Wednesday, February 8, 2017

LEGION

I'm part of the problem, I know.


  1. Some for , The Mutant Lounge, a popup where "not everything is as it seems"
  2. Scroll through the depths of David Haller’s mind. premieres this Wednesday 10p on FX.
  3. Don’t blink.




I'm going to be watching LEGION tonight on FX.

We have way too many superhero shows already.

Like Ava and C.I. point out, we've already got five hours of prime time devoted to superheroes ("TV: Funny and unfunny").

And they're not any good.  Add POWERLESS (flat out awful) and we've got 5 and a half hours.

Now LEGION.

The clips make me want to watch.

I'm hoping it will be good.

Hell, I'd settle for MUTANT X level of quality.

I feel like we're escaping, though.

And I feel bad about that.

More and more superheroes which don't really reflect life and go to a longing for someone to save us?

I have no idea.

But then, that's why I'm part of the problem.

And will be watching LEGION tonight.

Going out with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

 
Wednesday, February 8, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue, Moqtada al-Sadr may be seeking a political alliance, protests in Baghdad and much more



As the western press continues to ignore events on the ground in Iraq, maybe it's time to update Tracy Chapman's "Behind The Wall"  to "the press always comes late, if they come at all"?


So far this morning, no western media  reports on the gathering protest in Baghdad.


A Massive protest will take place today in 3 PM near the Greenzone by Sadr supporters demanding new Elections Commission.
 
 



security forces have closed double bridge and roads as protesters gather near it. Security is on high alert.
 
 



No coincidence, Iraq's prime minister, Hayder al-Abadi, held a press conference today.  ALSUMARIA reports he called on the Parliament to immediately begin forming an electoral commission.  Get the connection?


Saturday, we noted:



Hundreds of Iraqis did useful things yesterday inclu
NINA reportsding the hundred who rallied in Baghdad's Tahrir Square.  ALSUMARIA reports they rallied to call for reforms in the government (corruption) and reforms in the election law and the Independent High Electoral Commission.  ALSUMARIA reports hundred also protested in Karbala with the same demands.

The western media has been ignoring the protests.


Is this the day they finally discover them?

And if they do, will anything happen?







NINA reports that MP Magda al-Tamimi is calling for the members of the electoral commission to appear before Parliament for questioning due to a number of reasons including the large amounts of complaints about alleged corruption she has been receiving about them.


Due to the protest, ALSUMARIA reports, the Election Commission has closed shop and gone home for the day to avoid "friction" with the protesters.

And ALSUMARIA is reporting that the protest has started with thousands turning out to demand changes in the electoral commission and in the voting law.

Sadrist respond to link the demonstrations on the anniversary of the Baath coup




ALL IRAQ NEWS carries the above photo in their report on today's protest in Baghdad.


And, in what may be shocking news for some, a new political alliance is being reported.

ALL IRAQ NEWS carries the story that Moqtada al-Sadr is discussing teaming with Ayaad al-Allawi for a political slate in the upcoming elections.

Moqtada is one of the most powerful Shi'ite politicians.  His only real challenger to the title is probably Ammar al-Hakim.

Ayaad al-Alawi is a Shi'ite as well.

He proved his political strength in the 2010 election when he devised an integrated political slate, Iraqiya, which won the 2010 elections and which would have led to Ayaad being prime minister were it not for then-US President Barack Obama overturning the election results with The Erbil Agreement.
(For those keeping track, when the US government interfered with that election, Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State.)

A teaming of Moqtada and Allawi is not all the strange.

Nouri al-Maliki sees both as political enemies.  (Nouri was prime minister from 2006 through 2014 and wants to be prime minister again.)

And the two were part of a coalition attempting to get a no confidence vote against Nouri in 2011.  (Then-US Vice President Joe Biden pressured then-Iraqi President Jalal Talabani to stop the process.)


If they do form a political slate, it would not be surprising if they attempted to bring in Ammar and others they had worked with in 2011 as well.


Turning to violence, the US Defense Dept announced this morning:


Strikes in Iraq
Attack, fighter, and remotely piloted aircraft and ground-based artillery conducted 12 strikes consisting of 51 engagements in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of the Iraqi government:
-- Near Rutbah, a strike destroyed a vehicle-borne bomb.
-- Near Kirkuk, a strike engaged an ISIL tactical unit.
-- Near Mosul, nine strikes engaged six ISIL tactical units and two ISIL staging areas; destroyed 12 watercraft, eight cranes, seven engineering equipment pieces, five vehicles, four supply caches, two tunnels, two mortar systems, a front-end loader, a weapons cache, a fighting position, a tactical vehicle, a weapons facility and a vehicle-borne-bomb facility; and damaged nine supply routes.
-- Near Qayyarah, a strike damaged four supply routes.

Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target. Ground-based artillery fired in counterfire or in fire support to maneuver roles is not classified as a strike.



Meanwhile, it's day 114 of The Mosul Slog.


The Defense Dept published an article yesterday which includes:

"At this point, ISIL fighters are stuck in Mosul," the Defense Department's director of press operations, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, told reporters.
With Iraqi forces closing in and bridge access to eastern Mosul severed, the terrorists in the western quadrant are unable to resupply and reinforce, he said.

"The fighters who remain in west Mosul face a choice between surrendering or annihilation, as there's not a place to retreat," Davis said.



Strange, though.

Violence is in place besides west Mosul.


3 corpses were discovered in the streets of Kirkuk yesterday.  2 were found dumped in the streets of Baghdad today.



Also today, a police commissioner was shot dead in front of his east Kirkuk home. a home implosion in Falluja has left 1 person dead and two more injured (the home was booby trapped),  and 2 members of the Iraqi military were killed in a western Anbar bombing.

Meanwhile Alsumaria reports that the head of security for Ammar al-Hakim, head of the Islamic Supreme Council in Iraq, has filed charges against MP Adel Nouri over an incident Monday between Baghdad and the Green Zone when they say Adel Nouri's car charged at the convoy Ammar was traveling in.  They are insisting it was an assassination attempt.





The following community sites -- plus BLACK AGENDA REPORT and PACIFICA EVENING NEWS -- updated:













  • iraq

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