Tuesday, May 16, 2017

ROSEANNE

So the sitcom ROSEANNE will return to ABC as a mid-season replacement.

Good.

Although for me, Sarah Chalke is Becky.

Didn't care for the farter -- the first Becky.

Remember the episode where she was embarrassed because she farted at school?

That's how I will always see Lecy Goranson.

Sarah Chalke was great.

Of course, they won't have Mark on -- Becky's husband, David's brother.

The actor who played him died.

I liked Mark.

A lot more than I did David, especially.  David could be so whiny.

Roseanne was (and is) my favorite character on the show.

After her?

Darlene.   She was real.

Then Dan and Jackie.

And I loved Estelle Parsons as Jackie and Roseann's mother.

Nana Marie can't come back (Shelley Winters has also passed away).

It'll be interesting to see how DJ turns out as an adult.


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



Tuesday, May 16, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue, The Mosul Slog continues, anybody remember those 2007 benchmarks, and much more.




AFP reports:

Iraqi forces have recaptured nearly 90 percent of west Mosul from ISIS after retaking the city's eastern side earlier this year, a military spokesman said Tuesday.
ISIS still controls "10.5 percent of... the right bank," Brigadier General Yahya Rasool, spokesman for the Joint Operations Command, told a news conference in Baghdad, referring to west Mosul.

Day 209 of The Mosul Slog.

map update. Green= completely liberated. Orange= frontline clashes. White= control.
 
 




Back in October, when it began, it was supposed to take a few weeks.

209 days later, it still continues.

And it's not even the biggest issue in Iraq.


Let's again note Ben Connable, Natash Lander and Kimberly Jackson's "Beating the Islamic State: Selecting a New Strategy for Iraq and Syria" (RAND CORPORATION):



Root Causes Can Be Bypassed or Suppressed, But Doing So Ensures Lasting Instability

  • Failure to address root causes may mean that instability and violence will outlast any individual armed group. Yet there is little appetite for the effort required to address root causes in Iraq and Syria. Current strategy has thus taken a middle-ground approach that does not truly reflect U.S. understanding of irregular war.
  • The research centered on the two prominent theories about root causes in Iraq and Syria, disenfranchisement and the effects of ethnosectarian discord. While the latter does have an influence, but the deeper cause in these two countries is disenfranchisement from the central governments and from the protections they should be providing their entire populations.
  • Debate over what to do about disenfranchisement is growing; this report argues shifting toward political action while maintaining military pressure against IS. 


And among the key findings:


  • The best way to reduce and, eventually, end insurgency and terrorism is to address root causes or, at least, to establish legitimate and capable governance. Stability is most consistent and enduring when it emerges naturally from popular satisfaction with governance and other socioeconomic conditions, rather than from government oppression or military action by external powers.
  • The legitimated stability option acknowledges that the best way to reduce and, eventually, end insurgency and terrorism is to address root causes or, at least, to establish legitimate and capable governance. The aim of this strategy is to establish legitimate governments in Iraq and Syria. Each government would be capable of addressing Sunni disenfranchisement while protecting the rights of all other groups. Ultimately, strong and legitimate central governments — perhaps federated or confederated to address regional challenges within each state — will reduce the current, dangerous emphasis on ethnosectarian identity politics and violence. 




  • Sectarianism is destroying Iraq.

    And has been destroying Iraq.

    And it's the issue that never gets dealt with.

    Remember the 18 benchmarks the White House created in 2007 to measure success in Iraq?

    Most people appear to have forgotten them.


    CNN noted in September 2007, "The benchmarks were created by lawmakers as part of a $120 billion war-spending bill passed in May, which asked the GAO -- the investigative arm of Congress -- to give a definitive answer as to whether each benchmark was met or not, instead of reporting partial progress."


    One of the benchmarks was national reconciliation.

    And ten years later, that's still not happened.

    Ten years later, it's still the biggest threat to security in Iraq.

    Ten years later, ISIS is being fought because of it and ISIS took root in Iraq because of it.

    In the last 2 days US airstrikes in Iraq and Syria have killed 35 civilians, including many women and children
     
     






    The US began these rounds of bombings in August of 2014.

    They're daily bombings.

    There was no effort began in August of 2014 (nor an existing one that got intensified) to foster national reconciliation in Iraq.

    Instead, weapons were handed over, money was forked over and US troops were sent into Iraq in larger numbers -- all with no strings attached.

    Because a diplomatic toolbox only works if you have a diplomat running the State Dept and during this period the Secretary of State was John Kerry who preferred playing toy soldiers and pretending he was the Secretary of Defense.

    May 15, forces conducted 28 strikes consisting of 91 engagements against in & . MORE:
     
     



    These bombing missions have cost the US taxpayers billions.

    But no one in government took the time to ponder how things could be improved with diplomacy or how giving Iraq F-16s with no strings attached was deeply foolish.

    | More than 16,000 members killed since start of operations
     
     



    Have they all been killed?

    Of course not.

    That's not how a rebellion works.

    ISIS is a terrorist group and it has connected with so many because of the persecution of Sunnis that ISIS is a response to.

    So national reconciliation could destroy ISIS for good.

    National reconciliation efforts also wouldn't have harmed or threatened children -- unlike the ongoing bombings.


    Message From Children In and to US Pilots Dropping Munitons On Them:...
     
     




    Imagine what Iraq might be like today if, back in August of 2014, the White House had decided to foster national reconciliation instead of bombing.


    Imagine what it might look like if the forgotten benchmarks of 2007 had ever been enforced.




    The following community sites -- plus Cindy Sheehan, PACIFICA EVENING NEWS and Jody Watley -- updated:















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