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    • Capitol Hill awash in corruption and criminality

      Posted by Sandyenglish

      April was a not a good month for the Republican Party. Two Congressional Republicans were forced to step down from their seats on powerful House committees amidst separate corruption and influence-peddling investigations—and may eventually lose their seats in Congress or go to jail—while the head of the US Agency for International Development, Randall Tobias, resigned from his post Monday after he was named as a client of a Washington DC call girl service.

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    • US analyst derides ineffective US-created Iraqi military

      Posted by Sandyenglish

      The Bush administration has repeatedly asserted that the soldiers and police of the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) are taking the lead in fighting the armed opponents of the US occupation and the US-backed Iraqi government. Announcing the deployment of 21,000 additional American troops to Iraq on January 10, Bush declared that the “well-defined mission” of the US forces would be “to ...

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    • Democratic presidential candidates debate where to wage war next

      Posted by Sandyenglish

      In the first debate between candidates for the Democratic Party’s 2008 presidential nomination, the leading contenders made clear that whatever their differences with the Bush administration’s handling of the war in Iraq, they are all committed to maintaining the US occupation of the oil-rich country and that, if elected president, they would not hesitate to use US military power anywhere in the world to defend the geo-political interests of American imperialism.

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    • Obituary: Kurt Vonnegut, satirist and pessimist

      Posted by Sandyenglish

      The American writer Kurt Vonnegut died on April 11 at the age of 84 from injuries to his brain suffered during a fall several weeks earlier. Vonnegut wrote 14 novels, three collections of short stories, and a smaller number of essays. He was a popular writer, particularly among the young and disaffected.

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    • Tom Stoppard's The Coast of Utopia

      Posted by Sandyenglish

      Tom Stoppard’s trilogy The Coast of Utopia, near the end of its six-month run at Lincoln Center’s Beaumont Theater in New York City, is an unusual theatrical event. The aim of these three plays—Voyage, Shipwreck and Salvage—is nothing less than to depict the rise and early struggles of the Russian intelligentsia. This very small stratum, drawn largely from the most privileged layers of the population, was to play a seminal role in Russian and world history.

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    • Oil company CEO nets $460 million in 2006

      Posted by Sandyenglish

      The Occidental Petroleum Corporation officers disclosed last week that Chief Executive Ray R. Irani took home more than $460 million in compensation in 2006. This is one of the highest annual executive payouts ever at a US corporation. Only a few CEOs have ever made more money in one year, including Oracle’s CEO Larry Ellison, who received $706 million in 2001, and former Walt Disney Company CEO Michael Eisner, who got $570 million in 1998.

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  1. thumbnail

    Damianmann comments on:

    The Obama "mistake": Breaking the taboo on discussing class in America

    Sandy…that’s EXACTLY what his point was. Patrick Martin missed the point completely.

    Reply »

    1:31 am 4/23/08
  2. thumbnail

    Damianmann comments on:

    The Obama "mistake": Breaking the taboo on discussing class in America

    Bill Clinton wanted to be the left-wing Reagan. Wouldn’t you say? He was after those same voters.

     

    Reply »

    11:44 pm 4/17/08
  3. thumbnail

    Sandyenglish comments on:

    The Obama "mistake": Breaking the taboo on discussing class in America

    Also:

    "Thomas Frank wrote a best-selling book four years ago (What’s the Matter with Kansas?), which examined this process in his home state, and his conclusions about the use of coded appeals to religion to induce voters to ignore their own economic interests have become conventional wisdom in ruling class political and media circles.

    "While Frank’s book had certain insights into American culture and politics, he ignored the most fundamental factor enabling the Republican appeals to prejudice and backwardness to produce electoral successes—the drastic shift by the Democratic Party to the right and its abandonment of any policies to alleviate economic inequality or improve living conditions for working people.

    —Patrick Martin, "US media, Clinton assail Obama for ‘bitter’ truth, World Socialist Web Site, 14 April 2008.

     

    Reply »

    8:00 pm 4/17/08
  4. thumbnail

    Jeff comments on:

    The Obama "mistake": Breaking the taboo on discussing class in America

    Thomas Frank  is a genius!

    Reply »

    7:33 pm 4/17/08
  5. thumbnail

    Damianmann comments on:

    The Obama "mistake": Breaking the taboo on discussing class in America

    Reminds me of this book:

     

    http://www.amazon.com/Whats-Matter-Kansas-Conservatives-America/dp/0805073396

     

    "The largely blue collar citizens of Kansas can be counted upon to be a "red" state in any election, voting solidly Republican and possessing a deep animosity toward the left. This, according to author Thomas Frank, is a pretty self-defeating phenomenon, given that the policies of the Republican Party benefit the wealthy and powerful at the great expense of the average worker. According to Frank, the conservative establishment has tricked Kansans, playing up the emotional touchstones of conservatism and perpetuating a sense of a vast liberal empire out to crush traditional values while barely ever discussing the Republicans’ actual economic policies and what they mean to the working class. Thus the pro-life Kansas factory worker who listens to Rush Limbaugh will repeatedly vote for the party that is less likely to protect his safety, less likely to protect his job, and less likely to benefit him economically. To much of America, Kansas is an abstract, "where Dorothy wants to return. Where Superman grew up." But Frank, a native Kansan, separates reality from myth in What’s the Matter with Kansas and tells the state’s socio-political history from its early days as a hotbed of leftist activism to a state so entrenched in conservatism that the only political division remaining is between the moderate and more-extreme right wings of the same party. Frank, the founding editor of The Baffler and a contributor to Harper’s and The Nation, knows the state and its people. He even includes his own history as a young conservative idealist turned disenchanted college Republican, and his first-hand experience, combined with a sharp wit and thorough reasoning, makes his book more credible than the elites of either the left and right who claim to understand Kansas. —John Moe"

    Reply »

    7:01 pm 4/17/08
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    Japhet comments on:

    Bush orders Iraq escalation to continue

     Ahh, finally we call it what it is: escalation.  Next stop Iran, baby!

    Reply »

    12:41 pm 4/11/08
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    rwtaylor comments on:

    Edinburgh Film Festival: Solitary fragments or part of social experience?

    Reply »

    5:31 pm 9/30/07
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  1. thumbnail

    Sandyenglish

    Member since Oct 2008

    New York