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This Veteran's Day, Remember Tomas Young Print
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 07:25

Kamp writes: "We've just heard that Iraq war veteran Tomas Young, one of the first vets to publicly oppose the war, has died at the age of 34."

Tomas Young was paralyzed from the chest down during his deployment to Iraq. He died at the age of 34. (photo: Frank Morris/NPR)
Tomas Young was paralyzed from the chest down during his deployment to Iraq. He died at the age of 34. (photo: Frank Morris/NPR)


ALSO SEE: Remembering Tomas Young (1979-2014): Iraq War Veteran Turned Antiwar Activist

This Veteran's Day, Remember Tomas Young

By Karin Kamp, Moyers & Company

11 November 14

e’ve just heard that Iraq war veteran Tomas Young, one of the first vets to publicly oppose the war, has died at the age of 34.

Young was featured in Body of War, a documentary by Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro that was featured on Bill Moyers Journal in March 2008. The film focused on Tomas, who was shot and paralyzed just days after beginning his tour of duty in Iraq.

Donahue, who visited Young last month at his home in Seattle, said the world had lost a “bright light” and a “talented young man” who was determined to speak out against “this massive blunder that was the Iraq war.”

“He was a political animal and he had a political statement that he wanted to make,” Donahue told BillMoyers.com. “Tomas wanted people to know that this is the drama being played out in houses across the country occupied by thousands of young men and women who fought in the war,” he said, referring to injuries that left Young in need of round-the-clock care.

The 24-year-old Young enlisted in the Army after the 9/11 attacks because he wanted to fight terrorists in Afghanistan, but instead was sent to Iraq. Five days after arriving there in 2004, he was shot in the chest and severely wounded. He was left paralyzed from the waist down and as the result of medical complications later became a quadriplegic .

In April 2013, Young announced that he would end his life by refusing his medication and feeding tube. But late last year, he told NPR he had changed his mind. “I just came to the conclusion that I wanted some more time with my wife,” Young said. “And I decided that I really don’t have the chutzpah to go ahead and do away with myself.”

Young is survived by his wife, Claudia Cuellar. In this video from the 2008 broadcast, Bill speaks to Donahue and Spiro about Tomas. They share scenes of him from Body of War.

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Country on Wrong Track, Say People Who Did Not Vote Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Monday, 10 November 2014 15:18

Borowitz writes: "The United States of America is on the wrong track and no one is taking action to fix it, says a broad majority of registered voters who did not vote last Tuesday."

 (photo: Devin Wagner/Argus Leader/AP)
(photo: Devin Wagner/Argus Leader/AP)


Country on Wrong Track, Say People Who Did Not Vote

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

10 November 14

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

he United States of America is on the wrong track and no one is taking action to fix it, says a broad majority of registered voters who did not vote last Tuesday.

According to a new survey, anger, frustration, and a pervasive view that the nation is moving in a fatal direction dominated the mood of those who were doing something other than voting on Election Day.

Exit polls involving election non-participants took place as they left malls, nail salons, gyms, and other locations where no voting occurred on Tuesday.

“The system is broken,” said Carol Foyler, thirty-one, a democracy abstainer from Akron, Ohio. “We need to come up with some way that ordinary citizens can make their voices heard and have some impact on who is running things in Washington.”

The economy, jobs, and terrorism topped the list of worries that are preying on the minds of the non-voting electorate.

“I find it difficult to sleep at night worrying about the kind of country we are leaving to our children and our children’s children,” said Mark Gardziak, forty-seven, who spent Election Day shopping for a phone.

While pessimism about the future dominated the comments of the sixty-three per cent of American voters who elected not to exercise their democratic rights on Tuesday, some expressed a glimmer of hope.

“The one way things could get better is if we all get together and throw out the crooked politicians,” offered Tess Shardin, thirty-eight, who said she was unlikely to vote in 2016.


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FOCUS | Putting a Stop to the New Cold War Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5494"><span class="small">Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Monday, 10 November 2014 13:16

Weissman writes: "'The world is on the brink of a new Cold War,' a surprisingly animated Mikhail Gorbachev warned in Berlin on Sunday. 'Some are even saying that it's already begun.'"

Mikhail Gorbachev. (photo: Jens Kalaene/DPA/Corbis)
Mikhail Gorbachev. (photo: Jens Kalaene/DPA/Corbis)


Putting a Stop to the New Cold War

By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News

10 November 14

 

he world is on the brink of a new Cold War,” a surprisingly animated Mikhail Gorbachev warned in Berlin on Sunday. “Some are even saying that it's already begun."

Speaking at a symposium celebrating the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, the 83-year-old Gorbachev may seem yesterday’s man. He is, after all, the last president of the Soviet Union before it fell apart, while Russia has now morphed into the corrupt oligarchic capitalism of Vladimir Putin, with his new-found religiosity, idiotic gay-bashing, and ultra-rightwing nationalism.

In today’s Russia, Gorby remains a prophet without honor in his own country, where members of parliament have called on their government to prosecute him for treason for having sold out to the NATO allies. By contrast, many in the West still admire him for his glasnost and perestroika reforms at home, for respecting the independence of his Eastern European satellites, and for helping end the first Cold War without major bloodshed.

But few Western leaders - including Obama, the Clintons, and the Bushes - will find comfort in what Gorbachev is now saying. That is, if they bother to hear him out, which his fellow Nobel laureate in the White House seems unlikely to do.

“The end of the Cold War was just the beginning of the path towards a new Europe and a safer world order,” said Gorbachev. “But, instead of building new mechanisms and institutions of European security and pursuing a major demilitarization of European politics – as promised, incidentally, in NATO's London Declaration – the West, and particularly the United States, declared victory in the Cold War. Euphoria and triumphalism went to the heads of Western leaders. Taking advantage of Russia's weakening and the lack of a counterweight, they claimed monopoly leadership and domination in the world.”

He specifically cited the expansion of NATO, the development of an anti-ballistic missile system, military interventions in Yugoslavia and Iraq, the West-backed secession of Kosovo, the crisis in Syria, and the standoff over Ukraine, which he called a “blister turning into a bleeding, festering wound.”

“Instead of becoming a leader of change in a global world, Europe has turned into an arena of political upheaval, of competition for spheres of influence and, finally, of military conflict,” he said. “The consequence, inevitably, is Europe's weakening at a time when other centers of power and influence are gaining momentum. If this continues, Europe will lose a strong voice in world affairs and gradually become irrelevant.”

“The events of the past months are consequences of short-sighted policies of seeking to impose one’s will and fait accompli while ignoring the interests of one’s partners,” he said.

Nothing better describes the Obama administration’s covert intervention in Ukraine, which I documented in “Meet the Americans Who Put Together the Coup in Kiev” (Part I and Part II) and “Ukraine: Who Will Control Eurasia's Oil and Gas?” But Gorbachev was there, playing a larger-than-life role. It was riveting to hear him recall his frank discussions with the leaders of other countries, some of whom greatly feared the prospect of a reunified Germany. Even with Germany’s domination of the European Union and its imposition of a counterproductive economic austerity on its weaker neighbors, the reunification has proved far less dangerous than many expected. As a result, Gorbachev believes that history will award him and his Western counterparts “high marks.”

I have my doubts, especially if the new nuclear-armed Cold War continues to escalate over Ukraine. As I described in “Exposing the Cold War Roots of America's Coup in Kiev,” Gorbachev knew that Washington had plans to encircle what was still the Soviet Union. When he offered substantial evidence, the elder President Bush assured him in writing that, “We have no intention of seeking unilateral advantage from the current process of change in the GDR [German Democratic Republic] and in other Warsaw Pact countries.”

Bush was telling an obvious lie, which Gorbachev felt compelled to swallow. A weakened USSR badly needed financial help, which Germany offered. But he should have been more honest with his fellow Russians about what he and his intelligence services expected the US and NATO to do. His failure has greatly fed a widespread sense of betrayal, which Putin plays upon to pursue his nationalistic agenda.

Still, Gorbachev sees a timely lesson for today in the political dialog and active diplomacy that brought a peaceful end to the first Cold War. He even sees the possibility of negotiating with Big Bad Vlad, whose recent speech in Sochi seriously ruffled feathers. “Despite the harshness of his criticism of the West and the United States in particular,” said Gorbachev, “I see in his speech a desire to find a way to lower tensions, and ultimately to build a new basis for partnership.”

Gorbachev admitted that his customary optimism was wearing thin, but remember that he began making peace with no less a Cold Warrior than Ronald Reagan.



A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he is researching a new book, "Big Money and the Corporate State: How Global Banks, Corporations, and Speculators Rule and How to Nonviolently Break Their Hold."

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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FOCUS | Death by Typo: The Latest Frivolous Attack on Obamacare Print
Monday, 10 November 2014 12:38

Krugman writes: "Last week the court shocked many observers by saying that it was willing to hear a case claiming that the wording of one clause in the Affordable Care Act sets drastic limits on subsidies to Americans who buy health insurance. It’s a ridiculous claim."

Paul Krugman. (photo: NYT)
Paul Krugman. (photo: NYT)


Death by Typo: The Latest Frivolous Attack on Obamacare

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times

10 November 14

 

y parents used to own a small house with a large backyard, in which my mother cultivated a beautiful garden. At some point, however — I don’t remember why — my father looked at the official deed defining their property, and received a shock. According to the text, the Krugman lot wasn’t a rough rectangle; it was a triangle more than a hundred feet long but only around a yard wide at the base.

On examination, it was clear what had happened: Whoever wrote down the lot’s description had somehow skipped a clause. And of course the town clerk fixed the language. After all, it would have been ludicrous and cruel to take away most of my parents’ property on the basis of sloppy drafting, when the drafters’ intention was perfectly clear.

But it now appears possible that the Supreme Court may be willing to deprive millions of Americans of health care on the basis of an equally obvious typo. And if you think this possibility has anything to do with serious legal reasoning, as opposed to rabid partisanship, I have a long, skinny, unbuildable piece of land you might want to buy.

READ MORE


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Obama and the (Disenchanted) Base Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=63"><span class="small">Marc Ash, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Monday, 10 November 2014 08:59

Ash writes: "Reader Supported News has a vibrant, engaged and outspoken readership. There are things we have consistently been hearing from them for a long time about President Obama. For context, the vast majority of our readers voted for Obama – twice. What has been apparent for some time is a sense of betrayal. A sense that Obama talked the talk, but did not walk the walk."

A vendor holds items for sale on the National Mall, Inauguration Day 2013. (photo: Alex Brandon/AP)
A vendor holds items for sale on the National Mall, Inauguration Day 2013. (photo: Alex Brandon/AP)


Obama and the (Disenchanted) Base

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

10 November 14

 

eader Supported News has a vibrant, engaged and outspoken readership. There are things we have consistently been hearing from them for a long time about President Obama. For context, the vast majority of our readers voted for Obama – twice.

What has been apparent for some time is a sense of betrayal. A sense that Obama talked the talk, but did not walk the walk.

Images of Obama walking rather than riding up Pennsylvania Avenue, as his predecessors have done for decades, on his way to his inauguration gave way all too quickly to images of Obama playing golf with John Boehner. It didn’t sit well.

It became apparent early in Obama’s tenure that “change” had still not come. While Obama campaigned on on a promise to challenge the status quo, his actions portrayed a man desperately seeking compromise, and thus his presidency is viewed – by his supporters – as compromised.

Key to the disenchantment of Obama’s base were appointments like Timothy Geithner as Secretary of the Treasury. Geithner embodied the very policies and transgressions Obama’s supporters expressly elected him to forcefully oppose. Geithner’s transparent allegiance to Wall Street’s interests became emblematic of an administration that never really had a chance to change anything.

Matt Taibbi’s groundbreaking report, “The $9 Billion Witness: Meet JPMorgan Chase's Worst Nightmare,” chronicling Attorney General Eric Holder’s mind-boggling coziness with JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon – as the DoJ was engaged in a criminal securities fraud probe of JPM – provides a picture window into the mindset of an administration that has no intention of challenging Wall Street misconduct, no matter how criminal.

It took Obama four years to admit that the U.S. had “tortured folks.” To his credit, he’s the only U.S. official who ever has admitted this. But he did it with a Senate report detailing Bush-era acts of torture days from completion, and has never said another word about it since. The people who supported Obama wanted justice; what they got was complicity through silence, and they understood very well the difference.

Sure, the The Affordable Care Act, Obamacare, is a game changer, and it will survive the Supreme Court’s poorly hidden desire to derail it, primarily because it is now beyond the Court’s capacity to control.

Obama has tried to do a number of good things. He tried to get so-called Mortgage Cram Down Legislation passed by Congress that would have largely avoided the collapse of the U.S. economy in 2009. He failed, and collapse the economy did. He tried to close the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay. Open it remains. He tried to avoid a return to war in Iraq, but back at war we are.

The base wants change, the base wants a serious challenge to the corruption that has gripped the nation, the base wants fighters for social justice. The base is the party of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

We want a new deal.


Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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