearby park, where volunteers with the Food Not Bombs group handed out apples and water to exhausted anarchists, Trump-supporters, and reporters alike. The RNC was almost over.

Rod Webber, an artist who came from Boston for the week and said he had been to 173 protests and political rallies this year alone, handed out yellow daisies to fellow protesters of all views — “offering a flower for de-escalation,” he said.

He and other activists staying at a house outside the city were raided by the FBI earlier this week, the latest in a series of similar incidents that civil rights advocates say have seriously stifled dissent and had a direct impact on the low turnout at the convention. And while the response to protesters didn’t escalate to the levels seen elsewhere, Webber denied it had been peaceful.

“Sure, no one has been shot, so it was peaceful in that sense,” he said, adding that protesters were sometimes pushed around and officers put guns “in people’s faces.” “I don’t want to have higher expectations for violence,” he added. “Any level of violence is unacceptable to me.”

For Anna Fisher, a high schooler from Youngstown, Ohio, holding a “Guns save lives” sign, this was the very first protest.

“I thought it would be a little more violent,” she said, echoing what seemed to be a widely held sentiment.

By Thursday evening, Cleveland’s Public Square, which throughout the week had been home to preachers of all ideologies, anti-war grandmothers, gay bashers, supporters of black and blue lives, open carriers, and wall opponents, was filled with children playing in a water fountain and reporters napping on benches next to helmets and flak vests they never had to use.

A couple of locals walked around in shirts reading “Make America Cleveland again,” and out-of-towners started talking about next week’s Democratic convention in Philadelphia, sure it would be “bigger.”

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The post In Cleveland, Lonely Protesters Marched Through Empty Streets appeared first on The Intercept.

22 Jul 07:42

America Steps Down to Become One of the Great Powers. Michael Vlahos, @JHUWorldCrisis.

by The John Batchelor Show
Tom Roche

how US must adapt to the end of its global hegemony, or lose all in imperial overreach

MICHAEL VLAHOS 07-15-2016 (Photo: Otto Von Bismarck) http://JohnBatchelorShow.com/contact http://JohnBatchelorShow.com/schedules http://johnbatchelorshow.com/blog Twitter: @BatchelorShow America Steps Down to Become One of the Great Powers. Michael Vlahos, @JHUWorldCrisis. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_von_Bismarck
19 Jul 01:35

Republicans boycotting RNC; Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey

Tom Roche

Second half is Conn Hallinan (from Foreign Policy in Focus) on the new Cold War against Russia (as well as some discussion of US sabre-rattling against China), especially nuclear aspects (i.e., danger of nuclear war).

18 Jul 21:43

Crackdown on Protestors in Baton Rouge; Venezuela Food Crisis

Tom Roche

Second half is Conn Hallinan (from Foreign Policy in Focus) on the new Cold War against Russia (as well as some discussion of US sabre-rattling against China), especially nuclear aspects (i.e., danger of nuclear war).

18 Jul 18:38

Democracy Now! 2016-07-18 Monday

Tom Roche

Cornel West expresses well the need to oppose Hillary, though not very well with how to oppose Trump.

Democracy Now! 2016-07-18 Monday

  • Headlines for July 18, 2016
  • Three Police Officers Shot Dead in Baton Rouge Two Weeks After Officers Killed Alton Sterling
  • Cornel West: Justice and Accountability are Necessary to End Tension over Killings by Police
  • Cornel West: Why I Endorse Green Party's Jill Stein Over "Neoliberal Disaster" Hillary Clinton
  • Many Who Opposed Coup in Turkey Came Out in Support of Democratic Process, not the President
  • "My Heart Aches": Sen. Nina Turner, from Family of Police Officers, Responds to Baton Rouge Attack
  • Kurdish Activist: Erdogan Should Be Pushed Out, But by the People, Not the Military
  • Medea Benjamin: Why Is Government Downplaying Saudi-9/11 Docs After Keeping Them Secret for Years?
  • Meet the RNC Activists Questioned by Authorities Ahead of This Week's Convention
  • Dozens of Companies Withdraw Funding from RNC as Trump Headed to Nomination

Download this show

17 Jul 02:58

Rep. Ellison: Why is the Democratic Party Afraid to Mention the Israeli Occupation in Platform?

Tom Roche

Ellison discusses much more than Israel/Palestine in this piece: problems with Democratic Party platform generally, and US House deadlock on gun control.

In Part 2 of our conversation with Rep. Keith Ellison, we discuss the Democratic Party's platform. Ellison was appointed by Sen. Bernie Sanders to serve on the Platform Drafting Committee.

Watch Part 1: Rep. Keith Ellison: Arrest the Officer Who Killed Philando Castile, He Has to Be Held Accountable

16 Jul 04:20

FriComedy: Dead Ringers 15th July, 2016

Tom Roche

One sketch, with the motivating conceit of various celebrities paying tribute to David Cameron on his exit, has Baronness Thatcher saying: "I think the most important achievement of David Cameron was fooling the world I was dead, kidnapping Theresa May, strapping her to a pentangle under St Martin-in-the-Fields, and allowing my black soul to pour into her brainless carcass!"

It’s a momentous week for Theresa May as she makes her first appearance on Dead Ringers as Prime Minister. Ministers sacked, the Labour party in meltdown, Brexit fears remain unabated this is a fabulous time for Laura Kuenssberg, Andrew Neil, Robert Peston, Jon Snow, Andrew Marr, Kirsty Wark , Hugh Edwards, all feeding off the trough of political failure. Starring: Jon Culshaw, Jan Ravens and Lewis Macleod. Written by: Nev Fountain & Tom Jamieson, Laurence Howarth, Ed Amsden & Tom Coles, James Bugg, Laura Major, Sarah Campbell, Max Davies, Jack Bernhardt, Liam Beirne, Alex Harvey and Sara Gibbs. Produced and created by Bill Dare. BBC Studios Production.
15 Jul 17:49

How remain failed: the inside story of a doomed campaign – podcast

They promised it would be an easy victory. But they had no idea what was about to hit them
12 Jul 02:26

Is this the world’s most radical mayor? – podcast

When Ada Colau was elected mayor of Barcelona, she became a figurehead of the new leftwing politics sweeping Spain. The question she now faces is a vital one for the left across Europe – can she really put her ideas into practice?
09 Jul 21:18

Behind the News – July 7, 2016

Tom Roche

1st piece: George Joseph on the neoliberal absurdity that is "Teach for India" (see his article @ https://www.thenation.com/article/teach-for-america-has-gone-global-and-its-board-has-strange-ideas-about-what-poor-kids-need/ ). 2nd piece: Adolph Reed gives Sanders campaign post-mortem (and advocates transition to movement), as well as thoughts on black voters and US politics more generally.

09 Jul 04:44

Brexit: a disaster decades in the making – podcast

On the day after the EU referendum, many Britons woke up feeling that the country had changed overnight. But the forces that brought us here have been gathering for a very long time
07 Jul 18:25

Changing Constitutional Law in the Post-Scalia Era: Lessons from the Past for the Future

by contact@opensocietyfoundations.org
Award-winning constitutional scholar David Cole discusses his new book, Engines of Liberty, which explores how citizen activists have successfully shaped constitutional law. Speakers: David Cole, Jeffrey Toobin, Wendy Weiser. (Recorded: Apr 26, 2016)
06 Jul 15:00

Yanis Varoufakis

Tom Roche

Yanis Varoufakis for the hour, on the history of and need for recycling of intenational trade surpluses and deficits.

05 Jul 17:14

Democracy Now! 2016-07-05 Tuesday

Tom Roche

Wayne Barrett on Trump for the hour. See also part 1 @ http://www.democracynow.org/2016/6/30/a_classic_state_capitalist_how_donald

Democracy Now! 2016-07-05 Tuesday

  • Headlines for July 05, 2016
  • Trump's "Greatest Mentor" was Red-Baiting Aide to Joseph McCarthy and Attorney for NYC Mob Families
  • How Donald Trump Threatened an Investigative Reporter, Attempting to Bribe Him with a Free Apartment
  • Wayne Barrett on Donald Trump's Broken Promises, Tax Returns & Potential VP Pick Chris Christie
  • As Workers at Trump's Taj Mahal Casino Go on Strike, a Look at Trump's Long History of Labor Abuse
  • Trump's Unofficial Biographer Wayne Barrett: "The Way He Has Treated His Wives is Just Deplorable"
  • "A Shocking Threat to the World": Biographer Wayne Barrett on Donald Trump

Download this show

05 Jul 17:13

Democracy Now! 2016-06-30 Thursday

Tom Roche

Wayne Barrett on Trump is great, and this is only part 1: http://www.democracynow.org/2016/6/30/a_classic_state_capitalist_how_donald followed by Barrett for the hour @ http://www.democracynow.org/shows/2016/7/5

Democracy Now! 2016-06-30 Thursday

  • Headlines for June 30, 2016
  • Report from Istanbul: Uptick in Bombings Comes as Turkey Drifts Toward Islamist, Authoritarian Rule
  • "A Classic State Capitalist": How Donald Trump Profited from Public Subsidies & Political Favors
  • Vice President's Daughter Karenna Gore Arrested in the Trenches of a Climate Protest
  • Tim DeChristopher Arrested Again in the "Age of Anticipatory Mass Graves" for Climate Victims

Download this show

05 Jul 02:31

Europhobia: a very British problem – podcast

Tom Roche

Geoffrey Wheatcroft (text @ http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/21/brexit-euroscepticism-history) is actually more about Britain's (or the British 1%'s) pathological sense of nationhood (or lack thereof) as cause for Brexit than about Europhobia per se. He *almost* makes the Lexit (left Leave) case, but apparently can't quite bring himself to. Interesting listen for tidbits of recent British history, just not what it might have been.

Last month’s vote was about more than whether Britain stays in the EU. Behind the present turmoil lurks a desperate need to find our national identity
03 Jul 23:39

Hacked Emails Reveal NATO General Plotting Against Obama on Russia Policy

by Lee Fang

Retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, until recently the supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe, plotted in private to overcome President Barack Obama’s reluctance to escalate military tensions with Russia over the war in Ukraine in 2014, according to apparently hacked emails from Breedlove’s Gmail account that were posted on a new website called DC Leaks.

Obama defied political pressure from hawks in Congress and the military to provide lethal assistance to the Ukrainian government, fearing that doing so would increase the bloodshed and provide Russian President Vladimir Putin with the justification for deeper incursions into the country.

Breedlove, during briefings to Congress, notably contradicted the Obama administration regarding the situation in Ukraine, leading to news stories about conflict between the general and Obama.

But the leaked emails provide an even more dramatic picture of the intense back-channel lobbying for the Obama administration to begin a proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

In a series of messages in 2014, Breedlove sought meetings with former Secretary of State Colin Powell, asking for advice on how to pressure the Obama administration to take a more aggressive posture toward Russia.

“I may be wrong, … but I do not see this WH really ‘engaged’ by working with Europe/NATO. Frankly I think we are a ‘worry,’ … ie a threat to get the nation drug into a conflict,” Breedlove wrote in an email to Powell, who responded by accepting an invitation to meet and discuss the dilemma. “I seek your counsel on two fronts,” Breedlove continued, “how to frame this opportunity in a time where all eyes are on ISIL all the time, … and two, … how to work this personally with the POTUS.”

 

Breedlove attempted to influence the administration through several channels, emailing academics and retired military officials, including former NATO supreme commander Wesley Clark, for assistance in building his case for supplying military assistance to Ukrainian forces battling Russian-backed separatists.

“I think POTUS sees us as a threat that must be minimized, … ie do not get me into a war????” Breedlove wrote in an email to Harlan Ullman, senior adviser to the Atlantic Council, describing his ongoing attempt to get Powell to help him influence Obama.

“Given Obama’s instruction to you not to start a war, this may be a tough sell,” Ullman replied a few months later, in another string of emails about Breedlove’s effort to “leverage, cajole, convince or coerce the U.S. to react” to Russia.

Breedlove did not respond to a request for comment. He stepped down from his NATO leadership position in May and retired from service on Friday, July 1. Breedlove was a four-star Air Force general and served as the 17th Supreme Allied Commander of NATO forces in Europe starting on May 10, 2013.

Phillip Karber, an academic who corresponded regularly with Breedlove — providing him with advice and intelligence on the Ukrainian crisis —  verified the authenticity of several of the emails in the leaked cache. He also told The Intercept that Breedlove confirmed to him that the general’s Gmail account was hacked and that the incident had been reported to the government.

“The last conversation I had about it with General Breedlove, he said, ‘Yeah, I’ve been hacked several times,’” said Karber. He added that he noticed at least one of his personal emails appearing online from the leak before we had contacted him. “I turned this over to the U.S. government and asked them to investigate. No one has given me any answer.”

“I have no idea whose account was leaked or hacked,” said Powell, when reached for comment about the emails. Powell said he had no comment about the discussions regarding Obama’s response to the conflict in Ukraine.

In the European press, Breedlove has been portrayed as a hawkish figure known for leaning on allied nations to ditch diplomacy and to adopt a more confrontational role again Russian-backed separatists in Ukraine. Breedlove, testifying before Congress earlier in February of this year, called Russia “a long-term existential threat to the United States and to our European allies.”

Der Spiegel reported that Breedlove “stunned” German leaders with a surprise announcement in 2015 claiming that pro-Russian separatists had “upped the ante” in eastern Ukraine with “well over a thousand combat vehicles, Russian combat forces, some of the most sophisticated air defense, battalions of artillery” sent to Donbass, a center of the conflict.

Breedlove’s numbers were “significantly higher” than the figures known to NATO intelligence agencies and seemed exaggerated to German officials. The announcement appeared to be a provocation designed to disrupt mediation efforts led by Chancellor Angela Merkel.

In previous instances, German officials believed Breedlove overestimated Russian forces along the border with Ukraine by as many as 20,000 troops and found that the general had falsely claimed that several Russian military assets near the Ukrainian border were part of a special build-up in preparation for a large-scale invasion of the country. In fact, much of the Russian military equipment identified by Breedlove, the Germans said, had been stored there well before the revolution in Ukraine.

The emails, however, depict a desperate search by Breedlove to build his case for escalating the conflict, contacting colleagues and friends for intelligence to illustrate the Russian threat. Karber, who visited Ukrainian politicians and officials in Kiev on several occasions, sent frequent messages to Breedlove — “per your request,” he noted — regarding information he had received about separatist military forces and Russian troop movements. In several updates, Breedlove received military data sourced from Twitter and social media.

Karber, the president of the Potomac Foundation, became the center of a related scandal last year when it was discovered that he had facilitated a meeting during which images of purported Russian forces in Ukraine were distributed to the office of Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., and were published by a neoconservative blog. The pictures turned out to be a deception; one supposed picture of Russian tanks in Ukraine was, in fact, an old photograph of Russian tanks in Ossetia during the war with Georgia.

Breedlove stayed in close contact with Karber and other officials who shared his views on the Ukrainian conflict.

“Phil, can’t we get a statement to counteract the Russians on use of force? what can I do to help? If the Ukrainians lose control of the narrative, the Russians will see it as an open door,” wrote retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who forwarded on his messages with Victoria Nuland, the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs. He also passed along concerns from the Bulgarian president that Bulgaria might be Russia’s next target.

In other messages, Clark relayed specific requests for the types of military aid desired by Ukrainian officials. In addition to radar systems and other forms of military equipment, Clark recommended that Breedlove “encourage Ukraine to hire some first rate pr firms and crisis communications firms in U.S. and Europe.” He added, “They need the right tools to engage in information warfare.”

Ukraine did hire several D.C. lobbying and communication firms to influence policymakers. In June 2015, the government signed a deal with APCO Worldwide, an influential firm with ties to senior Democratic and Republican officials.

