That's Jeff Lussane (WSWS) reviewing Ani DiFranco's awful album Which Side Are You On? I reviewed it back in January. And I've found most of the so-called reviews appalling. As Ava and C.I. noted at the end of January:
Noting the lousy sales for Ani DiFranco's new album, yesterday Kat pointed out that many reviewers are reviewing Ani's politics and not the lousy album she produced. Which had us thinking about how politics allows bad shows to be treated as if they're wonderful.
Lussane does not play the quiet game and he notes:
DiFranco then proceeds to encourage people to vote, confesses that “a little socialism don’t scare me one bit” and urges the president and congress to “make the law.” The song is entirely devoid of criticism of the current administration, its bailout of the banks and Wall Street, its expansion of war and its relentless assault on disappearing democratic rights.
And that is so true. It's a thinking albume for non-thinkers. Ani really betrayed her audience with this album. It was more important to her that Barack get a second term than that immigrants stop being deported, that the Constitution stop being attacked, that wars end, etc.
Ani's worthless. I'm glad I'm not the only one noticing that fact.
Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Thursday,
March 15, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, the government refuses to
follow the rules for disclosure in their case against Bradley Manning,
the State Dept goes after one of their own, the illegal wars compete for
time and attention with the administration's war against the
Constitution and the public's right to know, Iraqi youths continue to be
targeted, and more.
Chanel Curry: I started
off as as a veteran during Operation Iraqi Freedom. I'm from
Cleveland, Ohio and I joined the military in 2008. As I served overseas
and came back to the United States, I suffered many difficulties
finding employment. So I recently relocated to Atlanta, Georgia because
I had a job opportunity available to me almost immediately. So I
relocated and during my process of living in Atlanta, Georgia, a lot of
different circumstances forced me to have to move back to Cleveland,
Ohio where I was originally stationed. Coming back to Cleveland, Ohio,
it was very hard to find a job. So basically, I bounced around from
different relatives homes, different friends and it just became
definitely a burden because a lot of people I knew suffered their own
hardships and no one could afford to accomodate another adult. So that
forced me to have to contact the VA and I contacted the Ohio Coalition
for the Homeless and I spoke to a veteran by the name of William and he
directed me over to a female by the name of Toni Johnson. Toni Johnson
is a representative of the women's homeless outreach program. And she,
herself, actually opened up a lot of possibilities for me to get back on
my feet. She told me about the Grant Per Diem program and I lived in a
homeless shelter, a women's homeless shelter, known as the Westside
Catholic Center and there there were other things available for me such
as the Employment Connection and I met with a representative by the name
of Angela Cash and she basically helped me to get a job at the
Cleveland Clinic. So she offered me classes, computer training,
basically everything that I needed to be readily available for work.
And also she had her own non-profit organization known as the Forever
Girls At Heart which is a group of beautiful women who helped me get
all of the things I needed for my apartment. Now with that being said, I
will be moving into my place as of Friday if everything goes as
planned. And I do have everything I need. So the VA definitely went
above and beyond to make sure that I was not -- that I did not remain a
homeless veteran.
Curry's testimony
goes to what Senator Scott Brown rightly termed "a lack of consistency."
While the VA was able to assist her, Sandra Strickland's testimony to
the Committee made clear that the VA practices a scatter-shot,
non-consistent response.
Chanel
Curry is an Iraq War veteran and among a growing number of veterans of
the current war who have or are becoming homeless. She testified to the
Senate Veterans Affairs Committee yesterday as part of the hearing on
homeless veterans. The first panel was made up of veteran Sandra
Strickland, National Women Veterans Committee's Marsha Four, Deputy
Assistant IG for VA Linda Halliday and Reverend Scott Rogers. The first
panel was covered in yesterday's snapshot, by Ava in "Scott Brown (Ava)" and by Kat with "Glad someone's back, not impressed with hearing."
Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Committee. In her opening remarks, she noted:
VA
must focus on a new and unfortunately growing segment of the homeless
veteran population -- female veterans. Like their male counterparts,
women veterans face many of the same challenges that contribute to their
risks of becoming homeless. They are serving on the front lines and
being exposed to some of the same harshest realities of war. They are
screening positive for PTSD, experiencing military sexual traum,
suffering from anxiety disorder, and having trouble finding a job that
provides the stability to ease their transition home. Yet when our
female veterans find themselves homeless, they have needs that are
unique from those of male veterans. And, as the VA's Inspector General
found in a report released on Monday, some of those unique needs are not
being addressed. The IG found that there were serious safety and
security concerns for homeless women veterans, especially those who have
experiences Military Sexual Trauma. They found bedrooms and bathrooms
without sufficient locks, halls and stairs without sufficient lighting
and mixed gender living facilities without access restrictions. They
also found that the VA should do a better job at targeting places and
populations that need help the most. And in addition to this IG report,
GAO released a report at the end of last year that cited VA for the lack
of gender-specific privacy, safety and security standards. Following
that report, I sent a letter to VA and HUD with Senators [Jon] Tester
and [Olympia] Snowe seeking answers to a number of questions it raised.
I have heard from HUD that they are reviewing their data collection
process in order to capture more information on homeless women veterans.
I have also heard from VA tha they are working to develop and provide
training for staff and providers to better treat veterans who have
experienced traumatic events and modifying their guidance on privacy,
safety and security for providers who serve homeless women veterans. As
more women begin to transition home and step back into lives as mothers,
wives and citizens, we must be prepared to serve the unique challenges
they face. As we continue to learn about the alarming number of
homeless women veterans, we must be sure that VA is there to meet their
needs.
The second panel was Chanel
Curry and the VA's Executive Director of the Homeless Veterans
Initiative Pete Dougherty. (Lisa Pape, of the VA, accompanied
Dougherty.) VA's Dougherty noted a variety of figures including that
29,074 Veterans and family members are housed, as of last month, through
the HUD-VASH program, 37,549 Housing Choice vochers have been handed
out, Veterans Justice Outreach (legal services) have served 15,706
veterans, 366 is the number of homeless veterans (or formerly homeless)
that the VA has hired in the Homeless Veterans Supported Employment
Program (hires are since September of last year), "in FY 2011, VA helped
83 percent of veterans in default retain their homes or avoid
foreclsoure, an increase from 76 percent in FY 2010" and "VA paid
pension benefits exceeding $4.2 billion to over 500,000 veterans and
survivors in FY 2011. Because pension benefits are paid to veterans and
survivors whose income fall below Congressionally established minimum
standards, it inherently assists in income issues related to
homelessness."
We'll note this exchange from the second panel.
Chair
Patty Murray: Mr. Dougherty, we heard from Ms. Strickland on the first
panel. She reached out to the VA and was told there was no help --
literally [they] hung up [and left her] with nothing. We just heard Ms.
Curry obviously a totally different story. With a "no wrong door"
policy, it's unacceptable that more help wasn't given to Ms. Strickland
and others like her. Ms. Curry, I wanted to ask you, what was the
turning point that led you to the VA?
Chanel Curry:
Actually, it was a very long time before the resources were actually
known to me. I had to do some research. I actually contacted Military One Source which
is a very helpful resource who helps you basically get to a lot of
different resources. But what led me to the VA was the fact that I was
just tired of being homeless. I was tired of not having a stable job
and having to ask people for things. And I'm the type of person where I
like to get everything on my own so it was definitely a challenge for
me. So I had to make an adult decision and go to a shelter where the HUV
Ash program would be availabe for me.
Chair
Patty Murray: Mr. Dougherty, both the GAO and IG found that the VA has
to improve the way it serves homeless veterans -- homeless women
veterans -- especially those who have experienced Military Sexual
Trauma. I am deeply concerned about women veterans -- or any veteran --
but women veterans being placed in a place with no privacy, no locks on
doors, no locks on bedrooms. It just is implicit that that should be
available. I understand that the department is developing this new,
gender-specific, privacy, safety and security standard for the
facilities and I want that done quickly -- obviously. But I wanted to
ask you: Is that enough to make sure we have protection for women -- to
make sure there's no registered sex offenders? Are we following that?
And especially for women who are victims of Military Sexual Trauma, are
we really making sure we're focused on those issues?
Pete
Dougherty: [microphone not on or working . . .] and her staff are
working very closely on making those corrections. I would also say that
one of the things that we have and are asking the Committee to do is to
change the Contract Care Authority Requirement. Currently under law,
you have to have a serious mental illnesee diagnosis in order to get
contract residential care. And I think as the IG [Linda Halliday] just
said a few minutes ago, that one of the issues is that in some small
communities, we may not have enough need to develop a whole program
that's big enough to support a community program and in those places
what we need is more flexibility in contracted residential care in order
to make that work.
Chair
Patty Murray: Well, okay, let me be very clear given the strong
oversight work that this Committee has done leading up to just this
hearing, I think it's very clear we're going to be following this very
carefully. We want to make sure this is implemented. It's absolutely a
top item for all of us.
We'll jump to another exchange.
Senator
Scott Brown: Mr. Dougherty, how is VA working to improve the data
collected so that the VA and Congress have information to effectively
allocate the resources to ensure homeless veterans receive the needed
services? And that's based on the GAO report saying that the
information's lacking. [Doughtery speaking with Pape.] Either one.
Lisa
Pape: We have been collecting information on homeless veterans for
over 20 years now. What we've done to really enhance in the last several
years is roll over into an electronic system, enhancing the kind of
data we're really asking for so that there's more questions related to
people's experience, their medical issues, their housing issues prior
and-and-and leaving the program. But what really is where we're shooting
for is connecting with the community and aligning our data collection
system with the homeless management collection system that the continuum
of care do so that we have a coordinated and integrated collection
system to look at what veterans are entering the VA and the community
and bed capacity and things like that.
From the panel on homeless veterans to an Iraq War veteran imprisoned for over a year, Bradley Manning. In January, Josh Gerstein (POLITICO) reported,
"Another military officer has formally recommended that Army Pfc.
Bradley Manning face a full-scale court martial for allegedly leaking
thousands of military reports and diplomatic cables to the online
transparency site WikiLeaks." In addition, Article 32 hearings are
almost always rubber stamps. Monday April 5th, WikiLeaks released US military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported
in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the
Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of
violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his
personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized
software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight
counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified
information." In March 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported
that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges
including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could
result in the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took
place in December.
The Associated Press reports
the latest in government ridiculous, the military insisted to the court
today that the release Bradley is accused of aided al Qaeda. They
tossed in the word "indirectly." You know what directly aids al Qaeda,
endless war. So throw some charges at Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and
the rest of the crooked gang making up the administration. Know what
else aids al Qaeda? Keeping Guantanamo open. So throw some more
charges at Barack. The latest development only underscores that Barack
Obama is no different from George W. Bush, that idiots like Naomi Wolf
who swore he was a Constitutional lawyer (Memo to Naomi: Constional
lawyers take cases involving Constitutional issues -- they don't
generally represent slum lords) were wrong (and have refused to own
their errors) when they insisted Barack would protect the Constitution.
He's done nothing of the sort and now he's attempting to 'ohn Walker
Lindh' Bradley Manning.
Jessica Gresko (Huffington Post) reports,
"An attorney for an Army private accused of leaking hundreds of
thousands of pages of classified information asked a military judge
Thursday to dismiss the charges, arguing the government bungled the
handover of documents to the defense." At issue are documents that the
government refuses to hand over. Since this is a criminal prosecution,
discovery attached at the beginning of the case. Therefore, the
documents should have been turned over long ago. Discovery is the
process by which the defense learns the evidence the prosecution has.
This is standard procedure and the claim by US Capt Ashden Fein that the
defense is attempting to launch a fishing expedition is outrageous and
puts a stain on the already questionable concept of 'military
justice.' Fein whined to the court that they had to produce "as much as
possible" for the defense. Someone needs to explain the law to Fein,
"as much as possible" is not how discovery works. You're compelled to
turn over everything. "As much as possible" claims should get you up on
charges before a legal board.
Speaking
to RT on Thursday about that afternoon's hearing, Zack Presavento of
the Bradley Manning Support Network said that the prosecutors in the
case continue to defend their right to withhold material from the
defense, something he says is just "one more absurd allegation in a long train of absurdities."
Coombs
says he has repeatedly asked the government to supply him with
documents that pertain to the case, but the military is defaulting to
the claim that the material in question is classified and therefore must
be shielded from civilian eyes. For two years, Coombs says, he has
asked for documents that the government has still refused to deliver
and, at this point, he believes the US should forfeit their case.
Equally disturbing, Chantal Valery (AFP) reports:
Coombs
asked the government to provide an assessment of the damage Manning
caused to US national security by sending WikiLeaks military field
reports from Afghanistan and Iraq, a quarter million State Department
cables and war videos.
But military prosecutor Ashden Fein said the State Department "has not completed its damage assessment."
Any
'asssessment' should have been completed prior to charges being
brought. That's basic. Yet again, the Obama administration, in their
haste to punish whistle blowers, sets the law aside and goes off like a
vigilante posse bound and determined to take the law into their own
hands. America has never been more at risk from their own government
then with these crooks and clowns in the administration. They make
Bully Boy Bush look like a Constitutional defender by contrast.
Law and Disorder Radio is a weekly hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights).
The Center of Constitutional Rights is among those representing
WikiLeaks' Julian Assange. In that capacity, among others, Michael
Ratner is closely following Bradley's trial. Today he Tweeted on it including:
There
are many other Tweets Ratner's done but this may really sum up just how
much lying the prosecution thinks it can get away with:
Manning. Govt saysno video of manning solitary. Manning says otherwise. Same with gitmo clients. Think govt lying? #freebradley #Manning
We
were the ones, at Third, who pointed out the lie from the government
that they had to keep Bradley naked to 'protect him.' We were able to
point out that flaw because a very good friend of mine runs an
adolescent recovery center so I know about the procedures and about
scrubs and the rest. I also know when someone's basically on lockdown,
Cameras are recording. Bradely was kept on watch, videos were made.
The government's lie is just the latest effort by the Barack Obama
administration to lie and lie and lie again. When confronted with the
regulations -- and military regulations (I've just been told on another
phone) include recording people like Bradley both for his protection and
for the militaries -- the government will most likely trot out a new
lie: The tapes were erased! Or taped over. The military is supposed to
preserve those tapes. They knew a legal case was likely. If they next
try to lie that the tapes no longer exist, then they should be able to
provide a list of names that the defense can use as witnesses (names of
people doing monitoring while the taping was going on) and a list of
names of people fired for failure to follow procedure (which includes
preseving the tapes).
Bradley is only one alleged whistle blower the administration is going after. , Lisa Rein (Washington Post) reports on career diplomat Peter Van Buren:
Now the State Department is moving to fire him based on eight charges, ranging from linking on his blog to documents on the whistleblowing site WikiLeaks to disclosing classified information.
Now the State Department is moving to fire him based on eight charges, ranging from linking on his blog to documents on the whistleblowing site WikiLeaks to disclosing classified information.
In
24 years as a diplomat, Van Buren was posted around the world and
speaks four languages. He called the termination notice he received
Friday the coup de grace in a series of blows he received since his
book, "We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People" was published last fall.
Van
Buren's supervisors admittedly singled him out, and are monitoring all
of his online activities taken on his personal time using his personal
computer. They have insisted that he "preclear" all of his blog posts,
tweets, and other social media activities as well as live radio and TV
appearance - all First Amendment-protected activities Van Buren conducts
on his personal time. How is anyone supposed to pre-clear a live radio
interview?
The proposed removal alleges that
Van Buren mishandled sensitive information by linking - NOT leaking -
to a publicly-available Wikileaks document on his blog, which contains a
disclaimer that Van Buren is writing in his personal capacity and that
the State Department does not endorse his views.
The State Department's lame canned quote defending
against the retaliation claims offers no explanation as to why the
Agency has singled Van Buren out to monitor his social media activities
and selectively enforce the policies against Van Buren.
"There
are protections within the government for freedom of expression and for
whistleblowers," spokesman Mark C. Toner said. "The State Department
has followed process and acted in accordance with the law."
How
does it protect freedom of expression to propose firing an employee for
exercising his First Amendment right to speak on matters of public
concern in his private capacity?
Adding to
the trumped-up nature of the charges, the State Department accuses Van
Buren of "bad judgment" because he mocked Michele Bachmann and
criticized Hillary Clinton's laughing at Libyan leader Qaddafi's death.
Does the State Department really need to be told that the First
Amendment covers political speech?
The
US State Dept goes to war on Peter, but they refuse to publicly rebuke
the killing of Iraqi youths. The Department won't make a statement on
the record nor will Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Iraqis thought
to be gay and/or Emo are beign threatened, bullied and killed. And the
State Dept is silent. And wishing Americans would shut up already
because then the State Dept could function without accountability and
below the radar. Today, State Dept spokesperson Victoria Nuland opened
her press briefing by drawing attention to a sheet on US humanitarian
assistance to Syria.
Hey, those Syrians getting
humanitarian assistance? Al Qaeda. So when are we prosecuting the
State Dept and the administration?
If you're not getting how unaccountable and ineffectual the State Dept is, Al Mada reports
this morning that the Ministry of the Interior will be removing the
February statement attacking the Emo kids. That statement, reported on
by Reuters, CNN and other outlets, has been up the entire time.
Why did they finally take it down?
Because the press kept pointing to it.
Not because the State Dept lodged a complaint. Not because the State Dept did a damn thing. They've done nothing. The US Embassy in Baghdad gave an interview to Iraqi TV station Al Sumaria and they had a private e-mail exchange with a San Francisco LGBT group -- a private exchange that went public. Today they posted the following:
Why did they finally take it down?
Because the press kept pointing to it.
Not because the State Dept lodged a complaint. Not because the State Dept did a damn thing. They've done nothing. The US Embassy in Baghdad gave an interview to Iraqi TV station Al Sumaria and they had a private e-mail exchange with a San Francisco LGBT group -- a private exchange that went public. Today they posted the following:
We
strongly condemn the recent violence and killings in Iraq by groups who
appear to be targeting individuals based on their sexual orientation,
gender identity, or personal expression. These acts of intolerance have
no place in democratic societies.
We are
monitoring this situation closely on the ground and in Washington, and
have expressed our concern to the Government of Iraq.
Additionally,
in recent days, some of Iraq's religious leaders and members of
Parliament have denounced these attacks and taken steps to address this
issue. A representative for Grand Ayatollah Sistani has condemned this
violence and the Chairperson of the Human Rights Committee within Iraq's
Parliament has condemned these actions as well.
As
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton said, "Like being a woman, like being
a racial, religious, tribal, or ethnic minority, being LGBT does not
make you less human… It is violation of human rights when people are
beaten or killed because of their sexual orientation, or because they do
not conform to cultural norms about how men and women should look or
behave."
At the State Department, we will
continue to advance a comprehensive human rights agenda that includes
the elimination of violence and discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity.
Don't
applaud Hillary. That quote is not on the Iraqi youth, it's pulled from
her December 6th speech on Human Rights Day. In addition, the Embassy
was forced to put that up and forced to make it appear it had been up.
But the Baghdad embassy is only one and State Dept friends called to
inform me if I visited ___ embassy and ___ embassy, I would find
embassies
that did not backdate the statement. I did find
those and I've got screen snaps if it becomes an issue we need to
document. For not, we'll note that Hillary and the State Dept are
feeling the pressure over their silence -- enough so to basically forge a
press release. They should continue to feel the heat. Shawkat al Bayati (Niqash) reports:
Since
February Iraqi extremists have been threatening, even murdering, Iraq's
"emo" teenagers. They believe them to be Satanists, vampires or
homosexuals. While religious authorities say the anti-emo campaign is
wrong, activists now suspect police involvement in the threats.
Ahmad
is only 16 – but for the time being, he sits, virtually imprisoned, in a
small room on the roof of a building on the outskirts of Baghdad. His
crime? Dressing like a teenager.
Ahmad
is what is being referred to in Iraq as an "emo". In the West, the
description emo has become shorthand for a certain style of dressing and
music. The teenage devotees of emo tend to prefer their rock music with
punk overtones and emotional lyrics and they like to dress all in
black, have black hair and accessorise with slightly Gothic imagery,
such as skulls or bleeding hearts.
Emo
in Europe and North America was the latest evolution of music that
started off as "emotional hard core" and the look and music resonated
with a certain sort of melancholy outsider.
And
whereas in the West, an emo teenager might expect to be harassed by
those who didn't understand their funereal obsession or their dressing
up – a lot of critical bystanders thought the costumed nature of the emo
look meant the wearer must be homosexual – in Iraq, emo kids are at far
more risk.
Emo
kids first started to appear in Iraq in 2008; most of them are aged
between 12 and 18, the vast majority are male and one imagines the same
elements of rebellion that attract Western teens, also attract the Iraqi
youth.
In other news, Al Rafidayn reports that KRG President Massoud Barzani has made clear that Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi is safe in the KRG and they will not hand him over to Baghdad. Nouri is targeting Iraqiya and that includes al-Hashemi. Nouri accuses the vice president of terrorism.
That ongoing crisis hasn't been resolved either (Barzani wants the three presidencies to resolve it -- that's Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi and Nouri). The State Dept's done nothing to help their either.
Since October of last year, the State Dept was supposed to be running the US mission in Iraq. Thus far, they're an abject failure.
the associated press
politico
josh gerstein
the washington post
leila fadel
the los angeles times
david s. cloud
the washington postpolitico
josh gerstein
the washington post
leila fadel
the los angeles times
david s. cloud
lisa rein