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What Did You Do Today? - Antigone - May 27, 2023 - 3:33pm
 
THREE WORDS - oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 12:52pm
 
Outstanding Covers - Proclivities - May 27, 2023 - 11:43am
 
FOUR WORDS - oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 11:42am
 
ONE WORD - oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 11:30am
 
TWO WORDS - oldviolin - May 27, 2023 - 11:28am
 
Ukraine - Beaker - May 27, 2023 - 10:03am
 
Wordle - daily game - maryte - May 27, 2023 - 9:19am
 
Things You Thought Today - Steely_D - May 27, 2023 - 8:34am
 
Radio Paradise Comments - islander - May 27, 2023 - 8:14am
 
China - miamizsun - May 27, 2023 - 8:04am
 
Animal Resistance - Red_Dragon - May 27, 2023 - 7:46am
 
Little known information...maybe even facts - miamizsun - May 27, 2023 - 7:24am
 
Guns - Red_Dragon - May 27, 2023 - 6:57am
 
RightWingNutZ - kcar - May 26, 2023 - 8:09pm
 
You're welcome, manbird. - Bill_J - May 26, 2023 - 6:00pm
 
In My Room - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 26, 2023 - 4:17pm
 
The Lincoln quote ... wasn't from Lincoln - Proclivities - May 26, 2023 - 1:19pm
 
MQA in administration - HFH21 - May 26, 2023 - 12:52pm
 
Live Music - Steely_D - May 26, 2023 - 10:51am
 
It seemed like a good idea at the time - Red_Dragon - May 26, 2023 - 10:35am
 
Nuclear power - saviour or scourge? - miamizsun - May 26, 2023 - 8:31am
 
A Picture paints a thousand words - Proclivities - May 26, 2023 - 8:00am
 
The Daily complaint forum, Please complain or be Happy - sunybuny - May 26, 2023 - 7:08am
 
Gas or Electric? - ColdMiser - May 26, 2023 - 6:19am
 
Need help - anyone got a copy of Aristotle's Politics? - lily34 - May 26, 2023 - 5:48am
 
Republican Party - westslope - May 26, 2023 - 2:30am
 
Stream stopping at promo - kjf06 - May 25, 2023 - 2:20pm
 
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •  - oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 1:50pm
 
Word Association - temporary - oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 1:34pm
 
Florida - R_P - May 25, 2023 - 11:22am
 
USA! USA! USA! - R_P - May 25, 2023 - 11:17am
 
Today in History - Red_Dragon - May 25, 2023 - 10:27am
 
What's playing - lily34 - May 25, 2023 - 9:17am
 
• • • BRING OUT YOUR DEAD • • •  - oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 9:15am
 
What the hell OV? - oldviolin - May 25, 2023 - 9:03am
 
Happy Birthday! - lily34 - May 25, 2023 - 8:40am
 
NASA & other news from space - miamizsun - May 25, 2023 - 7:51am
 
Eversolo DMP-A6 streamer and RP? - jtcedinburgh - May 25, 2023 - 5:29am
 
The Obituary Page - lily34 - May 25, 2023 - 5:17am
 
Musky Mythology - rgio - May 25, 2023 - 4:49am
 
Canada - Red_Dragon - May 24, 2023 - 6:38pm
 
What Makes You Laugh? - Red_Dragon - May 24, 2023 - 4:49pm
 
What Are You Grateful For? - Antigone - May 24, 2023 - 4:06pm
 
Fascism In America - rgio - May 24, 2023 - 1:56pm
 
Graphic designers, ho! - RedTopFireBelow - May 24, 2023 - 12:43pm
 
LeftWingNutZ - Proclivities - May 24, 2023 - 10:29am
 
260,000 Posts in one thread? - oldviolin - May 24, 2023 - 10:19am
 
Annoying stuff. not things that piss you off, just annoyi... - GeneP59 - May 24, 2023 - 8:16am
 
Manbird's Episiotomy Stitch Licking Clinic - KEEP OUT - miamizsun - May 24, 2023 - 5:22am
 
Questions. - oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 7:59pm
 
Name My Band - oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 7:58pm
 
mood - oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 7:57pm
 
Museum Of Bad Album Covers - oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 2:55pm
 
Counting with Pictures - mrtuba9 - May 23, 2023 - 1:02pm
 
Baseball, anyone? - Proclivities - May 23, 2023 - 12:19pm
 
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum - NoEnzLefttoSplit - May 23, 2023 - 11:40am
 
What The Hell Buddy? - oldviolin - May 23, 2023 - 10:53am
 
Ask for a tea - lily34 - May 23, 2023 - 5:15am
 
Floyd forum - kurtster - May 22, 2023 - 7:26pm
 
Country Up The Bumpkin - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 22, 2023 - 4:31pm
 
Eclectic Sound-Drops - oldviolin - May 22, 2023 - 1:58pm
 
Quick! I need a chicken... - oldviolin - May 22, 2023 - 1:24pm
 
One Partying State - Wyoming News - Beez - May 22, 2023 - 10:29am
 
Play the Blues - thisbody - May 22, 2023 - 9:30am
 
Classical Music - thisbody - May 22, 2023 - 9:16am
 
Jazz - thisbody - May 22, 2023 - 9:06am
 
Climate Change - westslope - May 22, 2023 - 12:52am
 
Australia has Disappeared - haresfur - May 22, 2023 - 12:32am
 
Living in America - oldviolin - May 21, 2023 - 7:44pm
 
New Music - R_P - May 21, 2023 - 7:19pm
 
May 2023 Photo Theme - Buds, Sprouts & Beginnings - Antigone - May 21, 2023 - 5:08pm
 
Paul Simon - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 21, 2023 - 5:04pm
 
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos - Isabeau - May 21, 2023 - 3:46pm
 
Nebraska, anyone? - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 21, 2023 - 3:25pm
 
Index » Radio Paradise/General » General Discussion » USA! USA! USA! Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 10, 11, 12  Next
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Posted: May 25, 2023 - 11:17am

Kissinger’s Killing Fields
Interviews with more than 75 witnesses and survivors of U.S. military attacks and an exclusive archive of documents show that Henry Kissinger is responsible for even more civilian deaths in Cambodia than was previously known.
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Posted: May 24, 2023 - 11:12am

The Demonization of Homeless People Is Killing Homeless People
Homeless people in the United States are far more likely to be victims of gruesome violence than to be perpetrators. Yet the widespread demonization of the homeless would lead you to believe the exact opposite.
To any normal human being, the whole incident was a sad and wretched microcosm of everything that’s gone wrong in modern American life: from the callous failures of political leadership and the rippling tragedies of endemic poverty, to the deep-seated need among lost young American men to find meaning in violent heroics.

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Posted: May 22, 2023 - 4:31pm

US Geopolitics: Believing Impossible Things
On the global stage, US can only barely keep up the pretense that it is not losing its mind.
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Posted: May 20, 2023 - 12:47pm

BELLINGCAT—Who Funds the Favorite Outlet of NBC & the CIA?
Plus: Media Pushes Pentagon Lies as Biden Drones More Innocents | SYSTEM UPDATE #85


westslope

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Location: BC sage brush steppe


Posted: May 19, 2023 - 4:23pm

 R_P wrote:
Nearly two years after the U.S. killed 10 members of an Afghan family, including seven children, in a drone strike that prompted a rare apology from the Pentagon, the U.S. government has yet to make good on a pledge to compensate surviving relatives.
Sorry, there are other countries that need "saving."

Yeah.  I love all the lose talk about getting the Russians to pay compensation or reparations for Ukraine....

You first Uncle Sam.   

R_P

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Posted: May 19, 2023 - 3:00pm

Nearly two years after the U.S. killed 10 members of an Afghan family, including seven children, in a drone strike that prompted a rare apology from the Pentagon, the U.S. government has yet to make good on a pledge to compensate surviving relatives.
Sorry, there are other countries that need "saving."
westslope

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Location: BC sage brush steppe


Posted: May 19, 2023 - 2:19pm

 R_P wrote:

Herding sheep while brown
Pentagon Admits It Doesn’t Know Who It Killed in Syria Drone Strike
CENTCOM initially claimed the strike killed a senior al-Qaeda leader, but locals said the man was an innocent farmer

...

False positive.  At one point, there were lots of those in Colombia.  

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Posted: May 19, 2023 - 11:01am

Herding sheep while brown
Pentagon Admits It Doesn’t Know Who It Killed in Syria Drone Strike
CENTCOM initially claimed the strike killed a senior al-Qaeda leader, but locals said the man was an innocent farmer
US military officials are walking back claims that a drone strike Central Command (CENTCOM) launched on May 3 in northwest Syria killed a senior al-Qaeda leader after evidence emerged that a civilian was killed.

When the strike was first launched in Syria’s northwest Idlib province, reports immediately emerged that the strike killed a sheep herder with no ties to any militant groups. The Associated Press spoke with family members and neighbors of the victim, Lotfi Hassan Misto, who insisted he was innocent.

According to The Washington Post, Misto was a 56-year-old father of 10, and the paper spoke with terrorism experts who said it was unlikely he was affiliated with al-Qaeda.

“We are no longer confident we killed a senior AQ official,” an unnamed military official told the Post. Another official claimed the person they killed was al-Qaeda but offered no evidence. “Though we believe the strike did not kill the original target, we believe the person to be al-Qaeda,” the official said.

CENTCOM’s initial press release on the strike did not name the person they killed. Since then, the command has refused to share any details of the operation or say why they could have targeted the wrong person.

The US military is notorious for undercounting civilian casualties or lying about them. The Pentagon is also known for investigating itself and finding no wrongdoing, even in instances of significant civilian deaths, such as the August 2021 Kabul drone strike that killed 10 civilians, including seven children.

Lazy8

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Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: May 19, 2023 - 11:00am

 R_P wrote:

Yes, we must see things from the Russian perspective. We must be sympathetic to their fear of being surrounded by hostile countries.

But we absolutely must not see things from the perspectives of those countries—from the Polish, Baltic, Czech, German, Swedish, Finnish perspective. We must not examine why they are hostile to an aggressive imperialist neighbor who openly threatens to invade and re-subjugate them.

Because
they
don't
matter.
R_P

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Posted: May 16, 2023 - 11:56am


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Posted: May 15, 2023 - 9:20pm

Defund the World Police
Post-9/11 wars have contributed to some 4.5 million deaths, report suggests
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Posted: May 13, 2023 - 2:57pm

Frank Church, Deep State: The True Story of the Senator Who Took on the CIA and Its Corporate Clients
Jeremy Scahill speaks to James Risen and Thomas Risen about their new book, “The Last Honest Man.”

I’m sure many of you recall that earlier this year there was a showdown over the House Speakership of Rep. Kevin McCarthy.

Matt Gaetz: Because we do not trust Mr. McCarthy with power, because we know who he will use it for, and we are concerned it will not be for the American people. We trust Jim Jordan; I nominate him and I’m going to vote for him.

Those events highlighted one of the more impressive grifter trains that’s now docked in the U.S. capitol, the idea that you have this new generation of anti-imperialist lawmakers, many of whom just happen to be loyal to Donald Trump and his movement. While some members of the Freedom Caucus do consistently take on serious issues that should be confronted — including on war, civil liberties and the increasing power of tech companies — the newly launched select subcommittee to investigate the quote, “weaponization of the federal government,” it’s not being established to engage in the kind of rigorous investigation embodied by the House Committee on Assassinations, or by the Church Committee in 1975.

This new committee, it’s clear, is going to largely be a partisan lollapalooza of wacky theories and totally hypocritical attacks. What’s notable, however, is that by taking on issues that have long been associated with the political left in the United States, these Republicans, who have been banging the drums about the deep state, have unmasked just how much the established power within the current Democratic Party actually reveres the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, and the broader national security state. (...)


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Posted: May 12, 2023 - 1:55pm

Rhetoric vs. reality
Biden Is Selling Weapons to the Majority of the World’s Autocracies
Despite the White House’s rhetoric about supporting global democracy, the U.S. sold weapons in 2022 to 57 percent of the world’s authoritarian regimes.
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Posted: May 11, 2023 - 11:11am

0:00 John’s upcoming book, How States Think: The Rationality of Foreign Policy
2:51 Is the US to blame for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine?
10:00 Is Putin less rational than John assumes?
22:20 Why John is a Russia dove and a China hawk
29:50 Does China pose a threat to freedom around the world?
36:57 Why John thinks China’s rise threatens American security
47:58 Has globalization made great-power peace possible?
56:14 Should the US defend Taiwan against a Chinese invasion?

Taiwan Says Its Military Won’t Let the US Blow Up Semiconductor Factories
Bombing the TSMC factories to prevent them from being controlled by China is becoming an increasingly popular idea in Washington
Red_Dragon

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Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: May 10, 2023 - 6:24pm

 R_P wrote:
Americans Shocked by Spectacle of Liars Not Getting Away with It
In Washington, the ominous possibility that lies have consequences has sent a chill down the corridors of power.




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Posted: May 10, 2023 - 6:19pm

Americans Shocked by Spectacle of Liars Not Getting Away with It
In Washington, the ominous possibility that lies have consequences has sent a chill down the corridors of power.
westslope

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Location: BC sage brush steppe


Posted: May 7, 2023 - 8:19am

Coping with a Tech War   Author Stephen Roach

May 5, 2023

The United States has dispelled any doubts about its intentions to squeeze China’s rise as a technology superpower. Starting with a mid-September 2022 speech by National Security Director Jake Sullivan that laid out the broad parameters of the case against China, the Biden Administration and the US Congress have taken a series of actions in the Sino-American tech war that go well beyond the early skirmishes sparked by the Trump Administration.

America is taking dead aim at the most advanced segments of China’s tech aspirations, like artificial intelligence and quantum computing, that, in turn, are essential to the nation’s push for indigenous innovation and productivity enhancement. That is even more important in the face of China’s stiff demographic headwinds that leave China with no choice other than to lever innovation for productivity enhancement.

Yet China has managed to cope with all this reasonably well. As was the case during the initial phase of the trade war dominated by Trump’s tariffs, there has been some tit-for-tat retaliation. China has signaled its intention of restricting Micron Technology’s operations in the mainland; Micron is America’s largest memory chip producer, and the Chinese market currently accounts for about 11% of Micron’s global sales. While China’s action is hardly inconsequential, it pales in comparison to the measures the US has imposed on China in the past six months. I have been surprised at the limited scope of Chinese retaliation and suspect that there is more to come.

China’s counter-offensive focuses on homegrown tech optionality. Huawei, China’s leading technology company and first to get hit by tough US sanctions in 2019, is a case in point. Denied access to the US chips it required for its once globally dominant mobile phone business, Huawei moved aggressivity to develop an in-house work-around. It not only redirected its supply chain away from the US toward Taiwan and Japan, but it turned to its domestic semiconductor subsidiary, Hi-Silicon, to produce a new smartphone, the Mate 3.0, made without any US components.

Contrary to the profusion of America’s false narratives about Huawei’s predatory thievery of US technology, the company’s success has long been driven by its focus on research and development. While there has been an accelerated injection of government subsidies in recent years, Huawei’s massive R&D efforts are largely self-funded, hitting approximately $25 billion (USD) in 2021, more than double the combined budgets of Alibaba and Tencent, which have the second and third largest R&D programs among Chinese tech companies. Reflecting its R&D-intensive strategy, Huawei has been especially effective in developing domestic alternatives to US sourcing of both software and hardware, with notable breakthroughs in electronic design automation and lithographic chip-making tools.

Chinese tech companies also appear to be benefitting from a second-best approach to chip processing speed. While denied access to the fastest processors of Nvidia and AMD, both Silicon Valley suppliers still offer lower-speed alternatives to a Chinese market that is very important to their businesses. Significantly, this option does not appear to compromise AI-related tasking—at least, not yet. That day will come—possibly ten years from now. But by then, Chinese and Western chip-making prowess could well be near parity.

The dual meaning of the Mandarin word for crisis, wēijī (危機), captures the spirit of China’s response to America’s tech-war — danger mixed with opportunity. US actions underscore the danger China faces if doesn’t seize the opportunity for indigenous innovation. Time will tell if China’s coping strategy ultimately bears fruit.

You can follow me on Twitter @SRoach_econ




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Posted: May 4, 2023 - 9:20am

How U.S. Efforts to Guide Sudan to Democracy Ended in War
Critics say the Biden administration and its partners were naïve about the intentions of two rival generals and failed to empower civilian leaders.
Just weeks ago, American diplomats thought Sudan was on the verge of a breakthrough agreement that would advance its transition from military dictatorship to full-fledged democracy, delivering on the soaring promise of the country’s revolution in 2019.

Sudan had become an important test case in President Biden’s core foreign policy goal of bolstering democracies worldwide, which in his view weakens corrupt leaders and allows nations to more capably stand as bulwarks against the influences of China, Russia and other autocratic powers.

But on April 23, the same American diplomats who had been involved in the negotiations in Sudan suddenly found themselves shutting down the embassy and fleeing Khartoum on secret nighttime helicopter flights as the country spiraled into a potential civil war. (...)

Lazy8

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Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: May 4, 2023 - 7:38am

 R_P wrote:
U.S. and Germany Slip, Russia Stumbles on the Global Stage
After a relatively strong debut in his first year in office, the honeymoon is over for U.S. President Joe Biden, as approval ratings of U.S. leadership worldwide slid at the halfway mark of his term. (...)


Readers please note that the graphic represents change in status, not status. Russia's leadership approval stands at 21% (down 12%), the US at 41% and Germany's at 46%.



R_P

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Posted: May 3, 2023 - 9:38am

U.S. and Germany Slip, Russia Stumbles on the Global Stage
After a relatively strong debut in his first year in office, the honeymoon is over for U.S. President Joe Biden, as approval ratings of U.S. leadership worldwide slid at the halfway mark of his term. (...)


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