5/22/2020

motherland fort salem

'motherland fort salem.' ever since ava and c.i. noted it in 'TV: Tracking the progress of women in TV,' I've been watching. so i started late but even so, i was surprised the season finale was last night (on 'free form,' by the way). i'm not sure if it will go to 'netflix' but it is on 'hulu.' if you haven't checked it out, you should. it was a really strong 1st season that just got better and better as it went along. general sarah alder has been commanding the witch armed forces for decades and decades. for too long, president kelly wade says. (the president is played by Sheryl lee ralph who 1st came to fame with the broadway musical 'dreamgirls' and has numerous tv shows including 'moesha' and 'it's a living.')

sarah has this throng of elderly witches that surrounds her at all times. if some 1 criticizes her, they hiss. when she's using her magic, they usually chant or make sounds to assist her.

sarah killed civilians in a mission - knowingly. and when 3 witches go to general petra bellweather, the general dismisses the 3 cadets. (1 of whom is her daughter.) but she actually believes them and goes to the president who sees this as the time to remove sarah. she's going to put petra in charge.

but?



sarah learns of what's happening and she and her throng of witches take over the president as she's delivering a national address. they parrot her and the president announces her faith in sarah and that she's giving sarah even more powers.

this is a show in an alternate universe where witches exist. in the u.s., a number of them have been working for the government - as witches - since the revolutionary war. they do military missions and combat terrorism.

raelle is 1 of the 3 main characters. at the start, she's going off to war college and her father's not happy. he's not a witch. but her mother was and her mother died. raelle questions how her mother died and is very upset about her death. she is put in a group with abigail (whose mother is the general petra) and with tally. all 3 have powers. raelle's are considered very powerful during exercises where they sing notes. raelle also has the power to heal. abigail's talent is battle and that's the family talent - they are a legendary family of warriors. tally can read things - minds, when enemies are approaching, etc.

raelle falls for scylla - a young witch. and, for the record, though scylla is a woman, there are male witches. raelle trusts scylla. but scylla is actually spree. the spree are determined to stop the witches working for the government. the government considers them terrorists. scylla's parents were 'dodgers' who refused to enlist with the government.

the 3 cadets are put through their paces by drill sgt. anacosta quartermaine. she ends interrogating scylla after tally discovers scylla's spree and turns her in.

now that sarah knows the 3 were responsible for the president finding out about her, she basically ensures that they will be canon fodder and not go on to glory. but petra pulls strings to ensure that abigail will be fine. this causes tension with the other 2 until they learn abigail turned her mother down.

tarim. they are a section of witches. they are powerful beyond belief. their songs ('seeds') are desperately wanted by sarah. khalida not only says no, she uses her power to inflict pain on sarah to show her just how powerful she is. the tarim do not trust sarah and feel she would use their spells to harm people and to enslave them. khalida and her brother adil are there at the academy because khalida is sick. raelle heals her.

the president had told sarah to stay away from the tarim. 1st, it would cause an international incident (russia and china would be outraged) and 2nd the tarim do not want their help. but now as the season winds down and as sarah has parroted the president, sarah makes the mission to go in (invade). she does this even when tally warns there are people hiding in the distance with weapons - not the tarim. and it's not the spree.

as they approach, they see a tarim elder who has been hanged. they enter a cave and another elder tells them to leave, they are not wanted. but people are dying (there are very few left - it may be only 10). adil says that they healed khalida. 'khalida?' that's all that's needed for raelle to approach and cure a child.

they head for the helicopter - even though tally warns there are people waiting with weapons.

a series of battles take place. it is the camarilla. they are a mortal enemy and they are back. despite sarah insisting 2 episodes ago that they are all defeated and gone. they hide in a dust storm they create but tally uses her powers to tell her fellow soldiers where to strike. even so, sarah gets hit and whatever was used (in a dart) is making her age. to save her, tally grabs hold and takes the poison from her so that sarah reverts to young and tally is now much older.

then raelle is hit after she goes back to rescue a tarim child. Abigail refuses to leave her behind. they hold hands as they get ready to face death but something spins up from the ground and the two are transported somewhere else. where we don't know.

we know anacosta helped scylla escape. she was being sent to a torture site. but anacosta helped her. why? because she wants to know where the spree are hiding. scylla shows up at a home and give a password. we then see anacosta posing as a jogger and watching.

that's not the big surprise though. the season ends with scylla going into the kitchen of the house and a woman is mad that she did not bring raelle. the woman? it's raelle's dead mother (or some 1 who looks just like her).


let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq snapshot:'


Thursday, May 21, 2020.  Attacking Tara Reade isn't feminism though it clearly helps some make a quick buck.





Cher performing Stephen Stills' "For What It's Worth." Cher's version appears on her 1969 classif album 3614 JACKSON HIGHWAY.


There's battle lines being drawn 
And nobody's right if everybody's wrong 
Young people speaking their minds
Getting some much resistance from behind

As a friend with the Biden campaign gloated to me on the phone last night, "We knew what we were doing."  Yes, they did.  The campus papers are pretty much mute right now.  That was always the biggest block for Joe.  It's not just that young adults don't like him.  It's also that they're better educated on assault and harassment.

The generational divide that's been at the heart of Joe's lukewarm reception continues.  And you see it at THE NATION where the elderly write so many columns that 46-year-old Dave Zirin is the 'youngster' in the mix.

Joan Walsh? 61.  Katha Pollitt?  70.  Patricia J. Williams?  68.

I had to ask Jim to look into that 2007 e-mail from THE NATION.  Ava and I had been sick of the imbalance at THE NATION in terms of gender.  They were publishing far more men than women.  We'd started to track it.  Around July 4th, THE NATION had e-mailed frantically.  They wanted the story killed.  They would do anything.  They would publish Ava and myself (we had no interest, thank you), they were going to be hiring women columnists shortly -- and young women at that.  Could we please kill the story?

Do we look like whores?  Maybe.  But we're not.

We tracked it for a full year and served up "The Nation featured 491 male bylines in 2007 -- how many female ones?" on December 23, 2007. 149, by the way, that's the answer.  They had 491 male bylines that year and only 149 female bylines.

And you don't see what women are up against?  Even on the so-called inclusive Democratic left (as opposed to genuine left).

Well they never did hire a young woman -- 46-year-old Melissa Lacewell Harris Perry was the closest they got.

They don't get it, like so many, they just don't get it.  They don't want to get it is probably the reason why they don't get it but it really doesn't matter.  What matters is we're in the 21st century and they're stuck in the 90s with their James Carville mindset.

They smear and attack Tara with rape culture because they must stop Tara and any other woman who might come out -- two have now hinted publicly about coming forward.

Katha Pollitt, you're the new Midge Decter!  To this generation coming up right now, that's what you are.  Embrace your descent into frivolity -- or further frivolity.

They don't get it.  They didn't get Anita Hill in real time either but we'll talk about that tomorrow.

Alexis Grenell (NEW YORK DAILY NEWS) plans to vote for Joe but is dismayed by the attacks on Tara Reade:

  
Reade may be only the latest in a long line of inconvenient women to pipe up about a favorite son, but she’s the first to appear post-#MeToo in the middle of an election year where the sitting president has botched the response to a pandemic that’s killed more Americans than the Vietnam War. All of this leaves less bandwidth for her in the public imagination, as she asks us to weigh her individual pain against the agony of watching our whole world bleed out. It certainly doesn’t make her any easier to like.

The thing is, it’s not necessary to like or not like Reade, because either way we cannot know what happened. I’ve read through every shred of “evidence” and I still can’t make sense of the facts or my feelings about them. I have no qualms about supporting Biden — we can’t re-elect the titular head of the death cult formerly known as the Republican Party — but my ambivalence about Reade is what keeps me up at night. I want her, and anyone else who comes forward about alleged abuse, to be allowed to be unlikeable and legitimate. I want people to be able to separate feelings from facts, and when the facts don’t lead somewhere conclusive, not to fill in the blanks with feelings. I want us to learn that sexual abuse rarely comes with a certificate of origin and to sit with that discomfort.

Alexis bills herself as a feminist.  Is she?  I'd say no.  Xenophobia doesn't really belong in feminism.  Maybe she's a domestic (and domesticated) feminist (tabby)?  The Vietnam War?  If we're going to count deaths, we should include the Vietnamese.  It was their country.  Reducing a war to the deaths on only one side -- regardless of the war -- is not just short-sighted, it's xenophobic.

But Grenell is a writer and she's right to be concerned about what's taking place which puts her far ahead of Katha Pollitt the faux feminist that we addressed in yesterday's snapshot.  Others are addressing her nonsense as well.  Here's Sady Doyle:



Here, from Katha Pollit's latest piece on Reade, is a problem troubling me with this coverage: Pollit names four-count-em-four witnesses corroborating sexual harassment, three of them roughly contemporaneous to the event. Then she calls it merely "possible" Reade was harassed.
  


The evidence for the assault itself is much weaker. But every witness, even hostile ones (like the ex) corroborates the harassment at least. Why "possible?" Why not "likely?" In any other circumstance, feminists would likely say "can be relatively sure harassment occurred."


One element of Reade's claim - the most inflammatory, the rape - has the weakest evidence for it. But we DO have corroborating accounts for the harassment, more than are often required to take a claim seriously. If we're feminists, we should take that as our grounds for argument.

If the worst insinuation of Reade's critics is true -- that she inflated a sexual assault claim to a rape claim to get press attention she was missing -- that's a tragedy about a woman who went unheard so long she risked something desperate and destroyed her life in the process.

Another scenario is that a vulnerable woman, who struggled with money and an abusive marriage after being sexually harassed at work, was later preyed upon by bad political actors and convinced to escalate her claim. Again, that would be horrible, but it would also be tragic.


In no scenario does Biden emerge spotless. In no scenario does his track record with women become irrelevant. What makes Biden look worst, all this, is the rush to demolish Reade in the hopes of restoring some "feminist" reputation Biden does not appear to have ever deserved.

Katha Pollitt is an embarrassment.  She opened that hideous column attacking Tara with the reveal that she would vote for Joe even if were seen on the street eating a baby.  Is she trying to restart the spirit cooking nonsense?  Is that stupid?  I thought we agreed that nonsense was harmful, that people were wrongly being threatened because of it.  But here's Katha offering, like a good whore, where her line in the sand is.  The entire column is an embrace of and advancement of rape culture.  That's not feminism.

Candice Russell Tweets:

Watching the Tara Reade coverage has become like some sort of trauma induced version of Groundhogs Day so of COURSE “professional feminist” Katha Pollitt just HAD TO give her two cents on sexual assault again (hint: still just as problematic as when she wrote about mine)


By the way, when Katha attacked Candice, Katha wrote, "Why not say, 'These are serious allegations, and we're going to look into them'?"

Double standard?  Katha denies there's one with regards to Christine Blasey Ford and Tara Reade.  But there is one.  There's also a double standard to how Katha responded with Candice and with Tara.

The rank hypocrisy that wafts off Katha is something no FDS will ever send running.

COMMON DREAMS' Eoin Higgins offers:

Wow, Katha Pollit doesn't believe Tara Reade, what a shocking surprise, what's next, that she's a TERF?

It's left to Anthony Zenkus to provide the realities Katha avoids:

There is rarely "definitive proof" in rape cases. The reason so many victims never even come forward. And yet 1 in 6 women are victims of rape or attempted rape in their lives. Funny how that works.


Let's note two more from Zenkus:

After being called out by multiple women for nonconsensual, inappropriate touch which they viewed as harmful, Biden joked about consent multiple times. Mr. Biden: what is so funny about consent? #AskBidenAnything



And:



We need nominee who doesnt think it's fair game to touch the thighs of sex assault victims after they talk about their assaults, and who then jokes about consent after being called out on his gross behavior. Biden needs to go. Consent is not a joke. #DropOutJoe #AskBidenAnything


Andrew Levine (COUNTERPUNCH) notes:

Let’s begin with the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund, whose leadership decided to throw Reade to the curb because of the identity of her alleged assailant. According to Reade, she only realized after reading Ryan Grim’s reporting for The Intercept  that this happened owing, in all likelihood, to the nonprofit’s professional relationship to Anita Dunn, a Biden advisor who works for SKDKnickerbocker, the PR firm for Time’s Up. Leaving aside any other critiques one has of The Intercept and Joe Biden, it is a tremendous faux pas for Ryan Grim to let a journalistic bombshell like that be published without forewarning to his source. The Watergate conspirators were given more courtesy, as demonstrated by the classic exclamation “[Washington Post publisher] Katie Graham’s gonna get her tit caught in a big fat wringer if that’s ever published!” What was he thinking?
In 2019, both the Associated Press and the Washington Post worked the story but ultimately canned coverage. The AP had the story in April of that year, when, simultaneously, everyone was publishing about Biden being too touchy for people’s comfort case and point this particular column in Clinton lap dog Ezra Klein’s Vox. Even if there were inconsistencies within Reade’s story (purportedly the reason for squashing it), she deserved a fair hearing and a forum. These venues have given far more airtime to far more dubious actors over the years (cf. 2016 Donald Trump campaign) and have no shred of credibility here. Sexual trauma and memory are very messy things from top to bottom. There are plenty of women who have very public accounts of suppression and triggering that causes them to recall details sometimes years after the events.


We're living in a different century and what's going down will not have consequences.  In this century, a woman writes her own "For What It's Worth" and performs it.  Stevie Nicks:





In Iraq, REUTERS reports:

Royal Dutch Shell evacuated some 60 foreign staff from Iraq’s Basra Gas Company as a security measure following a protest over delayed pay, company officials said on Thursday, adding production was unaffected.
The staff were flown out of the country on Wednesday after workers protested at the headquarters of Basra Gas Company (BGC), a venture between state-owned South Gas Company, Shell and Mitsubishi, to demand payment of their delayed salaries, officials said.
“Shell confirms that as result of a security breach at the accommodation camp of Basra Gas Company, we have temporarily relocated Shell secondees,” Shell said in emailed comments.






The following sites updated: