13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
snood
 
  1  
Reply Sat 17 Dec, 2022 05:56 pm
The J6 committee is deciding whether to recommend prosecution.
The DOJ is very obscure about what sort of effect the recommendations will have on their assessments and decisions, if any effect at all.

I don’t get why this announcement by the J6 committee should elicit any reaction stronger than a yawn
Builder
 
  -1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 01:28 am
@snood,
Quote:
The J6 committee is deciding whether to recommend prosecution.


Saudi Arabia tossing its collective hat in with the BRICS nations should be front and centre in the "news" that matters.
Lash
 
  -1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 06:07 am
@Builder,
It’s amazing how the national media can keep them laser-focused on Trump while the world burns down around them. No Minsk II here either.
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 07:14 am
@Lash,
Lash wrote:
No Minsk II here either.
That's history. (As is Normandy)
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 07:34 am
I LOVE football. Neymar, Mbappe and Messi

https://static01.nyt.com/images/2022/12/17/multimedia/17worldcup-mbappe-1-7c25/17worldcup-mbappe-1-7c25-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 08:09 am
NYT has extraordinary reporting up now on Putin's war
Quote:
How could one of the world’s most powerful militaries, led by a celebrated tactician like Mr. Putin, have faltered so badly against its much smaller, weaker rival? To piece together the answer, we drew from hundreds of Russian government emails, documents, invasion plans, military ledgers and propaganda directives. We listened to Russian phone calls from the battlefield and spoke with dozens of soldiers, senior officials and Putin confidants who have known him for decades.
HERE

Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 08:30 am
@blatham,
I've posted on the Putin's war thread a translated 'Der Spiegel' article, written by Mikhail Zygar: "This is how Russians learn about the world's wars"
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 08:36 am
@InfraBlue,
Tragically so. But it is being done now.

This is the sort of legislation that could be a lightening rod for RW poutrage. It's the sort of thing a President waits until the first month of his 2nd term to pull off. Joe did it now.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 08:43 am
@revelette1,
Much, much better now than never.

This disparity in sentencing is a prime example of "institutional" racism: exactly what Critical Race Theory is about.

White powder users are: experimenting, black crack users are degenerates; when the fact is: it's all cocaine use and there's more important things going on here than drug use and law enforcement.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 10:18 am
@Walter Hinteler,
Thanks, Walter. I've got it bookmarked now.
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  2  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 11:05 am
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

I LOVE football. Neymar, Mbappe and Messi

https://static01.nyt.com/images/2022/12/17/multimedia/17worldcup-mbappe-1-7c25/17worldcup-mbappe-1-7c25-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp


Me too!

Mahomes and Allen.

https://library.sportingnews.com/styles/crop_style_16_9_mobile_2x/s3/2022-01/patrick-mahomes-and-josh-allen_1hbhlxpqp4df71e8h0e5dhtqmo.jpg?itok=OAdsM1rB

I was hoping someone else would do it...but no takers.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 12:04 pm
Congratulations, Argentina.
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 12:06 pm
Many House Republicans 'Too Dimwitted' to Wield Power: Wall Street Journal

Quote:
A new editorial from The Wall Street Journal on Saturday decried the leadership conflicts in the House GOP and called some Republican representatives "too dimwitted" to effectively wield political power.

Known as one of the preeminent financial news publications in the United States, the newspaper is also owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, the mass media outfit known for prominent conservative outlets like Fox News and the New York Post. As such, the output of its editorial board is often seen as reflecting the feelings of high-level Republican donors and voting base members.

In the editorial, the board called out the divisions forming in the House GOP as nonsensical, noting that the differences in policy goals being presented by prospective Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy and his detractors are minimal. With Republicans securing a much thinner House majority margin than expected after their disappointing performance in this year's midterms, McCarthy is reportedly having difficulty obtaining sufficient votes to secure the speakership position, putting the race for House leadership in disarray.

"A handful of other backbenchers say they'll also oppose Mr. McCarthy, which could lead to multiple ballots and perhaps even a Democratic Speaker," the board's piece said. "What's bizarre is that the dissenters don't have major policy differences with Mr. McCarthy or a plausible alternative candidate for Speaker. [Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona] has no chance. He and his rump group also don't seem to have any constructive reason to oppose Mr. McCarthy beyond a desire to grab the media spotlight or blow everything up."

As noted in the piece, McCarthy's run for House speaker has been challenged by Arizona Representative Andy Biggs. Biggs is the former chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, a group consisting of the most conservative House GOP members and McCarthy's most vocal Republican detractors. Among other positions, Biggs has notably been an outspoken election denier, falsely claiming that the 2020 presidential election results in Arizona are uncertain.

The Journal's editorial board continued, raising concerns that division among a House GOP with only a four-seat majority could spell disaster for the next two years, worrying that Republicans could squander their recent gains due to in-fighting.

"A narrow GOP majority of only 222-213 requires a leader who can enforce party discipline," the board added. "That's how Nancy Pelosi has been able to govern with the mirror-image majority in the last two years. Too many House Republicans are too dimwitted to understand the uses of power and how to wield it. They'd rather rage against the machine to no useful effect."

newsweek
Mame
 
  3  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 12:18 pm
@hightor,
Sorry, that article made me laugh. And yes, good on Argentina!
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 04:29 pm
Brittney Griner’s Hollow Homecoming

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2022/12/brittney-griner-hollow-homecoming.html

When WNBA star Brittney Griner was arrested at a Russian airport in February for carrying hashish oil, as many as 30,000 people were in prison in America for simple marijuana possession. By the time she was released on December 8 as part of a prisoner swap that sent arms dealer Viktor Bout back to Russia, President Joe Biden had pardoned “thousands” who had been convicted of the same crime at the federal level. The exonerations were meant to correct our government’s “failed approach” to criminalizing cannabis, he said, but they also helped the Biden administration save face: Russia had invaded Ukraine a week after Griner’s arrest, cementing its status as a global villain, and its decision to prosecute her was seen as an extension of this villainy — even as the country lobbying for her release was persecuting thousands of people for the same offense. But if Biden was trying to wash America’s hands, Griner got a face full of dirt. Throughout her detention, right-wing media figures blasted her as an anti-American ingrate because in the summer of 2020 she’d voiced opposition to playing “The Star-Spangled Banner” before her team’s games. Now “she expects that country to come in full bore to take care of her,” said Fox News’ Jeanine Pirro in August. The criticism ramped up after Griner’s release with some people proclaiming that Paul Whelan, an ex-Marine imprisoned in Russia on espionage charges, should’ve been exchanged for Bout instead. Rather than interrogating whether the U.S. and Russia should be imprisoning people for minor crimes at all, Americans were subjected to an argument about which prisoner deserved to suffer more.

This mentality reflected an ethos that has helped make the U.S. and (to a lesser degree) Russia world leaders in incarceration, accounting for almost 3 million total prisoners between them. Each has built its justice system on punishment unmoored from any clear standard of harm. Yet Griner’s story is being read as a straightforward parable of Russian iniquity rather than as the indictment of Russo-American criminal policy and political gamesmanship that it is.

Griner’s ordeal was harrowing. A six-foot-nine phenom and one of fewer than ten WNBA players to dunk during a game, the Texas native was nine years into a celebrated career with the Phoenix Mercury before her arrest. She had been a league champion once, a scoring leader twice, and an all-star six times, but the WNBA’s famously skewed revenue-sharing agreement — until 2021, its players received roughly a 20 percent share compared to 50 percent in the men’s league — had compelled her to play in Russia during the off-season. Back in Arizona, she’d been prescribed cannabis to manage her chronic pain, and she maintained — over the period when she was detained, charged, and pleaded guilty to passing through Russia with less than a gram of her medication — that she had brought the hash-oil cartridges by mistake. Russian authorities were not moved: After a jury convicted her of drug trafficking in August, Griner was sentenced to nine years in one of the country’s notorious penal colonies — successors to the Stalin-era Gulags immortalized in the work of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

During those ten months, Americans got little real-time insight into how Griner was coping, but the information that managed to get through was bleak. U.S. authorities reported that she was doing “as well as can be expected under the circumstances” based on their limited interactions with her, but photos showed her to be uncommonly gaunt and haunted-looking. News outlets published stories about the conditions she faced at the labor camp in Russia’s Mordovia region, based on the testimony of former inmates: 80 women housed in one room with three toilets, no hot water, and “planklike” beds, forced to work ten-to-12-hour days sewing police and army uniforms or, in the case of inmates with a “strong, athletic build,” loading sacks of flour or unloading “mountains of coal,” according to sources interviewed by Reuters. Women there are punished with solitary confinement for infractions as minor as leaving their wristwatch on a bedside table or appearing with a coat improperly buttoned. Shortly before her release, Griner cut her signature dreadlocks in preparation for a punishing winter because every time she washed them, the cold air would give her a chill, her Russian attorney said.

Griner’s anguished wife, Cherelle, spoke with her twice during her detainment, beginning this past summer, and was struck by how much she had deteriorated between the two conversations. “It was the most disturbing phone call I’d ever experienced,” Cherelle told CBS. “I don’t know if she has anything left in her tank to continue to wake up every day and be in a place where she has no one.”

There’s plenty to be outraged about concerning Griner’s treatment and plenty more to celebrate now that she is free. But it’s striking how aptly her conditions could describe those in the U.S., where she and Cherelle were recently reunited: Poorly compensated labor, overcrowding, squalid housing, solitary confinement, mental stability pushed to the breaking point, mounting hopelessness — all par for the course in the land of San Quentin and Parchman Farm. And if Russia’s villainy is reflected in the cruel way it treats its prisoners, then the plantation at Angola prison merits a similar indictment. If the misery that radiated outward from Griner’s incarceration suggests a system in which abject callousness is the norm — affecting her wife, her teammates, her league — then the suicide of Kalief Browder points to the same conclusion. U.S. officials and foreign-policy experts insisted that Griner was wrongfully detained, the victim of a politically motivated abduction inspired by American sanctions against Vladimir Putin’s government. Such an outcry rings hollow in a country where presidential clemency is withheld depending on how it might affect an election and tough-on-crime politics remain stubbornly en vogue.

Griner seemed to recognize that her life had become a political football. “She’s saying things to me like, ‘My life just don’t even matter no more,’” Cherelle continued on CBS. “‘Like, I’m just being tossed around for people’s enjoyment and gain.’ ” It’s widely believed that Putin slow-walked this prisoner swap until after the U.S. midterms so he could deny Biden a preelection victory. If such games did not vindicate Griner’s disillusionment, then the chorus of conservatives insisting that her protests made her unworthy of freedom surely did.

Countless people across the U.S. deserve the kind of reunion that Brittney and Cherelle Griner enjoyed in San Antonio, and there are many more levers that Biden could pull to make it happen — marijuana amnesty was one, but he has otherwise been frugal with his clemency powers. He’s far from alone: The officials and everyday citizens willing to tolerate mass suffering as long as it targets people branded as criminals are the lifeblood of local criminal-justice systems, in which most of that suffering takes place. Griner’s release is as good an opportunity as any to reassess. The spotlight on her predicament showed that her life was too full and meaningful for the fate to which the Russian criminal system had condemned it. The next step is recognizing that this was not because she is famous and talented, or was geopolitically useful at that particular moment, but because she is human — and America’s jails and prisons are overflowing with humans like her, desperate for the same chance.

Not much to add to that.
0 Replies
 
Builder
 
  0  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 04:46 pm
@Lash,
Quote:
It’s amazing how the national media can keep them laser-focused on Trump while the world burns down around them.


The corporate media is part of the obfuscation "team". Rupert Mudrock, despite being an expat Aussie (now American) controls almost 95% of all media sources down under. He bought up all of the little local news rags, just so he could shut them down. Quite easy to direct the course of the narrative, if you have nobody saying otherwise.

As for this mob here, if you don't quote from that same corporate media, but find a dissenting voice, they choose to shoot the messenger, while ignoring the gist of the message.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 05:48 pm
Kosovo rebel commander sentenced to 26 years in prison for war crimes in case overseen by Jack Smith

https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/16/politics/kosovo-war-crimes-tribunal-jack-smith

A war crimes tribunal in The Hague on Friday sentenced a former commander of the Kosovo Liberation Army to 26 years in prison for the war crimes of arbitrary detention, torture and murder.

The Salih Mustafa case was one overseen in part by now-special counsel Jack Smith, a war crimes prosecutor appointed last month by Attorney General Merrick Garland to oversee investigations in the US involving former President Donald Trump.

The panel of judges in the tribunal found Mustafa guilty of crimes that occurred in April 1999 in a village in Kosovo used as a base by a KLA unit that Mustafa led during the conflict with Serbian government forces.,,,,

Smith participated in the Mustafa trial before stepping down last month from his role as specialist prosecutor in the Kosovo tribunal after being tapped to oversee the Trump-related investigations in the US.

He remains in the Netherlands while he recovers from a bike injury and is expected to return to the US in the coming weeks.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 05:59 pm
@hightor,
Quote:
Congratulations, Argentina.

Family here so just now finished watching the game. Certainly the most exciting football game I've ever seen. God damn! And I got what I wanted which was a deserved career cap for Messi with added bonus of the golden boot for Mbappe, also deserved. It would have been nice if Canada had gotten a bit further but it's a young team that's well coached and there is a future there.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  4  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 06:04 pm
Oh, Will the bullshit grifting NEVER end?

Trump STOLE the NFT images. Watermarks they forgot to erase have been found in the images.

The images were lifted from some small clothing brand logos
hightor
 
  4  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2022 07:05 pm
@snood,
Every time you think it can't get any cringier...
0 Replies
 
 

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