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Clinton on what’s next for Egypt

Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, has told Al Jazeera that the US is hopeful Egypt will become a model for democracy in the region. There are critics who say the US government is again sitting on the fence — as it did before president Mubarak resigned — in deciding whether to back the people or the army. Al Jazeera’s Abder-Rahim Foukara asked Clinton for her response.

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Chris Matthews Asks if Jeb Bush Could be Pushed into Running in 2012

Click here to view this media Apparently some of the “very serious” people in Republican politics have been privately urging Jeb Bush to run for president in 2012, and thus the topic of The Chris Matthews Show’s meter question for this week: “Is Jeb Bush the strongest Republican candidate in 2012?” The “Matthews Meter” regulars are split 6 to 6. It doesn’t say much for the Republican field of candidates this year if insiders are pushing for a man whose last name should be mud as their best chance to win back the presidency in 2012. Apparently Bush isn’t interested in running anytime soon. I guess he’s hoping the media will continue with their turd-polishing exercise of trying to wipe our collective memories clean of how awful of a president his brother was so he can run in 2016. Chris Matthews thinks he could be pushed into running in 2012.

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Click here to view this media A conference call with Congressional Budget Office spokesman Ken Baer and White House adviser David Plouffe tonight was probably aimed at growing indignation in the blogosphere over the proposed Obama budget , which features your proverbial draconian cuts to just about every social program — except Social Security and Medicare. It wasn’t likely that bloggers would be happy with the conversation, since once we got into the details of arguing different cuts, it looked as though we were buying into the White House frame that the cuts were urgently needed in the first place, and most of us don’t believe that’s true. Baer’s opening remarks focused on “shared sacrifice.” Some bloggers weren’t buying it. I know I didn’t. My question: “When you’re talking about shared sacrifice, clearly, the working and middle class is getting a disproportionate slam everywhere they turn with this budget, and you’re talking about a few, what sound like token items to the rest of us out here, and I wonder how you rationalize that during this severe economic recession.” Baer said people got that impression from the stories that were released early, without looking at the big-budget picture. (See ” www.budget.gov. “) Anyway, no one on the outside really knows what they’re up to. Is this a ploy to back Republicans into a corner over popular programs? Is this a strategy to get the public to support Social Security cuts later? Your guess is as good as mine. In the meantime, here’s a roundup of some budget stories: Ezra Klein: The U.S. Government: An insurance conglomerate protected by a large, standing army. HuffPost: Republicans Response: It would be better to pass nothing. David Dayen : Festival of budget links!

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Click here to view this media Kelley Williams-Bolar, the mom sentenced to jail for sending her children to an adjacent school district, is now out of jail, but her story is far from over. In the NPR interview above , she talks about why she sent her children where she did, and why she believed she was entitled. Her father is a homeowner in the Copley-Fairlawn School District (which means he is also a taxpayer). Look at the timeline of how events unfolded, as laid out in this interview: 2006 – Williams-Bolar’s home is robbed and trashed. September, 2006 – Williams-Bolar enrolls her daughters in the Copley-Fairlawn schools using her father’s address. To comply with district requirements, she applies for a grandparents’ Power of Attorney, which the district has told her will meet the requirements for her daughters to attend school in their district. June, 2008 – The court denies the grandparent’s Power of Attorney because the biological father of the girls did not sign off on it. June, 2008 – At the end of the school year, Williams-Bolar withdraws her daughters from the Copley-Fairlawn school district. December, 2010 – Charges are brought against her by the District Attorney, and in January, 2011 she is prosecuted for Grand Theft. Here are a couple of uncontested facts: While the girls were enrolled in the Copley-Fairlawn School District, Williams-Bolar was operating on the belief that she had complied with residency requirements by getting the required grandparent’s Power of Attorney. When that Power of Attorney was denied by the court, Williams-Bolar withdrew her children from the district. Williams-Bolar’s children did stay at their grandfather’s house. That’s not in dispute. The only question is what their legal residence was for purposes of school attendance. Here’s another fact: The prosecutor in this case is dead-determined to nail Williams-Bolar and her father to the wall for this. What’s interesting to me is to watch how they do it. After seeing the rolling wave of public outcry to her prosecution, the Summit County DA’s office actually published a FAQ about the case on their official website. Among other things, there are multiple references to “her fraud”. And then there’s this: This same prosecutor released taped telephone conversations Williams-Bolar had with family and friends while in jail. There was only one reason to release these snippets, which are helpfully excerpted at Ohio.com, and that is to make Williams-Bolar appear to be a money-grubbing grifter who was always in it for the publicity and possibility of a movie deal. Evidently the prosecutor doesn’t understand the concept of dealing with adversity through humor. Or telling the whole story. Some telephone calls have been withheld, supposedly to use against her father when they prosecute him. Who wants to bet there won’t be any phone calls from jail used in that trial? Ten bucks, right now. There is a bit of good news to tell: The superintendent of Akron schools says she can come back to her job as a teacher’s aide. Whether or not she’ll ever have a chance to be a teacher? Well, that’s something else entirely. In the meantime, the felony charges against her father will proceed. Contrast the crusade against Williams-Bolar with another Ohio family, the Ebners Mark Ebner is a resident of Columbus, Ohio. He owns a home in that area valued at more than $1 million, but he rented an apartment in the Bexley school district and says that is where his children live. His wife lives in the big house, according to Mr. Bexley; he and the boys live in the 3-bedroom apartment in the Bexley school district. The district was suspicious, so they hired someone to tail him, just like the Copley-Fairlawn district did to Williams-Bolar. Here’s what the investigator discovered: The investigator hired by the district watched the apartment and the house 14 times in April and May. His report to the district said he saw Ebner come or go on occasion but never Julian. The investigator concluded that Ebner and his family spent most of their time at the house, not the apartment. In June, the private investigator watched Ebner again. He saw him at the house in a T-shirt and sweat pants and that he left later in a dress shirt and tie. Bexley’s attorney concluded that Ebner had “abandoned all pretense of living” at the apartment by then because school was nearly out for the summer. “It strains credulity to suggest – as the Ebners have done here – that Mr. Ebner voluntarily lives in a small apartment while maintaining a very comfortable family residence nearby,” school district attorney Gregory B. Scott told the state Education Department in a letter. The state rarely steps in to settle a residency dispute. It did so only four times in 2008 and once so far in 2009. In Ebner’s case, Delisle sided with Bexley. “Mr. Ebner has submitted very little documentation supporting his claimed residency at the Bexley address,” Delisle’s ruling said. Why didn’t Mr. Ebner go to jail? Well, they hired a lawyer and fought back. And won , by swapping around houses with another family member. Because that family member had a house. And they all had the money to do that. All in the family only works if you have money and are the right color, evidently. Race aside, there is too much inequality in our education system Cynthia at K-12 News Network : That parent, being white, male, and wealthy, didn’t spend any jail time but instead sued the Bexley school district which had hired a private investigator to have him tailed, much like Copley-Fairlawn had an investigator follow Ms. Williams-Bolar. And the Ebners used the legal system to fight back , engaging in some complicated house-swapping and lease arrangements with relatives who live in the district to finally enable their two younger sons to attend Bexley District schools. Where is the justice for Williams-Bolar, a divorced mom, woman of color, and person of much more modest means? Other stories suggest that school residency fraud may be on the rise. See below. In which case, this is not an isolated case of one person who can’t seem to follow the rules or decides to treat school requirements like a scofflaw, this is a larger problem that reflects increasing desperation on the part of all parents to do what they can to make sure their children attend good schools. She’s got several other examples of residency fraud in her post. Her bottom line: The solution is to make every existing school excellent and open to all . Stop heightening scarcity and unequal distribution of resources, and allowing racial and economic inequality to play out over real estate. Making great public schools scarce is anti-democratic. It goes against what this great nation is about: America is about equality of opportunity, if not equality of circumstance. If we don’t address this issue, we’ll have invisible gated communities–minds and lives locked in according to the neighborhood where you live–and a quality education for just a few who can afford it. That’s not America…that’s how China works. Totally agree. Also, let’s start kicking prosecutors out of office who bully the accused with half-edited recordings of phone calls, and hammer people who can least afford it but who are trying to get ahead in this life with piles of felony charges for daring to want their children safe and educated.

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Paul Krugman Ironically Asks ‘How Can Voters Be So Ill Informed?’

In his lifetime, Princeton economics professor and Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman has published 20 books, over 200 papers, and since the year 2000 two columns a week at the New York Times. Clearly without understanding the irony of his question, the man once accused by the Gray Lady's ombudsman of possessing a “disturbing habit of shaping, slicing and selectively citing numbers” asked his readers Monday, “How can voters be so ill informed [sic]?”: The key point to understand is that while many voters say that they want lower spending, press the issue a bit further and it turns out that they only want to cut spending on other people. That’s the lesson from a new survey by the Pew Research Center, in which Americans were asked whether they favored higher or lower spending in a variety of areas. It turns out that they want more, not less, spending on most things, including education and Medicare. They’re evenly divided about spending on aid to the unemployed and — surprise — defense. The only thing they clearly want to cut is foreign aid, which most Americans believe, wrongly, accounts for a large share of the federal budget. Pew also asked people how they would like to see states close their budget deficits. Do they favor cuts in either education or health care, the main expenses states face? No. Do they favor tax increases? No. The only deficit-reduction measure with significant support was cuts in public-employee pensions — and even there the public was evenly divided. How can voters be so ill informed [sic]? Readers should note the “[sic]” after informed, as the proper spelling is ill-informed, unless of course one is talking about a medical professional. But the sentences that immediately followed were the real treasures:

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Obama Proposes Higher Debt Burden For Grad School Students

Click here to view this media Oh, I am so tired of these political minions who talk out of both sides of their mouth — and their media enablers. Have you noticed how few journalists even think about our point of view? The Iraq and Afghanistan wars continue to drain the national treasury and beggar our nation , and the president just signed a trillion dollar tax increase FOR MILLIONAIRES AND BILLIONAIRES. Hell-o? And somehow, we’re supposed to pretend that those things do not contradict this “austerity” blitz from a Democratic president . We’re supposed to nod and agree when they justifying it by saying stupid things like, “We’re cutting back on spending, just like Americans do around their kitchen tables.” As if we all pay cash for our homes and cars. And now, at a time when new college graduates face record levels of unemployment , we’re going to add this to the average family’s economic burdens. Why should we believe anything they say about the deficit “crisis” when they don’t address the ten-ton WAR and TAX CUT elephants in the national living room? WASHINGTON — In his 2011 State of the Union address, President Obama promised that investment in education and getting the next generation of Americans ready to face their own “Sputnik” moment would be a focus of his administration. But at least one component of his FY 2012 budget, which will be released tomorrow, will likely pile more debt upon students who decide to pursue graduate school, potentially making the dream of higher education even more unattainable for many Americans. The move, say administration officials, is needed to ensure that a popular financial aid award stays available at current levels. In an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, Office of Management and Budget Director Jacob Lew said that interest on graduate school loans will begin building up while students are still in school. Currently, interest does not begin compiling until after students graduate.Host Candy Crowley questioned Lew about whether this would make graduate school less accessible for many Americans: CROWLEY: Here’s the problem, I guess. If you are a graduate — let’s take one of your examples. You’re a graduate student; you are, right now, getting loans. You don’t have to pay those loans or any interest on them until you graduate. But now you have to pay — or it accumulates, I’m assuming — you have to pay interest beginning on day one of grad school, and that makes it so that you can’t go to grad school. LEW: Well, let’s just be clear. Interest will build up, but students won’t have to pay until they graduate. So it will increase the burden for paying back the loans, but it will not reduce access to education. That’s, I think, part of how you can responsibly have a plan that deals with the challenge of solving our fiscal crisis , getting out of the situation where the deficit is growing and growing, but also investing in the future. Unbelievable. Don’t these economic wizards have any friends or relatives outside that Beltway bubble, someone who could knock some sense into them?

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I agree with Tim Webb ( Letters , 14 February) that there has been a Labour silence on the events in Egypt, including the participation in this people’s revolution of one of its most powerful sectors – the working class. Last week, over 20,000 workers were participating in strikes, thrusting aside the official Egyptian Trade Union Federation and establishing their own independent Federation of Egyptian Trade Unions. Kamal Abbas, of the independent Centre for Trade Union and Workers’ Services, confirmed reports by al-Jazeera in an interview with US magazine Labor Notes, commenting: “This day [10 February] in the revolution could be named for the labour unions. They have moved all over, with more than 20 strikes in the railroads and also textiles, nurses and doctors.” A textile factory with 24,000 workers was expected to join the strikes; added to these, were protests by workers at coke and cement companies in Helwan, by Suez Canal labourers and by workers at a Schweppes factory. Another account lists bus drivers, railway workers, steelworkers, teachers and sanitation workers among those taking action. Perhaps it’s time to recognise the part played by those unromantic heroes and heroines, the sanitation workers, train drivers, factory workers, labourers and service employees of Egypt. Sheila Cohen University of Hertfordshire • It appears a people’s pro-democracy regime change has all the ingredients of morphing into another Middle Eastern military dictatorship ( Reports , 14 February). What’s the betting the corporations running the US will cheer that on? Ian Lowery Watford, Hertfordshire Egypt Middle East Al-Jazeera guardian.co.uk

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Sean Hannity yucks it up with Donald Rumsfeld over "fun moments’ with the press during the Iraq War

Click here to view this media Donald Rumsfeld is on his book tour, and what better place for him to distort the truth and remember the good old days than with his good comrade, Sean Hannity at FOX News. It’s very insulting to watch him laugh about his many press briefings about the Iraq war since we learned that it was a war based on lies and neocon ideology. Hannity: Those were fun moments…I think you were having a good time. I don’t think our troops or the Iraqi people were having a good time, Sean. Our press corp also bought into his act and didn’t come out looking too good either. Back in 2006, a retired CIA analyst for over twenty years named Ray McGovern interrupted a speech by Donald, asking Rumsfeld why he lied about WMD’s being in Iraq. At the time it caused quite the controversy. As usual, The Daily Show and Jon Stewart examined some of the mindless reactions from the press including an incredible fluff job by then-FOX News reporter, Brett Baier: Click here to view this media RAY McGOVERN: And so, I would like to ask you to be up front with the American people. Why did you lie to get us into a war that was not necessary and that has caused these kinds of casualties? Why? DONALD RUMSFELD:Well, first of all, I haven’t lied. I did not lie then. Colin Powell didn’t lie. He spent weeks and weeks with the Central Intelligence Agency people and prepared a presentation that I know he believed was accurate, and he presented that to the United Nations. The President spent weeks and weeks with the Central Intelligence people, and he went to the American people and made a presentation. I’m not in the intelligence business. They gave the world their honest opinion. It appears that there were not weapons of mass destruction there. RAY McGOVERN:You said you knew where they were? Stewart played Rumsfeld’s MTP appearance where he stated he knew where the WMD’s were and said: Stewart: To be fair Rumsfeld probably never saw that episode of MTP… No, but we sure did. Will Bunch went to a speaking engagement featuring Rumsfeld and a funny thing happened. He never got an answer to a very important question that was never even asked. Sharply attired in a navy blue suit, seated with hands clasped and uttering “Oh my gosh” in response to about every third or fourth question, Rumsfeld made it feel like 2003 all over again during much of the 70-minute session. The same could arguably be said about the one controversial topic Rumsfeld did attempt to address in detail last night: The case for the war in Iraq. Just as the public saw eight years ago, Rumsfeld threw out a jumbled kitchen sink of reasons for invading a country that had not attacked us on Sept. 11. These included violations of the “no fly zone” over Iraq, fears that Saddam Hussein might somehow attack the U.S. in smallpox ( a threat that even Fox News debunked at the time ), and the subsequent fact that Libya abandoned its weapons program in the wake of the U.S. attack in the region. Of course, some of the key reasons given to Americans at the time — such as an allegation that Iraq had tried to buy yellowcake uranium in Africa — have long since been tossed down the memory hole. Answering one of only a couple of audience questions on index cards that were filtered through Beschloss, Rumsfeld said of the different between the Iraq War and Vietnam: “The Vietnamese were not likely to come and attack the United States of America.” Yet the CIA reported in October 200 2 that it was unlikely that Iraq would launch any type of chemical or biological attack against America — unless we provoked the regime by attacking them. — Last night in America’s founding city, the competition of ideas did not involve journalists. There would be no news conference or interviews, no questions from the press at all and few from the public except several pre-screened by Beschloss. Nevertheless, I grabbed an index card and wrote down a question, in the wildly futile hope that the moderator might select it. I wanted to know why — on the early afternoon of Sept. 11, with the Pentagon still on fire — Rumsfeld scribbled notes later made public about his desire to go after not just bin Laden but Saddam as well . But like a lot of questions last night, that one remains somewhere in the “unknown” pile.

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On Monday's Hardball Chris Matthews, who devoted much of last week's shows to Egypt, got caught up on some conservative bashing as he mocked those who attended CPAC last week as “zany” and likened the conference to a “carnival act.” The MSNBC host, who was joined by fellow liberals David Corn of Mother Jones and Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo, led the show by describing the event as a “right wing jamboree that puts the zany in the same room as the zanier.” The following Matthews outbursts were aired on the February 14 edition of Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: The Right goes wild! Let's play Hardball! Good evening and Happy Valentine's Day. I've got a tie for the occasion. I'm Chris Matthews in Washington. Leading off tonight – the far side. Whenever you think progressives need to calm down and get real you should head over to something called CPAC. It's the right-wing jamboree that puts the zany in the same room as the zanier. Where Ron Paul wins the presidential straw poll. Where Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld get booed, a rare moment of sanity over there. And where a real life Mitt Romney shows up, only to be upstaged by a fake Sarah Palin. Talk about switcharoos! Usually it's Romney doing the pretending. We missed a lot of the fun last week because of the revolution in Egypt. Well tonight what you need to know about how the Right plans to run against President Obama. If this is the starting lineup I can only imagine what characters they've got sitting on the bench. … MATTHEWS: Let's begin with the right wing jamboree called CPAC. David Corn is the Washington bureau chief for Mother Jones and an MSNBC political analyst and Josh Marshall is founder and editor of Talking Points Memo. Here's a taste, a little collage or montage, of what we heard at CPAC during what – while interesting things were happening in Cairo, this is what we missed. Let's listen. (Begin clip) HERMAN CAIN: The American dream is under attack. But the good news is we are fighting back! ANDREW BREITBART: I don't know why I decided to make my career trying to destroy the institutional left. I thought that it would just be a fun thing to do and it would look good on a resume. And it's so fun. JOHN BOLTON: We do not accept an America that is weak and declining. ANN COULTER: What do you mean knowing that there are jailed journalists? I think there should be more jailed journalists. (End clip) MATTHEWS: You know sometimes it's better not to comment but I'm asking you guys to comment. David and Josh, that, you know, there's some people that you don't want to meet in a bar that's for sure even, if you're watching Star Wars. But what, what an amazing group of people there, David. And I think what you're seeing there is it's almost like a levitation, like in some carnival act. Like they're levitating. It has nothing to do with reality over there. DAVID CORN, MOTHER JONES: Well maybe it's like the side show at a carnival where you go in and you see all these creatures that you don't know if they are real or not. I mean this is like, this is like a zoo where are allowed to feed the animals. In fact you're expected to feed the animals. So while you and I and Josh and others were spending Thursday and Friday thinking about Egypt. What were they doing? They were attacking Obama for being a socialist, for believing America is evil, for causing the economic downturn. … MATTHEWS: And here's former Governor Tim Pawlenty who's doing more kiss-butt than anybody I've ever seen. They're cracking birther jokes. He'll do anything to prove he's insane. And I – actually he's not. This is the sad thing about the Republican Party. Credible people, like Pawlenty, the governor of Minnesota have to act zany to get the nomination. … MATTHEWS: Well here's Ron Paul. He won the CPAC straw poll. They think he should be president. And actually I respect his basic libertarianism. I don't think it really applies to real life but I like the sentiment at least, but it's not real. Here's Mitt Romney. Let's take a look here. He took second. Look at these numbers. We're looking at the numbers now. It's interesting there how poorly Palin did, Josh. I mean among the zanos. She couldn't even win among the zanos. —Geoffrey Dickens is the Senior News Analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here

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Blue America PAC, along with Daily Kos, Americans For America PAC and Americans United have teamed up to run ads that are exposing Republicans who are voting to try and repeal health care for Americans while they are receiving their own government funded health care. In NJ, Rep. Leonard Lance’s people successfully stopped our ad from running on radio due to a technicality, but then the Courier actually did some reporting: Reporter Jane Roh did some great investigative journalism for the Courier Post . New Jersey Congressman Leonard Lance successfully challenged the accuracy of a radio ad attacking him this week and got it pulled off the air. But in doing so, the 7th district Republican may have created more problems for himself. “I should’ve kept my mouth shut,” Chief of Staff Todd Mitchell told the Courier-Post Friday . The progressive group Blue America PAC Wednesday released basically identical ads hitting four House Republicans on their votes against health care reform. The ads implied the Republicans– Reps. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., Charlie Bass, R-N.H., Sandy Adams, R-Fla., and Lance– enjoy taxpayer-funded health insurance. “They voted to make it tougher for you to get affordable health care,” the announcer said. markos tweets : First smart thing Republican has said in a while: “I should’ve kept my mouth shut”. http://is.gd/NUVj9P Greg Sargent weighs in on the story and has a great piece up online at the Washington Post: House GOPer against big government health care enjoys taxpayer-funded state government insurance Okay, this one is funny. As you know, Dems and lefty groups have been loudly insisting that House Republicans in favor of repealing the Affordable Care Act should forego the “government run” insurance they enjoy as members of Congress. One of those GOPers is Rep. Leonard Lance of New Jersey, a fiscal hawk who opposes the health reform law out of opposition to big government. He is in the crosshairs of an ad by Blue America PAC accusing him of enjoying taxpayer-funded insurance. After that ad started running, Lance’s office protested that he is not enrolled in the plan enjoyed by members of Congress, and successfully got the ad pulled. But in response, New Jersey’s Courier-Post did some digging and found that as a retired state government official, he and his family do enjoy taxpayer-funded health care on the state level — Whoops! Rep. Lance’s chief of staff appears to realize that by protesting the ad attacking him, he’s only created more problems. The aide told the Courier-Post: “I should have kept my mouth shut.” It’s another mark of the ways that the politics of repeal — even if the health law is unpopular — are putting some Republicans in a very awkward spot. I want to thank of of you that have helped fund our newest round of ads and we’re redoing our original one so it will be running in NJ very shortly. We’d like to run a revamped version of the ad on even more stations. Can you help us with a $10 or $20 contribution here

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