Sunday, September 18, 2011

Truest statement of the week

The Obama cult is going on the offensive, on the theory that the best defense is a good offense, the Obama cult is going on the attack – launching a special web site, and a twitter feed, attackwatch.com, which is devoted to refuting the “smears” being repeated by the counter-revolutinary wreckers who oppose the Will of the Dear Leader. “President Obama’s opponents have falsely suggested that the President has not been a strong ally to Israel,” the Obamaites whine. How dare anyone suggest that the US isn’t at Tel Aviv’s beck and call! Even the suggestion of something less than absolute fealty is considered a “smear.” If that doesn’t underscore what’s wrong with American foreign policy in the Middle East, then I don’t know what does.

On the boob tube, Rachel Maddow is leading the counter-attack, going after Republicans for “lying” about the Dear Leader’s wise policies. When Ron Paul said that the US embassy in Iraq is bigger than the Vatican and will cost $1 billion – and that we should be keeping that money at home – Rachel is had a cow on camera. No, she barked, the Vatican is 110 acres and the embassy is 108, and also the cost of the embassy is “several hundred million” under $1 billion.” She then crumpled a piece of paper, threw it at the camera, and bellowed “False!”

Rachel, you need to hire some new researchers: yes, Vatican City is 110 acres, but that’s not the same entity as The Vatican. Vatican City is a sovereign state, which includes the Holy See – the actual residence of the Pope and the organizational headquarters of the Roman Catholic Church – as well as the land around it.


-- Justin Raimondo, "Debunking Rachel Maddow" (Antiwar.com).

A note to our readers

Hey --

Another Sunday.


First up, we thank all who participated this edition which includes Dallas and the following:

The Third Estate Sunday Review's Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess and Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.

And what did we come up with?

Are you looking for Ava and C.I.'s piece?

Keep looking.

We f**ked it up.

They wrote it, they typed it up, they were done with it.

Somehow we merged it with another piece.

We've just gotten ahold of them and I (Jim) explained to them what had happened. They're going to try to do a quick rewrite. It will not be what it was. They are tired (they're at an Emmys party) and they're not in the mood plus C.I. still has to do The Common Ills.

Ava wants it noted that they worked 2 and 1/2 hours on their piece. She said they'll do 20 minutes if that trying to recreate it. I'll take the blame for losing it.
Peace.

-- Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess, Ava and C.I.

Editorial: 2 US soldiers have died in Iraq this month

According to the official death toll of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars put out by the Pentagon, two U.S. service members have died in Iraq this month.

Did you read about it in your newspaper?

Nope.

Did you hear about it on the radio?

Nope.

Did you see it on your TV?

Nope.

And the Defense Dept. issued no death announcements?

C.I. covered this Thursday. Unlike the news media, we think this is an important topic and, strange, we're having a hard time thinking of an outlet that didn't think "no deaths in August" was news. But 2 deaths in September?

From C.I.'s "I Hate The War:"

Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 4477. Tonight it is [PDF format warning] 4479.

1 dod

That's the screen snap of the current count. You can drop back to Sunday's "And the war drags on . . ." to see that it has indeed increased by one because I did screen snap of the DoD figures in that entry after going through all the death announcements from DoD back to the start of August and finding nothing but Afghanistan death announcements.

Oh, hell, I'll spoonfeed and make it real easy for everyone. Here's the Sunday screen snap.

1 death toll

So what's going on? Why has the death toll increased when there are no DoD announcements?

Is the Pentagon screwing up the count? Possibly. Possibly someone's not paying attention and the count increased (by two) due to a human error and there really weren't two more deaths.

Another possibility is that there have been two deaths and the Pentagon forgot or was ordered not to announce the deaths.

Seems to me if I was Pentagon reporter -- and that's what the networks and the newpapers have, a lot of: Pentagon reporters -- and if I'd come down from my high of hugging Bobby Gates for that off the record photo op after Gates' last press conference, I'd be asking what the hell was going on?

And were I an editor or news exec, I'd be asking why the increase by two wasn't noted by our own outlet? I'd be asking who is supposed to be doing the basics.

According to the official count by the Defense Department, since September 1st there have been two deaths.

Seems like after making so many headlines with "NO U.S. DEATHS IN IRAQ IN AUGUST!" that the first death, let alone the first two deaths since that, would be news.

If the Pentagon's not doing their job, then it is possible someone could make SUCH A SERIOUS MISTAKE and allow the count to increase by two all by accident. That error would be news. It doesn't strike me as very likely that it's a simple error but then I'm puzzled by how an official DoD count issued by the Pentagon could increase by two in less than seven days and no press outlet would get all over that story?

TV: The backlash whines 'poor men'

Last week, NBC debuted a hit-and-a-miss double dose of sitcoms. One of the two, Up All Night, is fresh, warm and engaging. The other is problematic at best.

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Christina Applegate, Will Arnett and Maya Rudolph star in Up All Night which revolves around new parents (Applegate and Arnett) adjusting to their daughter Amy. Arnett's a stay-at-home father and Applegate works for talk show star Ava (Rudolph). The writing is rather lukewarm in the first three episodes; however, the performances put the show over. Paired with it last week was Free Agents which bombed.

Free Agents' seven character cast is led by Hank Azaria and Kathryn Hahn. Among the reasons it's struggling because it's not in front of a studio audience. Whenever we bring up how that's effecting timing, someone always wants to insist, "Comedy films don't have soundtracks." No, but they have directors. Good ones have directors with vision. If you don't have the studio laughter to explain where the laugh is and to impose the timing on the cast, you better be able to emphasize the laugh with the camera. As with too many TV shows, on Free Agents, there's no thought going into the camera work other than, "Who is speaking! Get that person on camera!" Repeating, if the studio audience isn't present to help set the rhythm of the show, you better be doing it with camera work. If you're not, your comedy is unsure and the audience is left confused.

And that explains why the show's struggling with funny but it doesn't explain why it is so loathed. We heard about reviews, lines from some were quoted to us. No offense to Azaria or Hahn but we say "good." And what no one wants to vocalize is that the show's flopping for the same reason that Will Arnett's last sitcom flopped. In February's "TV: Another failed sitcom from Fox," we explained that Running Wilde was looking backward, a throwback, that refused to utilize its female star and that it was throwing the whole thing off. Here we are again with a show supposedly featuring a male and female lead -- Free Agents finds Azaria and Hahn's characters, who work together, falling into bed repeatedly with them swearing each time was the last. And yet, Hahn's seldom allowed to be funny and, like Kerri Russell's character, is denied a life of her own. The show has one other female among the seven regular characters and she's on to be "hot," to say one or two lines twice an episode and to get out of the way so the 'men' can talk. And while Azaria is yacking to everyone in the cast, Hahn really speaks to no one but Azaria -- despite the fact that all seven work together. Women have no power in this show despite the idiotic claims by Rosen.

Think our take is wrong? Here's the executive producer of Free Agents, Todd Holland, explaining what the show is about, "Manliness is under assault. That's the premise."


"It's living in the past and trying to pretend to be the present," a sitcom producer told us about Free Agents and we not only agree with that assessment, we'd apply it to NPR these days.

It wasn't a good week for NPR. The most obvious failure was Jackie Northam's All Things Considered report in which she blamed Americans for the lack of Iraq and Afghanistan War coverage -- because support for the wars has decreased, Jackie insisted, the wars are no longer covered. Last time we checked, support for unemployment was at 0% among Americans but that hasn't driven that news story off the air or front pages. It takes a lot of nerve and a lot of stupid to blame Americans for what news outlets decide to cover and decide not to cover.

But NPR can't stop trafficking in crack pot theories these days.

Case in point, Hanna Rosin.

Rosin's been peddling her crap all over public radio in the last days. She wrote a bad article in 2010 entitled "The End of Men" (for The Atlantic, a notoriously sexist magazine) and she's now in the process of turning it into a bad book. To promote her book, she's shown up on NPR and PRI to insist that this fall season is "the end of men" on TV.

On NPR, she yacked away with Neal Conan on Talk of the Nation and neither worried too much about facts or reality.

A CBS exec (unnamed) was quoted in a June Wall Street Journal article saying he had heard 20 pitches that referenced Rosen's article. Please note, because Rosen and Conan didn't, 20 shows were not picked by CBS. Further note, CBS has a long, long history of killing off female led shows. This is known industry wide and if you're attempting to sell them on a show with a woman, you bring in anything you can to show there is "buzz" on the topic.

In 2010, Rosen's wrote a trend story. "Trend stories" are light on facts and heavy on cautionary tales -- especially for women. Rosen's gumbo of a 'thesis' is that men are effected more by the recession than are women and that men feel emasculated as a result and that TV is portraying this and showing "alpha power" women dominating men. And, of course, that it's due to her article. She will insist that "women are still doing better at work than men." Rate of pay and other issues, apparently, be damned.

The recession and the so-called recovery have not been kind to women. Rachel Sandler (Feminist Majority) explains reality:

While the recession was particularly tough on men, the economic "recovery" has been extremely unkind to women. Since the recession officially ended in June 2009, women have lost 345,000 jobs and counting. The job gap between women and men is now 1.5 million, with women’s unemployment rate growing while men’s declines. Simply put, the jobs that have been created since the recession are for men, and the jobs disproportionately held by women are in jeopardy. Already, women lost nearly three-quarters of the public sector jobs that have been cut.

Those are facts that Hanna can't handle and possibly that's due to the fact that they involve numbers?

She tells Neal Conan, "I, in fact, recently watched an episode of Lucy and Ricky where they switched places and she goes to work and he stays at home. And the whole thing just seemed like such a farce, you know, such comedy that nobody could possibly imagine happening in the real world. But you realize, you know, only these 30 years later, it's fairly common."

Hey, remember when I Love Lucy stopped production 30 years ago today? Back in 1981?

By Rosen's 'facts,' that's when it happened. (The show ceased production in the fifties.)

Last month, we were noting Lucille Ball's 100th birthday and using it to reflect on the difference, 60 years later, in opportunities for women in broadcast TV. We noted that in 1951, women were only leads (or hosts) in 9 prime time programs. And this fall, we noted, that number had risen to 25 which we didn't see reason to applaud. The number seemed tiny especially when the networks are offering 97 programs. (We cover broadcast TV here.)

But Rosen would have you believe women are taking over television this season -- working women -- a classification she frowns on. She states, "The difference now, as I say, is, in a lot of these, there are these alpha female characters, you know, these women at the office or the wife who's kind of eating these men for lunch." And what of the "mancession" (a term she appears to claim credit for)?

She says while women are "alpha female characters," mean are portrayed as weak, "But all sorts of, you know, bumbling of the husband taking care of the baby, the wife is kind of a big shot at work, those kinds of things that happen. The husband can't find his way around a supermarket. The wife never gets home from work. He's staying at home whimpering, wondering what to do with the baby, sad, alone, depressed, that kind of thing - playing videogames, mostly. "

Maya Rudolph's Ava, she will insist, is that alpha power female while speaking to Conan. At The Atlantic, she will write Rudolph's character "is the embodiment of supreme female power."

Really? We've seen four episodes and we're not seeing that. The only episode that's aired, the one she's referencing, features Applegate returning to work to find Ava in her office, weepy and gorging on a cake (stress eating) while lamenting what has become of her show.

That's a power female? That's an alpha female?

Throughout the episode, she will have an intense and needy desire for her best friend (Applegate) and that's a power female?

Maya's delightful in the role but who the hell would mistake it for a power female?

Time and again, it appears the person most threatened by working women is, in fact, Hanna Rosen.

She will declare that the six sitcoms this fall are "White, White, White." Moments later on Neal's show, the issue of Maya Rudolph will be raised and though Hanna Rosen has now been caught in an obvious lie that demonstrates how shoddy her research was, she and Neal will both try to offer up excuses for why Maya Rudolph doesn't count as a person of color. (We found that especially amusing, but then we know Maya.) Near the end of the excuses, they would insist that Maya is doing a bit. No, she's not. She had a small role in the unaired pilot. NBC liked the show and they liked Maya. They insisted her role be upgraded. She is now one of the three leads of the show.

Will Arnett also doesn't fit Rosen's theories despite the fact that all the activities she listed -- can't buy cheese, etc. - were just Will's character in the first episode of Up All Night. Will hasn't lost his job. He was an attorney. He quit his job when they agreed one of them needed to stay home with their daughter.

That is never noted by Rosen. Not in any of her many interviews last week or in her writing. Trend stories are fact free.

And TV stories all the more so. Most famously, in the nineties Newsweek wanted to do a story about 'kinky' sex making it on the airwaves. Ooooh. Scandal. So they wrote about, among other things, Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry's Friends character) handcuffing a woman. Are you scratching your head? Think of when Chandler had the affair with Rachel's boss (played by Alison La Placa). Remember, they were messing around in her office? Remember he had his pants off? Remember she got called out of the office and to make sure he stayed, she handcuffed him?

Yeah, you remember.

But Newsweek didn't get it right and when called out on the error, a Newsweek editor declared, "It's only TV."

So accuracy doesn't matter when it's TV?

That's an interesting and, yes, slippery slope to go down. Reporting on TV doesn't require accuracy? And when those habits are ingrained and taken elsewhere what do we do? We're thinking of an entertainment feature writer who not only is currently in a war zone, he's heading up his paper's news desk there.

Accuracy always matters. Regardless of what you cover, you are supposed to strive towards accuracy.

Hanna Rosen missed that memo and, oh, so much more.

But Rosen can't lie alone, she needs help.

So at The Atlantic, she writes "For an analysis of the corresponding wave of young powerful lady shows, see this story in Slate." Yes, folks, it is a circle jerk so we'll assume non-feminist women ("lady shows"?), unlike feminist women, do suffer from penis envy until someone demonstrates otherwise. Why else would they be involved in a circle jerk to begin with?

Rosen's circle jerk takes you to Slate's Jessica Grose who whacks away insisting:

According to the Wall Street Journal, Work It was explicitly inspired by Hanna Rosin's Atlantic magazine essay "The End of Men," and the other two seem at least implicitly influenced (here's Rosin's take on these shows at the Atlantic's website). All have the same premise: Male economic dominance is over and it's the women's turn now.

Unlike Jessie and Hanny, we know the people behind Work It. We spoke to them. They've never read Rosen's article. It inspired nothing. And that link (under "inspired") goes to a Wall St. Journal article from March of this year, one that not only doesn't assert that the program was influenced -- implicitly or otherwise -- by Rosen's article, it also doesn't even mention Work It.

The article that mentions Rosen's article and the program Work It is from June and was written by Amy Chozick.

However, it doesn't credit Rosen's article in any way, shape or form for the sitcom:


"We're showing how guys are growing and maturing and evolving by listening to women more than they traditionally have," says "Friends" writer Ted Cohen, who executive produces the new sitcom "Work It." The show, about two St. Louis men who get laid off at a Pontiac dealership and must dress like women in order to get a job selling pharmaceuticals, will premiere on ABC in midseason.

When Mr. Cohen and his partner Andrew Reich pitched the show to Warner Bros. Television, which produces it, they brandished numbers showing a decline in manufacturing and construction jobs and an increase in nursing and teaching. Males account for around 75% of the 2008 decline in employment. In 1970 married women contributed 2% to 6% of their families' household income, compared with as much as 36% in 2007, according to a study by the Pew Research Center.

"This isn't just a recession we're in, it's a man-cession," a character in "Work It" laments.


Again, no one with the show claims to have read Rosen's bad article from 2010.

When not linking to friends like Jessica Grose who are willing to make false boasts for Rosen, Hanna Rosen makes them for herself, "My original story was a mix of sociology, statistics, and reporting, so I never considered its sitcom potential. In fact, I must confess, I thought the sitcom was mostly dead. But apparently all the old genre needed was a new kitchen-sink configuration to breathe new life into it. In this generation of sitcoms, the wives are working double shifts or getting promotions while the men sit around confused."

Yet another lie. The "Death of the Sitcom" was a popular topic that we repeatedly took on when we started covering TV here, nearly seven years ago. Though it doesn't make Rosen look like a savior to point this out, the reality is that the sitcom was reborn about three years ago and the rebirth was noted in the media (which usually cited Parks and Recreation and Modern Family as the sitcoms leading the way). Now Rosen wants to show up and claim she's re-birthed the sitcom?

Vanity, thy name is Hanna Rosen.

And it's her vanity, her belief that she's so above the material she's covering that trips her up repeatedly.

For example, no one asked her to cover TV or sitcoms. There was no draft Rosen petition for that. She made the decision to. Having made the decision she should have her facts correct.

She needs prompting in interviews just to get the title of TV longest running sitcom -- the sitcom that's been in the news all summer long -- Two and a Half Men correct.

What an idiot.

That's before we get to Holland Taylor's character of Evelyn on the show. We have many problems with that show and have noted that repeatedly over the years, but we understood what was before us. She wrongly writes that Charlie Sheen's character treats Holland Taylor's "like a senile idiot."

Did she ever actually watch the show?

First off, Charlie and Alan Harper treat their mother the same way.

Second, they don't see her as senile (nor is the character). They also don't see her as an idiot.

They see her as the devil, they see her as a witch. There's even an episode where Alan's being hexed by a witch who refuses to leave but bolts the second she sees Evelyn. Both sons fear their mother and run from her every chance they get. Charlie leaves with a male lifeguard who, after saving his life, shows up because he thought they shared a spark and maybe they could talk about it over coffee? Faced with staying in the house with his mother or going out on a date with a man, Charlie heads out for coffee with the lifeguard.

Things like that happen over and over. The sons do not see their mother as senile or as powerless. They make references to what she allegedly did to their father and how they fear she might do it to them as well. Maybe Rosen distorts Taylor's character so much because what Evelyn does is supposed to be "emasculation" and what Rosen is proposing is that this is the new theme for TV this year?

Of course it would sell on NPR. That's where women made up only 18% of Terry Gross' guests in 2010. That's where, from April through August, women accounted for only 34% of Diane Rehm's guests. It's where, last week, a man interviewing a woman whose business had gone under, an 85-year-old woman, cut her off when her voice broke and asked to speak to a man.

And asked to speak to a man.

Journalism, for those wondering, is supposed to exist for the moments that would follow that woman's voice cracking. It is not supposed to run from them, to fear them or to ignore them. Those are the powerful moments of reporting. Unless you're NPR's Morning Edition.

It's on NPR where Terry Gross brings on TV and film critics. All men. But it's not just Terry, now is it? Over the summer, Morning Edition decided it was time to review Oprah's new channel. If you thought a woman would be assigned that task, you forgot how sexist NPR is.

That's how you got a commentary from a man which included, "This may be the most harrowing assignment I have ever tackled for NPR: spending a day watching Oprah Winfrey's new cable channel. [. . .] I consider myself a confident guy, but it's a little scary to enter a world where my concerns are among the least considered in the universe. OWN is aimed directly at women. It's a world of swimsuit dos and don'ts, lunch with the girls and makeovers."

In the 1970s that would have been considered patronizing and sexist and that's before we get to the man's knuckle dragging efforts in his cooking remarks.

Rosen and her crack pot theories are helped by that sort of garbage.

But when you do the work yourself, what you find is, on Free Agents, women have no power. There are only two women in the case. Hahn is in many scenes. Then there is token "hot girl" who comes on every now and then. Hot Girl has to listen to Azaria practice opening lines (he'll be wing-manning later that night at a bar and he needs practice) and respond to them. She makes it clear none would work for her.

Apparently a "power female" is now, according to Rosen, a woman who doesn't look at a pudgy man over 20 years older than her who is a sad sack and not attractive and immediately flop on her back and spread her legs.

And that brings us to the fall's actual theme. T&A. For all of Rosen's caterwauling about six sitcoms (three hours of TV), three hour long dramas are serving up solid T&A: "They Called Us Stews Then" on Pan Am, the bunnies of Playboy (about the Playboy Club) and, yes, the return of Charlie's Angels.

Rosen ignores those programs, acts as though they don't exist, despite the fact that the networks have spent more money on them than they have on the sitcoms.

Susan Faludi's wonderful Backlash: The Undeclared War Against Women remains a ground breaking book three decades later. But as much we love the book, we really wish that the actions of Rosen and others didn't indicate that we might need a part two from Faludi on this topic. Maybe we won't. For all her attacks and distortions, Rosen is just a gas bag and we'll argue that more of an impression was made with Up All Night. And we'll remember that as the episode was winding down, we got Maya singing a rock classic -- and one written and originally sung by a woman, Stevie Nicks' "Edge of Seventeen."



---------
Please note, our original, that we worked two & half hours on was lost. We were already partying (and drinking) when we got a call informing us that we needed to recreate our piece. If there are errors, we're not surprised. Please e-mail us at thirdestatesundayreview@yahoo.com and Ty will correct any factual error.

Roundtable

Jim: For this roundtable, the focus is Iraq and the online world. Our e-mail address is thirdestatesundayreview@yahoo.com. Participating in this roundtable are The Third Estate Sunday Review's Dona, Ty, Jess, Ava, and me, Jim; Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude; Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man; C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review; Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills); Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix; Mike of Mikey Likes It!; Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz); Ruth of Ruth's Report; Trina of Trina's Kitchen; Wally of The Daily Jot; Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ; Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends; Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub. Betty's kids did the illustration.


Roundtable


Jim (Con't): Let's start with an e-mail from a guy named Joe who wants to know what our problem with Digby is and insists we should be supporting her.

Kat: You mean like financially? Is she unable to meet her bills? That's a shame. It's a shame that you sell out and become a tool but still can't meet your bills.

Rebecca: We love Digby's story about what it's like to be a woman online. I've loved that story for years. Ever since C.I. and Ava wrote about it long, long before Digby did. But, hey, when you're unable to think for yourself, steal.

Ava: Also why would we want to visit that stupid site? She's a woman -- woopie-doo, who gives a damn? She's not a feminist. A feminist would never embrace Network -- Digby's site features an image of Network character Howard Beale. In the film, Faye Dunaway gives an award winning performance as Diana, yes. But the character's written in the most sexist terms. She's supposed to be the modern woman and is ridiculed and mocked for that by the screenwriter. Even her orgasm is a ridicule of women. And by "the modern woman," I mean a woman who works. How very sad that this is what the film really chooses to go to town on. I'm really sorry that some people are too stupid to grasp the meaning of the film Network but that's really not my problem and I would not now or ever go to a site promoting the film. Especially a site run by a woman. Talk about not getting the point.

C.I.: And just to pick up there -- and speak slowly so Ava can grab this -- just to pick up there, Howard Beale? Talk about missing the point. Howard Beale has a psychotic break at the beginning of the film. He is not a prophet. That point is repeatedly made. Nor is he someone to be followed. His whining that he's "mad as hell and he's not going to take it anymore" but the mad as hell isn't over any of the pompous reasons he lists -- he's a network anchor, he's supposed to be pompous and out of touch which is why William Holden is the lead character of the film -- the reason he's mad as hell is because he's been fired by the network, given two weeks notice, that's when he goes on air and starts screaming he's mad as hell. His psychotic episode continues throughout the film. Howard Beale is a rather strange identification. And, as Ava pointed out, we're talking a highly sexist filmthat trashes women and plays into fear of and hatred towards them. It was not a progressive film. And we haven't even factored in that, starting at the mid-point, there's a huge anti-Arab bias brought into the film.

Betty: This is the woman who couldn't defend Hillary from sexist attacks in real time and acted as though they weren't taking place but gives a few general comments on the topic for a book on the 2008 election and we're supposed to consider her brave. In addition, Bob Somerby has well documented how that White woman is forever charging others with racism.

Jim: Bob Somerby of The Daily Howler which Betty and C.I. were noting early in the writing edition has moved over to Blogger/Blogspot. This is the new site of The Daily Howler. Betty, C.I. called out DC Blogger, of Corrente, attacking peace activists and, in it, she notes you --

Jess: Stop. Before you get to that, I'm putting in the transcript C.I. did of the video. The video, the action was trashed. I think we need to start there. If streaming is something you're able to do and that you're able to follow, you can watch the video here. Otherwise, here's C.I.'s transcript of the video.


Activist: Remember when Barack Obama was a candidate and he inspired so much hope for change by saying things like this?
Barack Obama October, 2007: If we have not gotten our troops out by the time I am president, it is the first thing I will do. I will get our troops home. We will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the bank.
Screen shot of a check 'from' Barack Obama for payment of "Priceless" to be made to "Citizens of the World."
INT. BANK OF AMERICA - DAY
Activist: Congratulations Bank of America, Cambridge branch. We come in peace to let you know that you are the winners of a promotion -- a promotion being held by the president of these United States of America who said on the campaign trail --
Barack Obama: We will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the bank.
Activist: Today we are at the Bank of America taking this to the bank. Is there any manager available who's like to pose for a photo op? We just want to know who we should give this to --
Bank employee: Come upstairs, I'm the banking center manager. I'd be happy to take it for you. So take all the pictures you'd like.
Activist: Is the Bank of America not the place to redeem this check? Bring the troops and the money home. Who should I --
Bank employee: Sir, could you please stop disturbing our customers?
Activist: So you're not willing -- you're not willing to bring -- the customer here all have the same check in their hands.
EXT. CITIZENS BANK - DAY
Activist: We went to Bank of America and they could not cash this check. We'd could establish an account here at Citizens Bank, the poetry of that for this priceless amount paid to Citizens of the World, bring the troops hom and redirect money towards human and environmental needs and could I have some popcorn?
Woman's voice: Yes, you can.
Activist: Alright!
INT. CITIZENS BANK - DAY
Bank employee2: We cannot have this.
Camera Operator: Yeah, yeah, we'll just be a minute.
Activist: So who should I give this check to? Who wants to bring the troops home and redirect that money towards human and environmental needs? Is there a local community bank we could go to?
Bank employee2: No, we cannot suggest anything. But you cannot stay in here.
Bank employee 1: Can you please? [He covers camera with his hand.]
INT. CITIBANK - DAY
Bank employee: We could not allow that in the branch.
Activist: We've been to several banks. We've been trying to make a deposit but now we realize that we need to make a withdrawal.
He signs the check on the back.
Activist: Listen the only reason I'm doing this today is because I know there are people out there who know, who feel in their bones that the representative democracy is not working the way it's supposed to. A majority of people want to tax the rich. A majority of the people want the wars to end bring those troops and those dollars home, spend them on environmental and human needs. That's not happening by who you vote for. So that's why I'm trying to redeem Barack Obama's promise and take it to the bank. Now imagine, just think, if one person a day did that, they would just think that that person was crazy and they would ignore him. Imagine if two people a day did that, they might think that they were lovers on a lark and they would have a little laugh. Imagine three -- no, imagine 50 people a day walking to a bank with that check and trying to withdraw all those troops based on Barack Obama, they might think it's a movement. That's what it is. The homecoming October 2011 movement Bring The Troops Home, bring the dollar home, spend it on human needs. Take care of the poor, tax the rich. All you have to do to join me is send me your e-mail [at TheHomecoming 2011@Gmail.com], join me in Freedom Plaza starting October 6th for the protests that will not go home, for the protests that will not go away


Jess (Con't): As C.I. notes, "The video is both prompoting the October 2011 actions in DC and it's putting the war out there." Now that's what DC Blogger attacked. And it is a she. Her attack on the peace activists is a 10 sentence attack. Along with the headling, "Annoying white activists," she uses two sentences to emphasize that they're supposedly stupid due to their race. Two comments attack them. A third one offers some input that can be read several ways. Jim.

Jim: And as C.I. pointed out, it's really sad and telling that someone would form judgments based upon race at this late date. Let me quote from that section:


Were that to happen, they might realize how stupid they looked slamming people because of their skin color. [And before someone e-mails that Betty, Stan or Marcia did it -- Ann or Cedric are more likely to use that technique in roundtables at Third than at their own sites due to what they cover at their sites -- when they call out a White person and make a note of the skin color, it is because that White person has decided they know more about African-Americans than, in fact, African-Americans do. That's the point of Betty, Stan and Marcia calling those people out. It's not "They're white!" It's "that fool is saying this is what it's like to be Black and that fool is White and we don't anyone to speak for us, we can speak for ourselves thank you very much."]

Jim (Con't): So, Betty, agree, disagree?

Betty: I agree 100%. If someone writes, "Barack's jobs 'plan' is wonderful" and the writer's White, I'm not running to my website and typing, "Stupid White person!" C.I.'s correct. If a White person wants to 'explain' Black people or to Black people, I will call them out. There are more than enough of us to speak for ourselves, thank you very much.

Marcia: And I'll say the word: Cracker. I do try to avoid that at my site now because it makes some White readers uncomfortable as in -- is she calling us that? No, I'm referring to White people who do what Betty's talking about, what C.I. wrote about. I don't need White people telling me what it's like to be Black. And I really wish they'd find something else to write about and stop trying to speak for us. It strikes me as racist.

Jim: Okay, give me an example of that.

Marcia: Gladly. In The Progressive, Naomi Klein gave that stupid and racist interview to Matthew Rothschild where she took it upon herself to tell you what a group of Black men were thinking on election night. Though just across the street from them, she never bothered to ask them what they were thinking. She just 'knew,' the way some White people, with their sense of entitlement, seem to think they 'know' everything. Why doesn't she speak for herself and stop trying to put voices into the mouths of Black men -- her voice into the mouth of Black men? Of course, it's equally true that she spoke to Rotschild for his radio program and on that and in the pages of The Progressive, the most likely way you will hear a Black voice is second hand since Matthew appears unable or unwilling to speak to Black people.

Jim: Now some people might say, "What's the problem? She's just speaking."

Stan: She's reducing Black people to props. She's making puppets out of them. They were just across the street. She could have walked over and said, "Hey, I'm Naomi Klein, best selling author. I write a column that runs in The Nation and The Guardian and I'd like to ask you a few questions." She didn't do that. But still chose to speak 'for them'? It's appalling and patronizing. But how much more belittling is it to speak for them when you refused to SPEAK TO THEM?

Ann: And speaking to them might not have allowed her to put forth her theory about what they really thought. And this isn't a new problem. Elaine and C.I. can go historical and tell you about that. The movements of the sixties and early seventies are about people stepping up and saying, "We'll speak for ourselves, thank you." Lesbians and gays, feminists, Native Americans, Chicanos, Blacks, go down the list. And as various movements sprung up and people came forward to speak for themselves. That's what so irritating about Tim Wise. In the 60s, he would have been told shut your ass because White Tim Wise has declared himself an expert on what it means to be Black. And what it means when a White person is an 'expert' on being Black is that the limited time and space any of these left radio programs or web and print outlets actually devote to issues of color are being taken up by a White man. He needs to be told to shut the hell up. He needs to be told he is not an expert on Blackness and we really don't care for his crap. Now let me take DC Blogger's post to the issue of Iraq. There is no Iraq coverage at Corrente. So how very telling that when the Iraq War is finally mentioned, it's so DC Blogger can attack an activist against the wars.

Cedric: Yeah, I'm going to have to agree. And I didn't care for the blogging what Al Jazeera was reporting on Egypt to begin with. If you can't cover the wars your own country is engaged in, don't go foreign issues on something else. It makes you look immature and unable to address reality, it makes it appear you are hopping on trends for the sake of hopping on trends.

Trina: And Iraq really is absent from most websites online. If you want to know what's happening in Iraq, there are a number of right wing sites you can follow, a number of sites run by veterans that are centrist or right wing. But if you want a left view the only place is The Common Ills. That stupid little blogger Joel -- who I won't promote, either his last name or his website -- is stupid and is praised by Thomas E. Ricks which demonstrates that he's got nothing to say as far as the left is concerned.

Elaine: Let me pipe in again. That blogger Trina's talking about? He can't read Arabic. All of his news sources are in English. That severely limits his ability to understand what is going on in Iraq. Let me provide one example. Aswat al-Iraq is in English and that blogger, who I'll call Thomas E. Ricks' boyfriend, cites Aswat al-Iraq frequently. But when rumors broke last week that a secret agreement had already been signed by the US and Iraq, that wasn't coverred by Aswat al-Iraq. In fact, it was 24 hours later when they covered it and only because the US Embassy in Baghdad had issued a denial. Now C.I. had covered it a day before Aswat al-Iraq and that's a result of being able to read Arabic. Rebecca, I'm tossing to you, you know why.

Rebecca: Oh, okay. Yeah, Elaine and I were talking about this. There are so many things that C.I. doesn't cover at The Common Ills on Iraq. For instance, there was a grade fixing scandal last week. And I know about this because C.I. does a presentation on Friday nights to Trina and Mike's Iraq Study Group on some major issue and then comes back for a 'things no one covered including me' bit that lasts about ten minutes. And the grade fixing scandal wasn't covered. C.I. noted that, in August, it turnedo ut that standardized testing was being rigged in Iraq as well. She ignored that because time is limited and, in July, she'd already called out the claims of literacy increasing in the midst of war. I mean that's amazing that the lie got told to begin with. Think about that. Iraq is a war torn country. Every other month it seems some group has members refusing to send their children to school because of some threat. It's a very young population as well. And the growth industry in Iraq is orphans. But somehow in spite of all of that the literacy rate is climbing? It made no sense. And her point, in August, was that (a) I'd already covered it before this scandal emerged and (b) to cover it now would be a "See, I told you so!" and there were far more important things to cover than that.

Jim: I'm not at those meetings, in Boston, I'm out here in California. Give me an example, C.I., of a story you skipped recently?

C.I.: Friday's snapshot addresses the housing issues -- corruption -- and how the prices are going up and who's going to buy them. Today Al Mada has a story -- Dallas, I'll get you the link -- which continues the housing issue. It's an important story but I'm trying to figure out how do we cover it, one article, when we've already addressed the topic at length?

Jim: And Dallas does all of our links in the roundtable. He does not speak Arabic. Which is why C.I. just explained she'll get the link and pass it on to Dallas. Al Mada is an Iraqi news outlet which is in Arabic.

Dona: There are also human interest reports in the Iraqi media. I've talked to C.I. about that before and since we're talking media, C.I. talk about that a little bit.

C.I.: The big thing, feature writing wise, these days appears to be Iraqi women as subjects. And sometimes I do work it in. Sometimes I don't. For example -- let me know if links are needed for any of this, Dar Addustour has been running an article on women drivers' for some time. This even after their own columnists had, I thought, exhausted the topic. That's one we skip because Iraq has always had women drivers. It's not Afghanistan and that's always my concern because people confuse the two wars. Sloppy commentary is claiming that the Iraq War was sold on gender equality and freedom. It was not. That was part of the Afghanistan War roll out. Iraqi women have actually lost rights as a result of the Iraq War. And so a piece on driving is going to require a lot of explanation in a snapshot, a lot of, "Now women were driving in Iraq before the war started and in fact" blah blah blah. Al Rafidayn, to offer another feature article topic, did a piece on Madonna this month that was huge -- in terms of being read -- for almost two weeks. It was one of the most read arts articles at Al Rafidayn. And I seriously considered including that because how does Madonna go over in Iraq? That's interesting to me due to all of the things Madonna represents. And the article was about her buying lodgings for her boyfriend's family.

Dona: I'm interested in that article, give me an overview.

C.I.: Okay, it was about Madonna purchasing a home in France, the south of France if I remember the article correctly, for the mother of her boyfriend. The article noted she practices the Kabala and referred to it as the "Jewish Kabala" and it noted that her boyfriend fell into a "boy toy" -- term was used in the article -- pattern she already had. I believe it said her boyfriend was 28 years younger than her. That's all based on the article. I have no idea -- or honestly interest -- in whom Madonna's dating these days. If the article misrepresented her relationship with the man, I wouldn't know.

Dona: Who was the man?

C.I.: Brahim something. The article noted he was of Algerian descent.

Dona: Brahim Zaibat. Yes, that's who she's supposed to be dating.

Jim: And as the US media covers Iraq less and less, I'm guessing you try to focus on the bigger issues coming out of Iraq?

C.I.: I try. And it's also true that there are reports I read in Arabic and I think, "If I amplify this at The Common Ills will it get picked up?" And sometimes it might and sometimes it might not. But, for example, there's several province wars -- battles between Nouri and the provincial governments -- that are going on currently and it's always an issue we could return to if the national government out of Baghdad, Nouri's government, ever had any stability. Which it doesn't. Now there's a continued move in Basra to set up a government similar to the KRG. If anything develops on that long running story, I always try to work it in if there's time and space. Sometimes there's not.

Jim: Repeatedly last week, C.I. charted something the US media turned a blind eye to and I think Ruth captured it very well in her Friday night post "Iraq's disinegrating government." Talk about that, Ruth.

Ruth: Well prior to last week, there were aleady problems and I'm thinking about it and grasping that two weeks ago the US outlets were silent on those problems as well. I did not realize that until right now. Two weeks ago, the Kurds and Nouri al-Maliki began having public problems. The Kurds went public with their desire for the Erbil Agreement to be implemented and, two weeks ago, they even threatened to publish the Erbil Agreement.

Jim: I'm stopping you for a moment to bring in Mike. Mike, explain the Erbil Agreement.

Mike: Okay. March 2010, Iraq held elections for Parliament. Nouri created Political Stalemate I. It started with his hating the results -- his group, State of Law, came in second to Ayad Allawi's Iraiqya. And Nouri challenged the results and stomped his feet and even after Allawi's group still came out ahead, Nouri refused to allow Allawi what the Constitution mandated, first crack at forming a government. This stalemate lasts months and months and months. Eight months later, November 2010, the leaders of the political blocs and the US come up with the Erbil Agreement -- called the Erbil Agreement because the meeting where they all signed off on it took place in Erbil. This agreement allows Nouri to remain prime minister, it allows Jalal Talabani to remain president of Iraq and it is supposed to create a new and independent commission on security issues which will be headed by Ayad Allawi. Now there are other agreements as well including that one Shi'ite group gets to retain their post of vice president, that Iraqiya members forced out of the elections with false accusations that they were Ba'athists had their names cleared, etc. After all sign off on it, the Parliament convenes and puts through Jalal as president and Nouri is prime minister-designate.

Wally: But they fudge that.

Mike: Right. As C.I.'s pointed out before, they fudge it and wait like 15 more days to declare Nouri prime minister-designate officially because once declared the candidate has exactly 30 days to propose a Cabinet and get it approved by Parliament. If the candidate can't do that, someone else is supposed to become prime minister-designate. That wasn't followed, by the way. So Nouri gets what he wants and trashes the Erbil Agreement. And that starts Political Stalemate II. Which is now nine months long.

Wally: And the understanding was that Article 140 would be followed, that's Article 140 of the Constitution. Nouri scheduled the census for October 2010 and then delayed it to December 2010. After he is named prime minister-designate, he cancels it at the end of November 2010. It's never been re-scheduled. And Article 140 of the Constitution requires a census and referendum to be held on the issue of oil rich and disputed Kirkuk which both the central government out of Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government lay claim to. That census and referendum were supposed to have taken place by the end of 2007 but Nouri ignored the Constitution during his first term as prime minister.

Jim: Alright, thank you, Mike and Wally. Ruth, you were saying the KRG was threatening to make public the agreement and they were demanding that it be honored. Anything else?

Ruth: They oppose Nouri al-Maliki's proposed oil and gas bill.

Jim: And what has this led to?

Ruth: Calls that they are going to join others in a no-confidence vote.

Jim: Okay, now I'm going to Elaine because she dated a British member of Parliament for a number of years so we'll call her our expert on parliaments. Elaine, tell us what a no confidence vote means?

Elaine: It would mean Nouri was out of office. He's challanged. Now he can try to campaign to retain the post, but there will be new elections held. Now the Parliamentary process in England and the one in Iraq may or may not be similar but the elections, I believe -- C.I., correct me if I'm wrong, would be within Parliament and this would not require printing of ballots and setting up voting stations all over Iraq as a -- a general election would.

C.I.: Elaine's correct. And that is the point that Ayad Allawi was attempting to explain in last week's now infamous interview. Back to Ruth.

Jim: One second. That interview is covered in C.I.'s Tuesday snapshot and a Saturday entry. I'm putting that in because I'm sure we'll do a link to the interview itself but that is in Arabic. So for English, see those two pieces by C.I. Now back to Ruth.

Ruth: So the Kurds and Iraqiya are talking about a no-confidence vote. At one point, there was support from Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc for that, support reported, but they did a push back on that so who knows? Nouri al-Maliki declared Ayad Allawi, after the interview was published, to not be fit to be in the government. Others ignored the outburts from Mr. al-Maliki as evidenced by the fact that Jalal Talabani met with Mr. Allawi even after the Nouri al-Maliki's outburst. I would say things are very tense at this point and I would argue that a functioning US press would be reporting on all of this. There are many more details that C.I.'s covered, but that is an overview. Seems like a pretty important story to me which is why I wrote what I wrote.

Jim: Alright. Isaiah hasn't spoken according to Dona's list. Ty hasn't either but we worry more about the guests than about Third proper. In other words, if Ty wants to speak up, he will. Do you want to?

Ty: Yeah, let me bring Isaiah in because there were e-mails about him. You were not doing a comic on Sunday, last Sunday, Isaiah, and you were going to do a comic at some point during the week last week. You never did. A number of people are confused and e-mailing this site about it.

Isaiah: Okay. Well I never did a comic because the week escaped me. On Tuesday, I had time, Tuesday night, and I thought about it but I was explaining it to a friend and he told me that Jon Stewart had done that on The Daily Show. I'm not going to do the same thing someone else is doing. So I was hoping to do one later in the week but then time ran out. I didn't do a comic on Sunday because it was 9-11. I didn't want to do a 9-11 comic. I was also aware that, regardless of the theme of the comic, due to the date people would be looking to see if there was some secret or hidden 9-11 message to it.

Ty: Do you have a comic for tonight is the big question in e-mails?

Isaiah: I will have a comic up tonight even if it's the worst I've ever done, I give you my word.

Ty: Okay.

Jim: There were other e-mails I wanted to get to but Dona's done the wrap up sign so just quickly. It was pointed out that we posted a video with no explanation and that was wrong by C.I.'s standards in Friday's snapshot. That is correct. And after it went up here, the next day C.I. asked me what the hell I was thinking? C.I. didn't participate in that. It was a 'short feature' we pulled together quickly while finishing up the edition. I believe that was me and me alone on that. But, yes, it is not fair to readers who need closed captioning or are using computers or operating systems or providers that don't allow for streaming. I apologize for that. Second, there were a few e-mails -- Actually, no. Dona's saying "wrap it up." This is a rush transcript.

He was always the face of sexism

merkeled



There were always so many clues and hints. Not just Barack's decision to touch Hillary in the midst of a debate -- something he wouldn't have done to a male opponent. (Illustration is Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Merkel-ed.")

For example, in July 2008, Marie Cocco observed in "Obama's Abortion Stance When 'Feeling Blue'" (Washington Post Writers Group).

Obama says that these women should not be able to obtain a late-term abortion, because just "feeling blue" isn't the same as suffering "serious clinical mental health diseases." True enough. And totally infuriating.
During the recent Obama pander tour -- the one in which he spent about a week trying to win over conservative religious voters -- the presumptive Democratic nominee unnecessarily endorsed President Bush's faith-based initiative, a sort of patronage program that rewards religious activists for their political support with public grants. Then in a St. Louis speech, Obama declared that "I let Jesus Christ into my life." That's fine, but we already have a president who believes this was a qualification for the Oval Office, and look where that's gotten us.Obama's verbal meanderings on the issue of late-term abortion go further. He has muddied his position. Whether this is a mistake or deliberate triangulation, only Obama knows for sure.
One thing is certain: Obama has backhandedly given credibility to the right-wing narrative that women who have abortions -- even those who go through the physically and mentally wrenching experience of a late-term abortion -- are frivolous and selfish creatures who might perhaps undergo this ordeal because they are "feeling blue."

And there was the photo of Barack's male speechwriter groping a cut out of Hillary to degrade women. Dee Dee Myers pointed out in "Favreau's Sexist Photo Is No Laughing Matter" (Vanity Fair):

What's bugging me is his intention. He isn't putting his hand on her "chest," as most of the articles and conversations about the picture have euphemistically referred to it. Rather, his hand--cupped just so--is clearly intended to signal that he’s groping her breast. And why? Surely, not to signal he finds her attractive. Au contraire. It’s an act of deliberate humiliation. Of disempowerment. Of denigration.
And it disgusts me.


And the speechwriter remains with the White House to this day. There was no fallout for doing that.

Most of the time, Marie Cocco was the only journalist calling out the non-stop sexism:

But I do wonder why a candidate praised for his rhetorical gifts talks about women in the way that he does. During the primary campaign, he said Hillary Clinton launched political attacks on him "periodically, when she's feeling down." He called a Detroit reporter "sweetie" when she was trying to ask him about job creation. Now he has incorporated a myth created by the right -- that women who seek late-term abortions should not be allowed to do so if they are "feeling blue" -- into his own lexicon. And this is enough to make me see red.

Wonder no more. Ron Suskind's book conveys what all but the deluded always knew. POLITICO quotes his section of the book:

"The president has a real woman problem" was the assessment of another high-ranking female official. "The idea of the boys' club being just Larry and Rahm isn’t fair. He [Obama] was just as responsible himself." … "[L]ooking back," recalled Anita Dunn, when asked about it nearly two years later, "this place would be in court for a hostile workplace … Because it actually fit all of the classic legal requirements for a genuinely hostile workplace to women."



Ron Suskind's Confidence Men comes out Tuesday and, no, Barack was never the face of feminism or what feminism looked like. A lot of female leaders and 'leaders' are going to have a lot of explaining to do.

Another truth telling book

Flashback:

The White House has mounted an aggressive operation to discredit the book, scrambling to obtain copies and contacting reporters to point out minor errors.

The White House attempted to discredit a book by Ron Suskind.

Guess what?

We're not talking about the Bush White House or about Suskind's The Price of Loyalty. The quote above is from Toby Hardin's report on White House efforts to discredit Suskind's new book Confidence Men about the administration of Barack Obama.

confidence men

For those who've forgotten, the assault on The Price of Loyalty was brutal. One of the biggest whores for the Bush administration was David Gregory who went on NBC's Today the day before the book was officially released to claim that the book relied on memos and that the White House said that material must have been stolen and they would be prosecuting. Gregory, who held a copy of the book in his hands on air, apparently forgot to read it or even read the introduction where it was explained how the memos were obtained (the White House had allowed Paul O'Neill who had handed them over to Suskind).

Now it's time for the whores in the press corps to yet again dance for their masters so watch to see who comes forward to aid in the attacks on Suskind this time.

Last week, Ava and C.I. noted, "Watching Charlie is to realize that you can say anything as a guest because there's no follow up on Charlie's part. The tight ass just can't 'wing it.' So although, for example, Panetta painted a picture of the administration which really left the impression that Barack is the Dead Beat President,the Absentee Leader, over-delegating and under-briefed, forever out of the loop, Charlie had no follow ups."

And guess what, folks?

That's what's portrayed in Ron Suskind's new book which comes out Tuesday.

Toby Harnden again:

Larry Summers, a former top economic adviser is quoted as telling Peter Orszag, then Mr Obama's budget director, at a dinner in Washington's Bombay Club: "We're home alone. There's no adult in charge. Clinton would never have made these mistakes." Mr Summers was US Treasury Secretary under President Bill Clinton.

Mr Orszag is quoted as telling the author: "Larry just didn't think the president knew what he was deciding."



So it will surprise a few, it will merely confirm a great deal for others.

Video of the week




Activist: Remember when Barack Obama was a candidate and he inspired so much hope for change by saying things like this?
Barack Obama October, 2007: If we have not gotten our troops out by the time I am president, it is the first thing I will do. I will get our troops home. We will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the bank.
Screen shot of a check 'from' Barack Obama for payment of "Priceless" to be made to "Citizens of the World."
INT. BANK OF AMERICA - DAY
Activist: Congratulations Bank of America, Cambridge branch. We come in peace to let you know that you are the winners of a promotion -- a promotion being held by the president of these United States of America who said on the campaign trail --
Barack Obama: We will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the bank.
Activist: Today we are at the Bank of America taking this to the bank. Is there any manager available who's like to pose for a photo op? We just want to know who we should give this to --
Bank employee: Come upstairs, I'm the banking center manager. I'd be happy to take it for you. So take all the pictures you'd like.
Activist: Is the Bank of America not the place to redeem this check? Bring the troops and the money home. Who should I --
Bank employee: Sir, could you please stop disturbing our customers?
Activist: So you're not willing -- you're not willing to bring -- the customer here all have the same check in their hands.
EXT. CITIZENS BANK - DAY
Activist: We went to Bank of America and they could not cash this check. We'd could establish an account here at Citizens Bank, the poetry of that for this priceless amount paid to Citizens of the World, bring the troops hom and redirect money towards human and environmental needs and could I have some popcorn?
Woman's voice: Yes, you can.
Activist: Alright!
INT. CITIZENS BANK - DAY
Bank employee2: We cannot have this.
Camera Operator: Yeah, yeah, we'll just be a minute.
Activist: So who should I give this check to? Who wants to bring the troops home and redirect that money towards human and environmental needs? Is there a local community bank we could go to?
Bank employee2: No, we cannot suggest anything. But you cannot stay in here.
Bank employee 1: Can you please? [He covers camera with his hand.]
INT. CITIBANK - DAY
Bank employee: We could not allow that in the branch.
Activist: We've been to several banks. We've been trying to make a deposit but now we realize that we need to make a withdrawal.
He signs the check on the back.
Activist: Listen the only reason I'm doing this today is because I know there are people out there who know, who feel in their bones that the representative democracy is not working the way it's supposed to. A majority of people want to tax the rich. A majority of the people want the wars to end bring those troops and those dollars home, spend them on environmental and human needs. That's not happening by who you vote for. So that's why I'm trying to redeem Barack Obama's promise and take it to the bank. Now imagine, just think, if one person a day did that, they would just think that that person was crazy and they would ignore him. Imagine if two people a day did that, they might think that they were lovers on a lark and they would have a little laugh. Imagine three -- no, imagine 50 people a day walking to a bank with that check and trying to withdraw all those troops based on Barack Obama, they might think it's a movement. That's what it is. The homecoming October 2011 movement Bring The Troops Home, bring the dollar home, spend it on human needs. Take care of the poor, tax the rich. All you have to do to join me is send me your e-mail [at TheHomecoming 2011@Gmail.com], join me in Freedom Plaza starting October 6th for the protests that will not go home, for the protests that will not go away

On the picket line (Sue Davis, WW)

Repost from Workers World:


On the picket line

Published Sep 17, 2011 9:18 AM

Hyatt Hotel workers strike in four cities

Hyatt Hotel workers in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Honolulu and Chicago who have been working without a contract since August 2009, walked out Sept. 8 for a week-long strike to demand decent wages and healthy, safe working conditions. Studies conducted by their union, UNITE HERE, show that Hyatt room cleaners have the highest injury rate in the industry. No wonder. They’re forced to lift very heavy beds while cleaning 30 rooms during an eight-hour shift.

Local 2 kicked off the protest in San Francisco by staging a march and rally in Union Square on Sept. 5, Labor Day. According to eyewitness Joan Marquardt, “More than 500 UNITE HERE and other union members and community supporters marched around the area, ending at the Grand Hyatt, where they held a picket and rally. We were able to get out Workers Worlds to the crowd.”

Victory for locked-out Honeywell workers

The 13-month struggle that ended Aug. 2 with a decent contract for Steelworkers Local 7-669 at the Honeywell International uranium processing plant in Metropolis, Ill., proved why it’s critical to build solidarity internationally as well as nationally. The 230 highly skilled workers at the largest conversion plant in the world that produces nuclear fuel for commercial reactors were locked out in June 2010, when they refused to accept drastic cuts in pension, health care and overtime benefits as well as unfair changes in seniority rules. Not only did they rally wide support from the U.S. labor movement, but they credit “a global labor coalition of organized Honeywell workers in the U.S. and Europe,” backed up by four European labor federations representing 16 million workers, with forcing Honeywell to drop its anti-worker demands. USW President Leo W. Gerard praised Local 7-669 members who “showed a commitment to fight an American multinational on principles that are rock solid about workplace safety, family health care, pensions and job fairness.” (jwjblog.org, Aug. 23)

Int’l support for postal Verizon workers

When delegates to the Post Logistics Global Conference, called by a division of the UNI Global Union, representing 900 labor unions with 20 million members worldwide, met Sept. 5-9 in Washington, D.C., they showed solidarity with U.S. postal and communication workers. Coming to the aid of three U.S. affiliates — the American Postal Workers Union, the National Association of Letter Carriers and the National Postal Mail Handlers Union — UNI PL delegates unanimously passed a resolution calling on Congress to pass H.R. 1351 to stabilize the post office’s finances and give the unions a fair playing field in the current round of contract negotiations. (www.UNIglobalunion.org, Sept. 12) Delegates also took on Verizon when they joined a 500-strong demonstration Sept. 7 called by the Communication Workers at the L Street Verizon Wireless Store. The protesters’ chant of, “Workers, united, will never be defeated!” needs to echo around the world. (Union City, newsletter of Metro D.C. AFL-CIO, Sept. 12)

Nurses demand: ‘Tax Wall Street to Heal America’

National Nurses United used creative tactics on Sept. 1 when mobilizing its members, labor activists and community supporters to lobby congressional legislators in 60 cities in 21 states. One of the largest, most eye-opening actions was the soup kitchen outside San Francisco’s federal building. NNU’s purpose: to get politicians to sign a pledge to “support a Wall Street transaction tax that will raise sufficient revenue to make Wall Street pay for the devastation it has caused on Main Street.” They are calling for a 0.5 percent federal tax on big financial transactions to raise $350 billion annually to fund jobs, health care and schools. The tax would apply to stocks, securities, debt purchases, options, credit swaps, foreign currency bets and derivatives. Why is this on NNU’s agenda? According to an Aug. 26 article in the California Progress Report, “Every day nurses see broad declines in health and living standards that are a direct result of our patients and our own families struggling with lack of jobs, unpayable medical bills, hunger and homelessness, and they are not going to let people suffer in silence any more.” To show NNU’s determination, more than 23,000 NNU members in 34 north and central California hospitals will hold a one-day strike on Sept. 22 to protest cuts in services and unsafe patient-to-nurse ratios.

LIU locks out striking faculty, cancels health coverage



When Long Island University faculty members at the Brooklyn campus went on strike the first day of classes on Sept. 7, the university immediately retaliated by locking them out and canceling health care coverage. Ralph Engelman, a delegate of the LIU Faculty Federation, an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers, denounced the cancellation as “an attempt to pressure us to accept their contract offer and go back to the classrooms.” (The Chronicle of Higher Education, Sept. 9) But such strong-arm tactics aren’t likely to make the teachers accept contract terms that will make them forgo raises for the next three years or link pay increases to tuition hikes. (blog.villagevoice.com, Sept. 9)


Highlights

This piece is written by Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude, Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix, Kat of Kat's Korner, Betty of Thomas Friedman is a Great Man, Mike of Mikey Likes It!, Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz, Ruth of Ruth's Report, Marcia of SICKOFITRADLZ, Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends, Ann of Ann's Mega Dub, Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts and Wally of The Daily Jot. Unless otherwise noted, we picked all highlights.

"I Hate The War" -- most requested highlight and one we may be reposting in this edition.

"Mashed Potato Casserole in the Kitchen"-- Trina covers the economy and offers an easy recipe (how easy? you can use instant mashed potatoes).

"Iraq's disinegrating government" -- Ruth on Iraq.



"Still Solyndra" and "Solyndra" -- Ruth on the growing scandal.

"In the mood for" -- Kat provides a listing.


"Record number disapprove of Barack's performance" and "He keeps losing" -- Marcia charts the shrinking president.

"In A Lonely Place," "Netflix" and "Cass Elliot" -- Stan covers movies.


"Merkeled" -- Isaiah dips into the archives.

"Idiot of the week" -- Mike selects the week's biggest idiot.

"Oh that great thinker" and "THIS JUST IN! HE'S TIRED!" -- Barack's got a 'new' idea to campaign on.


"Get your facts right about my state's election" -- Trina offers a suggestion.

"Oh, Debbie" -- Betty wonders about the nut.


"oh that spin" and "Jay Carney and other lies" -- Rebecca and Kat on the sad attempts to spin.

"Shameful NPR" -- Elaine calls out NPR.

"Those elections" -- Mike breaks down the special elections.

"Can the nursing home come pick up Robert Scheer?" and "THIS JUST IN! SCHEER STILL AN IDIOT!" -- Cedric and Wally weren't in the mood for 'Barack's not what I thought he was . . . but it's all Bill Clinton's fault and let me spend my entire column trashing Bill Clinton who is not in the White House.'



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