Tuesday, February 09, 2021

Fleetwood Mac

young pete

 

Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Young Pete On Being In The Cabinet" went up about six hours ago. 


In other news?  Christine McVie gave an interview and stated she doubted that Fleetwood Mac would tour again.  Then she added not with John McVie and Stevie Nicks.  People are acting like this is some huge news.


It's not.


Back in 1990, similar statements were made.  Then the group got back together in January 1993 to play Bill Clinton's inauguration.  Then it was said . . .


It always happens.  


It's talk.  


Christine's been done with the band and with touring with them before.  In 2003, with SAY YOU WILL, she didn't even record with the band, let alone tour with them.  


She turns 78 this year, Mick Fleetwood 74, John 76  and Stevie 73.  It may be time for the band to consider packing it in.  Christine's sure the band's not touring this year.  I'm sure of that too.  With COVID and all, I don't see them able to pull off a tour and plan it.  


And there's no point in it if they don't have an album to promote it.  For me, anyway.  This recent tour?  I had no real interest in it.  I've seen Mac a huge number of times.  I really wasn't into the latest go round because there was no new album.  


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


 Tuesday, February 9, 2021.  The US government's goal of spreading austerity continues, the Pope releases his schedule for his planned visit to Iraq next month and much more.



Jessica Miles (KSTP) reports of Carin Hanson:


"Leaving the kids at home is, it’s going to be different," Hanson said.

Hanson says she didn't have children at home during her first deployment 13 years ago. 

She now has an 11-year-old, an 8-year-old and a 3-year-old.

"For my older two I think they understand as much as they can at this point (about me leaving)," she said. "I don’t think that it’s sunk in to them quite yet emotionally or mentally what that’s going to mean."


Yesterday, she is one of the over 60 members of Minnesota's National Guard who will be deploying to Iraq and Kuwait.  David Schwarz (ST. CLOUD TIMES) notes, "The troops will next travel to Fort Hood, Texas, where they will join 75 soldiers from the Iowa National Guard for two months of training before leaving for their nine-month deployment." 


They're deploying to Iraq.  Why?


It's a question that no one is ever pressed on.  The illegal war hits the 18 year mark next month.  Why?


Back in August of 2005, NPR featured Cindy Sheehan in a nonsense segment where the 'interviewer' editorialized repeatedly:


ALEX CHADWICK: [. . .]  Cindy Sheehan. She is the woman who set up a peace vigil outside President Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas. Her son, Casey, an Army specialist, died in combat in Iraq last year.

In the last month, Cindy Sheehan has become the face of the anti-war movement. She's demanding that the president meet with her, though she did see him in the company of other families last year. In a Washington Post/ABC News poll that's out today, 53 percent of those polled support Ms. Sheehan's demands for this meeting; 42 percent do not. Most also say her protest has not changed their views on Iraq. I spoke with Cindy Sheehan from Crawford yesterday.

What do you think of everything that's happened over this last month? You've become the center of a lot of attention.

Ms. CINDY SHEEHAN (Fallen Soldier's Mother): I think that it has really been a good thing because it's opened up a dialogue on the war, and people are putting their money where their mouth is. We've had thousands and thousands of people come from all over the world to be here at Camp Casey, and I think a peace movement has galvanized and something big has started here in Crawford.

CHADWICK: You've attracted a lot of attention from people who don't like what you're doing as well. There are complaints that you also misrepresent military families--that is, that many...

Ms. SHEEHAN: Well, I never said I spoke for every military family. I never said I spoke for every Gold Star family. I said I speak for me and my son. But we've had a lot of military families and Gold Star families here supporting me and standing behind me. You know, I don't begrudge them their freedom of speech or their freedom of expression or their freedom to peacefully assembly. I wish they wouldn't begrudge me mine.

CHADWICK: President Bush has said that he recognizes your right to do what you're doing, to be an activist, but that to get out of Iraq now would be to create a worse situation than exists now, that this would be a real step back.

