Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Music: Cher, Rihanna, Sam Smith. Garth Brooks

So I got Cher's 3614 JACKSON HIGHWAY today.  I opened the big box from AMAZON and wondered why it was so big?  In that box was a box with the album.  Lewis had e-mailed me that it wasn't the double album and that one reviewer at AMAZON had even noted that in the reviews.  Sorry, it was the double album. 

One disc is the original album and the second disc is the songs that were not released originally.  That is the songs she recorded for that album and they didn't make the cut plus some tracks she recorded right after that never got released on an album (like "Superstar").  3614 JACKSON HIGHWAY was her only album for ATCO. 

Do I love it?

Yes, I do. 

It's all in a plastic sleeve.  I felt bad opening it and thought I might need to order a second one to listen to.  :D  But I finally went ahead and opened and listened.  I love it.

I also love that the vinyl is so thick.  When they started skimping on vinyl, that's when people got sick of vinyl.  I've written about that before and used Linda Ronstadt's LIVING IN THE USA as the example.  I returned that album at least twice, maybe three times, before I got a copy that didn't skip.  It was a touch stone moment for people who were buying music in 1978. 

What else? 

I'll be doing another review this weekend.  No, it probably will not be Haim.  It'll be a male artist.  That's all I'll say right now.  As Trina noted in "Music," I've already done eight reviews this year.  I think, due to COVID, that I'll be doing more this year than I usually do.  Due to COVID?  I think we all need something to look at other than the pandemic. 

We all noted a Cher song we loved last night, so see Mike's "Cher," Trina's "Music," Stan's "Those disappointing Emmys," Ruth's "Cher and films," Marcia's "Ellen is to blame," Betty's "Perseverance readies for launch to Mars," Rebecca's "abba,'' Elaine's "Medicare For All," Ann's "Campaign-ability was my issue" and my "3614 JACKSON HIGHWAY" or just check out C.I.'s "Great Cher songs" which gather those posts and also includes picks from Isaiah, Wally, Cedric and THIRD.

Reading this, I'm wondering if Rihanna isn't about to surprise everyone with an album?  Probably not but I wouldn't be surprised if she did have something ready and just drop it and surprise everyone.  Sam Smith's about to release a new song:

Sam Smith has announced the release of a brand new single, which will arrive ahead of their long-awaited third album.
On Wednesday (29 July), the British singer teased a ”special announcement” on social media, with many fans predicting they would share details about the new record.

Instead, Smith shared a small clip of a surprise new song, titled “My Oasis”. is a collaboration with Nigerian singer-songwriter Burna Boy.

Still waiting on the album to drop.  Meanwhile, did you see this item:

Garth Brooks won't compete for "Entertainer of the Year" at the CMA Awards this year. Brooks — a seven-time winner of the lauded country music honor, considered by many to be a top prize in the format — said Wednesday that "it's time for somebody else to hold that award." Here's more on what led to his decision.

Good for him.  Julia Louis Dreyfuss should have done the same.  She did not need six Emmys for VEEP.  Nor did she deserve six consecutive Emmys for that awful show.  It made her come off greedy.  So good for Garth.

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


Wednesday, July 29, 2020.  Iraq is slammed with one crisis after another.



Iraq faces many, many problems.  There's the coronavirus.  Zehra Nur Duz (ANADOLU AGENCY) reported yesterday, "The Iraqi Health Ministry said 77 people died from COVID-19 over the past 24 hours, pushing the nationwide death toll to 4,535."  WORLDOMETER notes Iraq has had 115,332 confirmed coronavirus cases so far.  RUDAW Tweets:

The government of France’s most populous region donated 100,000 face masks to the Kurdistan Region’s health ministry on Tuesday as the novel coronavirus pandemic continues to wreak havoc across Iraq.

Iraqi journalist Steven Nabil Tweets about his recent coronavirus test:

The testing was professional and easy, thanks to Texas Army National Guard. thank God the results were negative
Smiling face with smiling eyes
Red heart
1:04 PM · Jul 28, 2020

Coronavirus has been used in Iraq to crack down on dissent.  That's the government using the disease.  It's also been used by terrorist groups -- including ISIS.  Taylor Luck (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR) notes:
“From approximately March 2020, the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic became a factor in ISIL operational, propaganda, and fundraising activities,” the U.N. Security Council was warned last week.  
ISIS is “consolidating in Iraq and the Syrian Arab Republic,” said a U.N. report to the Council, “and showing confidence in its ability to increasingly operate in a brazen manner in its core area.”
Alarming experts is ISIS’s ability to move freely between eastern Syria and western Iraq – territory that once fell under its “caliphate” – entering towns and villages with relative ease. Its ranks boast around 10,000 fighters, according to U.N. and analysts’ estimates.
“The pandemic came at a time with preexisting conditions on the ground in Iraq and Syria that allowed ISIS to benefit,” says Hassan Hassan, director of the Non-State Actors and Geopolitics program at the Washington-based Center for Global Policy.

ISIS was never defeated.  It was routed out of Mosul -- though Mosul still hasn't been rebuilt.  Routing it out of Mosul wasn't a 'victory.'  They never should have been able to seize Mosul -- let alone hold it for years.  In the time since it was routed out of Mosul, it has remained active.  MENAFN reports, "The Iraqi military stated that two Iraqi policemen and a frontier safeguard were murdered on Tuesday in two assaults by the Islamic State (IS) militants in western Iraq."  Also reporting on Iraq this morning is Lawk Ghafuri (RUDAW):

The Islamic State group (ISIS) has claimed responsibility for the killing of a top Iraqi army commander in Anbar province, west of Baghdad in an "ambush" late Tuesday.

In a statement published on ISIS' Telegram propaganda channel, the extremist group claimed its militants "killed General Brigadier Ahmed al-Lami, commander of 7th division of the 29th brigade of the Iraqi Army in an ambush in Anbar."

The statement also claimed that another officer was killed in the ambush which also injured an Iraqi soldier.

Yehia Rasool, spokesperson for the Iraqi commander-in-chief released a statement early Wednesday confirming the death of the “brave commander.”


As ISIS rises in Iraq, we need to note this nonsense from Brian W. Everstine (AIR FORCE MAGAZINE):

The U.S. will hand over control of bases in Iraq and is likely to reduce its overall troop level within the country as progress against the remnants of the Islamic State group continues, a senior official with the American-led coalition said.
On July 25, U.S. forces will hand over control of the Besmaya base south of Baghdad to Iraqi forces, and Spain’s training contingent will return home, USAF Maj. Gen. Kenneth P. Ekman, the deputy commander of Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve, told reporters via videoconference July 22.
“There will be some degree of a reduction in force in Iraq, that’s what success looks like,” he said.

Now if it takes the US government lying that ISIS has been defeated to finally get all US troops out of Iraq, okay, I can live with others lying.  But even then, I wouldn't just stay silent in the face of those lies.  ISIS has never been defeated.  It can't be defeated militarily.

For a few brief weeks, then-President Barack Obama told some truths about Iraq.  He noted that the problems were the government -- Nouri al-Maliki was prime minister at the time.  He was right.  ISIS is a threat to stability.  The Iraqi government has never given the Iraqi people anything that they'd want to stabilize -- let alone fight to protect.  



Early last October, while working in his office in Baghdad, a businessman named Hussein Laqees got a phone call from a number he’d never seen before. “We need to talk,” the caller said. The man’s voice was gruff and self-assured, a little menacing. He demanded that Laqees come meet him but refused to give his name.
Laqees demurred, and the call ended. He might have forgotten the whole exchange had a colleague not been in touch a few minutes later with worrisome news. The mystery caller, he said, was from Kataib Hezbollah, a powerful Iraqi militia with strong ties to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. They had a business proposal to discuss.
When the militiaman called again, Laqees reluctantly agreed to a meeting. He gathered a few colleagues, and they all drove to a house off Sadoun Street in downtown Baghdad, arriving near dusk. Inside, he was led into a dim office and introduced to a small, bald man who got right to the point. “You need to work with us, there is no other choice,” the bald man said. “You can keep your staff, but you must do as we say.” He explained that Kataib Hezbollah would take 20 percent of Laqees’s gross revenue — about 50 percent of his profits.
Laqees refused. His company, Palm Jet, had a five-year government contract to run a V.I.P. terminal at Baghdad’s international airport, along with a nearby hotel; it also works routinely with Western aeronautics firms like Lockheed Martin. He could not have any dealings with a group like Kataib Hezbollah, which is listed by the U.S. government as a foreign terrorist organization (as is the unrelated Lebanese group also called Hezbollah). The bald man replied that if Laqees refused, he would seize everything he owned in Baghdad. Laqees looked at him in disbelief. “I’m an investor,” he said. “There is law.” The bald man shot back: “We are the law.” He told Laqees to give him an answer by noon the next day.
The following afternoon, five Chevrolet S.U.V.s rolled up outside the V.I.P. terminal. Twelve men got out, dressed in black paramilitary gear and carrying guns. They found Laqees in the cafe of the airport hotel, smoking and sipping coffee. He had been calling all his government contacts since the night before, along with the airport’s department heads. No one had called back. It was as if they’d been warned — or perhaps paid off. The militiamen took Laqees’s phone and told him to sign a document relinquishing his contract. He stalled for time. One of his employees slipped outside to take a cellphone picture of the militiamen’s vehicles, but they caught him, smashed his phone and beat him up. Laqees, who is Lebanese, had been working in Iraq since 2011. He knew the country was troubled by crime and corruption, but he believed that the airport, with its hundreds of uniformed immigration and security officials, was different. “I wait 20 minutes, maybe someone will come,” Laqees told me later. “Police, something.” Finally, he walked to the departures hall and caught a flight to Dubai. Days later, Kataib Hezbollah installed its preferred contractor in his place. Laqees has not returned to Iraq since.

Worth also notes:

The militias have been aided and abetted by a new Iraqi political class whose sole ethic is self-enrichment. Over the years, this cross-sectarian cabal has mastered scams at every level: routine checkpoint shakedowns, bank fraud, embezzling from the government payroll. Adel Abdul Mahdi, who was hailed as a potential reformer when he became Iraq’s prime minister in 2018, hoped to subordinate the militias to the state. Instead, they outmaneuvered and overpowered him. His cabinet included people with ties to some of the worst graft schemes afflicting the country.
The United States is deeply implicated in all this, and not just because its serial invasions wrecked the country and helped ravage the economy. America provides the money that sustains it, even as U.S. officials wink at the self-dealing of Iraqi allies. The Federal Reserve of New York still supplies Iraq with at least $10 billion a year in hard currency from the country’s oil sales. Much of that is passed on to commercial banks, ostensibly for imports, in a process that was hijacked long ago by Iraq’s money-laundering cartels. At the same time, the United States inflicts punishing sanctions on two countries -- Iran and Syria -- with which Iraq shares notoriously permeable borders. It is the ideal breeding ground for corruption.

Paddy Cock-burn.  Remember that idiot?  What's our non-American Middle East correspondent writing about right now?  Oh, right, propaganda to get Donald Trump defeated in November. Well, maybe that's better than all his valentines to Adel Abdul Mahdi.  Mahdi was never serious about ending corruption.  If he had been, Worth wouldn't be noting that Mahdi's "cabinet included people with ties to some of the worst graft schemes afflicting the country."

It was always obvious that he didn't know what he was talking about.  Elaine called him out when Bully Boy Bush occupied the White House.  An Iraqi woman was killed because of who she married and there's Paddy Cock Burn getting the details wrong of a public execution.  And THE INDEPENDENT let him get away with it.  He has had one error after another in report after report, he is known in the Middle East as someone who is anti-Arab.  His most recent laughable book claimed that ISIS was defeated.  He's an idiot.  Scott Horton loves Paddy Cocks but that's part of the reason Scott Horton has been so wrong about Iraq over and over.  Remember, Scott cheered on Nouri al-Maliki, cheered him and praised him.  Nouri was -- and remains -- a thug.  He is responsible for the rise of ISIS in Iraq.  But when you get your information from professional liar Paddy Cock Burn, you're going to be misled.


