Showing posts with label Should. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Should. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

"I SHOULD BE GIVEN PARADE"...

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"I SHOULD BE GIVEN PARADE"...

Sunday, April 6, 2014

King: Cheney "Should Sit In A Waterboard" If He Thinks It"s Not Torture


Sen. Angus King (I-ME) on Sunday criticized former Vice President Dick Cheney (R) for defending the enhanced interrogation techniques used by the CIA under the Bush administration.


“If he doesn’t think that was torture, I would invite him anywhere in the United States to sit in a waterboard and go through what those people went through, one of them 100-plus-odd times,” King said on MSNBC’s “Up With Steve Kornacki,” as recorded by Mediaite.




“That’s ridiculous to make that claim. This was torture by anybody’s definition. John McCain said it’s torture and I think he’s in a better position to know that than Vice President Cheney.”


Cheney defended the interrogation practices in March during an interview with American University television station, ATV.


“Some people called it torture. It wasn’t torture,” he said.


King cited the Senate Intelligence Committee’s investigation into interrogation practices under the Bush administration and said that the CIA’s worst offense was “misrepresenting it the way they did throughout a number of years.”


“To say it was carefully managed and everybody knew what was going on, that’s absolute nonsense,” King said.




All TPM News



King: Cheney "Should Sit In A Waterboard" If He Thinks It"s Not Torture

Saturday, April 5, 2014

The media should stop reporting what Harry Reid says


posted at 4:01 pm on April 5, 2014 by Dustin Siggins



One of the most important jobs of the media is to be the so-called “fourth estate” — an unofficial fourth branch of government that holds the three official branches accountable. Ideally, this would take place when reporters provide a look at reality when politicians lie, despite pressure from the same politicians to not report the truth.


However, there is another way to hold a politician accountable: Stop taking the politician seriously by not reporting what he or she said. I propose that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) has long passed the point of “unseriousness” to “harmful to society,” and this should be reflected in reporters and editors refusing to publish what he says.


Consider just a handful of truly harmful things Reid has done or said in the last few weeks, and one example from 2012:


In 2012, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) received some level of infamy for claiming that Mitt Romney didn’t pay taxes for a decade. Naturally, the charges were not backed by any evidence, yet the mainstream media treated Reid’s comments as though they had legitimacy. At the time, I asked if Reid had violated Senate Ethics rules by essentially campaigning on the Senate floor.


More recently, Townhall’s Guy Benson hammered Reid for using his Koch brothers obsession as an excuse to block amendments to the unemployment insurance that is set to pass the Senate on Monday. As Guy put it in his headline: “Old Man Still Muttering Incoherently About Koch Brothers”


MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough attached Reid’s tactic as “the stupidest strategy” he has seen, but most mainstream and liberal media outlets have taken Reid seriously. They’ve done this despite the probable abuse of power Reid’s statements are, and Ed’s point that at least one of Reid’s anti-Koch efforts likely violates Senate Ethics rules.


Of course, it’s not just the Kochs Reid has gone after recently. He’s also gone after the people sharing how the Affordable Care Act is hurting them – and then denied doing so. If you want to read about how arrogant and abusive of power this is, check out Guy’s excellent takedown of Reid here. Justifiably and rightly, Guy is and was furious, and so should the rest of us be.


Reid’s Koch habit — yes, yes, I used the cliched term; I couldn’t help it — includes accusing the Koch brothers of associating with companies that circumvent sanctions on Iran. Lachlan Markay of the Washington Free Beacon showed that Reid has taken campaign donations from companies doing the exact same thing.


And, finally, Reid recently said the minimum wage Democrats want — $ 10.10 per hour — was not picked arbitrarily, but to bring people out of poverty:


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid reiterated his “no negotiations” stance on the Democratic proposal to boost the minimum-wage to $ 10.10 per hour, despite calls for a deal from some red-state Democrats up for reelection in 2014.


“No, there are none. Nope,” Reid told reporters following a minimum-wage rally with union members and other Democratic leaders. “The reason we picked that number, $ 10.10, gets you out of poverty — $ 10 doesn’t. $ 10.05 doesn’t. We didn’t pick that number just to be fun.” The current federal minimum wage is $ 7.25 per hour.



You know what would actually help people get out of poverty? Eliminating the minimum wage so low-skilled minorities could work more, or repealing the Affordable Care Act, or tax reform, or cutting the budget, or pretty much anything else that wouldn’t increase the cost of employees for employees. And does anyone believe Reid picked a $ 10.10 hourly wage because that’s the way to help people out of poverty, rather than reasons of political gamesmanship? Why not go to $ 20/hour, Senator?


Like the lies of President Obama on pretty much everything — whether his views on spying on Americans; war without authorization from Congress; fiscal responsibility; and the alleged benefits of the Affordable Care Act — the media would actually be doing its job to not report on what Reid says. But if it must report, fact-checks should accompany what is said in its articles and editorials, not simply an unchallenged and uncorrected reporting of these lies and other brazen violations of the public trust.



Related Posts:



Hot Air



The media should stop reporting what Harry Reid says

Friday, April 4, 2014

Brandon Eich was a victim of market forces, conservatives should applaud

Brendan Eich
Brendan Eich, pondering the sanctity of marriage.


Brendan Eich is a tech legend, the inventor of Javascript—a programming language that powers much of what’s cool on the web. He is also a bigot, a donor to California’s successful Prop 8 effort in 2008 to enshrine hate in the state constitution by banning same-sex marriage.

Last week he was named as CEO of the Mozilla Foundation, a nonprofit organization best known for the Firefox browser. It is an organization in turmoil, as the mobile revolution makes desktop computers increasingly irrelevant, and with that, Mozilla’s core product. (Daily Kos’s traffic is now nearly 50-50 mobile traffic, as you can see in this chart. The dark blue band is mobile.)


The problem with Eich is that, well, he’s a bigot. And worse than that, he hasn’t “evolved” since 2008, like so much of America. He held steadfast to his beliefs, out-of-step with the world his product serves. So the Mozilla community erupted in anger, and after a half-assed effort to hang on, Eich resigned the position. So of course, you have people screaming about “persecution” from the usual conservative suspects to contrarians like Andrew Sullivan.


When people’s lives and careers are subject to litmus tests, and fired if they do not publicly renounce what may well be their sincere conviction, we have crossed a line. This is McCarthyism applied by civil actors. This is the definition of intolerance.


Please read below the fold for more on this story.



Daily Kos



Brandon Eich was a victim of market forces, conservatives should applaud

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Should the Government Be Able to Scan Your Entire Genome Upon Birth?

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Should the Government Be Able to Scan Your Entire Genome Upon Birth?

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Rand Paul says Obama should apologize to Pope Francis for Obamacare’s contraceptive mandate

The Kentucky senator thinks the president should promise not to spy on Francis, too




    








Salon.com



Rand Paul says Obama should apologize to Pope Francis for Obamacare’s contraceptive mandate

I.R.S. Says Bitcoin Should Be Considered Property, Not Currency

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I.R.S. Says Bitcoin Should Be Considered Property, Not Currency

Monday, March 24, 2014

Should baby formula ads be banned?

“Aggressive” tactics have led to shifts in breastfeeding rates — how can parents turn them around?




    








Salon.com



Should baby formula ads be banned?

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Should Your Kids Know How to Bug Out…from School?


hiking-backpack-through-grass-friendsThe Organic Prepper


There are many alarming trends throughout the American public school system, and one of the most unsettling relates to “terror drills.”


Paul Joseph Watson of Infowars wrote last week about “lockdown drills” run by the DHS:


The Department of Homeland Security is expanding its operations by running unannounced school lockdown drills, another sign of the federal agency’s encroachment into more areas of Americans’ lives.  


“On Thursday, March 6, a team comprised of ten officials from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, and the NJ Department of Education’s Safety and Security Task Forces visited Glen Ridge High School to conduct an unannounced school lock-down drill,” reports Georgette Gilmore

While authorities justify school lockdown drills as necessary exercises to prepare for potential school shootings, the likelihood of one happening is miniscule. Critics have pointed to the fact that the drills achieve little else than traumatizing school children.


