Welcome! "The Evening Blues" is a casual community diary (published Monday - Friday, 8:00 PM Eastern) where we hang out, share and talk about news, music, photography and other things of interest to the community.
Just about anything goes, but attacks and pie fights are not welcome here. This is a community diary and a friendly, peaceful, supportive place for people to interact.
Everyone who wants to join in peaceful interaction is very welcome here.
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Hey! Good Evening!
This evening's music features Louisiana blues and swamp pop musician Lonesome Sundown. Enjoy!
Lonesome Sundown - They call me Sundown
"The world organization debates disarmament in one room and, in the next room, moves the knights and pawns that make national arms imperative."
-- E. B. White
News and Opinion
Ukraine: separatists refuse to end occupation despite Geneva agreement
Pro-Russian groups occupying a string of public buildings across eastern Ukraine have insisted that they would not end their occupation until a referendum to decide the status of the region had taken place.
There was no sign of separatist groups pulling out from their positions at city halls and in town squares, although several said they would hold meetings on Friday to discuss the implications of the Geneva agreement between Russia, Ukraine, the European Union and the United States to de-escalate the crisis.
In Khartsyzsk, an industrial city 30 miles from Donetsk where separatists have been in control of the city hall since Sunday, local activists said they had no plans to leave public buildings. Barricades of tyres have been built around the city hall, which flies the flag of the Donetsk People's Republic. Banners draped outside proclaim "No to Fascism" and "No to the EU". Another banner reads "Russia+Donbass=heart".
At the barricade, Vladimir Pakhomovich, a former miner, said: "We are not Moscow or Kiev. They do not command us. We are just here to defend our people. Until we get a referendum, we do not intend to leave."
Pakhomovich said he was aware of the agreement made in Geneva but said he did not feel beholden to Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, or president, Vladimir Putin. "We are prepared to ignore Lavrov. Why should we listen to him?" he said.
Pro-Russian groups to stay put in east Ukraine until referendum takes place
At a press conference on Friday, however, Denis Pushilin, the self-styled leader of the Donetsk People's Republic, said his supporters would stay put until a referendum on the region's future status took place. The current pro-western government in Kiev was illegitimate, he said.
Referring to Ukraine's interim prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, and president, Olexsandr Turchynov, he added: "We understand that everyone has to leave buildings or nobody does. Yatsenyuk and Turchynov should vacate theirs first."
Pushilin – speaking from the occupied regional administration building in central Donetsk – said that Kiev had already violated the Geneva deal by refusing to withdraw its military units from eastern Ukraine. "They have not pulled their forces out from Slavyansk," he said, referring to the town taken over by armed separatists a week ago. Ukrainian troops currently occupy an aerodrome close to Slavyansk and the neighbouring town of Kramatorsk.
Pushilin delivered his message on Russian state television, which had turned up to interview him. He appeared to be speaking from a carefully drafted script and was surrounded by several media advisers. He also claimed Kiev was denying the local population access to insulin, and asked Russian civilians to send money to a bank account to help. Kiev says separatist leaders in the east are under the direct control of Russian's spy agencies. Moscow denies the charge and says it is not meddling.
Pushilin's comments suggest that the Geneva agreement is already unravelling.
What Role Has Russia Played in Eastern Ukraine?
Flier calling on Donetsk Jews to register now widely seen as fake
Ukrainian city's separatist leader, whose alleged signature is on document, says he never signed it; ADL 'skeptical of fliers' authenticity.'
The pro-Russian separatist leader of Donetsk, whose alleged signature is on the now notorious fliers calling on the eastern Ukrainian city's Jews to registeron pain of deportation, said the documents were fakes, the ThinkProgress website reported Thursday
Relax. Ukraine Is Not Ordering Its Jews to Register
Western press caught up with the Ukrainian rumor mill: apparently, the People's Republic of Donetsk had ordered all Jews over the age of 16 to pay a fee of $50 U.S. and register with the new "authorities," or face loss of citizenship or expulsion. This was laid out in officious-looking fliers pasted on the local synagogue. One local snapped a photo of the fliers and sent it to a friend in Israel, who then took it to the Israeli press and, voila, an international scandal: American Twitter is abuzz with it, Drudge is hawking it, and, today in Geneva, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry slammed the fliers as "grotesque."
The Donetsk Jewish community dismissed this as "a provocation," which it clearly is. "It's an obvious provocation designed to get this exact response, going all the way up to Kerry," says Fyodr Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs. "I have no doubt that there is a sizeable community of anti-Semites on both sides of the barricades, but for one of them to do something this stupid—this is done to compromise the pro-Russian groups in the east."
Ukraine imposes travel restrictions on Russian men
Ukraine bans entry for all Russian males aged 16-60
Ukraine has banned entry to its territory for all Russian males aged between 16 and 60, the Russian flagship carrier Aeroflot said Thursday, a measure Russia called "disgusting".
"In line with an official order received by the company, all Russian male citizens aged from 16-60 will be refused entry into Ukraine," Aeroflot said, adding that exceptions would only be made in extreme cases such as the death or illness of a relative.
The ban also applied to men aged 16-60 and women aged 20-35 travelling on Ukrainian passports registered in Crimea, which was annexed by Russia last month, Aeroflot added.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Russia's delegation had raised the measure at talks in Geneva with the United States, the European Union and Ukraine.
"As for the decision to discriminate against Russian citizens of male gender and a certain age on the possibility to travel to Ukraine, we drew attention to this," Lavrov said in Geneva. ...
The Russian foreign ministry said in a statement that border guards at Ukraine's main airports had told Russian airlines it was due to an order from security services. It called for an official explanation, saying Russia would consider reprisals.
I wonder if Obama the master negotiator considers American nuclear weapons to be so surpassingly superior that Russians would be ashamed to use theirs.
Obama: Russians Know Our Military Is Far Superior
In a high-profile interview today, President Obama downplayed the military risks of plans to deploy US ground troops to Eastern Europe, saying Russia wouldn’t dare confront the US militarily and knows the US troops are “significantly superior.”
Edward Snowden defends decision to question Vladimir Putin on surveillance
Edward Snowden has defended his decision to appear on live Russian television, insisting his question to Vladimir Putin on mass surveillance was designed to hold the Russian president accountable and not, as critics have suggested, an act of compliant propaganda.
Writing for the Guardian, the whistleblower behind the National Security Agency leaks suggests he carefully framed the question to Putin, which he asked via video link in an annual televised call-in with the president on Thursday. Putin, Snowden writes, “denied the first part of the question and dodged on the latter”.
In the phone-in, Snowden asked Putin: "Does Russia intercept, store or analyse, in any way, the communications of millions of individuals?"
Putin replied: "Our intelligence efforts are strictly regulated by our law... We don't have a mass system of such interception and – according with our law –it cannot exist."
The wording was deliberately modelled, Snowden says, on the query of US senator Ron Wyden to the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, in March last year – almost three months before the NSA disclosures began – to which Clapper blatantly and inaccurately denied that the US government collected data on millions on Americans.
“The question was intended to mirror the now infamous exchange between Senator Ron Wyden and DNI James Clapper… and to invite either an important concession or a clear evasion” from Putin, Snowden writes.
The Corruption of Mainstream Media
CBS News, once known as the network of Edward R Murrow and Walter Cronkite, has veered in another direction since it canned Dan Rather after a star chamber proceeding to punish him for a story showing that President George W. Bush lied about his military credentials.
Today, predictably, CBS has gone the other way on the Snowden story too. That shouldn’t be a surprise for an outlet that appointed Pentagon groupie Lara Logan as its chief foreign correspondent, only to be called on the network’s attempt to cover up her erroneous Benghazi report that gave credence to right-wing spin on the subject.
More recently, CBS produced a two part pro-NSA story on “60 Minutes,” reported by John Miller who acknowledged on air that he has worked for the Director of National Intelligence and who then, after the story ran, left the network to become an intelligence chief at the New York Police Department.
As the Village Voice reported: “Miller is not the first reporter to make this sort of switch – newsrooms are shrinking and folks have families to feed. …. He has shown that there is a viable, and lucrative, career in circling the revolving door between journalism and law enforcement (or any other institution).”
Now, CBS, the “big eye” network, has gone even further, as Danny Weil reports: “CBS News has hired former acting director of the CIA, Mike Morell, as their senior security correspondent. Morell has been a frequent guest on CBS’ Face the Nation, where he has disseminated CIA propaganda and misleading information, raising questions about CBS’ journalistic integrity. Morell also works for Beacon Global Strategies, a DC consulting firm which peddles its government connections to defense contractors, raising even more questions about his role at CBS.”
