Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Just Shoot Me.*

*Updated from 8:31 p.m. with ave daily weeks through Aug. 31


160.041 average daily cases Aug. 25-31. Up almost 2k/day. That's up almost 5k/day in the latest two 7-day iterations.
158,946 average daily cases Aug. 24-30. Up almost 3k/day.
156,886 average daily cases Aug. 23-29. Up 741 ave/day. Up is bad. 741 represents a 0.47% increase over Aug. 22-28. Which is minuscule, but minuscule bad.
156,145 Aug. 22-28. Increase of ~ 800 ave/day. An unhealthy increase but the number has not (yet) exceeded that on Aug. 20-26. P'ert near, but not quite. I know, my eyes are squinting now.
155,365 Aug. 21-27. Second decrease, almost 1k/day average.
156,349 Aug. 20-26. Huge leap, almost 4k/day average.
152,372 Aug. 19-25. Increase.
151,441 Aug. 18-24. Increase.
150,625, Aug 17-23. Increase almost 1k/day average.
149,675 Aug. 16-22. First slight decrease.
150,138 Aug. 15-21. Huge increase, over 4k/day average from Aug. 14-20.

The change in the seventeen days of data from the Aug. 15-21 iteration to that of Aug. 25-31 is +6.66. Nine of the eleven it's have been increases and four in a row, the last two mammoth. The CDC's at-a-glance is a mirror reversal (in the wrong direction) from yesterday to today.

🎵What a Difference a Day Makes ♯





 

In my view this was the best speech I ever heard Joe Biden deliver. I caught, unintentionally, these last five minutes. I looked through several videos before I found the knuckle-rap punctuation on which he ended, a powerful ending to a powerful speech.

Taliban members escorted Americans to gates at Kabul airport in secret arrangement with US

(CNN)

The US military negotiated a secret arrangement with the Taliban that resulted in members of the militant group escorting clusters of Americans to the gates of the Kabul airport as they sought to escape Afghanistan, two defense officials told CNN.

One of the officials also revealed that US special operations forces set up a "secret gate" at the airport and established "call centers" to guide Americans through the evacuation process.

The officials said Americans were notified to gather at pre-set "muster points" close to the airport where the Taliban would check their credentials and take them a short distance to a gate manned by American forces who were standing by to let them inside amid huge crowds of Afghans seeking to flee.

The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the arrangements, which have not been disclosed until now because the US was concerned about Taliban reaction to any publicity, as well as the threat of attacks from ISIS-K…

The US has had military and diplomatic contact with the Taliban for years through political talks and deconfliction efforts, but the secret evacuation arrangement between the militant group and the US military reflects an unprecedented level of tactical coordination. While it's not known whether there is any connection, CIA Director William Burns paid a highly unusual visit last week to Kabul, where he met with Taliban leader Abdul Ghani Baradar…

Throughout the evacuation, Biden administration officials stressed that the Taliban were cooperating and senior officials repeatedly emphasized that the militant group had committed to provide "safe passage" for Americans.

The Taliban escort missions happened "several times a day," according to one of the officials. One of the key muster points was a Ministry of Interior building just outside the airport's gates where nearby US forces were readily able to observe the Americans approach. Americans were notified by various messages about where to gather.

"It worked, it worked beautifully," one official said of the arrangement. 

It is not clear if the Taliban who were checking credentials during these efforts turned away any of the Americans. There have been numerous reports that some Americans with passports and US green card holders were turned away from Taliban checkpoints close to the airport and sometimes beaten.




 A month ago I thought I was a cynic about our 20-year war in Afghanistan. Today, after watching our stumbling withdrawal and the swift collapse of practically everything we fought for, my main feeling is that I wasn’t cynical enough.

My cynicism [was]...that the American effort to forge a decent Afghan political settlement failed definitively during Barack Obama’s first term...This failure was then buried under a...blizzard of official deceptions and bureaucratic lies, which covered over a shift in American priorities from the pursuit of victory to the management of stalemate, with the American presence insulated from casualties in the hopes that it could be sustained indefinitely.

Excellent point by Douthat. Keep American casualties under the public's radar and strive for the military-industrial complex' wet dream--perpetual war.

[In this shift] there would be no prospect of victory...no clear reason to be in Afghanistan, as opposed to any other failing state...But if American casualty rates stayed low enough, the public would accept it, the Pentagon budget would pay for it, and nobody would have to preside over anything so humiliating as defeat.

In one way, my cynicism went too far. I guessed that the military and the national-security bureaucracy would be able to frustrate the desire of every incoming U.S. president to declare an endless-seeming conflict over, and I was wrong. Something like that happened with Obama and Donald Trump in their first years in office, but it didn’t happen with Joe Biden. He promised withdrawal, and — however shambolically — we have now actually withdrawn.

But in every other way the withdrawal has made the case for an even deeper cynicism — about America’s capacities as a superpower, our mission in Afghanistan and the class of generals, officials, experts and politicos who sustained its generational extension.

First, the withdrawal’s shambolic quality, culminating in yesterday’s acknowledgment that 100 to 200 Americans had not made the final flights from Kabul, displayed an incompetence in departing a country that matched our impotence at pacifying it. There were aspects of the chaos that were probably inevitable, but the Biden White House was clearly caught flat-footed by the speed of the Taliban advance, with key personnel disappearing on vacation just before the Kabul government dissolved. And the president himself has appeared exhausted, aged, overmatched...

At the same time, the circumstances under which the Biden withdrawal had to happen...[w]as a devastating indictment of the policies pursued by his three predecessors, which together cost roughly $2,000,000,000,000 (it’s worth writing out all those zeros) and managed to build nothing in the political or military spheres that could survive for even a season without further American cash and military supervision.

...our $2,000,000,000,000 built a regime that fell to the Taliban before American troops could even finish their retreat.

Before this summer...it was possible to read all the grim inspector general reports and document dumps on Afghanistan, count yourself a cynic about the war effort and still imagine that America got something for all that spending, no matter how much was spent on Potemkin installations or siphoned off by pederast warlords or recirculated to Northern Virginia contractors.

My son and I looked up the story on "Private Military Companies (PMC's). It is shocking. It's a multi-multi billion per year industry. In 2003 PMC's were a $100B industry. Official U.S. defense and intelligence agencies outsource their dirty work to companies like Blackwater--to get around constitutional and legal restraints. Titan was involved in the Abu Ghraib crimes. Think we withdrew from Iraq in 2011? We did not. In FY 2019 the Defense Department spent $7.366B on PMC's in Iraq--which was less than half the 16.385B spent in FY 2018. As to the numbers of these soldiers of fortune, security guards, and hit men in Iraq: "DOD...ceased reporting data on DOD-funded private security contractor personnel in Q4 FY2013." Some local municipalities, Palm Bay, Florida is one, now use PMC's to get around laws on their police! PMC's are a U.S. off-the-shelf military. Trump pardoned four Blackwater employees convicted in the Nisour Square Massacre that killed 17 Iraqi civilians. "The New York Times reported in March 2020 that in recent years Prince had recruited former intelligence agents to infiltrate "Democratic congressional campaigns, labor organizations and other groups considered hostile to the Trump agenda."[66]. Trump could easily have outsourced his 1/6 coup d'etat to PMC's.

Yet that knowledge has not prevented a revival of the spirit that led us to this sorry pass. I don’t mean the straightforward criticisms of the Biden administration’s handling of the withdrawal. I mean...the political reaction...

The argument...that the situation in Afghanistan was reasonably stable and the war’s death toll negligible before the Trump administration started moving toward withdrawal: In fact, only U.S. casualties were low...Afghan military and civilian casualties were nearing 15,000 annually, and the Taliban were clearly gaining ground — suggesting that we would have needed periodic surges of U.S. forces, and periodic spikes in U.S. deaths, to prevent a slow-motion version of what’s happened quickly as we’ve left.

Or the argument that an indefinite occupation was morally necessary to nurture the shoots of Afghan liberalism...after 20 years of effort and $2,000,000,000,000...

...these arguments are connected to a set of moods that flourished after 9/11:...overconfidence in American military capacities, naïve World War II nostalgia and crusading humanitarianism in its liberal and neoconservative forms. Like most Americans, I shared in those moods once; after so many years of failure, I cannot imagine indulging in them now. But...they retain an intense subterranean appeal in the American elite, waiting only for the right circumstances to resurface.

Thus you have generals and grand strategists who presided over quagmire, folly and defeat fanning out...to champion another 20 years in Afghanistan. You have the return of the media’s liberal hawks and centrist Pentagon stenographers, unchastened by their own credulous contributions to the retreat of American power over the past 20 years. And you have Republicans who postured as cold-eyed realists in the Trump presidency suddenly turning back into eager crusaders, excited to own the Biden Democrats and relive the brief post-9/11 period when the mainstream media treated their party with deference rather than contempt.

Again, Biden deserves plenty of criticism. But like the Trump administration in its wiser moments, he is trying to disentangle America from a set of failed policies that many of his loudest critics long supported.

Our botched withdrawal is the punctuation mark on a general catastrophe, a failure so broad that it should demand purges in the Pentagon, the shamed retirement of innumerable hawkish talking heads, the razing of various NGOs and international-studies programs and the dissolution of countless consultancies and military contractors.

Small wonder, then, that making Biden the singular scapegoat seems like a more attractive path. But if the only aspect of this catastrophe that our leaders remember is what went wrong in August 2021, then we’ll have learned nothing except to always double down on failure, and the next disaster will be worse.

Monday, August 30, 2021

We Got Out a Day Early!

Oh, thank God, that is over: the evacuation and the Afghan war. DONE.

 





It's 5 o'clock somewhere.

 

North Korea Restarted

Plutonium-Producing 

Reactor, U.N. Agency Warns

​The activities at the sprawling nuclear complex in Yongbyon suggest that the country is once again ramping up its nuclear weapons program.

Nuclear-disarmament talks between Washington and Pyongyang fizzled after the second summit meeting between the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, and former President Donald J. Trump collapsed in 2019. The Biden administration has offered to renew talks “anywhere, anytime without preconditions,” but North Korea has not shown interest...

Historically, the North has increased activities at Yongbyon when it has sought to raise tensions and increase ​its diplomatic leverage.

“There were no indications of reactor operation from early December 2018 to the beginning of July 2021,” the International Atomic Energy Agency said in its annual report, dated Friday and reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal. “However, since early July 2021, there have been indications, including the discharge of cooling water, consistent with the operation of the reactor.”

The watchdog also...call[ed] the activities “deeply troubling.”

Anything else?
I put Remembrance of Things Past out on my desk to begin to re-read this morning but I had to check the news first. Had to. No choice. Like an addict. No free will. Three distressing reports to start my day brightly. Nothing positive. WEEE!
Why do I check the news.

U.S. Records a Daily Average of 100,000 Covid Hospitalizations

The influx of patients has not been this high since the winter, before vaccines were widely available. Ahead of a new academic year worldwide, the W.H.O. urges actions to keep schools open.

Biden Drone Strike Hit Wrong Car?

Children Killed in  U.S. Drone Strike in Kabul, Family Says

Hours after a U.S. military drone strike in Kabul on Sunday, Defense Department officials said that it had blown up a vehicle laden with explosives, eliminating a threat to Kabul’s airport from the Islamic State Khorasan group.

But at a family home in Kabul on Monday, survivors and neighbors said the strike had killed 10 people, including seven children, an aid worker for an American charity organization and a contractor with the U.S. military.

Zemari Ahmadi, who worked for the charity organization Nutrition and Education International, was on his way home from work after dropping off colleagues on Sunday evening, according to relatives and colleagues interviewed in Kabul.

As he pulled into the narrow street where he lived with his three brothers and their families, the children, seeing his white Toyota Corolla, ran outside to greet him. Some clambered aboard in the street, others gathered around as he pulled the car into the courtyard of their home.

It was then that they say the drone struck.

The missile hit the rear end of the Corolla in the narrow courtyard inside the walled family compound, blowing out doors, shattering windows and spraying shrapnel. Mr. Ahmadi and some of the children were killed inside his car; others were fatally wounded in adjacent rooms, family members said. An Afghan official confirmed that three of the dead children were transferred by ambulance from the home on Sunday.

Mr. Ahmadi’s daughter Samia, 21, was inside when she was struck by the blast wave. “At first I thought it was the Taliban,” she said. “But the Americans themselves did it.”

Samia said she staggered outside, choking, and saw the bodies of her siblings and relatives. “I saw the whole scene,” she said. “There were burnt pieces of flesh everywhere.”

Among the dead was her fiancé, Ahmad Naser, 30, a former army officer and contractor with the U.S. military who had come from Herat, in western Afghanistan, in the hopes of being evacuated from Kabul.

A spokesman for the U.S. Central Command said on Sunday that the U.S. military had carried out a drone strike against an Islamic State Khorasan vehicle planning to attack Hamid Karzai International Airport. The group had claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing at the airport on Thursday.

On Monday, Capt. Bill Urban, the spokesman, reaffirmed an earlier statement that the military hit a valid target, an explosives-laden vehicle. He also repeated that the military was investigating claims of civilian casualties.

Mr. Ahmadi was a technical engineer for the local office of Nutrition and Education International, an American nonprofit based in Pasadena, Calif. His neighbors and relatives insisted that the engineer and his family members, many of whom had worked for the Afghan security forces, had no connection to any terrorist group.

They provided documents related to his long employment with the American charity, as well as Mr. Naser’s application for a Special Immigrant Visa, based on his service as a guard at Camp Lawton, in Herat.

“He was well respected by his colleagues and compassionate towards the poor and needy,” Steven Kwon, the president of NEI, said of Mr. Ahmadi in an email. He wrote that Mr. Ahmadi had just recently “prepared and delivered soy-based meals to hungry women and children at local refugee camps in Kabul.”

Israel doubles down on booster shots as daily Covid cases set new record

(CNBC)

Sonofabitch. This is just the GODblastedest thing I’ve ever heard of.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

* #

#Updated with Aug. 23-29 data.


156,886 average daily cases Aug. 23-29. Up 741 ave/day. Up is bad. 741 represents a 0.47% increase over Aug. 22-28. Which is minuscule, but minuscule bad.
156,145 Aug. 22-28. Increase of ~ 800 ave/day. An unhealthy increase but the number has not (yet) exceeded that on Aug. 20-26. P'ert near, but not quite. I know, my eyes are squinting now.
155,365 Aug. 21-27. Second decrease, almost 1k/day average.
156,349 Aug. 20-26. Huge leap, almost 4k/day average.
152,372 Aug. 19-25. Increase.
151,441 Aug. 18-24. Increase.
150,625, Aug 17-23. Increase almost 1k/day average.
149,675 Aug. 16-22. First slight decrease.
150,138 Aug. 15-21. Huge increase, over 4k/day average from Aug. 14-20.

So, in the latest iteration we have surpassed the high of Aug. 20-26 in the period under measurement. Now seven of these nine iterations have been up; downs make up 22%. Cases have increased 4.49% from the Aug. 15-21 iteration through the August 23-29 it. +4.49% is bad because it is still up but over nine iterations of data over fifteen days...c'mon, that's a lot of data and that cumulative increase is objectively pretty small. Look at the graph with my red line extension from July through August 29.

I'm not saying we're "flattening the curve," you will NEVER read me write that hackneyed cliche. I'm  not saying "plateau." I'm only saying that the trend line has not continued in the straight diagonal set earlier. We have bent it slightly and we are a helluva lot better off for the bending compared with where the trajectory would have taken us

8/28, 11:02 p.m.

*I'm straining to see a glimmer of progress, and more failing than succeeding. The below is updated at post time to include the cases 7-day daily averages Aug. 22-28.

Cases ave./day recently

156,145 Aug. 22-28. Increase of ~ 800 ave/day. An unhealthy increase but the number has not (yet) exceeded that on Aug. 20-26. P'ert near, but not quite. I know, my eyes are squinting now.
155,365 Aug. 21-27. Second decrease, almost 1k/day average.
156,349 Aug. 20-26. Huge leap, almost 4k/day average.
152,372 Aug. 19-25. Increase.
151,441 Aug. 18-24. Increase.
150,625, Aug 17-23. Increase almost 1k/day average.
149,675 Aug. 16-22. First slight decrease.
150,138 Aug. 15-21. Huge increase, over 4k/day average from Aug. 14-20.

Two of seven eight iterations down, so the decreases fade from 28.57% of seven to 25% of eight. Over thirteen days there was an overall increase of 3.48%. Now over fourteen days the increase is 4.00%. More of an increase but still not much of an increase.
Wail, I was hoping the Quasi's COVID stats would be up at about 10 p.m. and it's 10:12. I'm going to get ready for bed and check one more time. If they're not in when I get back, this is good night.
This is a wonderful article, by Kathy Ryan and Maureen Dowd. I didn't know the Quasi's were shut down and working from home.

A Newsroom, On Pause

From the shadows, the office beckons, ready to come alive again.

I first met Kathy Ryan a few years ago... We met on an autumn afternoon in the New York office that’s been headquarters since 2007.

To be honest, I wasn’t that fond of our new building. It was too sunny, too many windows. It took the metaphor of transparency too literally.

COULD not agree more. 

...I prefer shadows, not least for getting work done.

I prefer no windows.

...Kathy... told me I was wrong. She coolly guided me past windows that threw slatted shadows Jacques Tourneur would have envied.

As the evening wore on, I began falling in love with the building and gave it my highest film-noir accolade, “Quite a hacienda.”

She explained that we were blessed with dramatic light because of the Renzo Piano horizontal white ceramic rods that sheath the building for environmental reasons. The shadows striping the rooms lend the place a film noir air.

“Cinematographers spend hours trying to make this light that is handed to us in The New York Times building,” she said.

During the pandemic, Kathy missed the building, or 620, as it’s known because it’s at 620 Eighth Avenue, and headed up there on weekends to make pictures of this historic moment.

Our old building off Times Square was close to empty for 114 days during the printers’ strike of 1962-63, our in-house historian David W. Dunlap recalled, and for 88 days during the pressmen’s strike of 1978. But never before, through wars and 9/11 and hurricanes and even King Kong, had our offices been abandoned for this long a stretch.

Jeffrey Henson Scales, our swell photo editor in Opinion, asked Ryan to document the desolate offices, with baby pictures and sunglasses and towers of books left on desks as though they had been forsaken mid-thought, like the mud statues of Pompeii, or Elsa’s frozen kingdom.

"Swell"? Now you're writing like a film noir screenwriter. Lose swell.

Okay, there's a baby and there's sunglasses. I'm not smitten with the photos cexcept for one. Too much light!

There is something profoundly sad about a newsroom without noise or people. Even without crusty editors in fedoras and green eyeshades yelling, “COPY!” or the clicketyclack of typewriters or the roar of the presses in the basement, the modern Times still throbbed with life, creativity and great stories unspooling on every floor.

Yes, I bet. I returned to the courthouse months after we went on lockdown last year. We were still on lockdown. The courts were closed. After I took care of my business I wandered the hallways, normally crowded beyond fire capacity, now, of course, empty. The judges post their morning "calendars", they're called, the list of the day's cases clipped to an easel built into the wall outside the courtroom. I walked over to one calendar. It was dated March 16, 2020. I had had a jury trial to verdict the previous week that ended on Thursday the 12th. It had to be one of the last jury trial held in that building--to this day!

Kathy’s haunting photos of the Gray Lady speak to the larger picture: deserted offices, all over the world, drained of vitality, preserved in amber, with mail piling up and computer terminals gone dark and plants dying and newspapers left on racks with old headlines like this one from the week we vacated the office in March 2020: “Markets Spiral as Globe Shudders Over Virus.” (We may yet have to use that one again.)

Well, "haunting." Personally, I've never seen a haunted house in blinding sunlight. "Haunting," I think of Chernobyl and Pripyat,
...
We’re tired of Zoom and miss the novelistic dramas of the office but dread resuming some work rituals that now seem de trop.

I'm not tired of Zoom court! And I don't know what de trop means.

I love newsrooms. They are some of the most stimulating rooms in the world. It’s why I became a journalist, to be part of that vertiginous chaos, to scramble chasing stories on deadline with a bunch of hard-boiled hacks.

Yes, I bet they are. Who you calling a hard-boiled hack?!

I haven’t been getting that same frisson hunched at my dining room table.

But other people feel otherwise, and different professions require different things...

Meanwhile, thanks to the insidious Delta variant, The Times has not set an official date for a return. I will have to wait still longer to be reunited with the part of me that I left at the office.

My favorite image is the pile of clocks, stopped at different times when the clocks were taken off the walls. It is an image of time’s defeat, of nature’s power over society, of the disorienting interregnum in our lives...


I do like that image. The stopped timepiece has always held significance. Is that when the person was murdered? Did the Johnstown Flood hit an hour later (or sooner, I forget) because the street clock somewhere stopped at that time. I have always thought stopped timepieces were made by us to tell things they weren't, but as Dowd says, "Other people feel otherwise."

Also, the photograph reminds me of a noir favorite, “The Big Clock.” Charles Laughton is a wicked media tycoon, Ray Milland a crusading journalist. They work in a Manhattan skyscraper, where the clocks mysteriously stop one night during a murder manhunt. I have the movie poster at home. Where I’m working. Indefinitely.

See? I don't know "The Big Clock", I don't know what the significance to a murder manhunt clocks stopping has. Cannot imagine, actually. Dowds clocks in "620" stopped at different times do not tell us that's when "they were taken off the walls" (?) What is she talking about? They stopped at different times because their batteries had different lives left. Anyway, it's Maureen Dowd's fantasy and we can't be critical of others' fantasies. It's a wonderful story.

My grandcat Marni and granddog JJ. I have never seen anything like this.



Talking, or Writing, About Something Bad Often Doesn't Help

I know that. I learned it from my last girlfriend, CCC. But I still do it. It's a very American thing to do. "Talk about it, it'll make you feel better." NO IT WON'T! In re day's first post. I had forgotten it until just now. I can't even think about it now, much less read it, it's so painful. But there it is; I had to write it. Why? Cause I'm an idiot American.
Nebraska began year four of the Scott Frost Error yesterday with a 30-22 loss at last season's B1G West doormat Illinoise. Corn was a seven-point fave. Reaction:

-In postgame comments, Scott Frost said that the coaching staff had prepared the offensive line for odd man fronts assuming Illinois would come out in a 3-4 or 5-2, but when they came out in 4-2-5, there was simply nothing Nebraska could do about it. This is the kind of thing that one assumes would be a leak by a disgruntled booster close to the program...if it hadn’t come from SCOTT FROST HIMSELF

-BuffKomodo: Nebraska now stands at the corner of “Oh Shit” and “Not Again.”

-Dave Matter
@Dave_Matter
Nothing about this game would indicate Nebraska is being investigated for practicing too much.
3:01 PM · Aug 28, 2021·Twitter Web App

Waffle House closures in Louisiana indicate storm's power

 Holy shit.



















I apologize, I apologize. Firefighters in Montegut saying a prayer before the arrival of Ida.























Ann Colette Boudreaux and grandson Abel, New Orleans.























What photography curated by NPR!

Yikes

NWS New Orleans

@NWSNewOrleans

An extreme wind warning is in effect for Houma LA, Laplace LA, Bayou Cane LA until 4:30 PM CDT for extremely dangerous hurricane winds. Treat these imminent extreme winds as if a tornado was approaching and move immediately to an interior room or shelter NOW!.


2:26 PM · Aug 29, 2021 from Louisiana, USA·Svr Wx Impact Graphics - LIX

 


On the exact day sixteen years ago that Hurricane Katrina made landfall.

 LIVE

U.S. Carries Out Strike on Explosive-Laden Vehicle in Kabul




“U.S. military forces conducted a self-defense unmanned over-the-horizon airstrike today on a vehicle in Kabul, eliminating an imminent ISIS-K threat to Hamad Karzai International airport. We are confident we successfully hit the target. Significant secondary explosions from the vehicle indicated the presence of a substantial amount of explosive material.”

Biden Thwarts Car Bomb Attack

...the U.S. carried out a strike on a vehicle in Kabul in response to an “imminent” threat to the airport in the Afghan capital, an official said.

A U.S. military official said there were “significant secondary explosions” following the Sunday strike, indicating the presence of a “substantial amount of explosive material.”

*

*Updated

After I shut my laptop and iPhone off last night I had an additional thought to the article below which, under the circumstances, I hand-wrote on a clean sheet of paper:

"I believe also, to a standard of reasonable suspicion, that Trump supporters and these right-wing nuts are deliberately not getting vaccinated to do what they can to make President Biden fail in his handling of COVID--The president and CDC are certainly being useful fools to them! but I do have reasonable suspicion that this is another prong of their efforts at sabotage, to sicken and kill Americans in order to 'own the Libs.'"

They are a Fifth Column, an internal enemy. The Chinese had a name for them, those who "wave the red flag to fight the red flag." The Christian Jihadists ostentatiously wave, wear, display, and mate with the stars and stripes to fight the stars and stripes. They are not ultra American nationalists, they are an anti-American Fifth Column who see their own shining path washed with American blood, American body parts, corpses, and the sickened are their sign posts that they are on the right road. They are for anything that damages Democrats in power, everything else is acceptable collateral damage. "You can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs."  They are against anything that helps Democrats succeed, even if American life is saved and protected. 

What is the likelier explanation, that they need "more information", that it's a matter of persuasion, of cutting through the false information they are getting? I don't believe that. They want Biden to fail, that's in fact their plan!, the reason they praise with faint damnation the Taliban. They got together during Obama's inaugural BALLS and vowed to oppose anything he proposed. Mitch McConnell said early in Obama's presidency Republicans' first and only job was ensure that Obama was a one-term president. 

I offer Goldberg's article and my postscript because the vaccination education and persuasion campaigns are not going to work. Trump and a congressman he was with got booed in Alabama for urging rally attendees to get vaxed! Not even Trump got it: "If we get vaxed it makes Biden look good." That is their thinking. It's not lack of info, it's calculation to bring closer to realization their desideratum of a Christian nationalist state to replace the liberal democratic, pluralistic United States of America of our Founding Fathers. The alternative to education and persuasion? Force. Mandates, as the president has done belatedly in the military. Banning travel to and from the slave states. Vaccine passports. They are going to have to be forced.

8/28, 9:37 p.m.:



This is an extremely important column by Michelle Goldberg:

The influential young white supremacist Nick Fuentes — an ally of the Arizona Republican congressman Paul Gosar and the anti-immigrant pundit Michelle Malkin — wrote on the encrypted app Telegram: “The Taliban is a conservative, religious force, the U.S. is godless and liberal. The defeat of the U.S. government in Afghanistan is unequivocally a positive development.” An account linked to the Proud Boys expressed respect for the way the Taliban “took back their national religion as law, and executed dissenters.”

“The far right, the alt-right, are all sort of galvanized by the Taliban essentially running roughshod through Afghanistan, and us leaving underneath a Democratic president,” said Moustafa Ayad, executive director for Africa, the Middle East and Asia at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a think tank devoted to countering violent extremism. They’re looking at Afghanistan, he said, “from a standpoint of us getting ‘owned,’ in the parlance of the internet.”...

...Florida Republican Matt Gaetz may be a clown, but he’s also a congressman who was close to the previous president. On Twitter earlier this month, Gaetz described the Taliban, like Trump, as “more legitimate than the last government in Afghanistan or the current government here.”

...

...before the devastating terrorist attacks on Thursday, there was a subtler form of satisfaction with the Taliban’s takeover among more respectable nationalist conservatives. They don’t sympathize with barbarism, but were pleased to see liberal internationalism lose. “The humiliation of Afghanistan will have been worth it if it pries the old paradigm loose and lets new thoughts in,” Yoram Hazony, an influential nationalist intellectual whose conferences feature figures like Josh Hawley and Peter Thiel, tweeted earlier this month.

...a few days later he tweeted, “What went wrong in Iraq and Afghanistan was, first and foremost, the ideas in the heads of the people running the show. Say its name: Liberalism.”

Fox’s Tucker Carlson, the most important nationalist voice in America, seemed to sympathize with the gender politics of Taliban-supporting Afghans. “They don’t hate their own masculinity,” he said shortly after the fall of Kabul. “They don’t think it’s toxic. They like the patriarchy. Some of their women like it too. So now they’re getting it all back. So maybe it’s possible that we failed in Afghanistan because the entire neoliberal program is grotesque.”

...In his new book “Reign of Terror,” the national security journalist Spencer Ackerman draws a direct line between our stalemated post-9/11 wars and the rise of Donald Trump. “Trump was able to safely voice the reality of the war by articulating what about it most offended right-wing exceptionalists: humiliation,” he wrote.

Humiliation: That was what Adolph Hitler dialed into. 

Humiliation is a volatile emotion....Perhaps it’s not surprising that parts of the right would respond to humiliation by identifying with images of brutal masculinity.

Just below the surface in these comments is what I have always thought about the Right and of Trump. Politics is sex by other means. It is humiliating to be impotent, sexually or in political influence. Hitler, Trump, McConnell, Bannon, Giuliani--they are (or were) all limpy dicks. They can't get it up because they're old and morbidly obese. No woman is attracted to them because they are disgusting looking. They take out their sexual humiliation through their politics, rageful language, rape, prostitutes.

As for the rest of the pro-Taliban right, the Proud Boys and incels and MAGA splinter factions, some of them are probably just trolling. 

My goodness, Ms. Goldberg, you're naive. The "incels", involuntary celibates, are the template for this thought and behavior. You think the guy in Britain was just "trolling." Bullshit!



 

Elephant in the Living Room

My son and I were living together. We were sleeping on an air mattress on the floor in the living room. The truck containing the body of his friend who had committed suicide was propped up on its back tires a few feet in front of us. I hadn't looked in the cabin of the truck. I knew what the body would look like after three days in the hot sun, bloated, straining the seams of his shirt and pants, blackening, the lips like a sucker fish's. The air mattress jolted as my son crawled back on top of it. "Where'd you go?" "I bought a battery to keep the hazard lights," which were blue, "on," he said, laughing. They blinked through the night. I called out that I didn't like the truck there and woke myself up. I told myself it was just a dream, but with my eyes closed saw it all, "That is your place and the truck is there", and had to open my eyes and look around to convince myself it was not.


Saturday, August 28, 2021

So, There Is Going To Be Another Attack





Later Saturday, the U.S. Embassy in Kabul again warned Americans to leave the airport there immediately because of a “specific, credible threat.” State Department officials have issued several similar warnings in recent days.  

Biden warns that new

 attack is ‘highly likely’ 

as evacuations slow.


In a statement, Mr. Biden said another attack was “highly likely” in the next 24-36 hours. He added that he had directed the U.S. military to “protect our men and women on the ground.”

The warning was yet another sign of the chaotic and dangerous situation as the U.S. tried to pull the last remaining Americans and Afghans out of a Taliban-controlled Afghanistan before the Tuesday deadline.
...
The U.S. State Department said Saturday that about 350 Americans were still awaiting evacuation from Afghanistan...The United States has repeatedly warned Americans to stay away from the airport because of the threat of attack...

With three days remaining before President Biden’s Aug. 31 deadline for withdrawing U.S. troops, the mission is shifting from airlifting people in Afghanistan to bringing home American military personnel.

On Saturday, a Pentagon official said about 6,800 people had been evacuated from the Kabul airport over the previous 24 hours, bringing the total to 117,000 since the operation began on Aug. 14.
...
Thursday’s attack was one of the deadliest in the nearly two decades since the U.S.-led invasion, killing 13 American service members and as many as 170 civilians.

Arteta Out!

My goodness would you look at this:














Never saw a stat line that one sided in a Premier League match. Never. Disgraceful on Arsenal's part. That's all on Arteta.

Arsenal are 0-3 on the new season and have not scored a goal. They lost to newbees Brentford in the opening match, 2-0, home to Chelsea 2-0, and now this debacle at the Etihad. They should axe Arteta now!

England Has Moved on From COVID

Full house today at Etihad Stadium.


Not a mask in sight.



U.K. cases and vax:

U.S. cases:

Don't see much to choose between there. The U.K.'s is actually worse. Still, they've fully reopened. There is no way, no way I would have reopened without masks, without social distancing, just pack 50,000 people into a stadium like sardines in a can with the U.K.'s cases.


U.S. vax:
Yes, they are more highly vaxed. What good has that done them? Look at their cases.


                                                                  
                                                                             U.K. deaths:

U.S. deaths:

Big difference there! Very surprising that the U.K.'s June-current mountain of cases has resolved as into an English countryside plateau and ours is Big Round Top and Little Round Top. 

Man, the two countries' deaths graphs are just about identical from Feb.-May 2020, aren't they? That's amazing. The sheer cliffs of Dover on both shores. Then they bottomed out as Trump "LIBERATED!"

 Both countries had the same rise in deaths, Nov. 2020 but their's briefly plateaued almost immediately. Their death plateau lasted all through December into the middle of January it looks like, and then shot up dramatically to their summit. I have some English friends and I remember that they traveled to the U.S. for Christmas 2020. We were appalled. They had to sneak out practically. I think BOJO shut the country down again around that time and travel was curtailed. I know that, of course Trump, just ignored it the last three months of his illegitimate presidency. I know Britain started vaccinating before we did; my recollection is in December sometime. We, of course, didn't until 46-1 left. 

Britain's Winter peaks both of cases and deaths looks like India's Delta peaks. What I have never understood is why every strain of COVID-19 seems to stall over the U.S. Look at our Winter cases and deaths graphs compared to Britain's. That's a blob of cases and of deaths, two mountain ranges of multiple peaks and crags on ascent and descent and lasts three and one-half months. If you measure from before Britain's November plateau, their Fall-Winter cases surge lasts October 2 to peak on January 9, 99 days. Our surge extended back into late Summer. From September 12 U.S. cases began a slow ascent, Britain's was abrupt and sheer; we never had the near vertical ascent that Britain had. Instead, ours moved ponderously. Britain's Fall drop in late November was almost as sheer as their rise. From mid-October to November 25 we never had a week's let-up, it was all up, up, and away. From mid-October to peak January 8 we never had a stable drop. Our graph for that period looks "irrational," like a drunk taking stumbled steps: back Nov. 26-30, sideways Dec. 9-15,  twisting an ankle and backwards again Dec. 21-28 then regaining footing and taking long strides upward until Jan. 8. There clearly was no cause for these erratic steps as we weren't doing anything! The shortest distance between two points is a straight line and the U.S. decidedly took the long way to the summit. The result was that huge blog of cases. The Fall-Winter deaths graphs for the two countries track each's case graph with the death interval.
















Fair opinion.

Manchester City vs. Arsenal score: How long does Mikel Arteta have after another diabolical performance?

Justifiable question now.

Holy hell

Friday, August 27, 2021

Inspector Biden



taliban?
Taliban?
TALIBAANN!
Pay attention, this is your employer speaking!
I am canceling the attack orders for tonight. Do you understand?
I knu that I told you to show no mercy and to attack and to pay no attention to what I say.
But tonight...Buttonight I am ordering you…to PAY ATTENTION!
You will not attack, Taliban!
...
Obviously the little towel-head swine is not paying attention.

Dave Brooks Has Come Back!

Can't touch his asshole with a powder puff I reckon but he's back,

This Is How Theocracy Shrivels

Back on Planet Biden.

'Another terror attack in Kabul is likely,' national security chiefs warn Biden


 President Joe Biden was warned Friday that another terror attack in Kabul is "likely," one day after a suicide bomber outside the city's airport killed at least 113 people, including 13 U.S. service members.

The stark warning from the president's national security team came as the United States entered the final days of a monthslong military withdrawal from Afghanistan, on track to meet Biden's Aug. 31 deadline for a full withdrawal.

"The next few days of this mission will be the most dangerous period to date," they told Biden, according to a White House statement.

In response, Biden reaffirmed his "approval of all authorities they need to conduct the operation and protect our troops," said the White House. The generals confirmed to the president that they had the resources they believed they needed to do so effectively.

Marine Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, said Thursday that ISIS is likely to try to continue attacks before the evacuations conclude.

McKenzie, who oversees U.S. military operations in the region, said the threats against Western forces and civilians at the airport ranged from gunfire to rockets to suicide bombings.

"So very, very real threat streams, what we would call tactical that means imminent, could occur at any moment," he said.

A Catastrophic Failure

 ...as many as 170 people were killed and at least 200 were wounded.

...the number of bombing victims, which did not include the 13 U.S. service members killed and 15 wounded, was supported by interviews with hospital officials. The hospital officials, who requested anonymity because the Taliban had told them not to speak with the media, said some of the dead civilians were Afghan Americans, with U.S. citizenship.

The revised estimates made Thursday’s attack one of the deadliest in the nearly two decades since the U.S.-led invasion.

IN AN EVACUATION! 

Out of Control

COVID-19 BIDEN+219 (August 26, 2021):

Cases leapt by 4,000/day (average Aug. 20-26) to 156,296 average/day. Unbelievable. +24% from two weeks ago. 

Hospitalizations are at ave./day 96,586, +29% from two weeks ago.

The tail of the deaths graph is still at an 80 degree angle upward. The average/day over the last seven is now 1,233, an even 100% increase from two weeks ago.

It is moving unchecked, as if we aren't doing anything, as it did last summer when Trump just gave up. Now, it is moving unchecked over a population 52% fully vaccinated, 63% of adults fully vaxed, 81% of the elderly. Sixty-one percent of the entire eligible population has received one dose; 74% of adults, 92% of the over 65. I would like to hear some officio to chant his mantra "Vaccines are effective, vaccines are effective" against a background of these graphs.









One cannot credibly say that the vaccines have reduced cases, hospitalizations, or deaths.

Manchester City have had a bad August, just like the U.S. has and I have had. 

They led club icon Sergio Aguero go to Barca, sure that they could get another striker.

Then they gave up on long-time wet dream Lionel Messi, sure they were going to get 'Arry Kane. Messi signed with Paris.

Then Spurs wouldn't 'Arry and he announced he's staying with the club "this summer."

Their Plan C was Cristiano Ronaldo and just yesterday they were this close to getting him from Juventus. Instead, Cristiano went back to old club Manchester United.

With just days before the transfer window closes, they, presumably, are pursuing Plan D, E, and F. Otherwise they will have to go the first half of the season until the December transfer window without a striker and with Ronaldo at nemesis and runner-up United. United'll catch City. They have City's number in head-to-head, the have Ole Gunnar Solskjær and now they have Ronaldo.

Oh, and Pep said he's leaving the club when his contract expires after the 2023 season.

At the airport’s southern and eastern gates, trucks were blocking both approaches diagonally and Taliban guards were positioned a few hundred yards away. At both locations, Taliban guards told a reporter that no one was allowed to go near the airport and that all entrance gates were closed.

Just three months after the killing of Osama bin Laden, the U.S. military endured its biggest single-day loss of life during its two-decade war in Afghanistan. On Aug. 6, 2011, insurgents shot down a transport helicopter, killing 30 Americans and eight Afghans.

The Taliban, who claimed responsibility for the attack, had found an elite target: U.S. officials said that 22 of the dead were Navy Seal commandos, including members of Seal Team 6. Other commandos from that team had conducted the raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan, that killed Bin Laden in May of that year.

The helicopter, on a night-raid mission in the Tangi Valley of Wardak Province, to the west of Kabul, was most likely brought down by a rocket-propelled grenade, an official said then. It was the second helicopter to be shot down by insurgents within two weeks.

"I hate that man," or "I can't stand that man." The waitress approached from behind and over my left shoulder before I was paying attention. I thought she was referring to the cook. "I didn't like Trump but I voted for him. If we had Trump we wouldn't have this!",  she continued, gesturing to the television on the wall tuned to CNN on Afghanistan. 

Thursday, August 26, 2021

I have inhabited these days as an awake nightmare, scarcely trusting my perceptions, my ears ringing, my mind mush. Not long ago--God, when was it?--I wrote an encomium to the life I was living. Today I had to get away for a couple of hours. Anxious about the morrow I want to force shutdown for the peace of sleep.

"And now, beware of rashness. Beware of rashness."

Since last night I have had one thought in mind for a Public Occurrences “editorial”. I may change my mind on it and decided that if I did publish as conceived prudence required waiting until Biden got done evacuating, or other disasters ensued, whichever came first. Events today reinforced the theme but not the timing. That could change.

 

US Covid hospitalisations rise above 100,000 for first time since January

This Is a Bad Dream, Right?

U.S. officials provided Taliban with names of Americans, Afghan allies to evacuate

“Basically, they just put all those Afghans on a kill list,” said one defense official.



U.S. officials in Kabul gave the Taliban a list of names of American citizens, green card holders and Afghan allies to grant entry into the militant-controlled outer perimeter of the city’s airport, a choice that's prompted outrage behind the scenes from lawmakers and military officials.

I have been shocked at the degree of trust that the Bidens have put in the Taliban.

…the Biden administration has been relying on the Taliban for security outside the airport.

Since the fall of Kabul in mid-August, nearly 100,000 people have been evacuated, most of whom had to pass through the Taliban's many checkpoints. But the decision to provide specific names to the Taliban, which has a history of brutally murdering Afghans who collaborated with the U.S. and other coalition forces during the conflict, has angered lawmakers and military officials.

“Basically, they just put all those Afghans on a kill list,” said one defense official, who like others spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive topic. “It’s just appalling and shocking and makes you feel unclean.”

Asked about POLITICO's reporting during a Thursday news conference, President Joe Biden said he wasn't sure there were such lists, but also didn't deny that sometimes the U.S. hands over names to the Taliban.

"There have been occasions when our military has contacted their military counterparts in the Taliban and said this, for example, this bus is coming through with X number of people on it, made up of the following group of people. We want you to let that bus or that group through," he said. "So, yes there have been occasions like that. To the best of my knowledge, in those cases, the bulk of that has occurred and they have been let through.

"I can't tell you with any certitude that there's actually been a list of names," he added. "There may have been. But I know of no circumstance. It doesn't mean that it doesn't exist, that here's the names of 12 people, they're coming, let them through. It could very well have happened."

The list issue came up during a classified briefing on Capitol Hill this week, which turned contentious after top Biden administration officials defended their close coordination with the Taliban. Biden officials contended that it was the best way to keep Americans and Afghans safe…

After the fall of Kabul, in the earliest days of the evacuation, the joint U.S. military and diplomatic coordination team at the airport provided the Taliban with a list of people the U.S. aimed to evacuate. Those names included Afghans who served alongside the U.S. during the 20-year war and sought special immigrant visas to America. U.S. citizens, dual nationals and lawful permanent residents were also listed.

“They had to do that because of the security situation the White House created by allowing the Taliban to control everything outside the airport,” one U.S. official said.

…that U.S. officials handed over a list of Afghan allies and American citizens and residents shows the extent to which they outsourced security of the airport’s outer perimeter to the Taliban. The Taliban has gone door-to-door in search of Afghan interpreters and others who helped U.S. and Western forces.

In written and verbal communications, Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, and Rear Adm. Peter Vasely, head of U.S. forces on the ground in Afghanistan, have referred to the Taliban as “our Afghan partners,” according to two defense officials.

The Biden administration has been coordinating the evacuation effort and airport security with the Taliban, which is running the checkpoints outside the airport’s outer perimeter. Officials have been “in daily communication” with Taliban commanders about who to let in, Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby told reporters this week.

After the attacks, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) appeared to criticize the Biden administration’s strategy of coordinating with the Taliban, writing in a statement: “As we wait for more details to come in, one thing is clear: We can’t trust the Taliban with Americans’ security.”