Saturday, March 26, 2016

Jobs


jobs and the economy



From July 28, 2013, that's "Jobs."  C.I. noted:


Barack plays out on the lawn with Caroline Kennedy who holds a football that reads "THE ECONOMY."  He says to her, "People say I don't focus enough on jobs and the economy."  She replies, "Nonsense.  You've provided plenty of jobs to those of us who raised money for your campaigns!"  Isaiah archives his comics at The World Today Just Nuts.


Caroline Kennedy certainly bought her seat at the table, didn't she?


Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"




Saturday, March 26, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, the Islamic State launches more attacks in Iraq, more US troops will be heading to Iraq, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visits the country, and much more.



AP reports that the death toll has now climbed to 41 with at least one hundred and five more people left injured from a Friday bombing in Iraq.  AL JAZEERA reports:

Mobile phone footage widely shared by Iraqis on social media showed players in football kits gathering to collect trophies and footballs as at least one child stood nearby.
One man throws a new football to the crowd, before the camera shakes violently and the footage ends, at what witnesses said was the moment a bomber in the crowd detonated an explosives belt.

NATIONAL IRAQI NEWS AGENCY explains that a bomber blew himself up on the field of a soccer stadium in  Iskanderiyah. Abbas al-Ani (AFP) notes, "The mayor, Ahmed Shaker, was among the dead, as was one of his bodyguards and at least five members of the security forces."  BBC News reports that burying of the dead began today and "Many of the dead were young boys who were in a trophy ceremony hit by the bomber, himself said to be a teenager."  Michael D. Regan (THE NEWSHOUR, PBS) notes that the Islamic State has claimed they orchestrated the attack.



The attack was condemned by the United Nations via Jan Kubis but more talk on Arabic social media revolved around Kubis' inability to find a suit that fits his body than focused on his words regarding "evil doers."

The United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon is in Iraq today and has met with KRG President Massoud Barzani.



: Ban Ki-moon, WB, IDB Presidents in ,meet President Masoud Barzani, PM Nechirvan Barzani





The visit was part of an economic effort -- for Iraq or for those who prey on Iraq? not yet clear -- which also featured Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank.  The two held a press briefing with Haider al-Abadi, prime minister of Iraq, and Ahmed Mohamed Ali al-Madani, president of the Islamic Development Bank.






Saif Hameed (REUTERS) reports the UN Secretary-General again stressed the need for national reconciliation in Iraq.  This go round, he attempted to tie it in with the efforts to defeat the Islamic State but talk, without pressure or incentive, is just talk.


Some of today's violence?

AL JAZEERA reports that the Islamic State sent 10 suicide bombers to attack Ein el-Assad base today resulting in 8 of the bombers being killed by Iraqi forces, 2 of the bombers blowing themselves up and "at least 18 soldiers" being killed.  GULF NEWS explains, "Al Assad airbase, located about 180 kilometres northwest of Baghdad in Anbar province, is one of the largest military installations in the country."


Meanwhile,  "The secretary and I both believe that there will be an increase to the U.S. forces in Iraq in the coming weeks."


This announcement was made by Gen Joseph Dunford at the press briefing he and Secretary of Defense Ash Cater held on Friday.



Q: The Marines this week in their support of the Iraqi offensive operation, is this something we will see more of, do you think, as time goes on in the fight to get to Mosul? And is -- can you talk about the accelerants that the secretary has talked about before and whether this is a key part of what you want to see the military do more of in Iraq over the next several months?


GEN. DUNFORD: I mean, Lita, we've talked I guess now for some months about setting the conditions for success in Mosul and -- and facilitating the Iraqi forces and staging around Mosul to begin to isolate Mosul, and as the Iraqis have announced, that has begun. These Marines that were there, the artillery battery that were there were in direct support of that. We put the -- we put the battery there to support the Americans that are there advising the Iraqi forces and also in a position to provide support to the Iraqi forces.

And from my perspective, this is no different than aviation fires we've been delivering. This happens to be surface fires -- (inaudible) -- artillery. But certainly no different conceptually than the fire support we've been providing to the Iraqis all along.

