| Thursday, November 18, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, stronger  analysts (including The Economist) weigh in on Iraq's political issues, Iraqi  Christians continue to be targeted, Military Families Against the War calls for  all US troops to be brought home from Iraq and Afghanistan, the whores of Beggar  Media continue to avoid realites that would make them call out the War Hawk in  the White House, and more.     "Iraq Is a Democracy." In theory, but it doesn't work like one.  Yes, it has had three, free national elections and a constitutional referendum  and there are elements of democracy. I started covering Iraq in 1998, living  there from the start of the war until late 2009, and it certainly feels freer  than before. Saddam Hussein held his last election, a plebiscite in 2002, and  claimed 100 percent of the vote (and maybe it was true -- who would risk voting  against him?). Under the old regime, even when I could slip away from government  minders, people were usually too scared of informants among their family and  friends to speak openly. You weren't even allowed to keep your mouth shut.  Failure to join the chanting crowds at pro-government rallies -- watched closely  by neighborhood-level Baathists -- could cost you your job, admission to  university, or worse. Now there's lots of open talk, government criticism, and  widespread Internet access.  But Iraq is not democratic in a reliable or deep sense, where  people can expect equal rights, legal protections, or access to their leaders.  Free speech is still a dangerous pursuit. At least seven reporters or their  staff have been killed this year in what appear to be direct attacks on news  agencies, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Most others are  afraid to get too specific in their criticisms of the leadership. Regulations  are tightening, and the track record of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who has  just maneuvered himself into another term in office, is getting darker. The  government has started requiring that news agencies register their staff and  equipment. Media regulations ban quotations from anonymous sources. Human Rights  Watch recently documented government  efforts to ban public demonstrations and encourage security forces to violently  disperse attempts at peaceful protest.    Some people, like Kaplow, claim three national elections.  We don't.  There  was the 2005 elections (December 2005) and there was the March elections this  year which were national elections.  The way they're getting three is they're  counting the 2009 elections which were provincial elections.  Could they be  considered "national elections"?     Most of the time a national election takes place on a set date.  Whereas  the 2009 provincial elections were held on two different dates, months apart.   The KRG voted on their own and were not part of that. January 31, 2009  was election day for 14 of Iraq's 18  provinces. The KRG held their elections July 25, 2009 .  And  Kirkuk wasn't allowed to hold elections -- which is why only 17 of 18 provinces  held elections in 2009.   In addition, if we were going to count those, it would  be four elections because January 30, 2005 saw governorate council elections.  National elections, for our purposes here, were the December 2005 and March 2010  parliamentary elections.  Only the parliamentary elections result in the  creation of a national government so we only count the two parliamentary  elections as "national elections" here.  Others can count as they want.  Let's stay with the most recent elections.  March  7th, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board noted in  August, "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as a  success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that optimism  in a cold shower of reality." 163 seats are needed to form the executive  government (prime minister and council of ministers). When no single slate wins  163 seats (or possibly higher -- 163 is the number today but the Parliament  added seats this election and, in four more years, they may add more which could  increase the number of seats needed to form the executive government),  power-sharing coalitions must be formed with other slates, parties and/or  individual candidates. (Eight Parliament seats were awarded, for example, to  minority candidates who represent various religious minorities in Iraq.) Ayad  Allawi is the head of Iraqiya which won 91 seats in the Parliament making it the  biggest seat holder. Second place went to State Of Law which Nouri al-Maliki,  the current prime minister, heads. They won 89 seats. Nouri made a big show of  lodging complaints and issuing allegations to distract and delay the  certification of the initial results while he formed a power-sharing coalition  with third place winner Iraqi National Alliance -- this coalition still does not  give them 163 seats. November  10th a power sharing deal resulted in the Parliament meeting for the  second time and voting in a Speaker. And then Iraqiya felt double crossed on the  deal and the bulk of their members stormed out of the Parliament. David Ignatius  (Washington Post) explains, "The fragility of the coalition  was dramatically obvious Thursday as members of the Iraqiya party, which  represents Sunnis, walked out of Parliament, claiming that they were already  being double-crossed by Maliki. Iraqi politics is always an exercise in  brinkmanship, and the compromises unfortunately remain of the save-your-neck  variety, rather than reflecting a deeper accord. " After that, Jalal Talabani  was voted President of Iraq. Talabani then named Nouri as the prime  minister-delegate. If Nouri can meet the conditions outlined in Article 76 of  the Constitution (basically nominate ministers for each council and have  Parliament vote to approve each one with a minimum of 163 votes each time and to  vote for his council program) within thirty days, he becomes the prime minister.  If not, Talabani must name another prime minister-delegate. . In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister-delegate. It  took eight months and two days to name Nouri as prime minister-delegate. His  first go-round, on April 22, 2006, his thirty day limit kicked in. May 20, 2006, he  announced his cabinet -- sort of. Sort of because he didn't nominate  a Minister of Defense, a Minister of Interior and a Minister of a Natioanl  Security. This was accomplished, John F. Burns wrote in "For Some, a  Last, Best Hope for U.S. Efforts in Iraq" (New York Times),  only with "muscular" assistance from the Bush White House. Nouri declared he  would be the Interior Ministry temporarily. Temporarily lasted until June 8,  2006. This was when the US was able to strong-arm, when they'd knocked out the  other choice for prime minister (Ibrahim al-Jaafari) to install puppet Nouri and  when they had over 100,000 troops on the ground in Iraq. Nouri had no  competition. That's very different from today. The Constitution is very clear  and it is doubtful his opponents -- including within his own alliance -- will  look the other way if he can't fill all the posts in 30 days. As Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) observes, "With the three top slots  resolved, Maliki will now begin to distribute ministries and other top jobs, a  process that has the potential to be as divisive as the initial phase of  government formation." Jane Arraf  (Christian Science Monitor) points out, "Maliki now has 30  days to decide on cabinet posts - some of which will likely go to Iraqiya - and  put together a full government. His governing coalition owes part of its  existence to followers of hard-line cleric Muqtada al Sadr, leading Sunnis and  others to believe that his government will be indebted to Iran." The stalemate  ends when the country has a prime minister. It is now eight months, eleven days  and  counting. David Romano (Rudaw) offers his take on  the power-sharing arrangements, "A Sunni Iraqiya parliamentarian, Osama Al  Nujaifi, became Speaker instead.  The Kurds remain weary of Al Nujaifi and his  penchant for strident Arab nationalism, reminding them a bit too much of  yesterday's Ba'athist discourse.  Nujaifi will likely remain a fierce opponent  of most of the Kurdistan Bloc's aspirations in the new government.  Meanwhile,  something clearly had to be done to placate Allawi, so a new 'National Security  Council' was created for him to lead.  The only problem is that no one seems to  know what powers, if any, this new National Security Council will have.  Muqtada  Al Sadr's group of parliamentarians is also entering this new government,  despite their bitterness towards Maliki for the offensive against them in 2008  as well as their abiding distrust of the Iraqiya bloc.  They will want some  important portfolios which no one trusts them enough to give them.  Nuri al  Maliki, once again, isn't particularly liked by any of the other groups, but  somehow he has managed to engineer his resurrection as Prime Minister for  another term.  Finally, virtually all the other parties remain deeply suspicious  of Kurdish aspirations, especially fearing that implementation of Article 140  could set the stage for eventual Kurdish secession from Iraq." The Economist emphasizes  a number of  issues -- including the Kurdish issues, "Mr Maliki has agreed to nearly all of  the 19 demands made by the Kurds, including a commitment to hold a referendum on  who should control the disputed city of Kirkuk. Mr Maliki is also said to have  promised some powerful ministries to a Shia group led by a populist anti-Western  cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr."  Writing today, The Economist  also grasps  what few other outlets can:   A new government has not yet been born.   Why The Economist has the ability to grasp that and so many others  don't is puzzling but credit goes to them for noting reality in their opinion  piece when most pieces passing for reporting from news outlets continually hail  the 'new' 'government'.    On the issue of the National Security Council, Alsumaria TV reports ,  "State of Law Coalition senior official Hassan Al Sunaid stated that the  political parties have started the legislation of a special law for the national  policy council which will play a major advisory role in shaping Iraq's future  policies, he said."  Bernard Gwertzman (Council on Foreign Relations)  interviews  Charles W. Dunne (NSC during the previous Bush administration)  about the developments.  Gwertzman notes of the power-sharing deal, "Allawi is  supposed to have an important policymaking role, says Dunne, although it remains  to be seen whether Maliki keeps his word and whether the Obama administration  will press him to do so."  Excerpt.  Bernard Gwertzman: A key question is how important this new  National Council for Higher Strategic Policies that Allawi is supposed to head,  will be, right?   Charles W. Dunne: This council has not yet been enshrined in Iraqi  law.  There is a school of thought that believes there will need to be a  constitutional amendment to make it serve as an effective check on the prime  minister's power. This is all going to be very contentious and the outcome is  very uncertain, which is probably one of the reasons why Allawi said, before he  departed for London, that the power-sharing deal is dead.  In addition, there  are very different views among the Iraqi political leadershipr about how this  council should function. Maliki clearly sees it as an advisory body, whose  advice he can ignore. Allawi and a number of his supporters see it as a venue in  which national security decisions by the prime minister, and important economic  decisions, can be altered or veteoed.  Even if legislation has passed to create  a fairly robust council, the concept of this council as it exists right now will  require 80 percent consensus within the council in order to implement a  decision, which in this political system -- as in any political system -- is  going to be difficult.    At Foreign Policy, David Bender offers  an  analysis of the deal that sees the new council and other efforts themselves as  being of little value and noting that the council -- under Allawi or another  Iraiqya member -- is not going to have grand powers:  But formally changing the chain of command in Iraq would require a  highly unlikely constitutional change, and it seems unlikely that Maliki will  ultimately agree to a significant reduction in his powers. He has argued that  the new council will function as an advisory panel with no independent  authority. If Allawi decides he is powerless in his new position, he could  resign and become a forceful leader of the opposition.  Between an unclear Iraqiya role, an uncomfortably large Sadrist  contingent, rising Kurdish demands, and no unity of purpose among any of the  political groups, the prospects for the next government are not great. But the  overall situation in Iraq will probably improve anyway. The next government  isn't going to resolve much of Iraq's deep social and political dysfunction, but  having it in place will finally allow the oil sector, budget, and infrastructure  projects to begin to move ahead.  Was it worth the eight (soon to be nine) month wait? No.   But is it a good thing that there's likely to be a government by  the new year? Absolutely.      Meanwhile Currency Newshound reports  that the  Ministry of Planning declared today that 10 times the current allocation of the  investment budget is needed to address issues of operations  such as government  salaries and the rations card system.  Shashank Bengali (McClatchy Newspapers' Middle  East Diary) crunches  other numbers -- the latest Brookings Institution figures for Iraq  -- and notes, among  other things, that Iraq is "on track to exceed the 2009 death total of 3,000".   Bengali picks many interesting figures.  Some he doesn't note include that  landlines are down in Iraq as compared to the middle of 2004 -- this may be  partly due to the large increase in cellular phones (and there was no cell phone  industry prior to the start of the Iraq War according to Brookings). The report  finds that an estimated 20,000 Iraqi medical doctors have left the country since  the start of the war and only 1,525 of that number have returned -- so (check my  math) 18,475 doctors have left and not returned. In addition, 2,000 Iraqi  medical doctors have been killed since the start of the Iraq War.  So the Iraq  War has resulted in the country losing an estimated 20,475 doctors.  The most  recent estimate finds approximately 16,000 medical doctors remain in Iraq.  CIA  estimates put the Iraqi population at between 26 and 30 million.  Check my math  but that should put the number of doctors at 0.053%  of the population.  The  median age in Iraq is 20.6 years-old.  In 2008, the official unemployment rate  in Iraq was 15.2%. Though there are no figures for this year, there's been no  improvement and that official figure is much lower than the actual unemployment  figure (the CIA notes that the unofficial estimate is 30%).  But in 2009, a  number of Iraqis were surveyed and asked if they thought unemployment would  improve in 2010?  37% hoped it would "fall slightly" or "fall a lot," 35%  thought it would increase -- slightly or a lot) and 24% expected it would remain  the same.   Turning to some of today's reported violence, Reuters notes  a roadside bombing outside Baiji  wounded one Sahwa leader while clashes at Baghdad's al-Tasfirat prison left  twenty prisoners injured. Xinhua reports  2 Baquba bombings  targeted Sahwa today with Firas Ahmed being killed in one and two other people  being killed in the second one.    At Answers For The Faith , Dr. D. explains , "Tuesday a six-year-old girl and  her Christian father were killed by a car bomb in Mosul. On Monday in Mosul,  gunmen barged into a home and killed two Christian men in their living room.  Today on Wednesday the bullet-riddled body of a 20-year-old Christian student  was found on a  street also in Mosul." Natasha Dado (Arab American News via New America Media) reports on last  week's rally in Detroit to protest the targeting of Iraqi Christians and quotes  Patrick Lossia stating, "As a result of the U.S. occupying Iraq, its Christian  population has declined from three percent to one percent. If America never  invaded Iraq in 2003, we would have stabilization. We're almost less than one  percent of the minority in Iraq, but we're the ones dying the most. I didn't  like Saddam Hussein, but it's a fact Iraq was safer under his regime." October  31st, Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad was attacked, over 70 people died,  over 70 were wounded. Among the dead were two priests, one of which was shot in  the back of his head "execution style." That event began the latest wave of  attacks on Iraqi Christians.Leila Fadel and Ali al-Qeisy  (Washington Post) report ,  "The names of the dead are pasted on the floor in the center of the church and  surrounded by lighted candles. But the window glass is missing, destroyed by  blasts and gunfire, and craters dot the ground - all reminders of the four  suicide bombers who carried out the deadly attack along with other gunmen." The  response to the latest wave of attacks is no different from earlier responses:  many Iraqi Christians attempt to relocate within and outside of Iraq. The  government response? When the issue receives global attention, Iraqi politicians  make a few public statments and nothing more is done. This has especially been  the pattern since Nouri al-Maliki was installed as prime minister in 2006. Alan Holdren (Catholic News Agency) quotes  the  Syrian Catholic Archbishop Basile Georges Casmoussa of Mosul stating, "In terms  of declarations, we are really saturated. What we are asking for are concrete  actions. We must find a solution, solutions, effective ways to safeguard the  security of Christians." Meanwhile Alsumaria TV reports   that Iraqi president Jalal Talabani is whining over France's offer of asylum to  victims of the October 31st attacks and their families and saying that Iraqi  Christians are welcome in the KRG. But they're not always safe in the KRG. And  they don't have all the bodyguards that Jalal does, do they? Jalal is one of the  two types of stupid on display of late. The first is someone basically in Iraq  but well protected who has a hissy that another nation might offer asylum to the  defenseless persecuted. The second is the Iraqi Christian who has fled Iraq at  some point and is now safely in another land (often a citizen of that land) and  who insists that Iraqi Christians must stay in Iraq. The Detroit rally was made  a joke by one of the leaders of the rally insisting that Iraqi Christians must  remain in Iraq. The very obvious point is that that leader didn't remain in Iraq  nor has he taken it upon himself to go back to Iraq. It's easy to call for  someone to make what could be a last stand while you're safe elsewhere.   The latest wave of attacks is one in a series of ongoing attacks. Iraqi  Christians have not been protected throughout the war. Anyone who feels they  need to leave should have all the resources and support needed. Anyone who feels  they want to stay should be encouraged and the Iraqi government should be  offering them all the resources and support they need. But what shouldn't happen  is for other people to be making the decisions for them. This is life or death  and it will be blood on someone's hands if they attempt to make the decision for  Iraqi Christians. Repeating, there is something highly offensive about an  American-Iraqi who wants Iraqi Christians to remain in Iraq while he sits his  happy little ass safe in Detroit. If what he now advocates had been done to him  and his family, he'd still be in Iraq. That no one involved in planning the  rally saw that rank hypocrisy is rather telling. (As was his cries that the US  military must remain in Iraq for years to protect Iraqi Christians. The  targeting is not an excuse to continue the illegal war.) 
 Kevin Menz (The Sheaf) reports on a Saskatoon  protest against the violence and quotes Peter Kiryakos stating, "It's genocide,  essentially. The Christian people, since the war began, have had no protection  and have been targeted by terrorist groups wanting them out of the country." If  it's genocide, it's criminal to suggest that Iraqi Christians should be forced  to stay in Iraq. (Repeating, some may want to leave, some may want to stay. That  is for them to decide and governments world should open their borders to those  who make the decision to leave.)     Over the next several months we want to gather tens of  thousands of signatures on the petition, which will also spread the word about  the campaign and build participation.
 (Text of the petition is below -- click here to sign). 
  Dear President Obama and Members of Congress:
 As of  November 2010, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have lead to:
 • the deaths of  over 5,787 American service members
 • the deaths of tens of thousands of  Afghani and Iraqi civilians
 • over 2,000 suicides of American veterans
 •  over 40,000 injuries to American service members
 
 In financial costs:
 •  It costs $1 million to keep one soldier on the ground in Afghanistan for one  year.
 • The operational costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have  already surpassed $1 trillion.
 • The total projected costs of the wars in  Iraq and Afghanistan is $4 trillion, including an estimated $1 trillion to  provide care for returning veterans.
 
 These wars are not making us safer.  They are betraying the values that lead many of our young men and women to  volunteer for their country and are ransoming the futures of this generation and  the next. These funds should be used to take care of the troops when they come  home, rebuild our economy, and protect our communities.
 
 Enough is enough!  Bring our troops and our tax dollars home NOW!
   Action is needed to end the wars.  A lot of people are willfully deluding  themselves, keeping their heads in the sand, refusing to call out War Hawk  Barack.       Sometimes a leader emerges And is followed for awhile Doesn't matter what he encourages As long as he's got style Young ones conceived in a passion Of directions we thought enlightened Grown-up, they follow the mood in fashion But beneath their bravado  You know they're frightened I remember a time gone by When peace and hope and dreams were high We followed inner visions and touched the sky Now we who still believe won't let them die     "Doesn't matter what he encourages as long as he's got style."  Who knew  Carole was a prophet?  Barack's encouraged war, encouraged drone attacks and so  much more.  But so many are so damn scared to call the Christ-child out.   Supposed life-long peace activists tremble in fear at the notion of pointing out  that the emperor sports no peace symbols.  They better grow the hell up pretty  damn quick because they're not just being played for fools, they're risking  lives around the world as they avoid calling out the War Hawk in the White  House.  This week, Gareth Porter (Dissident  Voice) breaks  new ground with his monumental scoop detailing how  the White House has actively been working to decieve the US voters into  believing the Iraq War would end when, in fact, it would not. NSC-er Puneet  Talwar was dispatched to offer Iraq 15,000 US troops after the end of  2011 'withdrawal' and to explain that the would simply shove these 15,000 under  the US Embassy to hide the remainders. As we've noted for months, Nouri got  US-backing to remain prime minister because he promised to allow US forces to  remain in Iraq past 2011.  From Gareth Porter's article:   The Iraqis also asked whether the 15,000 regular combat troops  could be augmented with Special Operations Forces, according to the Iraqi  official's account. Talwar said the additional deployment of SOF troops after  the withdrawal deadline would be possible, because the United States had never  publicly acknowledged the presence of SOF units in Iraq. The Pentagon signaled last summer that it was assuming the  post-2011 U.S. military presence in Iraq would be less than 20,000 troops. In a  press briefing last August, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Middle  East, Colin Kahl, said Iraq "is not going to need tens of thousands of  [American] forces". Talwar also told the Iraqis that any deployment of combat troops in  Iraq beyond the termination date of the U.S.-Iraqi agreement would require a  letter from Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. The Iraqi officials said the letter  would be sent.   How many times do you have to be lied to before you wake the hell up?  How  many lies can you stomach in order to avoid keeping your membership in the Cult  of St. Barack?   Let's provide context.  From the October 25th "Iraq  snapshot :" Philip J. Crowley:  Well, we have a Status of Forces Agreement and a strategic framework. The Status  of Forces Agreement expires at the end of next year, and we are working towards  complete fulfillment of that Status of Forces Agreement, which would include the  withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Iraq by the end of next year. The nature of  our partnership beyond next year will have to be negotiated. On the civilian  side, we are committed to Iraq over the long term. We will have civilians there  continuing to work with the government on a range of areas – economic  development, rule of law, civil society, and so forth. But to the extent that  Iraq desires to have an ongoing military-to-military relationship with the  United States in the future, that would have to be negotiated. And that would be  something that I would expect a new government to consider. [. . .] Should Iraq  wish to continue the kind of military partnership that we currently have with  Iraq, we're open to have that discussion.
 That should have sent off alarm signals immediately. Yet despite this being  declared a press briefing at the US State Dept, Amy Goodman couldn't cover it.   Of course, she used Barack's inaugaration to raise funds for her program  Democracy Now!  To raise big funds for her program -- or maybe you  think it's normal to CHARGE $1,000 for a ticket when you're so-called  'independent media'?  That's what she did. "For a donation of $1000, you can  join this extraordinary celebration" insisted Goodman in her  reach-in-your-pockets e-mail (entitled "Last Tickets for 1/20 Inaugural Peace  Ball & VIP Reception" and sent out January 8, 2009 at 8:55 pm).  This is the  woman who makes millions -- in fact, Pacfica Radio would have a lot less  economic problems if they still owned Goodman's program but she bullied,  blustered and blackmailed in order to get ownership of it.  Why?  It's not like  it does anything unless you need to hear what's going on in Aspen at the  conference she and her program used to criticize but now Amy speaks at.  She's  feathered her nest very well and yet continues to beg non-stop.  Pacifica is  paying far too much for her middle-of-the-road Charlie Rose style program.  And  her whoring for the White House knows no end.  In a functioning independent  media -- as opposed to the Beggar Media we've had for the last years -- Goodman  would have been called out for all of her whoring.     As we've long noted, she played a little game (she  wasn't the only one, it was very popular in 'independent' circles) where when a  Hillary supporter was on her show, they were asked about Hillary's votes for the  Iraq War but despite the fact that Hillary supporters were only one when Barack  supporters were (by contrast Barack supporters were often the entire show with  no effort to balance), no Barack supporter was ever asked to justify his votes  for the Iraq War.  He wasn't in the Senate in 2002.  He was in the Senate in  2005 and he voted repeatedly and consistently to continue the illegal war.  But  Amy played dumb.  Same way she LIED to her audience in January 2008  when she brought LIE FACE Melissa Harris-Lacewell on as a 'college professor'  who just happened to catch Barack's speech and compared it to MLK and blah,  blah, blah .  She never said a word about Hillary Clinton.  She couldn't shut  up about Barack.  And Amy should have informed her audience -- the audience she  repeatedly F**KS OVER -- that Melissa was part of the Obama campaign and had  been since 2007.  A week later, she would bring Melissa on -- back on -- to  attack Gloria Steinem in a little bit that was scripted ahead of time by Melissa  and Amy -- another 'detail' she forgot to inform viewers of, and Melissa -- in  the midst of her Jerry Springer-style theatrics -- would point out that she'd  been working for the Obama campaign since 2007.  