Quote:

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”--Martin Luther King

Thursday, February 16, 2017

Simple Minds

The travel ban was a test, and not only with regard to the mechanisms of America’s judicial politics and constitutional law. It was a test of the basic ideological preparedness of a nation that has spent most of its time trying not to imagine a Trump presidency, and must now shape that sentiment, as quickly as possible, into the groundwork of a credible resistance. While our justice system appears to have passed the test, at least for the time being, our first attempts at resistance reveal a nation struggling in thought and action to frame the larger case against Trump. Obviously, such a case does exist, and there should be no question at this point that our feelings of imminent danger are justified. It’s just that the narrative we’ve been telling each other to explain and act on those feelings – the Love vs. Hate narrative passed down to us by Democratic leadership – is so grossly simplistic, so troublingly inconsistent, and so profoundly at odds with the reality of this danger, that we become ally to the very forces we are fighting against each time we tell it.--PG

Simplistic is the right word.  It is as if many people are slowly awakening from a long sleep. They are what Henry Miller was fond of calling them--somnambulists.

Unequipped to think for themselves, they haven't studied history nor developed a critical capacity to analyze the forces that surround them.  Their lives, steeped in apathy and apolitical dreams, were barren, and as long as they had good jobs and enough toys to distract them they were fine with the world.

Everything was too easy for many.  Now things are tougher and they're having to engage with aspects of existence that never occurred to them in the past. They've lost their way and remain reliant on wishes and dreams without realizing there is no easy fix.

It will take a mass mobilization and new consensus, or nothing will change inside the oligarchical system that dominates our lives.


TS

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Coup in Progress

One upshot of the Flynn resignation is that Vice President Mike Pence, a white “Christian” nationalist, who is also is a darling of both Wall Street and the “neo con” interventionists comes out smelling like roses. Trump is a twisted narcissist who is a political opportunist. But Pence is likely what a lot of people claim Trump is.

Flynn was compelled to resign in large part because what is euphemistically called the “intelligence community” apparently had recording of his dealings with Russian representatives that he allegedly mischaracterized.

This implies that people will be held accountable for their falsehoods if — and only if — their stance upsets the CIA, NSA, et al.--SH

Trump is toast, has been since his election.  Things will return to normal once the Intel community has its way.

The CIA will not allow this upheaval to go on much longer; it's been overturning regimes (and democratically elected governments) fluidly worldwide since the Dulles brothers reigned supreme.

The better to hold hegemony and Empire.

Elites can't afford this kind of infighting at the top, and the U.S. is restless now; the last thing the Intel community wants is revolution.

Regime change is what American elites do best, and with the full backing of the majority of Americans this time, they'll get it.

Kennedy lasted three years in office.   Trump won't last half that long because he insulted the Deep State and hasn't the capacity or savvy to play along like Clinton would have.

Ironically, it might be the first time the CIA got something right!

God Bless American Imperialism!

Now, once the Dems and Repubs hook up again in a satisfactory realm, will we survive a messy nuclear exchange with the Rooskies!?


TS

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Not Going Away

From 1852 to 1862, Marx earned his living as a correspondent for the New-York Daily Tribune, at the time the newspaper with the largest circulation in the world. In his hastily worked-up English, he turned out twice-weekly columns, mainly on European affairs, which the ever-loyal Engels sometimes composed for him. Though Marx would rather have been producing books, his decades as a journalist lie behind much of his special character as a writer, his brash phrase-making and wide and ready command of information setting him apart from other major economic thinkers. (Keynes, who wrote many articles for The Times of London, supplies a partial exception.) If Marx is at once the grimmest and most abstract and the liveliest and most entertaining of theoretical minds, this is partly because the philosopher was also a newspaperman.--BK

An interesting read from The Nation.


TS

Don't Sing!

I watched the Kansas/West Virginia game last night.  Kansas was down by 12 with under three minutes to play in Lawrence, and the usual full house began to clear out.

You would think the spoiled Kansas crowd would be more educated than that, especially with so many difference makers on the Jayhawks' roster, the "three" and the 30 sec. shot clock.

Kansas won the thriller in OT.

Here are some other notable comeback games in recent times.


TS

Monday, February 13, 2017

The FWIW Dept.

Oregon has two bad conference losses, one against a Colorado team that played over its head, and the epic meltdown in L.A. against the UCLA Bruins.

The Bruins are in danger of becoming a one-man team (as Ball bounces, so does UCLA), and they have to go to Arizona eventually.  Yikes!

Oregon gets the home advantage one last weekend beginning Thursday when the dangerous Utes visit Eugene in what ought to be a crowd-pleaser.  But Utah can beat anyone on a given night, so the Ducks best come prepared. Saturday, the revenge game vs. Colorado could evolve as pure fun.

After that, the Bay Area trip looms.  It was bad for Oregon last year when my team dropped two before going on its rampage and into the Elite Eight.  Cal is really good, almost beat Zona Saturday.

As for the aforementioned Lonzo, who has a habit of going Gonzo from the basketball equivalent of the moon, would someone please stop him from doing that thing he does so well?

It's major excitement, babies.  Let it roll.


TS

Sunday, February 12, 2017

George Capaccio















(George Capaccio and friends in Mosul before the war.)

Some critics are calling the January 30 raid in Yemen a botched affair. Insufficient or incorrect intelligence and poor planning, they argue, are responsible for the chaos that erupted when the Navy Seals launched their raid and ended up causing excessive “collateral damage.” Sean Spicer, Trump’s adversarial press secretary, lashed out at anyone — including Arizona Senator John McCain — who calls the raid a failure. In Spicer’s view, such malcontents and naysayers owe an apology to Ryan Owens, the soldier who was killed in the raid: “It's absolutely a success, and I think anyone that would suggest [the raid is] not a success does a disservice to the life of Chief Ryan Owens."

What about the life of Nawar al-Awlaki and the lives of the other women and children whom the soldiers ended up killing? Don’t they deserve an apology? Better than an apology, don’t their families deserve some form of compensation for the loss of their loved ones? Even more to the point, don’t we all deserve an explanation for why the United States is conducting drone strikes and clandestine military operations against the poorest country in the Middle East while supporting the Saudi-let coalition against Houthi rebels and allied military forces?--GC

George Capaccio is a longtime peace activist, educator and humanitarian worker who went to Iraq nine times between 1997 and the 2003 invasion by Bush and Co.

Round Bend Press will soon publish his memoir, "Iraq: A Human Narrative," about his times and travails among the Iraqis; hopefully by April or May and once the structure and details of the book are worked out.

In fact, I'm sending the author a first edit tomorrow.

Stay tuned.


TS

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Sawant and Street

We cannot only react to Trump’s right wing assault. We will need to put forward audacious demands that can inspire with the promise of a dramatic improvement in people’s lives, like those popularized by Bernie Sanders, including: a Medicare for all, single-payer healthcare system; a federal $15 minimum wage; free higher education; taxing the rich to fund massive public works program to create jobs and rebuild our infrastructure, develop green energy, and mass transit; demanding that Black Lives Matter and for an end to the racist mass incarceration state. Bernie’s bold program energized millions, especially young people, while Hillary’s timid, corporate-friendly proposals of tinkering around the edges failed to mobilize them.--KS

This is strong, from the pen of Kshama Sawant.

She overstates the depth of the "resistance" to this point, but levels into a viable vision of the future.

Paul Street has a similar rap dispelled of illusory, Sanders-like "soft" (my word) socialism.


TS

Thursday, February 9, 2017

My Poor Ducks

Oregon couldn't sustain its early goodness and falls to the Bruins by three.

Missed too many wide-open looks, then couldn't find any looks at all, or stop super frosh Lonzo Ball, who hit a three from beyond downtown late and a couple of sensational drives.

O woe!

It's already March Madness in mid-February!

Heh...

Can the Ducks bounce back after this disappointment, versus USC? We shall see on Sat.


TS

Agreed

The United States is marked by a crisis of governance. Neither political party has articulated a vision for how to rein in corporate power, create an economy that works for working Americans, or build a government that protects the needy and disadvantaged. Republican’s reactionary turn provides an opportunity for a political alternative that rejects neoliberal capitalism. Ultimately, it’s up to the public to articulate such a vision if they desire an alternative to the status quo.--AD

DiMaggio covers the edges of home plate while future-gazing in this fine piece.


TS

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

LA Bound

The Ducks had to deal with star Dillon Brooks' early injury issues, but are looking very good. Oregon has beaten all four of the other Pac-12 teams that are currently in the bracket (Arizona, California, UCLA, USC), including that 85-58 blowout of Arizona last Saturday. However, the Ducks are a high-level home-court hero. All their best wins were in Eugene. They do not have to make the return trip to Arizona, but the L.A. trip is this week.--JP

Two tough games in L.A.  I expect a split, the loss being to UCLA.

But alas, USC is tough at home as well.  Everyone is tough at home, even me.


TS

Monday, February 6, 2017

Corporate Resistance?*

If a new anti-war movement emerged from the resistance to Trump it would have the potential to shake the entire system. So the Democrats try to focus as narrowly as they can on Trump’s social and psychological pathologies while waiting to make up for their loses in the 2018 mid-term elections as the default party. The corporate media follows suit.--RM

Any movement expectant of making a difference must begin with rejecting the Democratic Party's bogus claim to resistance.

*You're joking, right?


TS

Seeding Fascism


One thing is already clear: this drastic tilt toward yet more Pentagon spending and away from investment in diplomacy abroad and civilian needs at home will only further militarize American society, accelerate inequality, and distort the country’s already highly questionable foreign policy.  After all, if your military is the only well-funded, well-stocked arm of the government, it’s obvious whom you’re going to turn to in any crisis.--WDH

Successive administrations were given a free pass on the militarization of American society and instituting its attendant surveillance mechanisms.

Amid the corporatist onslaught of global overreach, propagandized and embraced by ruling elites from the edifices of Wall Street to the desktops of the welfare bureaucracy, and every place in between, the seeds were planted long ago.

And people are shocked by what it has wrought?

The disgust I feel curls my flesh.


TS

Friday, February 3, 2017

The Last Bowl?

The election season did have a salutary phase – it started when the Sanders campaign took off and ended when Sanders decided to make common cause with the Democrats who had rigged the nomination process against him.  Also there were local and state elections that turned out well.

On the whole, though, it was a nearly eighteen month long disaster that culminated, at the national level, in a contest between a leading cause of all that has gone wrong with the Democratic Party over the past three and a half decades and an exemplar of much that is wrong with the human race.

The election was Hillary Clinton’s and the Democrats’ to lose; she and they outdid themselves. Therefore, Donald Trump is now in the White House, the world is out of joint, people suffer, and vileness reigns.--AL

Levine weighs in.

Amid the good stuff, I punch in here.

Enjoy the weekend and the Stupor Bowl if  you can. (It might be our last one, which wouldn't be a bad thing in itself, though the payoff might come with complications for the planet.)

Let's hope the QBs' long bombs don't inspire our new head coach to throw one himself.


TS

Thursday, February 2, 2017

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Winds of Change

Damn rough winter for this area.

Feels like snow again.

Well, I've got nothing better to do but stay at home and watch basketball, occasionally flip through the news sites to gather the latest on our destruction.

Dylan's idiot wind is blowing through the Capitol Building as I type. It's a wonder they know how to breathe...


TS