Friday, March 31, 2017

Carly, Gladys and Christine

Available NOW! ! The definitive guide to the music of ! |



  Retweeted
We are so thrilled to see among the finalist for the Audiobook of the Year!



The book is a great read but I want part two now!!!!!!!!


I also love that one of my favorites is recording new music!!!



Love and music keep me alive. I'm so blessed to have an abundance of both ❤️



Gladys Knight is a one of a kind singer.

Just try to imagine "That's What Friends Are For" without her, for example.

Her voice adds so much to that song.

Or listen to "Neither One Of Us Wants to be the First to Say Goodbye" or "On and On" or my favorite of all time "Make Yours A Happy Home."


Gladys is amazing.


And let's note Christine McVie.


  1. Fleetwood Mac's Lindsey Buckingham And Christine McVie Announce Joint Concert - 100.7 WZLX Classic…
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Chrisine and Stevie Nicks made Fleetwood Mac a super band.

Lindsay Buckingham -- who has aged so badly!!! -- should have been content to be the guitar player.

Instead, he wanted to sing.

And, truth be told, he can't sing.

He also can't write lyrics worth singing.

But Christine is the real deal.

Favorite Christine songs?  "Wish You Were Here," "Hold Me," "Honey Hi," "Think About Me," "Little Lies," "Sugar Daddy," "You Make Loving Fun" and "Everywhere."



Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Friday, March 31, 2017.  Chaos and violence continues as Michael Gordon and THE NEW YORK TIMES sling their ass to work it for death merchants.


Judith Miller lost her job at THE NEW YORK TIMES over her Iraq War stenography.  Her frequent co-writer Michael Gordon kept his.

A reminder of the damage control the government stenographer can still perform appears on A6 of today's NEW YORK TIMES.

What is the big news?

The massacre of civilians in Mosul, apparently killed in a US air strike.

So the government rolls down the window at Gordo's street corner and guess who walks over?

The money shot?

"New ISIS Tactic: Gather Mosul's Civilians, Then Lure an Airstrike."

In other words?

Those hundreds of civilians killed?

They had it coming.

Shouldn't have gone out that late at night, shouldn't have worn those tight clothes, they were begging for it.


No where in the ravings of the aging prostitute do issues like international law appear.

Not once does he note that, even if his assertion is true, it doesn't not excuse dropping bombs on civilians.


Silly US government, they sent a disease ridden whore to do a clean up thinking the American people would believe Michael Gordon.

Gordo, of course, offers no dissenting view.

And, for the record, he has no eye witnesses.

Iraqis would be the one to talk to -- residents of Mosul.

But when has THE NEW YORK TIMES ever been interested in the Iraqi civilains?

When they sold the war?

When the re-sold it to keep it going?


yeah, so maybe you guys close up shop. I'm sure the people of Iraq wouldn't mind you scumbags





The Iraqi people are not numbers.

They live, they breathe, they dream just like anyone else.

Yet the paper of (mis)record has repeatedly rendered them invisible.

Gordo continues that long and disgraceful tradition today.

Not everyone is unable to speak to the victims.

Heartbreaking: speaks with survivors of the attacks that left dozens dead and others injured








Meanwhile, THE ARMY TIMES reports, "About 600 soldiers from the 1st Armored Division will deploy later this year to Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army announced Wednesday.  Of those, about 400 soldiers belong to the 1st Armored Division headquarters at Fort Bliss, Texas. They are scheduled to deploy this summer to Iraq in support of Operation Inherent Resolve."  Corey Dickstein (STARS & STRIPES) adds, "Both deployments are rotations of regular troops replacing units currently deployed, according to the Army. Therefore, they do not represent an increase in American forces in either country, an Army spokesman said."  On the topic of troops, W.J. Hennigan (LOS ANGELES TIMES) reports:

Even as the U.S. military takes on a greater role in the warfare in Iraq and Syria, the Trump administration has stopped disclosing significant information about the size and nature of the U.S. commitment, including the number of U.S. troops deployed in either country.
Earlier this month, the Pentagon quietly dispatched 400 Marines to northern Syria to operate artillery in support of Syrian militias that are cooperating in the fight against Islamic State, according to U.S. officials. That was the first use of U.S. Marines in that country since its long civil war began.
In Iraq, nearly 300 Army paratroopers were deployed recently to help the Iraqi military in their six-month assault on the city of Mosul, according to U.S. officials.




It's day 165 of The Mosul Slog.

How's that working out?


map update. Green= completely liberated. Orange= frontline clashes. White= control








That's a visual showing the Islamic State still controls a great deal of land.

Still controls it 165 days after the operation to 'liberate' Mosul started.


And how's that 'liberation' going?



: IOM urgently requires $76.3 million, of which $28.83 million is desperately needed 2 care 4 IDPs in next 12wks.







UN chief urges greater solidarity with displaced: via


In N Iraq, calls for greater support for all those displaced by the fighting in Mosul.






IRAQ: Displace Iraqi Families from Western Mosul.








Doesn't look like liberation, does it?


Doesn't sound like it either as described by Molly Hennessy-Fiske (LOS ANGELES TIMES):


They camp on muddy corners, beside an abandoned mosque and in the rain-soaked ruins of a soccer stadium — families displaced by ongoing fighting in Mosul are filling emergency camps in this smaller city about 20 miles south.
Disabled boys arrived in wheelchairs one day last week, and elderly men limped in on metal braces and canes.





The following community sites -- plus Cindy Sheehan, THE GUARDIAN, Jody Watley and DISSIDENT VOICE -- updated:











  • ADDED at Ann's request:






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