And with regard to further accelerants, the secretary and I do expect that there'll be increased capabilities provided to the Iraqis to set the conditions for their operations in Mosul. Those decisions haven't been made yet, but we certainly -- we certainly do expect more of the kinds of things that we saw in Ramadi, albeit a bit different tailored for operations in Mosul. But it's -- but again, the primary force fighting in Mosul will be Iraqi security forces and we'll be in a position to provide advise, assist and enabling capabilities to make them successful.

Q: It appears to be part of a -- more of a ground combat role than we've seen before.

GEN. DUNFORD: No, it's not. I mean, we have -- we have -- we have surface fires in Al Asad and other places, as an example, and we've used those in the past. And so this is not a fundamental shift in our approach to supporting the Iraqi forces. This happens to be what was the most appropriate tool that the commander assessed needed to be in that particular location.

[. . .]
Q: But General Dunford, we've just heard this week that there are actually 5,000 U.S. troops on the ground in Iraq. Why is the Pentagon and senior military leadership reluctant to say that it's more than 3,800?

GEN. DUNFORD: We're not reluctant, Jennifer. What we track is the number that are in our force management level. That's 3,800. But this is nothing that's inconsistent with what's been going on for the last 15 years in terms of people that are in and out on temporary duty less than a certain period of time, people that are in direct support of the embassy. Those have -- those have not been counted. In other words, there's a consistency in the way we've been counting people that's been going on for the last 15 years.

And at any given time, we have 3,800 directly in support of the mission. When units rotate, for example, we don't double-count those numbers, so if there's a unit of 200 that's being replaced by a unit of 200 and they both happen to be on the ground at the same time, we don't count that as 400, we haven't in the past 15 years, because that hasn't -- that hasn't counted against our force management level.

So the accounting of our people has been consistent. We're not denying that there's more people than 3,800; I think you got the numbers from us. But in terms of what we count in the mission, and that's in accordance with the direction that we've been given, the 3,800 is what's against the mission.

SEC. CARTER: Jim.

Q: (Off-mic.)

GEN. DUNFORD: No, I didn't say 5,000 was accurate, I said 3,800 was the force management level and there's some number above that on any given day as a result of people that support the embassy, people at a TDY and people in other categories that don't count against that 3,800.

SEC. CARTER: Jim?

Q: I'd like to follow up, if I could, on Lita's questions about the Marines and that fire base. Unlike the previous U.S. military combat positions and fire support, this is an independent base, these are U.S. military only. And by all indications, they are not just defensive, but in this latest movement by Iraqi forces, they provided fire support for offensive operations against ISIS. So why is this not the first footprint of a U.S. combat ground operation there in Iraq?

GEN. DUNFORD: Jim, the reason they're in a different base is simply a function of geometry. They're designed to support forces in an area called Makhmur. The artillery can't be co-located with the ground forces in Makhmur and provide effective fire support, so this position was selected because of the geometry necessary to support that particular location.

And with regard to providing support to Iraqi offensive capability, once again, I mean, to me, there's no inconsistency between what this artillery unit did and what our aviation support is doing every single day. I don't draw a distinction with it. In other words, we've said that we're providing enabling support to include combined arms capability to Iraqi forces as they conduct operations, which is exactly what this artillery unit was doing.

Q: Well, we have all indications that this is a pretty permanent position right now; that after a short period of time, U.S. Army personnel are going to replace the 26 MEU Marine there. And it still has all indications that the U.S. military is directly involved in the ground operations of -- with the U.S. -- with the Iraqi.

SEC. CARTER: Yes, maybe very quickly just say, even since last week now, as the Iraqis have started to consolidate their positions, the situation on the ground has changed in terms of where the Iraqis are in the relationship to the support, the defense of support they're providing to our artillery unit that's there. So that's already changed, you know, through the course of the week.

But in all honesty, I just cannot see this being inconsistent with everything that we've been doing over the last several months.

SEC. CARTER: And let me just add to that, what we'll be doing in coming months. This is our approach to eliminating ISIL from Mosul. The Iraqi Security Forces are the ones who are carrying out the assault, the envelopment, the assault, but we're helping them.

That's our -- that's been our approach and we'll continue to do that. Started in Ramadi, we'll continue to going up to Mosul. Carla?

Q: When do you anticipate seeing U.S. American ground forces closer to the front lines as the battle towards Mosul looms?

GEN. DUNFORD: Jim, one thing that I probably just need to clarify, this position is behind what is known as the forward line of troops for the peshmerga and Kurds. So it's by no means out in front on its own.

And secondly, what I would say about your question about the future is we have a series of recommendations that we will be discussing with the president in the coming weeks to further enable our support for the Iraqi security forces.

So again, the secretary and I both believe that there will be an increase to the U.S. forces in Iraq in the coming weeks. But that decision hasn't been made.

Nor -- you know, you alluded to decisions that have already been made about Army units replacing the Marine units. All that is pre-decision. There's been no decisions made about what's going to happen to this particular position in the future.

But it is going to be decided in the context of the broader issue that the secretary will bring to the president again, focused on what it is we need to do to maintain a minimum money campaign and what specifically do we need to do to enable operations in Mosul.



 "The secretary and I both believe that there will be an increase to the U.S. forces in Iraq in the coming weeks."


So much for Barack Obama's promise of no boots on the ground and of no US troops in combat.

Like every other promise, it was just another lie.


The last time I saw Richard was Detroit in '68
And he told me all romantics meet the same fate someday
Cynical and drunk and boring someone in some dark café
You laugh he said you think you're immune
Go look at your eyes they're full of moon
You like roses and kisses and pretty men to tell you
All those pretty lies pretty lies
When you gonna realize they're only pretty lies
Only pretty lies just pretty lies

-- "The Last Time I Saw Richard," written by Joni Mitchell, first appears on BLUE


Lies and more lies from Barack.


And lies have consequences.


On the 13th anniversary of the start of the Iraq War, March, 19, 2016, another US service member died in Iraq.


Dropping back to Tuesday's snapshot:

Barbara Starr (CNN) reports, "A U.S. Marine stationed at Firebase Bell was killed by an ISIS Katyusha rocket attack on Saturday. Eight U.S. troops were also wounded in the attack. Three were medivaced to Germany where one is described as having serious injuries a defense official told CNN."  Spencer Ackerman (GUARDIAN) notes of the attack:

The US marine who was killed in a rocket attack on Saturday died at the first exclusively American base established in Iraq since the Pentagon returned forces to the country in 2014, a spokesman said on Monday.
The base, whose existence had not previously been public, has come under fire from ever closer range over recent days, an indication that Isis knew about the outpost before the Pentagon announced its creation.



Dan Lamothe (WASHINGTON POST) offers a photo essay on the new base.


Barack's sending US troops into Iraq again.

And this as Iraqi soldiers are still deserting.  Wladimir van Wilgenburg (DAILY BEAST) reports:

At first, Iraqi soldiers involved in an operation to capture villages close to Mosul on Friday were in good spirits. “Allah Akbar,” Arabic for “God is Great,” they shouted after they hit an alleged Islamic State (ISIS) suicide bomber with US-provided mortars. But just one hour later many of them fled, fearing ISIS would strike back.
Early in the day, there were already signs of trouble. A sergeant named Hussein from the artillery battalion told The Daily Beast, “There has been some delays in what we expected, but it’s mostly because of their heavy use of sniper fire and of IEDS. We have not been really advancing today, but that is not part of our plan as of yet, but in coming hours, we are planning to move forward.”
[. . .]

 When their artillery struck something that created a huge explosion inside Nasr, Jibouri and his men shouted with joy. They thought maybe they’d hit an ISIS suicide bomber. General Jibouri looked with his binoculars over the trench to see the result of the artillery, and it seemed he already thought he achieved victory over ISIS militants in the village. 
Yet one hour later, his men were not so joyful, when most soldiers ran in panic, fleeing in their Humvees, fearing ISIS mortar attacks. Just a few of his men, including the artillery officers, stood their ground.
This seems to be exactly the biggest problem for the Iraqi army: the lack of morale. One week ago Iraqi soldiers abandoned their base, which forced the United States to send in more Marines in support, and one of them was killed. Again this time, Iraqi army soldiers almost completely deserted their positions, fearing an ISIS response to their artillery when,  in reality, not one mortar shell or bullet hit close to their positions.



Patrick Cockbun (INDEPENDENT) attempts to address what's going on:



Without any pubic admission or even telling the families of the US soldiers involved, they sent 200 Marines from the Marine Expeditionary Unit with four artillery units to the by now largely abandoned base. Their arrival was wholly contrary to the impression the Pentagon had previously given that US soldiers in Iraq are limited in number and not engaged in front line combat duties. Though the Marines were within rocket range of Isis ten miles away, they were not added to the official US roster of 3,870 troops in Iraq because they were supposedly there on a temporary assignment.
The US public may not have known that their soldiers were back in Iraq defending a fire base, but Isis certainly had observed the arrival of the Marines and the artillery. They began firing rockets at the base, one of which hit a bunker on 19 March, killing Master Sergeant Louis Cardin, a 27-year-old Marine from California, and injuring eight other Marines, three of them seriously. Two days later they made a ground attack in which two Isis fighters were killed.  At this point, the Pentagon was forced to become more open about where Sergeant Cardin had been when he died and admit that Marines were not just acting in support of the Iraqi Army and Peshmerga.

The purpose of sending the Marine unit into such as dangerous place was to revive the morale of the 15th Division and to some extent this was successful. 


Attempts?

Where's the subject, where's the noun?

He writes an overly long article but never names Barack Obama, the president of the United States.  Instead, things just happen, "they" do things.

As opposed to Barack Obama sending "200 Marines" on the mission.


Today, the US Defense Dept announced/bragged/boasted/claimed:



Strikes in Iraq
Using rocket artillery along with ground-attack, attack, fighter, and remotely piloted aircraft, coalition forces conducted 22 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of the Iraqi government:
-- Near Fallujah, two strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units.
-- Near Hit, five strikes struck an ISIL improvised weapons factory, an ISIL communications facility, an ISIL weapons storage facility and two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed two ISIL vehicles and an ISIL fighting position.
-- Near Kisik, two strikes destroyed an ISIL artillery piece and suppressed an ISIL fighting position and an ISIL mortar position.
-- Near Mosul, four strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units, suppressed two ISIL mortar positions, and destroyed two ISIL supply caches and three ISIL assembly areas.
-- Near Qayyarah, six strikes struck four separate ISIL tactical units, suppressed an ISIL mortar position, and destroyed three ISIL mortar positions, an ISIL artillery piece, an ISIL supply cache, an ISIL vehicle, and five ISIL assembly areas.
-- Near Sinjar, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL heavy machine gun position and an ISIL assembly area.
-- Near Sultan Abdallah, two strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units, destroyed an ISIL fighting position and denied ISIL access to terrain.

Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is a strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.


On the topic of US-led coalition bombings, we'll note this:










  • Reports confirm that about 30 Iraqi soldiers were hit mistakenly by US led coalition airstrike near Mosul.





















  • Read on ...

    Sunday, March 20, 2016

    The Birthday Reminder


    the birthday reminder

     

    That's  "The Birthday Reminder" from July 21, 2013.  C.I. noted:

    Barack declares, "35 years ago, this could have been me."  Valerie Jarrett points out, "36 years ago, sir!  Until your birthday next month, it's 36 years."  To which Barack replies, "Yes, I do have a birthday next month!  Consider this your reminder."  Isaiah archives his comics at The World Today Just Nuts.

    The point of the comic?


    The only reference point Barack ever has is himself.

    He's president of the United States but as self-absorbed as an adolescent.

    Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"



    Saturday, March 19, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, another US service member dies in Iraq, there's still no progress in the never-ending Iraq War, a piece of trash supporter of Hillary Clinton decides to attack the wife of Bernie Sanders, and much more.



    In Iraq, another US service member has been killed in the never-ending war.

    The Combined Joint Task Force issued the following:



    March 19, 2016
    Release #20160319-02
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

    Operation Inherent Resolve Casualty

    SOUTHWEST ASIA -- The Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve can confirm the death of a Coalition service member in northern Iraq today as a result of enemy action.

