Full Bernie Sanders Speech on Economic Justice, Healthcare, Opposing Trump & Ending the War in Yemen | DN | 11/30/18 | 26:20 Major Trump administration climate report says damage is 'intensifying across the country'
The report suggests that by 2050, the country could see as much as 2.3 additional degrees of warming in the continental United States. By that same year, in a high-end global-warming scenario, coral reefs in Hawaii and the U.S. Pacific territories could be bleaching every single year -- conditions in which their survival would be in severe doubt. A record-warm year like 2016 would become routine.
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Key crops, including corn, wheat and soybeans, would see declining yields as temperatures rise during the growing season. The city of Phoenix, which experienced about 80 days per year over 100 degrees around the turn of the century, could see between 120 and 150 such days per year by the end of the century, depending on the pace of emissions. And those who face the most suffering? Society's most vulnerable, including "lower-income and other marginalized communities," researchers found. In another major step, the authors of the new report have begun to put dollar signs next to projected climate damage, specifically within the United States. In a worst-case climate-change scenario, the document finds, labor-related losses by the year 2090 as a result of extreme heat -- the sort that makes it difficult to work outdoors or seriously lowers productivity -- could amount to an estimated $155 billion annually. Deaths from temperature extremes could take an economic toll of $141 billion per year in the same year, while coastal property damage could total $118 billion yearly, researchers found. When asked about it, President Trump said he didn't believe the report. In Mueller investigation, Trump is now "Individual 1" Until this week, public revelations about special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation focused on characters who had been around President Trump. Driving the news: For the first time, the special counsel's narrative has suddenly come alive with pre-presidential actions and entanglements by Trump himself. "Investigators have now publicly cast Trump as a central figure of their probe into whether Trump's campaign conspired with the Russian government during the 2016 campaign," the WashPost reports. ... Read more 2018's midterms were the most unusual in modern history Of the 18 midterms since 1950, there have been just five split decisions, where the House shifted towards one party and the Senate towards the other. And 2018's was the most split of them all. Why it matters: Now that all of the races have been settled -- with the exception of the California 21st district race -- we can see how much of an outlier the 2018 midterms were. The split is also a sign of how Democrats dominated the suburban House districts while Republicans won the rural Senate states. ...
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Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, November 30 [12:41]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, November 30 (FULL) | 59:02
SHOCKING Michael Cohen Plea | TYT | 11/29/18 | 15:35
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The1a.org Friday News Roundup -- Domestic | 1a.org | 11/30/18 | 1hr
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11.30.2018. 10:59
Elizabeth Warren Illuminates the Left's Foreign-Policy Divide For decades, every American president and major presidential candidate tried to reconcile the language of universal morality with the language of national interest. From Ronald Reagan to Hillary Clinton, each argued, in his or her own way, that as America grew more powerful than its adversaries, the world became a better place. Donald Trump does not. "You think our country is so innocent?" he asked Bill O'Reilly soon after taking office. He wasn't being critical. Trump's point was that America doesn't need to be morally superior to be worthy of loyalty and love. America is precious simply because it is ours. In a world of gangsters, America should not strive to be the police. It should be the toughest, shrewdest gangster of them all. On Thursday at American University, Senator Elizabeth Warren will outline her own foreign-policy vision. Her speech--shared exclusively with The Atlantic--charts a careful course, emphasizing progressive ideals while also celebrating the American order. The 2020 presidential campaign is still in its infancy. But it's already becoming clear that, when it comes to foreign policy, Warren's vision is more conventional; Bernie Sanders's is more radical. And both leave crucial questions unresolved. ... Read more Elizabeth Warren's Theory of Capitalism While so much of the action on the American left in recent months has come in the form of revived enthusiasm for socialism, Senator Elizabeth Warren has positioned herself quite differently. During the past two weeks, she has expounded about the prospects for capitalism in a much-covered speech and in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. Instead of championing the system's demise, she presents herself as its savior.
2.3 TRillion Dollars Missing from DOD Day before 911 | 09/10/01 | 3:57
The Pentagon Can't Account for $21 Trillion (That's Not a Typo) | Truthdig | | 05/14/18 | article
What Does One Trillion Dollars Look Like?
Click to zoom in**Daily Ticker | Find the $8.5 Trillion the Pentagon Can't Account For | 2014 | 5:32 Dr. Mark Skidmore, of Michigan State University, as he talks about $21 Trillion Missing from US Federal Budget | 12/02/17 | 33:32
The 2018 NDAA approves $700 billion for the Pentagon. This was done despite the fact that a recent report on the budgets of the Department of Defense and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, found that between the two departments, they have lost over $21 trillion in the last 17 years.
MSU scholars find $21 trillion in unauthorized government spending... | MSUToday | staff | 12/11/17 | article
What Does One Trillion Dollars Look Like? | Mint | older | 1:09 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, November 29 [13:33]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, November 29 (FULL) | 59:02
Counting the Drops: Climate Change and The Colorado River | TRNN | 11/29/18 | 8:43
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Maybe Try Putting The 'CHRIST' Back In CHRISTIAN This Christmas. | TYT | 11/29/18 | 3:31 Trump Incoherently BABBLES Through Latest interview | TYT | 11/28/18 | 13:27 Trump On Climate Report: 'I Don't Believe It' | TYT | 11/28/18 | 7:55 The1a.org American Life Expectancy Is Down | 1a.org | 11/29/18 | 1hr
American life expectancy has dropped. A report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says Americans born last year are expected to live to just above 78 years old. That's a drop from the predicted life expectancy issued last year for people born in 2016.
Unlike Richard Nixon, Donald Trump Misconduct Piling Up In Full Public View | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 11/28/18 | 25:06Key Mueller Witness: I Lied And I'm Ready To Die In Jail | The Beat With Ari Melber | MSNBC | 11/28/18 | 22:05 |
11.29.2018. 11:56
Sarah Huckabee Sanders Gets Fact-Checked Live On Air By CNN The network split its screen to run a "Facts First" box during Sanders' press briefing. A "Facts First" box listing key points about the government's new National Climate Assessment flashed up as Sanders defended President Donald Trump's rejection of the report, which was released over the Thanksgiving weekend and predicted that the U.S. faces warming of at least 3 more degrees this century. CNN's bullet points did not exactly call out Sanders' questionable claims in real time. But they did serve to note the difference between the authority of the report, which involved 300 scientists and 13 federal agencies, and the Trump administration's dismissal of its findings. ... Read more
Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security by Sarah Chayes
The world is blowing up. Every day a new blaze seems to ignite: the bloody implosion of Iraq and Syria; the East-West standoff in Ukraine; abducted schoolgirls in Nigeria. Is there some thread tying these frightening international security crises together? In a riveting account that weaves history with fast-moving reportage and insider accounts from the Afghanistan war, Sarah Chayes identifies the unexpected link: corruption. Since the late 1990s, corruption has reached such an extent that some governments resemble glorified criminal gangs, bent solely on their own enrichment. These kleptocrats drive indignant populations to extremes?ranging from revolution to militant puritanical religion. Chayes plunges readers into some of the most venal environments on earth and examines what emerges: Afghans returning to the Taliban, Egyptians overthrowing the Mubarak government (but also redesigning Al-Qaeda), and Nigerians embracing both radical evangelical Christianity and the Islamist terror group Boko Haram. In many such places, rigid moral codes are put forth as an antidote to the collapse of public integrity. The pattern, moreover, pervades history. Through deep archival research, Chayes reveals that canonical political thinkers such as John Locke and Machiavelli, as well as the great medieval Islamic statesman Nizam al-Mulk, all named corruption as a threat to the realm. In a thrilling argument connecting the Protestant Reformation to the Arab Spring, Thieves of State presents a powerful new way to understand global extremism. And it makes a compelling case that we must confront corruption, for it is a cause?not a result?of global instability.
Capitalism: A Crime Story by Harry Glasbeek
Our assumptions about the world condition us to see these situations as legally different from one another. But what if we, the critics of corporate capitalism, instead insisted on taking the spirit of law, rather than its letter, seriously? It would then be possible to describe many of the daily practices of capitalists and their corporations as criminal in nature, even if not always criminal by the letter and formality of law. In Capitalism: A Crime Story, Harry Glasbeek makes the case that if the rules and doctrines of liberal law were applied as they should be according to law's own pronouncements and methodology, corporate capitalism would be much harder to defend
After a 1996 school shooting, Britain implemented tough gun control laws. Today they have 100 times fewer gun deaths than the United States
HummmmmThe rise of the delivery AVs A new report suggests autonomous vehicles could deliver goods cheaper and faster-- within an hour or two of ordering in some cases -- and have a major impact on consumer behavior. The big picture: It's still unclear whether people will embrace self-driving vehicles, but the report by KPMG says one way it could happen is by lowering the cost of goods delivery, enabling e-commerce to take a larger bite out of brick-and-mortar sales and reducing the number of shopping trips people make. That access to fast, low-cost delivery could make it irresistible to order even more stuff -- and send profound ripples through the economy. ... Read more Scoop: Marijuana delivery startup Eaze is raising $65 million Marijuana delivery service Eaze is in the process of closing $65 million in venture capital funding that would give it a valuation in excess of $300 million, Axios has learned. The bottom line: This is basically Uber for pot, except the actual delivery workers are legally required to be W-2 employees. And, like Uber in the early days, it's beginning to raise big money. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 28 [14:08]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 28 (FULL) | 59:02
Russell Mokhiber: Systemic Corporate Crime: Business as Usual, Making Markets Irrelevant | TRNN | 11/28/18 | 12:31
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Russell Mokhiber, the editor of the Corporate Crime Reporter, speaks at the forum, "Destroying the Myths of Market Fundamentalism," held in Washington DC, on October 19, 2018.
Ralph Nader: Destroying the Myths of Market Fundamentalism | TRNN | 11/28/18 | 22:26Prof. Bill Black's talk at the forum, "Destroying the Myths of Market Fundamentalism" | TRNN | 11/28/18 | 22:34 Proof Manafort CONSPIRED With WikiLeaks? | TYT | 11/27/18 | 15:57 The1a.org Guns As A Public Health Crisis | 1a.org | 11/28/18 | 1hr
At the end of October, the American College of Physicians released a paper detailing the public health risk of guns. Here is part of what they wrote:
How Do You Claim Asylum? | 1a.org | 11/28/18 | 1hr
Firearm violence continues to be a public health crisis in the United States that requires the nation's immediate attention. The ACP is concerned about not only the alarming number of mass shootings in the United States but also the daily toll of firearm violence in neighborhoods, homes, workplaces, and public and private places across the country.
But what does it actually mean to apply for political asylum? Here's more from the Union-Tribune:
To win, applicants must show how their stories line up with the legal definition for asylum, that they have been persecuted or have a well-founded fear that they will be persecuted because of their race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a social group.
They must also show that either their country's government is persecuting them or that the government is unwilling or unable to protect them. In this part of asylum law, the stories that come out of Central America often fall into a gray area because many are fleeing gangs extorting them or threatening to kill them. Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that "private violence" such as domestic violence or gang violence should not count for asylum and made changes to case law since the last caravan arrived to make it harder for those kinds of claims to win in court. |
11.28.2018. 11:27
The American car is becoming obsolete GM is laying off 14,300 employees. It's shuttering five factories in the U.S. and Canada, and says that two more closings will be announced internationally. By next year, it will no longer make the Buick LaCrosse, the Chevrolet Impala, or the Cadillac CT6 sedan. It's even killing the Chevy Volt plug-in hybrid. The big picture: Welcome to the modern car industry, which is full of bad news. All the top-selling sedans in America -- the Toyota Camry, Honda Civic, Honda Accord, Toyota Corolla, Nissan Altima, and Nissan Sentra -- are Japanese. ... Read more Trump On Climate Change Report: 'I Don't Believe It' The White House released the 1,700-page report the day after Thanksgiving, which many critics have said was an apparent attempt to bury the alarming findings. The report, which was produced by scientists from 13 federal agencies, concluded the United States would warm at least 3 more degrees by 2100 unless the use of fossil fuels was dramatically curtailed. It also connected climate change to other environmental issues, like record-breaking wildfires and storms, and warned of negative effects on the economy and American livelihoods. ... The U.S. has warmed roughly 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit in the past century, and 2017 was the country's second-hottest year in history. Last year, the U.S. spent a record $306 billion on climate-related disasters. ... Read more The Trump Administration Released a Damning Climate Report. Now Its Agencies Won't Comment. "Earth's climate is now changing faster than at any point in the history of modern civilization, primarily as a result of human activities," warns the very first sentence of the fourth National Climate Assessment, a 1,656-page report that gives us the most comprehensive portrait yet of how climate change is reshaping the US, from more damaging wildfire seasons to shrinking coastal lines. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which operates out of the Department of Commerce, organized a press call on Friday afternoon with reporters, but other than that, the other agencies involved have not issued any kind of comment. The Environmental Protection Agency, the agency most closely tasked with addressing climate change, has not acknowledged its findings on its social media or in news releases. When contacted by Mother Jones, the EPA redirected questions to the White House. Acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler, who has remained faithful to the Trump administration's particular brand of deregulation and climate denial, may finally address the issue at an event on Wednesday hosted by the Washington Post. ... Read more One Of The Best Video About The Economic Collapse 2018 Stock Market CRASH! | 10/04/18 | 10:03 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 27 [13:11]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 27 (FULL) | 59:02
Dismantle the American Doomsday Machine -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 12/13) | TRNN | 11/23/18 | 18:52
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Federal Government Confirms Nearing Apocalypse | TYT | 11/26/18 | 7:14 Trump Throws FIT Over '60 Minutes' | TYT | 11/26/18 | 9:36 Ana On Trump Gassing Migrants | TYT | 11/26/18 | 9:55 The1a.org Amid Layoffs, An American Automotive Institution Tries To Change | 1a.org | 11/27/18 | 1hr
GM's announcement comes on the heels of the release of the Trump administration's climate change report. In total, 13 federal agencies said that if drastic action isn't taken soon, climate change could shrink the American economy by up to 10 percent. The New York Times has more:
Robert Mueller Accuses Paul Manafort Of Lying Again, Yanks Plea deal | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 11/26/18 | 17:46
Mr. Trump has taken aggressive steps to allow more planet-warming pollution from vehicle tailpipes and power plant smokestacks, and has vowed to pull the United States out of the Paris Agreement, under which nearly every country in the world pledged to cut carbon emissions. Just this week, he mocked the science of climate change because of a cold snap in the Northeast, tweeting, "Whatever happened to Global Warming?"
But in direct language, the 1,656-page assessment lays out the devastating effects of a changing climate on the economy, health and environment, including record wildfires in California, crop failures in the Midwest and crumbling infrastructure in the South. Going forward, American exports and supply chains could be disrupted, agricultural yields could fall to 1980s levels by midcentury and fire season could spread to the Southeast, the report finds. |
11.27.2018. 11:45
How Extreme Weather Is Shrinking the Planet With wildfires, heat waves, and rising sea levels, large tracts of the earth are at risk of becoming uninhabitable. But the fossil-fuel industry continues its assault on the facts. Thirty years ago, this magazine published "The End of Nature," a long article about what we then called the greenhouse effect. I was in my twenties when I wrote it, and out on an intellectual limb: climate science was still young. But the data were persuasive, and freighted with sadness. We were spewing so much carbon into the atmosphere that nature was no longer a force beyond our influence--and humanity, with its capacity for industry and heedlessness, had come to affect every cubic metre of the planet's air, every inch of its surface, every drop of its water. Scientists underlined this notion a decade later when they began referring to our era as the Anthropocene, the world made by man. I was frightened by my reporting, but, at the time, it seemed likely that we'd try as a society to prevent the worst from happening. In 1988, George H. W. Bush, running for President, promised that he would fight "the greenhouse effect with the White House effect." He did not, nor did his successors, nor did their peers in seats of power around the world, and so in the intervening decades what was a theoretical threat has become a fierce daily reality. As this essay goes to press, California is ablaze. A big fire near Los Angeles forced the evacuation of Malibu, and an even larger fire, in the Sierra Nevada foothills, has become the most destructive in California's history. After a summer of unprecedented high temperatures and a fall "rainy season" with less than half the usual precipitation, the northern firestorm turned a city called Paradise into an inferno within an hour, razing more than ten thousand buildings and killing at least sixty-three people; more than six hundred others are missing. ... Read more
Elon Musk: There's a 70% chance that I personally go to Mars.
Bill Gates' new crusade: Sounding the climate-change alarm I know him as an advocate for climate change and clean energy. Gates has long worked on these issues, but here's what's new for the tech visionary: he's increasingly worried not enough people understand the dimensions of the problem and that it's going to prevent progress. This escalation was on display in a 40-minute interview with "Axios on HBO." ... Gates and his team devised a pie chart -- which he brought up repeatedly throughout the interview -- showing the causes of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. Wind and solar are used for electricity, which makes up a quarter of the world's emissions.
Other pieces:
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Arctic Methane Melting NOW
Click to zoom in Contrary to Popular Belief, Trump Didn't Originate Fake News Meet the KGB Spies Who Invented Fake News | NYTimes |11/19/18| 15:37
The Seven Commandments of Fake News | NYTimes |11/20/18| 14:16
Casting Team Trump | Axios |11/04/18| 2:12How Disinformation Is Taking Over the World | NYTimes |11/20/18| 17:27 How Russia Perfected the Art of War (full) | NYTimes |11/25/18| 47:00 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 26 [12:33] Trump Admin Tries to Bury 1,656-Page Climate Report Warning of Devastating Health Impacts of Warming | DM |11/26/18| 6:47 Bill McKibben: New Report Reconfirms Climate Change is Shrinking Inhabitable Parts of the Planet | DN | 11/26/18 | 10:30
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 26 (FULL) | 59:02
The Doomsday Machine and Nuclear Winter -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 11/12) | TRNN | 11/23/18 | 13:52
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An H Bomb first strike will create firestorms and smoke that ends most human life; this is a fact ignored by military planners and by the Trump administration which doesn't believe in climate science.
Michelle Wolf OBLITERATES Trump | TYT | 11/22/18 | 7:48The1a.org Cradle To Grade: Living A Lifetime Of Student Loan Debt | 1a.org | 11/26/18 | 1hr
Nothing in America is certain except for debt and taxes. And one increasingly challenging category of the former is student loan debt. Americans owe more than $1.5 trillion in student loans. And more than ten million Americans are in deferment, forbearance or default.
But it's not just 22-year-olds fresh out of undergrad who find themselves owing. People over 60 are rapidly accumulating student loan debt, whether it's for continuing education or --- more often -- taking out loans for a child or grandchild. |
President Donald Trump Says Troops Can Use Lethal Force At US Border | Morning Joe | MSNBC | 11/26/18 | 13:13 |
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert Heated Debates At This Year's Cold Thanksgiving | Stephen Colbert | 11/21/18 | 5:52 The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Khizr Khan - Paying Tribute to Democratic Values in "An American Family" | The Daily Show | 11/22/18 | 10:18 Late Night with Seth Meyers Trump Turns on Allies, Stands by Saudi Arabia | Seth Meyers | 11/21/18 | 8:42 |
11.26.2018. 12:41
Trump Thanks Saudi Arabia For Low Gas Prices After Jamal Khashoggi's Killing President Donald Trump on Wednesday thanked Saudi Arabia for the declining price of oil, one day after he said the United States would back the country even if Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. "Oil prices getting lower. Great! Like a big Tax Cut for America and the World. Enjoy! $54, was just $82," Trump said in a tweet. "Thank you to Saudi Arabia, but let's go lower!" ... Read more This Thanksgiving, I'm Grateful for Donald Trump, America's Most Honest President THERE'S NO QUESTION that Donald Trump is the most flagrantly, compulsively, and voluminously dishonest president in American history -- which is saying something, given the competition. He's probably told 27 more lies during the time it took you to read this one sentence. But as preposterous as it sounds, there's a case to be made that he's simultaneously America's most honest president. Every now and then, in the midst of his unending eruption of prevarication, Trump will blurt out the truth about the United States in a way that no normal politician ever has. Most recently, when asked whether he would consider sanctioning Saudi Arabia for its Mafia-like murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Trump was hesitant. Why? "Because they are ordering military equipment. Everybody in the world wanted that order. Russia wanted it, China wanted it, we wanted it. We got it. ... Boeing, Lockheed, Raytheon ... I don't wanna lose an order like that." ... Read more Behind the scenes: Trump vs. Mueller President Trump delivered to Robert Mueller handwritten answers about pre-election dimensions of the Russia probe but did not answer questions about his behavior as president, including allegations of obstruction of justice -- and will resist doing so in the future -- his lawyer Rudy Giuliani tells Axios. The big picture: It is possible that Mueller will subpoena Trump regarding his activities as president. But Rudy said he has reason to suspect he won't: "I think that he would not win a legal battle if he did that, and I think it would consume months." If Mueller does, the president's view is clear: He will refuse to cooperate. ... Read more Asian countries invest more in industrial robots than Europe, U.S. A common way to measure the use of robots around the world shows that wealthy countries -- like Korea, Singapore, Germany and the U.S. -- are way ahead of the curve, while China flounders behind unlikely characters like Slovenia and the Czech Republic. Why it matters: Taking wages into account changes the landscape dramatically. When comparing countries' actual robot adoption to the quantity one would expect based on their wage levels, Asian countries far outstrip Europe and the U.S. ... Read more Click to zoom in |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 21 [14:11]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 21 (FULL) | 59:02
A Strategy of War Crimes, Killing Civilians to Win a War -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 10/12) | TRNN | 11/21/18 | 16:24
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General Curtis LaMay, who directed the firebombing and nuclear attacks on Japan said, "War is killing people, when you kill enough of them, the other guy quits.
Opioid Crisis: Purdue Pharma Billionaire Owners to be Sued | TRNN | 11/19/18 | 7:10Ivanka Going To Jail? | TYT | 11/20/18 | 4:30 The1a.org The 1A Movie Club Sees 'Green Book' | 1a.org | 11/21/18 | 1hr
The Green Book was real. It was a guide that let African-Americans navigate the cities, towns and roadways of Jim Crow America.
Now, Green Book is a movie. In the film -- directed by Peter Farrelly of "Dumb and Dumber" and "There's Something About Mary" fame --Viggo Mortensen plays a driver hired to escort a musician, played by Mahershala Ali, on a tour of the southern United States. The Green Book is their guide. It's a mix of a road trip drama and a buddy comedy, with a running commentary about race. The movie has drawn generally positive reviews, but a number of critics have pointed out that it seems to be more of a pollyannaish look at the past than a realistic exploration of a difficult history -- a story that presents good intentions as a panacea to racism. "The movie taps into a kind of nostalgia for when everything -- even racism -- seemed simpler, and ready to be legislated out of existence," David Edelstein writes in New York Magazine. |
11.21.2018. 11:13
PhRMA spread money far and wide in Trump's first year PhRMA, the pharmaceutical industry's main lobbying group, considerably bolstered its political and financial position during President Trump's first year in office, new federal tax filings show. The bottom line: PhRMA directed tens of millions of dollars toward conservative think tanks, political groups of all stripes and patient advocates with the hope of convincing the public that the industry isn't "getting away with murder," as Trump put it, and that others are to blame for the country's drug pricing maze. ... Read more
Report: Ivanka Trump sent hundreds of government emails with personal account.
It's Time for America to Reckon with the Staggering Death Toll of the Post-9/11 Wars HOW MANY PEOPLE have been killed in the post-9/11 war on terror? The question is a contentious one, as there has been no formal accounting for the deadly cost of the initial U.S. interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, not to mention the secondary conflicts that continue to wreak havoc across the Middle East and the opaque, covert war still expanding across Asia and Africa. But even as the U.S. government evades responsibility for the human cost of its overseas endeavors, some researchers are determined to keep count. Brown University's Costs of War Project this month released a new estimate of the total death toll from the U.S. wars in three countries: Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. The numbers, while conservatively estimated, are staggering. Brown's researchers estimate that at least 480,000 people have been directly killed by violence over the course of these conflicts, more than 244,000 of them civilians. In addition to those killed by direct acts violence, the number of indirect deaths -- those resulting from disease, displacement, and the loss of critical infrastructure -- is believed to be several times higher, running into the millions. ... Read more
Although public attention has almost completely drifted from Afghanistan -- the war there was not even mentioned during the last two 2016 presidential debates -- the United States actually dropped more bombs in that country this year than in any year since the war began.
The Eerie Parallels Between Trump and the Watergate 'Road Map' Lawmakers thought Nixon's gathering of inside information about the Watergate probe from DOJ was an impeachable offense. Nearly 45 years ago, the House Judiciary Committee concluded that President Richard Nixon's contact with high-level Justice Department officials overseeing the Watergate investigation, detailed in a 62-page "road map" of evidence collected by prosecutors in 1972--73, amounted to an impeachable misuse of executive power. A half century later, the FBI's former top lawyer, Jim Baker--a close friend and associate of fired FBI Director James Comey--is laying out parallels, albeit subtly, to President Donald Trump's interactions with the law-enforcement officials who have been investigating him and his campaign team since July 2016. In a piece for Lawfare published on Monday, Baker and co-author Sarah Grant, a student at Harvard Law School, used the newly unsealed Watergate road map to show how one president's attempts to control an investigation targeting him and his associates were quickly exposed and, ultimately, used against him. As the road map laid out, Nixon interacted regularly with the man supervising the Watergate investigation -- Henry Petersen, then the assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Criminal Division -- and pumped him for information. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 20 [14:23] How America’s Perpetual Warfare Abroad Is Fueling an Increase in White Supremacist Violence in U.S. | DN | 11/20/18 | 11:25
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 20 (FULL) | 59:02
Why Did CIA Turn Against Saudi Crown Prince MBS? It's More than Khashoggi | TRNN | 11/20/18 | 16:22<
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The Discovery That Should Have Changed the Cold War -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 9/12) | TRNN | 11/19/18 | 11:53
In 1958, then Senator John F. Kennedy claimed there was a "missile gap", saying the USSR was far ahead in ICBM weapons; when satellite photos showed the astounding true number, it meant the USSR did not have plans for global domination, but it remained a secret, says Daniel Ellsberg.
Trump Attacks Democrat With Tasteless Joke | TYT | 11/19/18 | 6:13The1a.org Farmers' Growing Problem | 1a.org | 11/20/18 | 1hr
This summer, the U.S. Department of Agriculture put out its farm income forecast. It is estimated that profits for American farms would drop 13 percent, coming in nearly 10 billion dollars under 2017's totals.
As The New York Times reports: According to the Department of Agriculture, just $838 million has been paid out to farmers since the first $6 billion pot of money was made available in September. Another pool of up to $6 billion is expected to become available next month. The government is unlikely to offer additional money beyond the $12 billion, according to Sonny Perdue, the agriculture secretary. The program's limitations are beginning to test farmers' patience. The trade war shows no signs of easing, with China and the United States locked in a stalemate that has reduced American farmers' access to a critical market for soybeans, farm equipment and other products. Europe is planning more retaliatory tariffs on top of those already imposed on American peanut butter and orange juice, and Canada and Mexico continue to levy taxes on American goods, including on pork and cheese. |
11.20.2018. 11:53
The $6 trillion price tag for the "War on Terror" The U.S. will have spent almost $6 trillion on the war on terror by the end of fiscal year 2019, according to an annual report out Wednesday from Brown University's Watson Institute of International and Public Affairs. Between the lines: This differs from the Pentagon's calculation of $1.5 trillion because it includes more than Defense Department appropriations, such as costs of veteran care, interest on debt from the wars and war-related spending from the State Department. ... Read more Click to zoom inWhat Does One Trillion Dollars Look Like? | Mint | older | 1:09 President Trump on Fox News Sunday President Trump on Fox News Sunday (full Interview) | Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace | 11/18/18 | 47:18 Retired Adm. McRaven responds to Trump's Fox News interview | CNN | 11/18/18 | 10:49 LastWeekTonight with John Oliver Authoritarianism | John Oliver | 11/18/18 | 18:28 Sackler family members face mass litigation and criminal investigations over opioids crisis embers of the multibillionaire philanthropic Sackler family that owns the maker of prescription painkiller OxyContin are facing mass litigation and likely criminal investigation over the opioids crisis still ravaging America. Some of the Sacklers wholly own Connecticut-based Purdue Pharma, the company that created and sells the legal narcotic OxyContin, a drug at the center of the opioid epidemic that now kills almost 200 people a day across the US. Suffolk county in Long Island, New York, recently sued several family members personally over the overdose deaths and painkiller addiction blighting local communities. Now lawyers warn that action will be a catalyst for hundreds of other US cities, counties and states to follow suit. ... ... "This is essentially a crime family ... drug dealers in nice suits and dresses," said Paul Hanly, a New York city lawyer who represents Suffolk county and is also a lead attorney in a huge civil action playing out in federal court in Cleveland, Ohio, involving opioid manufacturers and distributors. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 19 [14:34]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 19 (FULL) | 59:02
US Dept of Defense Failed Audit While Spending $5.9 Trillion Since 9/11 | TRNN | 11/19/18 | 21:09
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The Watson Institute released its report 'Costs of War,' showing astronomical costs of $5.9 trillion and at least 500,000 killed due to the never-ending war on terror. Is there an alternative? The report was published on the heels of the news that the Pentagon failed its first and only audit.
Feds Roll Back Banking Regulations, Priming Us For Another Meltdown | TYT/Ring of Fire | 11/18/18 | 9:37Trump Didn't Bring Us Fascism... It Was Always Here | TYT | 11/18/18 | 14:01 The1a.org Fighting The Bureau's Investigations: How The FBI Polices The President | 1a.org | 11/19/18 | 1hr
"Is it the FBI's job to make sure the president is not above the law?" That's the question driving the new documentary series "Enemies: The President, Justice & The FBI."
Enemies: The President, Justice & The FBI (2018) (trailer) | SHOWTIME | 2018 | 1:39
Deconstructing The Myths Of Reconstruction | 1a.org | 11/19/18 | 1hr
How many black people did white Southerners target for murder between the end of the Civil War and 1895?
In Grenada, Mississippi, for example, J.B. Blanding, a 25-year-old Army officer and bureau agent, was shot three times in the head while out for an evening stroll in 1866. The next morning, as Blanding lay dying, "a committee of citizens" paid a call on his captain to warn him "that the teachers must leave, and that if he himself did not leave he would be killed next." When an Atlanta-based activist named Walker journeyed into the countryside during the fall of 1868, "a party of white men" surrounded a house where he was spending the night and threatened to torch it unless he came with them. Vowing to "deliver himself and trust to the Lord," Walker did so. He was found the next day "with two bullet holes in his breast." Two days before the election, another Georgia-based bureau agent informed his superiors that he knew of "five freedmen who have been murdered for political opinion within the last two weeks." Just weeks before that in Alabama, "a gang of men disguised" broke into the home of freedman Moses Hughes. When they couldn't find Hughes, who had crawled up the chimney, they shot his wife "through the Brain & left her dead." The "plain truth," the agent reported, "is the Rebellion is flourishing in these parts." |
11.19.2018. 13:44
Death Toll Rises To 63 In Northern California Camp Fire, 631 Now Unaccounted For The death toll in Northern California's Camp fire rose once again on Thursday to 63 as rescue workers continue to search through the devastation left by the state's deadliest blaze in history, authorities said. A further 631 people remained unaccounted for, a vast increase from just a day prior when officials said 130 people were missing. The fire has scorched some 141,000 acres and is 40 percent contained. ... Read more White House ordered to return Jim Acosta's press pass U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly issued a temporary restraining order Friday forcing the White House to reinstate CNN correspondent Jim Acosta's press credentials. The big picture: Judge Kelly said it is likely that Acosta's first and fifth amendment rights were violated when the White House suspended his press pass, saying he believes CNN and Acosta are likely to prevail in the case. ... Read more Defense strategy report warns of grave erosion in US military superiority U.S. military superiority "has eroded to a dangerous degree," with "grave and lasting" consequences if Washington doesn't act quickly to reverse the damage and adequately fund the Pentagon, according to new report ordered by Congress. Released Wednesday by the independent National Defense Strategy Commission, the report warns that America has reached a "crisis of national security," due to a combination of political, financial and international issues and might struggle to win if faced with numerous conflicts at the same time. "The U.S. military could suffer unacceptably high casualties and loss of major capital assets in its next conflict," the report states. "It might struggle to win, or perhaps lose, a war against China or Russia. The United States is particularly at risk of being overwhelmed should its military be forced to fight on two or more fronts simultaneously." The report's authors also write that it would be "unwise and irresponsible not to expect adversaries to attempt debilitating kinetic, cyber, or other types of attacks against Americans at home" while also fighting the U.S. military overseas. ... Read more REPORT: America In "Crisis Of National Security" | TYT | 11/15/18 | 14:51 |
Exclusive: WikiLeaks Lawyer Warns U.S. Charges Against Assange Endanger Press Freedom Worldwide | DN | 11/16/18 | 17:10
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, November 16 (FULL) | 59:02
The Corporate Top 1% Control Over 50% of International Trade (Part 1/2) | TRNN | 11/16/18 | 18:15
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Taking an ever rising share of global income, the real benefits of global trade go to the profits of the top 2,000 TNCs. The flip-side is falling wages and government revenues, says Richard Kozul-Wright discussing UNCTAD's 2018 Trade and Development Report.
REPORT: America In "Crisis Of National Security" | TYT | 11/15/18 | 14:51The1a.org Friday News Roundup -- Domestic | 1a.org | 11/16/18 | 1hr
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11.16.2018. 11:50
The $6 trillion price tag for the "War on Terror" The U.S. will have spent almost $6 trillion on the war on terror by the end of fiscal year 2019, according to an annual report out Wednesday from Brown University's Watson Institute of International and Public Affairs. Between the lines: This differs from the Pentagon's calculation of $1.5 trillion because it includes more than Defense Department appropriations, such as costs of veteran care, interest on debt from the wars and war-related spending from the State Department. ... Read more
Stack of 100 dollar bills that equals 1 trillion dollars would be 62 miles high. This is how the Elites, i.e. Military, Industrial Congressional complex extracts money from our economy. And they say it is too expensive to investigate sustainable energy to prevent Global Climate Change. Our kids are going to pay the price.
U.S. budget deficit grew by $113 billion in fiscal year 2018
The total deficit grew 20% for FY 2018 came in at $779 billion, or 3.9% of U.S. GDP, and was the largest of any year since 2012. In a statement, Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said that "America's booming economy will create increased government revenues," but warned that Congress should be wary of the "dire consequences" of irresponsible spending.
American Overdose: The Opioid Tragedy in Three Actsby Chris McGreal
How far the GOP has fallen,they don't represent any of these values!The opioid epidemic has been described as "one of the greatest mistakes of modern medicine." But calling it a mistake is a generous rewriting of the history of greed, corruption, and indifference that pushed the US into consuming more than 80 percent of the world's opioid painkillers. Journeying through lives and communities wrecked by the epidemic, Chris McGreal reveals not only how Big Pharma hooked Americans on powerfully addictive drugs, but the corrupting of medicine and public institutions that let the opioid makers get away with it. The starting point for McGreal's deeply reported investigation is the miners promised that opioid painkillers would restore their wrecked bodies, but who became targets of "drug dealers in white coats." A few heroic physicians warned of impending disaster. But American Overdose exposes the powerful forces they were up against, including the pharmaceutical industry's coopting of the Food and Drug Administration and Congress in the drive to push painkillers--resulting in the resurgence of heroin cartels in the American heartland. McGreal tells the story, in terms both broad and intimate, of people hit by a catastrophe they never saw coming. Years in the making, its ruinous consequences will stretch years into the future. Click to zoom in |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, November 15 [13:55]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 04 (FULL) | 59:02
Once Fired, There's No Calling a Nuke Back -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 8/12) | TRNN | 11/15/18 | 14:51
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Trump Goes Mental | TYT | 11/14/18 | 5:26 Fox and Friends: THE CARAVAN IS HERE!!! | TYT | 11/14/18 | 4:21 The1a.org Why Is The Opioid Epidemic Still Happening? | 1a.org | 11/15/18 | 1hr
In 2016, more Americans died of drug overdoses than died in the war in Vietnam.
Reddit: Downvoting Conspiracy, Upvoting Community? | 1a.org | 11/15/18 | 1hr
The statistics are staggering. And yet, we still are grappling with how to respond to the public health crisis. We're also struggling with how to support those who are in treatment.
Not familiar with Reddit? It is, as The Daily Dot describes it: It's a place where millions of people go every day to discuss politics, post memes, find porn, and share every odd thought that's ever occurred to them in the shower. No matter who you are or what you're into, Reddit has a place for you. From social justice warriors to men's rights activists and conspiracy theorists, all are accounted for.
... But there is another side. Sometimes these groups veer into hate speech. Sometimes subreddits are banned. And Wired reported that "of all of the tech platforms that Russian trolls infiltrated during the run-up to the 2016 election in the United States, Reddit has been among the least forthcoming." ... |
11.15.2018. 17:45
What Trump gets wrong about wildfires, by a fire scientist The president blamed 'poor forest management' for the state's crisis. But much of the area burning isn't forest You cannot possibly understand what it means to live with the risk of wildfire until you have to do so. I'm a fire scientist and have spent most of my adult life in the flammable south-west. At the start of the fire season, you pack up the things in your house you cannot replace and stage them so they are ready to be thrown into the car. You make a plan for your family and your pets. You identify escape routes and put together a bag with clothing and you spend the summer alert to smoke, radio reports and evacuation notices. Unfortunately, Donald Trump is one of those who does not understand wildfire. In a tweet, Trump blamed "poor forest management" in California for the devastating conflagrations currently burning in the state, and he threatened to withhold federal aid as if in punishment for this negligence. ... Trump probably has in mind how a century of putting out wildfires in the American west has caused forests to grow dense with trees, making large, hot fires more common than they once were. This is not the predominant cause, however, of the fires currently making the news. To comprehend what is currently taking place in California, you have to comprehend how it has historically burned -- and the vast changes now occurring across the landscape. ... Read more
Since October 2017, America experienced three of the deadliest mass shootings in modern history.
Donald Trump and the Counterrevolutionary War DONALD TRUMP IS waging a political counterinsurgency. This week on Intercepted: Columbia University professor Bernard Harcourt lays out the multidecade history of paramilitarized politics in the U.S., how the tactics of the war on terror have come back to American soil, and why no one talks about drone strikes anymore. Academy Award-winning director Michael Moore talks about his recent visit from the FBI in connection to the pipe bomb packages and who he thinks should run against Trump in 2020. Journalist and lawyer Josie Duffy Rice analyzes the battle over vote counts in Florida and Georgia, the Republican campaign to suppress black voters, the gutting of the Voting Rights Act, and why she isn't protesting the firing of Jeff Sessions. Jeremy Scahill explains why Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer need to go away. ... Read more Intercepted | Jeromy ScahillDonald Trump and the Counterrevolutionary War -- For non-powerful people in this country, this isn't politics. This is life or death. | TheIntercepted | 11/14/18 | 1hr DC Neo-Nazi Who Called Pittsburgh Murders A 'Dry Run' Arrested; Has Deep Ties To 'Alt Right' Jeffrey Clark, the 30-year-old man federal agents arrested here Friday after he called the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting a "dry run" and his relatives worried he might try to launch a race war, wasn't shy about being a neo-Nazi. In April 2017, when someone asked Clark at a White House rally organized by "alt-right" coiner Richard Spencer whether he considered himself a fascist, he said no ? he considered himself a Nazi. Antifa activists photographed him at the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017. He has posed for pictures in front of Nazi symbols and holding Nazi memorabilia. On Gab, the favored social network of racists and anti-Semites, Clark had the username @PureWhitEvil and called himself "DC Bowl Gang," a reference to Dylann Roof, the bowl-cut racist who murdered nine black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015 ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 14 [14:19] Climate Scientist Who Fled CA Wildfire: We're Going to Keep Paying Price If We Ignore Climate Change | DN | 11/13/18 | 14:30
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 14 (FULL) | 59:02
California Sees Deadliest Wildfire in History | TRNN | 11/14/18 | 9:12
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Even for Local Taxes, the Rich Pay Far less Than the Poor | TRNN | 11/13/18 | 16:06
Ms. Foroohar says the legalization of stock buybacks in 1982 allowed companies like Apple to now spend only 15% of their investments on R&D, while the majority is spent on market manipulation; the Financial Times columnist and author of "Makers and Takers" says the move from traditional pensions to 401k's makes everyone feel they benefit from finance, when the vast majority of profits go to the elites and most people's living standards deteriorate
Iran Restrained in Face of US-Israeli Provocations and Regime Change Threats (Part 1/2) | TRNN | 03/10/18 | 9:24
Apple, Market Manipulation and the Cult of Personal Finance -- RAI with Rana Foroohar (Part 2/6) | TRNN | 05/09/18 | 15:55
Clinton's 'Committee to Save the World' Unleashes Wall Street -- RAI with Rana Foroohar (Part 3/6) | TRNN | 05/09/18 | 11:03
Sociopaths Rise to the Top -- RAI with Rana Foroohar (Part 4/6) | TRNN | 05/14/18 | 11:21
Americans, NOT Immigrants Are Causing Mass Shootings! | TYT | 11/13/18 | 4:21The Rich Have an Escape Plan -- RAI with Rana Foroohar (Part 5/6) | TRNN | 05/17/18 | 12:13 Artificial Intelligence in Whose Interests? -- RAI with Rana Foroohar (Pat 6/6) | TRNN | 05/21/18 |12:34 Melania Trump Demands Firing Of White House Advisor And CNN Goes After Trump (Full) | TYT | 11/14/18 | 44:34 The1a.org Excelsior! How Stan Lee Remade American Myth | 1a.org | 11/14/18 | 1hr
Born as Stanley Lieber to immigrants, he was an avid reader who dreamed of literary fame. He found his way into comics. First, he filled inkwells in the years when the medium was considered a public menace.
What's On Amazon's Wish List? All Of Us. | 1a.org | 11/14/18 | 1hr
Soon, he was writing comics. He split his first name into two in the credits (he legally changed his name in the 1970s) of his earliest works, implying that his new comics imprint, Marvel, had more writers than it really did. And those credits appeared on stories about heroes who were a little more human than the caped crusaders that dominated the comic book shop shelves. Spider-Man might save the day, but he still has to do his homework. The Fantastic Four were a formidable fighting force that couldn't stop bickering at times. And Wolverine ... well, was Wolverine.
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11.14.2018. 09:56
CAMP FIRE: Deadliest in California History. The Camp Fire Is Also The State's Most Destructive Fire Ever The wildfire raging in Northern California is now the deadliest in state history. At least 42 people are dead and 228 people still missing in the Camp fire, which left the town of Paradise and surrounding areas in ashes, Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea told reporters on Monday night. The fire, Honea said, is the deadliest single fire on wildlands in California's history. That grim title had previously been held by the Griffith Park fire of 1933, which left 29 dead. The Camp fire, which has destroyed more than 7,000 structures, is also the most destructive fire in California's recorded history. "I've seen a lot of fire, but this is the worst I've ever seen," retired firefighter Dan McCard told CBS News of the devastating blaze. "The winds were so high. It was incredible." ... Read more
Conservatives have gone fully fact-free. No more alternative facts.
Trump Reportedly Plans To Fire DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen In Coming Weeks "The Secretary is honored to lead the men and women" of the Department of Homeland Security, an agency spokesman said after the Washington Post report. ... Trump has moved quickly to shake up his administration following the midterm elections, which ushered back in Democratic control of the U.S. House. He fired Attorney General Jeff Sessions last week after more than a year of criticism due to the man's decision to recuse himself from special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation of the 2016 presidential election. Others also appear to be on rocky ground, and the Post noted that some officials believe chief of staff John Kelly's future is also in doubt. ... Read more Donald Trump's Tax ReturnsThe secret of why Trump won't release his taxes with Chris Cillizza | CNN | 10/04/18 | 7:25 Alexa, Should We Trust You? We're all falling for Alexa, unless we're falling for Google Assistant, or Siri, or some other genie in a smart speaker. When I say "smart," I mean the speakers possess artificial intelligence, can conduct basic conversations, and are hooked up to the internet, which allows them to look stuff up and do things for you. And when I say "all," I know some readers will think, Speak for yourself! Friends my age--we're the last of the Baby Boomers--tell me they have no desire to talk to a computer or have a computer talk to them. Cynics of every age suspect their virtual assistants of eavesdropping, and not without reason. Smart speakers are yet another way for companies to keep tabs on our searches and purchases. Their microphones listen even when you're not interacting with them, because they have to be able to hear their "wake word," the command that snaps them to attention and puts them at your service. The speakers' manufacturers promise that only speech that follows the wake word is archived in the cloud, and Amazon and Google, at least, make deleting those exchanges easy enough. Nonetheless, every so often weird glitches occur, like the time Alexa recorded a family's private conversation without their having said the wake word and emailed the recording to an acquaintance on their contacts list. Amazon explained that Alexa must have been awakened by a word that sounded like Alexa (Texas? A Lexus? Praxis?), then misconstrued elements of the ensuing conversation as a series of commands. The explanation did not make me feel much better. ... Read more
By 2021, there will be almost as many personal-assistant bots on the planet as people.
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Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 13 [12:59] As Fires Devastate California, 350.org Calls for Transition to 100% Renewable Energy Economy | DN | 11/13/18 | 3:41
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 13 (FULL) | 59:02
Why America? Mass Shootings & White Nationalism Share Roots | TRNN | 11/13/18 | 52:02
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SHAMELESS. Kellyanne Conway On Jim Acosta Tape | TYT | 11/12/18 | 3:50 Mueller Target Expects Indictment And Florida Headed For Recounts | TYT | 11/13/18 | 42:04 The1a.org "The New Abnormal": Wildfires And Climate Change | 1a.org | 11/13/18 | 1hr
California is burning again. These latest wildfires are already the deadliest yet. And they continue to blaze.
Hasan Minhaj Didn't Become A Lawyer, And That's Good For Us | 1a.org | 11/13/18 | 1hr
Wildfires make headlines every few months. They've been called "the new normal." But California Governor Jerry Brown isn't having that. He says it's "the new abnormal." To be clear, humans are part of this. The effects of climate change make conditions for wildfires worse. As the Union of Concerned Scientists says: US wildfire seasons -- especially those in years with higher wildfire potential -- are projected to lengthen, with the Southwest's season of fire potential lengthening from seven months to all year long. Additionally, the likelihood that individual wildfires become severe is expected to increase. Researchers project that moist, forested areas are the most likely to face greater threats from wildfires as conditions in those areas become drier and hotter. Surprisingly, some dry grasslands may be less at risk of catching fire because the intense aridity is likely to prevent these grasses from growing at all, leaving these areas so barren that they are likely to lack the fodder for wildfires to start and spread.
Hasan Minaj attends the The Donald J. Trump Presidential Twitter Library Opening Reception presented by Comedy Central's "The Daily Show."
President Donald Trump Tweet Wrong, Unhelpful To California Firefighters | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 11/12/18 | 6:37 |
11.13.2018. 13:37
Drain the Swamp: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver Drain the Swamp | John Oliver | 11/11/18 | 16:36 Ryan Zinke and the environment: a tragedy in three acts At first I kept an open mind about Trump's interior secretary. But it soon became clear he put the oil, gas and mining industry above our agency's mission Back in 2017, the staff at the interior department was not hoping for the best, we were hoping for the competent. A presidential transition can bring dramatic change to the leadership of a federal agency -- particularly the agency that manages the conservation and use of one fifth of America's land area and the seabed of our continental shelf. Civil servants pledge to continue to serve the American people and the agency mission regardless of whether or not they agree with the political positioning of the president and his cabinet. So we watched the Ryan Zinke confirmation hearings carefully, listening for hints at his management style, his communications style, and his general understanding and respect for public lands and the mission of the agency. These were the qualities that mattered, not his ideology. We were hoping for competence. What we heard in his hearing was a general respect for the notion of public lands, of science, and of the career staff who make the agency tick. There were some red flags for public land advocates and positive signs for industry, but for civil servants, he seemed competent and respectful enough. As so often happens in politics, however, looks can be deceiving. ... Read more Most Democrats see Republicans as racist, sexist Many Americans think people in the other party are ignorant, spiteful, evil and generally destroying the country, according to a new Axios poll by SurveyMonkey, aired on HBO on Sunday night. 61% of Democrats see Republicans as "racist/bigoted/sexist." 31% of Republicans say they view Democrats in the same light. Why it matters: If Americans are this convinced that the other side isn't just wrong, but dumb and evil, they'll never be able to find enough common ground to solve real problems. And they're more likely to elect leaders who can't do it, either. ... Read more
Whose Boat Is This Boat?: Comments That Don't Help in the Aftermath of a Hurricane by Donald Trump
Whose Boat Is This Boat? Comments That Don't Help in the Aftermath of a Hurricane is a picture book made entirely of quotations from President Donald Trump in the wake of Hurricane Florence. It is the first children's book that demonstrates what not to say after a natural disaster. On September 19, 2018, Donald Trump paid a visit to New Bern, North Carolina, one of the towns ravaged by Hurricane Florence. It was there he showed deep concern for a boat that washed ashore. "At least you got a nice boat out of the deal," said President Trump to hurricane victims. "Have a good time!" he told them. The only way his comments would be appropriate is in the context of a children's book--and now you can experience them that way, thanks to the staff of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Whose Boat Is This Boat? is an excellent teaching tool for readers of all ages who enjoy learning about empathy by process of elimination. Democrats Should Remember Al Gore Won Florida in 2000 -- But Lost the Presidency with a Preemptive Surrender AT MIDNIGHT ON election day last Tuesday, vote tallies showed Republican candidates ahead in key races in Florida, Georgia and Arizona. However, many votes remained to be counted in all three states. The stakes are high: two Senate seats (Florida and Arizona) and two governorships (Florida and Georgia), plus some lower offices. And as the count has proceeded, the Democratic candidate in each case has gained more votes than the Republican, narrowing the margin or -- in the case of the Senate election in Arizona -- taking the lead. Republicans, led by President Trump, have responded by declaring that counting these votes is somehow fraudulent. The GOP's rhetoric has been particularly preposterous in Florida, where Governor Rick Scott is attempting to switch offices by ousting incumbent Democratic Senator Bill Nelson. Scott's Tuesday night margin of 50,000 votes is now down to 15,000, and he's demanded that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigate some unspecified malfeasance. Each race now appears likely close enough to trigger a recount (or in the case of the Georgia governor's race, a run-off.) ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 12 [14:21] A Century After End of WWI, Trump Snubs Peace Summit While Macron Warns of Growing Nationalism | DN | 11/12/18 | 8:28
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 12 (FULL) | 59:02
U.S. Refuses to Adopt a Nuclear Weapon No First Use Pledge -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 7/8) | TRNN | 11/12/18 | 17:27
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The Doomsday Machine: The Big Lie of the Cold War -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 1/8) | TRNN | 10/29/18 | 16:04
*Hitler Wouldn't Risk Doomsday, But The United States Did -- Daniel Ellsberg (Part 2/8) | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 17:56
*Truman Delayed End of WWII to Demonstrate Nuclear Weapons -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 3/8) | TRNN | 11/02/18 | 21:28
The Largest Act of Terrorism in Human History -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 4/8) | TRNN | 11/04/18 | 16:29
*Russian "Doomsday Machine" an Answer to U.S. Decapitation Strategy -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 5/8) | TRNN | 11/04/18 | 16:42
U.S. Planned Nuclear First Strike to Destroy Soviets and China -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 6/8) | TRNN | 11/09/18 | 11:11
Nuclear Detonation Timeline "1945-1998", I'll give you a hint... 2053Terrifyingly Powerful Nuclear Weapons SEVEN Justice Democrats Are Heading To Congress | TYT | 11/11/18 | 14:03 Trump Attacks Three Black Female Journalists | TYT | 11/11/18 | 4:07 The1a.org An American President In Paris | 1a.org | 11/12/18 | 1hr
The imagery may have been rooted in logistics, but as France and its European partners fret about the alliance forged with the United States in bloody conflict a century ago, it mattered. Trump has shown little appetite for strengthening the relationships that have underpinned transatlantic relations since the end of World War I, instead lambasting traditional US partners on trade and the cost of security.
Impeachment Now | 1a.org | 11/12/18 | 1hr
He's shown more affinity for strongmen leaders who have eroded democracy in their countries, like Putin, with whom he spoke at a lunch on Sunday, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who sat alongside him at dinner on Saturday. That's left leaders, such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Macron, who put forth well-publicized displays of unity this weekend, to urgently warn of backsliding into history's darkest moments.
Now, former Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, D-NY, and former CIA officer David Priess have released their contributions to the genre.
NBC News: President Donald Trump Likely Faced Indictment But For Presidency | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 11/09/18 | 10:06In The Case for Impeaching Trump, Holtzman draws on her time as a member of the House Judiciary Committee during Richard Nixon's presidency. |
11.12.2018. 13:22
China figures out how to live without U.S. lobster and soybeans Three weeks ahead of a meeting between President Trump and China's Xi Jinping, Beijing is notching record exports and figuring out how to manage without American goods. Why it matters: Despite tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese goods, Trump has appeared to fail to budge Xi on his determination to do whatever it takes to dominate the technologies of the future. ... Read more Point and Nuke Remembering the era of portable atomic bombs. When Dwight D. Eisenhower took the oath of office as the 34th president of the United States in 1953, the total U.S. nuclear stockpile was approaching 1,000. When Ike left, eight years later, that number had grown to around 20,000--with further increases programmed in. Those weapons included one of the strangest creations of the Cold War: an atomic bazooka, putting nuclear destruction in the hands of as few as two soldiers. For the U.S. military planners of the 1950s, nuclear weapons were not merely strategic assets to deter conflict but munitions ready for use in the event of hostilities. Eisenhower looked to nuclear weapons as a cheaper alternative to conventional troops at a time when U.S. forces were dangerously, and expensively, overstretched. Soon after taking office, for example, the Eisenhower administration decided it would use nuclear weapons in Korea if armistice negotiations broke down. Officials announced in 1954 that the United States might respond to conventional aggression anywhere with massive nuclear retaliation. The Eisenhower administration even attempted, in 1957, to reorganize the U.S. Army to better survive on a nuclear battlefield.... Read more Our participation in Yemen is criminalWildfires Rage Across Northern California And Thousand Oaks A series of wildfires continued their tear through California on Friday, encroaching upon an area still reeling from a mass shooting that struck the community of Thousand Oaks just one day earlier. A set of brushfires lashed Ventura County, prompting mandatory evacuations across Ventura and Los Angeles counties. The two blazes ranged from 2,000 to 10,000 acres, according to Cal Fire. Authorities shut down part of the 101 Freeway as plumes of smoke cascaded into the air on Thursday. ... ... "We were surrounded by fire, we were driving through fire on each side of the road," said police officer Mark Bass, who lives in the hard-hit town of Paradise and works in neighboring Chico. He evacuated his family and then returned to the fire to help rescue several disabled residents, including a man trying to carry his bedridden wife to safety. "It was just a wall of fire on each side of us, and we could hardly see the road in front of us." ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, November 09 [11:41] Trump Fires AG Sessions, Installs New Loyalist Whitaker to Oversee Mueller Probe | DN | 11/08/18 | 14:53
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, November 09 (FULL) | 59:02
U.S. Planned Nuclear First Strike to Destroy Soviets and China -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 6/8) | TRNN | 11/09/18 | 11:11
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PROOF White House Doctored Jim Acosta Video | TYT | 11/08/18 | 9:59 Mass Shooting at Bar in Thousand Oaks, CA | TYT | 11/08/18 | 13:38 The1a.org Friday News Roundup - Domestic | 1a.org | 11/09/18 | 1hr
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11.09.2018. 12:16
At Least 12 Killed In Mass Shooting At Borderline Bar & Grill In Thousand Oaks, California ... Police officers headed to Borderline Bar & Grill in Thousand Oaks, a city located about 40 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles, at around 11:20 p.m., Ventura County Sheriff Geoff Dean said, after receiving multiple calls of shots fired. It was "College Country Night" at the bar and the dance floor was full of students from nearby universities. A sheriff unit arrived three minutes later, followed by two highway patrol officers. Sergeant Helus, a 29-year veteran, and one patrol officer went in through the front door, at which point Helus was struck multiple times with gunfire. The patrol officer rescued Helus out of the line of gunfire, though Helus later died from his injuries. ... Read more Trump uses CNN's Jim Acosta to act on longtime fantasy against media Sources with direct knowledge say that since the earliest days of his presidency, Trump has mused about revoking press credentials for reporters who infuriate him. But press staff have often successfully counseled him against doing so, telling him it would only elevate the reporter involved and would result in damaging stories about him cracking down on press freedom. Driving the news: Yesterday, Trump went ahead and did it anyway, with Sarah Sanders announcing that the White House had removed the "hard pass" of CNN's Jim Acosta, who had tangled with Trump at his midday press conference ... Read more The high-profile Trump White House departures The Trump White House had more first-year departures than any other president in at least 40 years -- and the departures haven't stopped. The latest resignation: Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Why it matters: The first term revolving door of Trump's highest Cabinet officials is not normal, although some turnover should be expected now that we're past the midterms. ...
All Of The Bizarre Things Trump Has Done Post-Midterms In the span of one day, Trump congratulated himself for a "very Big Win" in the midterms (despite Democrats taking control of the House), threatened war with the Democrats, engaged in a war of words with reporters and took actions to take back control of the special counsel's Russia investigation into his 2016 presidential campaign. ...
Trump warned House Democrats against pursuing more investigations into him and threatened to fight back using his majority in the Senate if they had the temerity to do so. During his post-election press conference, Trump even laid out his plan of attack, which included counter-investigations into Democrats. MarketWatch | Shawn Langlois | 10/29/18 Since he made that promise in early 2016, the debt has ballooned to $21.7 trillion, and his tax cuts are expected to drive that number higher. Click to zoom in Click to zoom in Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, November 08 [11:29] In Rebuke of Trump, Female Democrats Help Seize House & 7 Governorships In Historic Midterm | DN | 11/08/18 | 13:24
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, November 08 (FULL) | 59:02
Russian "Doomsday Machine" an Answer to U.S. Decapitation Strategy -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 5/8) | TRNN | 11/04/18 | 16:42
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The Doomsday Machine: The Big Lie of the Cold War -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 1/8) | TRNN | 10/29/18 | 16:04
*Hitler Wouldn't Risk Doomsday, But The United States Did -- Daniel Ellsberg (Part 2/8) | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 17:56
*Truman Delayed End of WWII to Demonstrate Nuclear Weapons -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 3/8) | TRNN | 11/02/18 | 21:28
The Largest Act of Terrorism in Human History -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 4/8) | TRNN | 11/04/18 | 16:29
Nuclear Detonation Timeline "1945-1998"Terrifyingly Powerful Nuclear Weapons Did We Have to Drop the Bomb? The Bomb Didn't Beat Japan ... Stalin Did The1a.org Jeff Sessions Has Been Forced Out. What Happens To The Justice Department? | 1a.org | 11/08/18 | 1hr
After taking several waves of criticism from President Donald Trump, Sessions sent the president a letter that opened with the line "At your request, I am submitting my resignation."
Preserving Stories Of Holocaust Survivors | 1a.org | 11/08/18 | 1hr
The departure happened suddenly, but it likely wasn't a surprise for everyone. In late October, the journalist Marcy Wheeler wrote a piece analyzing potential paths the president might take if the Democrats retook control of the House in the midterm elections ...
On November 9, 1938, violent mobs attacked Jewish homes and businesses in Germany, Austria and parts of Czechoslovakia.
GOP Hurt By Donald Trump Bungling In Democratic Midterm Victories | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 11/07/18 | 13:54The pogrom is known as Kristallnacht, or the "night of broken glass." Nearly 100 Jews were murdered, tens of thousands taken to concentration camps and thousands of synagogues and businesses were destroyed, looted and desecrated. Eighty years later, anti-Semitic actions are on the rise in the United States. A shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue in late October was the most violent incident, but cemeteries have been vandalized, and swastikas painted on community centers. Slurs and conspiratorial whispers spread online. ... |
11.08.2018. 12:38
Stop biodiversity loss or we could face our own extinction, warns UN Ahead of a key international conference to discuss the collapse of ecosystems, Cristiana Pa?ca Palmer said people in all countries need to put pressure on their governments to draw up ambitious global targets by 2020 to protect the insects, birds, plants and mammals that are vital for global food production, clean water and carbon sequestration. "The loss of biodiversity is a silent killer," she told the Guardian. "It's different from climate change, where people feel the impact in everyday life. With biodiversity, it is not so clear but by the time you feel what is happening, it may be too late." ... Read more
What is biodiversity and why does it matter?
Biodiversity describes the rich diversity of life on Earth, from individual species to entire ecosystems. The term was coined in 1985 -- a contraction of "biological diversity" -- but the huge global biodiversity losses now becoming apparent represent a crisis equalling and quite possibly surpassing climate change. Deforestation, poaching, industrial farming and pollution are some of the ways in which the planet's natural ecosystem is being disrupted -- with devastating results. This series will look at the myriad ways that human activity has ravaged biodiversity, and how we can fight back.
The caravan Trump should fear With a new Democratic House majority, the Trump White House is bracing for a caravan of subpoenas covering everything from Russia to business deals to soon be headed their way. What they're saying: House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said in her victory speech: "Today is more than about Democrats and Republicans. It's about restoring the Constitution's checks and balances to the Trump administration." ... Read more Live map: 2018 midterm elections results - The Democrats have taken the House, while Republicans will keep the Senate.The Midterm Results Gave Everybody Just Enough to Keep Fighting VOTERS WENT TO the polls on Tuesday with an overwhelming belief that the American economy is in strong shape and that the country is headed in the wrong direction. Those voters surged to the kinds of numbers that the nation's electoral system was ill-equipped to handle, with reports of broken scanners and voting machines. Lines stretched around corners and into parking lots while voters waited for hours. As the ballots were being counted, it became clear that there would be little clarity by the end of the night. Democrats, on the back of historic turnout -- the product of two years of post-Trump grassroots organizing -- seized control of a House of Representatives that had been meticulously gerrymandered in order to assure that they would never be able to do just that. Democrats also made major gains in state capitals, winning governorships in Kansas, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Maine. ... Read more Humanity has wiped out 60% of animal populations since 1970 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 07 [11:29]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, November 07 (FULL) | 59:02
Ralph Nader on how the Democratic Party 'Almost Blew it Again' | TRNN | 11/07/18 | 9:12
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2018 Midterm Elections TYT Summary | TYT | 11/07/18 | 9:56 Women Of Color Win BIG in 2018 Midterm Elections | TYT | 11/06/18 | 2:05 BIG WIN In Fight Against Money In Politics | TYT | 11/06/18 | 5:35 The1a.org The Latest On The Midterm Elections | 1a.org | 11/07/18 | 1hr
As of Tuesday evening, Democrats were projected to retake control of the House of Representatives while Republicans were expected to hold the Senate.
This was a tremendously expensive election -- the most costly on record, with $5 billion poured into races across the country. While the Democrats had hoped for a "blue wave," gains will likely be below the most optimistic predictions, despite high turnout in many districts. But there are still some big changes to who holds power. |
11.07.2018. 10:04
The Other Press Secretary On the evening of the midterm elections, Sean Hannity dispensed with the polite fiction that he is more than the president's puppet. On Monday morning, Sean Hannity, the talk-radio host and the star of the Fox News Channel's angriest and most-watched primetime show, defended himself in a tweet. "In spite of reports," Hannity insisted, "I will be doing a live show from Cape Girardeau and interviewing President Trump before the rally. To be clear, I will not be on stage campaigning with the President. I am covering final rally for my show. Something I have done in every election in the past." The tweet was, it would turn out, a work not just of fiction, but of fan fiction. Hannity, after ending his show on Monday evening--an episode broadcast, this part was accurate, from Donald Trump's rally in Cape Girardeau, Missouri--did the precise thing he had promised he wouldn't: Hannity, beckoned by the president, strode onto the presidential stage. The line dividing the news commentator from the newsmaker, one that had for so long been stretched to precarious tautness, finally snapped. "They're very special," the president said, as Hannity and another Fox guest, Jeanine Pirro, crossed over from the screen to the stage. "They've done an incredible job for us. They've been with us from the beginning." ... Read more 'It's depressing as hell': Dem win would spell misery for Trump White House aides Veterans of past White Houses that faced hostile Congresses call life under the oversight microscope 'excruciating.' Working for President Donald Trump has never been easy, but his staffers can expect a whole new level of mayhem if Democrats win control of the House on Tuesday. Democratic control of even one chamber of Congress would unleash an onslaught of hearings, subpoenas and document demands as lawmakers investigate everything from the president's personal tax returns to his controversial policies on immigration, health care and the environment. Beyond the huge consequences for national politics, the arrival of opposition-party oversight can make daily life in the White House unbearable for senior officials and their aides, according to more than a dozen veterans of the Clinton, Obama and George W. Bush administrations interviewed by POLITICO. Their assessments offer a gut-churning preview of what's in store for Trump administration officials should Democrats wield gavels come January. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 06 [11:10] Noam Chomsky: The Future of Organized Human Life Is At Risk Thanks to GOP's Climate Change Denial | DN | 11/05/18 | 10:08
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, November 06 (FULL) | 59:02
Survey of Medical Treatment Wait Times in Canada -- Designed to Mislead | TRNN | 11/05/18 | 3:33
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Trump Supporters: WE'RE EXPERTS ON IMMIGRATION! | TYT | 11/05/18 | 6:30 The1a.org Bloody Political Battles And The Forces That Keep The Nation Together | 1a.org | 11/06/18 | 1hr
Violence and compromise tend to follow each other through United States history, starting with the violence of the Revolution and the compromise of democracy formed in its wake. ...
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11.06.2018. 12:58
'Trump has hijacked the election': House Republicans in panic mode Worries deepen that Trump's charged immigration rhetoric will cost the GOP more seats. House Speaker Paul Ryan got President Donald Trump on the phone Sunday for one final plea on behalf of anxious Republicans: Please, please talk up the booming economy in the final hours before Election Day. But Trump, unsurprisingly, had another issue on his mind. He boasted to Ryan that his focus on immigration has fired up the base, according to a source familiar with the call. Two days out from an expected Democratic takeover of the House, Republicans focused on the chamber are profoundly worried that Trump's obsession with all things immigration will exacerbate their losses. Many of these same Republicans welcomed Trump's initial talk about the migrant caravan and border security two weeks ago, hoping it would gin up the GOP base in some at-risk, Republican-held districts. ... Read more Last Week Tonight with John OliverFamily Separation: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver | 11/04/18 | 18:19 Trump on Climate Change On climate change, Trump disavows his own scientists, government | 11/04/18 | 2:02
Only half of Americans have faith in democracy Just 51% of Americans said they have faith in democracy, and 37% say they have lost faith in democracy, according to a new Axios/SurveyMonkey poll conducted in late October. | Axios | Kim Hart | 11/05/18 | article
Trump rattles his saber at the "caravan," while Mnuchin splashes $1.3338 trillion in debt Trump's treasury just broke the trillion dollar debt mark and we are busy watching him bark at the southern border In the final days of the midterm campaign President Donald Trump's camo clown car has all eyes on the southern border as 15,000 American troops are assembled to prepare for the onslaught of a ragtag caravan of refugees.He's been visualizing a kind of Gaza-like scenario where American troops will get to fire on rock throwing migrants. We look where he points no matter what. We can't help it. He's the 'entertainer-in-chief'. His skilled misdirection has the effect of obscuring his disastrous misrule. You have to always ask what are the things he's not attending to, or leaving on automatic pilot, that could come crashing down on his watch or somebody else's later on down the line. So, we should not be surprised that there was scant attention paid last week when the U.S. Treasury Department disclosed that it was going to issue $425 billion in new debt for this quarter, bringing our grand total for 2018 to an eye popping $1.3 trillion in debt. As the Fiscal Times pointed out, that reflects "a 145 percent increase from the $546 billion issued in 2017." That's the biggest annual issuance of federal public debt since 2010 when Uncle Sam issued $1.586 trillion in debt. ... Read more Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh billed as "special guests" at Donald Trump's final 2018 rally Monday's rally is another reminder of the symbiotic relationship between Fox News and President Trump's White House President Donald Trump on Monday will host Fox News primetime host Sean Hannity as a "special guest" at his final rally of the midterm season. Hannity's involvement was announced in a Trump campaign press release distributed Sunday afternoon. Fox News told CNN that Hannity is not sponsoring the rally or campaigning to "Make America Great Again," and instead the network star would be hosting his "Hannity" program from the rally site and would interview Trump. Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh will also be there, the Trump campaign announced, noting that the rally in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, is Limbaugh's hometown. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 05 [13:49] Noam Chomsky: Members of Migrant Caravan Are Fleeing from Misery & Horrors Created by the U.S. | DN | 11/02/18 | 9:13 Noam Chomsky on Pittsburgh Attack: Revival of Hate Is Encouraged by Trump's Rhetoric | DN | 11/02/18 | 24:55
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 05 (FULL) | 59:02
Russian "Doomsday Machine" an Answer to U.S. Decapitation Strategy -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 5/8) | TRNN | 11/04/18 | 16:42
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The Doomsday Machine: The Big Lie of the Cold War -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 1/8) | TRNN | 10/29/18 | 16:04
*Hitler Wouldn't Risk Doomsday, But The United States Did -- Daniel Ellsberg (Part 2/8) | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 17:56
Truman Delayed End of WWII to Demonstrate Nuclear Weapons -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 3/8) | TRNN | 11/02/18 | 21:28
The Largest Act of Terrorism in Human History -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 4/8) | TRNN | 11/04/18 | 16:29
Trump Supporter: I'd Shoot My Sister For Trump | TYT | 11/04/18 | 15:40The1a.org The Last Day Before The Midterms | 1a.org | 11/05/18 | 1hr
Midterm elections are (finally) happening on Tuesday. We're watching a bunch of races: Republican Ted Cruz and Democrat Beto O'Rourke for Senate in Texas; Democrat Stacey Abrams and Republican Brian Kemp for Georgia governor; and Andrew Gillum and Ron DeSantis for Florida governor.
History Brought Us Here: Doris Kearns Goodwin On Disagreement | 1a.org | 11/05/18 | 1hr
Plenty of people are saying they've never seen a political climate as polarized and as angry as this one. You've seen the talking heads on CNN and, well, even on NPR decrying the state of civil discourse and offering advice for how we should treat other people we disagree with.
Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, in her new book focuses on leadership, specifically the leadership of Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and Lyndon Johnson. She says we've got a lot to learn from them -- especially from their early years as leaders. She tells us that these legends of American history...well, they screwed up too.
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11.05.2018. 15:51
Trump's immigration push is Stephen Miller's dream come true Even if Republicans suffer losses on Tuesday, the midterm election campaign will have been a bonanza for immigration hard-liners inside the Trump administration. President Donald Trump's fixation on border security in the closing weeks of the campaign has given a tight-knit group of senior staffers from the White House and several departments the chance to put Trump on the record, yet again, on immigration policies he touted aggressively in 2016 but which had faded amid the mayhem of his early presidency. Just within the past week, Trump has deployed thousands of troops to the border, floated potential executive action to block a caravan of Central American migrants from entering the country, and proposed the idea of ending automatic citizenship for anyone born in the U.S. On Wednesday, he told reporters that the administration may send 10,000 to 15,000 additional military personnel to the border. ... Read more Documents Expose President Donald Trump Border Deployment As Political Stunt | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 11/01/18 | 9:57Watch out: 3 warning signs U.S. economy could be close to recession Why it matters: There's plenty of good news-- today's jobs report showed unemployment holding at a stunning 49-year low, for instance. But look closer, and visible threats suggest an all-out recession could come as soon as next year. But, between the lines: Key economic indicators are flashing red.
Operation Enduring Boredom: What Troops Will Actually Face When Caravan Members Eventually Arrive President Donald Trump likes to portray the still-distant migrant caravan as an invasion: a dehumanized mob that can only be stopped by military might. At Trump's behest, the Pentagon is now deploying more than 5,000 active-duty soldiers to the border, on top of the 2,100 National Guardsmen who are already there. Trump, who is hellbent on attacking migrants to motivate his base before the midterms, said on Wednesday that he might send up to 15,000 troops to the border, more than the entire US military presence in Afghanistan. What another 10,000 troops would do is a mystery, even to the commander of US Northern Command, which is responsible for security in North America. "I...saw 14,000 out there," General Terrence O'Shaughnessy said on Tuesday about rumors of a bigger troop deployment. "I'm not--I honestly don't even know where that came from. That is not in line with what we've been planning." Soldiers can't legally enforce immigration laws, so some of the 5,200 troops being deployed now will do things like shoveling manure from the Border Patrol's horses, in addition to providing logistical support. Like many of the Border Patrol agents they are reinforcing, the soldiers are likely to be extremely bored. The one thing they will almost certainly not be is overwhelmed. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, November 02 (FULL) | 59:02
Truman Delayed End of WWII to Demonstrate Nuclear Weapons -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 3/8) | TRNN | 11/02/18 | 21:28
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The Doomsday Machine: The Big Lie of the Cold War -- Daniel Ellsberg on RAI (Part 1/8) | TRNN | 10/29/18 | 16:04
*Hitler Wouldn't Risk Doomsday, But The United States Did -- Daniel Ellsberg (Part 2/8) | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 17:56
Arms Races Increase Atomic Arsenals, Raising the Risk of Nuclear Winter | TRNN | 11/02/18 | 10:18Trump's Drumbeat For An Iranian Confrontation Is Deafening -- How Imminent Is War? | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 16:53 Fox Host: Report News The Way Trump Wants It! | TYT | 11/01/18 | 5:52 Trump ADMITS He Doesn't Tell The Truth | TYT | 11/01/18 | 7:04 Republican Called Out ON AIR For Racism | TYT | 11/01/18 | 8:00 The1a.org Friday News Roundup -- Domestic | 1a.org | 11/02/18 | 1hr
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11.02.2018. 10:44
Corporate America leans GOP in 2018 midterms A slim majority of the midterm congressional campaign contributions from America's biggest companies have gone to Republican candidates, an Axios analysis of federal election data shows. Why it matters: America's wealthy companies are able to influence elections by financially supporting candidates whose positions align with their values -- or who they believe can help their businesses. But even more often, they support both sides, ensuring access to whomever ends up in power. ... Read more The Quickie: Sarah on the Migrant Caravan | 10/31/18 | 2:45
The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner by Daniel Ellsberg
*How Trump Weaponized Fake News | TYT | 10/31/18 | 20:13From the legendary whistle-blower who revealed the Pentagon Papers, an eyewitness expose of the dangers of America's Top Secret, seventy-year-long nuclear policy that continues to this day. Here, for the first time, former high-level defense analyst Daniel Ellsberg reveals his shocking firsthand account of America's nuclear program in the 1960s. From the remotest air bases in the Pacific Command, where he discovered that the authority to initiate use of nuclear weapons was widely delegated, to the secret plans for general nuclear war under Eisenhower, which, if executed, would cause the near-extinction of humanity, Ellsberg shows that the legacy of this most dangerous arms buildup in the history of civilization--and its proposed renewal under the Trump administration--threatens our very survival. No other insider with high-level access has written so candidly of the nuclear strategy of the late Eisenhower and early Kennedy years, and nothing has fundamentally changed since that era. Framed as a memoir--a chronicle of madness in which Ellsberg acknowledges participating--this gripping exposé reads like a thriller and offers feasible steps we can take to dismantle the existing "doomsday machine" and avoid nuclear catastrophe, returning Ellsberg to his role as whistle-blower. The Doomsday Machine is thus a real-life Dr. Strangelove story and an ultimately hopeful--and powerfully important--book about not just our country, but the future of the world. The Military's Justification for Sending Thousands of Troops to the Border is the Opposite of the Truth OPERATION FAITHFUL PATRIOT, the Trump administration's military campaign to secure the midterm elections by deploying troops to the southern border, is less than a week old, and it already features some of the same core failings that defined its post-9/11 predecessors. Like the invasion of Iraq, Faithful Patriot is a right-wing political project carried out through military means against a demonized nonwhite population, one that haunts the fevered dreams of many Republican voters. And, as some observers have already noted, Faithful Patriot, like the ongoing war in Afghanistan, does not appear to feature a clear end game. The similarities don't end there though. Speaking to reporters Tuesday, Gen. Terrence J. O'Shaughnessy, head of the U.S. military's Northern Command, revealed that Operation Faithful Patriot is running on bad intelligence, which the decorated military commander is apparently comfortable regurgitating to the American public and the four-star general's press shop is seemingly unable to account for. While the general's line on the caravan -- that it is a more organized operation than others in previous years -- appears to be the line the enforcers of Operation Faithful Patriot have settled on to justify its existence, O'Shaughnessy's press office at NORTHCOM did not provide evidence to support his assertion, despite repeated requests. It is true that this caravan is different, but according to longtime Latin America experts and reporters on the ground, it is different for reasons that are the exact opposite of the justification coming from the general leading Faithful Patriot. ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, November 01 [14:27]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, November 01 (FULL) | 59:02
*Hitler Wouldn't Risk Doomsday, But The United States Did -- Daniel Ellsberg (Part 2/8) | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 17:56
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Hitler ended the German nuclear weapons program in 1942 when told it could end life on Earth--the Americans were willing to take the risk; since the end of WWII the Cold War was to a very large extent, from beginning to end, a marketing campaign for subsidization of the aerospace industry, says Daniel Ellsberg.
*Catastrophic Death Toll in US-Saudi War on Yemen Has Been Grossly Downplayed | TRNN | 11/01/18 | 20:43Domestic Terrorist: Trump Made Me Do It! | TYT | 10/31/18 | 9:03 *The Koch Brothers' Biggest Secret | TYT | 10/31/18 | 9:59 Trump: Maybe Soros Funded Migrant Caravan | TYT | 10/31/18 | 2:58 The1a.org Stopped At The Box: Voter Access Ahead Of The Midterms | 1a.org | 11/01/18 | 1hr
Twenty-three states have restricted the ability to vote since 2010. This includes efforts such as passing voter ID laws, purging names from voter rolls and restricting early voting times or locations.
Road Map For Nixon Impeachment Published, Could Guide Robert Mueller | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 10/31/18 | 12:32 |
11.01.2018. 15:01
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Lindsey Graham
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said the quiet part aloud on why he’s still so close to former President Donald Trump: because we can use him for our goals. "President Trump has gotten people who wouldn't give me or Romney or anybody else the time of day. They believe he is on their side," the senator told the America First Agenda Summit crowd on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
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Environment
The term "climate change" is often used to refer specifically to anthropogenic climate change (also known as global warming). Anthropogenic climate change is caused by human activity, as opposed to changes in climate that may have resulted as part of Earth's natural processes.
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AI - Artificial Intelligence
AIArtificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence demonstrated by machines, as opposed to the natural intelligence displayed by animals including humans. AI research has been defined as the field of study of intelligent agents, which refers to any system that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chance of achieving its goals.
The term "artificial intelligence" had previously been used to describe machines that mimic and display "human" cognitive skills that are associated with the human mind, such as "learning" and "problem-solving". This definition has since been rejected by major AI researchers who now describe AI in terms of rationality and acting rationally, which does not limit how intelligence can be articulated.
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Quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, quantum field theory, quantum technology, and quantum information science.
Classical physics, the collection of theories that existed before the advent of quantum mechanics, describes many aspects of nature at an ordinary (macroscopic) scale, but is not sufficient for describing them at small (atomic and subatomic) scales. Most theories in classical physics can be derived from quantum mechanics as an approximation valid at large (macroscopic) scale.
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Wall Street and Banksters
Wall Street is an eight-block-long street running roughly northwest to southeast from Broadway to South Street, at the East River, in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City. Over time, the term has become a metonym for the financial markets of the United States as a whole, the American financial services industry (even if financial firms are not physically located there), or New York-based financial interests.
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Intelligence Agencies/Deep State?
An intelligence agency is a government agency responsible for the collection, analysis, and exploitation of information in support of law enforcement, national security, military, and foreign policy objectives. Means of information gathering are both overt and covert and may include espionage, communication interception, cryptanalysis,.
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Daniel Ellsberg
Daniel Ellsberg and Paul Jay explore Ellsberg's latest book, The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner. In the introduction to the book, Ellsberg writes: "No policies in human history have more deserved to be recognized as immoral or insane. The story of how this calamitous predicament came about and how and why it has persisted over a half a century is a chronicle of human madness".
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Nukes
Nuclear weapons have come a long way and come in all types of different sizes. Some are relatively small while others are enormous, so big they boggle the mind at what they can be capable of, i.e. the Soviet 'Tsar Bomba' is/was 3,000 times greater than the Hiroshima bomb.
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Rana Foroohar
Ms. Foroohar says financialization delivers stagnant wages, inequality and economic crisis; the Financial Times columnist and author of "Makers and Takers" says the financial sector represents only 7 percent of the U.S. economy, but takes around 25 percent of all corporate profit while creating only 4 percent of all jobs.
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The Untold History of the United States by Oliver Stone & Petere Kuznick | 2014 | 10 Episodes
Oliver Stone and American University historian Peter J. Kuznick began working on the project in 2008. Stone, Kuznick and British screenwriter Matt Graham cowrote the script. It covers "the reasons behind the Cold War with the Soviet Union, U.S. President Harry Truman's decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, and changes in America's global role since the fall of Communism." Stone is the director and narrator of all ten episodes.
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Kuznick Interviews
Historian Peter Kuznick says Eisenhower called for decreased militarization, then Dulles reversed the policy; the Soviets tried to end the cold war after the death of Stalin; crazy schemes involving nuclear weapons and the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba put the world of the eve of destruction - with host Paul Jay
The Untold History of the United States by Kuznick, Peter.mobi | Book | 6.99 MB
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China Valley of Tunnels
A report written by a Georgetown University team led by Phillip Karber conducted a three-year study to map out China’s complex tunnel system, which stretches 5,000 km (3,000 miles). The report determined that the stated Chinese nuclear arsenal is understated and as many as 3,000 nuclear warheads may be stored in the underground tunnel network.
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911
On September 11, 2001, 19 terrorists attacked the Unites States. They hijacked four airplanes in mid-flight. The terrorists flew two of the planes into two skyscrapers at the World Trade Center in New York City. The impact caused the buildings to catch fire and collapse. Another plane destroyed part of the Pentagon (the U.S. military headquarters) in Arlington, Virginia. The fourth plane crashed in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Officials believe that the terrorists on that plane intended to destroy either the White House or the U.S. Capitol. Passengers on the plane fought the terrorists and prevented them from reaching their goal. In all, nearly 3,000 people were killed in the 9/11 attacks.
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The Vietnam War
Ken Burns and Lynn Novick's ten-part, 18-hour documentary series, THE VIETNAM WAR, tells the epic story of one of the most consequential, divisive, and controversial events in American history as it has never before been told on film. Visceral and immersive, the series explores the human dimensions of the war through revelatory testimony of nearly 80 witnesses from all sides--Americans who fought in the war and others who opposed it, as well as combatants and civilians from North and South Vietnam. Ten years in the making, the series includes rarely seen and digitally re-mastered archival footage from sources around the globe, photographs taken by some of the most celebrated photojournalists of the 20th Century, historic television broadcasts, evocative home movies, and secret audio recordings from inside the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations.
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Trump's Mashups
Donald Trump talks a lot, but what is he actually saying? VICE News' "Trump Talk" mashup series tries to answer that. And, we're happy to say, it was just nominated for two Webby Awards. Now you can watch all the nominated videos.
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Trump's Sexcapades.
Jessica Leeds (1980s)
Kristin Anderson (1990s)
E. Jean Carroll (1995 or 1996)
Lisa Boyne (1996)
Cathy Heller (1997)
Temple Taggart McDowell (1997)
Karena Virginia (1998)
Mindy McGillivray (2003)
Jennifer Murphy (2005)
Rachel Crooks (2005)
Natasha Stoynoff (2005)
Juliet Huddy (2005 or 2006)
Jessica Drake (2006)
Ninni Laaksonen (2006)
Cassandra Searles (2013)
Allegations of pageant dressing room visits(1997)
Mariah Billado,
Victoria Hughes,
and three other Miss Teen USA contestants
Bridget Sullivan (2000)
Tasha Dixon (2001)
Unnamed contestants (2001)
Samantha Holvey (2006)
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Trump's Speeches | Rallys
Donald Trump talks a lot, but what is he actually saying? Watch Trump at some of his rallys and see what you think.
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