Some have also argued that teaching kids to “shelter in place” rather than evacuate the scene of a shooting is bad advice because it is likely to lead to more casualties. The process of having children submit to armed masked men during school lockdown drills is also contradictory in that it teaches them to behave exactly the same way towards an actual gunman.(source)



But a quick drill with guns pointed at children are not even the worst of the drills being performed. Another type of drill began occurring in 2012. These are called “evacuation drills” or “relocation drills” and the kids are put on a bus and taken to a location that is not disclosed to parents. Michael Snyder wrote:


All over the United States, school children are being taken out of their classrooms, put on buses and sent to “alternate locations” during terror drills…In the years since 9/11 and the Columbine school shootings, there has been a concerted effort to make school emergency drills much more “realistic” and much more intense.    Unfortunately, the fact that many of these drills are deeply traumatizing many children does not seem to bother too many people.  Do we really need to have “active shooter” drills where men point guns at our kids and fire blanks at them?  Do we really need to have “relocation drills” where kids are rapidly herded on to buses and told that they must surrender their cell phones because they will not be allowed to call anyone? (source)



During these drills kids are not allowed to phone their parents and parents are not even allowed to know where their children are in many cases.  In some incidences during which the school forewarns parents about the drill, the parents are told that they cannot pick up their children “for any reason” during the drill.  Many schools now boast of having supplies to keep children at the school for 48 hours in the event of an “emergency” during which time the children will not be released to their parents.


And it gets even worse. In the name of predictive programming, do you recall a “drill” during which the police took over a school and practiced fighting “angry parents”?  I’ve been plenty annoyed at different schools my daughter has attended, but in no way have I been compelled to attack the school, requiring SWAT teams to defend it against me and my band of likewise irate moms.


In fact, there’s only one scenario I can imagine in which parents would storm the school to take back their children.  Mac Slavo of SHTFplan wrote about it:


Let’s consider the circumstances that would have to occur for not one, but two or more parents to lay armed siege to a school.


There’s only one real scenario that comes to mind, and you’d more than likely have to be a prepper or conspiracy theorist to even contemplate the possibility.


The schools which our kids attend have “shelter-in-place” emergency procedures that would be enacted in the event of an emergency such as a nuclear, chemical or biological attack. During these emergencies schools are to be locked down with no unofficial access into the buildings until the all-clear has been given. It’s unclear based on district procedures just what the shelter-in-place order means and what steps parents would need to take to get their kids out of school – or whether they could even take their kids out of school based on the emergency.


But basically, it boils down to this: If there is a widespread emergency, and a school locks down and refuses parental access to children, then and only then could we envision a scenario where parents might take it upon themselves to evacuate their children by force.


The ‘event’ in question would likely need to be mass scale, or perceived as mass scale, in order for a parent to be so adamant about getting their child out of the school that they would take to armed violence to get them out.


Is this what police are training for?


Someone, somewhere obviously thinks there is a legitimate reason for this type of training simulation. (source)



So when you put all of this together, it’s easy to see the future. The picture this is painting is that one day, a unilateral decision could be made to put our children on a bus, take them to an undisclosed location, and keep them. (Dave Hodges wrote a chilling article about the role of FEMA in these scenarios – you can read it HERE.)


Should you teach your child to escape?


Maybe it’s time to teach your child how to bug out from school.


By no means am I suggesting that this is a legitimate course of action for every child.  Some kids are too young or too prone to panic and poor judgement to safely bug out. Some environments are too dangerous for a young person to take off on his or her own.  Parents have to consider the skills and mindset of their kids before making plans like this. It can definitely be risky, and you have to compare it to the alternative of having your child herded along.


I have a huge amount of faith in my child. So much so that we have performed some of our own drills.  She attends a part-day advanced science program at a school 13 miles from our home.  She’s a lot more “aware” of events going on in the world than most of her peers because we discuss things like government encroachment and tyranny on a regular basis. She knows that she is not to get on a bus without my prior knowledge and consent.


If, out of the blue, the teachers just tell students to get on a bus, and there is no compelling reason for them to be doing so, it might be time for your child to use his or her own judgement on whether boarding that conveyance is actually a good idea.


If you feel that a school bug-out plan is a good idea for your child, here are a few things to consider:


  • If there are younger siblings at the school, your older children will need to plan how to connect with them, and whether or not to abort the bug-out if they can’t connect with the younger ones.

  • You need to set up a primary and secondary rally point where you’ll meet your kids.  This should be within a couple of miles of the school, and it should be a place where your children can stay hidden from the main road. The plan should always be to go to the primary rally point, but if for some reason that is unsafe or unaccessible, there should be a secondary rally point that is reached by a different route.

  • Figure out the route your child will take to get to the rally point.  Practice getting there from the school.  If possible, for reasons of safety and stealth, develop a route that does not use the main road to take them there. Hike or walk this route with your child until they are completely comfortable with it.

  • There are some situations in which evacuation is actually necessary. For example, some places are prone to forest fires and you wouldn’t want your child out on foot in such a scenario.  If the school building were to collapse, it’s obvious the children would be relocated to a safe shelter. This is the point at which your child’s judgement comes into play. It is vital to discuss different scenarios in which evacuation is necessary.

It is also important that your child have the proper gear to take off on foot, as well as the ability to use all of it.  It’s important to practice things like filtering water in order for a young person to feel confident doing so.


  • A hiking pack (My daughter keeps this  Signpost Outdoor Packable Handy Backpack Foldable Lightweight Travel Bag Daypack – Green in the bottom of her school bag)

  • Comfortable weather-appropriate footwear (winter boots, sneakers, etc.)

  • Water filtration bottle (we use THIS ONE from Berkey)

  • At least one full water bottle, but preferably two

  • Snacks like granola bars or energy bars (Clif Bars are made with good ingredients and are very filling)

  • Weather appropriate clothing (snow gear, light hoodie, gloves, hat for sun or warmth)

  • Fire-starting flint

  • Space blanket

  • First aid kit (band-aids are a must forpotential blisters)

  • Extra socks

Most of the other gear that you’d prefer your child to have is going to be deemed “dangerous” by the school.  Things like multi-tools, matches or lighters, or self-defense items are frowned upon and can result in anything from suspension by a “zero-tolerance” school system that seems unable to differentiate between a tool and a threat, to felony charges by the overzealous “justice system.” These are things you must take into consideration when choosing items for the emergency kit, and you have to weigh the pros against the cons.


Will this work for you?


This is not a plan that will work for every family. Only you can judge whether or not your child or teen can keep a cool enough head to execute a similar plan and use their own judgement in a surprise situation. Only you can assess the immediate environment and decide if it is safer for your student to set out on their own or to go with the staff from the school.


Do any of you have a simliar plan for your kids? Please share your suggestions in the comments below.


NOTEThis is not a debate about whether children should be educated at home or via the public school system. This is about a specific situation that affects many families in America who have made the decision to send their children to school based on their own personal circumstances or the availability of special programs.


About the author:


Please feel free to share any information from this site in part or in full, giving credit to the author and including a link to this website and the following bio.


Daisy Luther is a freelance writer and editor.  Her website, The Organic Prepper, offers information on healthy prepping, including premium nutritional choices, general wellness and non-tech solutions. You can follow Daisy on Facebook and Twitter, and you can email her at daisy@theorganicprepper.ca


If you enjoyed this article, please Vote for The Organic Prepper as a top prepping web site.

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Should Your Kids Know How to Bug Out…from School?

Friday, March 14, 2014

Harvard Professor Frankel Proposes "ECB Should Buy US Treasuries" to Fix Eurozone Problems

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Harvard Professor Frankel Proposes "ECB Should Buy US Treasuries" to Fix Eurozone Problems

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

What Should We Read Into FL-13? Maybe Nothing.



Tonight, votes will be tallied in Florida’s 13th Congressional District special election to replace deceased Congressman Bill Young, a Republican. Here are three basic thoughts on the race:


1. My sense is that the Democratic candidate, former state chief financial officer and 2010 gubernatorial nominee Alex Sink, will probably win. 


Back in mid-January, I was corresponding with a left-of-center analyst about a St. Petersburg Times poll, and I commented that “53-47 Sink is about what I’d predict.” That’s about where I am right now, though I think a narrower Sink win is likely, maybe in the three-to-four point range. 


We’ll discuss this more in bullet point No. 3, but this is a district that has gradually trended Democratic over the past few decades, where Democrats have an unusually strong (though still somewhat flawed) candidate, and where Republicans have a candidate who is average at best. In a swing district, that seems to be a recipe for a Democratic win.


There hasn’t been much independent polling in this race. The Tampa Bay Times and Saint Leo University released polls in early February showing Sink up 7 and 9 points, respectively. A PPP poll conducted the weekend before Election Day for the League of Conservation Voters showed Sink with a smaller, 48-45, advantage.


On top of this, if there were ever a case where we’d expect a massive polling failure, it would be a special election for a legislative seat. Witness the special election to replace Tim Scott in South Carolina, where polls predicted anywhere between a big Democratic win and a close race, but which ended up in a nine-point GOP blowout.  Legislative seats are just difficult to poll in our gerrymandered universe, especially when the unpredictable turnout from a special election is figured in.


But if there’s one thing that seems to tip the scales in Sink’s direction, it’s that Democrats seem to be outperforming their early voting/absentee metrics from 2012.  That race ended up with an Obama victory in the district, albeit a narrow one. Of course, Election Day turnout may drop off if Democrats are simply cannibalizing their regular voters, but for now, things seem to point in Sink’s direction.


2. There is some symbolic importance to this election.


The 13th District is the lineal descendent of one created in 1952 and won by Republican Bill Cramer.  Cramer was the first Republican from Florida since 1882, when Horatio Bisbee represented a district that spanned the entire eastern half of the Florida Peninsula (it was based in Jacksonville, as Miami wouldn’t be incorporated for another 14 years).  Cramer’s win was the face of the “New Southern Republicanism,” a creation of immigrants from the North who caused sleepy Sun Belt hamlets to explode in population and who transformed the political dynamic in the South.  These sorts of victories were replicated during the ’50s in places like Dallas, Charlotte, N.C., and Arlington, Va., before spreading to the countryside starting in the ’70s and turning swing regions into Republican ones.


Republicans have already lost Tampa and have had to cede most of St. Petersburg proper to that Tampa-based district in order to keep the Pinellas peninsula red.  Losing one of the first Republican redoubts in the South doesn’t mean terribly much in the big picture, but it is a useful reminder that things really do change, sometimes quickly, even in the South.


3. There are very few electoral lessons to be drawn here.


The Hill and USA Today both agree that there is a broader lesson to be learned from this race about the 2014 elections.  I’m much less certain. To begin with, special elections aren’t bellwethers, except when they are. If that doesn’t sound particularly helpful, well, it isn’t meant to.


As we might expect, wave elections are often preceded by surprising wins for the victorious side. In 1974, a number of surprising special election Democratic wins in historically Republican districts were the first signals that things were about to go massively awry for the GOP, and played a role in convincing Richard Nixon to resign. In 1994, Democrats lost historically Democratic districts in Kentucky and Oklahoma.  In 2008, GOP losses in Illinois, Mississippi and Louisiana seemingly presaged the rout in the fall.


But sometimes waves aren’t preceded by surprising wins. In 2006, the GOP managed to hang on to a seat with a badly flawed candidate in southern Ohio, and kept a San Diego-based district that many saw as a test of Democrats’ chances in the fall.  In 2010, the GOP lost a special election in southwestern Pennsylvania that had been trumpeted as the only district won by both John Kerry and John McCain.


Of course, there are also special election upsets that herald nothing. Democrats were riding high in 2004 after winning special elections in South Dakota and central Kentucky, but all of that amounted to nothing in the fall.


But even if all that weren’t the case, I’m still not sure what we could read into this particular race.  As mentioned above, this seat is politically marginal, voting near the national margin in two straight elections.  Democrats fielded a reasonably strong candidate in Sink, who had won statewide office, had very nearly won the governorship in a terrible Democratic year (albeit against a damaged opponent), and who carried this district twice in her statewide bids.  This is a profile more commonly found among Senate candidates than House candidates.


Republicans fielded a first-time candidate, David Jolly, who had served as a lobbyist and who faced a competitive primary — indeed a primary that split Young’s family. While Politico’s “airing of grievances” piece should be taken with a grain of salt — jilted/nervous consultants turn on campaigns with regularity — it does serve as a nice compendium for the public mistakes by Team Jolly.


If we must say something, it is this:  If Sink wins, we will know that a strong Democrat without a voting record, who is running in an open swing district, can defeat a middling Republican candidate.  To be honest, that’s actually a somewhat important data point for Democrats, because it wasn’t clear that there was much of anything that they could do to avoid their drop-off problem. Also, some level of support for Obamacare isn’t an automatic kiss of death. But there are very few competitive House races will fit this mold, and none of the competitive Senate races will.


If Jolly wins: Because this is a seat that Sink should win in a neutral year, should she lose despite all her advantages we’ll have another data point that this is not shaping up as a neutral year. But we already intuited this; there are much better data points highlighting the Democrats’ likely midterm blues.


As for my bottom line? I think the Democrat will win this race, but I think there’s a pretty good chance that it will prove as meaningful as their win in southwestern Pennsylvania in 2010.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



What Should We Read Into FL-13? Maybe Nothing.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

THIS VIDEO SHOULD PISS OF THE WHOLE WORLD



THIS VIDEO SHOULD PISS OF THE WHOLE WORLD When you watch this video, you will know why. Masonic Secrets revealed http://www.masonic-secrets.org http://www.il…



THIS VIDEO SHOULD PISS OF THE WHOLE WORLD

Thursday, March 6, 2014

What Country Should Crimea Be Part Of? Reflections on Nation Building and US Hypocrisy

What Country Should Crimea Be Part Of? Reflections on Nation Building and US Hypocrisy
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjA-P_lShMUYlIO0LKzHPKwBEG7EBA7-5T8TsvYAYyZnKCJmVOYQgFdMYQXIxAh8siYt4XzI7akH9woxsjNUPax4HsMx5yAPSwIEtenP4Pj6kI_ctSDHwi2MnIVgSLXUr0Mrk_fxgsJq5c/s400/Kurdistan.png

An up or down vote on whether Crimea stays with Ukraine or joins Russia is slated for March 16, just 10 days from now.


Please consider Crimea Votes to Join Russia, Accelerating Ukraine Crisis.

Crimea’s parliament voted to join Russia on Thursday and its Moscow-backed government set a referendum on the decision in 10 days’ time in a dramatic escalation of the crisis over the Ukrainian Black Sea peninsula.

The vice premier of Crimea, home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol, said a referendum on the status would take place on March 16. All state property would be “nationalized”, the Russian ruble adopted and Ukrainian troops treated as occupiers and forced to surrender or leave, he said.


Historical Background


Let’s take a look at the historical and political references as noted by the Financial Times.

“Crimea was, is and will be an integral part of Ukraine,” said Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Ukraine prime minister. Speaking in Brussels, he said the referendum had “no legal grounds” and urged the Russian government not to support those advocating separatism in Ukraine.

Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s acting president, said Crimea’s referendum would be banned, its parliament disbanded and snap elections held.


Crimea has been a bone of contention between Moscow and Kiev ever since Nikita Krushchev gave it to Ukraine in February 1954, in a move to mark the 300th anniversary of the 1654 treaty that unified Ukraine and Russia.


In 1992, Crimea’s parliament voted to declare the region independent of Ukraine and scheduled a referendum to confirm the vote. But after pressure from Kiev, lawmakers backtracked, announcing the peninsula was part of Ukraine.


What Country Should Crimea Belong To?


Like it or not, it’s pretty clear that in recent history Crimea was not part of Ukraine. Rather Crimea became part of Ukraine without a vote. In 1992 it almost left Ukraine, but the Crimea parliament was talked out of a vote.


What country should Crimea be part of? Should it be its own country? And should the people decide, or politicians?


U.S. Hypocrisy


Somehow it’s OK for the U.S. to send troops to Iraq and Afghanistan half a world away, supposedly to protect U.S. interests, but it’s not OK for Russia to protect its interests at its own doorstep.


Two wrongs don’t make a right, I simply want to note the hypocritical nature of U.S. statements on the matter.


In general, I don’t condone military actions. Nor do I condone Russia’s military actions now. That said, Russia at least has genuine political interest in its actions.


The U.S. had zero business in Iraq and there is certainly no justification for ongoing U.S. troops in Afghanistan for the last 10 years.


Rule of Votes


Politicians don’t want votes unless the vote is going their way.


That Crimea’s parliament is willing to hold a vote is a strong indication of which way the vote will go.


Reflections on Nation Building


No matter how the Crimea vote goes, there is going to be a significant number of people who will despise the outcome.


This is precisely what is guaranteed to happen when politicians merge regions into countries for political reasons.


Iraq was once three distinct countries. Wikipedia offers these notes on Iraq History.


Following WWI … “Britain imposed a Hāshimite monarchy on Iraq and defined the territorial limits of Iraq without taking into account the politics of the different ethnic and religious groups in the country, in particular those of the Kurds and the Assyrians to the north. During the British occupation, the Shi’ites and Kurds fought for independence.


Iraq achieved independence in 1932. Then came multiple coups, two US invasions, religious wars, and ethnic battles that continue to this day.


The Kurds want their own country. They once had it. Here is a Map of Kurdistan.



Turkey and Iraq are both involved in the Kurdish mess.  Kurdistan once overlapped part of Turkey and part of Iraq. The Kurds now want their own independent area of Iraq. Turkey does not want that to happen fearing it will unite Kurdish sentiment in Turkey.


Historically speaking, no good ever came from the “nation building” political exercise of forcing together widely different ethnic and religious groups into a single country.


Why should it be any different this time?


So let me ask again: What country should Crimea belong to and who should decide?


Whatever you answer, the U.S. should stay out of this mess. It’s not our battle, and sending missiles to the Czech Republic as part of the solution as McCain proposes is decidedly preposterous.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis




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Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Scarborough: Politics Should End At The Water"s Edge In Time Of Crisis





JOE SCARBOROUGH: The president’s snippy retort about the ’80s wanting their foreign policy back now makes him look small and ill-prepared for the crisis that’s on him. And the consensus among foreign policy analysts, it just is, is that the diplomatic corps believe that neither Vladimir Putin nor any other world leaders on the stage fear Barack Obama enough to alter bad behavior.


But it bears noting that the Republicans crowing about the Democrats’ failed policy in Russia need to remember three things. First, it was George W. Bush who claimed to look into Putin’s eyes and see the goodness of his soul. Right, remember that?


Second, it was the Bush administration in charge that did very little to stop Putin from invading Georgia in 2008, to support breakaway factions to aligned with Russia then. And third, there remains a quaint notion that some of us still hold closely in our hearts despite all the shabby behavior over the past quarter century, politics should still end at the water’s edge in time of crises.


This is a time of crisis. A great crisis, Steve. And what can we do, other than calling the president feckless and attacking the president? Obviously, I’ve got — I share a lot of the same concerns that John McCain shares with Barack Obama’s foreign policy. But I don’t think that gets us anywhere right now when Vladimir Putin already believes Barack Obama’s weak, to undercut him in the middle of this crisis. So what can we do to make it hurt for Vladimir Putin?




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Scarborough: Politics Should End At The Water"s Edge In Time Of Crisis

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Graham: Nobody in the World Should Legitimize Using Troops to Invade a Country



If we had anything resembling a functioning media in this country, this one segment should have demanded that Candy Crowley follow up with minimally a “Are you serious, Sen. Graham? Does the name Iraq mean anything to you?” if not flat out laughing in Huckleberry Graham’s face:


CROWLEY: What do you make of that position, that a Russian view of this [the turmoil in the Crimea] is not totally understood or taken into account?


read more



Latest from Crooks and Liars



Graham: Nobody in the World Should Legitimize Using Troops to Invade a Country

Friday, February 28, 2014

Why Should Logos Be Limited to Shoes and Clothes?

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Why Should Logos Be Limited to Shoes and Clothes?

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Austria should stand by Hypo creditors: Nowotny




VIENNA Sat Feb 22, 2014 8:29am EST



Austria

Austria’s nationalised lender Hypo Alpe Adria headquarters is pictured in Klagenfurt February 12, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Heinz-Peter Bader




VIENNA (Reuters) – Austria should not demand creditors of struggling state bank Hypo Alpe Adria HAABI.UL take a “haircut” on the debt, central bank head Ewald Nowotny said, contradicting the country’s finance minister.


Nowotny, who was on Friday put in charge of a task force set up to advise the government on how to wind down Hypo after its previous chief quit, said Austria’s reputation was at stake if it did not stand by its obligations.


“I believe our model of how a state should behave should be, if you like, more like Germany, should be more like Holland, and not so much Greece or Cyprus,” Nowotny told Austria’s ORF radio in an interview broadcast on Saturday.


Finance Minister Michael Spindelegger had on Friday questioned whether investors who snapped up discounted Hypo debt “to try to make a quick buck” were worthy of protection.


Nowotny said: “When one has reached this decision in principle that a state honors its obligations, then one must recognize that this means also making payments to creditors that one personally does not agree with.”


The resignation of Klaus Liebscher on Friday as head of both the Hypo task force and the bank’s supervisory board piled more uncertainty on how Austria would deal with the problem of how to wind down Hypo, which it nationalized in 2009.


Nowotny said a state-owned “bad bank” was his preferred solution and one that should be put into practice as quickly as possible, but Spindelegger had said he had no favored option and again refused rule to out allowing an insolvency.


The split has highlighted market worries posed by Hypo, which Austria had to take over after a period of breakneck expansion in the Balkans pushed the bank to the brink of bankruptcy and threatened financial stability in the region.


TOP RATING


The expansion was fueled by guarantees from Hypo’s home province of Carinthia, of which 12.5 billion euros ($ 17.2 billion) remain, posing the danger that the province would be bankrupted if Hypo were allowed to become insolvent.


Ratings agency Fitch maintained its top rating and stable outlook for Austria on Friday but said Vienna’s failure to lay out a clear strategy for Hypo raised “concerns about policy coherence and credibility in the near term”.


Nowotny said he estimated the winding-down of Hypo would cost Austria around 4 billion euros on top of 4.8 billion it has already provided in aid and guarantees.


And he said it would be a “sensible arrangement” if Austria’s other provinces, which are nervously eyeing Carinthia’s position, would contribute to the federal government some 250 million euros they collect in bank taxes.


Nowotny denied that he personally, or the central bank, which was responsible for overseeing Hypo, were to blame for what he called the “real catastrophe” of the current situation, and reiterated that he believed the auditors had failed.


“I believe the main problem was simply that many of the balance sheets weren’t right and the valuations weren’t right,” he said. “That is a process where the central role lies with the auditors.”


Deloitte DLTE.UL, Hypo’s former auditors, had rejected the accusation in an email to Reuters saying: “Deloitte is surprised by the statement of Governor Nowotny. We are convinced that we have performed the audit of Hypo Group state of the art and therefore we completely reject these allegations.”


($ 1 = 0.7275 euros)


(Additional reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by David Holmes)





Reuters: Business News



Austria should stand by Hypo creditors: Nowotny

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Ruth Bader Ginsburg Should Do All Liberals a Favor and Retire Now

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg Should Do All Liberals a Favor and Retire Now

Friday, February 14, 2014

New ADA Recommendation: Parents Should Use Fluoride Toothpaste on 12-Month-Olds

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New ADA Recommendation: Parents Should Use Fluoride Toothpaste on 12-Month-Olds

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Boehner Should Stop Casting Stones at Obama

Boehner Should Stop Casting Stones at Obama

Ron Fournier, Natl Jrnl
When John Boehner says Republicans can’t trust Barack Obama on immigration reform, my first thought is to take a sarcastic swipe at his hypocrisy. A snarky headline jumps to mind: House Speaker Pot Calls President Kettle Untrustworthy.On second thought, I’ll stick with the facts to make a case that nobody in Washington is trusted.
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