this week's bonus post here is elaine's post from last week. enjoy.
I
was supposed to be attending the Iraq study group but made the mistake
of mentioning to a few what I was planning on blogging tonight and the
reaction was, "Write it early so I can link to it!"
The Common Ills hits the four year mark next month. I thought I'd push ahead in line and write about that.
I had many ideas of where to start but Ruth pointed out, "The only place to start is with
C.I." She is correct.
Throughout
2003-2004, I was among the many friends of C.I.'s saying, "You should
start a blog." In one regard, we were being selfish. C.I. is famous for
her letters. There are people I haven't seen in years but feel as if
I've kept up with them due to C.I.'s letters. The letters are page
turners and they address everything and anything. When I was a smoker,
I'd have to light up to enjoy the good read. In February 2003, C.I. had
to fill in for a friend who had scheduled some college campus events to
speak out against what seemed (and what was) the impending illegal war.
C.I. grabbed those and was supposed to finish them out at or near the
end of March. However, the illegal war started.
So we all loved
the phone calls (those of us in C.I.'s inner circle) and we loved what
remained of the 'letters' (largely observations of campus reactions to
the illegal war and much shorter than most of us were used to). But to
be honest, a lot of us thought, "A blog would be a way to get those
letters still."
Equally true was that many of us thought a blog
would mean C.I. could go off the road. So we pestered and we pleaded.
C.I.'s response was always, "I don't even know what a blog is." After
the 2004 election, C.I. participated in a "what worked and what didn't"
conversation. It was illuminating in many ways but the only thing C.I.
could really think of for "what I could have done but didn't" was do a
blog.
If you know C.I. what happens next is not at all
unexpected. C.I. left the meeting, went home and tried to learn about
blogs. But there's never time so after about 20 minutes, C.I. just
tried to learn how to set up one. Within a half-hour of arriving home,
C.I. had done just that. I was a small handful of people (20) that C.I.
passed on the news to. In fact, we were on the phone that night.
I
could talk about how to find readers but that's really C.I.'s story. If
she wants to tell it, she will. One thing she's written of online is
that the multi-posts on day two were really just practice and comfort.
She
knew no rules and wasn't sure what to do or how to do it. Due to the
fact that the New York Times had ticked her off that day, that became
the paper they referenced. But C.I. has a shy streak that you really
have to know her to grasp. She can go out before a crowd and you'd
never know there was any discomfort if you didn't really know her.
So
it's no surprise for those of us who know her that her first post that
first Friday was the sort of thing where her hands were shaking and she
was extremely nervous. She didn't want that discomfort level so she
planned 'easy' topics for Saturday that would let her post multiple
times and get comfortable.
Due to her own interests, they caught
attention. Again, she can write about that. But she had people leaving
comments and e-mailing. I'll go ahead and share her greatest regret.
One of the nicest comments (there weren't any mean comments) was from a
young woman (I think she was 17) who had her own blog. C.I. did not
know how to do a "blog roll" then. If she had, that young woman would
have been on the blog roll just for that first comment. But when
comments were closed (I'll get to that), that comment was closed.
(There may be a way for C.I. to read it. If so, she's not aware of it
and no one else is.)
But one of the posts that second day of
blogging is the only one that C.I. would ever change. She feels she was
"gushing." It didn't read that way but you could tell she was touched
by the fact that people were commenting and sending e-mails. I honestly
think it is more the self-referential factor that has C.I. embarrassed
about that post.
As someone who has known her for years (we went
to college together and became friends, but I knew her before that), I
know that "Let me talk about me" (facts, feelings or memories or
dreams) is not a topic C.I. ever offers in conversation. So I truly
believe that's where the discomfort factor comes in.
Jim, Jess, Ty and Dona were leaving comments and e-mailing from that Saturday. They go way back in the community.
C.I.
always says (and often writes) that the community shaped The Common
Ills. Those aren't empty words. They shaped the focus, the content and
you name it. The first big attention getting thing at The Common Ills
was probably "
When NPR Fails You, Who You Gonna' Call? Not the Ombudsman"
which resulted in a ton of links. C.I. didn't plan to write that.
Someone wrote in asking that the topic be addressed and C.I. did it.
From there, many more would get attention from outside the community,
but that first one came solely because a reader wrote in that he was
unhappy with the NPR ombudsman's response. So C.I. read the response
and explained why the commentator should never have been invited on. (A
point that the ombudsman should have known but apparently didn't or
didn't want to write about that.)
That got a lot of attention
and a lot of comments. In December 2004, comments would be shut down.
Keesha had shared repeatedly that she didn't like the comment option.
She had visited many blogs and would feel comfortable with one and then
comments would be left attacking her for her race. C.I. promised her
that comments would be closed if that ever happened. There were two
Blue Dog Democrats who always had to leave comments and one day they
attacked Keesha with racist statements. That's when C.I. closed
comments (and had to learn how to do that).
Keesha and other
members truly shaped the community. Liang and Marcia are early
community members. When comments were closed, it especially became
necessary for C.I. to represent the community and to speak for them.
That was a lot of pressure and it's not anything that the rest of us
would ever attempt to tackle. For one thing, we don't have the time to
go through multiple e-mails before we write a word.
But that is C.I. She will always raise a voice for those who feel no one is speaking for them.
It
was a left site from the start. It was a feminist site. It was a blog.
That changed before the comments were closed. C.I. jokes about how she
never learned to do a blog. What she did do was build a community.
This
time, what's going on right now, is actually more helpful to explaining
The Common Ills than any other period. That's because it's similar to
when C.I. started The Common Ills. Look for discussions about Iraq. You
will have a hard time finding them. Iraq was a topic for The Common
Ills and Jim will tell you that is one of the things that drew Ty,
Jess, Dona and himself to The Common Ills that first weekend. No one
was talking about Iraq. Everyone was still in the election.
They
would stay in that mode for the next month as well. In January, the
'anti-war' AlterNet would publish an essay that was a War Hawk
reconsideration of the Iraq War. (Tom Hayden, when he still had some
common sense, managed to call that essay out.) If you notice how C.I.
finds a way to cover Iraq each day right now, you've got a good idea of
the silence everywhere else that we had to put up with in 2004.
Calling
cards are a big deal with Jim and he (rightly) has always noted that
Ava and C.I. are The Third Estate Sunday Review's calling card (their
writing). C.I. created calling cards at The Common Ills early on and
that's what allowed the community to build up. There was a move away at
allegedly 'left' sites from abortion and from the illegal war. C.I.
didn't play that game.
Another game C.I. didn't play was "Bash
the Bitch." It was very, very popular online and went far beyond Judith
Miller. Every woman was a target to be carved up. The blogger bois had
their (male) heroes and pretty much hated all women and thought they
could sexualize them. Todd S. Purdum's "atheletic cup" was an early
effort at making the point about the difference in the way a woman was
treated and a man was treated. (C.I. knows Todd's wife very well. Todd
does not stink. That was an effort to show the way a woman's writing
was called out. The bulk of drive-bys got that but to this day, C.I.
still gets e-mails asking about that. Despite noting repeatedly at The
Common Ills that Todd doesn't stink.)
The same thing happened
with members of Congress. Any man could be elevated as a hero and could
be applauded but it was as though there were no women in Congress --
unless they could be called out. C.I. wrote a piece on Barbara Boxer
and Shirley Tubbs Jones in January of 2005 that took The Common Ills to
a new level. It was those entries that really helped define The Common
Ills.
You knew Iraq would be covered, you knew that feminism
would flow and you could usually count on some hard hitting press
criticism with or without humor.
By January, community sites
started. I'll focus on A Winding Road here because it was one of the
first three and it is no more. A community member named Folding Star
started that site. FS covered the Senate and books. FS got e-mails that
were nasty and finally began wondering what was the point? After that
continued, FS shut down A Winding Road about seven months after it
started.
You really have to have a thick skin to be able to
blog. (Within three weeks of its start date, The Common Ills was not a
'blog.' It was what everyone wanted C.I. to cover and never "What I
wanted to write about.") It's a lesson most have had to learn.
C.I.
didn't have to learn it and that's what most people outside the
community never grasp. If you don't like something C.I. wrote, it's not
the end of the world to C.I. It is something C.I. will take seriously.
She'll think about it for days and days, mulling it over. That results
from two things. First, C.I. doesn't think she's the last word. (Many
would argue I put that mildly.) Second, she will gladly acknowledge she
could be wrong ("and I often am" -- pops up all the time at The Common
Ills). Equally true is that C.I. can handle negativity aimed at her
better than mass love. That's always been the case. C.I.'s hard wired
that way.
But Folding Star was a lesson for a lot of people who
had sites then and would start one later. C.I. always made clear that
no one should ever blame FS for folding up tent. No one should. If you
spoke to most people doing sites in the community, you'd grasp that
they have thought about it. Wally almost shut down his site in 2006.
This
is probably a good point to discuss the going dark in November 2008
aspect. In 2005, C.I. had gone through a great deal (including cancer).
She was tired. She was tired of the road, she was tired of the lack of
concern about the illegal war in the country at large, she was tired of
getting up each day and having to post entries to The Common Ills. A
number of other issues came together during a writing session for Third
and C.I. declared The Common Ills would probably close down in November
of 2008. (She also noted -- and this shocked Jim as much as the closing
down -- that the illegal war would still be going on.)
That is
typical C.I. The idea of doing something forever, something that can
sometimes feel like serving a jail sentence, was too much and she
needed an end point she could work to. So knowing that come November
2008, the whole thing could end allowed her something to work to.
The
first Christmas, a number of members e-mailed. Krista's gone public
about her e-mail so I'll share that story. She'd just graduated college
the previous May, found a job in Florida, moved out to Florida and
started working. But she didn't have the money to fly home and her
parents had their own financial issues that year and she didn't want
them to spend money on a plane ticket. So she told them she had to
work. She didn't. It's changed a little online but, back then,
Christmas meant two to three weeks of nothing online at most sites.
(Air America Radio also went into repeats back then. I have no idea if
they still do.) The e-mails like Krista raised an issue C.I. had not
thought of. It resulted in the fact that C.I. never takes a day off.
There's never been a day where C.I. hasn't posted in four years.
If you think about that, you'll probably grasp why anyone would need an end point to work towards.
(Of course, it should be noted that C.I. works with Third every weekend as well as doing The Common Ills.)
Having an end point allowed C.I. to keep going.
Those of us who insisted C.I. should do a site have been proved right.
The
reason for that is that C.I. I really think she has come through
online. She is not afraid to express her opinion but she's not afraid
to allow other opinions and she will go out of her way to defend anyone
under attack. She has a fairness that is sorely lacking in many
quarters (online and offline).
A perfect example is when the New
York Times slimed Paul Bremer. C.I. doesn't care for Bremer but when
Bremer responded to the unfair whispers that the paper ran as fact (and
unsourced), C.I. took up for Bremer's stand. You didn't find that a lot
of other places. Do we actually believe that Bremer could do whatever
he wanted without White House approval? There's no way in the world. It
was gossips trying to find a fall guy and going to Bremer. Bremer made
huge mistakes and needs to take responsibility for them. But to claim
that Bremer acted alone is dishonest.
Oklahoma members found
themselves in a bind. Ralph Nader did not make the ballot. Nor did
Cynthia McKinney. In fact, their only choices are John McCain, Barack
Obama or not to vote. They can't write in. They deliberated for weeks
and came out with their answer this week: They're endorsing John McCain.
That
wasn't a surprise to C.I. (who'd told me last week she expected that to
happen). But if you paid attention this week, even before they told her
their decision, you saw C.I. preparing for that, anticipating it. You
have seen C.I. defend their right and that goes to C.I.
C.I.
doesn't care how you vote. C.I. was covering that in 2004 and noting
that no one 'steals' an election by garnering votes. C.I. also made
clear that your vote is your vote and only you can decide what to do
with it. When the decision was announced, it wasn't a shock to the
community because we've all grasped the basics on who owns your vote:
only you.
The reaction of the community has not been outrage at the Oklahoma members. That goes to the ground work that C.I. has laid.
That's
probably the most value of what C.I. has done. Yes, in terms of the
Oklahoma decision but also in terms of many other things. C.I. has
always been ahead of the curve, her entire life. "Trust those
instincts," I've always told her.
What we're hearing (valid
criticism) about Barack Obama and Barack's campaign are all points C.I.
laid out some time ago. That's really true of any issue C.I. has
covered.
Having known her for years, I was amazed at the
groundwork laid re: Iraq this week. It's the sort of thing you may not
catch if you're not looking but, even if you don't catch it, you absorb
it.
A lot of people (online or offline) are caught up in the
"response." C.I.'s marking out new territory, breaking new ground. By
mid-January, some of the issues C.I.'s raising will be seized upon by
others who will rush to play catch up.
So it's just been really
great to see. Any of us who try to blog or do a site have to learn how
to communicate and how to be who we are. Find a voice is the more
precise term. Rebecca will tell you that she was all over the place for
her first three or four months. She had the beginning of her voice but
it waivered from time to time and she had to find it. With C.I., she
just took who she is when she's speaking, who she is when writing a
letter and who she is offline.
She's also known her limitations
and grasped that she can't cover everything. So you will see the focus
shift and narrow. As someone who blogs (and does so very badly), I
really appreciate and admire what she's managed to do.
That's
leaving aside the personal issues (the cancer in 2005, the return this
year), that's leaving aside the hectic schedule, that's leaving aside
so many things which, if factored in, really amaze me.
But she found a way to communicate and to keep the war front and center.
The Iraq War.
Begun in March 2003 and still ongoing.
But
we saw the 'anti-war' crowd rush off to that war with Iran that they've
been telling us (since 2004) is about to break out any day. They've got
to stop it. Repeatedly. But it never started. All the time they wasted
on that non-issue took time away from Iraq. The illegal war drags on
because our 'voices' refuse to take it seriously.
For four
years, C.I. will have covered the Iraq War as the illegal war it is.
Look around and find the others (online or off) who can say the same.
Didn't
we see our big 'anti-war' group trying to garner press attention this
week by protesting . . . Wall St. Yes, they always have something to do
other than Iraq. Unless Iraq is big in the news and then the 'anti-war'
group suddenly remembers it.
If we had ten of C.I., the illegal war would be closer to ending.
Barack
Obama is not going to end the illegal war. He admitted June 5th that he
won't decide what he'll do if elected until he's elected. His on the
road 'promises' to end the illegal war aren't promises. But even those
false promises don't promise an end to the illegal war.
Norman
Solomon, Jeremey Scahill, Laura Flanders, Matthew Rothschild . . .
Think of all the 'anti-war' voices and how they have destroyed their
own credibility. I don't know if C.I.'s going to continue The Common
Ills much beyond November (it will go through January due to a promise
Ava and C.I. made on an unrelated issue) but if C.I. feels like
continuing, the reason to do so is that C.I.'s one of the few in this
country who has maintained their credibility. The rest have defined
their role as cheerleading the War Hawk Barack into the White House.
That
will not be forgotten. It's so strange because during Vietnam, we saw
these sell outs but they waited until the 1976 election -- after the US
left Vietnam.
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,
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,
and Marcia
SICKOFITRDLZ.
All
of the above sites spun off from The Common Ills. I'd hoped to talk
about Isaiah's comics, Kat's CD reviews, the community newsletters and
more. But I've run out of time. So I'll just steal from Kat and say,
"It is what it is."
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):Friday,
October 10, 2008. Chaos and violence continue, another journalist is
killed, yesterday's assassination causes more suspicions of the US,
Iraqi Christians are targeted says an Archbishop, and more.
Yesterday
at the White House, spokesperson Dana Perino was asked about Iraqi
Christians "losing representation in Iraq's Muslim-dominated
legislature" and Perino responded that "I think that that was resolved
and the Christians' rights were restored." (Full answer: "I'll check,
but I think you should double check, because I think that that was
resolved and the Christians' rights were restored.") No, they were not.
Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) reported,
"a separate bill" will be sent "to parliament to restore" Article 50.
The bill may or not pass. But the provincial elections bill, which
passed by Parliament, passed the presidency council and was signed into
law by Iraqi president Jalal Talabani, eliminated Article 50 which
guaranteed representation to religious minorities. Yesterday, Kim Gamel (AP) reported
that in Mosul so far this month, 7 corpses of Iraqi Christians have
been discovered, notes that a person's religion is listed on the state
i.d., that there are approximately 800,000 Iraqi Christians still in
the country, and quotes Chaldean Archibishop Louis Sako stating, "We
are worried about the campaign of killings and deportations against the
Christian citizens in Mosul." The Kurdish Globe reported
yesterday that the Yazidis and the Christians continue protesting over
the elimination of Article 50 and quotes Jamil Zeito ("head of the
Seriaques-Chaldeans Public Council") stating, "We will demonstrate and
protest until we achieve autonomous rights for Christians in our
districts as well as fair representation for religious minorities,
including Christians, in the provincial elections. The protests and
demonstrations will not stop till we accomplish our fair rights;
ignoring the rights of minorities indicates incomplete democracy in
Iraq." And, as AINA reports,
the issue has led to protests elsewhere as well such as the Iraqi
embassy in Sweden where protestors gathered and Isak Monir ("spokesman
for the Chaldean Federation in Sweden") explained, "Since the decision
to exclude minorities representatives was taken by the Iraqi parliament
the violence against Christians has increased remarkably. The groups
who want Iraq cleaned from other ethnic and religious groups maybe felt
that they are backed up by the parliament and consequently have begun
to kill Christians again. They want a homogeneous Iraq -- cleaned from
other ethnic and religious groups." Ethan Cole (Christian Post) notes
the 3 Iraqi Christians killed on Tuesday in Mosul and he explains of
Mosul "the city is a historic center for Assyrian Christians, who view
it as their ancestral homeland. It is home to the second-largest
community of Christians in Iraq, after Baghdad." Asia News (via Catholic Today) identifies the dead:
More Christian blood in Mosul. On October 7, a father and son were
killed in the neighborhood of Sukkar while they were working. Amjad
Hadi Petros and his son were killed because "they were guilty of being
Christian" in a place where a "systematic persecution" is being seen.
In a second attack, recorded in another of the city's neighborhoods, a
fundamentalist group broke into a pharmacy and killed an assistant,
also of the Christian religion. We also recounted the execution, on
Monday, October 6, of Ziad Kamal, a 25-year-old disabled shop owner in
the city. The young man owned a store in the neighborhood of Karama: he
was taken by an armed group from inside his store and brought to a
nearby spot, where he was shot to death. Also, on Saturday, October 4,
two more men were barbarously assassinated in two other areas of Mosul:
Hazim Thomaso Youssif, 40, was killed in front of the clothing store he
owned, while 15-year-old Ivan Nuwya was shot to death in the
neighborhood of Tahrir, outside of his house in front of the local
mosque of Alzhara.
Vatican Radio offers a report:
Vatican
Radio: Concern is growing once again over violence against Christians
in nothern Iraq where, in the last week alone, seven of them have been
killed in the city of Mosul. Attacks have tapered off amid a drastic
decline in overall violence nationwide but these latest killings have
sparked renewed fears. The Chaldean Archbishop of Kirkuk, Luis Sako,
has condemned the violence.
Archbishop Sako: In Mosul the
situation is terrible especially for the Christians and many families
left the city, children cannot go to the school and also people cannot
go to work they are staying in their houses. Just a real tragedy for
them. I made an appeal to the Mosul population because I am from Mosul
-- I lived years in Mosul, in a parish -- and I had many, many
relationships with Muslims most of them so I made a call and an appeal.
This appeal has been delivered in all the local medias. This could be
helpful to encourage Muslim moderates to react and to do something.
The United Nations and Peoples Organization notes
the Wednesday meeting of the European Parliament of the EPP-ED in
Brussles which addressed "Christian Communities in the Muslim World:
Iraq". Archbishop of Mosul Basile Georges Casmoussa called the crisis
"heartbreaking" and stated Iraq Christians make up 40% of the refugee
population despite being only 4% of Iraq's population. He also noted
that that "aid was not reaching Christians in Iraq". The report also
notes: "Kirkuk was identified as a crucial issue by Ms. Naglaa Elhag,
of the IKV Pax Christi organization, in her presentation on 'The
Situation of Refugees in Iraq' -- the topic of the final panel. Until
this was addressed and Europe adopted a cohesive policy there were few
positive signs to be seen in the region Ms. Elhag concluded. Even
outside Iraq, Christians continued to find themselves excluded from
basic social services and had to face ongoing intimidation and
violence. There was also a pressing need to hold the Iraqi government
accountable for its failure to adequately protect the Iraqi Christian
minority." Marwan Ibrahim (AFP) reports
Archbishop Louis Sako declared today, "We are the target of a campaign
of liquidation, a campaign of violence. The objective is political. . .
. We have heard many words from Prime Minister Maliki, but
unfortunately this has not translated into reality. We continue to be
targeted. We want solutions, not promises." So, to toss back to Dana
Perino, no, "that" was not "resolved."
Dana Priest (Washington Post) was online at her paper yesterday afternoon for a discussion with readers
and the topic of the National Intelligence Estimate [] was raised.
Priest: "The jist of the NIE has been known for a while, since all the
reporting that the Washington Post and other major news organizations
have been doing over the past year says, basically, the same thing. In
this sense, the NIE does not offer a big revelation; it just brings the
series of daily intel/military analysis on Afghanistan to a higher
level with more visibility. Unlike the days before the Iraq war, many
people have access to what's happening in afghanistan and are willing
to share it with reporters, in part because they are frustrated it's
not getting more attention and they believe it should if, as we have
said since 9-11, defeating terrorism is a priority." Wednesday Jonathan S. Landay, Warren P. Strobel and Nancy A. Youssef (McClatchy Newspapers) reported
on the upcoming National Intelligence Estimate (which may or may not be
released prior to the US elections in November), "The draft NIE,
however, warns that the improvements in security and political
progress, like the recent passage of a provincial election law, are
threatened by lingering disputes between the majority Shiite Arabs,
Sunni Arabs, Kurds and other minorities, the U.S. officials said.
Sources of tension identified by the NIE, they said, include a struggle
between Sunni Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen for control of the oil-rich
northern city of Kirkuk; and the Shiite-led central government's
unfulfilled vows to hire former Sunni insurgents who joined Awakening
groups." At the White House yesterday Dana Perino noted that US
Secretary of State Condi Rice has not read the report. Not a slam at
Condi, just noting that the report is under wraps. Rice noted she
hadn't read it in brief remarks to the press before meeting with Maris
Reikstins (Lativian Foreign Affairs Minister) in DC, "Well, in fact, I
have actually not seen the NIE. I will -- I assume that we'll be
briefed on it shortly. But in any case, we had asked for the
intelligence community to take a look. It's important that it do so."
The issue of the NIE was raised at Thursday's State Dept press briefing
conducted by Sean McCormack who noted, "She [Rice] has not yet seen it,
and I don't believe any of the policy makers in the State Department
have seen any drafts of this assessment. I would expect at some point
that they will be briefed on it."
As noted in yesterday's snapshot,
Iraqi MP Saleh al-Auaeili was assassinated yesterday. al-Auqaeili had
been one of the 30 member Sadr bloc in Parliament. Tensions are high
over the assassination and Jeffrey Fleishman (Los Angeles Times) reports
overnight fighting in the Sadr City section of Baghdad between, on one
side, Sadr supporters and, on the other, Iraqi and US forces. Fleishman
also notes that Ahmed Massoudi ("a Sadr spokesman") states, "The
occupation sent us a message by staging this attack [the assassination]
because of our stance against the agreement." Sam Dagher (New York Times) quotes
Sheik Salah al-Obeidi (Moqtada al-"Sadr's chief spokesman") stating,
"By killing Ugaili they are silencing a major opponent of the
agreement" -- which would be the treaty the White House and the puppet
of the occupation want to pretend is a SOFA. Sheik al-Obeidi ties the
assassination in with other pressure to push on the treaty including US
Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte's visit to Iraq this week and
he also notes that a demonstration will take place October 18th in
Baghdad "against the American presence in Iraq." Ernesto London (Washington Post) quoted
MP Ahmad al-Massoudi stating, "We have laid the blame on the occupation
forces and the Iraqi government for the martyrdom of [the lawmaker]
because the explosion happened in an area that is under the control of"
the US military (the Green Zone). Marwa Sabah (AFP) reports
that the "[m]ourners shouted anti-American slogans . . . as relatives
hugged each other and wept while the wooden coffin of Ogayly was
brought out of his home early on Friday draped in the tri-colour Iraqi
flag." Khaled Farhan (Reuters) notes
a statement released by Moqtada al-Sadr: "The martyr gave most of his
time to eject the occupiers. . . . And for this reason the hand of the
hateful occupation and terrorism killed him." Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) explains
that observers (US and Iraqi) are noting a shift from acts of violence
targeting mass numbers of people to assassination attempts "using
magnetic bombs, weapons with silencers and bicycle bombs. As
provinicial elections approach, some officials worry that
assassinations will increase as political parties try to eradicate
their competitors." Leila Fadel (McClatchy) quotes
the statement by al-Sadr reading, "Here is another star that brightens
in the sky of martyrs, of Sadr followers and the sons of Iraq. Another
martyr waters the land of Iraq with his blood, a martyr that sacrifices
himself for the sake of Iraq and the people of Iraq, a martyr that gave
all of his time to expel the occupier and not to sign agreements with
him."
