Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Tennesse Guerilla Women: Home to Racists

What's the most racist site online? More and more, if you're African-American and visit the boards, you know we seem to think it is Tennessee Guerilla Women. That's where the nutty Carolyn KB posts. She claims she's not Carolyn of MakeThemAccountable and that's good to know since I do have a few nice thoughts of that Carolyn.

In the most recent example of the never ending racism (well Tennessee's not really a liberal state, now is it?), the very prissy and juvenile egalia decided to do another post on Michael Jackson because immature minds love them their celebrities, don't they?

So she blathers on and a comment calls her on it. A Lynda points out that Michael Jackson's a pedophile. That's really not a controversial statement outside the fans of trash TV.

It was known in real time but egalia's read Wikipedia (and trying to act like she did research). Wikiepdia's been scrubbed and people would do well to grasp that will happen when someone famous dies and the fans flock to erase all bad things. You can go to the "history" tab or you can do real research. Either's beyond egalia who writes a lot like the other racist from that area Anne Barstow.

So Lynda makes a point and it's time for egalia to launch her screaming match.

And of course, all the usual idiots show up. Like Zee. Zee is such a 'good' feminist that she plays blame anyone but the attacker: "And, if he had been a sexual predator, who is responsible for the safeguarding of their own children? The parent. " Oh, it's the parents' fault when a child is sexually abused by someone other than the parent? It's not the fault of the assailant?

Well if a young teenage girl is raped, we will assume Zee thinks it is also her parents fault and if the female raped is over 18, well, by Zee's 'logic' the fault must lie with the rape victim.

Again, they're not really smart which is why they have to follow the celebrity culture. It's as if Gail Collins and Maureen Dowd never made it to the New York Times.

Then there's palhart who leaves this lovely thing:

Third wave -- In the present scheme of (feminist) thnings, there are few things more despicable than a woman attacking another woman, and in this case a woman, egalia, who researches the issues before she posts, unlike you.This blog may be too mature for you and Lynda. Take some turns around the block beore returning because up until then we're talking over your heads.palhart

She's attacking Third Wave and Lynda and I mentioned Lynda earlier. She left one comment. Way down in the thread, palhart still can't let go of it because there will never be an opinion expressed other than egalia's! Excuse me, other than egalia and her sock puppets.

The 'delightful' Carolyn KB takes a breather from her bowling league to add:

Palhart:That's assuming that either of them even has a head that is attached to their neck, if you know what I mean. CarolynKB 07.07.09 - 8:25 am #

But little Carolyn KB is just warming up. She needs to go off:

Abg/Hbg/Lakeisha/NSCC or whover in the hell he is today writes:Honestly, I don't have the correct answer on this one.Happy Black Guy 07.07.09 - 8:26 am # -------------------------------------------------- -----------You don't have the correct answer on anything.CarolynKB 07.07.09 - 8:29 am #

Lakeisha? ABG is Angry Black Guy. As a poster on a board noted this afternoon, that's when she got nervous. See, we know the drill. We know when a racist is just warming up and Carolyn KB is getting ready to sing.

First, Keesha wanders by. This is community member Keesha Jones. She posts comments at TGW all the time. She left this one:


Egalia wasn't attacked she was told to act like a grown up. I don't see that as an attack and I find it offensive that children who were victims are being trashed for a pedophile. From CNN:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/06/1...rial/ index.html
The jury foreman, Paul Rodriguez, said jurors were "very troubled" that Jackson, by his own admission, had overnight sleepovers with children in his bed.
But Rodriguez, a 63-year-old retired high school counselor from Santa Maria, said jurors were instructed by the judge to base their verdicts on the facts of the case, not "our beliefs or our own personal thoughts."
"We would hope ... that he doesn't sleep with children anymore," Rodriguez said on CNN. "He just has to be careful how he conducts himself around children."
At a post-verdict news conference, jurors said that after more than 32 hours of deliberations over seven days, they all agreed prosecutors had simply not proved their case against the pop star beyond a reasonable doubt.
At the news conference, jurors were identified only by their seat number in the courtroom.
"We actually challenged one another in the deliberation room," said Juror No. 1, a 62-year-old man from Santa Maria, later identified as Raymond Hultman. "We challenged the issues, and we came to the decision that pointed to reasonable doubt."
Later, in an interview on "Larry King Live," Hultman said he believes Jackson "probably has molested boys."
"I can't believe that this man could sleep in the same bedroom for 365 straight days and not do something more than just watch television and eat popcorn," he said. "I mean that doesn't make sense to me, but that doesn't make him guilty of the charges that were presented in this case and that's where we had to make our decision."
-------
Innocent? Hardly. And feminists Rosanne Barr and Gloria Allred were on the children's side so let's not pretend that TGW is somehow doing something amazing. It's not.
Meanwhile, in the real world, The New Agenda and Feminist.com are highlighting an important editorial addressing how women are not getting bylines and are not being invited on programs:http://thirdestatesundayreview.b...- seriously.html
That's in the real world. As for poor little bitty feelings, I believe Susan Faludi addresses the nonsense of we-all-have-to-get-along in Backlash. This Black woman calls bulls**t on any feminist trying to glorify Michael Jackson. Pedophile. Don't make me look up Rosanne Barr's blistering words on the subject.
Keesha 07.07.09 - 8:55 am #

Now what did Keesha do? She noted two feminists, well known ones, who spoke up for the child. She also did something egalia wouldn't, she posted about the verdict. It was not "innocent." And you've got a juror going on Larry King after the verdict's announced saying Jackson was a child molestor.

It's all too much for some to handle like aphrabehn who believes guilt ends with death (earlier comment I'm not going to post). Here she writes:

That's what I love about you Keesha, no matter how complex the issue, you never get beyond the surface.aphrabehn Homepage 07.07.09 - 9:09 am #

Uh, who's not gotten beyond the surface? Keesha's just cited the jury. Who else bothered to do that?

But, quoting a message board, "When they know you're Black, they attack." And the person's right, that is Tennessee Guerilla Women but it's also a huge, huge number of sites online.

Now here's Carolyn KB again and we'll go bit by bit through the racist:

Keesha/ABG/HBG/Lakeisha or whoever in the hell you are today:

Because all us people look alike to Carolyn KB?

The truth is Peter King has NO IDEA what Michael Jackson did or didn't do anymore than you or I, but still there is reason to doubt the accusations.

Keesha's comment is in full above. She never said one word about Peter King. Nor would she. She's not a Republican. Her points were about the children but that's too much for a racist who wants to shout Keesha down.

Ask yourself this, if you had a child who was physically molested by Michael Jackson would you take a payoff? I can answer unequivocally NO to that question.

I think you might. I think you might if, like the young boy Jordan, you were going to need a lot of counseling.

I think you might if, as Ava and C.I. pointed out Sunday:

Whores like Margo refuse to tell people that Jackson hired Anthony Pellicano to attempt to destroy the Randall family. If Pellicano is a familiar name to you, you may be recalling last year when he was found guilty of 76 counts of racketeering.

Dumb Carolyn KB doesn't know the first thing she's talking about. It's cute that while everyone at TGW tries to pretend to be about the women, none of them note the woman whose writing documented this all, Maureen Orth of Vanity Fair. I guess that would be too much research for those fools.

What sort of person accuses someone of pedophilia within the statute of limitations and is satisfied to take a payoff in exhange for allowing a perpetrator to skate?

What sort of person in the early 90s pushes back a civil lawsuit to avoid criminal charges being filed (not pushed back, the statute of limitations would run out).

Reasoning tells you it is a person who is making up the story to cash in, knows it's a fabrication and consequently has no concern for the safety of potential future victims. If Jackson was guilty and folks took a payoff to ensure his freedom, they are as guilty of the crime as Jackson. There was no reason for these parents to take a payoff and avoid a criminal action unless they were in it for the money!

Wow, Carolyn KB knows all. Hmm. Well racists usually think they're smart. They're not but they thing they are. Parents who are intimdated might gladly grab the money to cover their child's expenses. Does that idiot not know what Pellicano did? Does she not know how he threatened people? How he bragged he was part of the mob?

Just the fact that Michael Jackson hired the man says a HUGE deal about the kind of person Jackson was. Pellicano's in prison now. May he die there.

They could have gone to the police, filed a criminal complaint, gotten a conviction, gotten money and put Jackson behind bars, why didn't they?

Gloria Allerd wanted to go that route. She was removed from the case. Ask her about that and she'll say (as she has before) that it didn't mean the parents just wanted money. She'll talk about (as she has) the smear campaign launched by Pellicano in the press, she'll talk about how the kid had to stop going to his school. She'll talk about all the suffering he went through and she'll explain to you that the parents couldn't believe what was happening.

But that's too much data for Carolyn KB. In her dream land, a lama took a dump at NeverLand but nothing else ever happened.

And surely you don't buy into the bullshit of the juror who thought that grownups can't sleep with children without molesting them, do you? Do you really think that all grownups are so sexually driven that if they sleep next to a child they must be a "Pedophile". [Censored by me, she can take her trashy, blashphemy somewhere else, I go to chuch], in many cultures entire famlies sleep together without incidents of incest or pedophilia.

We're talking about the United States and Michael Jackson wasn't these children's family. He slept with boys, he continued sleeping with boys. He bragged about it in that last ABC special, how, this decade, he continued sleeping with boys.

Carolyn KB thinks that natural.

Sleeping in the same bed with someone, watching movies and sharing popcorn with them does not make you a pedophile.

Sleeping in the same bed with someone who is not your child is suspicious activity when you do it repeatedly with one child after another. It is not healthy and it is highly inappropriate. In another section Carolyn KB lies that egalia's a huge supporter of children and that's a lie. Anyone who was would know the warning signs of abuse.

The man is dead now, if he's guilty and you believe in answering for your earthy deeds (I don't, I think this life is hell) then you also believe he'll pay. What the hell else do you want? The man went to trial and was found innocent, PERIOD!!!!

Carolyn KB, again, believes all crimes end with death. Tell it to a woman who was raped. See, these women aren't feminists. They're a bunch of undereducated (I don't care if they went to college or not, they didn't learn a thing if they did) celebrity watchers who have nothing better to do with their life than waste it on trash TV.

Peter King is a PRICK who probably has the biggest glass house on the block, so why didn't he speak up on Jackson while Jackson was alive? I'd say because there was no publicity in it for him and the possibility of being sued for defamation was HUGE, that's the only thing that explains the current public diatribes by King. If King honestly believed his current rants he should have taken on Jackson in LIFE, not in Death. King is attention WHORE coward!!!!

Again Peter King? Carolyn's obsessed with Peter King. Keesha never mentioned Peter King. Look at the comment that started the racist rage-a-thon by Lynda. Lynda didn't mention Peter King either.

Possibly Carolyn KB realizes she went way too far and as a result she has to keep screaming "Peter King!" hoping no one notices? Hoping no one notices how she gets 'confused' when more than one African-American is in the room?

Poor Carolyn KB, you sort of picture her clutching her purse in fear the second Keesha left a comment.

And here's more racism from Zee:

omg, now keesha/keisha, the troll who never knows how to spell "her" own nym comes in and dumps a bigggggg lonnngggggg pile. hmmmmm. who else does that?Zee 07.07.09 - 10:28 am #


I think Keesha knows how to spell her own name. The idiot is White Zee who doesn't seem to get that there can be (a) more than one spelling for names and (b) more than one African-American. See, it's got to be Keesha or Keisha. Can't be two Black women. If there be two Black women around, Zee's putting her house up for sale! She can't live in the neighborhood no more!
And this shit is exactly why African-Americans are on boards today talking about how racist TGW is. Look at the way they treat African-Americans: screaming at them, telling them they're too stupid to know how to spell their own names, making fun of their names (and, yeah, we know that happens all the time, it's still racist even when it's on Comedy Central) and just lumping every African-American in together.

More racism comes via Joanie in Brooklyn:

Happy Black Guy you say "Normally if a kid says he/she has been attacked we take it seriously regardless of a court outcome. I think we have to do that here" Maybe we shouldn't. Not too long ago a janitor of an elementary school was accused of molestation by a girl student. He was paraded out of the school in habdcuffs. There were cries of outrage in the community and calls for his head. After investigation, he was exonerated fully and it turns out that the childs mother was a kook who had also instisgated the child to bring similar accusations against her non-custodial father. Michael was found not guilty in a court of law. End of story. By the way, I feel the same way about O.J.
Keesha: You're not a lawyer, you don't even play one on tv, but you're trying to make a case here that couldn't be made in court by people with more legal expertise than you. Get lost! Gloria Allred is a self-promoting media hound like Arianna Huffington. They never was a publicity-getting story that they weren't drawn to for their own aggrandizement. By the way, why do you feel it necessary to identify yourself as a Black woman in this comment? It proves what exactly? Enlighten me, please.
Joanie in Brooklyn 07.07.09 - 10:54 am #

"Get lost!" That's how they treat African-Americans. And heaven forbid a Black woman is a strong, proud Black woman because Joanie and the girls of TGW can't stand it. "By the way, why do you feel it necessary to identify yourself as a Black woman in this comment?" Ooh, touched a nerve for White Joanie. Can't stand those 'uppity' Blacks, Joanie? Can't stand a strong Black woman?

The racism never ends.

And don't you love how she needs to rip into Keesha with "you're not a lawyer!" Keesha didn't claim she was. She cited CNN not case law. But Joanie wants to make it really clear, Black women don't be lawyers! Black women just clean Miss Joanie's house, yes'um, that's what we do. I mean the racism in this thread is just disgusting. And the fact that egalia allows it, embraces it, just goes to what a racist she is.

She allows stuff like this from Carolyn KB, " No matter what they call themselves, they're all dumbasses, aren't they?" They? She's referring to African-Americans. She's referring to Keesha, Keisha, Lakeesha and all the other names she's reeling off.

This is racism pure and simple and Tennessee Guerilla Women is one of the most racist sites online. Pure and simple.

It is precisely because of the above (and what continued, I'm done with it, I can only stomach so much racism in one day) that so many African-Americans do not leave comments. It's not that they disagree or disagree strongly, it's that it becomes racists attacks were it's all 'they' and 'those' people and we're stupid or we're trying to act smarter than a Black person should be in some racist's mind or, shudder, we mentioned we're Black! Heaven forbid a White person have to be around a Black person!

They really need to check themselves but, don't worry, they'll find a way to blame someone else. That's what racists always do, it's why they could justify slavery to begin with.



Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

Tuesday, July 7, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, Iraqi police become the target of choice, the US Senate Armed Service Committee appears to have no grasp of the US legal system and no respect for it, a War Hawk dies, and more.

Gay Life After Saddam is a documentary the BBC commissioned which was set to air Sunday, July 5th on BBC Radio 5 Live; however, the Wimbledon Men's Final ran late Sunday and the program has been rescheduled to air Sunday July 12th from nine to ten p.m. (1:00 to 2:00 p.m. PST). Ashley Byrne did the investigative reporting for the documentary and, at the BBC, Byrne explains, "What is clear, and confirmed by separate evidence from various human rights groups, is that some gay men have been subjected to appalling violent abuse. . . . Gay men inside Iraq have been able to seek santuary in safe houses, thanks to the UK-based Iraqi Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) group, which manages them from London. The documentary team were granted exclusive access to one of the homes on the outskirts of Baghdad". The people Byrne speaks to maintain it was easier to be a gay Iraqi when Saddam Hussein was in charge of Iraq. So much for 'liberation' and 'democracy.' Again, the specail has been rescheduled for this coming Sunday, July 12th.

Moving over to an Iraq War veteran in Canada, David Solnit, co-author with Aimee Allison of
Army Of None, notes the following action (taking place tomorrow):

Kimberly Rivera, mother of three, wife, and soldier of conscience is now living in Canada, but that could all change on July 8th. Join Courage to Resist at a support rally outside of the Canadian Consulate in San Francisco, July 8, 12 noon - 1pm 580 California Street at Kearny, San Francisco (4 blocks up Montgomery from Montgomery BART, left on Calif. St, right side of street just before Kearny)
http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&q=580%20California%20Street%2C%2014th%20floor&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wl%20) We will bring signed petitions to the Consulate General, urging the Canadian politicians to respect the will of the Canadian people, the Canadian parliament, whom have twice voted recommendations to allow war resisters to stay and the basic moral imperative that does not separate children from their loving mother.Kimberly has this to say: "I want to stay in Canada, with my family, because the Iraq War is immoral, illegal and I couldn't in good conscience go back. The amount of support I'm getting from Canadians is amazing. The parents of my kids' friends, MPs and even strangers on the street keep telling me that they can't believe the votes in Parliament aren't being respected." Kimberly Rivera is the first outspoken female Iraq War resister to publically and legally seek refuge in Canada. Kimberly, along with her partner Mario, son Christian (7 years old) and daughter Rebecca (4 years old), fled to Canada in January 2007 when Kimberly refused redeployment. In late November 2008 Kimberly gave birth to her Canadian daughter Katie (8 months old). She served in Iraq in 2006 and experienced, firsthand, the reality of this ongoing illegal war and occupation. On July 8th, Kimberly is going to Canadian federal court, to appeal the decision in her Pre-Removal Risk Assessment. If her appeal fails, she will be asked to leave Canada, or forcibly removed -- and delivered into the custody and jurisdiction of the United States Army where Kimberly will face charges that will carry, at the very least, a 4 year sentence in a military stockade. Four years or more away from her young children, away from her baby daughter, away from her husband -- she will be kept in an Army prison. She has served in Iraq, she has been to combat; now, because she has decided to exercise her conscience, she faces imprisonment, additional forced separation from her family and eviction from her new home. Act to help Kimberly on July 8th! Join Courage to Resist in protesting the Canadian governments attempts to violate a loving mother's human rights!Sign the letter online & for more info: http://www.couragetoresist.org/x/content/view/726/1/

Over the weekend, US Vice President Joe Biden continued his trip to Iraq.
Liz Sly (Los Angeles Times) reported that his "mission to promote national reconciliation in Iraq was rebuffed Friday by Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, who told him that the issue was a domestic Iraqi affair and that U.S involvement wouldn't be welcome." US involvement wouldn't be welcome . . . but Nouri's happy to have the involvement of US forces on the ground in Iraq because otherwise he would be overthrown. That involvement he's all for. An Iraqi correspondent for McClatchy offers her take here. Sheryl Gay Stolberg (New York Times) added, "One official said the vice president made it clear that if Iraq returned to ethnic violence, the United States would be unlikely to remain engaged, 'because one, the American people would have no interest in doing that, and as he put it, neither would he or the president." Yesterday, Alissa J. Rubin (New York Times) explained that "the Americans helped most leading Iraqi politicians, including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, come to power -- and stay there -- they can no longer expect the Iraqis to acknowledge the help, because being close to the Americans risks alienating average Iraqis." Which has never prevented the puppet from biting the hand that continues to feed him and why Alsumaria reports today, "Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki refused any foreign interference in Iraqi affairs; two days after the United States cautioned that it might disengage in Iraq if the country fails to reach national reconciliation. In a meeting with tribal sheikhs, security chiefs and local officials in Anbar, Al Maliki reiterated that he won't allow anyone to meddle in Iraqi affairs and oversee the political process and national reconciliation." Independent journalist Dahr Jamail (MidEast Dispatches) uses Biden's visit to provide the context on the non-departure and non-withdrawal:


On July 4 in Baghdad, Vice President Joe Biden, who campaigned with Barack Obama on a platform of ending the occupation of Iraq, found himself in one of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's lavish buildings, the Al-Faw Palace. While one of Saddam Hussein's thrones sat on the side of the room, Biden presided over a swearing-in ceremony for 237 soldiers, who were becoming US citizens. Speaking of the ceremony,
Biden said, "We did it in Saddam's palace, and I can think of nothing better. That S.O.B. is rolling over in his grave right now." Perhaps the irony of both the scene and his statement were lost to Biden. For if Saddam Hussein was rolling in his grave, the reason would have less to do with one of his palaces being used as a naturalization center for US soldiers, and more to do with the fact that the US government has no intention of withdrawing from Iraq anytime soon.
We have passed the June 30 deadline that, according to a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) signed between US Ambassador Ryan Crocker and Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari on November 17, 2008, was the date all US forces were to have been withdrawn from all of Iraq's cities. Today, however, there are at least 134,000 US soldiers in Iraq - a number barely lower than the number that were there in 2003. In addition,
US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates testified on June 9 that the United States would maintain an average of at least 100,000 troops in Iraq through fiscal year 2010.
The SOFA is a sieve, and the number of US military personnel in Iraq is remaining largely intact for now. Add to the 134,000 US soldiers almost the exact number of military contractors (132,610 and increasing), 36,061 of which, according to a recent Department of Defense report, are US citizens.

Dahr Jamail's latest book was just released this month and is
The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The weekend trend in Iraq was attacks on police officers resulting in the deaths of at least 6 police officers with eight more wounded. Though primarily in Mosul, the attacks also took place in Baghdad and Kirkuk.On
Saturday, 1 was killed and one wounded and a Mosul bombing targeting a police squad car resulted in one civilian being injured, Sunday's numbers were 3 killed with two wounded while a Mosul car bombing targeted the police but wounded three civilians, and Monday saw 2 killed and five wounded. (And use links in linked day's entries for wounded totals.)Meanwhile 'safe' Iraq still requires police training takes place . . . outside the country. Iraq's Foreign Ministry announced Sunday that their ambassador to Canberra, Ghanim Taha al-Shebly, attended graduation ceremonies for Iraqi police officers in . . . Australia: "Ambassador AL-Shebly delivered a speech on the occasion in which he expressed his thanks to the Federal Police and the Australian Government for their initiative in providing development programs to the elite members of the Iraqi National Police, which included training in management and leadership development, administrative and criminal evidence in order to strengthen the Iraqi Police Service." The Ministry also announced Sunday that Mustafa Musa Tawfik, Charge d'affairs in the Iraqi Embassy in Seoul, gave a speech at the "training course for the dvelopment of policies and programs human rights in filed in Iraq" in . . . (South) Korea.The need to continue training outside of Iraq is not surprising considering the ongoing violence; however, it needs to be noted that US government ended the training program which had been taking place in Jordan even though it was cost effective and, according to outsiders, effective period. The claim at the time was that training should take place in Iraq where it would be more cost efficient. And lucky for that cover story, reporters haven't been eager to point out that Iraqis continue to train in foreign countries. The only real difference now is that they are not training in Arab countries.

The targeting of police officers continued in Iraq today.
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports two Iraqi "servicemen and one civilian" were injured in a shooting at a Baghdad checkpoint and 1 police officer was shot dead in Mosul while his father (also a police officer) was left wounded. In both incidents, silencers were used on the guns and McClatchy was noting (in their daily violence round-ups) over the weekend how common the use of silencers was becoming. Reuters notes 1 Iraqi soldier was shot dead at a Mosul checkpoint with two other people left injured and they note 1 police officer shot dead in Mosul in a drive-by.

From violence to the thing everyone wants to get their hands on: Oil.
Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor) quotes Iraq's Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari saying, "We showed the world two things -- that the Iraqi oil industry is open for investment for the first time, and second, that the process was transparent." The statement comes on the heels of the first auction and as Iraq prepares for the second auction. Angel K. Yan (Red Net) notes, "China's three major oil companies are thinking of participating in Iraq's second auction of oil and gas fields later this year, in a move to get a better foothold in the country's oil industry." The first auction was at the end of last month and the big winners were British Petroleum and China National Petroleum Corporation who partnered up and won what Robin Pagnamenta (Times of London) described as "access to Iraq's biggest oilfield." At The Ecologist, Dan Box offers a historical view of England and Iraq. Vivian Wai-yin Kwok (Forbes) notes China Daily is reporting China National Petroleum Corporation and China Petrochemical Corporation plan to bid in the second auction. Jane Arraf observes that "factors including lingering security fears and concerns that Iraq's climate for foreign oil investment is still shifting" are weighing on some foreign companies.



"Good morning, everybody," declared US Senator Carl Levin bringing to order the Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing on Military Commission and the trial of Detainees for Violations of the Law of War. "In its 2006 decision in the Hamdan case, the Supreme Court held that Common Article 3 of the Geneva Convetions prohibts the trial of detainees for violations of the law of war unless the trial is conducted 'by a regularly constituted court affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples.' The Court concluded that 'the regular military courts in our system are the courts-martial established by congressional statutes' but that a military commission can be regularly constituted by the standards of our military justice system 'if some practical need explains deviations from court-martial practice'.'' His opening remarks set up the hearing so we'll also note this section.

Senator Carl Levin: Of great importance, the provision in our bill would reverse the existing presumption in the Military Commissions Act of 2006 that rules and procedures applicable to trials by courts martial would not apply. Our new language says, by contrast, that: "Except as otherwise provided, the procedures and rules of evidence applicable in trials by general courts-martial of the United States shall apply in trials by military commission under this chapter." The exceptions to this rule are, as suggested by the Supreme Court, carefully tailored to the unique circumstances of the conduct of military and intelligence operations during hostilities. Three years ago, when this Committee considered similar legislation on military commissions, I urged that we apply two tests. First, will we be able to live with the procedures that we establish if the tables are turned and our own troops are subject to similar procedures? Second, is the bill consistent with our American system of justice and will it stand up to scrutiny on judicial review? I believe that those remain the right questions to consider and that language we have included in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 meets both tests. Over the last three years, we have seen the legal advisor to the Convening Authority for military commissions forced to step aside after a military judge found that he had compromised his objectivity by aligning himself with the prosecution. We have had prosecutors resign after making allegations of improper command influence and serious deficiencies in the military commission process. We have had the Chief Defense Counsel raise serious concerns about the adequacy of resources made available to defendants in military commissions cases, writing that: "Regardless of its other procedures, no trial system will be fair unless the serious deficiencies in the current system's approach to defense resources are rectified." So even if we are able to enact new legislation that successfully addresses the shortcomings in existing law, we will have a long way to go to restore public confidence in military commissions and the justice that they produce. However, we will not be able to restore confidence in military commissions at all unless we first substitute new procedures and language to address the problems with the existing statute.


The hearing was composed of two panels. The first panel was composed of the Dept of Defense's Jeh C. Johnson, Dept of Justice's David S. Kris and JAG's Vice Adm Bruce E. MacDonald. The second panel was composed of Retired Rear Admiral John Hutson, Retired Maj Gen John Altenburg Jr. and the American University's Daniel Marcus.

Senator Carl Levin: Let me ask you first, Mr. Johnson, I quoted from the Hamdan case in my opening remarks, saying that the Court in Hamdan said: "The regular military courts in our system are the courts-martial established by congressional statutes." But they also said that a military commission can be regularly constituted if there's a practical need that explains the ndeviations from court-martial practice. We have attempted in our language to do exactly that. And my question first of you is, in your view, does our bill conform to the Hamdan standards?

Jeh C. Johnson: Senator, as you, as you noted, Hamdan uh-uh requires -- and of course Hamdan was at a time that the Military Commissions Act of 2006 did not exist, as I recall. The holding of Hamdan was that military commissions -- and I'm not going to get this exactly right -- but that military commission should depart from UCMJ courts only in situations of evident practical need. The proposed legislation, uh, in our view definitely brings us closer to the UCMJ model and the circumstances under which the military commissions, uhm, contemplated by this bill and UCMJ courts differ are, in our judgment, circumstances that are necessary, uhm, given -- given the needs here. Uh, for example, uh, there is no Miranda requirement imposed by-by this-by this legislation. Article 31 UCMJ is specifically excluded from application here. Article 31 is what uh calls for Miranda warnings in uh UCMJ circumstances. The legislation also takes what I believe is a very appropriate and practical approach to-to hearsay. As you noted in your opening remarks, Mr. Chariman, the-the-the burden is no longer on the opponent to demonstrate uh-uh that hearsay should be excluded. There is a notice requirement in the proposed legislation and if the proponent of the hearsay can demonstrate reliability and materiality and that the declarant is not available as a practical matter given the unqiue circumstances of military operations and intelligence operations, the hearsy could be admitted.

And people make fun of the way Sarah Palin speaks? The Dept of Defense sends that stammering uh-uh dofus into a hearing? He's the Dept's General Counsel?

First off, Article 31 is not the military's Miranda. UCMJ's Article 31 predates Miranda by 16 years. Don't confuse the two. Article 32 is not a copy of Miranda. Miranda can be seen as a civilian copy of Article 32. What an idiot. And, no, he has no knowledge of the law. Admitting hearsay goes against everything the US justice system stands for and that includes the US military justice system. The Senate should be ashamed of himself for authoring legislation that shreds the US justice system. Let's not let them off (and I don't) but let's be clear that Johnson's a stammering fool who came off like a drunk barely able to keep his head up at the bar (you really needed to see the way Johnson's head dipped and swung to this side and to that side). David Kris was just as much of an ass as Levin's being but he could speak. What he had to say was frightening. Terrorism, Kris said speaking for the Dept of Justice, should be prosecuted in military courts, not civilian ones and proscuted, pay attention to this, by the Defense Department. Slippery slope is apparently a concept foreign to the idiots Barack's appointed. Senator John McCain, the Ranking Member of the Committee, wanted to know if there was a difference in the proceedings based on whether the trials were held in the US or at Guantanamo? Johnson fretted that "due process" would apply if held in the US and "that the courts have not determined applies -- applies now" at Guantanamo. Johnson had a real problem being concise. Not because he was adding detail but because he was restating the same thing over and over. He did that with Levin in Levin's first round of questioning (leading the Chair to note that there was only six minutes in the round) and he tried that with McCain who cut him off.

Senator John McCain: So what you're saying is that you believe that there could be some differneces in procedure if the trials were held in Guantanamo or the United States of America?

Jeh Johnson: I'm not sure I would be prepared to say significant difference, Senator.

Senator John McCain: It would be important for this committee to know what your view is? It might have something to do with the way that we shape legislation. If they're going to have all kinds of additional rights if they're tried in the United States of America as opposed to Guantanamo, I think that the committee and the American people should know that.

Jeh Johnson: One of the things that I mentioned in my prepared statement, Senator, is that when it comes to the admissability of statements, the administration believes that a volunatriness standard should apply on account of the reality of military operations and we think that that is something that uh due process may require particularly if military commissions come to the United States, that the courts may impose a voluntariness standard.

Senator John McCain: Well I hope that you and Mr. Kris will provide for the record what you think the difference is and the process would be as to the location of uh those trials. I think it's very important. Certainly is to me.

Vice Adm Bruce E. MacDonald made clear to Senator Lindsey Graham that the US has more restrictive use on hearsay than, for example, an international tribunal in Rawanda. Boo-hoo. What Constitution did MacDonald swear to uphold and is not coherent enough to grasp what oath he took? And someone tell the idiot to comb his hair. That fallen lock wouldn't play on a guy half his age and for a man showing up before Congress in military dress it was flat out embarrassing. (His hair was comparable to Paul Wolfowitz for any needing a visual. Only worse.) Senator Mark Udall praised Lindsey Graham and had nothing to add. Disappointing. If any Senator did a half-way decent job and seemed to have an understanding of the law it was Senator Jack Reed who did speak up for at least some civilian courts, at least some of the trials needing to take place in civilian courts and he also noted that a number of criminals are being glorified by having their actions, their crimes, inflated into something more than that. It was a very sad hearing and the first panel lasted about one hour and seventeen minutes. The second panel moved more quickly. Former Judge Advocate General of the Navy and Retired Rear Admiral John Hutson made it very clear that he was opposed to the notion of allowing the Defense Dept to begin conducting trials. He spoke of the US system of justice and it would be wonderful if the senators present had either stood up and applauded or slapped their heads in I-didn't-not-know-that gestures. Instead, his words appeared to sail over their clueless heads. We're going to note his remarks at length:

Even greater than democracy itself, the greatest export of all from the United States is justice. Daniel Webster once said, "Justice, Sir, is the greatest interest of man on earth. It's the ligament which holds civilized beings and civilized nations together." But justice is fragile and easily disparaged. It must be nurtured and handled with great care. I was an early and ardent supporter of military commissions. Initially, I was drawn to their historical precedents and, more importantly, I was confident that the United States Armed Forces could and would conduct fair trails even of reprehensible defendants. My own experience gained during 28 years in the Navy and our long history of providing due process while trying our own military personnel in courts-marital gave me this confidence. Unfortunately, as it turned out, the commissions that were created did not live up to the traditions of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Predictably, they became a significant distraction for the military. I hasten to add that this was in spite of the stalwart, honorable effort of many, many military personnel themselves. Indeed, that is one of the great tragedies of this saga, and largely makes one of the points that I wish to underline. The primary role of the military is to fight and win our nation's wars or, stated more precisely, to provide the time and space necessary for real solutions -- economic, cultural, social, religious -- to take place. Prosecution of miscreants is an occasionally necessary sidebar to that mission but shouldn't distract from it. We have the UCMJ and the military court-martial system to expedite the legitimate role of the military, not interfere with it. If a sailor on a ship is alleged to have committeed a crime, we must expeditiously and fairly resolve that problem. Otherwise it can fester and interfere with unit cohesion and impede an effective fighting force. The UCMJ and the Manual for Courts Martial serve that purpose alone. They solves problems for the armed forces; not create them. Our recent history with military commissions has been the opposite. I've come to realize that even a perfect commission regime would be a distraction for the military. It's simply not part of its mission. I am very concerned when the military is called upon to perform functions outside of its core mission even when I'm confident that it can do it well. Preserving and ensuring justice in the United States is the primary mission of the Department of Justice, not the Department of Defense. If there will be criticism of our prosecution of alleged terrorists -- and there will be -- the Department of Justice and the US Federal Court system are equipped to deal with that criticism. Indeed, it is part of their responsibility to face it, address it and resolve it.

Monday
Kat reviewed Regina Spektor's latest album. I should have noted that this morning but was in rush to get to the hearing (see, it's connected) and (still connected), Kat will share her thoughts on the hearing tonight so be sure to visit her site.

Turning to peace and justice news, infamous War Criminal and scourge of the globe
Robert McNamara is dead. In an online discussion at the Washington Post (conducted by Robert G. Kaiser), Promise and Power author Deborah Shapley provided this context:

Washington, D.C.: Hi Bob -- I wrote a biography of McNamara, "
Promise and Power," published in 1993. For the record, he told me he did not quit over the grim outlook in Vietnam because he wasn't that sure he was right, and because holding on could force Hanoi's hand politically, in his view. Therefore, the deaths of additional Americans at that time (1965 ff) were not in vain. My personal opinion is that his 1995 book "In Retrospect" gave the impression he thought the war was 'totally wrong' at the time -- which is not what his record shows -- at all! He went on telling the president they could bring off something-or-other, albeit in more pessimistic terms. Some people want to seem on the right side of history even when they were on what 'in retrospect' was the wrong side of history. Too bad for the servicemen that he misrepresented (or seemed to misrepresent) his own record.

In this decade, the War Criminal recast himself as a bra-less starlet followed around by professional gadfly Errol Morris for the mockumentary Fog Of War (aka The Bore Never Shuts Up). As with any Morris revisionary opus, the point of the mocumentary was that no one was really guilty.
Alexander Cockburn (CounterPunch) observes:

He faded comfortably away. The last time we saw him vividly was in 2004 as the star of Morris's wildly over-praised, documentary The Fog of War, talking comfortably about the millions of people he's helped to kill.
Time and again, McNamara got away with it in that film, cowering in the shadow of baroque monsters like LeMay or LBJ, choking up about his choice of Kennedy's gravesite in Arlington, sniffling at the memory of Johnson giving him the Medal of Freedom, spouting nonsense about how Kennedy would have pulled out of Vietnam, muffling himself in the ever- useful camouflage of the "fog of war."


Danny Schechter (News Dissector) explains, "McNamara returned to his Waterloo (Hanoi) some years back for a conference on the "lessons of the war" with General Giap, the winner, and several American Generals, the losers. He was challenged by the feisty Vietnamese American documentary director, Tiana [Thi Thanh Nga], who made 'From Hollywood to Hanoi' and other films for all the deaths he caused. There is precious footage of him freaking out and arrogantly lecturing her. The Vietnamese government was too diplomatic to express its rage." On Democracy Now! today, Marilyn Young, Howard Zinn and Johnny Apologist Schell appeared to discuss War Hawk McNamara. Historian Marilyn Young (author of many books and recently co-editor of Iraq and the Lessons of Vietnam) is worth noting. She explained of McNamara:

One of the legacies is that there is none, in a sense. The first clip that you ran, you could have run it now. About Iraq, several years ago, about Afghanistan today. It's as if it doesn't go anywhere. There is knowledge, and then it's erased in between McNamara should be kind of a morality tale. During his tenure as Secretary of Defense, he initially -- he was responsible really -- for the initial escalation. In 1964, he and Bundy gave -- '65, I'm sorry -- gave Johnson what's called "The Fork in the Road Memorandum," in which they said, "Now, we have really thought this over and we have two choices. We could increase military pressure or we could negotiate." And they strongly urged the increase of military pressure and Johnson went along with that. Not that he was, you know, I think he was a little unwilling, but that is another subject. Gradually, by later in 1965, by 1966, and certainly by 1967, he was completely disenchanted with the war. And he said it in public at the Senate hearings on bombing targets. And he said, "This bombing is just not going to work." The next thing he knew, he was out. And he said later he never knew whether he had quit or Johnson had fired him. And then, as Howard [Zinn] said, he was absolutely silent. You can imagine that the silence was expressed in onse sense by his opposition to nuclear weapons, which was very sincere and I'm sure Jonathan can talk about that. He and Bundy both focused on the dangers of nuclear war as if that attempt to prevent a future war was going to erase the war they had both just conducted. And then in 1995 he comes out with In Retrospect and everybody quotes, "We were wrong, terribly wrong." But if you read the full paragraph, what it says is: "We weren't wrong in our values and our intentions, we were wrong about our judgments and capabilities." And the book as a whole is an excuse. It's a struggle -- he almost comes to terms and then he runs away from coming to terms. And he does the same thing, I think, in Fog of War. And he did the same thing for the rest of his life -- and approach to what he had really been responsible for, and then a bouncing off it, too awful to face. And it happens over and over again. He says, for example, he lists all the terrible mistakes that he made -- that "they" made. He never says "I." He says "they." And he says, "We just didn't understand that Vietnam was about nationalism." He doesn't ask why they didn't understand that. There were internal critics. George Ball, Paul Capenburg, but also, he was surrounded, if you read the newspapers, by Lidman, by Morgenthau, by I.F. Stone, who was vigorously writing about the Vietnam war. By George Cain, a great historian of South East Asia. So, if he wanted to know what the upsurge, the insurgency in South Vietnam was about, he had lots of sources. He never comes close to explaining why he didn't pay attention to any of that. Instead he says, "Oh my God! We just didn't know they were nationalists." How come?



iraqashley byrnebbc news
aimeee allisondavid solnit
the new york timessheryl gay stolberg
alissa j. rubinliz slythe los angeles times
dahr jamail
mcclatchy newspapers
the washington postrobert g. kaiserdeborah shapley
danny schechter
democracy nowmarilyn youngjonathan schellhoward zinn
kats korner

14 comments:

Layla said...

Tennessee Guerilla Women is where grown women go to play Girls Gone Wild. They're as laughable as Feministing and yet watch them hiss at Third Wavers like they're really doing something.
It's E! Hollywood True Story over there and they pretend like they do politics.

Lewis said...

Love how "they" is tossed around at TGW to refer to African-Americans. And they have the nerve to pick on Keesha? For saying she was Black? They're racists and they've got real problems with strong Black women.

SBV said...

These are the posts that hurt to read but are really important because we need to know that nothing's changed and that racism still abounds. We especially need to know it when it's some supposed lefty. Tenn. Guerilla Women is just a disgusting site.

Iwana said...

How do the people at TGW not see how racist they come off?
I don't get it.
But Marcia, you made a point about slavery and that's true. People like Egalia and Carolyn KB justify what they do and the same sort of justification took place during slavery.
These people are a danger to society. I'm so glad you wrote this and I completely understand your feeling, "That's enough."
It was difficult for me to read. Thanks for calling it out.

Keesha said...

Glad to see the reception to Marcia's wonderful post and thanks to Marcia for defending me.

Jill said...

I stopped posting there for exactly this reason. They're just so racist and Egala's little cult is disgusting. Carolyn KB is sadly not the worst, she's just the loudest.

KeShawn said...

Poor TGW, all us Black folk look alike to them. But we're the problem, not the racists. Marcia's right they'll find a way to make themselves the victim.
Keesha, good to see you on this thread and I'm so sorry you had to put up with that crap.
TGW encourages it.
A real site that gave damn about racism would have stepped in the minute all Black people started getting lumped together and long before the attacks on you.

Dion said...

Tell it Marcia! Tell it! Amen already. Well done.

Anonymous said...

TGW is a sewer filled with racists.

Anonymous said...

I really don't think things will get better until White bloggers start getting honest about their own racism and the racism they foster. That's not true of all White bloggers. But it is true of ones like the Guerillas.

Ethel said...

This is exactly why I'm selective about where I post. There's just too much of the TGW nonsense and abuse all over the net. I don't need it. Shame on them.

Lewis said...

Thing is though, I bet they don't even get it. I bet TGW is just convinced that they are forward thinking citizens. They have no idea how racist they come off and despite the fact that they're attacking every African-American who leaves a comment, and doing so in coded language, if you asked them, they'd insist they hadn't done a thing wrong.

Alfred Sims said...

Late getting here but I just found a link on a message board. This really is the most repeated issue of today, in my opinion. Blogs ask: "Why don't African-Americans participate here?" Then they make all these racists statements and act offended and surprised when it's pointed out.
It happens over and over.
Thanks for this post.

Anita Dardin said...

Just read this from a link online. I stopped visiting Tennesee Guerilla Women in 2007. The comments then were just as bad and it was very obvious that no Black woman was welcomed unless she wanted to play slave to all the White women.