5.29.2015

Why Ask Why?

Dennis Hastert indicted for lying to Feds over blackmail for "Decades-Old Sexual Abuse."

Best part of NYT story—
...the indictment said Mr. Hastert denied to the F.B.I. that he was making payments to the individual, saying he withdrew the cash because he no longer trusted the banking system.
Who would better know how vulnerable our institutions are, than someone intimately involved in undermining them for political and financial gain.

This, and the fact that Hastert had so much money to pay in extortion are items of interest, at least to me, Clever Sister, and other noticers.

Among comments at Charles Pierce's blog
Dave Wing ...·
... He was never an honorable man. He went from being a high school teacher and wrestling coach to being worth many millions of dollars, all while supposedly being engaged in public service. Among the things that he did was sneak a provision in to a Defense Appropriations bill granting immunity to vaccine makers for injuries or deaths caused by their drugs. He was also instrumental in preventing Medicare from being allowed to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies for lower drug prices for Medicare beneficiaries. I feel sad for the people who suffered and continue to suffer because of the things that Denny Hastert did.

http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2006/05/08/5235/vaccine-industry-giveaway/

John Kelly ...
Hastert's land became lots more valuable when a new cloverleaf providing direct access to the property got federal money courtesy of a bill introduced by -guess who ? D.H !

John Kahler ...
If convicted, he might have a good case on appeal. After all, as shepherd of the "patriot" act, he'd be a good witness to explain the unconstitutionality of the law.

Faith Biggs King ...
Not for nothing, but whistleblower Sibel Edmonds had quite a bit to say a few years ago about Hastert's illegal dealings with agents of the Turkish government. There was probably a celebrity White House press corp function happening in town some night that month, so, really, why investigate? Shiny object!
John Robinson ...
It's funny how when the Turks blatantly bribed Hastert (and by extension, the US House of Representatives), it was largely ignored by the same US media that is presently shrieking and running around in circles over vague 'improprieties' by the Clinton Foundation. Why, it's almost like the Republicans get to use the Special Rules...

5.27.2015

Genteel

Hushed and awed tones were heard on NPR this morning—
The scene was a luxury hotel in Zurich. The alleged crimes - corruption and bribery. The accused are some of the world's top soccer officials. They had gathered at the hotel for a meeting. Little did they know, Swiss police were also there to arrest them. This happened early this morning. Now seven officials in FIFA, the wealthy organization that governs soccer, are facing extradition to the United States....
...

"It was all very polite. People were escorted from the building. They were allowed to bring their luggage. People weren't in handcuffs. One of my colleagues remarked that it looked like people were leaving with a group of friends. It was all - it was all very friendly."
The quote is from NPR's guest, one of the NYT reporters covering the story.

Thoughtful hotel staff wielded bedsheets—held as privacy screens for the unfortunate guests being led off.
Photo: Pascal Mora, NYT
Indeed, it was a thoroughly genteel arrest, but these men are not are savages.

Certainly the Geneva hotel had no guests so terrifying as a twelve-year old, to be gunned down once a police car pulls up.

Nor were the FIFA arrests in need of a cop's jumping onto the hood of a stopped car, to fire "at least fifteen rounds" at the trapped occupants.

Regarding FIFA, Charles Pierce observes—
Here and overseas, the entire corporate universe is shot through with metastatic corruption and crime. It is an essential part of the business model almost everywhere, from Wall Street offices to the pitch at Wembley. FIFA's corruption is more than an endemic phenomenon. FIFA was simply one corrupt enterprise working with and through hundreds of other corrupt enterprises. There are governments, and there are communications empires, and there are all manner of companies advertising their wares -- the "corporate partners" of a claque of brigands. If you did business with the crooks of FIFA, you're a crook, too. There's no way to avoid it. All of them are guilty. All of them are responsible. All of them are complicit in the corruption in the spotlight today, and in the death of anonymous workers in Qatar whose names they don't even know. The whole goddamn corporate universe is begging for a gigantic RICO indictment.

Mary Ellen Mark, 1940– 2015

She was one of the first women to join Magnum, later leaving the agency to control her work.

The NYT Lens blog calls her a "force of nature" over her fifty year career—
Perhaps Ms. Mark’s best-known work was her intimate series on prostitutes in Mumbai, then known as Bombay, that was published in The New York Times Magazine in 1987. She said that the book of those images, "Falkland Road: Prostitutes of Bombay" (Knopf), "“was meant almost as a metaphor for entrapment, for how difficult it is to be a woman."
Lens quotes Mark from its 2012 interview—
"I don’t like gimmicky pictures; I’ve always hated them""...

"I think that's what's happened in photography now, which is too bad. Everything’s become overdone and overcomplicated and over-retouched. You know? There's no retouching in these pictures at all. None. It's all by light. You don't need to retouch if you know how to light."
Lens quotes former Magnum head Charles Harbutt
"I think she would probably be happy that she died working,"” he said. "That would have been a matter of pride for her. She never gave up. She always was out there trying to tell the most important story she could think of as best she could. And that was very good."
CNN offers this gallery, and notes of her final work
Mark's most recent project was an exploration of New Orleans to mark the 10-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. The project will be published later this summer by CNNMoney.

5.26.2015

Picture Of Family Values

Tbogg: "A lot of Republicans who want to be president got their picture taken with a child molester."

Well, of course they wanted to be seen with the guy: the godless, liberal media had made stars of these creepy Dominionists.

From a screenshot
If a woman is raped, the rapist should be executed instead of the innocent unborn baby. Adoption is an option. Many couples would love to adopt and are waiting for a baby. Abortion has been and always will be the destruction of an innocent child. Rape and incest represent heinous crimes and as such should be treated as capital crimes.
"Death penalty for thee, not me," adds Digby. That position statement is "from Jim Bob's 2002 Senate campaign website. He was running for office as his son Josh was molesting his sisters in their sleep." And subsequently, engineering a coverup.

5.05.2015

Plumbing New Depths

There's no need for FBI entrapment of hapless would-be jihadists—not when the setting up is so easily privatized.

Even if the media choose to ignore it, the gist is as tengrain says—
... anti-Islam agent-provocateur Pam Geller set up an event that was ensured to get a negative reaction (a Muhammad Cartoon Contest, in Texas no less) and it got a negative reaction: two (allegedly muslim) gunmen (killed) and a security guard (injured) in an attack on the event. The 70 or so attendees at this free-speech hate-a-palooza were escorted by the police to a secure site after the attack, and sang God Bless America....

Steve M. says, "In the future, if she's being honest, Pam Geller will acknowledge that yesterday was the best day of her life..."

Well, Geller and Anders Brevik seem to be long-time mutual admirers, and her blood thirstiness is on the record. She has the right of free speech; as a right-wing loon, she also will be allowed the right to pour gasoline on a fire.

So this certainly is "two notches for Pamela Geller," as tengrain puts it.

Though Big Bad Bald Bastard suggests amending that, to—
Two and a half notches- the poor working stiff who got shot by the jihad assholes was just trying to earn a day's pay in a bad economy. He was just "collateral damage" in Pammie's existential war.

5.01.2015

Shocker

So striking how a little sanity comes as a shocker these days. But Maryland State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby's May 1 statement—that the medical examiner had ruled Freddie Gray's death a homicide, and that six officers were being indicted on a number of charges—defied the usual mode of official reaction to suspicious deaths in police custody.

More sanity and common sense: while insisting that all citizens must receive equal protection under law, Mosby said
I come from five generations of law enforcement. My father was an officer. My mother was an officer, several of my aunts and uncles. My recently departed and beloved grandfather was one of the founding members of the first black police organization in Massachusetts.
Mosby's entire statement was impressive, and it ended a tumultuous week in my hometown.

For days following Freddie Gray's unexplained death in Baltimore police custody, large crowds protested peacefully. Ultimately, a much smaller number prompted media to helicopter into town to supply the usual round of looting video. After all, they are animals, whose inexplicable behavior is expected to preempt all questions about Gray's death.

Some reasons for frustration are suggested by the Baltimore Sun's 2014 report, "Undue Force." It describes a pattern of police behavior so egregious that money talked: since 2011, the city had "settled lawsuits claiming that police officers brazenly beat up alleged suspects," to the tune of about $5.7 million. Reporter Mark Puente's summary—
Over the past four years, more than 100 people have won court judgments or settlements related to allegations of brutality and civil rights violations. Victims include a 15-year-old boy riding a dirt bike, a 26-year-old pregnant accountant who had witnessed a beating, a 50-year-old woman selling church raffle tickets, a 65-year-old church deacon rolling a cigarette and an 87-year-old grandmother aiding her wounded grandson.

Those cases detail a frightful human toll. Officers have battered dozens of residents who suffered broken bones — jaws, noses, arms, legs, ankles — head trauma, organ failure, and even death, coming during questionable arrests. Some residents were beaten while handcuffed; others were thrown to the pavement.

And in almost every case, prosecutors or judges dismissed the charges against the victims — if charges were filed at all. In an incident that drew headlines recently, charges against a South Baltimore man were dropped after a video showed an officer repeatedly punching him — a beating that led the police commissioner to say he was "shocked."
Puente's pointed conclusions—
Such beatings, in which the victims are most often African-Americans, carry a hefty cost. They can poison relationships between police and the community, limiting cooperation in the fight against crime, the mayor and police officials say. They also divert money in the city budget — the $5.7 million in taxpayer funds paid out since January 2011 would cover the price of a state-of-the-art rec center or renovations at more than 30 playgrounds. And that doesn't count the $5.8 million spent by the city on legal fees to defend these claims brought against police.
In a very thoughtful interview, David Simon considers reasons why abusive police tactics he observed as a local journalist thirty years ago have become unrestrained.

As soon as disturbances followed Freddie Gray's April 27 funeral, the ready-made narrative was broadcast day after day. NPR, as is its wont, pretended to seriousness and "context"—by comparing this week in Baltimore (A CVS was looted!) with the toll of 1968 riots in Baltimore and D.C. Just a quick glance at Wikipedia shows that in Baltimore, 1968, "six people died, 700 were injured, and 5,800 were arrested. 1000 small businesses were damaged or robbed." According to the D.C. entry, there were twelve deaths, 1,097 injuries, over 6000 arrests. Fires damaged or destroyed 1,200 buildings, including over 900 stores.

To compare that history with recent events in Baltimore is absurd, but was made worse by the forum NPR gave two white police and fire veterans of '68. Though they noted that Baltimore this week was minor compared to '68, there were casually patronizing remarks along the lines of how in '68 "it wasn't all the people" in those neighborhoods who were troublemakers. This jumps out in the audio, but is also not hard to spot in the transcript
[Retired police sergeant] MATTSON: Yeah, well, I was in the police department 56 years ago. It was 98 percent white officers and a few percent black. There were no women on the street in the 1950s and '60s, not the early 1970s. And we actually walked beats without radios. We had call boxes. I'm going back a long time ago. And in '67, things started to change. We started to get cars and radios and all these kind of things. And we lost touch with the people. The police lost touch. And leadership started changing, and we started bringing in new people. We used to laugh about it and say, you know, lower them standards and you get what you going to get.

MARTIN: And do you mean race by that?

MATTSON: No, not race. Just the standards got lowered. I'm an old-timer. You know, I come from an old police department, and I still think the old way. I'm an old Baltimore kid. But everything, the political spectrum has changed. And, you know, it used to be the Irish were in charge and the Italians were in charge, and the now the blacks have maintained the city. They're in charge. So does the responsibility fall on them? I think so.
Fox's coverage is a given, but the rest of the pack were there with the usual they're just a bunch of thugs routine. While the right-wing Noise Machine hammered away at slandering the deceased, the Washington Post added more fodder, by obligingly printing this leak—
A prisoner sharing a police transport van with Freddie Gray told investigators that he could hear Gray "banging against the walls" of the vehicle and believed that he "was intentionally trying to injure himself," according to a police document obtained by The Washington Post.
Charles Pierce's response.

Police reaction to any death in police custody is about institutional protection. NPR's story on the indictment included audio; this is from the officers' lawyer, but is pretty much the standard disclaimer from police officials and unions—
No officer injured Mr. Gray, caused harm to Mr. Gray, and they are truly saddened by his death. These officers did nothing wrong.
But why should police be expected to take responsibility for wrong-doing, when no one in the Too Big To Fail club need ever lose sleep over the victims.

Early in the week, after a curfew had gone into effect, Rep. Elijah Cummings worked the streets of West Baltimore, encouraging people to go home. Meanwhile, a Shawn Hannity crew showed up to interfere with his efforts (Fox footage here was uploaded from a right-winger's blog).

In the video, an unidentified woman with Cummings says, "Too many people have died in custody of police," to be interrupted by Hannity, who relays to his minion the question, "Do you think the president rushed to judgement with this?" In a word, "No"—and Hannity talks over Rep. Cummings, who's trying to get back to business as the Fox crew pursues him.

The footage at that point makes obvious what Rep. Cummings observes of the crowd: "This is media here; the people have gone home!" As the minion continues to follow Cummings, Hannity's voice persists in whipping up the Two Minutes Hate.

Which actually was several minutes, each second excruciating to anyone with a sense of decency.

After Friday's indictment of the six officers, Rep. Cummings was again a voice of sanity.
Did they see this man who was a mother's child? Did they see this man who was just trying to get through life? Did they see him as a human being? And I have come here today to thank God that Marilyn Mosby and her team saw him, saw him.