Friday, July 31, 2015

In Memoriam

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

I Need To Be Out of Here in 6 Minutes

So.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

"Standing in the Slide Zone"

  • You're not hearing about the lawsuit against Monsanto for Reasons.
    You would think that coverage of something the whole world wants to see – the first step toward the successful downfall of Monsanto –would be a hot news item; a newsworthy tidbit that every paper, radio station, and blog would want to spread across their pages with double bold headlines. But wait. . . just six corporations own ALL of the media in America, so there isn’t much luck there.

    That’s why you have to go to sites like Russia Insider or Al Jazeera to find real news outside of certain alternative news channels in the US, and even those are white-washed from Facebook pages, and given secondary ratings on Google pages.

    Matthew Phillips, the attorney suing Monsanto in California for false advertising on Roundup bottles, has asked the LA Times, New York Times, Huffington Post, CNN, and Reuters, one of the world’s largest news agencies to report on the lawsuit (Case No: BC 578 942), and most enforced a total media blackout.

    When I spoke with Phillips over the phone, he said that he has tried posting the suit in Wikipedia’s Monsanto litigation section, but it keeps ‘disappearing.’ He says that he has also noticed posts on Facebook about this lawsuit get removed.

    Phillips points out that as long as Monsanto can keep this lawsuit off of most of America’s radar, then his client base would be relegated to just the citizens of California.

    If other attorneys were to follow his template-style lawsuit, which he wrote in English, devoid of extraneous legal-speak to encourage others to also take action against Monsanto, then suddenly the plaintiff count could be closer to several million.
    We shall see. (via skippy)
  • Why the Republicans are unfond of the Iran deal:
    The chain of events inside Fantasy Iran Deal is actually pretty simple: Brave Republicans talk enough Democrats into abandoning the deal, it goes under, and Iran shows its "true colors" and the American people demand war and regime change. And in 2017, under a Republican president and Congress, they get that war against God's enemies, because Onward Christian Soldiers. That war is magically won in six weeks and the US, having disposed of a terror state, suddenly has everyone falling in line to appease our might.

    It's total lunacy, of course. They can't say it because of precisely that reason. But we know exactly what will happen should Republicans win the White House and keep Congress: war, plain and simple.
    And a war they themselves won't be fighting.  And you know why.  (via Zandar)

In Memoriam

Anne Rule, true-crime chronicler.

Monday, July 27, 2015

In Memoriam

  • Bobbi Kristina Brown, only child of famous parents
  • Peg Lynch, writer (and radio star), who I knew about because every Friday musical cues from her show were posted at The Bleat, an old blog that used to be funnier than it is now.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

"Remain Calm! All Is Well!"

You might want to take a quick look at this stuff:

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Annual Amnesia

  • skippy the bush kangaroo celebrates 13 years in blogtopia, and yes, they coined that phrase.
  • Which reminded me that 7 years (and some weeks) ago, I tapped the mike and proceeded to blather.  Time to accessorize re-energize.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

In Memoriam

E. L. Doctorow, novelist

In Memoriam

Theodore Bikel, polytalent.

ETA:  Via File 770, though I am using a different obit.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

My Hat Has Superpowers

  • Hullabaloo features an article by Gaius Publius, "Serena Williams, racism [and] the subjugation of women," with excerpts from a piece in The Nation.  Gaius Publius says:
    There's much that's scary to confront in an image like this, in behavior like this. Couple that with what's known about her greatness (the correct word for her athletic accomplishments; 21 grand slam victories is a near-unbreakable record), and even ignoring what's known about her politics — more below — this is a challenging woman.

    I would even say this: A very frightening woman for two groups, those who fear blacks (they are many) and those who fear woman (there are a great many more). In fact, this could almost be more about fearing and attacking a woman who happens to be black than it is fearing and attacking a black person who happens to be a woman.
    I had heard she'd won her 21st Grand Slam; I missed the vilification, but then I don't poison my mind with right-wing data sources.
  • Satanist jiu-jitsu.  Doing the rest of us a service.  Article by Amanda Marcotte at AlterNet.  Yes, I know.
  • Southern Beale smacks a Tennessee legislator.  (Ableist language used.  Just so you know.)

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Broke the Streak!

Happy Bastille Day!  [ETA:  Via Making Light, Jacobin's explanation of the French Revolution and why Bastille Day is important.]
  • Why the plane fares have gone up.  (They swear it's not the consolidations.  The ghosts of the pirates of Standard Oil are shaking their heads ruefully.)
  • Driftglass goes full Driftglass.
    The problem, of course, is that a long time ago the fairy tale stopped being convenient narrative hammock in which lazy media grifters could repose in comfort and instead became their basic input/output system. The thing that boots them up every day. The thing that tells them who they are, what their function is and how they should treat all the other devices to whom they are attached.
  • Greece.  Greece.  Greece.
  • Avedon's Sideshow features a good bunch of links for further exploration.

