Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Notations On Our World (Special Mid-Week Edition): On #Jerusalem; #TIMEPOY ; @Disney & Other Thoughts....

As we went to press, President Trump was scheduled to make a statement advising that the United States will hereby recognize Jerusalem as the United Capital of Israel.    Some in Israel have noted that there is not much to panic over it yet based on reporting we reviewed here at #Outsiders as the entire Arab and Muslim World have been vocal in noting that it is wrong.    The President's apparent statement forthcoming notes that the move will "take years"--but it goes against Key European Countries, the Pope, Russia along with key regional players including Egypt, Saudi Arabia,  Turkey and Iran.    The President's apparent justification is that he is "accepting the realities".    The problem, as we see it, is that Israel has continued to expand settlements, confiscate Palestinian Lands and have the West Bank under Military Occupation to impose the "reality" that the President states is at hand.   The official Twitter Account of Ayatollah Khameini, Iran's Supreme Guide, said: 

What our team found especially poignant was this courtesy of Shahed Amanullah:

This, in our view, is lost in the blind adherence to whatever the Government of Israel says as it continues to blame the Palestinians when it is clear that there is a Occupying and an Occupied Power and any semblance of the United States playing an honest broker for what is for all intent and purpose a dead peace process has been decimated as a result of the decision by the President not withstanding his and his handlers on it captured in this hard hitting article in the National in the UAE.   300,000 Stateless Palestinians who are currently living in the most despicable of conditions in Occupied East Jerusalem will also be affected in a major way that Israel will be forced to address.    This is as the State Department has advised US Embassies to tighten security.    As the World is witness to this dynamic, we see Israel striking Syria and ostenibly Iranian Targets which may present another flash point in the ever changing dynamics of the Middle East.    

As the formal Presidential Statement was forthcoming, our team was assessing another breaking story: Time's "Person of the Year" :






We join in commending all the slience breakers who have had the courage to speak up to transform us all as America and the World will be better for it--as they had the courage to show us all the way to a better way to live for us all.    Please enjoy this the team at Time tweeted out early this morning on the history of the Person of the Year: 
We also do find it interesting that Donald Trump, the President of China, Special Counsel Robert Mueller, Kim Jung Un and Colin Kaepernick were named as runner-ups.   Colin Kapepernick was the recipient of the Mohammad Ali Legacy Award and we here at the Daily Outsider congratulate him on it.      There was a rebuttal to Donald Trump, though, as Time noted that, "...No Donald, we said that the women you abused were going to win the award!..."      The Parent company of Time Magazine is in the process of being bought out by Meredith Corporation with backing from the Equity Arm of the Koch Brothers.





  Bryan Bedder/Getty Images
A Disney deal could split the Murdochs as an operating team.
If The Walt Disney Company reaches an agreement to buy big parts of 21st Century Fox, it could represent more than a breakup of the kingdom that Rupert Murdoch built over decades. It could also lead separate his family as a team of operators working in the family business.
What we know: Disney is in advanced discussions to buy the 20th Century Fox movie and television studios, cable channels like FX and Nat Geo, a stake in the British broadcaster Sky, the Star India cable and media empire, and a stake in Hulu.
What would happen to Mr. Murdoch’s sons
This is where it gets interesting. If there’s a deal, James Murdoch, who’s currently Fox’s C.E.O., could become a senior executive at Disney, with a portfolio that would likely include oversight of Sky and Star. Several news reports have said that James Murdoch could eventually succeed Bob Iger as Disney’s C.E.O., though they cautioned that there’s no formal agreement.
His brother, Lachlan, would stay to oversee what remains of Fox, which would include Fox News Channel, the FS1 sports channel and the company’s broadcast network.
The WSJ has more on the dynamic between the brothers and their father, who remains deeply involved in the management of Fox:
At times, James has felt like a C.E.O. in title only, according to some people who know him. These people say James was never keen about the setup, is ready for a new chapter in his career and has sometimes been on a different page from his father and brother.
But the FT, citing an unidentified person close to the family, said that a split of the Murdoch men would be “a very amiable separation.”
What’s next: A deal could be announced as soon as next week. But Comcast is still in talks with Fox as well — even though that deal could be more problematic from a regulatory perspective, given that AT&T’s similar transaction with Time Warner has been sued by the Justice Department.
Critics’ corner
• “Even if it wins the Fox assets, buying a C.E.O. as part of the package might be too cute even for Disney.” (Lex)
• Peter Csathy, a media consultant, says that if Disney locks up a deal with Fox, it would have plenty of exclusive content for its forthcoming video streaming services. (Variety)
This is as we are witness to profound changes in healthcare with the pending CVS/AETNA merger and as we saw reporting of UnitedHealthCare buying a Doctors' Group.

The Political Landscape, in the meantime, continues to be in a state of Flux as ever here in the United States.   There is also the upcoming election in Alabama as President Trump came down in favor of Roy Moore and as the Republican Political Operation geared up in support of #RoyMoore.  Senator Jeff Flake sent out this yesterday incurring the wrath of Steve Bannon--as Steve Bannon also went after Mitt Romney hard incurring a rebuke from the Governor of Utah over Twitter for Mr. Bannon:



Although Ben Sasse, the Senator from Nebraska, called it a "bad idea"--he subsequently sent out a Tweet saying that if the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee throw its' support (that it withdrew) behind Roy Moore he would stop supporting it.       This is as our team is continuing to assess the state of the Tax Cut legislation--as it appears that the House is rejecting compromises that secured the votes of Senator Flake and Senator Collins,  and the state of the Children Health Program that has run out of money that we understand will result in 1.3 Million Children losing access to healthcare if it is not resolved soon.

Back in our Backyard of Southern California, though, we are witness to horrific scenes yet again as fires rage on in Ventura County and the City of Los Angeles.  The Fire in Los Angeles is near the Getty Center--what in our view is one of the Seven "modern wonders" of our World as the fires in Ventura County are currently out of Control.    


Truly Challenging times....


(Update:  President Trump spoke and the backlash has been swift by the likes of Amnesty International and  underscored by Prince Hassan's Opinion Piece in Haaretz with the exception of certain Conservative Circles as underscored by an Editorial published in Haaretz by Elliot Abrams.   The opposition to this also came from organizations such as http://www.truah.org as well in addition to JStreet as the United States effectively ended any semblance of acting as a Peace Broker as the Chief Palestinian Negotiator S'aab Erekat said that the struggle will be for One State with equal rights for all.--We Could not help but wonder whether we are able to see this brotherhood realized:

Image result for Israel Palestine  

Monday, December 4, 2017

Notations From the Grid (Special @POTUS Edition): On the #Flynn Guilty Plea & #TaxCuts





The Week-End was quite nasty to Donald Trump & The GOP as epitomized by what Michael Moore Released on his Twitter Feed which we captured in the image above.  This is as Friday December 1 2017 saw a guilty plea by Lt. General Michael Flynn, US Army (Ret), the Former Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor in Federal Court in Washington .  The President sent out a very curious Tweet basically implicating himself (that his Counsel, John Dowd, claimed he wrote again denying and walking back the claim)--and as The Chair of the US House Intelligence Committee "Blew Up" as he demanded to hold contempt hearings on the Russia Probe: 






Lt. Gen Michael Flynn, US Army (Ret)  

Time Magazine's Ryan Teaague Beckwith  provided the clearest indication of the challenges faced by President Trump (as underscored by the Esquire's Charles Pierce)  in the aftermath of the indictment not withstanding the spin by the White House and the subsequent reaction by President Trump himself as there were apparent reports that Jared Kushner, the President's Son-in-Law and White House Senior Adviser directed General Flynn's contacts with Russians.    






By Ryan Teague Beckwith






When George Papadopoulos pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI in October, President Trump blew off the news by calling him a "young, low level volunteer" who "few people knew."
Trump's attorney, Ty Cobb, attempted the same maneuver on Friday as former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his conversations with the Russian ambassador to the United States during the transition.
In a statement, Cobb pointedly noted that Flynn was national security advisor "for 25 days" and slyly added that he was "a former Obama administration official."
"Nothing about the guilty plea or the charge implicates anyone other than Mr. Flynn," he said in the statement. "The conclusion of this phase of the Special Counsel's work demonstrates again that the Special Counsel is moving with all deliberate speed and clears the way for a prompt and reasonable conclusion.”
But the official response — Trump's own response hasn't been tweeted yet — is simply a tougher sell this time around.
Unlike Papadaopoulos, a hapless figure who sort of chanced into the Trump campaign, Flynn was a central character. A campaign advisor on national security who regularly went out on the hustings, Flynn intrigued Trump enough to merit serious consideration as a running mate, according to multiple reports from July of 2016.
"The turn toward a military figure is being driven by Trump himself rather than by his advisers, the people said, and comes as the real estate mogul is telling his friends that national unrest may demand a 'tough and steady' presence alongside him on the ticket," noted one report in the Washington Post.
Flynn led a chant of "lock her up" from the stage of the Republican national convention, using his national security background as a cudgel against her private email server. "If I did a tenth, a tenth of what she did, I would be in jail today," he said, in a quote that he has had many occasions to regret.
And before his time as national security advisor, he served on the Trump transition team, where he admitted in the plea deal that a senior member of the transition team directed him to make contact with Russian officials in December of 2016.
In his official statement, Trump's attorney also pointed out that Flynn pleaded guilty to "a single count of making a false statement to the FBI," another attempt to minimize the day's events.
But that's also a tough sell. It's fairly typical in complex cases like the Russia investigation for prosecutors to agree to drop more serious charges if a defendant agrees to cooperate with the investigation.
And, make no mistake, Flynn faced some serious charges. In addition to the false statements he pleaded guilty to making, he faced questions about his business dealings overseas (as did his son), possible involvement in a plot to remove a Muslim cleric (which Flynn's lawyer denied) and his failure to report $530,000 for lobbying on behalf of the Turkish government (which he later addressed in a filing), among other things.
Cobb's statement was also belied by Trump's own actions in the past.
When Trump asked then-FBI Director James Comey in the Oval Office to "let this go," it was about an investigation into Flynn, according to a memo that Comey wrote immediately after the meeting. And it was Comey's subsequent firing that led to the appointment of Mueller as special counsel.
All of which leads to the final part of Cobb's statement today.
"The conclusion of this phase of the Special Counsel's work demonstrates again that the Special Counsel is moving with all deliberate speed and clears the way for a prompt and reasonable conclusion," he said.
That mirrors reports that Cobb has told Trump and others in the White House that the investigation will be wrapping up soon and that Trump will be exonerated, and other reports that Trump himself — in a highly unusual move — pressed senior Senate Republicans to wrap up their own Russian investigation soon as well.
It's been a little over six months since Mueller was appointed — barely the amount of time that most low-level criminal cases take for completion. Flynn's guilty plea indicates that at least one member of the transition team — as yet unnamed — may face charges as well. A grand jury has already postponed some testimony in light of the plea.
Of all the tough sells in Cobb's statement, the idea that Mueller's investigation is almost over might be the hardest pitch.

This is as the Tax Cut plan was passed by the United States Senate and this was released by the team at the Guardian--and as Vox.Com noted over its' Twitter Feed over the Weekend that, "..
A person in the bottom 10 % gets a $50 tax cut; A person in the top 1 % gets a $34,000 tax cut....": 
The Resistance Now

Senate Republicans feel force of protest … but pass tax bill anyway

Activists targeted key senators over tax, with sit-ins, phone calls and other lobbying efforts, while net neutrality campaigners have Verizon in their sights
A person participating in a rally holds a sign in protest of a Republican-crafted tax cut plan, outside the US Capitol Building after sunset in Washington DC.
 A person participating in a rally holds a sign in protest of a Republican-crafted tax cut plan, outside the US Capitol Building after sunset in Washington DC. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

Adam Gabbatt


Tax bill passes Senate … but only after activists make their voices heard

Senate Republicans finally managed to pass some legislation on Friday night, in the form of their much-criticized tax bill … but only after a remarkable effort from activists to thwart the bill.
In Arizona activists had protested through Thursday night outside John McCain’s office, while people did the same outside Susan Collins’ office in Bangor, Maine. Both had been seen as potential no votes before committing to the bill this week.
Even on Friday morning, progressive group Indivisible had been urgingactivists to spend the day making calls to senators, providing phone numbers and suggested scripts to urge elected officials to vote against the legislation.
The Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell: wealthcare victory.
 The Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell: wealthcare victory. Photograph: Edelman/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock

It wasn’t just activists who launched desperate efforts. The DNC urged supporters to make calls, while the editorial board of the New York Times took over the @nytopinion Twitter feed on Wednesday “to urge the Senate to reject a tax bill that hurts the middle class & the nation’s fiscal health”.
This morning, The New York Times Editorial Board is tweeting here to urge the Senate to reject a tax bill that hurts the middle class & the nation's fiscal health. #thetaxbillhurts
— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) November 29, 2017
On Monday thousands of activists across the country had launched sit-ins at senators’ offices. In the end all the effort wasn’t enough. But there will be more battles to come.

Verizon focus of last ditch net neutrality protest

Hundreds of protests are planned outside Verizon stores on Thursday 7 December, to demonstrate against the upcoming Federal Communications Commission vote on net neutrality.
Activists say they have chosen to target Verizon as the FCC chairman, Ajit Pai, is a former lawyer for Verizon. The company has lobbied for current regulations – designed to protect an open internet – to be overturned.
The FCC is due to vote on defanging those regulations on 14 December – potentially allowing internet service providers like Verizon to charge for different levels of web access.
Some cables
 It’s really hard to illustrate net neutrality. Photograph: Michael Bocchieri/Getty Images

A group of coalitions including Fight for the Future and Team Internet are organizing the demonstrations.
“We’ll demand that our members of Congress take action to stop Verizon’s puppet FCC from killing net neutrality,” said a message on the groups’ Verizon Protests website, which has a tool for people to find their nearest protests.

Broken musical instruments for children

Grammy award-winning composer David Lang is launching his Symphony for a Broken Orchestra in Philadelphia this weekend – a novel attempt to draw attention to the more than $1.2m that has been slashed from the city’s musical instrument repair fund.
Lang – who won a Grammy in 2010 for his composition The Little Match Girl Passion and the Pulitzer prize for music in 2008 – sourced 1,500 broken musical instruments the School District of Philadelphia for the performance.
A trombone
 This is a photo of a trombone. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

“If there are 1,500 broken musical instruments, that’s 1,500 children who should be playing these instruments and whose lives could be changed,” said Lang. “There is something heartbreaking about it.”
Lang hopes people will donate to repair instruments through the Symphony for a Broken Orchestra website – those instruments will then be put “back into the hands of a child”.

We’re reading

• “I’m a multimillionaire so Trump’s tax plan is great for me,” writes Morris Pearl for Time. “It’s a disaster for everyone else.” Pearl is chair of the Patriotic Millionaires, a group of wealthy people who believe millionaires, billionaires and corporations should be taxed more. The idea that the Senate tax plan “is going to help anyone beside the ultra-rich is ludicrous”, Pearl says.
• More than 20,000 people have signed a petition urging the justice department to investigate “claims of sexual assault against Donald J Trump”. “We request that the Justice Department appoint a special counsel to open an investigation into the years of accusations against Donald Trump,” wrote Susan O’Connor, who started the petition. More than 20 women have accused Trump of sexual misconduct – he has denied all the allegations. The Guardian has compiled a list of all the accusations against the president. Trump denies any wrongdoing.

Sunday, December 3, 2017

Notations From the Grid (W-End Edition): On #California (Courtesy The Nooner)

Image result for california Big Sur California  Disneyland California Los Angeles California

California is our home state and we love it!!!   We always, though, strive to understand our Community and our State as part of our overall mission of Intelligent Engagement as California has been a trailblazer on a constant & consistent basis.   One of the resources we consult on a daily basis is The Nooner published by Scott Lay that provides some of the insightful analysis on California Politics right now--and hope all do consider subscribing!!!

We are pleased to present the results of the recent PPI poll result for all as we bid farewell to 2017 and gear up for a crucial 2018 election season:


THE Nooner for November 30, 2017

Subscribe to The Nooner to access exclusive election analysis. | Follow @scottlay
If the subscription price is a bit steep for you and you don't need the election analysis, help support independent coverage of California politics and policy by chipping in whatever you can afford. Thank you for your support!

POLL POSITION: The Public Policy Institute is out with its statewide poll "Californians and their Government." Just some quick excerpts before you go to bed. Crosstabs [Adult residents | Likely voters]
Adult residents: n=1,391; MOE: ±3.9; live interviews (landline/cell); Spanish and English; November 10–19, 2017
Likely voters: n=1,070 MOE: ±4.3 live interviews (landline/cell); Spanish and English; November 10–19, 2017

Job approvals (Approve/Disapprove/Don't Know):
Adult residents
  • Governor Jerry Brown: 53%/28/19
  • Legislature: 49%/36/15
  • Donald Trump: 28%/68/5
  • U.S. Congress: 22%/70/8
California right direction/wrong direction/don't know: 53%/41/6
United States right direction/wrong direction/don't know: 29%/65/6
2018 GOVERNOR: “As you may know, California now has a top-two primary system for statewide races in which voters can cast ballots for any candidate, regardless of party, and the two candidates receiving the most votes—regardless of party—will advance to the general election. If the June primary for governor were being held today, and these were the candidates, who would you vote for?”
  • Gavin Newsom, a Democrat
    • All likely voters: 23%
    • Dem: 34%
    • Rep: 5%
    • Ind: 24%
    • Latinos: 11%
    • Whites: 27%
    • Other groups: 23%
  • Antonio Villaraigosa, a Democrat
    • All likely voters: 18%
    • Dem: 26%
    • Rep: 7%
    • Ind: 15%
    • Latinos: 42%
    • Whites: 9%
    • Other groups: 22%
  • John Chiang, a Democrat
    • All likely voters: 9%
    • Dem: 13%
    • Rep: 2%
    • Ind: 10%
    • Latinos: 9%
    • Whites: 7%
    • Other groups: 16%
  • John Cox, a Republican
    • All likely voters: 9%
    • Dem: 13%
    • Rep: 2%
    • Ind: 10%
    • Latinos: 7%
    • Whites: 12%
    • Other groups: 4%
  • Travis Allen, a Republican
    • All likely voters: 6%
    • Dem: -
    • Rep: 18%
    • Ind: 6%
    • Latinos: 4%
    • Whites: 8%
    • Other groups: 4%
  • Delaine Eastin, a Democrat
    • All likely voters: 3%
    • Dem: 4%
    • Rep: 2%
    • Ind: 2%
    • Latinos: 5%
    • Whites: 2%
    • Other groups: 5%
  • Someone else (volunteered)
    • All likely voters: 1%
    • Dem: -
    • Rep: 1%
    • Ind: 2%
    • Latinos: -
    • Whites: 1%
    • Other groups: 1%
  • Don't know
    • All likely voters: 30%
    • Dem: 20%
    • Rep: 37%
    • Ind: 35%
    • Latinos: 21%
    • Whites: 33%
    • Other groups: 25%
2018 SENATE: “Keeping in mind that California has the top-two primary system, if the June primary for US Senator were being held today, and these were the candidates, who would you vote for?”
  • Kevin de León, a Democrat
    • All likely voters: 21%
    • Dem: 16%
    • Rep: 25%
    • Ind: 20%
    • Latinos: 26%
    • Whites: 22%
    • Other groups: 12%
  • Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat
    • All likely voters: 45%
    • Dem: 66%
    • Rep: 18%
    • Ind: 43%
    • Latinos: 48%
    • Whites: 41%
    • Other groups: 58%
  • Someone else (volunteered)
    • All likely voters: 1%
    • Dem: -%
    • Rep: 2%
    • Ind: 2%
    • Latinos: 1%
    • Whites: 1%
    • Other groups: 1%
  • Don't know
    • All likely voters: 33%
    • Dem: 18%
    • Rep: 55%
    • Ind: 35%
    • Latinos: 26%
    • Whites: 36%
    • Other groups: 29%

GOP TAX PLAN: “From what you know of those proposals, do you think you and your family will be better off, worse off, or about the same if they are passed and signed into law?"
  • Better off: 20%
  • Worse off: 41
  • About the same: 33
  • Don't know 6
“Do you think that lowering taxes for large businesses and corporations would help the economy, hurt the economy, or not make a difference?”
  • Help: 35%
  • Hurt: 41
  • No difference: 20
  • Don't know: 3
POSSIBLE BALLOT MEASURES (Likely voters):
  • Top two primary:
    • Mostly a good thing: 60%
    • Mostly a bad thing: 26
    • Mixed (volunteered): 3
    • Don't know: 10
  • Gas tax repeal: 
    • Very important: 54%
    • Somewhat important: 18
    • Not too important: 12
    • Not at all important: 13
    • Don't know: 3
  • Single-payer health care:
    • Very important: 59%
    • Somewhat important: 19
    • Not too important: 6
    • Not at all important: 9
    • Don't know: 0
  • State bond for affordable housing:
    • Very important: 48%
    • Somewhat important: 25
    • Not too important: 11
    • Not at all important: 12
    • Don't know: 5
  • Expanding the size of the Legislature:
    • Very important: 18%
    • Somewhat important: 19
    • Not too important: 25
    • Not at all important: 31
    • Don't know: 7 
Since we're focused on our Home state, we got a chuckle when we saw this courtesy of the Guardian of London which in our view captures what we feel about our home state despite its' challenges at times as one of our own will be a member of the British Royal Family:

Never a dull moment.....