    Further information will be released as appropriate.

    It is CJTF-OIR policy to defer casualty identification procedures to the relevant national authorities.





    Barbara Starr and Jim Sciutto (CNN) report:


    A U.S. Marine was killed in a rocket attack by ISIS on a base at Makhmur in northern Iraq, the Pentagon said Saturday.
    Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook confirmed the death in a statement. He said the Marine was "providing force protection fire support at a recently established coalition fire base near Makhmur in northern Iraq."
      Cook added that several other Marines were wounded, though he did not provide details on their conditions.

      Liz Sly and Mustafa Salim (WASHINGTON POST) note:

      A senior Iraqi army officer in Makhmour said two rockets landed about 8:20 a.m. Saturday on the U.S. camp, a small, closely guarded facility where American advisers have been based for several months helping Iraqi army and peshmerga forces battle Islamic State fighters nearby and preparing for an offensive to recapture the key Iraqi city of Mosul.


      Yesterday, at VOGUE, Rebecca Bengal observed:

      It was 13 years ago tomorrow that a U.S.-led coalition launched a series of airstrikes in Iraq, dubbed “Shock and Awe,” which triggered the beginning of the near-decade-long war. The legacy of the Iraq War and its resurgence in the national conversation, especially now in the midst of a particularly charged and vitriolic election year, are among the urgent and resonant questions of Youngblood (Atria), a smart and riveting new novel by Matt Gallagher, set in the fictional town of Ashuriyah. Raised in Reno, Nevada, and now living in Brooklyn, Gallagher is an Iraq veteran—his first book, Kaboom, is a memoir that grew out of the blog he kept during his deployment (and which was subsequently shut down by the U.S. military).




      Unremarked upon in the coverage of the latest US military death in Iraq?  That the death occurred on the 13th anniversary of the start of the Iraq War.


      One of the few Tweets noting today's anniversary:






    • March 19 will forever be etched into the minds of the many millions who's lives have been utterly destroyed by the illegal invasion of



    • Some might expect THE NATION, THE PROGRESSIVE, etc to note the anniversary but when you're celebrating a woman who voted for the Iraq War (Hillary Clinton), it's a little hard to note any reality.



      So much takes place without comment.

      Like Barack Obama's promise that there would be no US "boots on the ground."

      Of course there are.

      Or the President's promise that the US troops would not be in combat when they are.


      The death also comes days after US Secretary of State John Kerry's ridiculous speech about the Islamic State in which he claimed ISIS was on the run.



      The US government has been bombing Iraq with bombs dropped from war planes since August 2014.  The daily bombing continued today with the US Defense Dept announcing:



      Strikes in Iraq
      Rocket artillery, ground attack, bomber and fighter aircraft conducted 25 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of Iraq’s government:

      -- Near Al Baghdadi, four strikes struck two ISIL bed-down locations and two ISIL staging areas.

      -- Near Al Huwayja, a strike destroyed an ISIL anti-air artillery piece.

      -- Near Fallujah, two strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units.

      -- Near Hit, seven strikes struck an ISIL training camp, two ISIL car bomb factories, an ISIL bomb factory, two ISIL tactical units, destroyed an ISIL tunnel, an ISIL vehicle, an ISIL supply cache, and an ISIL car bomb.

      -- Near Kisik, two strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL bunker and two ISIL assembly areas.

      -- Near Mosul, six strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed an ISIL assembly area, an ISIL supply cache, and three ISIL vehicles, and damaged an ISIL-used bridge section and suppressed an ISIL fighting position.

      -- Near Qayyarah, a strike destroyed an ISIL mortar position and an ISIL vehicle.

      -- Near Sinjar, two strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL vehicle and suppressed an ISIL fighting position.



      Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.




      All those bombings as well as John Kerry's blowhard claims and yet no progress to brag of.



      The Iraqi government targeting the Sunni civilians, under Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, led to the rise of the Islamic State -- a Sunni terrorist organization that got a foothold in Iraq because of this targeting.


      And with the US assisting the Iraqi government today, what has changed?