Tensions in Baghdad also include the ongoing conflict between northern Iraq and Turkey. Hurriyet notes
reports coming out stating that Turkey will be "direct talks with the
regional administration in the northern Iraq in its fight against the
terror organization, PKK". CNN notes that Turkey bombed northern Iraq again today. Reuters provides
the catch-up for the latest tensions, "Turkey's parliament on Wednesday
approved a government request to extend for another year a mandate to
launch military operations against PKK rebels based in northern Iraq
from where they are suspected of crossing into Turkey to attack
soldiers.
Turkish authorities are under mounting pressure after a
series of deadly attacks on Turkish security forces and police, which
has left more than 20 dead in recent days." Meanwhile the Turkish Daily News offers
this observation, "It looks like the [Turkish] government will not bow
to pressure from the opposition which calls for a ground incursion to
Iraq as well as setting up a security zone in the border." At the US
State Dept today, spokesperson Sean McCormack was asked about Prime
Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan's statements regarding " a buffer zone in
northern Iraq" to prevent attacks by the PKK on Turkey and McCormack
replied, "We are working with the Turkish and Iraqi governments on a
common problem, and that is the threat of terrorism from the PKK." An
October 17th vote for a non-permantnet seat on the United Nations'
Security Council will be held and that Turkey is a candidate for that
seat. Asso Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) quotes
PKK "senior leader" Bozan Takeen declaring in a phone interview "from
his hideout in Iraqi Kurdistan," "We are ready and our forces are
ready. We are not afraid of them. If they want to attack Iraq's
Kurdistan, then the Middle East will turn into a fire ball."
Meanwhile
Wednesday, in the Green Zone, US Maj Gen Jeffery Hammond declared:Now,
take for example, the transition or transfer of the Sons of Iraq to
Government of Iraq control. Now, we have two phases to this plan. The
first one is the transfer of the Sons of Iraq to the, to the Government
of Iraq control, which will include the assumption and the payment of
their salaries starting this month in October. We're working very
closely with our Iraqi counterparts to make sure this works. The
Government of Iraq has committed to accept responsibility for the Sons
of Iraq and it's been mandated in the Prime Minister Order No. 118‑C,
and we're going to be there to assist in the transfer. We spent the
last few weeks working hand in hand with the Iraqi Security Forces, the
IFCNR, our Iraqi partners and I'm confident ‑‑ I'm confident this is
going to go well. But again, effective this month, the Government of
Iraq will start paying the salaries for the Sons of Iraq.
Actually . . . Anwar J. Ali, Sam Dagher, Stephen Farrell, Erica Goode and Alissa J. Rubin (New York Times) report
on the tensions brewing among the "Awakeing"s including graffiti
appearing that is "the motto of a feared paramilitary unit during
Saddam Hussein's era": "Allah. Homeland. Salary" -- which "Awakening"
Sgt. Alaa al-Janabi ("Dora Awakening") states is "our slogan."
al-Janabi goes on to cite that the Iraqi government is not paying them
enough money to live on and offer "We're not going to fight again.
Unless they make us." Saleh al-Jubori ("a leader of the Awakening
Council in Dora") states that "there is no trust between us and the
National Police" and, "if the Awakening is let go, Dora will go back to
worse than it was before. I hope you don't consider this a threat." And
staying with the topic of "worse," Robert Fisk (Independent of London) reports
"that secret executions are being carried out in the prisons run by
Nouri al-Maliki's 'democratic' government. The hangings are carried out
regularly -- from a wooden gallows in a small, cramped cell -- in
Saddam Hussein's old intelligence headquarters at Kazimiyah. There is
no public record of these killings in what is now called Baghdad's
'high-security detention facility' but most of the victims -- there
have been hundreds since America introduced 'democracy' to Iraq -- are
said to be insurgents, given the same summary justice they mete out to
their own captives."
Staying with violence, Reuters notes
that 28-year-old journalist Diyar Abbas was shot dead in Kirkuk today
joining "at least 135 journalists [who] have been killed in the line of
duty since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003." Tuesday the Committee to Protect Journalists featured Robert Mahoney's report
on 27-year-old Iraqi journalist Jehad Abdulwahid Hannoon who had
surived a shooting in Baghdad and, with help from the international
journalism community (including CBS News' Lara Logan), was able to come
to the US where he had "successful surgery in a California hospital to
repair his bullet-shattered right leg." CPJ notes "135 journalists and
50 support workers" have died in Iraq. Here, we say 185 journalists.
"Support workers" are doing a great deal more than that classification
implies. So Diyar Abbass becomes at least the 186th journalist to die
in Iraq.
In some of today's other reported violence . . .
Bombings?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
a Baghdad roadside bombing that claimed 2 lives and left twelve
wounded, a Baghdad car bombing claimed 12 lives with twenty-two more
wounded, a Mosul roadside bombing that claimed 2 lives and left
fourteen wounded. On the Mosul roadside bombing, China's Xinhua cites
a police source who explains, "A roadside bomb detonated in the
afternoon at a popular marketplace in the Bab al-Tob neighborhood".
Corpses?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 corpse discovered in Baghdad.
In legal news, mercenaries in Iraq got a setback today. Matthew Barakat (AP) reports
that KBR contractor Ira L. Waltrip -- caught with child pornography --
was informed by US District Judge T.S. Ellis III that he wasn't any
getting any special breaks and that the argument that Waltrip was doing
the same duties soldiers do so should be punished the same way one of
them would have been was bunk. The Judge informed Waltrip's attorney
that, "He wasn't there because he volunteered. He was there to get some
money."
Public TV notes. NOW on PBS examines the American Dream as gas prices soar and home values crumble. PBS' Washington Week
finds Gwen sitting down with Washington Post's Dan Balz, National
Journal's James Barnes, Wall St. Journal's David Wessel and mystery
guest Karen Tumulty (Time magazine) who may or may not do her Hush,
Hush Sweet Charlotte impersonation. Both programs air tonight in some
PBS markets, check local listings.
Turning to the US presidential race, Cynthia McKinney is the Green Party presidential candidate and Rosa Clemente is her running mate. Rosa has the following upcoming campaign event this weekend in New York:
Jericho 10th Anniversary Weekend of Resistance www.jerichomovement.com
Saturday, October 11, 2008 @ 12 Noon Rally at the Harlem State Office
Building (Corner of 126th St. & A.C. Powell Blvd.) March through
Harlem @ 1 p.m. Closing Rally in Morningside Park @ 2 p.m. Between
112th & 114th near Morningside Ave. entrances
Ralph Nader is the independent presidential candidate and Sunday he will be Fairfax, VA to speak at a press conference and rally at Geroge Mason Univeristy beginning at 5:00 p.m.
Barack Obama is the Democratic presidential candidate, Joe Biden is his running mate. As Wally and Cedric
noted yesterday, Barack seemed to offer some sort of Born Free/Elsa
excuse for his friendship with Ayers whom he called "rehabilitated." Jake Tapper (ABC News) ponders rehabilitation:
And Ayers has made it clear that he is unrepentant.
''I don't regret setting bombs,'' Ayers told the New York Times in 2001.
''I feel we didn't do enough.'' Asked if he would do it all again,
Ayers said ''I don't want to discount the possibility. I don't think
you can understand a single thing we did without understanding the
violence of the Vietnam War."
In a comic strip that Ayers recently posted on his blog,
Ayers tried to explain the "we didn't do enough quote" from seven years
ago, writing, "It's impossible to get to be my age and not have plenty
of regrets. The one thing I don't regret is opposing the war in Vietnam
with every ounce of my being. During the Vietnam War, the Weather
Underground took credit for bombing several government installations as
a dramatic form of armed propaganda. Action was taken against symbolic
targets in order to declare a state of emergency. But warnings were
always called in, and by design no one was ever hurt.
"When I say,
'We didn't do enough,' a lot of people rush to think, 'That must mean,
"We didn't bomb enough s---."' But that's not the point at all. It's
not a tactical statement, it's an obvious political and ethical
statement. In this context, 'we' means 'everyone.' The war in Vietnam
was not only illegal, it was profoundly immoral, millions of people
were needlessly killed. Even though I worked hard to end the war, I
feel to this day that I didn't do enough because the war dragged on for
years after the majority of the American people came to oppose it. I
don't think violent resistance is necessarily the answer, but I do
think opposition and refusal is imperative."
(He doesn't think violent resistance is NECESSARILY the answer?)
So today, with today's facts, does Obama think Ayers has been "rehabilitated"?
No, he doesn't think so, a source at the campaign tells me.
Mike did a press roundup on Barack's Ayers stories last night, Kat called out AP's Philip Elliott who does not seem to grasp the number of "40," Ruth contemplated the press mistakes, Rebecca noted the lack of standards and Marcia congratulates Oklahoma community members (as have Kat, as did Elaine and Mike). Oklahoma community members are supporting the Republican ticket of John McCain and Sarah Palin.
The McCain-Palin campaign has a new TV ad entitled "Ambition" (click here to read more about it):
ANNCR: Obama's blind ambition.
When convenient, he worked with terrorist Bill Ayers.
When discovered, he lied.
Obama. Blind ambition. Bad judgment.
Congressional liberals fought for risky sub-prime loans.
Congressional liberals fought against more regulation.
Then, the housing market collapsed costing you billions.
In crisis, we need leadership, not bad judgment.
JOHN MCCAIN: I'm John McCain and I approve this message.
In addition, the Republican ticket notes:
Today
McCain-Palin 2008 announced that Bill Bruins, a dairy farmer from Fond
du Lac County, Wisconsin, joined the McCain-Palin Farm & Ranch Team
National Steering Committee. Bruins joins a distinguished team of
elected officials and leaders in agriculture who share a common goal
with John McCain: to provide the leadership necessary to create
prosperity in America's rural heartland. "John McCain understands
agriculture's need for a comprehensive national energy policy that will
combat rising energy costs," Bruins said. "I support John McCain
because he will foster greater opportunities for agriculture to thrive
in a market-driven society by reducing taxes and government
regulations. Most importantly, he understands that reducing trade
barriers expands international commerce and increases farmers' income."
In addition to serving on the McCain-Palin Farm and Ranch Team National
Steering Committee, Bruins joins former Wisconsin Secretary of
Agriculture Jim Harsdorf as a Wisconsin state co-chair on the Wisconsin
McCain-Palin Farm & Ranch Team. "Bill's understanding of
agriculture from both state and national public policy involvement
makes him a great addition to the McCain-Palin team in Wisconsin,"
Harsdorf said. "Bill Bruins is a hands-on dairy and crop producer who
understands the importance of John McCain's support for free trade, his
commitment to reducing the inheritance and capital gains tax on farmers
and his plan to reduce high energy costs by pursuing domestic energy
sources." The continuing success of American agriculture and the health
of America's rural heartland require a leader who understands that
productivity and innovation are created by the effort, ingenuity and
investment of individual Americans. As president, John McCain will
address the key issues facing agriculture and rural America:
Establishing a comprehensive energy strategy
Controlling taxation and regulation
Judicial restraint and preserving property rights
Providing a sustainable, market-driven risk management system for farmers
Promoting agricultural markets and reducing trade barriers
Improving incentives to invest in technology and rural infrastructure
Encouraging common-sense conservation and food safety measures
Securing America's borders and implementing a fair and practical immigration policy
Recognizing the role of agriculture in national security
Strengthen
America's economic competitiveness by eliminating wasteful government
spendingThe benefits of American leadership in agriculture extend well
beyond our borders -- America's contribution to meeting the food,
fiber, feed and energy needs of a growing world population through
efficient production and technology innovation are critical to our
national security. More details on John McCain's statement on
"Prosperity for Rural America" can be found on the McCain-Palin 2008
web site at rural.JohnMcCain.com. MCCAIN-PALIN 2008 FARM & RANCH TEAM NATIONAL STEERING COMMITTEE*
And finally, Team Nader notes:
This morning, as markets around the world are crashing, Nader/Gonzalez is on the rise.
And we need your help right now.
Here's why:
We have a chance over the next week to run inexpensive radio ads.
In battleground states all across this country.
To expose The Bailout Boys -- Obama and McCain.
And to let the American people know that on November 4, they have a choice.
The people's candidate -- Independent Ralph Nader.
The man who stood against the bailout of Wall Street crooks.
And for regulation that would have prevented the current crisis.
Here's the problem:
We want to run the radio ads from October 21 to Election Day -- November 4.
In thirty markets all across this country.
Our radio guy tells us he needs the money by Monday to be able to reserve air time for the last two weeks before the election.
Throughout this year, when we have asked, you have delivered.
Thanks to you, we have not missed one fundraising deadline this year.
Now, we are in a corner.
Over the past week, you have donated $130,000 to our October Surprise Fund.
On our way to our goal of $250,000 by Sunday midnight.
Now, to reach our goal, we need 12,000 of you -- our loyal supporters -- to kick in $10 each.
We know that many of you have dug deep for the past seven months.
So,
after you hit that contribute button, pick up the phone and get your
friends, relatives, neighbors -- who are angry about the bailout and
looking for an independent outlet -- to support the one candidate who
has stood with the American people against the corporate criminal elite
on Wall street.
To give you a sneak preview, we have cut a demo tape.
If
we reach our goal by Sunday night, we will be professionally producing
a version of this demo ad and getting it out to our radio guy in Los
Angeles.
As the Dow collapses, the Nader/Gonzalez shift the power platform is on the rise.
So, donate now -- whatever you can afford -- $10, $100, $1000 -- up to the legal limit of $2,300.
Help us fund our nationwide radio ad buy.
Inform the American public.
There is a choice on November 4.
Vote Independent.
Vote Ralph Nader for President.
Onward to November.
The Nader Team
iraqethan colekim gamelthe new york timesalissa j. rubinerica goodesam dagherstephen farrellanwar j. alirobert fiskthe washington postdana priestleila fadelmcclatchy newspapersnancy a. youssefjonathan s. landaywarren p. strobeljeffrey fleishmanthe los angeles timesnow on pbspbswashington weeklike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlz