Political Linkage
- Today's comic by Tom Tomorrow is The bad intelligence:
- EU dropped pesticide-control laws under U.S. pressure in negotiating the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.
- Proposed fedeal regulations on CO2 emissions would cut coal production:
Production of coal in the United States would drop by
one-fifth in the next five years and almost one-third by 2025 under the
Obama administration’s regulatory crackdown on carbon emissions from
electric power plants, the Energy Department’s statistical branch said
on Friday.
Retirements of coal-fired power plants would double, with about 50
gigawatts more in lost capacity compared with business as usual, the new
analysis by the department’s Energy Information Administration found.
At first, power plants would mainly switch to natural gas, but over
time, solar and wind capacity would soar.
- R.D. Kaplan says it’s time to bring imperialism back to the Middle East.
When did it ever leave? This guy repented for his active participation
in pressing for the invasion of Iraq. Then he said he deeply regretted
it. Now he's at it again. Repentance requires a vow not to repeat the
offense. Guess he missed that part.
- Iran adviser says U.S. let ISIL take over Ramadi:
An Iranian newspaper is quoting the chief of an elite unit
in Iran's Revolutionary Guard accusing the U.S. of allowing the Islamic
State group to seize the Iraqi city of Ramadi, the latest criticism to
follow the fall of the city.
- Deadline for releasing final JFK assassination-related documents fast approaching:
A special team of seven archivists and technicians with
top-secret security clearances has been set up at the National Archives
and Records Administration to process all or portions of 40,000
documents that constitute the final collection of known federal records
that might shed light on the events surrounding JFK’s murder, POLITICO
has learned — files that according to law must be made public by October
2017.
But the records’ release is not guaranteed, says Martha Murphy, head
of the National Archives’ Special Access Branch. While the JFK Records
Act of 1992 mandated the files be made public in 25 years, government
agencies that created the paper trail can still appeal directly to the
president to keep them hidden. And some scholars and researchers, not to
mention the army of JFK conspiracy theorists, fear that is exactly what
will happen given the details about the deepest, darkest corners of
American spy craft that could be revealed — from the inner workings of
the CIA’s foreign assassination program and front companies to the role
of a CIA psychological operations guru accused of misleading
congressional investigators about alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald’s
activities.
- Former S.C. GOP executive director Todd Kincannon says he threatened wife because cough medicine made him "completely crazy".
- Canada's truth commission nears the end of its seven-year probe into residential schools for Indians:
Between 1929 and 1974, St. Michael's Indian Residential
School was home to thousands of kids enrolled in often year-round
boarding school. Under the watchful eye of RCMP officers, aboriginal
parents were forced to give up their children as young as 4-years-old to
Indian agents, or face possible fines or imprisonment. From tiny
communities across the coast of BC, the children were brought into the
cold, brick rooms of St. Mike's. Run by the Anglican church under the
authority of the Indian Act, St. Mike's was where those little kids
learned that their hair and bodies were disgusting, that their families
were demonic, and that no amount of work, physical and sexual abuse, or
distance from their backwards communities would cure them of the stain
of Indian-ness. [...]
Many have urged the UN to classify the residential school system
under the 1948 Genocide Convention. It seems to fall squarely within the
boundaries, not only of the softer cultural genocide, but also as
straight-up genocide, the definition of which includes "forcibly
transferring children... with the intent to destroy, in whole or in
part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group."
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