Ms. SHEEHAN: Well, his invading a country that was no threat to the United States of America was a huge step back, and I believe our military presence there fuels the insurgency, and his justification for the war now is we have to continue killing Americans and Iraqis 'cause we've already killed so many, and I think that is the most insane and immoral reason to continue a war ever.

CHADWICK: Even people who are critical of the president--very critical of the president--say that you shouldn't just get out of Iraq, that the Iraqis just aren't capable of staving off this insurgency on their own and that for a stable, healthy political and national situation to develop in Iraq, Americans have to be there longer.

Ms. SHEEHAN: I disagree. We do not need our military presence there. Like I said, it's fueling the insurgency. And for us to think that we have to help Iraq rebuild their country, that's very arrogant and racist. You know, I've had a lot of Iraqis tell me, `You know, we were doing math and engineering before your civilization was even thought of. We've handled a lot of problems. We can handle these problems.' And we caused these problems; America caused the problems they're having now.

CHADWICK: America didn't cause the situation of Saddam Hussein.

Ms. SHEEHAN: Oh, we didn't? We propped him up and sold him weapons for years. We propped him up in his war against Iran, and I have to wonder for the rest of my life if my son was killed by a weapon that America sold to Saddam. Another thing is Saddam was a bad man. But that's not why the president told us that we were invading Iraq. He told us it was because Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and that Iraq had something to do with 9/11, and both of those were lies. He never said anything about Saddam. He never said that we were going to spread freedom and democracy; it's just an ever-changing ephemeral mission. And now the mission is to kill more people because so many people have already been killed.


 In 2009, karma came for Alex Chadwick and his lying ass got fired from NPR.  "Even people who are critical of the president -- very critical of the president -- say that you shouldn't just get out of Iraq . . ."?  The series he was doing was supposed to present a variety of voices but it didn't and it had Alex editorializing the whole time.  There were many of us calling for US troops out of Iraq.  And wanting it now.  At one point, that's what the Out of Iraq Caucus in Congress stood for -- when they stood for anything.  Then in August of 2009, revealed as whores and abject failures, their leader Maxine Waters gave a b.s. speech insisting that they had called for troops out of Iraq but hadn't failed because, please understand, they never said when.


Huh?


Whore wants to say that the Out of Iraq caucus had no demands and she got away with it.  She's been whoring ever since when she should have been facing a reckoning for her failures and for her lying.


We couldn't get answer back then and we still can't.  Cindy wanted Bully Boy Bush to explain what "noble cause" her son died for.  Never got an answer.


The Iraq War continues and we still are not given an answer as to why.


Why are US troops still in Iraq?


Back in 2005, Alex The Whore Chadwick insisted US troops had to remain in Iraq because  "the Iraqis just aren't capable of staving off this insurgency on their own and that for a stable, healthy political and national situation to develop in Iraq, Americans have to be there longer."  How's that going?  Still the same story.  And it forever will be at present.  That's because a government and officials were imposed upon the Iraqi people.  There is no buy-in.  Cowards who fled the country in the 70s, 80s and 90s and only returned after the fall of Baghdad were made prime minister over and over.  Those cowards don't inspire trust.  They keep their dual citizenship -- the current prime minister is Mustafa al-Kadhimi and he has Iraqi citizenship and UK citizenship -- because they're never sure when they might have to bail on Iraq again.  But, hey, let's pretend these cowards can lead a country.


They can steal from the public trust.  They've nearly bankrupted the oil rich country -- a country that brings in billions and billions in oil revenues each year.  They're trying to start austerity measures at present -- long a goal of the US government which spent the bulk of the early years of this ongoing war trying to gut the rations program.  Because heaven forbid a government provide its people with the basics like rice, tea bags, flour, etc.  2021 may be the year the US government finally gets what it has long wanted -- to spread austerity throughout Iraq.


Not democracy.  It was never about democracy.  You don't see cowards who fled Iraq made prime minister over and over when you're trying to create a democracy.  You don't see the US government overturn the voters of the Iraqi people in 2010 with The Erbil Agreement if you're trying to create democracy.  You don't see Joe Biden visit Iraq to sell the overturning of the votes to various Iraqi leaders if you're trying to create a democracy.


Austerity.  That's what the US government always wanted to create.


Petrona Tweets:


The US is currently not spreading democracy anywhere in the global south that it claims it's doing. Nicaragua, Chile, Brazil, Haiti, Iraq, Afghanistan etc. It's an endless thief of resources where they appointment their own people to power in this countries. They are causing harm


Next month, the Pope is planning to visit Iraq.  If the visit takes place, he will be the first pope to visit Iraq.  It will also be, CATHOLIC NEWS AGENCY points out, the Pope's first international trip since the COVID pandemic started.  VATICAN NEWS notes the schedule: 


Pope Francis' Apostolic Visit to Iraq begins on Friday morning 5 March when he departs from Rome and arrives at Baghdad International Airport in the afternoon.

Official Welcome and Visit with Civil Authorities

The official welcome ceremony will take place at the Presidential Palace in Baghdad followed by a courtesy visit to the President. Pope Francis will also meet with civil authorities and members of the Diplomatic Corps.

Meeting with Priests and Religious

As part of the schedule on Friday, the Pope will meet with Bishops, Priests, Religious, Consecrated Persons, Seminarians and Catechists at the Syro-Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Salvation in Baghdad.

Visit to Najaf and Mass in Baghdad

On Saturday, 6 March, Pope Francis will depart Baghdad for Najaf. Following a courtesy visit to the Grand Ayatollah Sayyid Ali Al-Husaymi Al-Sistani in Najaf, Pope Francis will fly to Nassirya for an interreligious meeting at the Plain of Ur.

On his return to Baghdad in the afternoon, the Pope will celebrate Holy Mass at the Chaldean Cathedral of Saint Joseph in Baghdad.

Erbil and Mosul

On Sunday morning, Pope Francis will depart for Erbil. On arrival at the airport, he will be welcomed by religious and civil authorities from the region of Iraqi Kurdistan before continuing his journey by helicopter to Mosul. While there, he will recite a prayer of sufferage for the victims of war at Hosh al-Bieaa (Church Square).

Meeting with community in Qaraqosh

The Pope will again take a helicopter to Qaraqosh where he will visit the Qaraqosh community at the Church of the Immaculate Conception.

Holy Mass in Erbil

In the afternoon, Pope Francis will return to Erbil where he will celebrate Holy Mass at the “Franso Hariri” stadium. Following the celebration, the Pope will depart for Baghdad.

Departure

After a farewell ceremony on Monday morning, Pope Francis will depart for Rome. He is expected to touch down at Rome’s Ciampino airport later in the day.


Sura Ali (RUDAW) observes, "The pope's visit comes at a time when only a few hundred thousand Christians are left in the country.  Only 400,000 are estimated to remain in the country, down from 1.5 million in 2003."


THE WASHINGTON POST's Louisa Loveluck Tweets:


"For 30 minutes, all I did was write down names, including of boys as young as 10." The mass grave of the missing men and boys appears to have been discovered last week. english.alaraby.co.uk/english/Commen



And from the same article, she highlights:


"I am losing track of the number of times I have documented allegations of killings in Iraq, only to read later that a mass grave was discovered right where the killings allegedly occurred. I cannot remember a single time where mass killings by Iraqi forces were investigated."



In the US this week, PBS's FRONTLINE is airing a program on Iraq:

Iraq's Assassins; Yemen's COVID Cover-Up

Allegations that Iranian-backed Shia militias are threatening and killing critics with impunity and targeting U.S. interests; how COVID-19 is worsening Yemen's humanitarian crisis.

Award-winning FRONTLINE correspondent Ramita Navai (Iraq Uncovered) investigates allegations that Iranian-backed Shia militias are threatening and killing critics with impunity and targeting U.S. interests. Also in FRONTLINE’s two-part Feb. 9 hour, a look at how COVID is worsening Yemen’s humanitarian crisis.



Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Lazy Dog Joe" went up last night.  The following sites updated: