Why?
For one thing, taking months off and then returning only to, last week, give us another repeat.
That ticked a lot of people off.
Then there's the Who Gives a F**k aspect of this season's storylines.
Dre?
He's turned on his father.
If he wasn't bad enough last season, now who gives a f**k what he does?
Then there's the woman he's working with, Lucious' enemy -- and why do we give a f**k about her?
Then there's Phylicia Rashad Ahmad and didn't we think she was gone?
No offense, but she lacks the sizzle for soap opera.
And she's really not offering anything even when she went after Cookie?
When Haeeim's starting to come off as the sane one of the family, the show's in huge trouble.
And don't get me started on Jamal's who appears to now be wearing a chastity belt of some sort since he can't get any and the show's turned into MELROSE PLACE of the 90s as it tries to do gay stories without allowing any contact between the men.
So the whole show's just floundering.
Going out with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Thursday, April, 27, 2017. Chaos and violence continue, The Mosul Slog
continues, tensions continue to rise between the governments of Iraq and
Turkey, the political situation in Iraq grows ever more tense as
evidenced by the latest news on the Electoral Commission, and much more.
ALSUMARIA reports that the al-Ahrar Bloc in Parliament has collected 80 signatures, enough to call for a vote to withdraw confidence from the Independent High Electoral Commission.
February 8th, a protest against the Electoral Commission took place in Baghdad. From that day's snapshot:
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.
And let's go to the February 11th snapshot to show how massive another protest on the electoral commission has been:
Shi'ite cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr called for demonstrations in Baghdad today.
Did the crowd turn out?
Goodness, did they.
The protests didn't end that day.
ALSUMARIA reports that the al-Ahrar Bloc in Parliament has collected 80 signatures, enough to call for a vote to withdraw confidence from the Independent High Electoral Commission.
February 8th, a protest against the Electoral Commission took place in Baghdad. From that day's snapshot:
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.
And let's go to the February 11th snapshot to show how massive another protest on the electoral commission has been:
Did the crowd turn out?
Goodness, did they.
Huge protest in #baghdad
The protests didn't end that day.
And it was not just Shi'ite cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr and his followers calling for changes to the electoral commission. As early as February, vice president Ayad Allawi was also calling for reform and for the members of the commission to be replaced.
Monday, a complaint against the commission was filed with the United Nations.
A complaint against corruption in the Independent High Electoral Commission in #Iraq was sent to UN Sec. Gen. H.E. @antonioguterres
A complaint against corruption in the Independent High Electoral Commission in #Iraq reaches @UN and @EU_Commission @OHCHRAsia @OHCHR_Europe
THE BAGHDAD POST reported that Serbest Mostafa, chair of the commission, answered questions before Parliament on Tuesday.
This is becoming a major issue yet somehow the western media is avoiding this story.
Are we really surprised?
Day 190 of The Mosul Slog.
Mosul was seized in June 2014 by the Islamic State. 190 days ago the central government based in Baghdad finally decided they might need to do something.
#Iraq: Six months into battle for #Mosul, water and trauma care are key UN and partner priorities
un.org/apps/news/stor…
#MosulAid
As The Mosul Slog drags on, tensions continue between Iraq and the Turkish government over Turkey's bombing of northern Iraq.
In other news, Luis Martinez (ABC NEWS) reports:
President Trump has delegated to the Pentagon the authority to set the American military troop levels in Iraq
and Syria. The move restores a process that was in place prior to the
Bush and Obama administrations and is another sign of how the White
House is giving military commanders greater flexibility in their
operations.
"The President has delegated the authority for Force Management Levels
(FML) for Iraq and Syria to the Secretary," said Captain Jeff Davis, a
Pentagon spokesman, referring to Defense Secretary Jim Mattis.
Davis said the authority is being returned to the Pentagon where it had
typically existed prior to the Bush and Obama administrations.
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