The DNC Vs Everybody – A Footnote to Russiagate

Those following the Julian Assange story probably already know about the recent ruling in the DNC email case. This is the one where the DNC sued Russia, the Trumpies, and Wikileaks over their stolen emails. They said it was racketeering. The judge said it wasn’t and dismissed the case. With prejudice meaning they even can’t file it again.

This was such a bummer to the DNC that they initially had nothing to say. The next day, they managed to mumble a few words about what a shame it was that free speech trumps the sanctity of our elections, or words to that effect. A few news outlets covered it and then the story faded away. Which is odd because it was kind of a big story — one wonders how it would have been covered had the ruling gone the other way.
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Enjoying The Good Old Summertime News-Free

This morning, shortly after reading on my iPad that there had been a couple more mass shootings, including the one in California at the garlic festival, someone in my rural neighborhood got out a gun and started firing. This is not weird or unusual for this neck of the woods, but having spent many years of my life in the city, gunfire functions as an alarm. It’s a a signal to freeze, listen, and possibly seek an interior room of the house, which is is exactly what our cat did when he heard the first volley. Read More

Poking the Hornet’s Nest in the Middle East

President Donald Trump is now focusing all his attention on the Middle East, and this is causing the rest of the world to look there too. It’s also causing Middle Eastern nations to look at themselves and take sides. Since there are at least two major factions, led by the Saudis and the Iranians respectively, one would expect that a US invasion of Iran would lead other Middle Eastern countries to get involved on one side or the other. As a spokesman for Iran said last night, one bullet could set the whole region ablaze and US interests with it. Read More

How To Keep The Middle Class In Line

Controlling the middle class is imperative if you want political power in America.  Here’s how it’s done:

Give them just enough to claim middle class status.

Keep them insecure and wanting more.

Make them think that if anything changes, they’ll lose what they have. Read More

Vermont Writer Questions Humanitarian Crisis in Venezuela

Vermont writer Peter Lackowski has visited Venezuela five times since 2005, giving him perspective on the current situation in the country and how it evolved over time. His new article, “Eyewitness in Venezuela: a 14-year Perspective,” calls into question the official story of a grave humanitarian crisis, which the United States says is due to Maduro’s corrupt leadership and which provides America with an excuse to attempt regime change in that country. Read More

In The Mode of Dr. Seuss

We had a lot of truths to say
But everywhere was yesterday

And everywhere we turn our heads
There’s nothing new
There’s nothing fun
There’s nothing new under the sun

It’s all the same
It’s just a game
And if we do it all for gain

The result will be predictable…

Governing by Decree: Presidential Power in the Age of Trump

If it seems as though the US President is the boss of the whole world, it’s because in many ways, he is. Presidential powers for modern presidents are prodigious. With the power to impose sanctions and tariffs, control the government through executive orders, and order military action, a determined president can create a lot of geopolitical mayhem. Read More

The Barbarians

Although on some level I must have known this already, somehow I was surprised to learn (in a book on Celtic history called The Ancient Paths by Graham Robb) that the ancestors of most white Americans were the same people we remember in history as “the barbarian hordes.”

Usually we think of barbarians in the context of the Fall of Rome, a momentous event oft lamented. But in fact, the Romans had spent the previous 200 years “subjugating” the barbarians — Celts, Gauls, and other non-Romans — all over southern and central Europe.

By barbarian, of course, they meant mean “hairy animal.” By subjugate, they meant to kill. The Romans killed as many non-Romans as they could and enslaved the rest. Apparently they weren’t even that into having sex with the locals (a time-honored tradition of armies everywhere). The end result of this killing campaign was to wipe out native culture, i.e., the native French, British, Belgian, Iberian, and southern Germanic people — to such a degree that today we have only the barest idea who the native non-Roman Europeans were.

How ironic then that the British, the French, the Iberians, and the Germans should all conquer territory around the world and commit the same crime of genocide against new “barbarian hordes” — for instance, the “savages” of North and South America, the peoples of Africa and the Middle East, as well as the Jews, Gypsies, and other so-called non-Aryans around the time of World War II.

Is it in our blood, innate and instinctive to human beings? Or was it planted there? History is written by the victors, and we tend, as a race, to ape history even if we don’t actually know any. Who are the “barbarians” of our own day, the people in need of subjugating? Could they be Middle Eastern or North Korean or Russian? Will there ever be a time when subjugating the weaker goes away?

Franca, Fashionista of the Spectacle

If you’ve been wondering how it happened that fashion spreads have turned into neo-modern tableaux vivants, the answer is probably Franca Sozzani, the late editor of Vogue Italia. Starting the 1980s, Franca took the fashion spread to new frontiers of weirdness and, oddly enough, social relevance.  Formerly the province of fashion mavens and Italians, a recent documentary on Netflix, entitled “Franca: Chaos and Creation” makes it possible for all of us to appreciate her subversive genius for art and fashion. Read More

Losing Notre Dame

When the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris burned yesterday, it was more than a religious icon that was lost. For workers, women, artists, tourists, the city of Paris and all of France, Notre Dame was both monument and living symbol of human aspiration and French spirit.

Notre Dame has always been remembered for the prodigious labors of the generations of workmen and artisans who created it. It was ordinary people who built it and, in large part, it is their legacy that went up in flames. Read More