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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

Archive | February, 2011

Nir Rosen No Longer Deserves his NYU Fellowship

UPDATE: Nir Rosen has submitted his resignation and the NYU Center of Law & Security has accepted it. Emphasis original.

From Karen J. Greenberg, Executive Director, Center on Law and Security

Nir Rosen is always provocative, but he crossed the line yesterday with his comments about Lara Logan. I am deeply distressed by what he wrote about Ms. Logan and strongly denounce his comments. They were cruel and insensitive and completely unacceptable. Mr. Rosen tells me that he misunderstood the severity of the attack on her in Cairo. He has apologized, withdrawn his remarks, and submitted his resignation as a fellow, which I have accepted. However, this in no way compensates for the harm his comments have inflicted. We are all horrified by what happened to Ms. Logan, and our thoughts are with her during this difficult time.

Original post follows…


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“Jesus Christ, at a moment when she is going to become a martyr and glorified we should at least remember her role as a major war monger” wrote Rosen. – Daily Caller

From Daily Caller we get a sampling of Nir Rosen’s Tweets about Laura Logan, after it was reported she’d been sexually assaulted. Not to put too fine a point on it, but what Rosen wrote was far worse than “trashing” her.

Rosen’s online resume states he’s a fellow at the New America Foundation, but calling them they said he hadn’t been a fellow for “a long time.” However, Rosen is a fellow at New York University Center on Law and Security, which I called for comment. They are overwhelmed and have been inundated with calls and will have a statement within the hour on “what they’re going to do about the situation,” according to the person I spoke to on the phone, a young woman, Sarvenaz Bakhtiar. It will eventually appear on their blog as well.

From Daily Caller:




Feminist bloggers rightly rant about the nonchalant mentality of some about violence against women. They often write that Americans do not take attacks nearly serious enough. We got a load of Republican ignorance when they tried to rewrite the rules on rape and unwanted pregnancy, by taking a woman’s freedom away from her in favor of intrusive anti-privacy laws.

That an American male, let alone a supposed liberal, would say such things about Logan out of political hatred is unconscionable and inhumane.

Political differences about war and peace should never give way to such callous disregard for a foreign correspondent who was sexually assaulted for a prolonged period of time.

At least Rosen had the decency to flee Twitter.

His statement to the Hollywood Reporter comes as the crescendo builds and his reputation and career lie around his feet.

“I am deeply ashamed because they do not represent who I am,” Nir Rosen, who has written for the New York Times and New Yorker and contributed to an Oscar-nominated documentary, tells THR.

Rosen should be ashamed, he should also lose his New York University Center on Law and Security fellowship.

Please take a moment to email New York University Center on Law and Security (cls@exchange.law.nyu.edu) or call 212-992-8854 to express your outrage.

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The Egyptian Dawning

… In the crush of the mob, she was separated from her crew. She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers. … – CBS News

News that Lara Logan experienced a “sustained sexual assault and beating” is harrowing in the extreme, though unsurprising given the violence many journalists experienced in Egypt during the revolution that ousted Mubarak, through state thugs and their allies. What journalists like Logan did during Egypt’s revolution is the stuff of 21st century foreign correspondent, and “Movietone News” reels.

As an aside, let’s bring those back before movies in theaters, instead of having to watch the ad nauseam bad TV promos. Maybe then more people would begin to grasp the depth of what happened in Egypt, which is just now beginning, and that it all matters to us, which will develop before our eyes.

There’s been a lot of rumination about what’s next and that it may be the same or worse than what it was under Mubarak (see sunlight’s excellent diary). This really misses the essential point and purpose of what the protesters were doing and the journey they’re now on, though that sounds like I understand what they’re going through, which would be supremely arrogant. It’s just it seemed obvious that this was about breaking free of their current bondage, not the bondage they may face afterward. It’s been so bad for Egyptians that anything was better than their current situation. Bottom line. To risk your life, literally, means your immediate circumstance are untenable. Period.

Egyptians, with the youth movement in the lead, wanted an end to the regime. They respect the military while fearing the state police. That’s the experience under Mubarak, but with him gone and the military in charge a new reality sets in and the education of the people of their own reality begins.

Lara Logan in an interview before Mubarak fell, with Esquire magazine’s Politics blog:

What don’t we know? What doesn’t the world understand about this situation that isn’t being articulated in the news right now?

Before we can finish the question, Logan fires back: “The army as an institution is not on the peoples’ side. The army is on its own side. They want to be with the winners. That’s who they’re going to stand with. If it looks like it’s going to be the people, they’re with the people. If it looks like it’s going to be Mubarak, they’re with Mubarak.” That can get ugly, quickly. “Oh, it can. There could be a military coup on the way and we don’t even know it at this point. The army’s playing to win.”

Freedom isn’t democracy, far from it.

Freedom is the cry for liberation from bondage, with democracy the ultimate level of sophistication through which governance can eventually deliver equality, peace and security from tyranny.

Democracy takes institutions and participation from all quarters of the population and ruling parties, which in Egypt means the military.

There was never any chance that from a military enforced dictatorship the Egyptian people were going to jump to democracy the next moment. ElBaradei thought it would take a year to get elections so that new political parties could be formed and participate. They’re encouraging parties to be formed, with the Muslim Brotherhood organizing, though not presenting a candidate this time for the elections.

No one knows what the Muslim Brotherhood’s role will eventually play out to be. As Mona Eltahawy tweeted today, they’re “no friend 2 women and women,” something anyone who studies the Middle East didn’t have to be told. But you didn’t hear Ms. Eltahawy saying they should be excluded from the political process or because of their presence that the revolution shouldn’t have happened.

A Pakistani tweeted Eltahawy: Never trust the military! Ask us, Pakistanis. Their ‘protection’ has led us into an abyss. Egypt must continue its struggle!

The ruling class of military has been handsomely paid to guarantee Egypt’s cooperation and calm, $1.3 billion from the U.S. alone. A man is seldom separated from his power without a fight; an army of men never.

The Egyptian people still have to digest their new world, which will be difficult to swallow, as questions of Why did we revolt? dawning when they see there’s much more work to be done before they rest.

Removing Mubarak was the beginning of something and no one knows what will follow.

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Panel of Three Women to Judge Berlusconi in Under-Age Prostitution Trial



Enough with the “bunga bunga!” You’re indicted.

This is just to deliciously karmic. From Bloomberg:

Giulia Turri, Orsola De Cristoforo and Carmen D’Elia were named today as the judges who will preside over the April 6 trial in Milan. Turri, for one, is no stranger to tough cases. In 2009, she presided over a trial in which two managers at Google Inc. were acquitted of tax-evasion charges. Last July, she ordered house arrests as part of a high-profile investigation into cocaine use and trafficking at some of Milan’s most fashionable night clubs.

“In the court we have wonderful judges and most of them are women,” Giuseppe Vaciago, an independent criminal lawyer in Milan, said in a telephone interview. “So this is not so strange, but it is a bit ironic.”

The trial will probe Berlusconi’s relationship with Karima El Mahroug, a Moroccan nightclub performer nicknamed Ruby Heart Stealer who attended a party at his Milan mansion last February when she was 17. The abuse-of-power charge stems from his role in helping secure El Mahroug’s release from police custody in Milan after her detention in May on unrelated theft charges.

Two days ago, hundreds of thousands of women took to the streets across Italy to protest Berlusconi’s behavior and demand better treatment for women. The female-led protest was sparked by the investigation into whether Berlusconi paid El Mahroug for sex and abused his power in trying to cover it up.

It’s a powerful signal to a stupid man who thought he was still living in the 20th century. More from the New York Times.

A Milan judge on Tuesday ordered Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to stand trial in April on charges of paying an underage nightclub dancer for sex and of abusing his office to help release her from police custody when she was detained for theft.

The trial is expected to begin April 6, according to a statement released by the judge.

Mr. Berlusconi denies wrongdoing. After the ruling on Tuesday he did not appear at a scheduled news conference in Sicily, where Italy is seeking to stem a flow of more than 5,000 illegal immigrants from Tunisia.

Berlusconi’s ex-wife says Silvio has a “sickness” for “hanging out with underage girls.”

You can call it a “sickness” or even a fetish, but men who like young girls rarely get over it. It’s an obsession that society used to ignore. That Berlusconi was so reckless with his predilection doesn’t surprise me, with his denials the usual response until the humiliation is delivered through evidence.

That said, using the word “underage” for a nightclub dancer who obviously is no longer innocent is one of the problems with how we police and adjudicate sex crimes. Young women are sexualized much earlier than ever before in modern society. It’s a lot more complicated than drawing a line at eighteen, which is what Berlusconi is counting on.

As for the abuse of office charge in getting her off a petty crime beef, Mr. Berlusconi’s simply got a big heart, right?

The coverage in The Star is priceless (h/t Joe Gandelman):

Basta the bunga bunga.

One needn’t be bilingual to get the drift. It’s Italianese: Enough with the orgies, the Lolita prostitutes and the old satyr rutting.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has been notoriously leading with his Johnson — Giovanni? — for years, growing increasingly sybaritic and scandalizing as he approaches his 75th birthday, unapologetic and defiant and counter-thrusting as always.

“Bunga bunga’’ has entered the Italian lexicon as slang to describe Berlusconi’s debauchery, shouted in war-type by those newspapers that aren’t part of the premier’s vast, privately owned media empire. But where Egypt’s youth-led revolt succeeded in bringing down a dictator, the democracy that is Italy appears incapable of rousting this aging creep.

Libidinous debauchery has always been a part of Berlusconi’s biography. The trial is certain to make it an official part of Italy’s history.

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Sect. Clinton’s Speech on Internet Freedom

**UPDATED**

In an awkward bit of timing, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is to deliver a major speech on Internet freedom in Washington on Tuesday just hours after Justice Department lawyers are scheduled to be in federal court a few miles away in the first public courtroom showdown over the probe into WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. Prosecutors are expected to urge a federal magistrate in Alexandria, Va., to uphold a court order requiring Twitter to turn over confidential information about the use of its services by three WikiLeaks supporters. … – U.S weaves tangled Web policy

Sect. Clinton’s speech on Internet Freedom is streamed live here, as well as on Facebook where you can leave comments.

Clinton begins with Egypt… .. as she began commotion was heard from someone protesting, but he was quickly taken out, a door slammed behind him.

Twenty minutes into her speech, Sect. Clinton addressed Wikileaks. It began “with a theft.” Makes a case for secrecy in diplomatic efforts, again disagreeing with transparency. Talked about Wikileaks exposing people to even greater risks, but does acknowledge there is a “duty” to transparency, be “judicious” when closing off access to information. Clinton still making the case that Wikileaks did endanger diplomatic work, while also saying the Universal Declaration of Human Rights protects the freedom of expression for all.

To add, Clinton’s emphasis on “theft” of Wikileaks is not a coincidence. As I said in the comments, it smacked of DOJ implications when she went out of her way in this section of the speech. As the POLITICO story now linked at the top reveals, DOJ today attempted to press their Twitter case re: Julian Assange and Wikileaks, just before Clinton spoke. Assange is livid at the pressure, which the POLITICO piece covers as well.

Clinton continued on saying the antidote to hate speech is more speech. Internet freedom and staying “one step ahead from the censors,” is now part of our diplomatic mission. There is “no silver bullet” against Internet oppression. “Start working,” Clinton encourage, which was greeted with chuckles. “We are taking an investor capital type of approach,” with investment in cutting edge technologies.

In a media blitz, yesterday Sect. Clinton had interviews with Abderrahim Foukara of Al Jazeera; Hisham Melhem of Al Arabiya; and Michel Ghandour of Al Hurra.

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Progressive Notes: I Have Crohn’s. Help Stop the GOP from Killing the Cure.

Texan4Hillary offers his perspective as a movement progressive activist.

The Right wing is as stone cold as you can get. No more hiding behind compassionate conservatism. These people are cruel. The budget cuts they are pushing would cripple key agencies and ruin millions of lives. Case in point: I suffer from Crohn’s disease, a condition where your immune system attacks your intestine tract causing all kinds of pain and grief. It can be debilitating and highly destructive to your life.

Boehner’s 2011 budget slashes funding essential to finding the cure for Inflammatory Bowel Disease. A million Americans suffer with it every day of their lives.

Here is the press release from the Crohn’s Colitis Foundation on the damage from these cuts and a link for you to tell your Congressfolk to reject such cuts.

IBD Funding In Jeopardy
Urge Your Legislator to Vote “No” on FY11 Appropriation Funding

The House of Representatives is scheduled to vote this week on its version of the appropriations bill to fund the federal government for the remainder of fiscal year 2011.

Please contact your member of the House of Representatives immediately and urge him/her to vote NO on this radical plan, which cuts $100 billion from discretionary programs.

The proposed legislation would dramatically reduce spending for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and other agencies of the Public Health Service. Specifically, the bill would:

Reduce NIH’s budget by more than $1 billion, stifling research on inflammatory bowel diseases.
Eliminate the $686,000 Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Epidemiology Program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

President Obama opposes cuts to these research programs. The NIH grants are critical to finding cures to so many diseases like cancer, diabetes, Crohn’s and much more. Obama has smartly drawn a big difference with t he GOP for once by proposing raising investment in NIH research considerably:

The White House wants an extra $1 billion for the National Institutes of Health as House Republicans are targeting the biomedical research agency for cuts in their new spending bill.

The Obama administration is seeking $32.3 billion for the NIH in fiscal 2012, up from the $31.3 billion currently funding the organization. The request comes just days after House Republicans proposed slashing $1 billion from the center in a seven-month continuing resolution to keep the government running past March 4.

The Obama budget invests in fighting disease like never before while the GOP aims to dismantle the NIH, FDA, community health centers. A contrast on this issue will be the central public policy fight for the White House and for once progressives as well. Other parts of his budget are abhorrent and progressives will fight, but they will join him on this issue.

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Pres. Obama: ‘I think history will end up… in the situation in Egypt we were on the right side of history.’

NBC’s Chuck Todd got under Pres. Obama’s skin when he asked “What was the point of the fiscal commission…?” Obama was visibly annoyed: “Still provides a framework for a conversation… You guys are pretty impatient.”

“I definitely feel folks pain,” Obama said in response to tough budget cuts. “It’s frustrating.”

On Egypt:

“… I think history will end up that at every juncture in the situation in Egypt that we were on the right side of history. What we didn’t do was pretend that we could dictate the outcome in Egypt, because we can’t. So we were very mindful it was important for this to remain a Egyptian event. That the United States did not become the issue, but that we sent out a very clear message that we believed in an orderly transition, a meaningful transition, and a transition that needed to happen not later, but sooner. And we were consistent with that message throughout. …” – Pres. Barack Obama

Minefield alert: “… particularly if you look at my statements. I started talking about reform 2 weeks or two and one-half weeks before Mr. Mubarak ultimately stepped down, and at each juncture I think we calibrated it about right. … …in a complicated situation we got it about right.”

I guess that’s true if you ignore Sect. Clinton’s “stable” comment, as well as V.P. Biden’s embarrassing PBS interview, with Pres. Obama himself moving very slowly towards freedom breaking out, with the real crux being that few others could have been prepared due to longstanding U.S. policy.

However, let’s also remember that Pres. Obama continues rendition to places like Egypt as he speaks.

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When Obama Loyalists Blow

A former community organizer in Chicago, Obama proposed a 50-percent cut to a $700-million community-service block grant program. A former lawyer who touted his work to improve living conditions for the poor, Obama proposed a sharp cut in energy assistance for low-income families. A graduate-school alumnus who only recently, and quite publicly, was able to pay off his debts, Obama proposed refiguring loan programs so that students would accrue interest even while they’re enrolled. – Sam Stein

Barack Obama still hasn’t learned you get no credit for cutting off your own. As a nod to the Republicans, he’s making a statement. Trust me, they could not care less.

Andrew Sullivan is not pleased with Pres. Obama’s budget, his caterwauling proving my point. After weeks away due to ill health, he’s back and begins by unloading on Obama:

They have to lead, because this president is too weak, too cautious, too beholden to politics over policy to lead. In this budget, in his refusal to do anything concrete to tackle the looming entitlement debt, in his failure to address the generational injustice, in his blithe indifference to the increasing danger of default, he has betrayed those of us who took him to be a serious president prepared to put the good of the country before his short term political interests. Like his State of the Union, this budget is good short term politics but such a massive pile of fiscal bullshit it makes it perfectly clear that Obama is kicking this vital issue down the road.

To all those under 30 who worked so hard to get this man elected, know this: he just screwed you over. He thinks you’re fools. Either the US will go into default because of Obama’s cowardice, or you will be paying far far more for far far less because this president has no courage when it counts. He let you down. On the critical issue of America’s fiscal crisis, he represents no hope and no change. Just the same old Washington politics he once promised to end.

The light has finally dawned. “Hope” and “change” were marketing messaging. Ah, got it. Mr. Sullivan is actually channeling his own grief even if he’s well beyond the under 30 crowd. It has him looking to Mitch Daniels for fiscal salvation, who just had a rhetorical collision with Rush Limbaugh.

Pres. Obama is just another elite corporate politician doing what every other president would do in order to live to fight another day. He’s going to let the opposition propose the devastating cuts to people’s favorite programs, while preemptively cutting some of his own to have as a talking point.

POLITICO proves why Obama did what he did. The first ones up on their “loser” list is “the liberal base.”

Pres. Obama cannot be taken seriously on anything having to do with fiscal reality, because his craven political cowardice pushed him to sign on to extending tax cuts for the top 2% in December, which any sane person would know is going to make the deficit worse not better, while not solving anything. The Wall Street Journal laid the budget out on Monday. Both parties are laser focused on discretionary programs, while placing their fingers in their ears and singing La La La La La on entitlement challenges.

It’s all so predictably absurd; politics as usual on steroids.

Everyone is running around saying how hard this is, but only because these knuckleheads are making it more difficult than it is.

Yes, I know, it’s argued that Obama couldn’t have gotten anything more. I don’t really want to revisit all of that; my point here is simply that everyone is drawing the wrong lesson. Fiscal policy didn’t fail; it wasn’t tried. – Paul Krugman

Raise the fricking cap on Social Security taxed income; $106,000 in today’s world of super wealthy makes no sense. That would be enough. But taxes should also be realigned so that multi-millionaires have a higher bracket, with the super wealthy another one above it. Then get out of Iraq, and immediately bring troops home from areas where we no longer need to be, which includes Afghanistan, because a 2014 date is patently absurd.

Pres. Obama was never going to stand up against his base on entitlements in this budget, particularly on Social Security. He wouldn’t get reelected if he did.

It does no good for Obama to keep Mr. Sullivan if he loses his base. The changes to Social Security are much more likely to come in Obama’s second term, which has always been the play, even if raising the cap would solve a lot more problems than tinkering with the model would make. Once you open that door it stays open.

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Egyptian Revolution Inspired by Liberalism

“He gave me a lesson in democracy and said: ‘We see the democracy the United States spearheaded in Iran and with Hamas, in Gaza, and that’s the fate of the Middle East,’” Ben-Eliezer said. “‘They may be talking about democracy but they don’t know what they’re talking about and the result will be extremism and radical Islam,’” he quoted Mubarak as saying. — Mubarak slammed U.S. in phone call with Israeli MK before resignation

Conservatism didn’t inspire the Egyptian people, it was liberalism.

Control is the central tenet of conservatism. That’s what the Egyptian people were fighting against, the control of the regime in all facets of their lives.

Control is also what 20th century leaders and thinkers desperately try to hold on to in the wake of a multi-platform media explosion, which obliterates the notion you can control anything anymore.

What Mubarak warns against may happen, but eventually liberalism will win there too, even if in the confines of a religious society, a conservative construct forwarded from ancient times.

Algeria is shutting down the internet and Facebook as protests mount.

Freedom cannot be stopped. It can only be delayed.

Liberalism is what broke out in Iran during the Green uprising.

Liberalism is what kept France from accepting the burqa.

Liberalism is what sparked the uprising in Tunisia. The basic human desire to live life freely is something worth dying for, because without freedom there is no essential life.

Liberalism is what inspired Egyptians to rise up to demand freedom.

In fact, freedom itself is a liberal notion.

Women in the Mideast demanding respect are invoking liberalism, while the conservatives who prop up old rules want to inhibit their freedoms.

Gays fighting to stay alive in Muslim countries are fighting conservatism. In America, they’re fighting for the basic equality of life, which conservatives believe should be denied.

Women in America are fighting to be as free as men.

Conservatives and leading Republicans like Sarah Palin are fighting to stop that basic human right from manifesting against the basic principles of the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights.

Conservatives in both political parties have made religion more important than the individual life being lived. Religion itself a conservative notion, which aims to control, unless you get beyond the organized into the self-spiritualized experience, which conservative society mocks.

Wherever liberalism is missing there is angst, anger and unrest.

Liberalism reaches out in support of our fellow man and woman, while conservatism demands up from your own boot straps mentality in a system rigged against the poor.

The Taliban and the Islamic extremists we’re fighting are all conservatives. Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria and many other countries are all conservative nations fighting against the freedom of people.

Conservatives, in whatever party they serve, wanted to gain control of Iraq, so they voted for preemptive war.

Conservatives wanted to control Palestinians, so they forced an election that delivered Hamas.

Conservatism is dry, infertile, cruel and deadly. It is about control and order versus freedom.

Liberalism is ripe, generous, infinite and hopeful. It is fundamentally uncontrollable, which is why people fear it. Like freedom itself, it is inexhaustible.

Everywhere in the world where people are rising up on the cry of freedom it’s because of liberalism.

Conservatism is bondage to rules, which in our country is well represented in Strom Thurmond, as well as Trent Lott, who bolted the Democratic Party to eventually form the Republican Party’s Southern wing, because they couldn’t stomach integration that was being heralded by the new liberalism of the ’60s.

Conservatism shuts off, where liberalism opens up.

Imagine if Iran’s mullahs were liberal.

Imagine if PM Netanyahu was a liberal.

Imagine if Democrats who voted for the Iraq war were guided by liberalism instead of 20th century conservative militarism.

When a small group of freshman Republicans voted against several tenets of the Patriot Act recently, they were joining liberals at a point of common ground, bipartisanship meeting organically. Liberals believing that government has no right to infringe on personal privacy without reason, with a few new conservatives agreeing because they think government’s role should be restricted so that it doesn’t impede on the individual.

Could this finally be a place to reboot, a new political beginning?

Then the Republican establishment rose up, including Rush Limbaugh, to say these conservative freshman were misinformed. The Right’s elite stepping in to curtail the freshman’s freedom to vote in favor of the people over government intervention. Their basic reasoning being that there is much to fear in the world, which makes impeding the American citizen’s freedoms worthwhile. Republican conservatism once again robbing people out of fear, which they also utilize on immigration.

“Compassionate conservatism” is finally understood to be the oxymoron it always was.

Pres. Obama is the latest elite politician to err on the side of conservatism over liberalism under his fear and ignorance moored to marketing more than truth. Because without liberalism Barack Obama would not be president. His conservatism evident amidst the Egyptian revolution, because he didn’t trust the Egyptian people’s freedom cry and know instinctively that they were in the right, no matter the outcome.

The Iranian Green uprising teaching a lesson Pres. Obama and his administration didn’t learn. The thirst for freedom will eventually win out.

If Barack Obama trusted liberalism, which he never has, he would have known what to do on Egypt from the start. If Sect. Clinton had trusted liberalism she would never have uttered that Mubarak’s government was “stable.” And V.P. Joe Biden would never have embarrassed himself by stating Mubarak shouldn’t step down or that he wasn’t a dictator. In the Administration’s struggles to get Egypt right the answer was always right in front of them, but they simply couldn’t see it and definitely didn’t trust it. It’s not just their failure, however, it’s the failure of a world coming out of the 20th century where control was policy.

Freedom cannot flourish in the confines of conservatism.

When Ronald Reagan shouted to Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall,” it was a liberal demand.

When a conservative is crying out for freedom’s justice he’s simply pleading for a release from bondage that conservatism itself has imposed.

There’s no denying it.

Wherever freedom is breaking out, demanded or being defended, liberalism is at its heart.

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Sunday Early Bird News Round-Up: The Freedom Edition

Good morning and welcome to Sunday.

On this day in history, February 15,1542, the fifth wife of England’s King Henry VIII, Catherine Howard, was executed for adultery.

I’ve rounded up some links for you to peruse:

~The Palestinian Authority has announced it will hold elections in September. Hamas is saying it won’t take part. In other news, Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat has resigned after an investigation found that the Palestine Papers were leaked by someone in his office.

~Former Israeli negotiator and Mideast expert Daniel Levy has an optimistic take on future of Egyptian-Israeli ties, believing that democracy in Egypt could result in a positive change in the status quo that makes it more likely that Israel and the Palestinians will move forward on a peace deal because it will be in Israel’s interest to do so. The days of Egypt providing a stamp of Arab legitimacy on the never-ending conflict will likely be over, forcing all sides to start to accept that time is not on their side. On the other side of the coin, Helena Cobban thinks Daniel has some good ideas, but it’s too little, too late.

~Boy, the U.S. sure knows how to apply pressure on an ally when it wants to- the operative word being want.

~Rachel Maddow calls out some on the political right for siding with Mubarak, over, you know, the pro-democracy protesters.

~Today, tensions in Egypt are bubbling to the surface as the military clears protesters from Tahrir Square. The military has sent the message, apparently, that there are limits to what kind of change they are willing to enact. And herein lies the rub- this was a coup, albeit a peaceful one, and there are many that are worried that the military is not going to be willing to give up the power and privilege that they have enjoyed for so long.

~I’m kind of getting sick of Arianna Huffington.

~The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has plans to discredit liberal bloggers and union organizers according to leaked documents. Here’s the thing, besides getting next to no media attention, some of the strategies sound out-right illegal. More proof that there are different sets of rules for the elite ruling class- no ethics, no accountability and no punishment. Ever.

~Speaking of corporate shenanigans- Bank of America’s war against WikiLeaks just hit a really big snag, while dragging several prominent intelligence companies and law firms through the mud with them. There’s a lot of MSM radio silence on this story as well.

~The NYT has an interesting article (which looks a lot like a planted article from the White House) about how some of the mixed messaging from the administration was a result of a difference in viewpoints about whether to privilege stability over a quick Mubarak exit. This tension clearly illustrates the difference between the status-quo-maintaining old guard of the foreign policy establishment and a new guard that seems to understand that the U.S. needs to start to accept that it’s leverage in the Middle East is not what it used to be and that our foreign policy needs to change to reflect that reality. In this information age, the chasm between our words and our deeds are amplified in a way they never were before and the protesters in Cairo were quick to point out U.S. hypocrisy.

~Speaking of which, Nick Kristoff is again a voice of reason, calling out the U.S. for using lazy, fear-mongering stereotypes of all Arabs as an excuse to prop up dictators under the false flag of stability.

~Fox News insider admits that the “news” network just makes stuff up to undermine democrats.

~Fox News had a “Breaking News” interruption for this Sarah Palin tweet on Egypt:

~Ron Paul wins the CPAC poll for like the millionth time which means he’ll never be Preznit!

~Speaking of CPAC, it’s no surprise that many used the events in Egypt to slam Islam. I think they were watching a different Egyptian revolution than the rest of us were. One thing was very clear at CPAC, other than fear-mongering about Islam, foreign policy is not their strong suit. They’re going to need to brush up on that because they are not ready for prime time.

~While our attention was diverted elsewhere, another U.S. ally, China, has detained and beaten a prominent activist and his wife after he released a video detailing his treatment.

~Democrats are thinking ahead to the Arizona Senate race and floating the idea that Gabrielle Giffords might be the perfect candidate.

~Good riddance Robert Gibbs.

~The GOP is proposing massive cuts to the State Dept. and UN because, you know, who needs all that silly democracy-promoting nonsense? We need more advanced weapons systems!

~Ok, this is the coolest thing ever. Kovas Boguta has done a computational history of how Twitter users in Egypt influenced each other based on their “follows.” If you click on the photo (you may have to do that twice- I did it and it did work) you will be taken to a larger image and you can zoom in to see the influence that certain Arabic and English-speaking Twitter users had related to Egypt (and definitely go check out his site at the above link for more explanation):

The End.

[cross-posted at Secretary Clinton Blog]

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Huffington Post Catches ‘No Labels’ Fever

**UPDATED**
Bumped from Friday night (2.11 – 6:30 pm).

But — and here comes a major but — ditching the bogus left-right frame is not about moving reflexively to the center. It is rather a rejection of the very concept that left, right and center are a good way to map the crucial debates of the day.Peter Goodman

Howard Fineman was the tell, but damn this was quick.

Arianna calls it her “last act.” The AOL buy makes her the Oprah of new media. Good for her. It’s nice to see a woman cashing in for a change.

HuffPost readers called it something else. From the Daily Beast:

So how did these users, collectively, feel about the deal? Pretty lousy, it turns out. The Daily Beast took the temperature of The Huffington Post community by wading through those comments, and randomly selecting 500 that expressed a clear opinion for or against the sale, taking care to avoid counting repeat commenters and also pulling data from all times of the day. From this large sample, a whopping 81 percent (405) opposed the acquisition in terms that ranged from confused to pessimistic to, most frequently, downright livid. Only 19 percent (95) were optimistic, though many of those were far closer to neutral.

Dana Milbank asked a couple of days ago: Did Arianna just sell out her fellow progressives?

Considering I never believed Ms. Huffington was a progressive, obviously I didn’t think so, but there are those who think she did. Talking about the middle class collapse and Wall Street robbers while not paying blogger reporters on the beat, of which I am not one, isn’t exactly progressive. What Arianna is above all things is a business woman who saw a trend and tapped the people to help her ride it. She was a Newt Gingrich booster back in the ’90s when he was cool, and wanted Bill Clinton to resign when the Right was coming for his head, and when Obama strode on the scene as the cool cat, with Hillary running against him, she did her best to bring her down.

Now people think centrism and “no labels” are in, so that’s the next rainbow to harness, according to the AOL culture, which is about as hip as “no labels.”

I actually hadn’t much interest in weighing in on the whole thing, but then Peter Goodman posted and the bait was simply too good to resist, because what he was writing was completely different to what Huffington Post had always been about. Just look at the cover of her book on blogging. A bunch of leftys helped her sell it.

You can change the road you’ve been traveling, just don’t try to sell people you aren’t, especially when they’ve been on the journey with you from the start.

The Huffington Post being acquired by AOL brought into the light the unpaid contributor role dozens of us have played over the years, myself included. The Huffington Post has been around for 6 years and I’ve been writing over there for 5. Lately things have begun to change. Their editing and posting procedures for guest contributors like myself has entered into the haphazard, leaning into complete disarray, showing disrespect of the contributor’s time and energy. There is no rhythm or timing about posts, they have to be reminded that one has been submitted, they post forgotten entries on same days as new posts arrive. They’re obviously overwhelmed, but also have slid into amateurism on the editorial side where guest contributors are concerned. It’s become a pain in the ass to post over there anymore and since you never know when your contribution is going up or if it will, all interaction with readers is cut off. That’s no good if you like talking to HuffPost readers, which I do, though I’m a minority. But back when it was good it was terrific.

It’s Ms. Huffington’s choice whom she pays and does not, with unpaid contributors having a choice to post or not. There isn’t one writer who didn’t know the drill when they signed on and as far as I am concerned I got more than some $100 fee out of writing over there, even if I did it only sporadically, because I simply didn’t have the time. That I’ve been ahead of every political curve since Obama and Sarah Palin and the Tea Party came on the scene on every editorial I’ve written speaks for itself.

The Huffington Post regularly featured my columns and promoted them, many times to the frontpage, but always on their politics page; especially liking my writings on Sarah Palin, but also Nancy Pelosi when she sold women out on health care, and on Afghanistan after McChrystal’s implosion, when I pulled my support for what was happening, because the general’s career ending rant exposed more than a bad policy. I have no complaints, because what I wrote got seen, because what I wrote brought eyes to the page, even if something other than politics is driving the traffic. I started on the web in ’96, so I know how this works. When I called HuffPost out for their embarrassing headline after Pres. Clinton came back from North Korea, they let it stand, though they didn’t feature it. It went viral anyway. And when I criticized “The Sopranos” ending, David Chase was so pissed off he sent me a letter, which I framed, and the entire series to me via Federal Express, becoming the classiest f-you I’ve ever received.

However, since the AOL buy, people at Huffington Post are now feeling very defensive and compelled to outline HuffPost’s mission of all things. Maybe it’s just me, but when HuffPost employees start explaining their purpose it makes me want to grab the popcorn, because the insecurity that inspires such nonsense to break out into the open usually means trouble is already brewing.

I hope not, but this stuff is strictly amateur hour, unless you’re fundamentally changing direction.

It was on display in the defensive posting of Jason Linkins first, and now Peter Goodman. Linkins rambles on justifying why he gets paid. He felt compelled to defend the “internet newspaper” from harsh criticism coming in and feels he must explain how he earns his salary to readers. It’s unseemly, but he evidently has some guilt, either that or the incoming is starting to sting.

After the AOL deal landed, the LA Times ripped the Huffington Post journalistic model the day before Linkins weighed in, which obviously hit a nerve.

To grasp the Huffington Post’s business model, picture a galley rowed by slaves and commanded by pirates.

Then Peter Goodman wrote this insulting drivel: Beyond Left And Right: It’s About Reality, which just screamed for a response from someone who’d been there all along. The entire overwrought egotism in Goodman’s post really is worth a read, but only if you don hip boots to guard yourself against the hubris. Get a load of this:

For far too long, the public has suffered under the tyranny of dueling narratives served up by one or another interest group seeking self-serving shortcuts around nuanced truths, all the while shortchanging the clarity of important debates about the biggest issues of the day — from health care reform to defense policy to education.

The tyranny of dueling narratives? The public is suffering from this?

This is so un-HuffPost like it makes you want to flee, close your browser and run outside. But Mr. Goodman isn’t finished:

Journalists have too often perpetuated the false notion that seemingly any issue can be cleanly divided into right and left, conservative and liberal, because these labels make our work simpler, supplying us with a handy structure we can impose at will on typically uncooperative facts.

Journalists so frequently deal in the false liberal-conservative dichotomy because it generates the sort of tension that feeds narrative, and narrative makes for more accessible stories. Simply dividing up the interests into two neatly-differentiated competing camps enables lazy beat reporters to claim to have painted all of reality with but two phone calls. Why venture outside and talk to ordinary people — whose experiences and views almost always challenge the traditional labels — when we can simply sit at our desks and dial up a D and then an R and gather a pair of quotes that supposedly cover the whole spectrum of the American take on anything?

Sucking up to “ordinary people,” aka mom and pop, how charming. Where am I and who stole my Huffington Post?

To hear Peter Goodman making the case that HuffPost now doesn’t have anything to do with Right or Left is rewriting the experience of readers and writers after 6 years. It’s just the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard of doing. Now HuffPost is not Left or Right, because that’s just so yesterday, but instead is working for some truth believed to lie beyond. As if Left and Right doesn’t belong in that frame too, while Goodman draws a “no labels” type line down the center in order to put Huffington Post’s mission on a pedestal. I know he hails from the New York Times and is well respected, but no one is buying this, except the AOL audience. Good luck with that.

This is all smoke, mirrors and mostly hubris.

Huffington Post is more about the money now than ever. So what? Good for Arianna Huffington and everyone on board. Just don’t try to switch me to water when the wine I was drinking before had legs and great taste.

When Swisher pointed out that she was known for a left political orientation, she said, “People have not really moved up to see where we’ve been going in terms of our content and in terms of bringing in voices from all around the political spectrum.” Yup, that wacky, politically cosmopolitan HuffPo. It’s business, kids. — Why Did Arianna Huffington Sell HuffPo? Payoff and Paywalls

And don’t try to preen you’re not doing what everyone can see you’re doing. It’s embarrassing.

As for Mr. Goodman’s ridiculous “the public has suffered under the tyranny of dueling narratives” word salad, it proves the HowardFinemanization of the Huffington Post is already underway. You just might notice it less if you stick to Sam Stein, Ryan Grimm, Amanda Terkel’s reporting and posts, which are still as good as it gets.

UPDATE: Nate Silver wrote an odd post yesterday on Huffington Post, especially considering he came out of the DailyKos land, which helped him keep climbing the media ladder. Silver takes on the monetization meter.

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Paul Wins CPAC (again), So What?

Rep. Ron Paul ended up the darling of CPAC with 30% of the vote, Romney getting 23%.

Ann Coulter decided to weigh in and actually delivered some sense. From The Hill:

Asked in a Q&A session after a bombastic speech at CPAC what she thought of the 2012 field of hopefuls, Coulter initially hesitated, but went on to essentially deliver an endorsement of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

“If you don’t run Chris Christie, Romney will be the nominee and we’ll lose,” said Coulter, eliciting cheers from the crowd.

There’s real love for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on the Right. He’s a constant topic on “Morning Joe,” with Scarborough a Christie believer. He’s not alone and says he’s not running. Smart, because 2016 is the move.

But no Republican has declared himself a candidate for ’12, with the Sarah Palin factor part of the issue. But the Right’s real challenge is finding someone who can win the primary challenge and go on to beat Pres. Obama. Right now Republicans don’t have a contender, not yet, no matter how many times Mr. Paul wows CPAC.

Oh, and did you hear the joke about Tim Pawlenty criticizing Pres. Obama on Egypt? Oh wait, that’s not a joke it actually happened. …because Mr. Pawlenty is such a Mideast expert.

I’m grateful the Republicans are getting a slow start on ’12. As Tim Pawlenty proves, they’re going to be absolutely insufferable once it begins.

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Queer Talk: Some Feel Good News

Malcolm's LetterMalcolmSometimes I need a break from hard political realities. Several recent stories fill that role very well. In fact, they fill the “makes you feel good and gives you hope” role.

Here’s the first story, from the Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center’s CEO Lorri L. Jean:

“What we found in our mailbox has everyone here at the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center buzzing,” says Center CEO Lorri L. Jean.

“It was a small envelope that carried two letters and a check for $70. But this is what blew us away: it was from a 7-year-old boy! His name is Malcolm… . On a note that accompanied the check he wrote: ‘I am sending you this money because I don’t think it’s fair that Gay people are not treated equally.’

Malcolm’s gift gave me such hope for our future. A hope that when his generation reaches adulthood, all of the homophobia, discrimination, and abuse we in the LGBT community face today will no longer exist.”

Malcolm’s mother wrote:

“To teach the importance of improving the world around him, Malcolm was given $140 to give away to the charity of his choice. After hearing a story on the radio about the mistreatment of gays and lesbians, Malcolm became both upset and curious about the issue…to help, he chose to split his money between the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center and the Human Rights Campaign Foundation.”

Jean included the information that Malcolm’s Mom said he had wondered, when he mailed his check and letter, “whether anyone would even notice his contribution.” It was, widely.

From seven year old Malcolm to 19 year old university student Zach Wahls, the son of a lesbian couple, who spoke to the Iowa House at a public forum. Via AssociatedContent, Zach

made the speech hoping to prevent the House from making gay marriage illegal. He eloquently explained that marriage comes from the love between two individuals and not a piece of paper that the government gives you. The speech was posted on YouTube and quickly gained national media attention. While his speech did not prevent the House from voting against gay marriage, the provision was stopped in the Iowa Senate.

Like Malcolm’s, Zach’s actions received a lot of attention. As did one last example, a high school lesbian couple. From Windy City Times:

Desiree Shelton is an out lesbian and a senior at Champlin Park High School, in Minnesota’s Anoka-Hennepin School District. She and her girlfriend, Sarah Lindstrom, were elected to the school’s Snow Days royalty court for the winter formal dance. They sued their school district—with the help of lawyers from the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), and Faegre & Benson LLP—after school officials said they couldn’t walk together in the traditional couples’ processional for the royalty court at the school-wide Snow Days Pep Fest assembly. The district settled the case and, on Jan. 31, the two girls walked in the procession hand in hand as their classmates cheered.

Desiree wrote a piece for Windy City, “Why I fought back against discrimination.”

“This was more than a high school Pep Fest—it was about basic rights and the ongoing fight for equality that seems so hard to win, even in 2011… .

Sarah and I were really looking forward to being able to share this occasion together and also thought this would be a great opportunity to send a positive message to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community and its allies.

The school administration, however, said “no.” Desiree continues:

They had a number of ridiculous excuses, such as “the tradition was one boy and one girl” and “it could make some kids uncomfortable.” …

Later, we heard that they were thinking about having everyone walk individually instead being paired up. So much for tradition! …

Then came the idea to cancel the procession, another “solution” Desiree and Sarah found unacceptable. Enter the NCLR, SPLC, and Faegre and Benson. Papers were filed and a court date set, but with a prior mediation session scheduled.

To our surprise, at the mediation, the school district worked with us … to come up with the solution that any member of the royalty court would be allowed to bring any significant person in their life to walk with them during the procession. …

One thing I would really like people to realize is that this was never about getting attention. This was only about Sarah and I wanting to share a special event together, and about showing other LGBT kids that they don’t have to be afraid to be who they are because they are not alone.

That these are all young people signals significant changes. In large part, they were helped in stepping up now because people old enough to be their grandparents and parents did, and do, their own stepping up actions.

In fact, feel good news is also a part of our political realities. The actions of a seven year old boy, and the parenting that informed them; the powerful words of a 19 year old with two moms; the refusal of a high school lesbian couple to accept a “second rate” status … these are not only indications of the progress made toward equality, but are in and of themselves further steps in that progress. A feel good message: individuals taking one step at a time really do make a difference.

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My $0.02/Saturday: Permission to Narrate

Click image to go to Al Jazeera Live Blog on Egypt

Photo: via the NYT Lens. Egyptian antigovernment protesters celebrated under fireworks at Tahrir Square in Cairo. (Marco Longari/AFP/Getty)

Good morning all!

It’s the morning after Egypt took its first step toward self-governance, and I can’t stop thinking “power to the people!”

[See Al Jazeera Feb 12 Egypt Live Blog for the latest]

Just wow! Whatever happens in the long and challenging road ahead, the Arab youth and the rest of the Egyptian protesters have changed the narrative forever. Gone with Mubarak is the mythology that Arab peoples don’t want democracy and have to have it imposed on them, as if they were somehow intrinsically “different” from Lady Liberty’s tired, huddled masses yearning to breathe free. Over the course of the past 18 days, the whole world saw what Egyptians wanted (freedom, dignity) and what the West wanted (first “stability,” then “orderly transition” to Suleiman-the-torturer).

Check out the headline on this new interactive map from the BBC: “Egypt: The camp that toppled a president.” (While you’re at it, check out the map, because it will answer the question that inquiring minds have been wondering, about just how did the protesters answer nature’s call!)

My rough timeline/liveblogging from yesterday:

The brutal police murder of corruption whistleblower Khaled Said was the turning point. Tunisia’s overthrow of Ben Ali was the awakening. Millions of people took to the streets and risked their lives. Thousands were wounded or “disappeared.” 300 are dead. Wael Ghonim’s interview after his release gave the protesters new life and the strength to carry on in the face of all the people who second-guessed them. The way I see it, though, the real “catalysts” were those 30 years of a regime that not only oppressed its people but served other countries’ interests, in the name of “stability” and stuffing their own pockets, while neglecting the needs of Egyptians.

I’ve had a helluva time trying to narrow down some Saturday reads to share with you, let alone getting myself away from the Al Jazeera live feed long enough to write this post. I’ve settled on a few favorites.

First, the Egyptian woman who has been holding down the fort in the Western media almost single-handedly–yes, that would be Mona Eltahawy–yesterday on the Brian Lehrer Show, reacting live to the news that Mubarak had resigned:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFED8wBJXeU]

“I want to be realistic as well as kind of really love this moment. This is just a first step. We’ve said all along we want the regime to go. This is not about Mubarak. This is about getting rid of a regime that has suffocated the life of Egypt for the past sixty years. Egyptians deserve so much better. This is a wonderful moment in our life. And, it’s not going to stop. Everybody I know in Egypt is saying ‘We did it, but we’re not going to stop.’ And, I have total faith in them. I love Egypt, and I love being Egyptian today.” –Mona Eltahawy, breaking down emotionally, after weeks of nonstop tireless work pushing the Western media to look beyond its narratives on the Arab world.

Mona’s reaction reminded me of what MLK once said: “This is where we are. Where do we go from here?”

Dr. King’s next words: “First, we must massively assert our dignity and worth. We must stand up amidst a system that still oppresses us and develop an unassailable and majestic sense of values.”

On Tuesday, I posted about Women’s Voices on Egypt, as inspired by Mona Eltahawy’s twitter query for analysis on Egypt from women’s voices instead of all the balding old men on tv. One of the writings I linked to was an excellent, must-read piece by Azza Karam — “The dignity of Egyptian youth.” In light of Friday’s historic developments, I’d like to revisit a couple passages from Karam’s essay:

The youth bulge in the Arab world (where nearly 60 percent of the population is under thirty years of age) has produced a dividend of human dignity across the region and way beyond. Regardless of what actually transpires, priceless milestones of social awareness, political savvy, cultural pride, and creativity have arisen. A deep yoke of humiliation—from a fear born of oppression and injustice, from a silence created by decades of clinking chains and printed lies, and from the combined pains of hunger, sexual frustration, and the stigma of poverty—has been thrown off. [...] What are the specific demands of the youth? Not only the President, but the entire regime “has to go.” [...] Their want, their demand, is not just a matter of a verb or a matter of course; it is the act of making this demand in and of itself that is critical.

And:

Every moment lost in removing the strongest symbol of oppression is causing not only loss of life, not only mounting internal dissent, confusion, and violence, but, critically, every moment Mubarak remains in power is an opportunity for those calling on God to dominate the emerging scene. There is already a culture of appealing to God (and those who speak in his name) when there is a sense of helplessness. The Egyptian youth who have been fashioning—with their lives—a new discourse of change over the last eight days, without resorting to Islamist discourse of any kind, but with dignity, with passion, with love for their country and their heritage, must not be let down now. If they are, we will have to accept responsibility for allowing the forces of Islamism to step in as the people’s liberator.

Next up, as quoted by Dan Sisken of Mideast Brief, via his post at Mondoweiss — Arabs seize the ‘permission to narrate’:

Facts do not at all speak for themselves, but require a socially acceptable narrative to absorb, sustain, and circulate them. . . . as Hayden White has noted in a seminal article, “narrative in general, from the folk tale to the novel, from annals to the fully realized ‘history,’ has to do with the topics of law, legality, legitimacy, or, more generally, authority.”
- Edward Said, Permission to Narrate (1984)

Sisken writes:

Just as the Egyptian revolution has liberated the Egyptian people from the grasp of a US-backed authoritarian leader and seems likely to wrench Egypt out of its nearly total reliance on US support and largesse, the Egyptian people–as covered by AlJazeera–may be bringing about a new international media order. [...] So, as we watch the unfolding drama of Egyptians reclaiming their voice and destiny, we watch and are enlightened by young and extremely well-informed Arab, and in many cases Egyptian, reporters and analysts. There is no western filter of former government officials, DC think tankers, former military officers, and other US policy wonks. No, what we are now witnessing is Arabs and Egyptians, not only making their own history, but having the international stature and reach to narrate it as well.

If you didn’t click on the link, you are missing the excellent and completely spot-on side-by-side comparison that Sisken put up of the Egypt coverage from Al Jazeera and the garbage rotating on Fox News.

The screengrabs that Sisken drew on were, by the way, from Salon’s reporting at the end of January that “Al Jazeera’s Egypt coverage embarrasses U.S. cable news channels.”

I could not bear to flip to Fox News for most of the day as hour after hour of celebration continued in the streets of Egypt, but the one and only time I did take a peek, it lasted a painful two seconds–the newsdesk gal was talking about illegal immigration. I thought that spoke volumes.

As you likely have already heard by now, and as the Guardian poetically notes here, February 11th was the day “Ayatollah Khomeini took power in Iran, his Islamic revolution cementing the downfall of the Shah, who had fled into exile – to Egypt.” And, now 32 years later on that same day, Hosni Mubarak has become the former president of Egypt. Another milestone you probably came across in the coverage of Egypt yesterday– exactly 21 years ago from yesterday, Nelson Mandela was released from Robben Island after 27 years of political imprisonment. But, the Guardian also points out that, “On the same date in 1975 Margaret Thatcher succeeded Edward Heath as Conservative party leader. And continuing the theme of divisive female politicians – for Sarah Palin the date has an entirely different significance: it’s her birthday.”

Now, I don’t know what it all means that Palin and Thatcher are tied to February 11th as well (not that it means anything at all), but I’m going to switch gears for the rest of this post. Incidentally enough, earlier in the week the theme I had been thinking of centering my roundup on was “America’s Adaleens.” I don’t know how many of you watch HBO’s Big Love, but the character Adaleen Grant–played by the wonderful Mary Kay Place–is a strong-willed woman, all moxie, yet brainwashed and sells out the sisterhood. Sound familiar? I’ve been seeing her face all week watching the assault on American women continue to unfold–an assault which is unsurprising to me, as I’ve been waving that guttmacher pdf of mini-stupaks erupting across the country in every post I can for the past six months.

But, getting back to Adaleen and women selling out other women. We’ve got quite a few grizzlies in a skirt helping the bastards in Congress avoid doing anything on the economy by declaring armageddon on women’s civil rights. (If you missed Dakinikat’s righteous rant on the war on our rights, please go read it: “They think they own our bodies.”)

Speaking of which, did you happen to catch this piece of tripe from the warped mind of Phyllis Schlafly this week? Is it supposed to be a birthday present to Sarah Palin or something? Whatever it is, it’s a mess. Everything I have to say, I already said on the anniversary of Roe. That’s not feminism Schlafly is criticizing. It’s a figment of her imagination–a convenient strawman to prop up a house of canards. Feminism isn’t about hating housewives. It’s about creating the sociopolitical and economic opportunities such that a woman’s sphere can be *wherever* she makes good. It’s the Schlafly nuts who are hellbent on ostracizing and marginalizing any woman who won’t tow their traditionalist line. They want to assume power by undoing all the work of our foremothers who fought for our rights. And, they want ‘permission to narrate’ on feminism that they have not earned.

So, what do you want to say this Saturday morning? And, what’s on your reading list? Do your thing in the comments and have a great weekend.

[originally posted at Let Them Listen; crossposted at Sky Dancing and Liberal Rapture]

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ARMY TAKES OVER – MUBARAK STEPS DOWN




The Supreme Council for the Armed Forces has taken power from the Egyptian President. The Pharaoh has been toppled.

From Al Jazeera, who played such an essential role in this story. Watch it live, it’s really chilling. The lump in my throat is keeping back the tears. What an incredible moment for the Egyptian people, but also for Arabs and Muslims in the Middle East.

The world is rocked. Nothing will ever be the same again and that’s a very good thing.

Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, has resigned from his post, handing over power to the armed forces.

Omar Suleiman, the vice-president, announced in a televised address that the president was “waiving” his office, and had handed over authority to the Supreme Council of the armed forces.

Suleiman’s short statement was received with a roar of approval and by celebratory chanting and flag-waving from a crowd of hundreds of thousands in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, as well by pro-democracy campaigners who attended protests across the country on Friday.

The crowd in Tahrir chanted “We have brought down the regime”, while many were seen crying, cheering and embracing one another.

Mohamed ElBaradei, an opposition leader, hailed the moment as being the “greatest day of my life”, in comments to the Associated Press news agency.

“The country has been liberated after decades of repression,” he said.

It’s a great day for Egypt, which has been the leader in the Arab world and now is the first to claim a new day has come. Much work lies ahead, but if the Egyptian people can topple the pharaoh they can do anything.

And to paraphrase Shibley Telhami from last night on Rachel Maddow’s show. Bin Laden’s worst nightmare just came true: A PEACEFUL REVOLUTION IN EGYPT.

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Cheney Called ‘War Criminal’ at CPAC



Amidst wild applause, Ron Paul supporters got rowdy. When it got quiet, a shout of “war criminal” could be heard.

When Donald Rumsfeld started speaking, as recipient of the “Defender of the Constitution” award, a laughable honor to bestow on this man, according TPMDC and other reports, some in the Paul contingent walked out.

“Uh, Defender of the Constitution?” Justin Bradfield of Maryland scoffed when I caught up with him after he walked out of Rumsfeld’s speech. “Let’s see: he expanded the Defense Department more than pretty much any other defense secretary and he enforced the Patriot Act.”

“[Speaking] as a libertarian, that’s not really the type of person who should be getting Defender of the Constitution,” he added.

The Tea Party is doing many things for the Republican Party, some of it Sharraon Angle-esque, with Sarah Palin’s part giving it celebrity. However, the main mission of the Tea Party initially came from Ron Paul and his people back during Bush’s reign. Republicans who actually resemble real conservatism instead of the neoconservative bastardization that dragged us into Iraq, of which Cheney and Rumsfeld are the bookends.

As much as I enjoy seeing Cheney and Rumsfeld hear pointed dissent amidst large applause for what the engineered under their watch, I’m also reminded that it’s a small minority against the dangerous right-wing that still champions Cheneyism, which is championed by Rush Limbaugh and his wingnut band.

The events at CPAC on Thursday are put into perspective through Donald Trump’s bluntness about Ron Paul’s chances to win the presidency, which also reveals the bottom line for all Republicans looking to 2012. They are only interested in someone who can beat Obama, with no one so far coming close to proving they can. Via The Hill:

“By the way, Ron Paul cannot get elected, I’m sorry to tell you,” Trump said at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Thursday. “I like Ron Paul, I think he’s a good guy, but honestly he just has zero chance of getting elected.”

Donald Trump may not be taken seriously by the Republican insider and intellectual elite, but he’s certainly taking himself seriously. How delicious it would be if he actually jumped in.

CPAC is just getting started, with more fun to come.

Oh, and as an aside, CNN has brought Tea Party activist Dana Loesch, talk radio host and editor-in-chief of Big Journalism, on board. It’s all in the name of giving voice to all sides, proving that 2012 will be a much bigger circus on the Right than anything they could muster in ’08.

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Lost in Translation, Mubarak Edition

**UPDATED**

Egypt Ambassador to the U.S. Sameh Shoukray speaking on CNN says that Pres. Mubarak has no actual power and that “Suleiman is now the de-facto President of Egypt.”

Mubarak has “delegated the authority of the presidency to the vice president,” according to Amb. Shoukray. He said this has been “verified to him that this the “intention” of Mubarak’s statement and he’s “transmitting it to (CNN) for the sake of objectivity.”

I won’t get into Wolf Blitzer’s handling of the interview, because his disbelief of what he was hearing was epic and obvious, because the way this whole event today is playing out is stunningly overwhelming.

In an irony, you could hear Amb. Shoukray, who announced he had a prior engagement, hang up on Blitzer while he was signing off.

ElBaradei with Wolf Blitzer is dismissing what Shoukray said completely, predicting violence if the army doesn’t “save” the people and the country.

The confusion and the lack of clarity here in the U.S. about this situation is indicative of how wide the split is with the U.S. See Ben Wedeman’s tweet.

…and at the NAF event tonight, Shibley Telhami said this moment (is) akin to (the) collapse of (the) Berlin wall – the Mubarak era is over (Via Twitter & Amjad Atallah). This is something Rachel Maddow has said on the air as well.

The confusion continues… ..

UPDATE: Pres. Obama released a strong statement demanding an explanation from Pres. Mubarak after his incomprehensible rambling speech, which Marc Lynch reviews to devastating results. Obama ratchets up the pressure on Mubarak, because everyone is concerned what Friday will bring and where this leaves the Egyptian people.

The Egyptian people have been told that there was a transition of authority, but it is not yet clear that this transition is immediate, meaningful or sufficient. Too many Egyptians remain unconvinced that the government is serious about a genuine transition to democracy, and it is the responsibility of the government to speak clearly to the Egyptian people and the world. The Egyptian government must put forward a credible, concrete and unequivocal path toward genuine democracy, and they have not yet seized that opportunity.

As we have said from the beginning of this unrest, the future of Egypt will be determined by the Egyptian people. But the United States has also been clear that we stand for a set of core principles. We believe that the universal rights of the Egyptian people must be respected, and their aspirations must be met. We believe that this transition must immediately demonstrate irreversible political change, and a negotiated path to democracy. To that end, we believe that the emergency law should be lifted. We believe that meaningful negotiations with the broad opposition and Egyptian civil society should address the key questions confronting Egypt’s future: protecting the fundamental rights of all citizens; revising the Constitution and other laws to demonstrate irreversible change; and jointly developing a clear roadmap to elections that are free and fair.

We therefore urge the Egyptian government to move swiftly to explain the changes that have been made, and to spell out in clear and unambiguous language the step by step process that will lead to democracy and the representative government that the Egyptian people seek. Going forward, it will be essential that the universal rights of the Egyptian people be respected. There must be restraint by all parties. Violence must be forsaken. It is imperative that the government not respond to the aspirations of their people with repression or brutality. The voices of the Egyptian people must be heard.

The Egyptian people have made it clear that there is no going back to the way things were: Egypt has changed, and its future is in the hands of the people. Those who have exercised their right to peaceful assembly represent the greatness of the Egyptian people, and are broadly representative of Egyptian society. We have seen young and old, rich and poor, Muslim and Christian join together, and earn the respect of the world through their non-violent calls for change. In that effort, young people have been at the forefront, and a new generation has emerged. They have made it clear that Egypt must reflect their hopes, fulfill their highest aspirations, and tap their boundless potential. In these difficult times, I know that the Egyptian people will persevere, and they must know that they will continue to have a friend in the United States of America.

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Mubarak Digs In

**UPDATED**

President Hosni Mubarak addressed an expectant Egypt on Thursday, saying that he had delegated his powers to his vice president, Omar Suleiman, but would not leave the country, according to NBC News translation. – MSNBC

Pres. Mubarak redefined out of touch today in his speech to Egypt.

Transferring some powers to V.P. Suleiman, Mubarak did not come anywhere close to stepping down. He’s obviously living in some bubble.

Mubarak did assure that Friday’s protests will be epic.

When Pres. Obama spoke in Michigan, he said “We are witnessing history unfold,” obviously believing senior official sources who were reporting that Pres. Mubarak was stepping down. Now the President is having an emergency meeting with his national security team.

Protesters are now rumored to be considering a march on the presidential palace, which could force the Egyptian military’s hand. Others heading towards State TV, according to CNN’s Ben Wedeman.

V.P. Suleiman in his remarks told protesters to go home, but also not to listen to the satellite networks, invoking desire for stability in Egyptians not in Tahrir Square. Disrespecting Egyptian “youth movement,” as he calls it, as “lackeys of satellite news channels,” as Anderson Cooper put it on CNN.

Things just got a lot tougher.

…and a few minutes ago (5:25 p.m. EST) Roger Cohen of the New York Times, in Cairo, put words to my thoughts above on CNN. He started by saying what happened today was a “huge case of bait and switch,” leaving everyone confused. But Pres. Obama and CIA’s Leon Panetta both leaning in to the reality of Mubarak standing down does get your attention, it sure did mine. Just maybe Egypt’s Old Pharaoh didn’t like his patrons arguing over his worth to them in public and decided to show everyone. After all, Mubarak is Egypt’s Pharaoh. What a mess.

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Mubarak Reportedly Handing Power to Suleiman, Admin Sources ‘Need to See it Happen’

**UPDATED**

CNN and MSNBC are reporting that a “senior U.S. official” says Pres. Mubarak is about to hand over Egypt’s government to V.P. Omar Suleiman, solidifying yet another military dictatorship, this time under the C.I.A.’s man on rendition. C.I.A. Director Leon Panetta weighed into this news, saying it’s a “strong likelihood,” via a congressional hearing. John King confirms this story, with one Administration official saying they have “specific information,” but “we need to see it happen” and that it is getting information inside Egypt supporting the rumor swirling.

According to CNN’s Ben Wedeman just a few minutes ago (12:05 pm EST), state run media is now running banners saying “Egypt is changing,” while also showing clips of protesters.

The conspiracy theories on what could happen in Egypt, with the large scale strikes now happening, have also broken out, answering my question from last week about the possibility of a coup being the last solution. CNN reporting that an Egyptian source said this is “a consensus not a coup.” To update, Richard Engel called it “this soft, or elegant, coup.”

Via The Lede (12:45 pm EST):

Statement of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
10 February 2011

Based on the responsibility of the Armed Forces, and its commitment to protect the people, and to oversee their interests and security, and with a view to the safety of the nation and the citizenry, and of the achievements and properties of the great people of Egypt, and in affirmation and support for the legitimate demands of the people, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces convened today, 10 February 2011, to consider developments to date, and decided to remain in continuous session to consider what procedures and measures that may be taken to protect the nation, and the achievements and aspirations of the great people of Egypt.

And considering the State Dept. had ample warning going back to the Green uprising in Iran, saying they’re late to the Arabic Twitter party is an understatement, but they have finally arrived.

Its first message? #Egypt #Jan25 تعترف وزارة الخارجية الأمريكية بالدور التاريخي الذي يلعبه الإعلام الإجتماعي في العالم العربي ونرغب أن نكون جزءاً من محادثاتكم

(Translation: “We want to be a part of your conversation!”)

The new State Department Arabic Twitter feed, @USAbilaraby, joins a growing chorus of Twitter feeds describing and commenting on events in Egypt and across the Arab world, where social media is helping to broadcast political ferment.

The real problem for the Obama administration right now, however, is at this late date they’re still trying to find their voice, with two stories finally widening the lens to important voices combating the old guard realpolitik.

Suleiman’s behavior reinforced the arguments of another camp inside the Obama administration, including National Security Council members Ben Rhodes and Samantha Power, which contends that if President Obama appears to side with the remnants of Mubarak’s discredited regime, he risks being seen as complicit in stifling a pro-democracy movement. – Obama’s advisors split on when and how Mubarak should go

Many of you will remember Samantha Power as the woman who called candidate Hillary Clinton a “monster” during the primary season. She long ago apologized and took her place inside the Obama administration, and now she’s once again on opposite sides of old guards like Biden, Clinton and SecDef Bob Gates.

The LA Times reports reality in their subheading: White House aides acknowledge that the differing views among Obama’s team of advisors has resulted in a mixed message on Egypt.

For fear of choosing wrongly and getting blamed, Pres. Obama is trying to have it both ways, which simply won’t work hasn’t worked.

POLITICO also has a story of White House spin on the messaging, which isn’t very convincing either. You can follow my columns since Clinton’s “stable” comment back on Jan. 25th that proves there’s been confusion mixed with incoherence at times. Once Mubarak let his thugs out it shifted the entire conversation and everything shifted.

So, we wait on Mubarak.

The Obama administration’s issue with Egypt remains what I’ve been writing about for several days now. It’s the difference between realpolitik versus idealism, with many of Obama’s die hard fans never believing he’d be on the side of Kissingerism. Anyone reading here since 2007, however, was at least prepared for it.

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At Least Rep. Chris Lee Isn’t a ‘Toad’

via Gawker

It is my experience that a middle-aged man doesn’t wake up one day and all of a sudden decide to go trolling for a mistress on Craigslist. It’s got to have happened before. Men who cheat start early.

Gawker broke the story yesterday and it’s a beauty.

On the morning of Friday, January 14, a single 34-year-old woman put an ad in the “Women for Men” section of Craigslist personals. “Will someone prove to me not all CL men look like toads?” she asked, inviting “financially & emotionally secure” men to reply.

Now the ignoramus has resigned, though why is beyond me, because it’s not like this hasn’t happened before. Gov. Andrew Cuomo will set a date for the special election to replace him.

Married politicians looking for extracurricular sexual liaisons is nothing new and neither is cheating on your wife. But it really never ceases to amaze me how brazen some of these guys are.

It used to be that finding a partner who could be “discreet” was the main consideration in extra-marital flings. Modern life has made men take horrible risks in ways that leave large trails.

It’s what always blew my mind about Eliot Spitzer, the stupidity and duplicitousness of John Edwards and his serial lying, the reckless stupidity of William Jefferson Clinton in the midst of a right-wing hunt, Rudy’s callousness, Newt Gingrich’s cruelty, all of whom stumbled on their own gigantic egos in public view. The possibility of ruining your own life couldn’t even stop them; their wife blotted out. Even the venerable right-wing crusader against women’s freedom, the man who hounded Bill Clinton into impeachment, the pious Henry Hyde, had an embarrassing extramarital affair.

Chris Lee is simply the latest. He brings a whole new meaning to “classy.” However, let’s not be overwrought here. This is hardly lurid stuff.

“Are you sure that’s not a photo from a Jcpenney ad?”

Lol…no…Here.. I just took one..i’m relaxing at home.

Thanks…so do you always send shirtless pics to women from cl?

Sorry. Its all I had

No diapers like David Vitter. No underage pages like Mark Foley. No wide stance discovered in an airport bathroom like Larry Craig. Just another lame cheating louse.

The ego must be fed.

…and right before Valentine’s Day, too.

All the women in the world can’t fill his void.

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National Journal: Obama to Cut Energy Assistance to Poor

If the cuts reported by Marc Ambinder manifest, it will put Barack Obama’s unwillingness to fight against tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans in true perspective. It will also reveal just how far the Democratic Party has fallen away from F.D.R.

But this is what happens when conservative Democrats get the reins and forget how people outside of the privileged survive. We learned a long time ago there is no such thing as “compassionate conservatism.” I’m not really sure how the political insiders in both parties feel about leaving the poor in the lurch during a brutal winter, but I’m pretty sure all of these preening Christians have a moral obligation to do better.

Consider this one of “the mysteries we cannot comprehend,” to quote Pres. Obama at the prayer breakfast last week. How wealthy, elite politicians like Obama can live with themselves when enacting policies and budget cuts that can hurt people.

From Ambinder:

President Obama’s proposed 2012 budget will cut several billion dollars from the government’s energy assistance fund for poor people, officials briefed on the subject told National Journal. [...]

On Wednesday, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., declared: “The President’s reported proposal to drastically slash LIHEAP funds by more than half would have a severe impact on many of New Hampshire’s most vulnerable citizens and I strongly oppose it.” A spokesman for Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., declared similarly: “If these cuts are real, it would be a very disappointing development for millions of families still struggling through a harsh winter.”

The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, would see funding drop by about $2.5 billion from an authorized 2009 total of $5.1 billion. The proposed cut will not touch the program’s emergency reserve fund, about $590 million, which can be used during particularly harsh cold snaps or extended heat spells, three officials told National Journal.

Let’s see how the Obama administration scrambles to fix this… or not. The word salads could be epic.

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