July 31, 2013

The sky is also an ocean

Whenever I have insomnia, which is often, I got to Radiolab.org and listen to their shows. Even ones I've heard ten times before.
Sometimes they help me sleep. This is beautiful. That is all.

via Radiolab.org

July 25, 2013

In US House, 83 Dems Vote to Continue Illegal Collection of Records

The following are the Democrats in the US House of Representatives who successfully voted with Republicans such as Michele Bachmann, John Boehner, Eric Cantor, Trent Franks, Peter King, Steve King and Paul Ryan yesterday to defeat legislation that, to quote its summary, would "end authority for the blanket collection of records under the Patriot Act. It would also bar the NSA [National Security Agency] and other agencies from using Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect records, including telephone call records, that pertain to persons who are not subject to an investigation under Section 215." Such collection is un-Constitutional.

Andrews
Barber
Barrow
Bera
Bishop, S.
Bishop, T.
Brown
Brownley
Butterfield
Carney
Castor
Castro
Cooper
Costa
Cuellar
Davis, S.
Delaney
Duckworth
Engel
Enyart
Esty
Foster
Frankel
Gallego
Garcia
Green, A.
Gutierrez
Hanabusa
Heck
Higgins
Himes
Hinojosa
Hoyer (minority whip)
Israel (chairman of the DCCC)
Jackson-Lee
Johnson, H. (defeated Cynthia McKinney)
Johnson, E.
Kaptur (defeated Dennis Kucinich)
Kelly
Kennedy
Kilmer
Kind
Kirkpatrick
Kuster
Langevin
Larsen
Levin
Lipinski
Lowey
Maloney, S.
Matheson
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Meng
Murphy
Payne
Pelosi (minority leader)
Peters, S.
Peters, G.
Peterson
Price
Quigley
Ruiz
Ruppersberger
Ryan
Schakowsky
Schneider
Schwartz
Scott, D.
Sewell
Sinema
Sires
Slaughter
Smith
Thompson, M.
Titus
Van Hollen
Vargas
Veasey
Visclosky
Wasserman-Schultz (chairwoman of the DNC)
Wilson

July 16, 2013

The Smearing of Snowden

 
By Adam Marletta

The media's vicious smear campaign against Edward Snowden is so predictable, Snowden himself anticipated it exactly. In recently released footage from the NSA whistleblower's initial interview with reporters Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras, Snowden, when asked what he believes the U.S. government's "response to your conduct will be," replies:

"I think the government's going to...say I have committed 'grave crimes,' that I've, you know, violated the Espionage Act. They're going to say I've...aided our enemies in making them aware of these systems..."

And so they have.

What Snowden seems to have failed to predict was just how much of those claims would come not from the political right, but the left. As Greenwald has pointed out in his Guardian blog, the most vitriolic attacks against Snowden have been made by many of the same liberals who denounced the warrantless surveillance program under George W. Bush.

California Democrat, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, called Snowden's leak " an act of treason." Speaking to Bob Schieffer on CBS's Face the Nation (06/23/2013 broadcast), Feinstein made numerous fatuous claims, including that Snowden was working with China and the "WikiLeaks group," and called for his extradition from Hong Kong. "I want to get him [Snowden] caught and brought back for trial," Feinstein said, adding, melodramatically, "The chase is on!" This is, after all, television news.

Maine "Independent," Sen. Angus King, echoed Feinstein's views. Though King said he was initially unsure what to think of Snowden, he told The Takeaway last month (06/28/13), "I'm moving more and more towards the treason end of the scale." This from the man The Portland Phoenix, in its endorsement of him last fall called "a serious thinker with a strong bent for...well-considered understanding" ("The King Impression," 10/31/2012).

King, like so many politicians and pundits, particularly takes issue with the manner in which Snowden went about releasing the information about the so-called PRISM program. Yet, as Greenwald keenly points out, even if Snowden had utilized the traditional whistleblower channels, he "would have ended up having to go to the very same members of Congress who think that not only are these programs good, but that they ought to remain secret" (Democracy Now!, 06/24/13). To wit, King claims Snowden could have "contacted elected officials with his concerns."

Furthermore, this tactic of quibbling over policy or procedure ("I support the idea, but not the process,") is a classic liberal cop-out that essentially allows politicians to avoid taking an actual stand on an issue. (See: The Portland City Council.) It is sort of like the liberal lawmakers who claimed they "understood" and "shared" the concerns of Occupy Wall Street protesters, but did not support their actual occupation of Wall Street. The point, as Greenwald acknowledges, is this myopic focus on tactics is a distraction from the actual content of Snowden's revelation.

The other criticism that has emerged among Snowden's liberal detractors is the fact that he fled the country, rather than stay and "own up to his actions." Citing examples like Martin Luther King, Jr., Nelson Mandela and Henry David Thoreau, media commentators have tried to argue Snowden's actions do not truly constitute an act of civil disobedience since he did not willingly go to prison for his "crime."

MSNBC host, Melissa Harris-Perry has garnered particular attention for her numerous attacks on Snowden--who she condescendingly refers to as "Ed Snowden." "I can see the merit in our knowledge of the NSA programs," Harris-Perry editorialized on her self-titled show (06/29/13), "but Edward Snowden is risking a lot to save his own skin."

As someone who has, admittedly, never watched Harris-Perry's show, I am struck by her snide, flippant attitude and decidedly non-professional one-liners in this clip. "We can't even get [Russian Prime Minister, Vladimir] Putin to give back a Super Bowl ring," she jokes in reference to the U.S. government's apparent inability to locate Snowden. (Yeah...I don't get the reference, either...) The remark is met with audible off-screen laughing, leading one to wonder whether this is supposed to be a news show or a sitcom.

Miami Herald columnist, Leonard Pitts, also jumps on the "this-ain't-civil-disobedience" bandwagon. In a recent column reprinted in The Portland Press Herald ("By seeking asylum, Snowden sheds doubt on his motives," 07/10/13), Pitts, like Harris-Perry, also takes issue with Snowden's "choice" (did he really have any other...?) to flee the country.

"Wherever Snowden goes," he writes, "he has no intention of coming home to answer for what he did." And what about those in power who established this mass, illegal wiretapping program? Should they not be expected to "answer for what they did"?

Indeed, Pitts says next to nothing about the actual spying program Snowden uncovered, as if it is irrelevant. And for liberals like him and Harris-Perry, it is. (Near the end of his piece, Pitts writes, without irony, "there's also something unseemly about some guy sitting behind his desk smugly advising some other guy to put the rest of his life at risk for the sake of principle." You're damn right there is, Leonard.)

The problem with the whole civil disobedience angle is Snowden is not the one who broke the law--the U.S. government is. Snowden merely called attention to the crimes. And now, predictably, he seems doomed to take the fall for his moral act of defiance.

Thus is the disjointed, unjust logic of a corporate state that allows corporations to savage and plunder the natural environment without penalty. It allows companies to spew endless amounts of heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere, free of charge, as if it were their own personal trash repository. Such a "profit-over-people" mentality allows "too big to fail" banks to openly engage in fraud and high-risk betting that trashed the global economy. And it is a corporate state that, ultimately, allows a racist, renegade civilian to murder an innocent, unarmed black boy and get away with it.

Edward Snowden, like Bradley Manning and Julian Assange, dared to defy the unconstitutional abuses of power of the corporate state, and now he faces life in prison for doing so.

Here's my takeaway: None of these debates over Snowden's tactics, motives, past statements or personal characteristics detract from his actions.

Media pundits can play the "shoot-the-messenger" game all they like. Snowden uncovered a vast, unprecedented and highly disturbing spying program that threatens the privacy, civil liberties and safety (yes, safety) of all Americans. The government is collecting and storing nearly every record of electronic communication on all of us. Those who believe they have "nothing to hide," or who cynically claim they are not surprised by our government's actions are, sadly, missing the point.

If anything, the Snowden affair has further demonstrated the depressing state of mainstream journalism as well as the hollow cravenness of the liberal class.