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Before the Blues

Friday, July 10, 2015

Not Anyone's Friends

  • Janet Allon at AlterNet summarizes Paul Krugman on conservatives' economic desires.
  • What conservatives expect to happen now that marriage equality is law (via AlterNet):
    1. Brian Tashman of Right Wing Watch lists 10 predictions.
    2. Evan McMurry quotes a variety of people who are not being rational.
    These folks will be embarrassed to have said this stuff in five years, and in Europe may ask Google to delete references to it. Also, they're not getting the good drugs.
  • Back in the day, Brian Epstein ensured placement of the first Beatles single in the Top 20 (British charts) by buying 10,000 copies of "Love Me Do."  (It's in Shout! The Beatles in Their Generation, Philip Norman, Simon & Schuster, 1981, which may still be in print for all I know.)  Apparently "right-wing" organizations have been doing the same sort of thing with books authored by conservatives/Republicans.  (It's called "strategic bulk sales" and is slightly subtler.)  Apparently the New York Times bestseller list people finally figured this out, and disallowed Ted Cruz's new book.  Predictably conservatives are up in arms.  Talking Points Memo for the win.

    (Did I mention going into Border's a week or so before it closed and seeing pallets of S. Palin's tome? And that no one seemed to want a copy, even at steep discount?

In Memoriam

  • Omar Sharif, actor and bridge expert
  • Ken Stabler, football player (that is, Raiders QB.  I only know about football by osmosis)

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Paper Like Kudzu

  • Yes, I know.  And I accidentally closed about 6 relevant tabs.  So more potpourri.  Deal.
  • 'Twas the week before the All-Star Game, and all through the house, both local teams fighting for .500 won-lost stats.  
  • So:
    • First and foremost, Ta-Nehisi Coates' "Letter to My Son" should be required reading (yes, I know I have a bad reaction to the words "required reading," and probably so do you.  Bear with me) for every American, particularly (1) those who might think they might run for office and (2) every sociologist, social worker, and bureaucrat.  And everyone entering a police academy of any kind.
    • Terrance, at Republic of T, on the Confederate flag, its meaning, and the "shared history and heritage."
      Slavery is inseparable from the Confederacy and its cause. It was essential to the south’s economy. In 1860, one in three people who lived in the South were owned as property. Their collective value was about $3 billion. The farmland they worked was worth much more, and only unpaid slave labor could work it so cheaply. Confederate president Jefferson Davis reminded his Congress in 1861, slavery was “indispensable” to the southern economy.

      Segregationists and white supremacists like Roof do not distort the true meaning of the Confederate flag by adopting it. White supremacy and the subjugation of black people were the cornerstones of the Confederacy and the “way of life” it sought to defend.
    • Daisydeadhead on Confederate Memorial Day.  (Tumblr blog, rather than Daisy's Dead Air.)
    • Jesse Curtis, confessing to confederacy-related blind spots.
    • Not only the flag:  Dave Ettlin on Maryland's state song.
    • Chauncey DeVega on the bigger picture, economically.
  • The enemy of my enemy, or what's going on in Ukraine. (via Mercury Rising.)
    The regime has shown little concern about widespread reports of “death squad” operations targeting suspected pro-Russian sympathizers in government-controlled towns. But such human rights violations should come as no surprise given the Nazi heritage of these units and the connection of the Islamic militants to hyper-violent terrorist movements in the Middle East.

    But the Times treats this lethal mixture of neo-Nazis and Islamic extremists as a good thing. After all, they are targeting opponents of the “white-hatted” Kiev regime, while the ethnic Russian rebels and the Russian government wear the “black hats.”
  • Naked Capitalism no longer allowing comments on most postings.  
  • Nathan Tankus at Naked Capitalism on the economic situation in Puerto Rico.
  • Sappho (Non Irritare Leones) on the Greek referendum and the "No" vote.
  • "Conservatives" assert that marriage is about duty, not love or happiness.  Amanda Marcotte (yes, I know) reports.  (My own suspicion is that conservatives believe that no one would marry them without coercion, which may be true.)  
  • Conservatives also believe that marriage is a cure for social and economic problems, which... may not be true.  (Rachel M. Cohen, The American Prospect, reprinted at AlterNet.)
  • Echidne of the Snakes on Jeb Bush's idea of productivity.
Isn't that enough?

[crossposted]

    Friday, July 3, 2015

    To One Side of the Law

    Via Zandar Versus The Stupid and Crooks and Liars:  Ken Paxton, the Texas Attorney General, is in trouble.  Specifically, felony securities fraud trouble.  Mmmm-hmmmmmmm.  The case against him is to be presented to a grand jury in upcoming weeks.

    Apparently, marriage equality bad, but fraud good.