In an email in February 2015, Karber told Breedlove that “Pakistan has, under the table, offered Ukraine 500 TOW-II launchers (man-portable version) and 8,000 TOW-II missiles,” adding that deliveries of the anti-tank weapons could begin by the end of the month. “However,” Karber wrote, “Pakistan will not make these deliveries without U.S. approval; moreover they will not even request that approval unless they have informal assurance that it would be approved.”

Karber told The Intercept that the Pakistani arms deal never materialized.

Breedlove was most recently in the news explaining that he now thinks we need to talk to the Russian government to resolve the conflict in Ukraine. “I think we need to begin to have meaningful dialogue,” he said last week, while reiterating his views on the need for a strong NATO to militarily match Russia. “Russia does understand power, and strength, and unity,” he said.

The emails were released by D.C. Leaks, a database run by self-described “hacktivists” who are collecting the communications of elite stakeholders such as political parties, major politicians, political campaigns, and the military. The website currently has documents revealing some internal communications of the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign and George Soros’s Open Society Foundation, among others.

Top photo: Gen. Philip Breedlove.

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The post Hacked Emails Reveal NATO General Plotting Against Obama on Russia Policy appeared first on The Intercept.

03 Jul 23:38

Accidental War, 2016, or Dr. Strangelove meets General Breedlove & the New Cold War. Michael Vlahos, Johns Hopkins, @JHUWorldCrisis.

by The John Batchelor Show
Tom Roche

See also Lee Fang on the DC Leaks release of Breedlove's emails to not only Powell, but to Wesley Clark and various members of the Atlantic Council and Potomac Foundation: https://theintercept.com/2016/07/01/nato-general-emails/

07-01-2016 (Photo: Dr Strangelove 5. General “Buck” Turgidson .. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuP6KbIsNK4.) http://JohnBatchelorShow.com/contact http://JohnBatchelorShow.com/schedules http://johnbatchelorshow.com/blog Twitter: @BatchelorShow Accidental War, 2016, or Dr. Strangelove meets General Breedlove & the New Cold War. Michael Vlahos, Johns Hopkins, @JHUWorldCrisis. “…Turgidson attempts to convince Muffley to let the attack continue and use the element of surprise to annihilate the Soviet military altogether before they can strike back; Muffley, however, refuses to be party to a nuclear first strike. Instead, he brings Soviet ambassador Alexei de Sadeski (Peter Bull) into the War Room, to telephone Soviet premier Dimitri Kissov on the "hot line". Muffley warns the Premier of the impending attack and offers to reveal the planes' positions and targets so the Russians can protect themselves. “After a heated discussion in Russian with the Premier, the ambassador informs President Muffley that the Soviet Union has created a doomsday device, which consists of many buried bombs jacketed with "Cobalt-Thorium G" connected to a computer network set to detonate them automatically should any nuclear attack strike the country. Within two months after detonation, the Cobalt-Thorium G would encircle the earth in a radioactive cloud, wiping out all human and animal life, rendering the surface of the earth uninhabitable for 93 years. The device cannot be dismantled or "untriggered", as it is programmed to explode if any such attempt is made. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Strangelove https://theintercept.com/2016/07/01/nato-general-emails/ http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/01/asia/taiwan-fires-missile-on-china/index.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuP6KbIsNK4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Qc8jJ0TjSY
02 Jul 20:23

How The FBI's Wiretaps & Sting Operation Failed To Stop The Orlando Shooter

Tom Roche

The Lichtblau interview is excellent, esp regarding how entrapment for "national-security purposes" is rampant, unchecked, and virtually legal. http://pd.npr.org/anon.npr-mp3/npr/fa/2016/06/20160629_fa_01.mp3

New York Times reporter Eric Lichtblau discusses the FBI's investigation of shooter Omar Mateen prior to the Orlando attack, as well as the bureau's broader efforts to pinpoint suspected terrorists. Book critic Maureen Corrigan reviews 'They May Not Mean To, But They Do,' by Cathleen Schine. Jazz critic Kevin Whitehead reviews Allen Toussaint's final recording.