Adam Marletta is a freelance writer and a candidate for Portland's City Council. He supports public space for people, a living wage, and cutting taxes by ending corporate welfare.

July 13, 2013

McDonald's and their f**ked up "budgeting" website

What the F**k Maggie Gyllenhaal?


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UPDATE:

I got this email from Maggie Gyllenhaal:

On Sun, Jul 14, 2013 at 2:55 AM, Maggie ◘◘◘◘◘◘@◘◘◘◘◘◘◘◘◘◘.◘◘◘ wrote:


Ok punk patriot. I got your video.
I like your style--patrolling the streets looking for trouble...

So...on the Daily Show what I said was that I would choose Obama over Mitt Romney on almost anything. That's what I said. And that's what I did a few months ago when I had to choose between them for President. But...you know...it's true that I'm finding it hard to say goodbye to Obama completely and unequivocally. I bought what he was selling for a long time. I really did. It's much harder to understand things like what JSOC is doing or what's happening to the mainstream media or Bradley Manning or the NSA when someone on your side is over seeing it all. Someone I voted for. It's easier to understand in a way when it's Rumsfeld or Cheney or someone who seems like the bad guy in an Austin Powers movie doing these things. So...you're not wrong in feeling that I'm conflicted. I am. I'm disappointed in Obama. But I guess it's true that I havent completely given up hope. That's where I am, right now.

And let me be absolutely clear that there is no part of me that thinks I am as brave as Bradley Manning. I made that video because I support him. And I wanted to say so. It took an afternoon. It was a small thing. And NOT NEARLY enough. I know that.
But here's the real thing I'd like to say. I've checked out your website. We seem to believe in a lot of the same things. Let's not take each other down. Let's make a video together.
Xxmaggie


I've spoken with her further, and I guess we're going to collaborate on a video this fall.

The internet is a very, very strange place.

July 7, 2013

Students school NSA recruiters

If you want to feel some hope about the upcoming generation, please take a listen to these students absolutely schooling these NSA recruiters. DAMN!

July 6, 2013

Sierra Club Hypocrites: Fracking

via a friend in West Virginia:

Hi Asher:

A week or so ago I commented about the Sierra Club stating shale gas drilling could be done right. Here's that video.



This needs to be seen, especially since it was revealed the following year the Sierra Club was taking millions from Chesapeake Energy. [link]

Also, the lead lobbyist at the WV Environmental Council, Don Garvin, is a former oil and gas business co-owner [link] and he is telling people a load of crap about shale drilling as well. His business Braxton Oil and Gas is now owned by a former delegate/state senator Mike Ross, whom my former employers at [the NGO I work for] filed ethics complaints against in the past.

[...]

I'm beyond infuriated. The so-called left in my state is enabling the right and the media rarely calls out such hypocrisies. Again, if you know of anyone putting together a documentary give this to them... minus my name (for the time being). WV isn't going to change unless these god damn enablers in the Progressive community are called out publicly and thrown out of their positions of power. I can't say anything at the moment because I need a reference from [the NGO I work with] cause like so many other people in my state I have yet to find steady employment since graduating college a few years ago... but I will once that changes and it should in a few months.

July 3, 2013

Racism is NOT dead in America.

LeVar Burton, fameous for his role as Jordy in Star Trek: The Next Generation, and for me, as host of Reading Rainbow, gives a detailed step-by-step method he uses to not get shot by the cops for being black.


via aattp.org
We’ve spotlighted racism several times in recent days–first with this video of a comedian owning a heckler who announced her grandpa was in the KKK, and then with this eye-opening experimentby the show What Would You Do? and our explosive story about the real allegations against Paula Deen.
It’s been especially difficult for the moderators here to deal with the staggering number of people who seem to be in complete denial that there’s a problem at all.   Some have written things like, “If black people can call each other ‘niggas’ then what’s the problem with white people saying it?” and “Everyone has used that word before, so what’s the big deal” (ummm, no…no they haven’t).
Here’s a very telling discussion between actor LeVar Burton and author Tim Wise about what it’s really like to be stopped by the police when you’re black.
Watch the video, courtesy of CNN.  WARNING:  Language NSFW