monday night, Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "YOUTUBE Loves Hosting Registered Sex Offenders"
subscribe to peacock and 1 good thing there is 'last light.' that's an upcoming show which will star matthew fox. he hasn't done t.v. since 'lost' and i'm really eager to see this new show.
i started to post last night. i got the sentences above in while i was going through the e-mails and then i saw dalton's e-mail asking me what i thought of the premiere of 'animal kingdom'?
i hadn't seen it.
i went to my cloud and there were 2 new episodes. next sunday, they'll air another 2 episodes. i don't know if that's the plan for every sunday. remember this is the final season - which sucks. there's so many ways this show could continue.
1st off smurf. it's the same actress but she looks good this season. maybe because they're not trying to make her so young? leila george plays the character and i found that out after i watched both episodes.
i did not know her as anything but smurf in the flashbacks (now, with ellen barken off the show, she's the only smurf). turns out she's sean penn's ex-wife (my sympathies, i imagine that was a two-year nightmare) her parents are greta scacchi and vincent d'onofrio. so i'm guessing the was born shortly after they did 'the player' together. (in the robert altman film, vincent played screenwrite david whom tim robbins' character griffin kills. then he watches david's lover - played by greta - from outside the house at night while he speaks with her on the phone.)
i wonder what else she was in?
she turned her head in the 1st episode at a certain angle and she reminded me of some 1. i couldn't pin down who. but that's why i looked her up after watching both episodes. maybe it was of her mother greta? i just felt like i'd seen her before - off 'animal kingdom' - when she titled her head a certain way.
so we're learning more about the past. these 2 episodes really focused on what it was like for pope and his sister to grow up with smurf as their mother. she lied, she manipulated and she tricked them constantly.
in the present, deran may be finding a new boyfriend. if so, things are going to have to calm down 1st. the community is seeing the cody's as soft, deran's told. so he has to go bust a head and threaten others - 'influencers.' pope and the others also take down smurf's old fence who refused to do business with them after smurf died but showed up in the 1st episode wanting their help to run 1 of her competitor's out of business. they pretended to take the job but then burned down the fence's business and inventory.
pope has an empty lot. he gets upset when he finds out j has put it up for sale.
he confronts his nephew who insists it was only to get the value. j says that they need to consolidate their holdings, sell some off, blah blah blah. he's going to find a new attorney for them. deran is backing j up. wonder if he'll end up regretting that.
j shows up at the law offices and meets with a young woman who is not an attorney.
and?
after the meeting, they're having drinks together. it's really hard to trust j.
there's some mystery about what pope wants to do with his empty property. he finds a guy stealing tools and attacks him until the guy says he's a carpenter. then pope offers him the choice between being beat up or working for him to build - whatever. there are no plans and the carpenter seems as in the dark as the audience is.
i'm assuming it has to do with something from the past.
craig?
obsessed with seeing his son and his ex is jerking him around. he's also gone sober for his son. deran tells j he liked his brother better when he was using.
deran and j seem to be closer this season. i'm like pope in that i don't trust j, not after every thing he's done the last seasons.
it was a strong opening.
let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq snapshot:'
But the brother of Mr Assange, Gabriel Shipton, believes the case has “gone on too long” and “could be ended so easily.”
He added in an interview on GB News’ Mark Steyn: “Joe Biden could just drop these charges, move on, just let it go and Julian could walk free.”
It also means all of those entities have a big target on their backs. So let’s do a thought experiment. Let’s say Moscow has engaged in a years-long attempt to catch and imprison the man responsible for publishing a series of massive leaks that proved deeply embarrassing to the Kremlin.
Though he’s not a Russian national, has never lived in the country, nor was he there when he committed his supposed “crime,” the Russian government has taken the radical step of trying to have him extradited to its soil, so it can put him through a trial that’s a foregone conclusion and imprison him for god knows how long — effectively asserting the right to prosecute and jail any journalist anywhere in the world if they happen to publish something that displeases Russia’s ruling elite.
What was it that displeased them? One was the several tranches of secret documents he released about the various wars Moscow has fought in the twenty-first century, revealing war crimes we never knew about, a civilian death toll higher than we thought, and various cover-ups and behind-the-scenes subterfuge. Another was the decades worth of diplomatic cables that gave us unprecedented insight into the workings of Russian and other nations’ foreign policy.
But maybe his greatest crime in the minds of the country’s ruling class was publishing scandalous information about the corruption and political manipulation of one section of the political elite, embarrassing revelations almost certainly fed to him by an adversarial foreign power with its own particular motivations.
The Kremlin has gone to extraordinary lengths to punish these acts of truth-telling, and to deter any future ones. It pressured PayPal to cut off payments to him, gave immunity to a criminal and sex offender if he helped them catch him, and used its assets in the hacker world to attack a foreign government’s websites and create the pretext for its security services to enter the country he was staying in. It eventually forced him to spend seven years in a foreign embassy to avoid capture by Russian authorities, leading to the partial unravelling of his sanity. Once they finally caught him, they promptly imprisoned him without charge for the next three years, some of it spent in solitary confinement, a vicious form of torture. As a result of Moscow’s actions, when he finally showed up to his extradition trial, he struggled to say his name and age, and the extreme stress ultimately caused him to have a stroke.
All for the crime of exposing war crimes and corruption.
Amnesty International has called out the move to extradite Julian:
Responding to the news that the UK Home Secretary Priti Patel has certified Julian Assange’s extradition to the United States to face charges under the Espionage Act, Agnes Callamard, Amnesty International Secretary General said:
“Allowing Julian Assange to be extradited to the US would put him at great risk and sends a chilling message to journalists the world over.”
“If the extradition proceeds, Amnesty International is extremely concerned that Assange faces a high risk of prolonged solitary confinement, which would violate the prohibition on torture or other ill treatment. Diplomatic assurances provided by the US that Assange will not be kept in solitary confinement cannot be taken on face value given previous history.”
“We call on the UK to refrain from extraditing Julian Assange, for the US to drop the charges, and for Assange to be freed.”
Julian Assange is likely to further appeal the extradition on separate grounds that it violates his right to freedom of expression.
For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:
+44 20 7413 5566
email: press@amnesty.org
twitter: @amnestypress
This is also the first year that Iraq's seen Lake Sawa dry up.
These are not good things for the Iraqi people.
And this is only going to get worse in the immediate future.
Another major sandstorm is predicted in the next few days. Iraq's seen these repeatedly this year. People have to go inside. Some that don't make it in time end up hospitalized. Iraq's always had sandstorms but they haven't been as frequent and as massive as the ones this year.
Temperatures are rising and the water is disappearing.
A report from the European Union Institute of Security Studies projects that the number of days when temperatures in Baghdad hit 120 degrees will go from roughly 14 per year to more than 40 over the next two decades.
The study forecasts that the Iraqi capital, which is already seeing longer heat waves each summer and higher peak temperatures, will be one of the places hardest hit by global warming.
Baghdad set a new record high of 125.2 degrees on July 28, 2020. The next day it cooled down to 124.
- Truest statement of the week
- Truest statement of the week II
- A note to our readers
- Editorial: Iraq and climate change
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- From The TESR Test Kitchen
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