If Melissa hadn't gotten angry  and lost it, viewer never would have known the little con Amy pulled on them.   Trusted media?  Before Melissa ever came on Democracy Now , Amy paired  up with Melissa when both guested on Rev Jesse Jackson's radio program.  She  damn well knew Melissa was part of the Obama campaign but she didn't think her  viewers required honesty or deserved it.     She whored and she continues to whore. (Which is why the WikiLeaks revelations were actually ignored on her  program . She provided a distraction, she just avoided providing an actual  service -- i.e. explaining to her audience that treaties were broken when the  current White House turned over prisoners to suspected and/or known torturers.)    Her program is useless and until her audience starts demanding accountability,  they're not going to see any change.  In the meantime, it's past time Pacifica  made clear to her that she already has ownership of that program, they're not  also going to fork over millions to air it.     People ask: "Where's the peace movement?  Why did it flounder?"  It  floundered because whores in Beggar Media  whored to get Barack in the White  House and all this time later they still can't take accountability.  Hearing the  ridiculous Larry Bensky try to pontificate on KPFA two weeks ago about ethical  standards was hilarious.  Not only is he a sexist pig, he's also the cheating  whore who booked a TWO HOUR 'analysis' of a Barack-Hillary debate and booked  only people who had endorsed Barack and 'forgot' to inform people of that.  He  allowed them to present as 'independent' 'analysists' and they were in no hurry  to tell KPFA audiences that they'd endorsed Barack.  That's how you rig the  analysis, that's how you ruin and destroy open debate and free speech.  So it  needs to be made very clear to Larry Bensky that his tired and whoring ass isn't  a respected voice and he can't claim the high ground until he can take  accountability for his whoring.   For reasons, never clear to me, Howard Zinn  decided to whore in the last five months of 2008.  Howard Zinn died.  For many  of us, all his words about elections and politicians were rendered meaningless  when he hopped on the Barack Obama wagon.  He destroyed his own legacy and you'd  think some of the other whores would look at that and think, "Damn, I better  take accountability now before my whoring becomes my legacy."  But thinking has  never been Beggar Media's strong suit.  For those who missed Crowley's remarks, another administration figure soon  spoke up.  From the November 9th snapshot :     Anne Gearan (AP) breaks the  news this morning that US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates stated publicly  today in Kuala Lumpur that the US military may stay in Iraq beyond 2011. She  quotes him stating, "We're ready to have that discussion if and when they want  to raise it with us."  Donna Miles (Defense Dept's press  department) adds, "But Gates said he wouldn't expect  such a request, at least until the Iraqis have selected a president, prime  minister and speaker of the council of representatives and made  ministerial-level appointments."     Beggar Media's Cult of St. Barack better find its comfort zone to critique  Barack from or they better start embracing these illegal wars because their  silence allows these wars to continue.  Finally, last month, we noted :  Another Times' journalist  who has moved on from Iraq is Joao Silva. His photographs have illustrated (and  often saved) many a Times' article filed  in Iraq -- for example, in the Let's-Meet-The-Awakenings nonsense of 2007, it  was Silva's photographs that told the larger truths. Today, the New York Times  reports at their blog, Silva -- who has been  covering Afghanistan -- was injured after stepping on a land  mine.   J.J. Sutherland (NPR) reports this evening, "Joao  Silva is the legendary New York Times photographer who stepped on a land mine last month in Afghanistan . He lost both  legs among a host of other injuries. Amazingly. because of the incredible  battlefield medicine available these days, he's going to live. And like most  soldiers in his condition he's ended up at Walter Reed. "       |