Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Eliza Barclay: This Brown Person Is Like That Brown Person

Allegedly indigenous "president" Evo Morales is so racist that he refuses to hand his country over to the skinhead groups that want him dead, which is unfair and Mugabe-like.

In her groundbreaking exposé, Atlantic Monthly contributor Eliza Barclay explores how one little Indian stirred up race hatred in a country where repressive minority rule had been working so well for so many years. She asks the big questions: Why do the brown people hate us when we only want best for them? Is the Bolivian economy struggling because of the global economic crisis, or there something more Indigenous afoot? And why do they insist on calling it 'Bolivia' when God already gave it a beautiful name, 'Rhodesia'?

PS: The article is accompanied by a video, which hilariously undermines everything the reporter wrote in the story part, because the Atlantic has been taken over by racist Aymara terrorist hackers. So tricky, those browns.

From Dispatches From The Bolivarian Revolution

Jon Stewart gets the last laugh

Jon's Continuing Smackdown:



From MSNBC

Shocker: Peruvian ALBA houses have nothing to do with Venezuela!

Hmmm, I wonder what Alan García says to this?
The Venezuelan ambassador, Armando Laguna, in declarations to the foreign press in Lima, dismissed accusations made by a Peruvian parliamentary commission that the so-called "ALBA Houses" represented "an arm of political infiltration" by the Venezuelan government in Peru.

Laguna declared that the "Casas del ALBA" initiative is entirely the doing of Peruvian citizens and has nothing to do with the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas treaty, which was initiated by Venezuela to counteract the Free Trade Area of the Americas, and to which Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua, Honduras and the Dominican Republic belong.

"We have not involved ourselves in the internal politics of Peru...I do not advise anyone, nor do I aid anyone, much less financially, in the wrongly-named 'ALBA houses'," said the ambassador. He added that he had never set foot inside one.

The ambassador attributed the initiative to a known leftist activist in the Puno region, Marcial Maydana, who has never hidden his sympathies for the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez, and who also presides over a non-governmental organization which transports Peruvian citizens to Bolivia to receive eye care in clinics set up by the Venezuelan government.

The ambassador himself has overseen no fewer than 18 flights of Peruvian citizens "of few resources" to Venezuela to be treated for eye conditions in "Mission Miracle", but this initiative was paralyzed when the parliamentary commission initiated its investigations of the "ALBA Houses".
Translation mine. Linkage added.

Smooth move, Ex-Lax--you've basically stopped your own citizens from receiving eye care your government sure as hell isn't providing. And isn't going to in the foreseeable future, either.

The more I learn about Alan García, especially compared to Chavecito, the worse I feel for Peru.

From News of the Restless

O’Reilly, stop your ranting!

Keith Olberman smacks down BillO...again. Gee Keith, this is so easy to do...like pulling the wings off flies. Oh, I forgot, that's what Bernie Goldberg's hobby is:



From MSNBC

Bush set wrong Taliban member free

Keith Olbermann goes off on Bush for the lingering effects of the Bush administration's incompetence:



From MSNBC

Math vs. the environment

If you needed any more proof that the Bush Administration valued stupidity, ignorance and incompetence, here it is:



From MSNBC

Meghan McCain on 'beef' with Ann Coulter

Meghan McCain picks a fight with ANN COULTER?!?!?? Why would you pick a fight with the Wicked Witch of the East? And what's this crap about her being a moderate? Her father ran and she participated in one of the all-time wingnut campaigns for president. I wonder if she can dump all her values like her father did if the bribes are big enough?



From MSNBC

After years of being under-equipped


From Pundit Kitchen

After disposing of his latest composer


From Pundit Kitchen

Paul Krugman to the rescue: Paradox of thrift

Paul Krugman smacks down Rahm Emmanuel. And Rahm whines about how hard it is to get legislation through Congress. Oh, boo hoo. Get off your overpaid ass and do your job, asshole. That's my take, not Krugman's.



From MSNBC

Jon Stewart to Jim Cramer: 'F**k you!'

Did Jon unfairly pick on Jim Cramer. Not in this lifetime. Jim Cramer, Rick Santelli and Lou Dobbs are representative of the ignorant, lazy shills of the corporate world who collect HUGE paychecks for simply repeating what the incompetent CEO's and snake-oil salesmen in the corporate PR departments feed them. Journalists? Not here, not now, not ever.




From Comedy Central

Talking Economic Accountability with Economist James Galbraith

Let us hope that the Obama Administration has learned its lesson about needing to pin the slippery asshole corporate CEO's down BEFORE they give them the money.



From Firedoglake

Monday, March 16, 2009

Is the US Giving Colombian "Drug Lords" A Free Pass on Worse Crimes?

Written by Ali Gharib
Tuesday, 10 March 2009

(IPS) - Yet another of Colombia’s top paramilitary leaders was extradited to the U.S. Thursday to be brought up on drug trafficking charges despite the objections of some rights groups and questions raised by Colombian politicians visiting Washington.

Éver Veloza García was put on a plane for New York by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, making him the 15th high-ranking paramilitary leader to be extradited.

After decades of violent conflict, some of those active in Colombian affairs worry that the singular focus of the U.S. on prosecuting drug crimes could prevent the truth from coming out about human rights abuses, the paramilitaries’ collusion with the government, and answers to questions about the locations of mass graves and stolen lands.

Being in U.S. custody cuts off the paramilitary leaders from Colombian access, and some observers suspect that, amid a political scandal connecting his supporters to the paramilitaries, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe may be whitewashing the record.

"A lot of the truth about Colombia’s conflict left the country when these guys were extradited," said Adam Isaacson of the Centre for International Policy (CIP), noting that while other Colombians have tried to gain access to the men, Uribe’s diplomatic corps have "not been asking about any of this."

Further complicating the relationship between Colombia and the U.S. is a free trade agreement that was pushed for by the then-George W. Bush administration and his right-wing ally, Uribe.

But despite Bush’s glowing praise - over the objections of rights groups, Uribe was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom - Democrats in Congress were more sceptical about the Colombian president’s human rights record.

Many Democrats had objected to the trade deal because they see protection of labour and human rights as an essential prerequisite for the trade agreement and argued that those concerns had not been adequately addressed. But Bush and Uribe insisted that the situation in Colombia was much improved.

"Colombia’s been the victim of a lot of partisan squabbling in Washington," said Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue. But with the executive and Congress unified, Shifter thinks Washington’s mixed messages to Colombia will likely end.

"They will be more clear about what they want from Colombia," he told IPS, noting that the trade deal would likely be impossible without further Colombian progress on human rights.

Details, however, haven’t been hashed out or disclosed because U.S. President Barack Obama has not yet put together his team to deal with these issues.

Emphasising the strain put on the U.S.-Colombia relationship - especially between Congress and Uribe - Human Rights Watch (HRW) released a statement this week signed by eight U.S. rights organisations and trade unions, including Human Rights First, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the American Federation of Labour and Congress of Industrial Organisations (AFL-CIO), and the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA).

The groups called for the "Colombian government to respect the work of trade unionists and human rights defenders in Colombia and to retract statements that put these workers at risk."

The statement was a reaction to threats against Lina Paola Malagon, a lawyer with Colombian Commission of Jurists who has worked on rights issues and on behalf of trade unions.

The threat to Malagon came just weeks after she made a visit to the U.S. to present a report on worker’s rights and violence against unions to Rep. George Miller’s Committee on Education and Labour.

In February, Uribe said that Colombians who travel abroad and discuss the country’s internal rights and union problems were part of the "intellectual bloc of the FARC," the acronym for the leftist rebel group the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. Uribe also later said those who went before Miller’s committee were practicing "political hatred."

"Why are they so scared of what people are going to say if things are so much better [in Colombia]?" asked Gimena Sanchez of WOLA. "Why are they censoring people?"

Uribe has been known to lash out against Colombian rights groups, but usually steers clear of speaking forcefully against U.S.-based groups, though he has harshly criticised HRW in the past.

But Uribe’s Vice President Francisco Santos did not mince words when describing Miller on Thursday, calling the Congressman "an enemy of Colombia."

At the crux of these tensions is paramilitary violence against unions and rights groups. HRW reported that since 1986, more that 2,600 unionists have been killed, usually at the hands of paramilitary groups.

The paramilitary groups were formed in the 1980s ostensibly to protect farmers and others from leftist guerillas, but since then, they have grown into organised crime groups and involved themselves in the drug trade.

The paramilitaries are also well connected to right-wing political movements in Colombia. The country is in the midst of being rocked by a scandal where huge numbers of pro-government legislators have been tied to the paramilitary groups.

As Colombia tries to dig out the truth behind this scandal as well as other issues, such as identifying huge swaths of land seized by paramilitary groups and the locations of mass graves, the investigation turns to those arrested for information.

But by extraditing paramilitary criminals - especially leaders - to the U.S., some Colombians worry that the truth about these events will be buried forever. The U.S. is not trying the men for human rights violations or mass murder, but is instead pursuing them strictly as drug criminals.

The complicated situation spurred two members of Columbia’s senate - opposition politician Piedad Cordoba and Uribe supporter Lara Restrepo - who were in Washington this week meeting with U.S. lawmakers and rights groups to ensure that the now 15 men are all held accountable for crimes against humanity.

Another crucial aspect of the delegation’s trip is to secure the information needed to flesh out Colombia’s history of atrocities so that there may be reconciliation, said Sanchez.

"It’s important that there is facilitation between the U.S. and Colombia and that the victims in Colombia have access to this information," she told IPS.

Sanchez said that the men likely had information about the paramilitary-politics scandal, the locations of mass graves, and the seizure of lands by paramilitary groups, but that information could be buried if the U.S. only focuses on drug charges.

But because the Obama administration has not set out a firm agenda on Colombia yet, there has been very little movement, and the delegation this week wasn’t able to garner much information.

"The visit raised more concerns than it answered questions," said Sanchez, who had been in contact with the delegation.

From Upside Down World

Jim Cramer responds to Jon Stewart

Jon Stewart vs. Jim Cramer. Not a real contest. Jon had a walkover.



From MSNBC

UN eyes Bush admin for war crimes

Good news! The UN might actually do something relevant and purposeful for a change.


From MSNBC

Abramoff bribes

This speaks for itself.



From MSNBC

GOP vs. unions

Rachel Maddow has a great piece on the Employees Free Choice Act. After having been through an organizing campaign on the management side, followed about half way thought the campaign by a switch to the non-management side I can categorically state that the guy that was a union busting consultant who reformed is understating the situation. Employers target employees that are suspected of being sympathetic to the union and fire them. Even when the emplyee subsequently wins the lawsuit (no sure thing with the Republican dominated judiciary, even in the most egregious cases), the employee is broke, probably divorced and needing therapy. Watch:



From MSNBC

Jon Stewart Smacks down John Sununu over Republican hypocrisy on spending



I just got around to going back for this clip but it's worth sharing. Jon Stewart smacks down John Sununu for Republican hypocrisy over their sudden new found religion on deficits now that it's for domestic spending and trying to get our economy out of a free fall, not wanting to regulate industry as well as their lack of concern for our future generations paying back what the occupation in Iraq and the Bush tax cuts have added to the deficit.

John Amato:
Stewart also asks Sununu if Judd Gregg just learned that he was a conservative? Wouldn't he have known that two weeks ago?

And then Jon talks about how the Bush tax cuts killed the Fed budget and, well...you know...

Stewart: I'm not an economist, but let's say I start out with a surplus and I say lets have a tax cut to stimulate the economy, lets make it 1.2 trillion dollars and that surplus turns into a deficit. Why would I at that point go, hey you know what could fix that? A tax cut.
Heather: As much as the villagers are trying to protect the Republicans over their Bush behavior, the only ones that are left to expose them are the late night comedy/talk show battles as of late. Whether anyone thinks SNL's skit of the Republican leadership was funny or not, which I actually didn't think was all that funny, doesn't really matter and that was not what I was trying to convey by posting it.

I posted it because like this clip, their two faced concern over how our tax payer dollars are spent is being made a mockery of as it should be. It's just sad that our MSM is so corrupted they're not reflecting how they should be scorned for their actions and it's taking our comedians to call them out for it, whether anyone thinks they are funny or not.

From Crooks and Liars

LEVELS OF FAME


From Pundit Kitchen

Artist illustrates clogged U.S. skies

As a former airline pilot, this caught my eye and I just had to use it. I LOVE Rachel Maddow:


From MSNBC

Rub-a-dub-dub

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Please tell me you guys...


From Pundit Kitchen

Dow plunges 500 points


From Pundit Kitchen

Night scares

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

BABIES HAPPEN


From Pundit Kitchen

IN A DEMOCRACY


From Pundit Kitchen

Breaktime at the U.N.


From Pundit Kitchen

Townhall Tweety

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Pyramid Scheme

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Regrets

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Future of the Party

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Different reactions

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Planning ahead

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Mea Culpa

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Apology

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Change has come

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Blackberry Withdrawal

By Peregrin

From BartBlog

Evolution Charts

By Peregrin





From BartBlog

Back Again

Well, after several weeks of reversals, I am back up to par and feel good enough to join the fray again. I think I'll start with all the political cartoons that have been backing up.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Jon Stewart Takes Down CNBC


From Comedy Central