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NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label neo cons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neo cons. Show all posts

Saturday, November 25, 2017

The US Turned LIBYA INTO A HELL HOLE & TERRORIST HAVEN


Dear Fellow American: Please start THINKING!


The US destroyed LIBYA and the rest of the World followed US PROPAGANDA? 
The US created a vacuum in LIBYA, A TERRORIST TRAINING GROUND.....

Everyone followed the Neo Con Chicken Hawks! 




Call it what you will.....my preference is AMERICAN EMPIRE.


PNAC [Project for the New American Century] founded by CHICKEN HAWKS and War Profiteers.....




"Rebuilding America's Defenses" – A SummaryBlueprint of the PNAC Plan for U.S. Global Hegemony



No comment about the veracity of videos:





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25 November 17 AM
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Illegal migrants from Africa are taken to a detention centre after being picked up by the Libyan Coast Guard on 8 July, 2017. (photo: Mahmud Turkia/AFP)
Illegal migrants from Africa are taken to a detention centre after 
being picked up by the Libyan Coast Guard on 8 July, 2017. 
(photo: Mahmud Turkia/AFP)

Starved, 'Mutilated' and Blackmailed Migrants Auctioned Off as Slaves by Smugglers in Libya

By Lara Rebello, International Business Times
25 November 17

The migrants are forced to work as slaves after they run out of money to pay the smugglers to find them passage to Europe.

lave markets are springing up across Libya trading impoverished African migrants who have arrived on the Mediterranean coast dreaming of a new life in Europe. A new investigation has revealed people are being sold as modern-day slaves for as little as £300 ($400).
According to CNN which exposed the racket, slave sales are conducted on the outskirts of the nation's capital, Tripoli, where auctions take place for various types of manual labourers. In one case, a video was made available, which shows the sale of "big strong boys for farm work".
An undercover operation revealed similar auctions where around a dozen people were sold in a matter of five to six minutes. "Does anybody need a digger? This is a digger, a big, strong man, he'll dig," an auctioneer calls out in one clip. "What am I bid, what am I bid?"
The interested bidders raise their hands till a final price is decided on following which the new slaves are transferred in the possession of their new "masters".
Slavery is getting a boost in places like Libya that are seeing a wave of desperate migrants from North Africa, hoping to find a better life in Europe. A crackdown by local authorities on boats ferrying people to the coast of Italy has turned smugglers to another profession — that of flesh traders.
At a detention centre in Tripoli, one man recalled how he ended up becoming an indentured servant after he ran out of money. Victory, 21, left Nigeria with his life savings and hopes of a brighter future. On reaching Libya he was forced to live in inhuman conditions and later sold as a day labourer once he could not afford to pay his smugglers.
He expected to pay off his debt through work but was unable to make enough. Finally his smugglers contacted his family for ransom. He was released after paying them a total of more than $2,780.
"If you look at most of the people here, if you check your bodies, you see the marks. They are beaten, mutilated," he said of his fellow detainees who have reportedly suffered a similar fate.
On being made aware of the slave trade in the region, the authorities said they were not aware of the auctions but confirmed the presence of organised gangs operating smuggling rings.
Earlier this year, the International Criminal Court (ICC) expressed interest in investigating crimes against immigrants in Libya, after the International Organization for Migration (IOM) warned about people being sold at slave markets in the country.







Sunday, August 27, 2017

A Nation Genuflecting to FAILED WARS



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26 August 17 PM
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Media Says Trump Is 'Presidential' Again - for Ramping Up War in Afghanistan 
Ben Norton, FAIR 
Norton writes: "Donald Trump is finally 'presidential' again, pundits insist, now that he is ratcheting up another US war." 
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Donald Trump. (photo: Al Drago/NYT)
Donald Trump. (photo: Al Drago/NYT)
onald Trump is finally “presidential” again, pundits insist, now that he is ratcheting up another US war.
In a speech on August 21, the far-right US president did an about-face, announcing a surge in the 16th year of the war in Afghanistan, which he had previously harshly condemned. Trump did not reveal many specifics, but reports suggest his administration will deploy 4,000 more soldiers to the country (Fox News8/21/17), in addition to the roughly 8,400 US troops and 5,000 other NATO forces already there.
Like clockwork, pundits responded to the news by rushing to praise Trump for his “presidential” decision. There is nothing quite as presidential as expanding an unending war that has left many thousands of Muslim civilians dead.
Just weeks before, the Trump administration had been openly acknowledging that the US war in Afghanistan was at least partly motivated by access to the large South Asian nation’s “vast mineral wealth”—nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral deposits (New York Times7/25/17). Yet now, according to media reports, the war is suddenly about “national security” and safety.
The response from the commentariat echoes similar proclamations made just four months ago, when pundits lionized Trump for launching 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian government air base (in an attack that effectively helped ISIS).
After the April strike, an analysis by FAIR (4/11/17) found that, of 47 major US newspaper editorials on the attack, just one opposed it. Trump’s missile strike was even sexualized by MSNBC‘s Brian Williams.
This time, in response to another military escalation, pundits were more aware, even self-critical, of the cartoonishness of reflexively praising presidential violence. But they did it anyway.
In Foreign Policy (8/22/17), Paul D. Miller minced no words, fawning over “Trump’s Presidential Afghanistan Speech.” Miller, who directed Afghanistan and Pakistan policy on the National Security Council for both George W. Bush and Barack Obama, declared that Trump’s address “was one of Donald Trump’s finest moments as president.”
“Trump’s nationalism, which I otherwise find objectionable, has led him to a keener and better appreciation of how to speak about war than Obama,” Miller added—a palpable demonstration of the intersection of the far right and establishment center that has been dubbed, with tongue in cheek, fish hook theory.
Miller’s obsequious op-ed was republished by the New York Daily News (8/22/17), New York City’s putative “left-wing” tabloid, with the headline “Trump’s Presidential Afghanistan Speech Sticks to the Script, Makes Powerful Argument.”
Maggie Haberman, a White House correspondent for the New York Times and a political analyst for CNN, tweeted effusively about “one of his more forceful/best lines of address”: “We are not nation-building again. We are killing terrorists.”
Washington think tanks, replete with revolving doors between the US government and so-called civil society, were likewise enthused. Michael O’Hanlon, the director of research for the foreign policy program at the arch-establishment Brookings Institution, published an op-ed in USA Today (8/21/17) with retired Gen. John Allen, who oversaw the war in Afghanistan from 2011 until 2013 before moving to Brookings, praising Trump’s reversal.
“Our new leader made the presidential call,” read the deck of the USA Today article, which had the titles “Donald Trump Making Afghanistan and America Safer” and “Donald Trump Makes Right Moves in Afghanistan.”
“We would especially commend Mr. Trump for making a difficult and very presidential decision about future American policy,” crooned O’Hanlon and Allen.
Rich Lowry, the right-wing syndicated columnist, Fox News commentator and editor of the neoconservative bible National Review, said in his magazine (8/21/17) that Trump’s Afghanistan speech “was quite good.” He noted it “seems a pretty conventionally hawkish policy,” and wrote of “the unifying potential of Trump’s nationalism.”
“It’s hard not to seem presidential when giving a speech like this,” Lowry continued. “If Trump had done nothing but give teleprompter speeches since his inauguration, he’d be about 10 points higher in the polls.”
Some of the most fanatic neoconservatives are warming to Trump. Proud self-declared “Americanimperialist” Max Boot, who excoriated Trump during his presidential campaign, came out swinging in his defense in the pages of the US newspaper of record. “Back to Nation-Building in Afghanistan. Good,” read Boot’s New York Times op-ed (8/22/17).
Right-wing pundits were not the only ones praising Trump’s Afghanistan surge. Their neoconservative counterparts in Congress were similarly enthused. Hard-line hawk John McCain—to whom Democratic lawmakers recently gave a standing ovation—likewise “commend[ed] President Trump for taking a big step in the right direction with the new strategy for Afghanistan,” and called for Trump to “conduct himself as a wartime commander-in-chief.”
Across the ocean, hawkish pundits said much the same. Writing in the UK’s Prospect (8/22/17), retired top general and King’s College London visiting professor Robert Fry applauded Trump’s Afghanistan surge, noting “his behavior bears a passing resemblance to the presidential.” The headline stressed, “Trump’s Afghanistan Policy Shows He’s Finally Thinking Like a President.”
In coverage that was more balanced in cosmetics, albeit not political substance, CNN (8/21/17) portrayed the speech as a largely welcome development, framing it as a matter of the collective good: “Trump to Ask Americans to Trust Him on Afghanistan.”
Again, on July 25, the New York Times‘ Mark Landler and James Risen reported that “President Trump, searching for a reason to keep the United States in Afghanistan after 16 years of war, has latched on to a prospect that tantalized previous administrations: Afghanistan’s vast mineral wealth, which his advisers and Afghan officials have told him could be profitably extracted by Western companies.”
Landler and Risen added that Trump “has suggested that this [vast mineral wealth] could be one justification for the United States to stay engaged in the country.” But their front page Times story has fallen down the memory hole, and, less than a month later, media insist the war in Afghanistan is a matter of “national security.”
“The speech will test the President’s capacity to convince Americans that he has settled on the right course of action on a major national security issue, and to unify the nation around it,” wrote CNN‘s Stephen Collinson.
The Afghanistan address, Collinson added, “represents a chance for Trump to leverage the symbolism of his office to stabilize a presidency that has threatened to spin out of control over the last two weeks.” Escalating war could help Trump “stak[e] out a more conventional presidential posture.”
A handful of journalists, like Huffington Post‘s Marina Fang, joked that Trump is being complimented as “presidential” simply for reading from a teleprompter:
Importantly, some media outlets did highlight Trump’s hypocrisy, drawing attention to the fact that he had campaigned—albeit inconsistently—on a pledge to withdraw from foreign wars, not to ramp them up (LA Times8/21/17).
Yet the contrasts between the punditry’s response to Trump’s Afghanistan’s speech and its outrage in July, when the president ended a CIA program that had for years strengthened ISIS, Al Qaeda and other extremist groups in Syria (FAIR.org7/27/17), are extremely stark.
One cannot help but observe that, when Trump is unpopular, he can miraculously reverse his fortunes by supporting a war. Trump no doubt understands that after, say, refusing to condemn white supremacists and drawing a ludicrous false equivalence between racist fascism and the antiracist resistance to fascism, he need only wrap himself in US military might and pundits—even ones who excoriated him mere days before—will suddenly praise him as a “presidential” imperial leader.
A very few journalists deserve credit for using the term “presidential” in its literal sense, not as a euphemistic stand-in. The Telegraph‘s Rob Crilly (8/22/17), who was critical of the military escalation, wrote: “If Donald Trump sounded presidential on Afghanistan, it is because he is repeating his predecessors’ mistakes.”
On Twitter, the Washington Post‘s Radley Balko quipped, “TBH, pledging thousands of troops to Afghanistan *is* the most presidential thing Trump has done. And I mean that in the worst way possible.”
After all, waging war in Afghanistan is a tried-and-true American tradition, going back to President Ronald Reagan’s 1983 Oval Office meeting with the mujahideen and the lionization of “anti-Soviet warrior” Osama bin Laden (Independent12/6/93).
Trump is indeed continuing a trajectory established by numerous presidents before him. Corporate media could do a far better job of interrogating whether or not that’s a good thing.



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Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Moral Bankruptcy defined by MILITARY BUDGET....they don't want you to know!



Think about it! The article below deserves to stand alone.


How tiring it is to have Republicans continue to repeat 'WE NEED A STRONG MILITARY....!' at what cost?

WHY? To bomb more countries to RUBBLE?










Chicken Hawk War Profiteers, like Robert Kagan, his wife Victoria Nuland and many others march to the BUILDING AMERICAN EMPIRE  PNAC campaign while they bankrupt the US, deny Americans FOOD and HEALTH CARE.



Robert Kagan: The Fool on the Hill








Americans are denied HEALTH CARE, FOOD STAMPS, Veterans are denied adequate care because the VA is being shortchanged, infrastructure is crumbling....to Build AMERICAN EMPIRE?





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27 June 17 PM
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Why Don't Deficit Hawks Care About the Cost of Military Adventurism? 
Adam H. Johnson, Los Angeles Times 
Johnson writes: "Crippling deficits and a nightmarish national debt are popular, recurring tropes in American politics: Every few months, politicians and the pundit class seem to recall that we're broke. While some are no doubt sincere in their concern, our pocketbook cops are wildly inconsistent." 
READ MORE

A Lockheed Martin F-35B Lightning II supersonic aircraft takes-off from amphibious assault ship USS America in a Coronado, California, operational test on November 19, 2016. (photo: LA Times)
A Lockheed Martin F-35B Lightning II supersonic aircraft takes-off from amphibious assault ship USS America in a Coronado, California, operational test on November 19, 2016. (photo: LA Times)
rippling deficits and a nightmarish national debt are popular, recurring tropes in American politics: Every few months, politicians and the pundit class seem to recall that we’re broke. While some are no doubt sincere in their concern, our pocketbook cops are wildly inconsistent. They complain that America is running out of money when it comes to helping the poor, people of color, the disabled and the elderly. Their worries miraculously disappear whenever the military wants to start a new war.
Let’s begin with a recent editorial in the Washington Post alleging that single payer in the U.S. is simply unaffordable. It cited studies showing it would cost “$32 trillion over 10 years.” Yet in the past 20 years of editorials on U.S. wars — every one of which the paper has supported — the Post has never framed the issue of bombing and occupying as one of cost. Most glaringly, its 2003 editorials in support of invading Iraq never mentioned dollars and cents, even though that war ended up costing the U.S. more than $2 trillion (not including the subsequent costs of fighting Islamic State). Never in any of its cheerleading did it stop to consider the war’s affordability.
In the Democratic primary debates and in press conferences, Sen. Bernie Sanders was grilled on “how he would pay” for his free college and healthcare plans over and over again. Putatively liberal publications including the New Yorker and Vox decried Sanders’ “vague and unrealistic” price projections. But nobody asked his challenger, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, how she would pay for the “no-fly zone” in Syria she championed that, according to the Pentagon, would require at least 70,000 servicemen and dozens of aircraft.
Similarly in the presidential debates, billionaire Pete Peterson’s pro-Social Security privatization group, the “bipartisan” Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, was mentioned twice by the moderators (that’s twice more than climate change) in the context of deficits and the alleged impending insolvency of Social Security. Yet none of the 178 mentions of Russia, 71 mentions of Syria, or 67 mentions of Iran had anything to do with costs to the U.S. Treasury. War and agitation and the routine functions of empire are “factored in.” Like gravity, they’re a universal constant that politicians don’t have to “account for.” They just are.
One common rejoinder to this complaint is that military spending is about national security and protecting lives and is thus sheltered from such calculus. Even if you believe that’s true (it’s not), it’s still a bad answer.
An estimated 44,000 Americans die a year because they don’t have access to healthcare, whereas you’re more likely to die taking a bath than at the hands of a terrorist. Why is spending on the latter existential and beyond cost-cutting, but working urgently to address the former a budget-buster we can’t afford?
Politics is priorities, and ours align with a specific class whose interests are far out of line with the collective good.
The same ideological scam is used on the topic of government shutdowns. The parts of the government that benefit the poor and middle class — labor and safety regulators, libraries, environmental regulators, national parks, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (which oversees the derivatives market), financial regulators, welfare, and WIC — are suddenly unable to operate and must be shuttered, but the cogs that feed the war machine are deemed essential and remain untouched, defended by everyone from Democrats to alleged “small government” conservatives.
Rep. Paul Ryan somehow got a reputation as a deficit hawk despite voting for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and every one of their supplemental budgets (current total $5 trillion and counting). Defense budgets and those that pad them operate in an alternate universe where military spending, somehow, isn’t spending.
In the same vein, the media’s most consistent deficit scold, Charles Lane, constantly hand-wrings about “entitlement reform” but the only time he brings up excess cost in the context of defense spending is when he wants to privatize the healthcare system for veterans. A $1.45 trillion F-35 program is A-OK; it’s Afghanistan war veterans’ medical costs that are going to cripple the economy.
If editorial boards and op-ed writers and debate moderators were genuinely concerned about us “running out of money” they would show concern across the board – especially on matters of U.S. military adventurism — and not just when it comes to programs that help the vulnerable.
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/44363-why-dont-deficit-hawks-care-about-the-cost-of-military-adventurism


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The US dropped WHITE PHOSPHOROUS on Syrian civilians

The US sold Barrel Bombs and WHITE PHOSPHOROUS to Saudi Arabia to bomb UNARMED  YEMINI CIVILIANS.

It's time to WAGE PEACE!