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Palin: War With Russia “Perhaps” Necessary


Thursday, September 11, 2008 - 8:30 pm (EST)
By Hassan Chop

Excerpts from Charlie Gibson’s interview with Sarah Palin were released on ABCNews.com, and in a telling moment, Sarah Palin said that war with Russia would “perhaps” be necessary if Georgia or Ukraine were admitted to NATO and Russia invaded either nation.

GIBSON: Would you favor putting Georgia and Ukraine in NATO?

PALIN: Ukraine, definitely, yes. Yes, and Georgia.

GIBSON: Because Putin has said he would not tolerate NATO incursion into the Caucasus.

PALIN: Well, you know, the Rose Revolution, the Orange Revolution, those actions have showed us that those democratic nations, I believe, deserve to be in NATO.

Putin thinks otherwise. Obviously, he thinks otherwise, but…

GIBSON: And under the NATO treaty, wouldn’t we then have to go to war if Russia went into Georgia?

PALIN: Perhaps so. I mean, that is the agreement when you are a NATO ally, is if another country is attacked, you’re going to be expected to be called upon and help.

But NATO, I think, should include Ukraine, definitely, at this point and I think that we need to — especially with new leadership coming in on January 20, being sworn on, on either ticket, we have got to make sure that we strengthen our allies, our ties with each one of those NATO members.

We have got to make sure that that is the group that can be counted upon to defend one another in a very dangerous world today.

GIBSON: And you think it would be worth it to the United States, Georgia is worth it to the United States to go to war if Russia were to invade.

PALIN: What I think is that smaller democratic countries that are invaded by a larger power is something for us to be vigilant against. We have got to be cognizant of what the consequences are if a larger power is able to take over smaller democratic countries.

And we have got to be vigilant. We have got to show the support, in this case, for Georgia. The support that we can show is economic sanctions perhaps against Russia, if this is what it leads to.

It doesn’t have to lead to war and it doesn’t have to lead, as I said, to a Cold War, but economic sanctions, diplomatic pressure, again, counting on our allies to help us do that in this mission of keeping our eye on Russia and Putin and some of his desire to control and to control much more than smaller democratic countries.

His mission, if it is to control energy supplies, also, coming from and through Russia, that’s a dangerous position for our world to be in, if we were to allow that to happen.

Palin is advocating, as McCain and the hawks in the administration have for some time, that Ukraine and Georgia should both be admitted to NATO, a position that is at odds with the one held by our NATO allies. Most NATO countries were wary of admitting Georgia specifically because of issues of territorial integrity, i.e. the problems in the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and because of Russian influence in those areas. Palin thinks that both countries should be admitted to NATO, and if Russia were to attack, the US would “perhaps” have to go to war with Russia, since NATO takes the view that if one country in the alliance is attacked, then all countries in the alliance must come to its defense. She’s right that the NATO treaty calls for all countries to defend an ally in the alliance if it’s attacked, but the larger problem here is that she’s willing to roll the dice on Georgia and Ukraine despite obvious Russian resistance to the plan, and if Russia attacks, well then, we’ll probably have to go to war. It’s the fact that her attitude, one that mirrors McCain’s, is to shoot first and ask questions later. The situation in that region is already serious, but McCain and Palin think that we should ratchet things up a few notches more and if the end result is war, then so be it. It’s this flippancy with respect to foreign policy that has gotten us bogged down in Iraq, and Palin and McCain seem not to have learned anything in the last 6 years in Iraq.

Here’s another example of Palin’s aggresive defense of Georgia, from earlier in the interview:

GIBSON: Let’s start, because we are near Russia, let’s start with Russia and Georgia.

The administration has said we’ve got to maintain the territorial integrity of Georgia. Do you believe the United States should try to restore Georgian sovereignty over South Ossetia and Abkhazia?

PALIN: First off, we’re going to continue good relations with Saakashvili there. I was able to speak with him the other day and giving him my commitment, as John McCain’s running mate, that we will be committed to Georgia. And we’ve got to keep an eye on Russia. For Russia to have exerted such pressure in terms of invading a smaller democratic country, unprovoked, is unacceptable and we have to keep…

GIBSON: You believe unprovoked.

PALIN: I do believe unprovoked and we have got to keep our eyes on Russia, under the leadership there.

Russian undoubtedly was overly aggressive and used a disproportional amount of force when it invaded Georgia and pushed into Georgia proper, destroying its military installations and naval vessels. And, it’s pretty clear that Russia was basically waiting for Georgia to try to retake either region by force so that it had a reason to invade. There’s no way that Russia put together an attack like that in 24-48 hours. It was planned out, Saakashvili obliged, and Russia responded. But, unprovoked? Did she forget that the US had specifically warned Saakashvili not to take any aggressive military actions against either breakaway region because Russia would respond? Russian claims of genocide were clearly overblown, but a Russian military response was hardly out of the question given that Russian troops were stationed in South Ossetia and thousands of people in each region are Russian citizens. In the larger context, Russia was obviously drawing a line in the sand with respect to what it viewed as NATO interference in its backyard, and it moved to protect what it views as its legitimate interests in the region. So, should we keep pushing for Georgia and Ukraine to be admitted to NATO? F. Stephen Larrabee of the CFR thinks that this a time for caution, not further escalating tensions.

The issue here is not simply Georgia. Georgia is a sideshow. What the Russians are really concerned about is Ukraine. Georgia’s entry into NATO wouldn’t have major strategic consequences for Russia. Ukraine on the other hand, is a very different matter. That would have much greater strategic consequences and destroy any possibility of trying to develop a Slavic Union composed of Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine. It would also have an effect on the Russian defense industry because they don’t want to break those ties between the defense industries of Russia and Ukraine. So the strategic consequences of Ukraine joining NATO far exceed those of Georgia. In short, this is much more about Ukraine.

The real question for the United States in the aftermath of what happened in Georgia is whether this is the right time to accelerate efforts to bring Ukraine into NATO? I would think this would be a time when we want to be cautious and careful.

Also, what about Palin’s experience with Russia?

GIBSON: What insight into Russian actions, particularly in the last couple of weeks, does the proximity of the state give you?

PALIN: They’re our next door neighbors and you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska, from an island in Alaska.

Super! So, she’s apparently learned all she needs to know about Russia by being that country’s neighbor and because you can apparently see Russian land from Alaska. That’s very comforting.

TAGS: attack, georgia, HBO, Interview, Iraq, John McCain, mccain, NATO, NPR, Politics, putin, russia, Sarah Palin, war

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Pipe Dreams Over the “Gateway of Tears”


Wednesday, August 20, 2008 - 10:49 am (EST)
By Jeff


Trust us...Djibouti will look like Fiji! \

Inside a half-finished five star hotel in Djibouti this past July, several hundred foreign dignitaries, investors and journalists gathered for the first look at an ambitious plan to unite continents. Dubai-based Al Noor Holding Investment Company hopes to build a bridge — to be the world’s largest suspension structure, at points boasting 800-meters-tall pilings — between Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. The bridge, spanning 29 kilometers of the Red Sea between Djibouti and Yemen, will be anchored by brand new cities on each side bearing the same name, Al Noor City, or City of Light. The estimated cost of the whole venture is somewhere around $200 billion. The visionary of this project, Tarek bin Laden, Saudi oligarch and brother-in-law of the notorious Osama, hopes in 15 to 20 years time to see his dream of the bridge and both cities become reality. But just how realistic is it?

Perhaps Djibouti’s only real asset today is its location at the junction of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. It has one of Africa’s smallest populations, estimated at around 500,000, and its land size is comparable to the US state of Massachusetts. It is also bordered by Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somalia — three nations who are embroiled in multiple conflicts and whose names have long generated images of famine, despotism and anarchy.

Along the road between the Djibouti-Ambouli Airport and the hotel hosting the project launch, people wandered between single-storey concrete buildings and shacks — some carried jerrycans or bundles of sticks, but most walked empty handed. Less than a kilometer away from the hotel, a naked child squatted beside a wall while groups of shirtless men slept in ditches beneath the shade of trees.

The “Bridge of the Horn” is to have a six-lane highway and three light rail lines for passenger and commercial traffic, with a goal of one day handling 100,000 cars and 20,000 rail passengers per day. There are also plans for a natural gas pipeline to run the length of the bridge from Djibouti into Yemen and onto the Persian Gulf.

If completed, the bridge will cross the aptly named Bab el Mandeb, the Gateway of Tears. It is the shortest point between Yemen and Djibouti and is named after the treacherous waters made famous for centuries of taking ships and lives. There is also the deadly threat of Somali pirates operating in the area, enough to warrant the permanent basing of an international pirate task force and several thousand French Foreign Legion and US military troops. Europe’s supply of oil from the Gulf passes through these straits making security here all the more vital.

And just as the Suez Canal controls sea traffic at the northern end of the Red Sea, the Gateway of Tears owns the shipping lanes of the south. Not far from the hotel there was a sight common to every port city from Buenos Aires to Shanghai: shipping containers. Stacked like a multi-colored set of Legos, rows of metal boxes waited to be filled with goods, loaded onto ships and sent out across the globe. This is the Horn of Africa. (more…)

TAGS: 2000, attack, economy, free, HBO, insurgents, Iran, Iraq, Islam, long island, model, Muslim, NPR, Pirates, Schools, Singapore, Slam, Suspension, Trade, Travel, Vice, Video, war

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Aaron Stuart on Today’s NYT Cover!!!


Thursday, July 31, 2008 - 11:30 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Stuey is the dude squatting…

Holy shit, Aaron Stuart, former Piebald guitarist and current diesel to vegetable oil converter, is on the cover the NYT...Stuey and I grew up together in the Andovers of Mass. He was the only guy in Andover Domino’s Pizza history to have anal sex (with a female) while delivering a two large ‘ronis and wings.

July 31, 2008
On the Bus, and Off It: The Initiation of a Young Rock Impresario

By MELENA RYZIK
“Where’s the bus, where’s the bus, where’s the bus?” Sean Carlson fretted last month as he paced around a block in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, his BlackBerry buzzing a message a minute. He peered anxiously down the street, waiting. An hour later, he spotted it: an old Blue Bird school bus, painted white and powered by vegetable oil. On its wheels rode one far-fetched idea, months of work and, perhaps, a blueprint for his future.

A nascent music promoter, with a wardrobe of cut-offs and three well-worn T-shirts, Mr. Carlson had turned 23 a few days before and barely had a moment to celebrate back home in Los Angeles. He was too busy planning the next step in his evolving career: taking the independent music festival that he founded five years ago in Los Angeles on the road.

(more…)

TAGS: Brooklyn, converse, Domino's Pizza, free, HBO, model, Music, New York, Pizza, polls, Race, t-shirts, Texas, Travel, vegan, Video, war, williamsburg

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Are you Man enough to love “Mad Men?”


Monday, July 28, 2008 - 6:53 pm (EST)
By Rachel Elder

When writer/producer of that little HBO show, “The Sopranos,” Matthew Weiner created “Mad Men,” I expected another half-assed look at 1960s New York: shiny, glossy pages of LIFE magazine and the good ol’ boys at the office. Needless to say I was happy to find I was wrong about Mad Men, a completely refreshing take on this pivotal time for masculinity and America, its nudge-nudge message being, “well times certainly haven’t changed all that much, have they?” Yet the shows’ opening theme is enough to put me into a comfortable trance, ready to absorb the best show on TV this summer (if not this year).

Without giving too much away, please watch Mad Men and see for yourself: TV is not a dead medium. This show is a work of art, much like the burgeoning ad industry itself was in the 1960s. I have a tremendous amount of respect for Matthew Weiner, whose recent piece in the Times is worth checking out. I feel like any TV series I’ve REALLY liked in the last decade has gained “critical acclaim,” and then is usually canceled immediately thereafter. Luckily, Season 2 of Matthew Weiner’s “Mad Men” premiered last night and did not disappoint. This, combined with the three Emmy nods this year give hope to the little show that could (and should be on HBO).

The greatest part of the second season’s premiere, for those of you who have seen the show, is that it doesn’t just pick up right where it left off in October. Season one started and ended with a boozy bang, leaving us with remnants of ice in our glasses ringing for more. The show centers itself around the life of Don Draper, a leading man whose gravity is reminiscent of Clive Owen, only you get the feeling he may never be checked out for James Bond –he’s just too All-American. His swagger, his creative genius, his way with all women is interestingly left behind this season, and a palpable air of decay settles around his former bravado like cigarette ash. The supporting characters, most importantly his wife, Birdy (played by January Jones) and his geeky-but-staunch assistant, Peggy (played by Elisabeth Moss) also exhibit surprising transformations this season. All this nuance is packed into a startlingly well done background: the 1960s Manhattan ad agency. It’s all tied up in an unusual little bow, but makes for a completely satisfying TV experience. When was the last time you felt that?

TAGS: AMC, drama, HBO, Rachel Elder

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UFC ex-champ, Rampage, on a Rampage in the OC


Saturday, July 19, 2008 - 6:39 pm (EST)
By John LaCroix

I’m not going to condone felony hit-and-run on the 55 in a monster truck. Nor am I going to make light of driving said monster truck (complete with a giant picture decal of yourself) down the wrong way of a crowded Balboa street “causing pedestrians to flee in terror.” Running red lights, crashing into cars, driving on the median and almost killing innocent people in Newport Beach… none of these things constitute normal behavior. I can’t even begin to speculate on what caused the UFC and PRIDE fighter, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson to freak out like this last Tuesday, but I sincerely feel for him.

It’s easy for even the most compassionate people to dismiss a guy like this. He beats people up for a living, he’s testosterone personified, a giant ego with a giant truck to match… I get it. They attribute his actions to steroids and/or drugs and claim it was his choice but don’t bother ask if there could be a bigger, more complex problem that not only made this possible but even probable.

I met Quinton after I moved to Huntington Beach, California around early 2000. I was running my gear company, called Next Level – designing and marketing merchandise and starting to sponsor fighters. I was also training Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu almost full-time and backstage at a lot of fights. A bunch of gyms at the time were either in location limbo or wrapped up in partner politics, so I was a constant visitor to several simultaneously around Orange County and LA. Quinton had moved to HB recently as well, his goal was to become a professional fighter but he was basically living in his car he was so broke. But he was always a nice guy that never complained, he was never too good to learn from anybody smaller or less experienced than him, never too prideful to ask for help, never too egotistical to see his own flaws and never too tired to work. He got hyped when you caught him in a knee-bar and was quick to congratulate you, but he would only let it happen once (true story). When it became pretty obvious that all the pros were buzzing about him and those top pros that visited were starting to get their asses kicked by him in training, he still talked humbly about his aspirations and his kids. He later beat almost all of those pros in Pride and UFC rising quickly to the top.

It’s fair to ask if steroids or drugs were involved when it pertains to the mixed martial arts world - steroids are fairly common throughout the professional social ranks and the in-crowd of hobbyist fighters in the United States and even more in countries like Brazil and Japan where the sport is absolutely huge and winners are national heroes. Up until somewhat recently, MMA was considered an outlaw’s sport in the U.S. with ex-military fighters from fallen third-world countries (where drugs and roids are plentiful) and old-school juicers dominating the top international levels of the sport. Sympathizers of Baseball’s (or cycling’s) steroid problem take notice - all excuses apply, ie: the pressure is too much, everybody’s doing it, can’t be competitive without it, we’ve got hungry mouths to feed, etc. The most serious painkillers are around too; you just have to ask anybody on the mat if they know a good sports medicine doctor and you’ll soon be drugged up enough to giggle through arm-lock training with your torn rotator cuff.

See Mark Kerr shooting up opiates in the HBO documentary “The Smashing Machine” or Rico Rodriguez’s first episode on Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew for good examples.

A couple of weeks ago, Quinton lost the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship to Forrest Griffin. Then Tuesday something we don’t yet understand obviously triggered Rampage to freak out. We don’t know if it was drugs, roids, depression or some other serious problem but in time we will find out the truth. If you’re so quick to judge Rampage as guilty of his own vices and condemn him to bad karma, you should have your “compassionate” card pulled.

Dana White, President of the company that owns the UFC was on a plane reportedly in 17 minutes to help. To the best of my knowledge, companies don’t usually show that kind of love for their employees and that might just be what this industry and many others need. After being released on $25,000 bail on Tuesday, Quinton was 5150’ed (committed to a mental hospital) for a three-day mental evaluation on Wednesday. White mentioned that Quinton been fasting - drinking only energy drinks and effectively not sleeping for a few days straight.

Before we move on to labeling Quinton “crazy” let’s just slow down and compare this to other famous freak-outs. If Quinton were a comedian, where would your prejudices lean? After Dave Chappelle walked away from like $50 million with Comedy Central and went to Africa, the press and the public called him crazy only when they weren’t alleging hard drug abuse. After the dust settled, Dave came back for an interview on Inside The Actor’s Studio where he used the example of Martin Lawrence to put this subject into perspective. “The worst thing to call somebody is crazy, it’s dismissive,” Chappelle said. Dave asked how Martin Lawrence, having survived great success and a stroke with a smile ended up screaming on the street waving a gun? Seems like a valid question to me.

“These people are not crazy. They are strong people. Maybe the environment is a little sick.” Chappelle said

TAGS: Boston, dog, Drugs, HBO, kids, Politics, Rehab, Sports, Video

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Times Iraq Editorial Forgets Iraqis


Monday, July 7, 2008 - 4:22 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


PIC AHMAD AL-RUBAYE. Iraqis still love Fitty…

The Times lead editorial today lists what the Presidential candidates should be talking about in regards to Iraq:

What support does Iraq need to ensure that provincial elections set for later this year — a crucial opportunity for disenfranchised Sunnis to play a larger role in government — and national elections in 2009 are as free and fair as possible?

What help does Iraq’s government need to resettle some two million internally displaced Iraqis and another two million who have fled to Syria and Jordan?

What can be done to promote long stalemated political reforms and encourage reconciliation? Should there be an internationally sponsored conference?

What can the United States do to try to persuade Iraq’s neighbors in Iran and Syria to promote rather than undermine Iraq’s stability and sovereignty?

Should the United States seek to keep a limited force behind for targeted counterterrorism operations or to deter genocide or aggressive outside meddling?

Would Washington have more influence — and a greater chance of enlisting help — if it completely withdrew or negotiated a slower drawdown with the Iraqis?

Missing is one big, fat question: What do Iraqis think the US owes them before leaving?

Under a just war rationale, the minimum requirement would be a functioning state that can provide its own security. We are not there yet. As Alissa Rubin reports in the Times news pages today, many Iraqis still lack electricity and water, and violence is perpetual despite the security improvements. I agree a withdrawal plan must be put in place, but the Iraqi people must be drawn into the process, whether through a referendum, a public commission, or some other democratic mechanism. Right now, the Sunnis are underrepresented in the Iraqi government and most Iraqis consider Maliki’s rule illegitimate.

A unilateral withdrawal is the same as a unilateral invasion—reckless and undemocratic. Yet anything negotiated with Maliki’s government would be considered illegitimate by the Sunnis and Sadrists. (Today Maliki even proposed his own withdrawal timetable.) Iraq’s general population must be brought into the process.

TAGS: election, free, HBO, Iran, Iraq, missing, political, war

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Obama Ups DNC Ante, To Deliver Speech at Stadium Not Arena


Monday, July 7, 2008 - 1:27 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Few understand the power of narrative political image like David Axelrod, Obama’s campaign chief, and this latest move is pure brilliance. Opening the acceptance speech to the public caps Obama’s four-year rise from DNC opening night speaker to Party nominee. Here’s the official DNC press release:

Breaking the mold of traditional political Conventions, the Democratic National Convention Committee (DNCC) today announced that Senator Barack Obama will accept the Democratic nomination for President of the United States at Denver’s INVESCO Field at Mile High. INVESCO Field can accommodate more than 75,000 people and will be the site of the 2008 Democratic Convention’s final day of programming on Thursday, August 28, 2008. 

(more…)

TAGS: Barack Obama, Colorado, HBO, Jr., NATO, NSA, obama, political, war

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Hitler’s Children


Wednesday, June 25, 2008 - 10:20 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Sports Blog Wars

I’m Jewish; Nazis suck. But I also recognize that had Hitler not pussied out on Operation Sea Lion and invaded the UK, we’d all be speaking German. Likewise, had he not gone south to annex Czech-ville before heading to the USSR, the German Army may well have taken Stalingrad pre-winter and we’d all be sprechen deutsch. Actually, I’d never have been born, but whatevs.

Somehow, our boy ‘Dolf came up in a b-ball column on ESPN’s website a few weeks ago. A black woman, Jemele Hill, compared rooting for my beloved Celtics as akin to rooting for Hitler. What I think she meant was that it was like rooting for Citi or GE, but her next sentence featured Gorby, so she was on a politically metaphorical level. It was a dumb statement, that’s all.

But these b-ball fans at Red’s Army ran a “Let’s Get Jemele Hill Fired” post:

For those who don’t know,Jemele Hill is a horrible sports journalist. I once watched her host Jim Rome’s show and thought to myself, “A high-school kid could do a better job.” She’s attacking the Celtics in her latest ESPN Page 2 column…but here’s a line sure to piss some people off:

“Rooting for the Celtics is like saying Hitler was a victim. It’s like hoping Gorbachev would get to the blinking red button before Reagan.”

Amazingly, that line made it past the editors at ESPN.com (Journalism 101 - Rule 1.1 - Never reference Hitler). As Deadspin so deftly points out, someone finally had the smarts to take it down. For me, that’s not good enough. Let’s email ESPN and demand Hill be fired for the simple reason that we shouldn’t be exposed to her garbage any longer.

Jemele got fired, and gave this interview:

You posted something on your personal blog saying you got e-mails calling you the N-word. How many such e-mails did you get?

A lot. But I hesitate to get into that because I’m not a victim and I don’t want it to come off like I’m saying, ‘Oh, look what happened to me.’ These are the consequences of my action. It doesn’t give anybody the right to call me that, and this is the nastiest batch of mail I’ve received, ever, in my 11-year career. But I don’t want that to be the focus.

To which Red’s Army responded:

I’m hoping… HOPING… that none of you sent that sort of email to her.  If you did… I would invite you to never come back.  That beyond worse than what she wrote.  What she wrote was dumb.  What people said in those emails was disgusting and hateful.  It kills me to read things like that.

I just don’t get people sometimes.

In between these episodes (Red A’s firing campaign, her firing, the n*gger emails, and Red A’s denouncing of n*gger emails), we at Med A engaged in a battle with Red’s A over whether Boston was a racist city. Red A accused Anthony of using generalizations when describing Boston’s racism. In fact, Anthony used specifics. He along with many others at Med A have seen the Boston police single out people of color for lesser crimes than we were committing at the exact same time. We’ve seen entire black neighborhoods paved over to make way for college dorms. And so on.

Red’s A countered by saying: “Racism, obviously, still exists in EVERY city… not just Boston. Boston has gone to great lengths to combat it. But times change… and even incidents of racism in certain cities shouldn’t color the entire city as racist.”

Actually, few northern cities are as racially segregated as Boston. Fewer still have as deep a pervading mistrust of one another as Boston’s blacks and whites.

Finally, it seems Red A’s campaign against Hill led to many-a-racist emails, further proving that racism is a Boston forte. Red’s A should have listened to us when we said a crusade of protest against a young, female, black sportswriter would lead to further racism. We suggested their petition would be better directed at, say, the genocide in Darfur or crisis in Zimbabwe. Or maybe they should have just stuck to sports writing and not ventured into journalism ethics.

TAGS: attack, Boston, Celtics, ESPN, HBO, Hitler, Jemele Hill, political, Racism, spin, Sports, war

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Nader is Wrong on Obama


Wednesday, June 25, 2008 - 4:25 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Left, pic by Geoff Kenyon

Consumer advocate Ralph Nader spoke today about presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama. Nader accused Obama of “talking white” and being “corporate.” Despite his causing of Gore to lose in 2000, I generally like Nader. I’m gonna pull the quotes from the Denver Rocky Morning News, who conducted the interview, and go through them:

“There’s only one thing different about Barack Obama when it comes to being a Democratic presidential candidate. He’s half African-American,” Nader said. “Whether that will make any difference, I don’t know. I haven’t heard him have a strong crackdown on economic exploitation in the ghettos. Payday loans, predatory lending, asbestos, lead. What’s keeping him from doing that? Is it because he wants to talk white? He doesn’t want to appear like Jesse Jackson? We’ll see all that play out in the next few months and if he gets elected afterwards.”

“I mean, first of all, the number one thing that a black American politician aspiring to the presidency should be is to candidly describe the plight of the poor, especially in the inner cities and the rural areas, and have a very detailed platform about how the poor is going to be defended by the law, is going to be protected by the law, and is going to be liberated by the law,” Nader said. “Haven’t heard a thing.”

“He wants to show that he is not a threatening . . . another politically threatening African-American politician,” Nader said. “He wants to appeal to white guilt. You appeal to white guilt not by coming on as black is beautiful, black is powerful. Basically he’s coming on as someone who is not going to threaten the white power structure, whether it’s corporate or whether it’s simply oligarchic. And they love it. Whites just eat it up.”

Nader is little off here. Remember Obama’s Philly race speech? In it, Obama said (with a Faulkner quote to boot):

Understanding this reality requires a reminder of how we arrived at this point. As William Faulkner once wrote, “The past isn’t dead and buried. In fact, it isn’t even past.” We do not need to recite here the history of racial injustice in this country. But we do need to remind ourselves that so many of the disparities that exist in the African-American community today can be directly traced to inequalities passed on from an earlier generation that suffered under the brutal legacy of slavery and Jim Crow.

Segregated schools were, and are, inferior schools; we still haven’t fixed them, fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education, and the inferior education they provided, then and now, helps explain the pervasive achievement gap between today’s black and white students.

Legalized discrimination - where blacks were prevented, often through violence, from owning property, or loans were not granted to African-American business owners, or black homeowners could not access FHA mortgages, or blacks were excluded from unions, or the police force, or fire departments - meant that black families could not amass any meaningful wealth to bequeath to future generations. That history helps explain the wealth and income gap between black and white, and the concentrated pockets of poverty that persists in so many of today’s urban and rural communities.

A lack of economic opportunity among black men, and the shame and frustration that came from not being able to provide for one’s family, contributed to the erosion of black families - a problem that welfare policies for many years may have worsened. And the lack of basic services in so many urban black neighborhoods - parks for kids to play in, police walking the beat, regular garbage pick-up and building code enforcement - all helped create a cycle of violence, blight and neglect that continue to haunt us.

Nice try Nader. While it’s true that Obama has not made the plight of the poor his top campaign priority (that was Edwards’ theme and he lost—fast), he did in fact address it in the best speech of 2008.

Obama’s historic race speech is not to be taken lightly. He said things no major American presidentail candidate has ever said. And I believe once in office there’s no way he can ignore black America, as it will make up one his largest constiuentcies. Strategically, he needs to court the middle now—the left is already with him.

TAGS: Barack Obama, Crack, HBO, Jesse Jackson, kids, obama, political, Race, Ralph Nader, Schools, war

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8 US Troops Killed in Iraq Since Friday


Wednesday, June 25, 2008 - 9:59 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Kerrada car bomb today kills 3, pic Loay Hameed/AP

2004 Redux: GOP Spinning the War, Again

Ah, Iraq. How many times can we win this damn war?

Last week, everyone seemed to be touting security gains in Iraq as evidence of some miracle Surge victory. But Friday began a spate of bombings that killed scores in Baghdad and Diyala. Then, on Saturday, The Times ran a long story explaining how the truces in Iraq’s three largest cities—Baghdad, Basra, Mosul—were in fact tenuous and negotiated, and not victories at all. And on Sunday further reporting showed that security gains have been overestimated by the DoD, mainly—and shockingly—by not reporting on Iraqi civilian deaths or counting missed attacks on “coalition forces”:

“A murder of an Iraqi is not necessarily counted as an attack. If we cannot determine the source of a sectarian attack, that assault does not make it into the database. A roadside bomb or a rocket or mortar attack that doesn’t hurt U.S. personnel doesn’t count.”

The ISG report said that U.S. officials reported 93 attacks or significant acts of violence on one day in July. “Yet a careful review of the reports for that single day brought to light more than 1,100 acts of violence,” it said.

Obviously, I’m not saying the decline in violence since May is a bad thing. Maliki’s power has expanded and it looks like Sadr’s has decreased. Rather, it’s important we not not forget that April and May were among the most violent of the war. 1000 were killed over four weeks in one Baghdad neighborhood, Sadr City; 600 in 10 days in Basra. Yes, the Iraqi Army has since moved into both areas, but only after a settlement was reached. No insurgents turned in their guns, and there’s been no reconciliation.

So, here we are. It’s not even July yet and 8 soldiers and two US officials are killed in six days. I say this because next month two combat brigades are leaving Iraq. Sometimes it gets lost that, of the 160,000 US troops in Iraq, only about 70-80,000 are actual combat troops. Losing over 7,000 combat troops will certainly affect Iraq’s security. Combat troops clear and hold territory. The big question is, who will hold the territory that our troops cede?

As the Surge comes to an end, a vacuum is about to open up—just in time for fall, when both the US presidential and Iraqi parliamentary elections are scheduled. It’s impossible to predict what will happen, but don’t think Moqtada al Sadr’s played his last hand. Also, look for Sunni nationalists, aka the Sons of Iraq/Awakening Councils, to make a power move. The war is far from over, nor is it close to being won, no matter what the GOP are trying to spin.

TAGS: attack, election, GOP, HBO, insurgents, Iraq, Review, spin, war

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THE BEAUTY BAR COLLECTION is in stores & on-line now at beautybar.com


Thursday, June 12, 2008 - 2:38 pm (EST)
By Rama Mayo

This groundbreaking collection launching with men’s and women’s tops, features six hot young designers showcasing their unique interpretation of the iconic Beauty Bar Logo.  This is the first of a clothing collection collaboration between fashion designers & a cocktail lounge.  Season Two will feature sunglasses, jewelry & much more…

The first season’s designs are from:
CTRL (Helsinki, Finland)
FREE GOLD WATCH (San Francisco)
Brains-On-Fire (New York, NY)
SEARCH + RESQ (Los Angeles)
HEEBEEGEEBEE (Grand Rapids, MI.)
SPRFKR  (Los Angeles, CA)

The collection is now available exclusively at the following select boutiques:
SHQ SugarHead Quarters (NYC)
Barracuda (Los Angeles)
Azalea Boutique (San Francisco)
Neighbourhood (San Diego)
Goodie Two Shoes (Austin, TX)
Lot 9 (Las Vegas)

TAGS: Beauty Bar, free, Free Gold Watch, HBO, Las Vegas, New York, san diego

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US-Backed Ethiopian Dictatorship Accused of War Crimes


Thursday, June 12, 2008 - 9:48 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

US troops train the Ethiopian Army who then wage a scorched earth campaign against their own people.

America is the China of the Horn of Africa

A new Human Rights Watch report claims the US is complicit in Ethiopian war crimes. For some reason, the NYT did not mention this story today. The Boston Globe picked it up from AP:

Ethiopia’s government is committing war crimes in its military campaign against rebels in the Ogaden region, a rights group charged Thursday in a report that complained the U.S. and other Western governments willfully ignored abuses.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said Ethiopian troops are beating and strangling civilians, staging public executions and burning villages in Ogaden. It said the allegations were based on more than 100 eyewitness accounts.

Washington looks to Ethiopia for help in the fight against Islamic extremists in East Africa, where al-Qaida has claimed responsibility for several attacks, including the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 225 people. Ethiopia is helping the U.N.-backed government in neighboring Somalia against Muslim insurgents.

“The silence of the U.S. government is not a silence based on ignorance,” said Peter Bouckaert, the emergencies director at Human Rights Watch. “They are ignoring the information available to them.”

Ethnic Somalis have been fighting for more than a decade seeking greater autonomy in the desolate Ogaden, which is being explored for oil and gas. Ethiopian forces stepped up operations after rebels attacked a Chinese-run oil exploration field in April 2007, killing 74 people.

“The Ethiopian army’s answer to the rebels has been to viciously attack civilians in the Ogaden,” said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director for Human Rights Watch.

The group also said the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front has violated humanitarian law by conducting the oil attack and by setting land mines along roads. Ethiopia accuses the rebels of being financed by its archenemy, Eritrea.

Gagnon chided Ethiopia’s leading donors, including the United States, Britain and the European Union, accusing them of ignoring what is happening in Ogaden.

“These widespread and systematic atrocities amount to crimes against humanity,” she said. “Yet Ethiopia’s major donors, Washington, London and Brussels, seem to be maintaining a conspiracy of silence around the crimes.” Gagnon said Western governments and institutions give at least $2 billion in aid to Ethiopia every year.

“Influential states use many excuses, such as lack of information and strategic priorities, to downplay the grave human rights concerns in Somali Region,” she said. “But crimes against humanity can’t be swept under the carpet.”

The US provides some $500 million in military to Ethiopia. This money surely contributes to the Ogaden scorched earth campaign, but it is mainly to be used for the occupation of Somalia by Ethiopian troops.

Complain all you want about China’s complicity in Darfur. Changing Beijing and and Khartoum’s minds isn’t going to be easy. However, America is the China of the Horn, and we can most definitely stop the Ethiopians by withholding aid. Dead Ogaden children are no less tragic than Darfuri children, and this is a case where you, the American taxpayer, is footing the bill.

TAGS: attack, Boston, HBO, insurgents, Islam, Muslim, New York, Slam, war

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1 Down, 3 Wins to 17


Friday, June 6, 2008 - 2:32 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Last night, the Boston Celtics continued their march to a record 17th NBA championship, beating the Lakers 98-88.

All Boston has: Sports (Paul Pierce) and politics (Sen John Kerry and Gov Deval Patrick) collide at the Garden.

Here’s some “Provocative Opinion”: The Lakers are b*tches. Too bad I missed all of last night’s game (due to a certain neighbor’s 30th b-day, where said celebrant’s mother was wasted at a nightclub dancing to “La Bamba” at 3am). Doesn’t matter though, I can read a box score and the Celts are up 1-0 against an overrated LA squad. Overall, I thought the West was weaker this year than people thought. Now we’ll see if the C’s can Sox the Lakers in four straight. I don’t want another drama series—Atl, Clevo, Det were too stressful.

Paul Pierce. What more can be said? The guy hurts his knee and still comes out and nails two threes. Love it!

You can’t be serious. This honky ass Deadhead is guarding The Truth? Ha! Off the court, PP is a Piru Blood gangster. Luke Walton wears tie-dye.

Photo of the game (Reuters):

TAGS: Basketball, Boston, Boston Celtics, Celtics, drama, HBO, Lakers, Politics, Sports, wasted

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Neighboor profiling contest - win a date with a psycho.


Thursday, June 5, 2008 - 3:54 pm (EST)
By John LaCroix

wtf?

YouTube Preview Image

TAGS: HBO, youtube

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Must Read: Dexter Filkins on Moqtada Sadr


Thursday, June 5, 2008 - 11:13 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Former NYT Baghdad reporter Dexter Filkins, whose million dollar advance book The Forever War (Knopf) comes out in Sept (and has been optioned by Tom Cruise), weighs in on Patrick Cockburn’s new bio of war criminal Moqtada al Sadr for TNR today.

The Wild Card
Dexter Filkins, The New Republic Published: Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Muqtada: Muqtada Al-Sadr, the Shia Revival, and the Struggle for Iraq

By Patrick Cockburn

(Scribner, 227 pp., $24)

To feel the power of Muqtada al-Sadr, the young Shiite cleric and tormentor of the Americans in Iraq, all you needed to do, in the years after the invasion, was go to the Mohsin Mosque in eastern Baghdad. There, spread in the street for a half a mile, as many as fifteen thousand young men would stand assembled, prayer mats in hand, waiting for the service to begin. The scene was safe: Mahdi Army gunmen searched the cars and the supplicants for bombs. There were no American soldiers in sight. And then, as the thousands fell to their knees, an imam would exit the mosque, climb onto a raised wooden platform, and signal the beginning of prayer. As he began, the crowd started to chant.

May God speed his appearance!
May God curse his enemies!
May God make his son triumphant!
Muqtada!
Muqtada!
Muqtada!

The “his” in the first three chants referred to the Mahdi–the messiah of Shia Islam–and the last three lines established a momentous equivalence between this redeemer and Muqtada al-Sadr. But Muqtada never showed his face; he almost never does.

(more…)

TAGS: attack, debate, election, HBO, Iran, Iraq, Islam, missing, model, Mosque, New York, New York Times, obituary, political, political parties, Politics, Shiite, Slam, spin, surf, Travel, war

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Worst Friends


Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - 3:37 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


My neighbor Ryan, of Worst Friends, just released a for Ghostly International, Michigan’s premium elctronica imprint. All day he mixes in the an apartment above me, and I get to hear a lot of great spacey techno. Ryan also does commercial work, like intro music for videos on the New York Times website.

TAGS: HBO, mp3, Music, New York, New York Times, Video

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The Beauty Bar Collection now available


Tuesday, May 27, 2008 - 2:19 pm (EST)
By John LaCroix

I’ve ended some awesome nights at various locations of the Beauty Bar. A couple weeks ago I went to see our close friend Rama, launch the Beauty Bar clothing line at Azalea in SF. I met the owner of the bar, Paul Devitt, and got a hint of their plans for the future. Take notice, they’ve got some great stuff in the works. (Including a possible Medicine Agency event soon)

img_4059.jpg img_4056.jpg

img_4070.jpg img_4119.jpg

THE BEAUTY BAR COLLECTION is in stores & on-line now at beautybar.com

This groundbreaking collection launching with men’s and women’s tops, features six hot young designers showcasing their unique interpretation of the iconic Beauty Bar Logo. This is the first of a clothing collection collaboration between fashion designers & a cocktail lounge. Season Two will feature sunglasses, jewelry & much more.

The first season’s collaborations are with:
CTRL (Helsinki, Finland)
FREE GOLD WATCH (San Francisco)
BRAINS ON FIRE (New York, NY)
SEARCH + RESQ (Los Angeles)
HEEBEEGEEBEE (Grand Rapids, MI.)
SPRFKR (Los Angeles, CA)

The collection is now available exclusively at the following select boutiques:
SHQ SugarHead Quarters (NYC)
Barracuda (Los Angeles)
Azalea Boutique (San Francisco)
Neighbourhood (San Diego)
Goodie Two Shoes (Austin, TX)
Lot 9 (Las Vegas)

Visit the online store here.

TAGS: free, HBO, Las Vegas, New York, san diego

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Oi Vey, Not Florida Again


Thursday, May 22, 2008 - 10:44 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

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