Monday, March 21, 2016

241.3 - Good News: Interior Dept. says no lease sales for oil drilling off Atlantic Coast

Good News: Interior Dept. says no lease sales for oil drilling off Atlantic Coast

Environmentalists, conservationists, and those concerned about global climate change were understandably upset when in January 2015 the Interior Dept. embraced the desires of fossil fuel corporations and proposed opening an area on the outer continental shelf from Virginia to Georgia to offshore oil drilling.

But after hearing from "thousands" of people in coastal communities from New England to Florida who said, in the words of Interior Secretary Sally Jewel, "now is not the time to start leasing (for oil) off the Atlantic Coast," on March 15 the administration reversed itself and declared there would be no Atlantic leases in the coming five years.

Interior Sec. Sally Jewell
Quoting Sec. Jewell,
When you factor in conflicts with national defense, economic activities such as fishing and tourism, and opposition from many local communities, it simply doesn't make sense to move forward with any lease sales.
There is - of course - a downside, as it seems there always is. Actually, two. The immediate one is that the same proposal that said there would be no Atlantic leases also said that there still would be two sales of leases for drilling in the US Arctic - one sale each in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas north of Alaska, an area potentially even more environmentally-fragile than the outer continental shelf.

The second, longer term, downside is that the next president could just change the decision. Both Sanders and Clinton have indicated opposition to both Atlantic and Arctic drilling - he, in fact, is opposed to any expansion of offshore drilling - but right now no one can honestly guarantee that one of them will be president. Probably, yes. A dead certainty? No.

Still, for the moment, we will say one battle at a time - and welcome the good news of a win for the Atlantic Coast and the people who live there.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-01-27/obama-proposes-offshore-oil-drilling-from-virginia-to-georgia
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/03/15/in-reversal-obama-admin-to-block-oil-drilling-in-atlantic.html
http://in.reuters.com/article/usa-oil-atlantic-idINL2N16N0W3
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-15/obama-said-to-bar-atlantic-coast-oil-drilling-in-policy-reversal

241.2 - Good News: Obama eliminates funding for "abstinence-only" sex ed in federal budget

Good News: Obama eliminates funding for "abstinence-only" sex ed in federal budget

Next up on the Good News front, our only President has actually done a couple of good things this week.

For one thing, over the course of something over two decades, the US has sunk hundreds of millions of dollars into so-called "abstinence-only" programs as part of programs to reduce teenage pregnancies. It has done this even though it has been known for just about as long that they don't work.

The Obama administration was not immune to this; not only did such programs continue, in 2012 HHS added a new abstinence-only curriculum to its list of approved programs for teenage pregnancy prevention.

But now, in his final year, President Hopey-Changey has apparently evolved on another issue and in his final proposed federal budget he eliminates all funding for abstinence-only programs while increasing funding for the evidence-based Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program and the CDC's Division of Adolescent and School Health.

In the grand scheme of things I suppose it's a small entry - especially given that the rate of teen pregnancy has been dropping pretty steadily for 20 years and in 2014 it was only 40% of the rate in 1991 - but it still is a good thing and so good news.

Sources cited in links:
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2005/03/be-careful-what-you-wish-for.html
http://www.siecus.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Page.viewPage&pageId=523&parentID=477
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2004/11/we-dont-need-no-stinking-studies.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2007/04/another-success-story-in-keeping-us.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2012/05/left-side-of-aisle-55-part-4.html
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/3/15/1501670/-Pres-Obama-eliminates-abstinent-only-funding-in-2017-budget-adds-4m-to-teen-pregnancy-prevention
http://www.hhs.gov/ash/oah/adolescent-health-topics/reproductive-health/teen-pregnancy/trends.html#

241.1 - Good News: FCC to consider stronger privacy rules for ISPs

Good News: FCC to consider stronger privacy rules for ISPs

We'll start the week with some Good News.

FCC Chair Tom Wheeler has circulated to the other board members a proposal that would require broadband and wireless companies to give consumers more control over how their personal data is shared with third parties such as marketing companies.

The proposed rules would require Internet service providers, both broadband and wireless, to clearly disclose how personal consumer data is collected, how it's shared with third parties, and how it's used by these outside firms. They would call for strengthened security for customer data. And perhaps most importantly, they would say that consumers can't be automatically enrolled in such a data-sharing program but must actively choose to do so - that is, to opt-in rather than having to opt-out.

If approved, the proposal would establish the strongest consumer privacy rules ever for ISPs.

Wheeler expects the FCC to open the proposal for public comment at its meeting on March 31. Actual rules would not be voted on until later this year after the comment period ends.

FCC Chair Tom Wheeler
A limitation to this is that it does not apply to Internet and social media sites, such as Google or Facebook, because they fall under the purview of the FTC, which has limited ability to enact regulations to control corporate activity, such as gathering massive amounts of marketable personal data from users. Generally, the FTC can act only after there is evidence of fraud or other illegal behavior. So of course the corporations - such as AT+T and Verizon - are all whining about how unfair it is and how "all the other boys get to do whatever they want."

For one example, Bob Quinn, senior vice president of federal regulatory affairs at AT+T, thundered that "Consumers deserve consistent privacy protections, regardless of which company is collecting it." Put differently, if you have crappy privacy protection from Facebook, then by God you deserve to have crappy privacy protection from AT+T.

Ah, well. This has a long way to go but the very fact that it's being considered, that privacy is becoming more of a concern even if we're coming to it pretty late in the game, is still good news.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.cnet.com/news/regulators-propose-stricter-privacy-rules-for-internet-service-providers/

Left Side of the Aisle #241




Left Side of the Aisle
for the week of March 17-23, 2015

This week:

Good News: FCC to consider stronger privacy rules for ISPs
http://www.cnet.com/news/regulators-propose-stricter-privacy-rules-for-internet-service-providers/

Good News: Obama eliminates funding for "abstinence-only" sex ed in federal budget
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2005/03/be-careful-what-you-wish-for.html
http://www.siecus.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Page.viewPage&pageId=523&parentID=477
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2004/11/we-dont-need-no-stinking-studies.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2007/04/another-success-story-in-keeping-us.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2012/05/left-side-of-aisle-55-part-4.html
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/3/15/1501670/-Pres-Obama-eliminates-abstinent-only-funding-in-2017-budget-adds-4m-to-teen-pregnancy-prevention
http://www.hhs.gov/ash/oah/adolescent-health-topics/reproductive-health/teen-pregnancy/trends.html#

Good News: Interior Dept. says no lease sales for oil drilling off Atlantic Coast
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-01-27/obama-proposes-offshore-oil-drilling-from-virginia-to-georgia
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/03/15/in-reversal-obama-admin-to-block-oil-drilling-in-atlantic.html
http://in.reuters.com/article/usa-oil-atlantic-idINL2N16N0W3
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-15/obama-said-to-bar-atlantic-coast-oil-drilling-in-policy-reversal

Good News: Myanmar chooses its president from first free and open elections
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Myanmar
http://www.sfgate.com/world/article/Suu-Kyi-loyalist-and-friend-elected-Myanmar-s-6891646.php
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2004/06/im-still-trying-to-keep-hope-alive.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2007/10/burma-no-time-for-silence.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2007/10/more-notes-on-burma.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2012/04/left-side-of-aisle-52-part-1.html
http://www.globalpost.com/article/6746286/2016/03/15/myanmars-parliament-elects-suu-kyi-confidant-president

Updates about Syria
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2016/03/2391-good-news-partial-ceasefire-in.html
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/john-kerry-we-may-face-best-opportunity-in-years-to-end-syria-war/
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=53453#.VukCyNBSQVI
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/russia-withdrawal-syria_us_56e6f864e4b0b25c9182af57?utm_hp_ref=world
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/russia-syria-withdrawal-putin_us_56e6faa1e4b0b25c9182b51d
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/analysis-why-putin-picked-moment-pull-out-syria-n538671
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2016/03/15/analysis-russian-withdrawal-aims-pressure-assad-seek-peace-syria/81805610/

Not Good News: UN excoriates South Sudan over human rights violations
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2014/01/1404-bad-news-south-sudan.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2014/01/1416-update-south-sudan.html
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2015/09/2184-more-tragedy-still-hope-in-south.html
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=17207&LangID=E
http://time.com/4255833/south-sudan-un-report-human-rights-abuses/
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/un-human-rights-south-sudan-militias-rape-women-girls-payment/
http://news.yahoo.com/sudan-troops-suffocated-60-church-compound-amnesty-213930700.html
http://www.voanews.com/content/south-sudan-rebels-sending-generals-to-juba/3239727.html

RIPs: Keith Emerson and Ben Bagdikian
http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-35787187
http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/7256311/keith-emerson-death-suicide-health-issues
http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2016/03/11/ben-bagdikian-dies-96-berkeley/
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2004/02/bill-is-that-you.html
http://fair.org/home/ben-bagdikian-visionary/

Clown Award: ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson
http://www.burntorangereport.com/diary/31897/exxon-ceo-sues-no-fracking-near-my-mansion
http://www.thenation.com/article/exxons-pro-fracking-ceo-suing-stop-fracking-near-his-mansion/

Media failures: scare-mongering headline totally distorts the story
http://www.aol.com/article/2016/03/14/serbia-investigates-after-portland-bound-missiles-found-on-passe/21327741/

240.6 - Clown Award: Immigration Judge Jack Weil

Clown Award: Immigration Judge Jack Weil

Now for one of our regular features; it's the Clown Award, given as always for meritorious stupidity. And this week we again had multiple contenders, narrowed down to two finalists.

First up: So, you think that same-sex couples have the right to get married? Well, yeah, they do, but do they have the right to get matrimonied?

Kentucky State Rep. Joseph Fischer has introduced a bill called the "Matrimonial Freedom Act" that creates the new status of "matrimony" which is legally separate from "marriage" because any two adults can marry, but only if they are of the opposite sex can they have a "matrimony."

The bill then proceeds for 450 pages, meticulously adding language about "matrimony" to any provision in state law that defines the basic parameters of marriage - and then, in any provision that describes a privilege, benefit, or responsibility of marriage, the word "marriage" is replaced by the word "matrimony," effectively stripping same-sex couples of any and all benefits of marriage.

The reason this is so laughable is that it is painfully obvious that this would never fly in the courts, but I imagine Fischer sitting alone in his dark, silent, office late at night going through the entire state legal code line by line, his brow furrowed in concentration, a bottle of scotch on the desk, a single high-intensity lamp lighting his weary work.

Of course I'm sure he did the whole thing by computer search, but that image just seems more fitting to the undertaking, especially since the bill declares that the Supreme Court has established an "absolute Tyranny over these States," and includes the line "with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor," which, in case you don't recognize it, is the conclusion of the Declaration of Independence.

But believe it or not, he got outclassed.

So this week the Big Red Nose goes to federal immigration judge Jack Weil.

The ACLU and immigration rights groups have filed a class action suit against the federal government, demanding that the government provide appointed counsel for every indigent child who can't afford a lawyer in immigration court proceedings, contending by failing to insure they had access to counsel the Justice Department had violated both due process and the children’s right to a fair trial under the Immigration and Nationality Act. The Justice Department is contesting the suit and this bozo, who has the responsibility of training other immigration judges, is one of the government's chief witnesses.

So what did he do? In a deposition taken in October but just recently released, he declared that providing counsel is unnecessary because "you can do a fair hearing" even with toddlers representing themselves in court, claiming he has "taught immigration law" to 3- and 4-year-olds.

I was going to take down his lame attempt at a defense, his claim this was "not representative of [his] thinking" and was "taken out of context" even though he said much the same thing five different times during the deposition, but then I stopped.

Because I really don't have to go on, do I?

Federal immigration judge Jack Weil: Good gosh, what a clown.

Sources cited in links:
http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2016/03/02/3756017/stupid-kentucky-matrimony-bill/
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/2016/0306/Can-toddlers-defend-themselves-in-immigration-court-One-judge-says-so
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/can-a-3-year-old-represent-herself-in-immigration-court-this-judge-thinks-so/2016/03/03/5be59a32-db25-11e5-925f-1d10062cc82d_story.html

Sunday, March 13, 2016

240.5 - Elections in Iran

Elections in Iran

A type of, a sort of, example of - or at least a lesson about - what I mean by "a different path" can be found in some news out of Iran of recent weeks.

You may recall I was ambivalent about Iran deal, the one of lifting economic sanctions against Iran in exchange for restrictions on its nuclear program, because it seemed to me to be a case of imperialism, of big nations bullying a small one into doing what they wanted and doing it over a supposed nuclear weapons program which I was never convinced existed. But I ultimately approved of and supported the deal because I thought its failure would be worse, that it would open door to increased pressure for, and likely would lead to an actual, military attack on Iran.

Sometimes good things come out of bad. Because it can fairly be argued that it was that agreement and the associated lifting of sanctions that provided the political opening for the dramatic victory of reformist and moderate conservative parties in the elections for the Iranian parliament that took place a few weeks ago. Reformist parties won 85 seats in the 290-seat body, with the moderate conservatives winning 73 more.

Meanwhile, hardliner parties lost 44 seats, dropping them down to 68.

Together, the reformist and moderate conservative parties have an absolute majority in parliament and are expected to work together, at least on economic issues, and overall President Hassan Rouhani will face a friendlier parliament as he tries to push for some increased social freedoms and for reforming the economy.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani
It's also likely to lead to greater economic and political openings and improved contacts with the West and some among those elected, particularly among the women, are prepared to argue and fight for greater social freedoms within Iran.

The changes, however, are unlikely to be dramatic; the hardliner old guard, primarily in the person of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, still has a strong grip on power. Indeed, some say such changes will not come at all, claiming that many of those who ran as reformers or moderate conservatives are actually hardliners and the Guardian Council, which vets election candidates, screened out all the real reformists.

But even that, while disheartening to the extent it's true, gives some cause for hope: The very fact those people had to label themselves reformers in order to get elected points to the shifting nature of the Iranian electorate, a shift also revealed in the fact that 60 percent of the population of Iran is under 30 and they show much greater interest in let's call it a less-rigorous lifestyle and politics than do their elders.

So even though I thought that the whole confrontation with Iran need never have happened, the fact remains: Ditch the threats, ditch the war mongering, reach an agreement both sides can live with - and then this happens. Some will insist it was a coincidence, some will insist the nuclear agreement had nothing to do with it. Bluntly, I'm not buying it.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.chron.com/news/world/article/In-blow-to-Iran-hard-liners-moderates-win-6859930.php
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/02/opinions/iran-election-key-takeaways/
http://www.care2.com/causes/irans-reformist-elections-may-spell-change-for-the-islamic-republic.html

240.4 - Somalia is proof our "war on terrorism" is not working

Somalia is proof our "war on terrorism" is not working

Just last week, I said of our bombing and drone wars that as effective counters to terrorism they haven't worked, they're not working, and they won't work.

This week brings the news that al-Shabab, the extremist Muslim militants in Somalia, one of the targets of our lovely little war, has regrouped under a new leader, one Ahmad Umar, and is showing signs of a resurgence, despite the billions of dollars being spent by the US to fight them.

They have become a lethal insurgency sufficiently strong that Daesh* is trying to convince them to switch their allegiance to them instead of al-Qaeda, to which al-Shabab has so far remained loyal despite al-Qaeda's flagging position of leadership among the most radical fundamentalists.

It's not working. We have to find, we have to take, another way.

*Daesh: a name for ISIS which ISIS dislikes, which is why I use it.

Sources cited in links:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/africa/despite-us-airstrikes-a-somali-militia-is-rising-again/2016/03/08/2fdeeeb8-e537-11e5-a9ce-681055c7a05f_story.html

240.3 - Footnote: Most literate nations

Footnote: Most literate nations

And as a footnote to both of the preceding, here is something I found interesting.

First, the World Economic Forum's report to which I just referred found that the most equal country in the world for women is Iceland, which has occupied the top spot for seven years in a row.

Iceland was followed by Norway, Finland, Sweden, and Ireland to finished out the top five.

Okay, another recent study, one I came across purely by coincidence, was of the world's most literate nations. It ranked nations, the authors say,
not their populace’s ability to read but rather their populace’s literate behaviors and their supporting resources.
Most equal           Most literate
There are five categories, including things related to libraries, newspapers, education inputs (such as years of compulsory schooling), education outputs (such as reading assessments), and computer availability.

Based on those criteria, the five nations that topped the list were, in order, Finland, Norway, Iceland, Denmark, and Sweden.

I was wondering if anyone else saw a pattern emerging here.

Damned socialist democracies.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2015/11/19/us-falls-28th-global-gender-equality-list/76018174/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2016/03/08/most-literate-nation-in-the-world-not-the-u-s-new-ranking-says/
http://www.ccsu.edu/wmln/

240.2 - Most equal countries for women

Most equal countries for women

On a related note, a sort of footnote to what I have been talking about and one which points out the need for continuing fights for justice, it develops that according to this year's Global Gender Gap report out of the World Economic Forum, the United States ranks 28th in their list of the world's most and least equal countries for men and women.

That is eight slots lower than last year.

The report, which looks at data from 145 countries, put the United States 74th in terms of equal pay for equal work and 81st in terms of the number of women in high government positions. On the other hand, it did rank higher in terms of education and life expectancy.

Kim Parker, director of social trends research at the non-partisan Pew Research Center, was not surprised by the results, saying:
We have not been at the leading edge internationally of female representation in top leadership positions nor in gender pay equity.
We have to keep on keepin' on. There is much to do.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2015/11/19/us-falls-28th-global-gender-equality-list/76018174/

240.1 - Abortion rights under attack

Abortion rights under attack

Many, I suspect most, people among those aware of the issue think that the most important Supreme Court decision on the right of a woman to terminate her pregnancy - that is, to obtain a legal abortion - was the 1973 case Roe v. Wade.

They are wrong. The most important case is Planned Parenthood v. Casey, a 1992 case that said that states can regulate access to abortions so long as those restrictions do not place an "undue burden" on the woman. That is a loophole that a whole battalion of anti-choice fanatics have marched through in their never-ending quest to return to the days of women being kept barefoot and pregnant.

The cold fact is that the right to an abortion, while it is still supposedly the law of the land as it has been for over 40 years, is under an unrelenting and increasingly-successful attack that is founded on the anti-choicers re-branding themselves from opponents of abortion to protectors of the health and safety of women.

The result has been a space of what are known as TRAP laws, TRAP for "Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers." These are laws that put extreme and medically unnecessary requirements on abortion centers, which usually operate as free-standing clinics but under these laws are required to have the facilities of ambulatory surgical centers and be staffed by physicians with admitting privileges in a hospital no more than 30 miles away - even if they only abortions they perform are induced by medication and they perform no surgeries at all.

Who says the requirements are medically unnecessary? Well, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association, to name two.

But these states don't care. What they care about is that most clinics can't meet the expense of the added, unneeded requirements and that a significant number of hospitals - often connected to Catholic organizations - refuse to give admitting privileges to doctors who perform abortions and many others won't give admitting privileges unless the doctor admits a certain minimum number of patients per year. The result is the clinics have to close.

According to Bloomberg.com, as a result of these laws,
abortion access in the US has been vanishing at the fastest annual pace on record.... Since 2011, at least 162 abortion providers have shut or stopped offering the procedure, while just 21 opened. At no time since before 1973 ... has a woman’s ability to terminate a pregnancy been more dependent on her zip code or financial resources to travel. The drop-off in providers - more than one every two weeks - occurred in 35 states, in both small towns and big cities that are home to more than 30 million women of reproductive age.
And there were never that many to begin with; back in 2011, before the surge in forced closures, the Guttmacher Institute counted only about 1700 nationwide. What's more, the clinic closures tend to be more concentrated in red states, where reactionary state legislatures have been able to push through the harshest laws, which means that there are some places in this country where women simply can’t get an abortion - or, more exactly, a legal abortion - if they need one.

The defenders of these laws claim they are to protect the health and safety of the women seeking abortions - but that is a complete and total lie, based on the complete and total lie that abortion is a risky procedure with a significant risk of complications that would require hospitalization.

In point of actual fact, abortion is almost remarkably safe.

For first-trimester abortions, which is when the vast majority occur, the rate of complications that could require going to a hospital is less than 0.05 percent, less than 1 in 2,000. The risk of dying from a legal surgical abortion is minuscule, estimated at about 0.0006 percent, or a bit over 1 in 200,000. A woman is 14 times more likely to die in childbirth than from an abortion. Which means, of course, that if their genuine concern was the health and safety of women, these people would be urging every pregnant woman to get an abortion to better protect her own life.

Abortions have lower mortality rates than dozens of surgical procedures usually considered safe, including gallbladder removal, knee replacement, bariatric surgery, and hernia repair. Hell, the mortality rate for a colonoscopy is more than 40 times that of abortion - but, as Jeanne Conry, former president of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, notes, gastroenterologists who perform that procedure outside of a hospital setting do not face similar requirements "in the context of safety."

It's not about the health and safety of women. It's all lies.

And the lies don't stop there.

Thirty-one states require women to be given state-written, state-approved "informational packets" before getting an abortion. Researchers at Rutgers University in New Jersey looked at the information provided in 23 of those states and found that nearly a third of them contained medically inaccurate information, including overstating the degree of development of the fetus.

What's more, in the 2015-2016 legislative session there were some 251 bills in some way restricting access to abortion introduced across 37 states. According to a study by the National Partnership for Women and Families, seventy percent of those bills were based on lies about abortion procedures and doctors or false claims about why a woman would get an abortion, or both.

None of this, none of this, none of this has a damn thing to do with the health or safety of women. In fact, these laws undermine women's health. A 2013 paper in the journal Contraception found a correlation between a lack of clinics and a rise in attempts at self-induced abortions, which can be and usually are far riskier than legal ones.

The connection between clinic closures and do-it-yourself abortions was even clearer in some research by New York Times contributing op-ed writer Seth Stephens-Davidowitz. He looked at Google searches in 2015 that used terms related to self-induced abortions and then compared those state-by-state results with the harshness of abortion restrictions in each state. The two maps overlapped almost exactly: The more restrictions on access to legal abortions, the greater the interest in self-induced ones.

source: New York Times
Which brings us to March 2. That was the day that the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt, in which some abortion providers in Texas are challenging that state's extreme anti-choice law. This is, without doubt, the most important case about reproductive rights the court has heard in over two decades, since the Casey decision.

The challengers won at the district court level but lost at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court stayed that ruling pending its own decision on the case, and here we are.

At oral arguments, the court, to I expect no one's surprise, seemed divided. Ginsburg, Kagan, Sotomayor, and Breyer all went after Texas Solicitor General Scott Keller's internally-contradictory attempts to defend the law. At one point, for example, Ginsburg asked him how may women in Texas were over 100 miles from the nearest clinic and he wound up saying that women in El Paso could go over the border to New Mexico. When she pointed out that New Mexico doesn't put the same demands on clinics that Texas does and asked him why, if those standards were good enough for women in El Paso, they weren't they good enough for women in the rest of Texas, he never answered.

Alito and Roberts - Thomas was his usual clam self - questioned whether or not it could be proved that the closures of the clinics right after the law went into effect were actually because of the law or something else - a fear of an alien invasion, maybe, who knows what they were thinking, although it seems more likely that they were looking for some way, any way they could find, to give Justice Kennedy a reason to join with them.

See, Kennedy, as is always true, is the question mark on abortion: He has made his personal distaste for it clear but has never been willing to outright ban it. In this case, while he suggested at one point that the law would increase the number of surgical abortions as opposed to those done via medication, which "may not be medically wise," he also raised the idea of remanding the case back to the lower court to develop a fuller record around some arcane procedural issues that could push the whole thing a couple of years down the road. It's possible that by their questioning Alito and Roberts were suggesting to Kennedy that the case be sent back.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg
There are four possibilities here: There clearly are four votes to strike down the law, three to say screw the women, full right-wing ahead, and Kennedy. It could end up 5-3 to protect women's rights. It could be a 4-4 tie, which would leave the lower court ruling intact. That ruling would be that of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, the one which upheld the Texas law. The result then would be that the Texas law stands but establishes no precedent for the rest of the country.

That, however, would be a significant blow for reproductive rights because it would tell other state legislatures that until there is a change on the Supreme Court, if you have a conservative appeals level court - such as, for example, the 6th and the 4th Circuits are - you can pass TRAP laws and SCOTUS will not turn them down, which likely would only increase the number of restrictions that women face.

A third possibility would be for the Justices to throw up their hands and call for re-argument next term (with the idea of by then having a ninth justice and so avoiding a deadlock.) Finally would be the stall, the punt, sending it back to the lower courts, with all the delays and dragging-out that entails.

A decision is not expected before June but if you want to engage in some speculation, there may be a hint of how the court is leaning to be found in a closely-related case.

Louisiana has an anti-choice law essentially identical to the Texas one now before the Supreme Court. In January, District Court Judge John deGravelles ruled that the law violates the Constitutional right of Louisiana women to obtain an abortion.

Anthony Kennedy
In February, a panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, the same one that upheld the Texas law, overruled Judge deGravelles and allowed the law to go into effect, with an expected impact of closing all but one clinic in the whole state. This was despite the fact that the Supreme Court had already stayed the 5th Circuit's ruling in the essentially identical Texas case. However, the 5th Circuit said, because that order, the one about the Texas law, had been issued without stating the high court's reasoning - by the way, such orders rarely include the reasoning behind them - the 5th Circuit "had no guidance" and so was free to make its own judgment - and allow the Louisiana law to go into effect.

About a week later, and two days after the oral arguments on the Texas law, the Supreme Court granted an emergency stay of the 5th Circuit's ruling about Louisiana. What's significant is that the order vacating the 5th Circuit’s order reinstating the Louisiana law began by saying "Consistent with the Court’s action granting a stay" in the Texas case.

That may not seem like much, but it is a definite legal smackdown after the 5th Circuit pretended to not know what SCOTUS intended by staying the Texas case. Now, considering that if it was certain that the justices were in a 4-4 deadlock and so the Texas law would stand - with the natural follow that the identical Louisiana law would stand as well - there would seem to be both less cause for the smackdown and less cause for the emergency stay. So this could be taken as a hopeful sign that the majority of the court does not accept the premises of the laws in question and will strike them down, and some people have interpreted it that way.

Unfortunately, it could also mean nothing except that the justices are irritated with the 5th Circuit's freewheeling on the issue and not paying attention to the high court's obvious preference to leave things in place, that is, as they were before the laws at issue were passed, until a decision on the matter is handed down.

On that particular question, we will have to wait and see.

