10/12/2006

barbra streisand in concert and ricky clousing sentenced

first thank you to c.i.! for filling in for me last night. i called thinking i could hint around it but after 'hellos' were exchanged, i was asked, 'you need some 1 to fill in right?'

i did. thank you.

i should have written last night because i dreamed about the concert repeatedly last night. barbra streisand at madison garden. fly boy and i saw her last night. she was amazing.

the dreams of the concert were amazing.

this tour is set up like an intimate night club show. and the songs are selected for that sort of set up.

i love 'guilty' and all the hits. but this is a real treat for fans who've really dug into the albums over the years. 'down with love' (which fly boy disputes was performed) is such an incredible song and how often do you get to hear that song performed by streisand in concert?

(fly boy knows streisand's music through me. i'm not sure he'd remember 'down with me.' that's from barbara's 2nd album and he's always paid more attention to barbra joan streisand and other albums following. he enjoyed her parody of 'stoney end.')

by the way, the fun room, where we're putting up different things and just making it a warm room? i did put up the reggie jackson action figure. he framed the barbra poster from barbra joan streisand and hung it for me as a surprise. i have held on to that poster for years and probably should have gotten it laminated. i would never hang it, it's stayed in the with the vinyl record all these years. i couldn't see putting holes in barbra. so it was a real treat to see that he'd had it professionally framed as a surprise for me.

i am not dismissing the other tours. i've been thrilled to go to every 1 and always loved them. but this 1 is just something really extra special. it's just warm and and connects with you on a level that goes beyond the others.

i think it's because she's not doing 1 hit after another. i think she's chosen songs she was interested in at this point of her life and spaced them out in such a way that they really breathe.
she's supposedly nervous on stage but she's never seemed more in her own skin when i've been lucky enough to see her live.

if you are a barbra fan and you can afford it, you have to see this tour. there's going to be a live cd and i will be purchasing that. if you're not able to go, you can get a good sense of it from that when it comes out but you will be kicking yourself & cursing yourself for years if you miss it and you could have gone. this is 1 that's really for the fans of the work and not just the radio hits.

there's a funny girl medly that you'll love.

and she looks gorgeous. the hair's a little bit longer right now. it used to stop more at the end of the neck and now it's flowing onto her shoulders. (not stopping there, and not just resting there.) i loved her hair. i think it's the perfect cut. it's shaped around her face. i don't mean cut around it but there's this wave thing to it and it looks incredible. (the hair is not wavy. i'm talking about the shape of it.) she looks incredible, she sounds incredible.

so, 1 more time, if you can see it, you need to.

as most of you know, i was pretty depressed over my miscarriage. we'd gone out to california and stayed with c.i. and that had helped, it was great to be around every 1. but i won't pretend fly boy telling me we had tickets to see barbra didn't lift my spirits as well.

i've been looking forward to this ever since. and when you're that excited by something, it's really easy, when the moment arrives, to be disappointed. i kept telling myself that all last week (okay, for the last 2 weeks.) but i was blown away.

that she still has her voice doesn't surprise me. i got the last cd. but this isn't just about the beautiful voice, though that would be enough (and more than most tours can ever provide). this is just a really warm, really intimate setting.

can you give an 'intimate' concert in madison square garden? barbra streisand did.

so that's the concert report.

just thinking about writing about it made me nervous tonight. i'm not joking. it gives me goose bumps. and, like i said already, i dreamed about it over and over last night. oh, 1 more thing, the bully boy skit? it was in the show. it was funny. nobody booed. nobody heckled.

so, moving on, as c.i.'s noted, ricky clousing has recieved a 3 month sentence, will get a reduction in rank and then a dishonorable discharge. ricky clousing is a war resister who had the courage to stand up and say no to war. it's a shame it didn't receive the attention it needed from independent media, but it's really not a surprise at this point. i think we've all grown used to that outcome. seems like every time a war resister goes on trial (clousing's court-martial was today), independent media has some where else to be.

read c.i.'s 'and the war drags on.' it's really amazing.

let me put in c.i.'s 'iraq snapshot' and call this an entry, i'm still high on the concert:

Thursday, October 12, 2006. Chaos and violence continue in Iraq; Judy Collins once sang "Hard Times for Lovers" but Bully Boy whimpers "Tough Times for Bullies"; war resister Ricky Clousing faces down the military and now faces sentencing, John Howard suffers from a grossly inflated sense of self, a study published in a medical journal continues to attract attention (as it should), and George McGovern weighs in on the 'cut & run' reality.


As the
AFP notes, Bully Boy "has acknowledged that 'these are tough times in Iraq'."
Possibly he's considering another pledge to go off sweets while the war in Iraq wages? He wasn't able to keep the first pledge, but considering what passes for a "plan" with his administration, who knows?

Bully Boy's facing questions about Iraq due to several issues including
a study published in The Lancet which estimated that 655,000 Iraqis have died as a result of the war as well as the facts on the ground in Iraq that he can't hide from such as the American troop fatality count which now stands at 44 for the month and 2757 since the beginning of the illegal war.

Criticism is even growing within his own party. As Sandra Lupien noted on Tuesday and Wednesdays
The KPFA Evening News, Olympia Snowe has become the latest Republican US Senator to break with the Bully Boy's Deaf-Dumb-Blind Iraq policy. AP notes Snowe's Tuesday statements including "that staying the course is neither an option or plan." As Lupien noted, Snowe has joined the company of John Warner, Susan Collins and Chuck Hagel in questioning the 'validity' of the 'stay the course' nonsense.

Speaking on
KPFA's The Morning Show, George McGovern noted that the real 'cut & run' was "when we cut & run from reality and common sense" and the US administration began the illegal war with Iraq. McGovern is a former US Representative, Senator and the 1972 Democratic Party nominee for president.

Also in US election news,
Katrina vanden Heuvel (The Nation) notes CODEPINK's Give Peace a Vote and "is the same pledge signed by aproximately 80,000 voters as part of the Voters for Peace campaign which includes Gold Star Families for Peace, Peace Action, Global Exchange, United for Peace and Justice (a coalition of 1,400 local groups in itself), CodePink and others." The pledge also has it roots in the November 28, 2005 Nation editorial entitled "Democrats and the War." And CODEPINK is celebrating its fourth anniversary this month.

Bombs?

CBS and AP report "a synchronized bomb attack [in Baghdad, which] killed five and wounded 11 others" that began with a car bomb and was followed with a roadside bomb. CNN notes a motorcycle bomb in Baghdad which killed three and wounded 15 more as well as "a bomb . . . near a fuel station" which left four injured.



Shootings?

Aseel Kami (Reuters) reported eleven dead in Baghdad when "[g]unmen stormed the officers of a new Iraqi satellite channel in Baghdad". The BBC reports that two people managed to escape and quotes a witness who states: "Some of the attackers were wearing police uniforms and other civilianc lothing. All were masked." Thursday's raid, Al Jazeera notes, followed one "at 8:30pm Wednesday" in Diwaniya on "the city's Hamza police station, killing one policeman and freeing 10 prisoners who were being held on various criminal charges, police Lieutenant Raid Jabir said."


Corpses?

Al Jazeera notes four corpses were discovered in Suwayrah ("signs of torture"). CNN notes that 40 corpses ("bullet-riddled") were discovered by police in Iraq and that
"[m]ore than 400 bodies have been found in similar condition in Baghdad this month alone." And, on Wednesday,
Al Jazeera reports that the corpse of an Iraqi priest who had been kidnapped, Amer Iskender, was discovered in Mosul.

As the violence and chaos continue the study published in the Lancet continues to get headlines, no matter how Bully Boy, his poodle Tony Blair and John Howard (to dopey to rate a nickname) dismiss it.
Sarah Boseley (Guardian of London) reports that "the US researches [of the study] have the backing of four separate independent experts who reviewed the new paper for the Lancet. All urged publication. One spoke of the 'powerful strength' of the research methods, which involved house-to-house surveys by teams of doctors across Iraq." Andrew Buncombe and Ben Russell (Independent of London) note that the study breaks down as follows: "Fifty-six per cent of violent deaths were caused by gunshots, 13 per cent by car bombs, 14 percent by other explosions and 13 per cent by air strikes." Paul Craig Roberts (CounterPunch) wonders: "What is America's reward for Bush's illegal wars that have killed 655,000 Iraiqs, an uncounted number of Afghanis, and disabled as many as 400,000 US troops?"

Speaking about the study on
The KPFA Evening News yesterday, Dahr Jamail noted that the study follows an earlier one -- published in the Lancet) ". . . October 29, 2004, since that time we've had the second siege of Falluja, countless other major US military operations and the even more importantly is the massive widespread abuse of the death squads in Iraq by the various militias and various political groups in that country and the criminal element which now is generating even much more deaths than the US military which is quite a staggering thing to say."

Today,
Dahr Jamail (Truthout) writes: "In the context of the horror stories that have reached us over the three-plus years of the occupation, this latest figure is not nearly as shocking as when the first Lancet report was published in October of 2004. It has been abundantly clear since then that the number of Iraqis being killed by and because of the occupation has continued to increase exponentially."

While the study and the numbers are discussed, John Howard, prime minister of Australia, appears to think the Iraq war is all about him. That might be a good thing since no WMDs have been found and that claim, and all the others, have been revealed as lies. However,
Ian McPhedran (The Daily Telegraph) reports Howard is stating that if Australia leaves Iraq "then it is good enough for the Americans and the British to do the same. . . . The present reality is if we pull out and the Americans pull out and the British pull out . . ." The answer to that long winded sentence to nowhere is, as George McGovern noted on The Morning Show today, no one knows for sure. But Howard seems convinced that he is the last glue holding Blair and Bully Boy together.

Returning to reality, in Fayetteville, North Carolina,
Ricky Clousing's court-martial began and ended (and the world wonders: WHERE THE HELL WAS INDEPENDENT MEDIA?). April Johnston (Fayetteville Observer) reports that Clousing "pleaded guilty to being absent without leave" and that was the end of the hearing: "The Army originally charged Clousing with desertion, but allowed him to plead guilty to the lesser charge." AP reports: "Sgt. Ricky Clousing, 24, of Sumner, Wash., was expected to be sentenced Thursday afternoon. His attorney, David Miner of Seattle, has said he would argue against sending Clousing to prison."

War resister
Ricky Clousing is part of a larger story of resistance within the military as well as the story of one person's brave stand. In June 2005, he self-checked out of the military after returning from Iraq. On August 11th of this year, Mike Barber (Seattle Post-Intelligencer) broke the news that 24-year-old Ricky Clousing had decided to turn himself in and noted that Clousing went AWOL from "Fort Bragg in 2005 after returning from Iraq with the 82nd Airborne Division." Clousing spoke publicly about his decision to return at the Veterans for Peace conference that was being held in Seattle. Clousing turned himself in at Fort Lewis (Washington) and was instructed that Fort Bragg handled the issue. On August 18th, Clousing turned himself to Fort Bragg. September 1st, the military announced, to Clousing's attorney David Miner, that Clousing had been charged with desertion the day before. Again, Miner states he will argue against sending Clousing to prison.

What if they gave a war and no one showed up? What if they gave a resistance and indymedia was too busy partying? (And promoting the party.) The "coverage" isn't cutting it.

Instead, the peace movement depends upon word of mouth, peer-to-peer, to get the word out. Which is why
Ehren Watada's father, Bob Watada, continues the second leg of his speaking tour to raise awareness on his son, the first officer to publicly refuse to deploy to Iraq. Ehren Watada feels that the war is illegal and that to participate would mean he and anyone serving under him would be committing war crimes. Some of the upcoming dates for Bob Watada's speaking tour include:

Thurs 10/12 6:00 pm Whittier Area Coalition for Peace & Justice, Mark Twain Club Potluck
($3 donations) Bob speaks at 7:00 pm. First Friends Church of Whittier, 12305 E. Philadelphia St., Whittier
Contact: Robin McLaren 562-943-4051 email:
mclaren@charter.net

Sat 10/14 morning Press Conference San Diego
Contact: Reiko Obata 858-483-6018 email:
watada@san.rr.com for San Diego events.

Sat 10/14 6:00 pm Lt. Watada Dinner/Fundraiser San Diego (suggested donation: $15)
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of San Dieguito, 1036 Solano Drive, Solano Beach

Mon. 10/16 4:30-5:30 pm National Lawyers Guild of San Diego
Room 300, Thomas Jefferson Law School, 2120 San Diego Ave, San Diego

All of that can be found online but, WARNING, PDF format. For those who can view PDF, click
here. Again, the speaking tour, Bob Watada's second, begins in October.
More information on Ehren Watada can be found at
Courage to Resist and ThankYouLt.org.

As the resistance grows, as the fatalities grow, as the wounded grow, it's worth remembering not only the lies that led to war but the reality of Iraq today. As
Amit R. Paley (Washington Post) reported: "Parliament on Wednesday approved a controversial law that will allow Iraq to be carved into a federation of autonomous regions, after Sunni Arabs and some Shiite Muslims stormed out of the session in protest."