Robert F. Worth offers:

The coronavirus pandemic has now pushed Iraq to the brink of an existential crisis. The global collapse of demand for oil has brought prices to historic lows, delivering a terrible shock to a country whose economy depends almost entirely on oil revenue. But it could also offer the new Iraqi prime minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, an extraordinary opportunity to face his country’s most intractable problem. Corruption can now be framed as a life-or-death issue: Iraq must choose between feeding its people and enriching its kleptocrats. Kadhimi has promised to take up this challenge. He is not likely to succeed unless the United States seizes this chance to undo some of the damage it has done in Iraq, and to make common cause with the protesters who are hoping to re-establish their country on a new footing.


That may sound like common sense.  It may also cause alarm because THE NEW YORK TIMES is not known for (a) doing a good job reporting on Iraq or (b) actually wanting to help Iraq.  Could the suggestion that the US back the protesters actually be yet another ploy to sell further US control and occupation of Iraq?  That's a strong possibility.

Equally true: No one in the Oval Office has ever supported the Iraqi protesters.  Not Bully Boy Bush, not Barack Obama and not Donald Trump.  One example, the Hawija massacre.  Let's drop back to April 23, 2015:



Nouri's slaughter.  The April 23, 2013 massacre of a sit-in in Hawija which resulted from  Nouri's federal forces storming in.  Alsumaria noted Kirkuk's Department of Health (Hawija is in Kirkuk)  announced 50 activists have died and 110 were injured in the assault.   AFP reported the death toll eventually (as some wounded died) rose to 53 dead.   UNICEF noted that the dead included 8 children (twelve more were injured).


And where was the US?

Where was the White House?

Did they immediately demand justice?  Or that Nouri step down?  Or express solidarity with the protesters?


No, they just looked the other way and continued holding hands with Nouri al-Maliki.

In fact, at that point they pretty much had their hands down Nouri's pants.

Oh, the Yazidis! Trapped on a mountain top!

But when Nouri's forces killed protesters -- and Hawija is only the biggest slaughter -- Barack Obama was still thrilled to hold hands with the man he installed in 2010.

Because Nouri lost the election.

Despite bribery and bullying, in 2010, he came in second in the elections.

But Barack Obama overturned the election results.  And, via the US-brokered Erbil agreement, he gave Nouri a second term.

Liar Patrick Cockburn ignores that as well.

He wants you to know that Iran decreed Nouri would get a second term in October and that's how it happened.

Well if tehran is so damn all powerful, than their decision in October should have been immediately implemented, right?

But that's not what happened is it?

November 10, 2010, The Erbil Agreement is signed.  November 11, 2010, the Iraqi Parliament has their first real session in over eight months and finally declares a president, a Speaker of Parliament and Nouri as prime minister-designate -- all the things that were supposed to happen in April of 2010 but didn't.

March 7, 2010, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board noted in August 2010, "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as a success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that optimism in a cold shower of reality." 


Bully Boy Bush installed Nouri as prime minister in 2006.

The Iraqi people suffered.

And in 2010, they went to the polls.

And they voted for something other than Nouri.

Despite his bribery, his bullying, the threats and so much more, they voted Nouri out.

But Barack overturned their votes and insisted Nouri get a second term.

So, yes, the Hawija massacre is something Barack bears responsibility for.

US forces are leaving Iraq in small numbers.  Why?  A number of reasons.  Peace isn't one.  Let's note this video.




Chronic power outages combined with low oil prices threaten Iraq’s political stability, and OPEC’s second-biggest producer must act fast to boost electricity supply or face a new crisis within the next two months.
That’s the conclusion of Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency, which advises the world’s richest economies on energy policy.
Iraq faces a widening shortfall in electricity, due largely to a lack of investment in aging power plants and networks, and the plunge in crude prices this year limits what it can spend to upgrade them. Baghdad must slash red tape and prioritize maintenance and spending on power facilities to stave off social and political turmoil, Birol warned.
“If there are not urgent and concrete steps taken for the electricity sector, we may well have major problems in the next two months in terms of electricity supply,” he said in an interview. “It may well lead to unrest within the country.”
In a grim sign of what could come, security forces in Baghdad opened fire Sunday on protesters complaining about power cuts. Two demonstrators were killed and at least 20 others wounded. Iraq’s Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi ordered an investigation into the killings.




The following sites updated: