Tuesday, April 25, 2017

On the Prowl with a"Virtual Gift" for all to contemplate.......

As we hope all enjoy visits to the properties in our Network, We wanted to present this "Virtual Gift" with some "Foods 4 Thought" for Week as we wish all a fabulous Final Week of April.....





& as we leave you with this final "Thought" as we hope you enjoy the visits to the properties of the Daily Outsider:

“You can’t control
how other people

receive your energy.
Anything you do or say
gets filtered through the lens of
whatever they are
going through 
at the moment,
which is not about you.
Just keep doing your thing
with as much integrity
and love as possible.”
Nanea Hoffman

Monday, April 24, 2017

Notations From the Grid (Weekly Edition): On @POTUS Watch as 100-Day Milestone is at hand...

The 100-Day milestone is at hand for the Trump Administration.   It is also a week that will see a number of key challenges.  The Border wall is at the forefront as the Trump Administration is seeking funding from Congress for it.  A Government shutdown looms as the wars in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan Continue.    This is also as Iran continues to be at the forefront with the Administration continuing what the New York Times deemed a "bullying of Iran" as the elections get under way in Iran.  The first live debate will be scheduled for later on this week.

As we went to press, our team received this from the Congressoinal Budget Office.   This is an arm of Congress that came under attack as the first "version" of the Obama Repeal and Replace Bill came to force.   What they have noted on the proposed expansion of the Navy is telling:



Costs of Building a 355-Ship Navy

CBO estimates that construction costs to build a fleet of 355 ships would average $26.6 billion (in 2017 dollars) per year over the next 30 years, which is 60 percent more than what the Navy has spent on average over the past 30 years.

CBO was asked at a recent hearing how deficit projections would be affected if individual economic variables differed from what the agency expects. This blog post discusses how lower rates of labor force participation would affect the deficit. 

Former President Obama also made the news as he gave a speech at the University of Chicago.   He began by noting, "...what's been goin' on since I've been gone.." as if he did not know!!  He did lament the state of the Media and the public apathy out there--something our team is hoping to help transform with its' going development.
Interesting times.....

Sunday, April 23, 2017

Notations On Our World: On a Brief Virtual Walkabout Around The World

Our Logo: A Tribute To Ordinary Faces
Why We Do This: A Tribute to All Ordinary Faces (Courtesy The Economist KAL) 

Our team has been on the prowl throughout the weekend on the elections in France, the protests in Venezuela, the elections in Iran, the tragedy in Afghanistan along the continued challenges faced by Europe.    It has been fascinating to be witness to it.

We begin with Europe.  France is in the midst of the election season.   As we went to press, France was in a period of "reflection" as the people of France went to the polls. Although the  Terrorist attack in Paris cast a shadow,  it will be Macron and Le Pen advancing to the second rounds.  The people of the United Kingdom, though, are also going to the polls.  The Prime Minister, Teresa May, called the elections to strengthen her hand and it appears that she has the upper hand as the UK Labor Party is struggling, The Scottish National Party is agitating for another independence vote and difficult negotiations with the European Union Looms.   

As we have been assessing our World, we have been assessing the Middle East This week (or what we actually like to refer to--the Near East (as favored by the State Department here in the United States).   The Palestinian hunger strikes are continuing as Israel contemplates moves to break them.   As we noted earlier, the Elections in Iran have begun in earnest.   The ruling factions have begun battling it all out.   What our team found so interesting was how a special envoy of Vladimir Putin went to see the leading Conservative candidate, Ebrahim Raissi.    What is critical to note that the alleged Russian Meddling has not been just in the US or Europe--but part of an apparent Worldwide effort by the Russians to assert what they view as their rightful place in the World.   This is as they continue to deal with profound internal challenges in large measure due to the aftermath of the Oil Price Collapse.      Ebrahim Raissi is being tipped as the leading conservative challenger even though the Mayor of Tehran has entered the race for the Third Time.   What is quite interesting is how out of almost 1700 People who registered, only 6 people past the so-called "test" of the Guardian Council.     The Mayor of Tehran gave a speech outlining his "objectives" for the campaign.  It was full of unrealistic promises--in effect promising to outgrow China which is an absolute impossibility.   This is as questions continue on his own conduct and apparent corruption as a result of his efforts running the Capital.    The incumbent President, Hassan Rouhani, has his own profound challenges as the election season has begun.       Our team looks forward to a weekly Notation throughout the 30-Day Election Cycle on Iran.     

Beyond Iran, there is Afghanistan.     The United States has approximately 9,000 Troops fighting in Afghanistan.  The past two months has seen some brazen attacks by the Taliban--this is as Daesh (also known as ISIS/ISIL/Islamic State in the West), has continue to gain ground in Afghanistan.    The latest brazen attack was in the North of Afghanistan as the Army's Main Base in the North of the country, Mazar-Sharif, was attacked that resulted in some 140 deaths.    One ordinary Afghan said it best:  If they can attack a heavily protected Army Base, they can one day attack the Presidential Palace.    The attackers went in wearing Army Uniforms and used an Army Vehicle and attacked Soldiers as they were leaving Friday Prayers.     From our assessment, the Afghan War is not going well at all as at least 9 cities continue to be under siege by the Taliban as the Government struggles to maintain a semblance of law and order.   The US Commander who ordered the "Mother of All Bombs" to be deployed has asked for additional reinforcements.   This is as the cost of the War was exemplified as President Trump awarded the Medal Of Honor to an Army Veteran who lost a leg last month fighting in Afghanistan.   

As we have assessed Latin America, the protests in Venezuela have continued.   The weekend saw protesters marching in silence to remember the fallen who had been killed as a result of the protests.   Inflation is rampant, basic good are next to non-existent as the suffering of the people continues as Nicholas Maduro stubbornly holds on.      The ordinary faces of Venezuela are stuck in limbo as the struggle for basic rights continues.      


It is bound to be a very challenging week indeed......


An #Outsider Newsflash (Special Edition): France Votes......

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Friday, April 21, 2017

On the Eve of #EarthDay2017....

We are here at The Daily Outsider are celebrating Earth Day 2017.      We could not agree more with a recent New York Times article that , "...our Climate Future is actually our Climate Present".    As the Trump Administration is busy rolling back Climate Protection, Companies, Cities and States are on the prowl to mitigate the tide.      For instance, Walmart has just announced Project Gigaton that is slated to, ".  removing a gigaton of greenhouse gas emissions from the company's global supply chain by 2030...".  

As a prelude to Earth Day 2017, The team at +Global Citizen put together 5 recommend movies--our team is pleased to feature the column in all our properties in its'  entirety as we wish all a Happy Earth Day!!

5 Movies Global Citizens Need to Watch Before Earth Day

By Phineas Rueckert|
Each week, streaming sites like Netflix, HBO, and Amazon release a whole spate of new movies for us to gobble up. 
Global Citizen has scoured the endless landscape of TV, movies, and streaming services to find the best things for you to watch. Check back every week as we present the latest and best offerings for you to enjoy.

1. “The Age of Consequences,” Documentary, Apple iTunes

Available on iTunes for just $0.99, this documentary considers the national and global security implications of a warming planet. Water and food shortages, extreme weather patterns, and rising sea-levels, this documentary argues, will lead to increasing instability, and more crises like the one in Syria.   

2. “Avatar,” Drama, Google Play

The highest-grossing film of all time, “Avatar” portrays an indigenous culture’s struggle to survive an invasion from earth-based explorers. The Na'vi are an advanced race that live in harmony with nature and whose way of life is under grave threat from exploitative forces. 
“Avatar,” director James Cameron said of the film, “wasn’t so much of a message as it was a feeling — a feeling that you needed to connect better with nature.” 

3. “A Plastic Ocean,” Documentary, Netflix

More than 8 million tons of plastic are dumped into the world’s oceans each year, posing a grave threat to this complex underwater ecosystem. This Netflix documentary shows how, eventually, this plastic waste ends up in an unsettling place: our stomachs. 

4. “Jumbo Wild,” Documentary, NetflixAmazon Prime

Produced in collaboration with Patagonia, “Jumbo Wild” takes us to the backcountry of British Columbia where a coalition of First Nations people, environmentalists, and locals have fought back against a proposed all-seasons resort development that would threaten sacred lands and threatened grizzly bear populations for more than 20 years.   

5. “Love Thy Nature,” Documentary, Amazon Prime

The argument made by “Love Thy Nature” is quite simple: if humans were to deepen their relationship with nature, they’d be more inclined to help protect it. Narrated by actor Liam Neeson, this documentary urges you to embark on this critical journey to save the planet. 

Thursday, April 20, 2017

View of the Week (W-End Edition): On Longevity--Journey Into the Blue

As the weekend looms, We wanted to report on this recent feature on +Al Jazeera English  that in our view contributes to transforming the conversation about our World.   Please enjoy:

Notations On Our World (Special Edition): On the Looming Presidential Campaign in #Iran


Iran's Presidential Election Season has begun in earnest as the Guardian Council has finished vetting over 1600 Candidates and the Six Candidates above have been announced by Iran's Central Election Tribunal as being qualified to run:


  • Mostafa Agha Mir Salim
  • Eshaq Jahangiri
  • Hassan Rouhani (The Incumbent Pictured in the Top Center) 
  • Ebrahim Raissi
  • Mohammad Ghalibaf
  • Mostafa Hashemi Taba
Hassan Rouhani is the current incumbent--what was surprising was the emergence of Jahangiri, Rouhanis' First Vice President, as a candidate.   The so-called "Principalitsts (Conservatives)" have two candidates in the race;  The Mayor of Tehran (Ghalibaf (who ran against Rouhani and lost in 2013) along with Raissi who is in charge of Iran's Largest Religious Organization and also serves as the Chief Prosecutor for the Clergy Court in the Country.    The former President, Ahmadinejad, has been disqualified along with what appears to be his Two Former Vice Presidents.     

On the eve of the Campaign, Rouhani delivered a speech earlier today Tehran Time when he noted that one very crucial point of pride was about how the level of criticism against the 11th Government (his government) was as such a high level--and he noted how he wore it as a badge of honor.

It will be quite an election no doubt--as we look forward to providing guidance on it due to the crucial role Iran has and especially in light of the recent pronouncements by The Secretary of State on the Iran Nuclear Deal and the response by J-Street:




 

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Notations On Our World: On the Hunger Strike In Israel (w/Updates)

Marwan Barghouti keeps busy in Israeli prison. Credit: Amos Biderman
Our team has been monitoring the latest out of Israel on the hunger strike spearheaded by the jailed Palestinian Leader, Marwan Barghouti.   We understand that over 2,000 prisoners have gone on strike.   We have noted his full editorial in the NY times today below.    We just got an update as reported by @i24news that Mr. Barghouti has been moved into isolation and a different Prison. 

Update:  The major US Media Outlets (CNN; FoxNews; MSNBC) had almost zero coverage of this.    The major headline on CNN  New York Times "amended" its' reporting to reflect Mr. Barghouti's convictions in Israel--as Israel began what The @Haaretz Chemi Shalev noted as the Usual Israel's campaign of Diversion and Denial.   The Former Israeli Ambassador to The US suggested sanctions against the New York Times.    The campaign of Denial was also underscored by what Yair Lapid wrote in the Times of Israel--as the Occupation goes on and On.      The closest came when the Wall Street Journal reported on it on the bottom of Page A16 For its' Tuesday, April 18 Edition.  In the meantime, there is also a sense of the true reality that the Haaretz Amira Hass noted in her latest column (Registration May be Required): The Palestinian hunger strike aims beyond the jailhouses:  http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.784124











Photo

Photos of prisoners during a demonstration demanding the release of the Palestinians held in Israeli prisons, in Ramallah, West Bank, this month. CreditIssam Rimawi/Anadolu Agency, via Getty Images

HADARIM PRISON, Israel — Having spent the last 15 years in an Israeli prison, I have been both a witness to and a victim of Israel’s illegal system of mass arbitrary arrests and ill-treatment of Palestinian prisoners. After exhausting all other options, I decided there was no choice but to resist these abuses by going on a hunger strike.
Some 1,000 Palestinian prisoners have decided to take part in this hunger strike, which begins today, the day we observe here as Prisoners’ Day. Hunger striking is the most peaceful form of resistance available. It inflicts pain solely on those who participate and on their loved ones, in the hopes that their empty stomachs and their sacrifice will help the message resonate beyond the confines of their dark cells.
Decades of experience have proved that Israel’s inhumane system of colonial and military occupation aims to break the spirit of prisoners and the nation to which they belong, by inflicting suffering on their bodies, separating them from their families and communities, using humiliating measures to compel subjugation. In spite of such treatment, we will not surrender to it.
Israel, the occupying power, has violated international law in multiple ways for nearly 70 years, and yet has been granted impunity for its actions. It has committed grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions against the Palestinian people; the prisoners, including men, women and children, are no exception. tinue reading the main story

I was only 15 when I was first imprisoned. I was barely 18 when an Israeli interrogator forced me to spread my legs while I stood naked in the interrogation room, before hitting my genitals. I passed out from the pain, and the resulting fall left an everlasting scar on my forehead. The interrogator mocked me afterward, saying that I would never procreate because people like me give birth only to terrorists and murderers.
A few years later, I was again in an Israeli prison, leading a hunger strike, when my first son was born. Instead of the sweets we usually distribute to celebrate such news, I handed out salt to the other prisoners. When he was barely 18, he in turn was arrested and spent four years in Israeli prisons.
The eldest of my four children is now a man of 31. Yet here I still am, pursuing this struggle for freedom along with thousands of prisoners, millions of Palestinians and the support of so many around the world. What is it with the arrogance of the occupier and the oppressor and their backers that makes them deaf to this simple truth: Our chains will be broken before we are, because it is human nature to heed the call for freedom regardless of the cost.
Israel has built nearly all of its prisons inside Israel rather than in the occupied territory. In doing so, it has unlawfully and forcibly transferred Palestinian civilians into captivity, and has used this situation to restrict family visits and to inflict suffering on prisoners through long transports under cruel conditions. It turned basic rights that should be guaranteed under international law — including some painfully secured through previous hunger strikes — into privileges its prison service decides to grant us or deprive us of.
Palestinian prisoners and detainees have suffered from torture, inhumane and degrading treatment, and medical negligence. Some have been killed while in detention. According to the latest count from the Palestinian Prisoners Club, about 200 Palestinian prisoners have died since 1967 because of such actions. Palestinian prisoners and their families also remain a primary target of Israel’s policy of imposing collective punishments.

Over the past five decades, according to the 
human rights group Addameer, more than 800,000 Palestinians have been imprisoned or detained by Israel — equivalent to about 40 percent of the Palestinian territory’s male population. Today, about 6,500 are still imprisoned, among them some who have the dismal distinction of holding world records for the longest periods in detention of political prisoners. There is hardly a single family in Palestine that has not endured the suffering caused by the imprisonment of one or several of its members.Through our hunger strike, we seek an end to these abuses.
How to account for this unbelievable state of affairs?
Israel has established a dual legal regime, a form of judicial apartheid, that provides virtual impunity for Israelis who commit crimes against Palestinians, while criminalizing Palestinian presence and resistance. Israel’s courts are a charade of justice, clearly instruments of colonial, military occupation. According to the State Department, the conviction rate for Palestinians in the military courts is nearly 90 percent.
Among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians whom Israel has taken captive are children, women, parliamentarians, activists, journalists, human rights defenders, academics, political figures, militants, bystanders, family members of prisoners. And all with one aim: to bury the legitimate aspirations of an entire nation.
Instead, though, Israel’s prisons have become the cradle of a lasting movement for Palestinian self-determination. This new hunger strike will demonstrate once more that the prisoners’ movement is the compass that guides our struggle, the struggle for Freedom and Dignity, the name we have chosen for this new step in our long walk to freedom.
Israel has tried to brand us all as terrorists to legitimize its violations, including mass arbitrary arrests, torture, punitive measures and severe restrictions. As part of Israel’s effort to undermine the Palestinian struggle for freedom, an Israeli court sentenced me to five life sentences and 40 years in prison in a political show trial that was denounced by international observers.
Israel is not the first occupying or colonial power to resort to such expedients. Every national liberation movement in history can recall similar practices. This is why so many people who have fought against oppression, colonialism and apartheid stand with us. The International Campaign to Free Marwan Barghouti and All Palestinian Prisoners that the anti-apartheid icon Ahmed Kathrada and my wife, Fadwa, inaugurated in 2013 from Nelson Mandela’s former cell on Robben Island has enjoyed the support of eight Nobel Peace Prize laureates, 120 governments and hundreds of leaders, parliamentarians, artists and academics around the world.
Their solidarity exposes Israel’s moral and political failure. Rights are not bestowed by an oppressor. Freedom and dignity are universal rights that are inherent in humanity, to be enjoyed by every nation and all human beings. Palestinians will not be an exception. Only ending occupation will end this injustice and mark the birth of peace.






Sunday, April 16, 2017

View of the Week: Planning For the (Very) Long Term


We wanted to welcome all to this new week with a "brighter note" courtesy of the team at BuzzFeed!!  It has been quite a weekend.

As we went to Press, Turkey has approved expanded Presidential Powers; Iran was about to enter a period of profound uncertainty and North Korea tried to launch missiles that failed in the aftermath of the Military Parade celebrating their "Day of the Sun" celebrating the birthday of the Nation's Founder.     This is as Israel is faced with another profound challenge as some 700 Palestinian prisoners have officially gone on Strike and thousands have also threatened which will be quite challenging as noted.  

As a new week dawns, we wanted to begin by featuring this Ted Talk from Ari Wallach.   This has been one of the implicit goals we've had here at The Daily Outsider as we have sought to work to "Change the Conversation" about our World as challenges continue to mount.   Please Enjoy:
  

Thursday, April 13, 2017

On the Eve of Easter Sunday 2017.....

On The Eve of Easter Week-End 2017,  We are pleased to  feature this compilation of thoughts courtesy of +Jonathan Huie on all #Outsider properties.   It reminds us all  how we should approach on-going challenges and always make sure we forgive--and never hate:

Happy Easter to all......



Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love.
- St. Francis of Assisi

You have heard that it was said,
"Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth."
But I tell you, Do not resist an evil person.
If someone strikes you on the right cheek,
turn to him the other also.
- Jesus (Matthew 5:38-39)

It is not enough to say we must not wage war.
It is necessary to love peace and sacrifice for it.
- Martin Luther King, Jr.

If a shepherd has a hundred sheep, and one of them has gone astray,
does he not leave the ninety-nine on the mountains
and go in search of the one that went astray?
And if he finds it, truly I tell you,
he rejoices over it more than over the ninety-nine that never went astray.
- Jesus (Matthew 18:12-13)

Know that all people are your brothers and sisters.
- Jonathan Lockwood Huie

The Weekly "Musical Interlude": @katyperry sings "Chained to the Rhythm"....

Please enjoy this our team has selected featuring our "artist of choice", Katy Perry: