if you don't know why, you haven't been watching. it's an involving show, to be sure. but so were a lot of shows that got the axe in may.
what did 'dallas' have going for it that other shows didn't?
the answer's front and center. josh henderson plays sue ellen and j.r.'s son john ross ewing iii.
and he is hot. he's sex on a stick. a really big stick.
it was either the 2nd or 3rd episode when he got in bed with a woman he was hoping to double cross his father with. and he wakes up drugged - she drugged him and taped their sex without him knowing it - and he's got straps around his wrists.
this is a more adult 'dallas' than you may be used to.
the whole cast is good. linda gray probably is my favorite of the actresses and, after her, jordana brewster. but of the men, it's josh henderson front and center. and you live to see him clash with j.r. how far will j.r. go was always the question. we knew, for example, that even when he actually cared for sue ellen - on those few times - that wouldn't prevent him from using her or discarding her for what he wanted.
credit to ava and c.i. for realizing what a stud josh henderson is. their 'TV: The fickle fate of stardom' may be the first review to really address the studly cock throbbing at the urinal that is tv.
(okay, probably overreached with that 1.)
other critics were carping about him. they were dissing his acting (which is strong) or insulting his mustache (which is sexy). they missed what was right before their eyes.
ava and c.i. didn't.
and you better believe that just because a bunch of men and women who want male approval didn't realize what josh henderson had to offer doesn't mean the audience missed it. he's incredibly popular.
if you haven't already checked out the show, make a point to and you'll see what all the moans and sighs are about.
let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq snapshot:'
Monday,
July 2, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, the political crisis
continues, Iraqi women are court-ordered to take virginity tests, the
drone war and more.
Last month, Al Jazeera's Listening Post reported on the Drone War (currently second clip below the viewing box). Excerpt.
Michelle Shephard (Toronto Star's National Security reporter): I think that New York Times article [Jo Becker and Scott Shane's "Secret 'Kill List' Proves a Test of Obama's Principles and Will"]
has actually changed the way that people are now reporting on the drone
program. It revealed that the Obama administration actually counts
anybody who's of military age that's killed in a certain region where al
Qaeda is known to be as a militant. So, in other words, the only way
to prove innocence is after death and proving that they weren't in fact
involved in the terrorist group.
Chris Woods (Bureau of Investigative Journalism):
Any adult male in Waziristan, we're told is fair game. And the only
way a civilian can be identified is after the event and posthumously.
Actually, even there, when we've supplied the CIA with named civilians
they have killed, they've spat it back in our face. Civilians have no
chance of being recognized as such by the CIA under their present
methodology.
Richard Gizbert: According to the US government's methodology, 16-year-old Tariq Aziz
was a militant. According to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism,
he was in Warziristan armed with only a camera given to him by a
Pakistani human rights organization to document drone strikes and their
impact on Pakistan's civilian population.
Shahzad Akbar (Foundation For Fundamental Rights):
This young boy, Tariq Aziz, when he goes back after the training, three
days later he is killed. And when we say this thing to the media
reporters and we file a case about this, what we get to hear from CIA is
that they completely deny. They say that they have killed a
16-year-old boy but he was a militant.
Richard
Gizbert: Tariq Aziz is just one case. The Bureau of Investigative
Journalism says there are 320 cases like his in Pakistan alone. And
those are just the names they know about. More civilians have been
killed in drone strikes in Yemen and Somalia. Yet the Obama
administration maintains that no more than 60 civilians have been killed
by drones in Pakistan and that is the figure that often gets reported.
Jameel Jaffer (American Civil Liberties Union): One of the really frustrating things is that there are still media organizations in spite of that New York Times
story that continue to just recite the government statements about how
many militants were killed or how many civilians were not killed
CNN news clip: Privately US officials say the covert strikes are legal.
Jameel
Jaffer: Without making clear that the government uses the word
"civilian" in this very unusual way and that it uses the word "militant"
in this very unusual way.
Richard
Gizbert: The uncritical use by most of the US media of the
administration's numbers, its narrative, is part of a disturbing trend
in American journalism that news consumers have been seeing in the
post-9/11 era. When it comes to matters of national security and
intelligence, the government plays the access card and most journalists
play along.
Lara Logan (CBS News) news clip: But our 60 Minutes team was given secret clearance and unprecedented access.
Shahzad
Akbar: So how it works normally is that they talk to individual
reporters and leak information and then that reporter does not name the
official who has leaked it but everyone in journalistic community knows
that it's CIA source which is leaking that source.
Chris
Woods: It's a rewards based system that we've seen emerge in
Washington where -- national security correspondents in particular --
if they play the game, they get the goodies. They get the morsels. But
when you stop playing that game, if you don't even play that game to
start with, you're cut off at the knees. You don't get access.
Michelle
Shephard: And there hasn't been any challenging. No one has
challenged the numbers or any of the important issues such as the
legality of the program itself. I think thankfully that has changed but
only recently. And considering how long the program has gone on, I
think that's surprising.
Barack Obama news clip: Actually drones have not caused a huge number of civilian casualties.
Richard
Gizbert: The White House did not even confirm the existence of its
drone program until just six months ago. That was not under questioning
from the American news media. President Obama made the admission
during an online Google talk forum. Since then journalists like NBC's
Brian Williams and CBS' Scott Pelley who are paid millions to anchor
network news shows had prolonged interviews on national security with
both the president and his CIA Director [to clarify, Pelley interviewed
Leon Panetta -- former CIA Director, currently Secretary of Defense --
the current CIA Director is David Petraeus] but neither journalist asked
a specific question about the drone program.
Brian Williams news clip: And the First Lady? She's at dinner?
Scott Pelley news clip: It turned out the lightest thing on board was the heart of the man with a world of worry.
Chris
Woods: The inside the situation room was hagiography at its worst. I
mean, [the late Nicolae] Ceausescu [General Secretary of the Romanian
Communist Party and President of Romania] would have been proud of that
had it appeared on Romanian TV two decades ago.
Barack Obama news clip: Good job, national security team.
Chris Woods: It was an appalling, appalling piece of television.
Brian Williams news clip: In your official life, where does this day rank?
Chris
Woods: It's a particular sycophancy among particularly broadcast
journalists in Washington right now towards administration figures.
Jameel
Jaffer: The vast majority of that coverage has been extremely
deferential -- not just failing to ask questions but essentially
glorifying the program.
Scott Pelley news clip: But Leon Panetta has held the toughest jobs in Washington and quietly done what seems impossible.
Jameel
Jaffer: And part of the reason that the United States is now at war
with more countries than even Leon Panetta can manage to remember in a
TV interview.
Scott Pelley news clip: And how many countries are we currently engaged in a shooting war?
Leon Panetta news clip: [Laughing] That's a good question.
Shahzad
Akbar: Why don't we see President Obama or Leon Panetta in an
interview where he's actually asked some strict questions and not that
how great it is and how much time they spend on selecting a target to
kill? Can we go a bit further to explain that these 3,000 people who
have been killed in drone strikes, who exactly are they and what was the
level of their militancy and what was the threat they posed to the US?
In his most recent piece (June 29th) on the Drone War, Chris Wood observed:
Earlier this week, former US President and fellow Democrat Jimmy Carter also made an outspoken attack
on Obama's counter-terrorism policy. In a New York Times article,
Carter said of the covert drone strikes 'We don't know how many hundreds
of innocent civilians have been killed in these attacks, each one
approved by the highest authorities in Washington. This would have been
unthinkable in previous times.'
Saying that
the United States had lost the right to speak with moral authority on
foreign affairs, Carter urged Washington 'to reverse course and regain
moral leadership according to international human rights norms that we
had officially adopted as our own and cherished throughout the years.'
The
Drone War's not getting the attention it deserves and we note it here
from time to time. All the above can be seen as applying to US coverage
of Iraq -- the reliance on officials, on officials figures, the failure
to ask questions, etc.
July 1st was Sunday.
The June death tolls were covered or 'covered' depending upon how easy
of grader you are. As noted in Third's "Editorial: 472 killed in June from violence in Iraq," "Reuters claims 237 deaths. AFP goes a wee bit higher with 282." Iraq Body Count
-- which neither of the outlets bothered to mention -- counted 472
deaths. The United Nations counted 401 deaths. But the wire services
went with the much, much smaller number. Well maybe they weren't
aware of the IBC number of the United Nations number?
Oops.
Prashant
is the Baghdad Bureau Chief and clearly he was aware of the other
numbers. He could include them in a Tweet. One wonders why AFP wasn't able to include them in an actual news article? Sunday Margaret Griffis (Antiwar.com) reported her outlet's count: 544.
Of course, a month with over 400 deaths? That doesn't imply the Iraq War is over, does it?
My name is Penny Evans and I've just gone twenty-one
A young widow in the war that's being fought in Vietnam
And I have two infant daughters, I thank God I have no sons
Now they say the war is over but I think it's just begun
-- Melanie's version of "The Ballad of Penny Evans" used as an intro to "Peace Will Come (According to Plan)"
Now the death tolls? Not a new issue. And in April, Joel Wing wrote a great article for AK News about the Iraqi government undercounting:
In February 2012, the Iraqi government released its official figures for casualties from April 2004 to the end of 2011. It had over 69,000 deaths for that time period. That count was 30,000 less than other organizations that keep track of violence in Iraq. During the height of the civil war, the country's ministries' numbers were comparable to other groups, but since 2011 they have consistently been the lowest. While some Iraqi politicians have claimed that the official counts miss many deaths, it could also be argued that the statistics are being politicized by the prime minister who controls all of the security ministries.
On February 29, 2012, Iraqi government spokesman Ali Dabbagh announced the government's numbers for deaths in the country. He said that from April 5, 2004 to December 31, 2011 69,263 Iraqis were killed. 239,133 were also wounded. The deadliest year was 2006 when there were 21,539 dead, and 39,329 wounded. 2011 was the least violent with only 2,777 casualties. Of the nation's eighteen provinces, Baghdad was the deadliest with 23,898 dead for the reported time period, followed by Diyala, Anbar, and Ninewa. Muthanna in the south was the safest with only 94 killed over the seven years covered. A member of parliament's human rights committee immediately criticized the report. The deputy claimed that there were thousands of people who disappeared during the civil war that were never counted. He also said that out in the countryside, reporting to the ministries was poor. No numbers on violence in Iraq can be anywhere near complete. During the civil war from 2005-2008 there were sections of the country that were too dangerous to enter and do any serious reporting. Some insurgent groups also buried their victims. The problem with the ministries numbers however are that they are so far below other organizations that keep track of violence in Iraq, which was not always true.
It's a shame Prashant wasn't aware of the article. Oh, wait. He was. And Joel Wing reminded him of it yesterday.
I
don't know what Prashant's been smoking in Baghdad but after Nancy A.
Youssef got her scoop (in Knight Ridder's final days before becoming
McClatchy) that the US was keeping a count (they'd denied it previously)
that figure was regularly included in the State Dept reports. Those
reports continued through 2011. Possibly he was unaware of them. I
have no idea what he's Tweeting about with his claim that the "US
miltiary felt compelled to release their figure" in 2010. Again, the
US kept toll of Iraqis dying from violence was included in the State
Dept reports. These were usually weekly though they did drop to
bi-weekly and less in the final year (2011).
Sometimes when I am feeling as a big as the land
With the velvet hills in the small of my back
And my hands are playing in the sand
And my feet are swimming in all of the waters
All of the rivers are givers to the ocean
According to plan
-- "Peace Will Come" written by Melanie (Safka), first appears on her Leftover Wine
But never according to the US press' plan, apparently. Reminder: From
October 19th through 28th at Blackfriars Theatre in Rochester, New
York, Melanie and the Recordman will be performed, the story of Melanie
and her late husband Peter Schekeryk (he passed away in 2010, they
were together for decades, starting in the sixties). That's ten
performances only and among those working on the show with Melanie is
her son Beau Jarred Schekeryk. Melanie is the original Queen of the
Rock Festivals, having performed at so many (including Woodstock). "Lay
Down (Candles in the Rain)" made her a name all over the world and her
other hits include "What Have They Done To My Song, Ma?," "Peace Will
Come (According to Plan), "Bitter Bad," "The Nickel Song," "Ring The
Living Bell," her cover of "Ruby Tuesday," "Beautiful People" and her
number one hit "Brand New Key."
Sunday, W.G. Dunlop (AFP) reports,
"Iraqi women face court-ordered virginity tests that often show they
were virgins until marriage but shame them nonetheless, doctors at an
institute that carries out the tests and a lawyer said." He quotes
Amnesty International's Marianne Mollman stating, "The issue of
virginity testing, and forced virginity testing and sort of legal
virginity tests in court proceedings or in other ways, violate a whole
host of human rights and are just not justifiable. Even if it were
legitimate to look at whether women were virgins for whatever reason,
which it's not, you can't use a virginity test for that, because the
hymen might break for any reason." Anna Breslaw (Jezebel) notes,
"The Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the Iraqi Women's
Association are all doing their best to eliminate this practice as the
status quo, claiming it's both inhuman and ineffective."
While
many have remained in Iraq, millions have chosen to leave. That
includes the brain drain period -- where Iraq lost a large number of
doctors, nurses, attorneys and other professionals in the earliest years
of the illegal war. In 2006 and 2007, as the ethnic cleansing took
place, many more began fleeing.
Despite false
claims, there has been no great return. Some people flat out lie and
others apparently don't understand UN figures on IDPs are not UN figures
on Iraqis who have left the country. Owen Bowcott (Guardian) has two reports on Iraqi refugees. From his first one:
Hind
Abed sees her husband every day – in Colnbrook detention centre, west
London, where he is detained under threat of deportation. Together they
can listen to the sound of planes departing from nearby Heathrow
airport.
The 18-year-old fled with her
family from bombings and gun attacks in Baghdad. They arrived in Britain
five years ago and Abed has been granted indefinite leave to remain.
Last year, she married Anwer al-Zaidi, 28, in an Islamic ceremony; she
is a Shia Muslim, he is a Sunni from a different area of Baghdad. Her
family, she says, does not approve of the match.
"I love him," she said, "but if he is sent back to Iraq, he will be killed.
Owen Bowcott's second article includes:
The Iraqi parliament has banned the forced return from Europe of tens of thousands of failed asylum seekers and threatened to fine airlines that take part in deportation programmes.
The
unilateral declaration has already resulted in deportees being turned
back at the border, according to the London-based refugee support
organisation that has lobbied for the policy change.
For
the past year, the United Kingdom has been unable to remove Iraqis,
even after they have lost the right to remain in Britain, owing to legal
disputes over their reception at Baghdad airport and the state of
security within Iraq.
Though
the United Nations has repeatedly noted it is not safe for Iraqis to
return, many host countries have ignored that reality. And in the
United States, the target goals set for Iraqi refugees remain unmet.
The political crisis continues, Al Mada reports
that an Iraqiya spokesperson says that the tolerance of nondemocratic
moves by the government is hurting Iraq and that, when Nouri al-Maliki
is questioned before Parliament,, this will become even more obvious.
The spokesperson says when, not if. Alsumaria interviews
State of Law MP Haitham al-Jubouri who insists taht the Sadr bloc has
abandoned efforts for Nouri to appear before Parliament for questioning
and that it wants to work with Nouri. The Sadr bloc is not part of
State of Law and State of Law is Nouri's political slate so the
announcements regarding the Sadr bloc will continue to come from Moqtada
and his spokespersons, not from State of Law. Kitabat reports
on Moqtada al-Sadr's statements which were that he worries this may not
be the time for a no-confidence vote and where he says he would favor
reforms. Of course, he would favor reforms. He's said that for how
many months now? Does State of Law think no one pays attention? He
wants the Erbil Agreement returned to. There's nothing new in his
statements -- which were in reply to a follower online. Al Mada reports
that Nouri is still pushing his recent interest: a national
conference. He wasn't interested in it from December through most of
June but, suddenly last week, he became interested. The newspaper
reports he's pushing Ibrahim al-Jaafari to head it. Nouri knew this
would cause conflict -- the Kurds and al-Jaafari have been publicly at
odds since 2005. (At odds much longer but it went public in 2005. They
began fighting against his receiving a second term as prime minister at
that point.)
Meanwhile remember when Little Saddam (Nouri al-Maliki) forgot he was a puppet and thought he could demand that the White House get ExxonMobil to drop their deal with the Kurds? Silly puppet. Administrations dance for oil corporations. Dar Addustour reports that US Vice Presidetn Joe Biden phoned Nouri on Thursday to express the US government's belief that Nouri needs to stop trying to halt that deal and that Nouri was informed that the F-16s Iraq 'needs' will not be supplied if Nouri doesn't stop trying to halt he ExxonMobil deal. It's amazing. Torture cells didn't bother the White House. Killing gay men and men suspected of being gay didn't bother the White House. Attacking Iraqi youths didn't bother the White House. But when a billion dollar ExxonMobil deal was threatened, suddenly the White House is ready to pull the F-16s.
Meanwhile remember when Little Saddam (Nouri al-Maliki) forgot he was a puppet and thought he could demand that the White House get ExxonMobil to drop their deal with the Kurds? Silly puppet. Administrations dance for oil corporations. Dar Addustour reports that US Vice Presidetn Joe Biden phoned Nouri on Thursday to express the US government's belief that Nouri needs to stop trying to halt that deal and that Nouri was informed that the F-16s Iraq 'needs' will not be supplied if Nouri doesn't stop trying to halt he ExxonMobil deal. It's amazing. Torture cells didn't bother the White House. Killing gay men and men suspected of being gay didn't bother the White House. Attacking Iraqi youths didn't bother the White House. But when a billion dollar ExxonMobil deal was threatened, suddenly the White House is ready to pull the F-16s.
In other news, Mark Bentley (Bloomberg News) reports
that the Turkish government is stating that its war planes have bombed
"three positions of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, in northern
Iraq." AP adds,
"It was the latest Turkish air campaign against the rebels in Iraq
since the killing of eight Turkish soldiers along the border around
mid-June." AFP notes the announcement here. Aaron Hess (International Socialist Review) described the PKK in 2008,
"The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's
oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has
waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed tens of thousands of
Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's
largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration
straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of
imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While
Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order
to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these
are now at risk." AP notes the Turkish government is claiming 24 PKK killed last week.
On this week's Law and Disorder Radio, an hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights)
and this week they address the Supreme Court immigration decision with
attorney Cathy Albisa and Dr. Katherine Albrecht joins the hosts to
discuss microchips and other privacy issue. Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan To Track You Your Every Move with RFID, is Albrecht's latest book. Excerpt:
Dr.
Katherine Albrecht: Where I get concerned is when we start talking
about places where your privacy is invaded that you don't know it's
happening and you don't have control over it. That's not Facebook,
that's more getting into Google and Gmail and e-mail programs and
tracking cookies and online tracking. And once all of that stuff starts
to get collected about you, then it begins to impede with democracy,
with freedom, with all of the things that we value so much in this
country. And I'll give you an example. When we -- Google is kind of my
current project right now because when you log on to Google -- and I
could say Yahoo or Bing too because they're all doing this -- you think
you're logging on to a search engine that's a helpful tool that's going
to answer a question that you have. The reality is that it does answer
your questions. But Google does not view the google.com search box as a
helpful tool for you. They do not spend millions of dollars
perfecting their search algorithms so they can give you stuff for free.
They're not your mom, they're not your dad, they're not your best
buddy. They're a company that's in business to make money. So what
they do is they set this up as essentially bait to get you to log onto
their system and tell them what you are thinking. You know, if you
think about this from a government perspective, Stalin and Pol Pot and
Hitler and all these people going back would have given their eye teeth
to have had a way to get the entire population five, ten, twenty times a
day to log into a centralized computer and upload what they were
thinking about at that moment. But the reality is that they came at us
with guns and tanks and laws and regulations forcing us to do that, we'd
all say, "Heck no." We'd never do it. But when they give us -- and by
"they," here I'll go back to Google -- when Google gives us a little
window into which we can type what's on our minds, we voluntarily do it
and we thank them for it. So another way to think of it, Google is a
multi-billion dollar corporation. When was the last time a
multi-billion dollar corporation gave you all of its products for free?
And the answer is "never" because those aren't products, they're bait
and you are the product. Let me transfer this over to e-mail as well.
Every G-mail [Google e-mail account] that you send or receive is read
and copied and the keywords are placed into the profile of both the
sender and the recipient of every e-mail. Now let me tell you why
that's a disaster. My doctor, my primary care physician -- I just
overcame an 18-month battle with breast cancer. My doctor, who I love
dearly, whose a total freedom loving woman, she said, "Listen, I need to
get your latest blood tests and you just had a full workup on the
cancer. Send that to me." And I said, "Well I have it as a PDF." And
she said, "Send it to me as an attachment." And then she writes down
her e-mail address and it's G-mail. Had I sent that to her, Google --
according to its own privacy policy -- would have stripped of my entire
medical report from that PDF and placed it into their files that I don't
even have access to, that I can't delete. They would have put it in
their file and then they would have known all of that about me.
So
this becomes not only a problem for privacy and control because I
certainly would not put my medical records up on a billboard in Time
Square, but it also becomes a problem for dissidents and for people who
are working for freedom in dangerous parts of the globe. You may have
heard a few years ago there was a fairly high profile case in which
Google was hacked into by the Chinese and the people whose e-mails were
hacked -- these were G-mail accounts and Google searches and all the
records that Google keeps. They were hacked, we believe, because the
Chinese government wanted to identify dissidents so that they could
round them up and lock them up. People whose identifies that they were
not able to get otherwise.
Michael Ratner: Yeah, it's absolutely creepy, Katherine.
Dr.
Katherine Albrecht: I was going to say, Michael, when people say, 'If
you're not doing anything wrong, why should you care?' Alright, we've
heard this a thousand times. Well let me you that if a woman is --
feels a lump in her breast and suspects she might have cancer, if a
woman is going through a miscarriage and needs some counseling, if-if a
man if his prescription drug use might be tipping the scale over into
addiction, if you are in the process of losing your home, or maybe
you're looking for unemployment insurance, you're not doing anything
wrong but you certainly don't want that information out there in a giant
data base where it could fall into the wrong hands or even where Google
itself could have it. Why would I want anyone to know this personal
information unless I chose to disclose it? So when people say 'you're
not doing anything wrong,' I say, "No, we've all got a line of what's
private and what's public. And it's not about right and wrong. That
is a fake argument. That is an argument that these people will give you
when they want to invade your privacy and they want you to suck it up
and accept it. And we've got to get passed 'I'm not doing anything
wrong' and we've got to get into, "It's none of your blank business."
Heidi
Boghosian: Now Katherine that brings up the issue, for example, of
attorney - client privilege if there are communications through G-mail,
for example.
Katherine
Albrecht: Huge issue. When you've got a situation where you are duty
bound and perhaps even legally bound to keep certain information
private, if you are using a G-mail account, even if your client has a
G-mail account and you don't, if you are transmitting sensitive
information through there, I believe that you are in violation of not
only your attorney-client privileges but potentially even in violation
of the law. And I believe that there will be in the future some major
lawsuits over this because Google clearly states in its privacy policy
that that so-called free e-mail program that they're giving you, which
is really only worth about five bucks a month, you're not getting a huge
value from them, but in exchange for that, you are allowing them openly
to copy and make records of everything that you send and transmit.