      Pics now Iraqi Sunni children victims of army airstrikes on their houses in





      That's right:  Nothing has changed.











    •  





    • Meanwhile, in the US, War Hawk Hillary Clinton continues to try to seize the Democratic Party's presidential nomination.





      Hillary insists she's not just another ugly face but someone who's uniquely qualified to run -- or at least ruin -- the world.



      She makes various claims of proximity to power.






    • 3/20/03 = million deaths tortured prisoners billion cash missing trillions spent & US oil fields

       
       
       



      There she is sitting with War Hawk Bully Boy Bush -- she was his 'work wife.'  Seated next to them is his actual wife Laura Bush.  Unlike Hillary, Laura Bush did not vote for the Iraq War or to send young men and women to their deaths.


      Hillary's chief qualifier?


      She's a War Hawk.




      THREE WAR CRIMINALS admire Clinton because she's loves war. No REAL progressive would support her.

       
       
       






    • She is disgusting.


      So are many of her supporters.


      Take pure trash US House Rep Luis Gutierrez.  Today, the corrupt member of Congress most infamous for being a near dead ringer for Barney Frank did what?

      Verbally attacked Jane Sanders.

      The wife of Senator Bernie Sanders was in Arizona with activists registering opposition to  Sheriff Joe Arpaio's 'tent cities.'  Arpaio briefly spoke with Sanders who made her opposition known.

      Because Jane Sanders is married to Senator Bernie Sanders and because Senator Sanders is vying with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, Luis Gutierrez rose from the gutter to spew an attack on her.


      Harper Neidig (THE HILL) reports, "Rep. Luis Gutiérrez (D-Ill.), an outspoken advocate of immigrant rights and a supporter of Hillary Clinton, slammed Sanders for the meeting, saying she was not forceful enough with Arpaio."


      As a general rule, family members are off limits during the campaign.


      But when you're corrupt and a piece of human filth like Gutieerez -- and when you're supporting someone as vile as Hillary Clinton -- you can't help but go to the family.


      Of course, Gutierrez's family is just as corrupt and filthy as he is.  In November 2010, Kim Geiger (CHICAGO TRIBUNE) reported:


       In 2010, Gutierrez paid his wife, Soraida, $37,000 for services listed as account manager, fundraiser manager and treasurer.
      "Soraida Gutierrez resigned from her successful, well-compensated, Wall Street investment banking career last year to work full-time for the Gutierrez for Congress campaign," Douglas Rivlin, the congressman's press secretary, said in a statement. "In her capacity as treasurer and fundraiser, she meets regularly with FEC officials, so her role is hardly a secret and a matter of public record."
      From 2004 to 2009, one of Gutierrez's daughters, Omaira Gutierrez, was paid $4,270 for managing the campaign's accounts. His other daughter, Jessica Gutierrez, was paid $600 in 2004 to assist with a fundraising project.



      Just your typical Hillary Clinton supporter -- vile, corrupt, disgusting, a tool for Wall Street.













      Read on ...

      Saturday, March 12, 2016

      The Lemon On The Lot



      the lemon on the lot

       

      From July 18, 2013, that's "The Lemon On The Lot."  

      C.I. wrote:

      Barack shows a couple a car and explains, "And right here we have the Obamacare!"  The couple replies, "Do you have anything not so beat up?  Something that actually runs?"  Isaiah notes Cedric's "Has he got a deal for you!" and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! SMILING BARRY HAS THE BEST PRICES!" from this morning about Barack's plan to try and sell ObamaCare again today gave him the idea. Isaiah archives his comics at The World Today Just Nuts.


      ObamaCare was a lemon.  A lot of liars pretended otherwise.  But most people have caught on.


      Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"



      Friday, March 11, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, the US government is accused of yet again lying about Iraq, the Iraqi government kills Sunni civilians, Moqtada al-Sadr holds another rally to back his best buddy Haider al-Abadi, and much more.


      Thursday, the US Defense Dept announced/claimed:


      Strikes in Iraq
      Attack, fighter and ground attack aircraft and rocket artillery conducted 15 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of Iraq’s government:

      -- Near Baghdadi, a strike destroyed an ISIL vehicle.

      -- Near Kirkuk, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit.

      -- Near Kisik, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL fighting position.

      -- Near Mosul, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL fighting position.

      -- Near Qayyarah, a strike destroyed an ISIL rocket rail.

      -- Near Ramadi, four strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed four ISIL heavy machine guns, two ISIL supply caches, 11 ISIL improvised explosive devices, three ISIL vehicles and an ISIL vehicle bomb and denied ISIL access to terrain.

      -- Near Sinjar, five strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL assembly area, an ISIL tactical vehicle, 12 ISIL rocket rails, an ISIL supply cache and six ISIL fighting positions.

      -- Near Tal Afar, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL fighting position.


      Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.


      The bombings continue and are passed off as working towards peace.


      And the Iraqi government, gifted with weapons and aircraft from the US and Russia, carries out its own bombings to ape the 'peace' efforts of bombings.


      And the bombs fall on populated areas, never forget that.

      So many in the media work overtime to cover that up, to pretend these bombs hit empty areas and that civilians are never killed.

      It's a lie.










    • Iraqi Sunni woman killed yesterday by Iraqi army airstrikes on




    • The Iraqi government killed Sunni civilians in those bombings.




      's Tears moving down their cheeks Every idea and every memory caused pain Tears of Wipe them ??


      So much propaganda swirling around such a small piece of land.  But Iraq couldn't be made miserable if the truth was acknowledged, could it?

      Did someone say Whore of Baghdad?

      Yes, Jane Arraf.  She Tweets this morning.














    • Why is Jane Arraf Tweeting about protests?


      She spent all her time since the Hawija massacre ignoring real protests.

      Oh, that's right, this isn't a real protest.

      It's a rally, a propaganda effort on the part of cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr to back the current prime minister Haider al-Abadi.

      It's not a protest.

      Only a whore like Jane would call it protest.

      And remember, her whoring on Iraq goes back to the 90s when she was covering up for Saddam while working for CNN.

      Jane's been lying for years.

      Decades.

      Maher Chmaytelli (REUTERS) offers a truth bomb, "Iraq's powerful Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr wants Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to stay in power but replace his cabinet with professionals with no party affiliation so he can fight corruption, the head of the Sadrist bloc in parliament said."


      Did that reality just send Jane Arraf scurrying like the rat she is?


      Probably.

      Mohammad Sabah (AL MADA) reports Haider is scheduled to name his Cabinet members in the coming days.

      Well, the reality, he'll name some nominees.

      Parliament has to approve them.

      Equally true, his efforts to kick out members of his Cabinet currently?

      Not covered by the Constitution.

      Parliament can strip someone of the post.  The person can decide on their own to resign.

      But the Cabinet does not serve at the pleasure of the prime minister.

      That's not written into the Constitution.

      As Haider al-Abadi already knows because it's a reality Nouri al-Maliki had to live with -- publicly -- throughout his second term.

      So there's Moqtada whoring his followers to call for the Constitution to be trashed.

      And no one wants to go there or address that.



      ALSUMARIA notes that State of Law has expressed concerns about these demonstrations.  State of Law is the political coalition that is headed by former prime minister and forever thug Nouri al-Maliki.  It must rankle Nouri that what he was held in check on, Haider may get away with.



      In news of real protests -- the ones you don't hear of because they're real -- AL MADA reports that citizens in Muqdadiyah on Wednesday took the street in large numbers to protest the lack of safety and demand better security.

      Jane Arraf never Tweeted on that, of course.  Why would she?

      Jane Arraf has never been anything but a megaphone for whomever happened to be the leader of Iraq going all the way back to Saddam Hussein.


      Let's stay with reality for a moment more.

      Western media echoing the US State Dept has made a number of claims this week.

      But they may not exactly qualify as true.

      ALSUMARIA reports that the Chair of Parliament's Defense and Security Committee has announced that, despite us claims, there has been no chemical weapons officer of the Islamic State that has been captured.  These reports, he insists, are attempts to breed fear and terror.


      The western world is full of Judith Millers.  Damn shame it's so short on truth tellers.






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