But what we can't afford to wait and see is the broader battle over reproductive rights and the actual health of women and the on-going and disturbingly successful attempts by the fanatics to undo not only the 21st century but the entire 20th century as well. That fight goes on every day.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/supremecourt/rights/landmark_casey.html
http://www.guttmacher.org/statecenter/spibs/spib_TRAP.pdf
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-24/abortion-clinics-are-closing-at-a-record-pace
http://www.salon.com/2016/02/25/abortion_access_is_vanishing_clinics_are_closing_at_a_rapid_pace_and_shameless_conservative_legislators_are_gunning_for_whats_left/
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2014/08/08/3469232/abortion-safety-trap-laws/
http://khn.org/news/abortion-admitting-privileges-fight/
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/02/us-supreme-court-whole-womens-health-v-hellerstedt/471546/?google_editors_picks=true
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2016/03/03/3756242/70-percent-bills-false/
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/txpep/_files/pdf/Grossman,White,Hopkins,Potter-PublicHealthThreatofAnti-abortionLegislation-Contraception-2014.pdf
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/06/opinion/sunday/the-return-of-the-diy-abortion.html?_r=0
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/02/politics/supreme-court-abortion-texas/index.html
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/03/supreme-court-texas-abortion-liberal-justices-ginsburg-breyer
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2016/03/02/3755868/the-incredible-shrinking-supreme-court-showdown-over-abortion/
http://theadvocate.com/news/14687281-84/louisiana-legal-requirement-that-abortion-providers-have-hospital-admitting-privileges-is-unconstitu
http://theadvocate.com/news/14981272-172/5th-circuit-ruling-allows-louisiana-to-begin-enforcing-its-abortion-law
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/04/politics/supreme-court-louisiana-abortion-case/index.html?eref=rss_politics

Left Side of the Aisle #240




Left Side of the Aisle
for the week of March 10-16, 2015

This week:

Abortion rights under attack
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/supremecourt/rights/landmark_casey.html
http://www.guttmacher.org/statecenter/spibs/spib_TRAP.pdf
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-24/abortion-clinics-are-closing-at-a-record-pace
http://www.salon.com/2016/02/25/abortion_access_is_vanishing_clinics_are_closing_at_a_rapid_pace_and_shameless_conservative_legislators_are_gunning_for_whats_left/
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2014/08/08/3469232/abortion-safety-trap-laws/
http://khn.org/news/abortion-admitting-privileges-fight/
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/02/us-supreme-court-whole-womens-health-v-hellerstedt/471546/?google_editors_picks=true
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2016/03/03/3756242/70-percent-bills-false/
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/txpep/_files/pdf/Grossman,White,Hopkins,Potter-PublicHealthThreatofAnti-abortionLegislation-Contraception-2014.pdf
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/06/opinion/sunday/the-return-of-the-diy-abortion.html?_r=0
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/02/politics/supreme-court-abortion-texas/index.html
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/03/supreme-court-texas-abortion-liberal-justices-ginsburg-breyer
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2016/03/02/3755868/the-incredible-shrinking-supreme-court-showdown-over-abortion/
http://theadvocate.com/news/14687281-84/louisiana-legal-requirement-that-abortion-providers-have-hospital-admitting-privileges-is-unconstitu
http://theadvocate.com/news/14981272-172/5th-circuit-ruling-allows-louisiana-to-begin-enforcing-its-abortion-law
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/04/politics/supreme-court-louisiana-abortion-case/index.html?eref=rss_politics

Most equal countries for women
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2015/11/19/us-falls-28th-global-gender-equality-list/76018174/

Footnote: Most literate nations
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2015/11/19/us-falls-28th-global-gender-equality-list/76018174/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2016/03/08/most-literate-nation-in-the-world-not-the-u-s-new-ranking-says/
http://www.ccsu.edu/wmln/

Somalia is proof our "war on terrorism" is not working
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/africa/despite-us-airstrikes-a-somali-militia-is-rising-again/2016/03/08/2fdeeeb8-e537-11e5-a9ce-681055c7a05f_story.html

Elections in Iran
http://www.chron.com/news/world/article/In-blow-to-Iran-hard-liners-moderates-win-6859930.php
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/02/opinions/iran-election-key-takeaways/
http://www.care2.com/causes/irans-reformist-elections-may-spell-change-for-the-islamic-republic.html

Clown Award: Immigration Judge Jack Weil
http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2016/03/02/3756017/stupid-kentucky-matrimony-bill/
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/2016/0306/Can-toddlers-defend-themselves-in-immigration-court-One-judge-says-so
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/can-a-3-year-old-represent-herself-in-immigration-court-this-judge-thinks-so/2016/03/03/5be59a32-db25-11e5-925f-1d10062cc82d_story.html

Monday, March 07, 2016

239.6 - Outrage of the Week: Islamophobic document to guide development of federal anti-terrorism programs

Outrage of the Week: Islamophobic document to guide development of federal anti-terrorism programs

Last for this week is our other regular feature, the Outrage of the Week.

And this in a way refers back to what I was talking about earlier, both about the knee-jerk Islamophobia that doomed al-Jazeera America from the start and about our lovely little wars exclusively in majority-Muslim nations.

In 2011, the Air Force Research Laboratory released a report titled "Countering Violent Extremism: Scientific Methods and Strategies." It was reissued this past summer and the revised version was made available online in January. A preface says "the wisdom contained in this paper collection is more relevant than ever."

Many of the articles are written by academics and researchers in the field of counterterrorism. But one, titled "A Strategic Plan to Defeat Radical Islam," written by a self-described former Islamic extremist, contains what The Intercept called "a number of bizarre prescriptions for how to defeat terrorism, few of which appear to be supported by empirical evidence."

It was written by Dr. Tawfik Hamid, a fellow at the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies.

One of his assertions is that militancy is primarily a product of sexual deprivation - put more crudely, people turn extremist because they don't get laid enough. That is strange enough - I can't help but wonder if Dr. Hamid is generalizing from this own experience - but it's not the only thing to make you blink.

Another claim is that our problem with our poor reputation among Muslim nations is not due to our policies, but to a lack of good PR. So I suppose if we painted smiley faces on our bombs people wouldn't mind getting blown up. And he argues that we shouldn't worry too much about killing innocent civilians in our bombing runs because
in war, as in medicine, good cells die when we treat bad ones ... "it is unfair to blame the doctor for killing good cells."
But the part that struck me the oddest was his assertion that wearing a hijab, the traditional head scarf worn by Muslim women, is a form of "passive terrorism" - whatever the hell that means - and represents an implicit refusal to "speak against or actively resist terrorism." Wear a hijab and you're an accessory to or at least not an opponent of, terrorism. Put more directly, be a Muslim woman and you are at best a silent supporter of terrorism.

Okay, the guy's a flake. So why the outrage? Because, again, this spluttering concoction of Islamophobic bilgewater undeserving of publication as any sort of research is in an official report that is intended to help government agencies formulate anti-terrorism programs, a report whose preface praises Hamid as offering a "soup to nuts strategic plan" for combating radicalism that "addresses the components of the Islamist terrorism cycle at ideological, psychological, social, and economic levels."

In other words, it is something that appears to be, in the words of one scholar, nothing more than "an attempt to supply national security agencies with bogus surveillance rubrics," rubrics being take seriously by our government.

That is frightening. It is immoral. And it is an outrage.

Sources cited in links:
https://theintercept.com/2016/02/23/department-of-defense-white-paper-describes-wearing-hijab-as-passive-terrorism/
http://www.care2.com/causes/are-hijab-wearers-terrorists-a-military-paper-says-yes.html

Sunday, March 06, 2016

239.5 - Clown Award: right-wing attorney Kory Langhofer

Clown Award: right-wing attorney Kory Langhofer

Now it's time for one of our regular features. This is the Clown Award, given as always for meritorious stupidity.

I had several contenders this week; it was that kind of week.

For one example, we had US District Judge Mark Kearney of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania rule that citizens do not have the right "to observe and record police officers absent some other expressive conduct," specifically, "without any stated purpose of being critical of the government."

That is, unless you are recording cops for the express purpose of protesting police conduct you have no right to do so.

Based on the ruling, it appears only police are entitled to this version of "Don't look at me" and of course the police are entirely free to film you - and in fact to do more; as one writer put it, we are now "a society where police are protected if they shoot you with guns but you're not protected if you shoot them with cameras."

Okay, but that is moving from clownish to outrageous, so what's the next option?

This picture is illegal in eastern PA
Well, it seems that in Idaho, the Education Committee of the state Senate has produced a bill to get that old time religion out of the churches and back into the schools where it belongs!

Senate Bill 1232 declares that the Bible - it doesn't actually say which version of the Bible, but I expect they just knew they meant the good Protestant version, not that dumb ol' Catholic one, but anyway, the bill says that the Bible
is expressly permitted to be used in Idaho public schools for reference purposes to further the study of literature, comparative religion, English and foreign languages, United States and world history, comparative government, law, philosophy, ethics, astronomy, biology, geology, world geography, archaeology, music, sociology, and other topics of study where an understanding of the Bible may be useful or relevant.
It adds in one of those "this way we can't get sued" provisions that no student will have to use any religious texts if they or their parents object, but what I really want to know is how the Bible is going to be "useful or relevant" in the study of at the least astronomy, biology, and geology. Maybe for astronomy we can have the bit from Joshua about the Sun standing still, I don't know.

As a footnote, the same bill also repealed an earlier, 1963 version of the law which had required daily Bible readings of state approved passages in every classroom.

Okay, what could top that? Believe it or not, I have someone.

Kory Langhofer
So the Big Red Nose this week goes to right-wing attorney and self-described "no fan of government" Kory Langhofer, who said on Phoenix TV station KPNX on February 21 that Justice Antonin Skeletor's votes in cases now pending before the Supreme Court should still count even though he died before the court issued its rulings or took its final vote.

"There's no Ouija board required to figure out how Justice Scalia would vote on these things," he said. "We know exactly what he thought. And it’s not unprincipled to say we should give affect to that."

Now just to be clear, in case you're wondering if you heard right, you did: Langhofer is proposing that Skeletor still get a vote on pending Supreme Court cases despite laboring under the handicap of being dead, as deceased as Monty Python's parrot.

Kory Langhofer - who, by the way, was a lawyer for Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign and if this is the quality of his legal advice I wonder if he actually was responsible for "corporations are people, my friend" - but in any event, Kory Langhofer is a truly championship-level clown.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/2/27/1492222/-The-Right-to-allow-Video-tape-Police-Not-Allowed-According-to-Federal-Judge
http://www.citylab.com/crime/2016/02/there-is-no-first-amendment-right-to-film-cops/470670/?utm_source=atlfb
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/2/19/1487715/-Idaho-Republicans-wrote-a-bill-saying-schools-must-use-Bible-in-biology-and-astronomy-and-geology
http://www.legislature.idaho.gov/idstat/Title33/T33CH16SECT33-1604.htm
http://biblehub.com/joshua/10-12.htm
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/2/22/1489329/-Conservative-lawyer-says-Scalia-should-get-vote-on-pending-cases-despite-handicap-of-being-dead
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/kory-langhofer-scalia-vote-still-counts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npjOSLCR2hE

239.4 - RIP: al-Jazeera America

RIP: al-Jazeera America

We have an RIP this week, but it's not for a person. It's for an organization.

After less than three years, al-Jazeera America, weighed down both by knee-jerk Islamophobia among viewers and advertisers and by cable corporations that pushed it into higher, more costly price tiers while littering their basic levels with shopping channels and a tsunami of scripted "reality" shows, has given up the ghost. It's website will no longer be updated and its cable TV operations will be shut down next month.

What most Americans didn't and still don't know and never had the chance to find out is that al-Jazeera is an internationally-respected news organization whose American channel won two Peabody Awards in its first year of operation. Despite being owned by the government of Qatar, its international coverage was as fair and as broad as could be found at, for example, the BBC and far superior to that of American commercial networks.

And if it brought an Arab slant on the world, in the same way that the BBC or the French Press Agency bring a European one, well, that was a feature, not a bug.

Al-Jazeera itself is still in operation, it's website featuring news reports and streaming video. But al-Jazeera America, very soon, will not be.

So RIP, al-Jazeera America.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/02/27/1492281/-Goodnight-and-good-luck-R-I-P-Al-Jazeera-America?detail=email
http://variety.com/2016/digital/news/al-jazeera-america-online-operation-shut-down-1201716258/

239.3 - US expands bombing/drone war to 7th majority-Muslim nation: Libya

US expands bombing/drone war to 7th majority-Muslim nation: Libya

Okay, I have, something else to talk about, a topic related to the previous ones. And as I go through this, I want you to be asking yourself how much you have heard about this, in fact, have you heard about it at all? Has any of it been mentioned, even obliquely, on the campaign trail by anyone on either side?

Three weeks ago, I told you that the Obama administration was drawing up plans for a new military intervention in Libya. The first one, in 2011, was sold as a humanitarian effort to protect Libyan civilians from a massacre but was actually a cover for assisting in overthrowing Muammar Qaddafi.

That effort was strongly endorsed by Hillary Clinton; indeed a major New York Times two-part story shows how she was the major factor in convincing Obama to do it, up to and including arming favored opposition groups. That plan went so well that after Qaddafi was killed, Libya descended into the chaos of a multi-sided civil war which has killed thousands and refugeed hundreds of thousands and from which it has not emerged. In the famous words of Rick Perry, oops.

Oh, but it's different this time! This time it's not about protecting civilians or any such nonsense, it's about opening a new front in the fight against ISIS ISIS ISIS! by taking "decisive military action" against some groups in Libya laying claim to the name.

I also said those three weeks ago that this is being planned without any debate in Congress, without any remotely plausible claims of lawful authority, without regard to the fact that it was Barack Obama himself who said in 2007 that "The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation," and without, it seems, any consideration of how similar "decisive actions" have lead only to deepening US military involvement in Syria and Iraq, with "boots on the ground" in both places playing an increasingly hands-on role.

Okay, that was three weeks ago. What you need to know now is that our Nobel Peace Prize president, Generalissimo Hopey-Changey, has acted on those plans, bombing an ISIS-controlled area in western Libya, killing approximately 40 people, including two hostages - still without any Congressional debate, much less authorization, but with the open acknowledgement that there may be more such attacks as top military officials, such as Gen. Donald Bolduc, commander of US special operations forces in Africa, are saying that Daesh is already too strong in Libya to be "rolled back" without direct US military involvement.

Not only was this bombing done without the approval of Congress, it was done without the approval or even knowledge of the only recognized government in Libya, which decried it as "a clear and flagrant violation of sovereignty of the Libyan state."

But there's more: The US military has also deployed special operations troops to Libya, boots on the ground, to give aid and training to - you guessed it - favored militias, assuming, as we did in Iraq and have done in Syria to such great success, that we can pick out "the good guys" who will fight Daesh for us from "the bad guys" who won't. Remember the classic definition of insanity?*

There's something else you need to understand: I referred to "the only recognized government" because there are three forces, each claiming to be the legitimate government. One, the recognized one, was elected or at least came in through an election, even if it was one marked by threats and violence to the point where voting didn't even occur some places and produced a turnout of just 18%.

After that election, Islamist parties that did poorly - gaining only 30 of 200 seats in the unicameral legislature (called the Council of Deputies) - staged a coup, forcing the new government to flee the capitol of Tripoli for the eastern city of Tobruk. The Libyan Supreme Court, still in Tripoli and all but literally under the gun, annulled the election as unconstitutional, which the Islamist parties used as a basis for saying that they are the rightful government rather than the one set in Tobruk, even though that one is still the one internationally recognized.

To make this more complicated, in January the UN Security Council recognized or more accurately created a third government, which is really just a means to push for the other two governments to join with them in a national unity government. To give you an idea of the state that Libya is in, this third government is based in Tunisia because it would be too dangerous in Libya itself.

And what's our answer to this clusterfuck of social and political chaos? More bombs! More "boots on the ground!" More trying to pick out the militias with the white hats from the militias with the black hats! More more more!

And I have to be fair here, I do. It's not just the US.

The UK has also sent special forces into Libya, working with the US to aid those select local militias. What's more, French special forces, including some openly operating on the front lines, were already there.

And that may be just the beginning. The new, UN-created "government" was consciously designed to be able to provide a pretext for justifying future, deeper military involvement by "inviting" or "requesting" such a wider war. After all, US Secretary of War Ashton Carter says, he is "certain they will want help."

The US, the UK, France, and Italy have all promised to expand their military campaigns against Daesh in Libya if that "national unity government" is ever created - failing which, some fig leaf excuse can always be found, even assuming our various Generalissimos feel the need for one in a way they have not so far.

Bottom line here for us as Americans: In 2015, the US dropped nearly 24,000 bombs on six nations, every one of them Muslim-majority. We are now waging bombing and drone campaigns in at least seven countries that we, the public, know of: Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, and Libya.

And it never seems to occur to us that what we're doing isn't working. It isn't making us more secure, it's making the lives of tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of people in those countries less secure, lives which it appears we only care about as some metric in a war that shows no sign of ending or indeed doing anything other than slowly expanding, a war that has turned even those with humane instincts - and I will say I include Barack Obama in that number - into people who are cold and aloof in matters of life and death, war and peace, safety and destruction, where bombing runs are just another errand, just another everyday chore - and I include Barack Obama in that number as well.

Indeed, when that report came out a few weeks ago about the plan for a new bombing campaign in Libya, the one I cited three weeks ago, the White House pointed out in a daily press briefing that it has actually already carried out airstrikes in Libya since the 2011 war, so, y'know, what's the big deal?

The big deal is the hardening of the soul that this demonstrates, the ossification of the spirit that enables someone to present bombing another nation as a minor, almost routine matter, that enables someone to forget that what lies on the other end of that minor matter is shredded limbs and shattered lives, the remnants of what moments before were living, breathing human beings.

But, comes the response, they are the enemy! They want to kill us! They are monsters, cruel, unrelenting, unforgiving! Which, for some portion of those we destroy, would be true. Fanaticism always gives rise to brutalities in whatever form it arises, with ultimately only the justifications, not the brutalities, varying.

So yes, terrorism - or, more accurately and the distinction is important, the ideologies that drive terrorism - must be resisted. The question is not if, but how and the fact is, the undeniable fact is, what we're doing hasn't worked. It isn't working. It won't work until we realize that we keep thinking of terrorism, of driven fanaticism, as a matter of people when it is in reality a matter of ideology, a matter of an idea. And you can't bomb an idea into submission unless you're prepared to essentially commit genocide.

We have been told so many times in so many ways that the "fight against terrorism" will be an "extended campaign." Likely so.

But the truth is that our best targets for "attack" in this "extended campaign" are not the actual terrorists (who number in the thousands) but the tens of thousands, the millions, among who they recruit and from who they draw their strength. Our best weapons are bread and butter, not bombs; our best tactic reconstruction, not retaliation; our best strategy justice, not jingoism. The best way to minimize terrorism is to ensure that the dispossessed and the spiritually seeking have a genuine stake in the world and don't see us as invaders or as grasping bullies - and the best way not to be seen as an invader or a grasping bully is not to be one.

That last paragraph is pretty much the same thing I wrote in an op-ed in the weeks after 9/11. In the ensuring more than 14 years, I have found no reason to change my mind.

*Insanity: doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/2/28/1492885/-The-invasion-of-Libya-is-in-progress
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2016/02/2374-bernie-sanders-just-like-hillary.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/us/politics/hillary-clinton-libya.html?_r=0
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/us/politics/libya-isis-hillary-clinton.html
http://www.salon.com/2015/10/26/the_real_benghazi_scandal_that_is_being_ignored_how_hillary_clinton_and_the_obama_administration_destroyed_libya/
http://www.salon.com/2016/02/20/u_s_kicks_off_its_new_bombing_campaign_in_libya_killing_2_serbian_embassy_workers/
http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/2016/02/29/pentagon-signals-support-expanded-operations-libya/81107750/
http://www.wsj.com/articles/libya-will-need-american-help-to-defeat-islamic-state-general-says-1456776041
http://news.yahoo.com/recognised-libya-govt-condemns-us-strike-jihadists-171414242.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan_Council_of_Deputies_election,_2014
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Deputies
http://intpolicydigest.org/2016/01/05/un-takes-the-wrong-road-in-libya/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/12176114/British-advisers-deployed-to-Libya-to-build-anti-Isil-cells.html
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/briefly-takes-center-strategic-libyan-city-37153386
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/22/un-support-libya-government-open-door-potential-uk-airstrikes-isis
http://www.salon.com/2016/02/10/obama_on_verge_of_launching_another_bombing_campaign_in_libya_after_dropping_23144_bombs_on_six_countries_in_2015/
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2011/09/911-2.html

239.2 - Footnote: US continues build-up in Iraq

Footnote: US continues build-up in Iraq

As a Footnote to that, don't worry: Remember that even if talks get started, our lovely little war against Daesh* in Syria and Iraq will continue unabated so we won't miss out on much fun.

In point of fact, the US has been building up its military forces in Iraq; between January 2015 and January 2016, the number of soldiers went from 2300 to 3700, an increase of some 60 percent.

Equally significant, the number of private forces, operating under contract to the Pentagon, went from 250 a year ago to over 2000 now, an eight-fold increase. Such contractors may not be performing what are called "security" duties; most of them are likely performing logistical duties such as construction, administration, and transportation.

The double point, however, is that they their presence would ease the way for a rapid return of a large number of US troops in Iraq since an administrative and supply network would already be in place and that by performing duties that earlier would have been done by soldiers, they make the US military footprint in Iraq look smaller than it is.

I said it before, I'll say it again: Watch this space.

*Daesh is another name for ISIS, derived from the sound of the Arabic letters for the name. Supposedly, ISIS hates the name Daesh, which for me is reason enough to use it.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.care2.com/causes/u-s-backed-military-contractors-are-returning-to-iraq-in-droves.html
http://www.acq.osd.mil/log/PS/.CENTCOM_reports.html/5A_January_2016_Final.pdf

239.1 - Good News: partial ceasefire in Syria

Good News: partial ceasefire in Syria

Starting with some Good News, as we always like to do, we have some at least pretty good news from an unexpected place: Syria. As I write this a week in, a partial ceasefire in Syria appears to be holding. It's tenuous and limited, but in the words of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, it's holding "by and large." Fighting has not completely stopped, but it's level is far below what it had been.

Each side side (I'm tempted to say "of course") accuses the other of any and all violations of the ceasefire. Asaad al-Zoubi, a senior official from Syria's main opposition group said on February 29 that the truce was in danger of collapse because of attacks by government forces while President Bashar al-Assad says he and his government have made every effort to keep the peace in the face of violations by the opposition "but everything has a limit."

Part of the problem in sorting out competing claims of violations of the ceasefire is that it doesn't apply to everyone: Military jihadist groups such as Islamic State and the Nusra Front, which have been responsible for some of the worst violence, can still be targeted. Russia, at least, has made it clear it intends to keep bombing those groups - while there is a question as to whether or not Russia, an ally of Assad, is confining its attacks to those groups rather than aiming at Assad's opposition.

There are three main goals for the ceasefire, one being the ceasefire itself, at least a pause in at least some of the killing. Another, specific, point is to allow aid convoys to get to rebel-held areas, to bring relief to an estimated 154,000 people living in besieged areas. The aid includes food, water, sanitation supplies, and medicine, as well as more mundane items like blankets, soap, and diapers. That aid has been getting through, although again there are troubles, in this case reports that some of Assad's forces are holding up aid convoys and even claims that they are taking items for themselves.

The other purpose of the ceasefire is to allow for the resumption of peace talks, which collapsed before they started last month when rebel groups said they couldn't negotiate during on-going airstrikes. Now, they are set to begin in Geneva on March 9. So that is the next big target date.

Will they actually start? Let's just get to that start, one thing at a time, we'll worry about keeping them going after that when they actually start.

In any event, there is for now at least a partial, tenuous, ceasefire in Syria. That doesn't sound like much, but in the face of what has happened there the past five years, yeah, this is good news.

Sources cited in links:
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2016/0229/UN-chief-Syria-cease-fire-holding-despite-some-fighting-accusations
http://www.news.com.au/world/breaking-news/135-killed-so-far-in-syria-ceasefire/news-story/dc26d30962d0755d3f3e5b74335a345c
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idUSKCN0W21O5
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/01/middleeast/syria-conflict-aid/
http://in.reuters.com/article/mideast-crisis-syria-kerry-idINKCN0W32VW
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Syrian_Civil_War

Saturday, March 05, 2016

Left Side of the Aisle #239




Left Side of the Aisle
for the week of March 2 - 9, 2015

This week:

Good News: partial ceasefire in Syria
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2016/0229/UN-chief-Syria-cease-fire-holding-despite-some-fighting-accusations
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idUSKCN0W21O5
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/01/middleeast/syria-conflict-aid/
http://in.reuters.com/article/mideast-crisis-syria-kerry-idINKCN0W32VW

Footnote: US continues build-up in Iraq
http://www.care2.com/causes/u-s-backed-military-contractors-are-returning-to-iraq-in-droves.html
http://www.acq.osd.mil/log/PS/.CENTCOM_reports.html/5A_January_2016_Final.pdf

US expands bombing/drone war to 7th majority-Muslim nation: Libya
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/2/28/1492885/-The-invasion-of-Libya-is-in-progress
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2016/02/2374-bernie-sanders-just-like-hillary.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/us/politics/hillary-clinton-libya.html?_r=0
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/us/politics/libya-isis-hillary-clinton.html
http://www.salon.com/2015/10/26/the_real_benghazi_scandal_that_is_being_ignored_how_hillary_clinton_and_the_obama_administration_destroyed_libya/
http://www.salon.com/2016/02/20/u_s_kicks_off_its_new_bombing_campaign_in_libya_killing_2_serbian_embassy_workers/
http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/2016/02/29/pentagon-signals-support-expanded-operations-libya/81107750/
http://www.wsj.com/articles/libya-will-need-american-help-to-defeat-islamic-state-general-says-1456776041
http://news.yahoo.com/recognised-libya-govt-condemns-us-strike-jihadists-171414242.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan_Council_of_Deputies_election,_2014
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Deputies
http://intpolicydigest.org/2016/01/05/un-takes-the-wrong-road-in-libya/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/12176114/British-advisers-deployed-to-Libya-to-build-anti-Isil-cells.html
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/briefly-takes-center-strategic-libyan-city-37153386
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/22/un-support-libya-government-open-door-potential-uk-airstrikes-isis
http://www.salon.com/2016/02/10/obama_on_verge_of_launching_another_bombing_campaign_in_libya_after_dropping_23144_bombs_on_six_countries_in_2015/
http://whoviating.blogspot.com/2011/09/911-2.html

RIP: al-Jazeera America
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/02/27/1492281/-Goodnight-and-good-luck-R-I-P-Al-Jazeera-America
http://variety.com/2016/digital/news/al-jazeera-america-online-operation-shut-down-1201716258/

Clown Award: right-wing attorney Kory Langhofer
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/2/27/1492222/-The-Right-to-allow-Video-tape-Police-Not-Allowed-According-to-Federal-Judge
http://www.citylab.com/crime/2016/02/there-is-no-first-amendment-right-to-film-cops/470670/?utm_source=atlfb
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/2/19/1487715/-Idaho-Republicans-wrote-a-bill-saying-schools-must-use-Bible-in-biology-and-astronomy-and-geology
http://www.legislature.idaho.gov/idstat/Title33/T33CH16SECT33-1604.htm
http://biblehub.com/joshua/10-12.htm
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/2/22/1489329/-Conservative-lawyer-says-Scalia-should-get-vote-on-pending-cases-despite-handicap-of-being-dead
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/kory-langhofer-scalia-vote-still-counts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npjOSLCR2hE

Outrage of the Week: Islamophobic document to guide development of federal anti-terrorism programs
https://theintercept.com/2016/02/23/department-of-defense-white-paper-describes-wearing-hijab-as-passive-terrorism/
http://www.care2.com/causes/are-hijab-wearers-terrorists-a-military-paper-says-yes.html
 
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