My "Kat's Korner: Simple Minds, Donna Summer, Barbra Streisand, Billy Joel, Frank Sinatra and Joss Stone"went up Sunday. Yes, I am covering albums by all six artists. I note in the review that I have one more review I may do next week.
But . . .
Polly told me about an album I hadn't heard of. I don't know that it was released in the US. But I am eager to review it so there may end up being two more reviews before I do my Year in Review on December 31st or Jan 1st.
I am eating cream cheese won tons, by the way. I'd be asleep otherwise. I've been so tired today. Time change? I don't think it's that. But I knew I had to post so I ordered some cream cheese won tons and hope that's enough to get me through it.
Olivia Rodrigo made her debut at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by honoring inductee Carly Simon with a rendition of “You’re So Vain.” Simon’s ubiquitous classic from 1972 was a fitting choice for Rodrigo, who also kickstarted her own career with deeply vulnerable songs.
Before Rodrigo took the stage, Sara Bareilles performed another tribute to Simon, singing the famed ballad and James Bond theme “Nobody Does It Better” from 1977. Bareilles also accepted the induction honor on behalf of Simon, who did not attend the ceremony following the deaths of two sisters to cancer just days apart at the end of October.
Carly was inducted!!! It's been a long time coming. She fully deserves it. I am so sorry she wasn't able to attend but I'm sure everyone understands.
“When I heard ‘You’re So Vain,’ I just thought, that is the best song that has ever been written. That is the most direct way anyone has ever addressed a breakup, it’s amazing.” - @taylorswift13 was featured in Carly Simon’s #RockAndRollHallOfFame induction video pic.twitter.com/WcqNb4d88w
— Taylor Swift Media (@tswmedia13) November 6, 2022
Olivia Rodrigo performs the classic Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 “You’re So Vain" in honor to Carly Simon's induction to the 2022 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
— __popjuice (@__popjuice) November 7, 2022
The ceremony will be airing November 19 on HBO. pic.twitter.com/X4oOOcwKyg
Clouds in my coffee...
— jane phượng (she/her) (@jane_phuong) November 7, 2022
My always go to song when I miss my childhood, happy 50th birthday to #youresovain by the talented #CarlySimonhttps://t.co/3bFRh0IkjJ
Your day needs Olivia Rodrigo singing Carly Simon’s “You’re So Vain” at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: https://t.co/ryWArv1phc
— Pink Bunny (@pinkbunnyr) November 7, 2022
Carly Simon To Release 1995 Live Set With Live At Grand Central:https://t.co/WQzDDbF1FC@CarlySimonHQ pic.twitter.com/oIgq5KxiGU
— MusicTAP (@MusicTAP) November 7, 2022
That's January 27th. And vinyl will be one of the options!!! I can't wait. I thought that concert was better than the one she did for HBO -- that became GREATEST HITS LIVE. She's got "Jesse" on there for one and she just seemed to have more fun -- like on "We Have No Secrets." I am so glad it's going to be released on vinyl and CD.
Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Any electoral success for the Republicans is due entirely to the reactionary and bankrupt policies of the Democratic Party and the impasse for the working class created by the two-party monopoly.
What have been the main “achievements” of the Democratic Party during the past two years, when it controlled the White House and both houses of Congress?
The central preoccupation of the Biden administration has been the prosecution of the war against Russia in Ukraine, which has the full support of the entire Democratic Party. This was reinforced two weeks ago when 30 liberal Democrats sent a letter to the White House pleading for a negotiated settlement with Russia rather than continuing to escalate the risk of nuclear war.
Within 24 hours, after a massive backlash within the political establishment, the letter was withdrawn and the leader of the “Progressive Caucus” issued a humiliating apology, reaffirming the group’s support for prosecuting the war until “victory.”
Inflation is skyrocketing and working class living standards are being slashed. The Federal Reserve is pursuing a deliberate policy of increasing unemployment through the raising of interest rates in an effort to use social misery as a bludgeon against demands for wage increases.
In two years in office, the Democrats have done nothing to improve the conditions of the vast majority of the population. The White House dropped any push for voting rights legislation. It did nothing to protect the rights of immigrants, instead stepping up the deportation and exclusion of asylum seekers to record levels, beyond even the level of the Trump administration. It regards women’s right to abortion as a means of motivating people to vote, while refusing to defend it in practice.
And, confronted with a party that sought to overturn the 2020 election and block Biden’s own inauguration through the methods of coup and political assassination, the Democrats have shielded the Republican Party.
Nearly two years after the coup attempt, neither Trump nor any of his top co-conspirators has been prosecuted. There has been no serious investigation into the January 6 conspiracy or the social and political forces behind it.
Since Biden’s speech last Wednesday, warning that Trump and his allies represent a dire threat to democracy, he and other leading Democrats have turned the declaration that “democracy is on the ballot” into a hollow sound bite.
The differences between the Democrats and the Republicans, however bitter and intense, are entirely tactical.
In domestic policy, the Democrats seek to use the trade union apparatus to suppress the working class, while employing the demagogues of identity politics to split the working class along race and gender lines. The Republicans wish to dispense with the unions, which are rapidly losing their ability to hold back the class struggle, and proceed directly to the deployment of the police and military violence.
On the fundamental question of which class they serve, the Democrats and Republicans are united. They are different components of a two-party system of capitalist-imperialist reaction.
Among the wounded is Major General Kadhim Bohan, head of the Iraqi civil defense directorate, while twelve other people who were trapped inside the building remain unaccounted for. Search parties continue in their search for the missing, according to Brigadier General Qusai Younis, head of Baghdad's al-Rusafa Civil Defense
The cause of the fire is still unknown.
The building houses large stores of perfumes and household items.
The huge blaze required the deployment of sixty civil defense teams and more than 50 firefighting vehicles, in an operation that took up to 10 hours according to Younis.
After a year-long crisis in Iraq triggered by contested elections, Iraq finally has a government headed by Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani. While this ends the political impasse, it’s unclear whether his new cabinet will bring about change or usher in more of the same.
Al-Sudani is backed by the Coordination Framework, an alliance of powerful pro-Iran Shi’a factions that holds 138 out of 329 seats in parliament. The Shi’a cleric Muqtada al-Sadr’s Sadrist movement that won a plurality of parliamentary seats in the October 2021 elections played no part in picking either the prime minister or the new president — a first since Iraq’s democratic transition, which does not bode well for a government that now effectively lacks legitimacy.
The new government will also need to fend off the sporadic but persistent protests that have swayed the country since October 2019 and are likely to regain momentum. These demonstrations, which forced the resignation of the government of Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi in 2019 and prompted an early election, reflect public frustration with long-unaddressed demands. Over the past three years, a coalition of protestors, activists and youth-led entities has since formed to push the government to address the country’s dysfunction through changes in the political system.
Outrage over corruption continues to be the major driver for the demand for reform of a power-sharing system that divides government posts among Iraq’s communities and fuels patronage-based abuse. It has not gone unnoticed that the new government has formed using the same methods and tactics and the same parties that have dominated Iraqi politics since 2005. Citizens may well ask, why should corruption change if the system that produces it has not? The latest corruption scandal at the Ministry of Finance involving the theft of $2.5 billion from the tax authority could implicate many who enjoy the support of powerful political parties in Iraq, including those backing the prime minister.
The new bill, titled Serving the Flag, has been drafted by the Iraqi parliament’s security and defense committee and proposes assigning all Iraqi men between the ages of 18 to 35, with limited exceptions, to mandatory military duty, according to the deputy-chairman of the parliamentary committee Sagvan Sindi.
The length of the service differs based on the academic level of the recruited, Sindi added. The draft compels secondary school graduates to 18 months of military service, preparatory school graduates to 12 months, university and institute graduates to 9 months, master’s graduates to 6 months, and doctorate graduates to 3 months.