9/11 military court adjourns trial until June amid FBI spying probe
The 9/11 military tribunal in Guantánamo Bay was adjourned until June on Thursday, derailed by an attempt by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to turn a classification specialist on the defendants’ legal teams into an informant.
The judge in the case, Army Colonel James Pohl, said he was considering appointing independent lawyers for defendants Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Ramzi bin al-Shibh to advise them of possible conflicts between their defense teams’ ability to represent them, and the lawyers' interest in defending themselves against an apparent FBI investigation.
Barring yet another unexpected development, it is likely that Pohl will take up the question of the defense teams’ exposure to the FBI when the pretrial 9/11 hearings reconvene in June. The issue this week crowded out progress in the voluminous hearings, casting doubt on the commission’s ability to proceed to jury selection as planned in January.
On 6 April, two FBI agents approached a classification adviser for Bin al-Shibh’s defense team and compelled him to sign a document, along with a nondisclosure agreement, indicating an ongoing role informing on the legal team.
Guantánamo judge to CIA: Disclose ‘black site’ details to USS Cole defense lawyers
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVY BASE, Cuba -- The military judge in the USS Cole bombing case has ordered the CIA to give defense lawyers details — names, dates and places — of its secret overseas detention and interrogation of the man accused of planning the bombing, two people who have read the still-secret order said Thursday.
Army Col. James L. Pohl issued the five-page order Monday. It was sealed as document 120C on the war court website Thursday morning and, according to those who have read it, orders the agency to provide a chronology of the overseas odyssey of Abd al Rahim al Nashiri, 49, from his capture in Dubai in 2002 to his arrival at Guantánamo four years later.
The order sets the stage for a showdown between the CIA and a military judge, if the agency refuses to turn over the information to the prosecution for the defense teams. The order comes while the CIA fights a bitter, public battle with the Senate on its black site torture investigation.
The judge’s order instructs prosecutors to provide nine categories of closely guarded classified CIA information to the lawyers — including the names of agents, interrogators and medical personnel who worked at the so-called black sites. The order covers “locations, personnel and communications,” interrogation notes and cables between the black sites and headquarters that sought and approved so-called enhanced interrogation techniques, the two sources said. ...
“It’s a nuclear bomb that may shut down the case,” said one person who read the order and is not a part of the Cole case.
Torture program designer James Mitchell: 'I'm just a guy who got asked to do something for his country'
Dr James Elmer Mitchell has been called a war criminal and a torturer. He has been the subject of an ethics complaint, and his methods have been criticized in reports by two congressional committees and by the CIA's internal watchdog.
But the retired air force psychologist insists he is not the monster many have portrayed him to be.
"The narrative that's out there is, I walked up to the gate of the CIA, knocked on the door and said: 'Let me in, I want to torture people, and I can show you how to do it.' Or someone put out an ad on Craigslist that said, 'Wanted: psychologist who is willing to design torture program.' It's a lot more complicated than that," Mitchell told the Guardian in his first public comments since he was linked to the CIA's enhanced interrogation program seven years ago.
"I'm just a guy who got asked to do something for his country by people at the highest level of government, and I did the best that I could." ...
Mitchell spoke to the Guardian by phone from his home in Land O'Lakes, Florida for two hours last Friday – the "longest conversation I had with any reporter," he said. He mounted a full-throated defense of the Bush administration's counter-terrorism policies and attacked "partisan Democrats" for "throwing me under the bus" and "rewriting history."
A Conversation with Jeremy Scahill
US strike kills Australian and New Zealander in Yemen
The governments of Australia and New Zealand have confirmed the deaths of two men in a US strike in Yemen, which took place last November.
The two men, one Australian and one dual Australian-New Zealand citizen, were reportedly junior members of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and were believed to be in their 20s.
The Australian foreign minister and the New Zealand prime minister, John Key, confirmed the deaths.
The men were identified as Christopher Harvard, reportedly from Townsville in Queensland, north eastern Australia, and a dual-national who went by the name Muslim bin John. The New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs told the Bureau Bin John’s next of kin have been told of his death. ...
They were killed with up to three others on November 19 2013 in a US strike as they drove through the sparsely populated province of Hadramout in eastern Yemen. ... A report in The Australian quoted a senior counter-terrorism source who described them as ‘foot soldiers’. The source said: ‘The Americans advised us that they had intelligence that suggested they may have been in the car and may have been collateral damage.’
Gabriel García Márquez in His Own Words on Writing "100 Years of Solitude"
Gabriel García Márquez, Nobel laureate writer, dies aged 87
The Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez, who unleashed the worldwide boom in Spanish language literature and magical realism with his novel One Hundred Years of Solitude, died at the age of 87. He had been admitted to hospital in Mexico City on 3 April with pneumonia.
Matching commercial success with critical acclaim, García Márquez became a standard-bearer for Latin American letters, establishing a route for negotiations between guerillas and the Colombian government, building a friendship with Fidel Castro and maintaining a feud with fellow literature laureate Mario Vargas Llosa that lasted more than 30 years. ...
Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos said yesterday via Twitter: "A thousand years of solitude and sadness at the death of the greatest Colombian of all time. Solidarity and condolences to his wife and family ... Such giants never die." ...
Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto expressed sadness at the death of "one of the greatest writers of our time," in the name of Mexico, the novelist's adopted home. Chilean writer Luis Sepúlveda was quoted by the Mexican newspaper Reforma as saying that he was "the most important writer in Spanish of the 20th century", central to the Latin American literary boom that "revolutionised everything: the imagination, the way of telling a story, and the literary universe".
"He Gave Us Back Our History": Isabel Allende on Gabriel García Márquez
Heartbleed bug 'will cost millions'
Revoking all the SSL certificates leaked by the Heartbleed bug will cost millions of dollars, according to Cloudflare, which provides services to website hosts.
SSL, the technology used to secure much of the internet, relies on private keys that must be kept hidden, but the Heartbleed flaw allows an attacker to steal them by pummelling a server with carefully crafted requests.
Cloudflare initially speculated that such an attack was impossible on the type of web server they use, but after opening it up to the public to test, the firm was soon proved wrong. As a result, it has decided to revoke and reissue all SSL certificates for its customers – well over 100,000 of them. ...
In revoking their customers' SSL certificates, CloudFlare caused the size of the file which contains a list of all revoked certificates to grow by more than 200 times, from 22KB to 4.7MB, still held by CloudFlare's certificate authority Globalsign, which issues the certificates. That list has to be served to every single internet user, to ensure that their browsers know to reject stolen certificates.
As a result, Prince writes, "if you assume that the global average price for bandwidth is around $10/Mbps, just supporting the traffic to deliver the CRL would have added $400,000USD to Globalsign's monthly bandwidth bill … The total cost to Globalsign if they were using [Amazon's] infrastructure, would be at least $952,992.40/month"
Obama and his Cabinet
It seems that an important, unwritten story of the Obama years may be the shift of power away from the individual Cabinet agencies and into the White House — enabled by the lack of a real connection between the president and his Cabinet secretaries.
At least from the standpoint of watching how the Obama administration’s healthcare policies have developed and been implemented, the president’s Cabinet members do not seem to be lead players. In the diaries and meeting minutes that I have examined, covering the beginning of 2009 through the exhaustive negotiations with Congress in early 2010 to get Obamacare passed, Sebelius and her staff were largely second-tier players. Her staff occasionally contributed technical details and data related to proposed provisions in the law, but even that input was typically vetted through, or contradicted by, staffers at the White House or the Office of Management and Budget.
Once the law was passed, Obama’s White House staff continued to take the lead on everything from the timing and substance of the technical regulations necessary to implement the law, to decisions made over the past year extending deadlines or defining other details of Obamacare. ...
“Still awaiting talking points from WH on this,” was how one HHS spokesperson began an email to me mid-morning on October 1, 2013, when I inquired about the website’s quick crash. The same spokesperson hastened to remind me that “everything is on background,” because the White House had a policy of having people in the Cabinet agencies never talk for attribution about anything outside of prepared press statements.
Taking a close look at what life is like in the “coverage gap”
[T]here is a large group of Georgians—some 400,000 of them—who are left behind by healthcare reform. That’s more than twice the number of state residents who have signed up to purchase a policy through the new exchanges (about 177,000, through the middle of March).
The article, by reporter Misty Williams, is behind the AJC’s paywall. ... Williams opens with the predicament of 41-year-old Karen LaBar, a home care worker with no healthcare or doctor of her own and high blood pressure to treat—and an income too low to qualify for subsidies to buy a private insurance plan on the new exchange. Williams captures the inequity created the law’s design, the Supreme Court decision saying Medicaid expansion was optional, and the choice by leaders in Georgia not to expand:
A parent of three who makes $10,000 a year can’t get a tax credit. A single person who makes $46,000 a year can.
The people in the gap are young and old, healthy and ailing. They are parents and workers, black and white. They live in metro Atlanta and rural communities across Georgia. They put food on the table for their families and put off doctor visits for themselves.
The rest of the piece uses more mini-profiles to show those whom health reform has left behind. There’s Anthony Jenkins, who suffers from seizures and lost his last job because of them. He thinks a specialist would help him, but he hasn’t been able to see one in years. Jen Rafanan, a 38-year-old freelance graphics designer, hasn’t been to a doctor for two years. She makes less than $10,000 a year, and recalls waiting for hours to get 10 minutes with a doctor at a clinic for low-income patients. (Clinics may be inclined to put paying patients—including those with Medicaid cards—at the head of the queue.) Then there’s John David Vandiver, a 63-year-old self-employed laborer who hasn’t been able to work since a car accident last summer—and can’t afford care or insurance, either, until he becomes eligible for Medicare in a couple years. ...
Williams concludes the outlook is grim for Georgians stuck in the coverage gap, as it is for the poor in 25 other states not expanding whose legislative calendar is drawing to a close. “Politicians on both sides of he aisle—many facing re-election this year—aren’t champing at the bit to come up with alternatives to Medicaid expansion,” she reported.
The Evening Greens
Jared Diamond: We Could Be Living in a New Stone Age by 2114
In [Jared Diamond's view of human evolution as the third species of chimpanzee], the downstream consequences of language acquisition are, basically, everything that stands out about human civilization. That ranges from the highly beneficial—the dramatic growth in life expectancy—to the mixed: technologies that have significant benefits but also huge costs (like, say, devices to exploit fossil fuels for energy). And most of all, it includes environmental despoilment and resource depletion. "At present, we, humans, are operating worldwide on a non-sustainable economy," says Diamond. "We're exploiting resources, water, energy sources, fisheries, forests, at a rate such that most of these resources will get seriously depleted within a few decades."
As a result, Diamond believes that our big brains are now setting us up for a major fall—a Great Leap Backward, if you will. "We are now reversing our progress much more rapidly than we created it," writes Diamond in the new The Third Chimpanzee. "Our power threatens our own existence."
In our interview, host Indre Viskontas asked Diamond where he thought humanity would be 100 years from now. What's striking is that he wasn't positive that the modern world, as we know it, would be around at all. It all depends, he says, on where we are at 2050:
DIAMOND: Either by the year 2050 we've succeeded in developing a sustainable economy, in which case we can then ask your question about 100 years from now, because there will be 100 years from now; or by 2050 we've failed to develop a sustainable economy, which means that there will no longer be first world living conditions, and there either won't be humans 100 years from now, or those humans 100 years from now will have lifestyles similar of those of Cro-Magnons 40,000 years ago, because we've already stripped away the surface copper and the surface iron. If we knock ourselves out of the first world, we're not going to be able to rebuild a first world.
Old-school coal is making a comeback
Coal, the former king of American energy, is making a comeback after being left for dead in favor of cleaner-burning natural gas.
For years coal has been losing market share as the American fracking boom created a flood of cheap and abundant natural gas. But natural gas prices have edged upward, and the frigid winter created unprecedented energy demands. Power plants have increasingly been turning to coal as the solution.
There’s serious doubt whether the resurgence in coal can last in America with stricter environmental rules coming. But the global outlook for coal is bright, and U.S. coal producers hope to take advantage by increasing exports to other countries hungry for cheap energy. The International Energy Agency believes coal will be the No. 1 fuel for meeting the worldwide increase in energy demand.
“Like it or not, coal is here to stay for a long time to come,” IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven said in the agency’s most recent coal market report. “Coal is abundant and geopolitically secure, and coal-fired plants are easily integrated into existing power systems.”
Van der Hoeven added, though, that she wanted to emphasize that coal burning in its current form is “simply unsustainable” for the world’s climate.
In a blow to President Barack Obama’s pledge to be a leader in the fight against global warming, American carbon dioxide emissions rose an estimated 2 percent last year _ after falling by 12 percent over the previous seven years. The federal Energy Information Administration attributes the rise in U.S. carbon dioxide emissions largely to the country using more coal than it used to.
BP manager allegedly learned scale of spill, dumped stock
Federal securities investigators say that the man that BP initially put in charge of cleaning up the oil from its massive 2010 Macondo well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico used nonpublic information to safely dump $1 million of his family’s company stock before the share price nosedived.
In a federal court suit filed in U.S. District Court in New Orleans, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged Keith A. Seilhan, 47, of Tomball, Texas, with insider trading. Without admitting or denying the allegations, Seilhan agreed to settle the charges for the negotiated sum of $223,000, including $105,409 in civil penalties. He is no longer with the company. ...
The SEC’s suit alleges that on April 29, BP was publicly estimating that the oil was gushing from the well at the rate of up to 5,000 barrels per day, as it reported to the SEC.
The actual flow rate was later estimated to be between 52,700 and 62,200 barrels per day, news that helped send the company’s share prices plunging from over $52 to close as low as $26.83, trading records show.
But Seilhan and his family didn’t suffer the consequences.
“Seilhan received material, nonpublic information indicating that the magnitude of the oil spill, and in turn BP’s potential liability and financial exposure, was likely greater” than what the company was stating publicly, the suit alleges. He was privy to worst-case company estimates on April 22, 2010 that the spill rate could range as high as 64,000 to 110,000 barrels per day and an array of other data showing the breadth of the disaster, the suit said.
On April 29 and 30, the suit alleges, Seilhan sold his family’s retirement accounts in the BP Stock Fund, which consisted “almost entirely” of BP American Depository Shares. In doing so, he exercised three sets of options and immediately sold the underlying shares.
Third Report in Three Days Shows Scale of Fracking Perils
The fracking industry is having a bad week.
In the third asssessment in as many days focused on the pollution created by the booming industry, a group of researchers said Wednesday that the controversial oil and gas drilling practice known as fracking likely produces public health risks and "elevated levels of toxic compounds in the environment" in nearly all stages of the process.
The latest research, conducted by the Physicians Scientists & Engineers for Healthy Energy, compiled "the first systematic literature review" of peer-reviewed studies on the effects of fracking on public health and found the majority of research points to dangerous risks to public health, with many opportunities for toxic exposure.
“It’s clear that the closer you are [to a fracking site], the more elevated your risk,” said lead author Seth Shonkoff, from the University of California-Berkeley. “We can conclude that this process has not been shown to be safe.”
According to the "near exhaustive review" of fracking research, environmental pollution is found "in a number of places and through multiple processes in the lifecycle of shale gas development," the report states. "These sources include the shale gas production and processing activities (i.e., drilling, hydraulic fracturing, hydrocarbon processing and production, wastewater disposal phases of development); the transmission and distribution of the gas to market (i.e., in transmission lines and distribution pipes); and the transportation of water, sand, chemicals, and wastewater before, during, and after hydraulic fracturing."
Blog Posts of Interest
Here are diaries and selected blog posts of interest on DailyKos and other blogs.
What's Happenin' Is On Hiatus
Putin insists Russia wants to repair US relations – but ill will for Obama is clear
Snowden: Vladimir Putin must be called to account on surveillance just like Obama
More From Ex-SEC Lawyer James Kidney on the Agency’s Failing
Illinois Transwoman Refused Medical Care Because Religious Freedom
A Little Night Music
Lonesome Sundown - My home is a prison
Lonesome Sundown - I'm A Mojo Man
Lonesome Sundown - One More Night
Lonesome Sundown - Gonna stick to you baby
Lonesome Sundown - I Had A Dream Last Night
Lonesome Sundown - Lost Without Love
Lonesome Sundown - Lonesome whistler
Lonesome Sundown - Leave My Money Alone
Lonesome Sundown - Learn To Treat Me Better
Lonesome Sundown - Don´t Say a Word
Lonesome Sundown Just Got To Know
Lonesome Sundown - I'm a sampling man
Lonesome Sundown - You Don't Miss Your Water
Lonesome Sundown - I'm Gonna Cut Out On You
Lonesome Sundown - I'm A Young Man
Scottie Milford and Lonesome Sundown - Shame Shame On You Baby
Lonesome Sundown - I Wanta Know Why
Lonesome Sundown - No Use To Worry
Lonesome Sundown - Black Cat Bone
It's National Pie Day!
The election is over, it's a new year and it's time to work on real change in new ways... and it's National Pie Day. This seemed like the perfect opportunity to tell you a little more about our new site and to start getting people signed up.
Come on over and sign up so that we can send you announcements about the site, the launch, and information about participating in our public beta testing.
Why is National Pie Day the perfect opportunity to tell you more about us? Well you'll see why very soon. So what are you waiting for?! Head on over now and be one of the first!
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