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A video, claiming to be from Monday’s protest, was posted on Facebook earlier today. The chant you hear is “death to the dictator.”
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Click here to view this media Okay, this is pathetic by even Fox’s horrible standards. From Fox Nation — Horseman of Apocalypse Shows up in Cairo? . This is an incredible piece of video. At the 1:20 mark you clearly see some greenish figure moving through the crowd. Between the crowds of protesters and barricades, the video shows a flowing, pale green image that resembles an erect rider atop a horse in Medieval-like barding. The ethereal figure remains for a few moments before floating over protesters’ heads and off the screen. Is this the Fourth Horseman of the Apocalypse?” I await Glenn Beck airing the clip on his show some time this week. In case they pull the post or the video the video can be watched here as well, and here’s a screen shot of the post at Fox Nation. enlarge h/t todayspolitics
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The US economy is the world’s largest, despite staggering public debt. President Barack Obama is expected to announce major budget cuts on Monday. But already, Republicans say those cuts won’t go far enough. Al Jazeera speaks to Ashraf Laidi, an investment strategist for brokerage firm CMC Markets, in London – on the upcoming budget battle.
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enlarge One of my favorite political groups to spring up over the past year has been UK Uncut , a British grassroots campaign that arose to oppose Conservative Party budget cuts by pointing out how British companies engage in obscene levels of tax avoidance. What makes this campaign so effective is how it plays into basic notions of fairness: The Tories are asking average Britons to swallow tuition hikes and cuts to heating assistance all while gigantic companies like Vodafone get away with paying next to nothing in taxes. Johann Hari has a very important article in this month’s Nation about how the group got started and how it changed the political conversation in the UK. I highly recommend giving it a read . At any rate, UK Uncut this month is now turning their attention to an extremely worthy target: Britain’s financial institutions : Protest movement UK Uncut is to target British banks as part of a wave of fresh demonstrations next week. The group, which has mounted dozens of demos at high street stores which it accuses of evading tax in recent months, wants to help focus public attention on the cost of recent bank bailouts at the start of the coming ‘bonus season’. The first day of action is expected on 19 February. Activist Daniel Garvin told the Guardian: ‘The idea this time is not to shut these places down but to open up high street banks, occupying them and using them for things that may be more useful for the community.’ Now this is something I’d like to see replicated in the good ol’ Yoo Ess of Ay! And there’s good news for us on that front, since WikiLeaks has promised to release damaging information on Bank of America sometime this year. Bank of America is an absolute perfect target for an American counterpart to UK Uncut. Why? Let us count the ways: BofA is a gigantic Frankenstein’s monster of other financial institutions and is a perfect symbol for just how dangerous banks can be when they get too large and powerful. As the proud owner of infamous subprime lender Countrywide, BofA is up to its neck in the foreclosure fraud scandal. Bank of America was one of the biggest users of the Federal Reserve’s emergency discount window during the financial crisis, as the bank went to the Fed trough nearly every day for nearly half a year. So let’s see: A gigantic bank that has a history of gobbling up other big financial institutions, that is instrumental in kicking Americans out of their homes and (best of all!) ran to the Fed for help every chance it got! Can you imagine a better target? And unlike Goldman Sachs, BofA has highly visible branches in major cities throughout the U.S. So here’s what I propose: During tax season, when the Tea Parties will be out in full force shrieking about gubmint socialism, we launch nationwide protests against Bank of America branches that mimic the disruptive tactics that UK Uncut has so cleverly employed thus far. If we make a big enough stink at enough BofA branches across America, it will give our illustrious press corps a new shiny object to play with that doesn’t involve powdered wigs and tricorner hats. So what say you, MoveOn and other liberal groups? I’ll use my megaphone to promote you if y’all want to help organize?
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Army clears protesters but small core of demonstrators remains in square at centre of protests that brought down Hosni Mubarak’s regime
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“Gray Lady Down – What The Decline And Fall Of The New York Times Means For America ” by William McGowan (from Encounter Books), is a carefully researched and devastatingly convincing critique of the New York Times losing its commitment to objective reporting. It opens with the 2006 funeral of the paper’s famed Executive Editor Abe Rosenthal, who retired in 1986. Though bad tempered and with a propensity to play newsroom favorites, Rosenthal is considered by McGowan the last lion of the paper’s once-serious commitment to journalistic objectivity, “allergic to Woodstock” and other left-wing pieties, holding the line against the left-ward drift seemingly inherent to a Manhattan newspaper. A 1970s anecdote on a recurring nightmare by Rosenthal (waking one “Wednesday morning” with no New York Times) reminds us that concerns over the decline of newspaper reading among the young didn’t start with the Internet. McGowan flags the “Southern guilt” of Howell Raines, the editorial page editor who became executive editor in 2001, felled by the favoritism he showed toward young black reporter Jayson Blair, who came to the Times via a minority-only internship program and proceeded to disgrace it. The most blunt parts of “Gray Lady Down” involve race: “The Times racial script…has come to resemble the journalist equivalent of reparations.” McGowan delved into the paper’s archives to show what the paper thought of Malcolm X in 1966 and came up with the striking headline “Black Power Is Black Death.” Can you imagine that at the top of the Times editorial page tomorrow? In a brief foray into partisan politics, McGowan cites a fine media watchdog site called (ahem) Times Watch, which analyzed a month of stories the Times did on Barack Obama and Republican John McCain during a slice of the 2008 campaign and found that positive portrayals for Obama outnumbering negative ones by a 3:1 ratio. When it came to McCain, that positive/negative ratio was reversed. “Gray Lady Down” also deals at length with what I consider the most disturbing coverage the paper has put out since I began monitoring the paper: The Duke lacrosse “rape” hoax, a sordid interlude in which the newspaper’s columnists and reporters often discarded the presumption of innocence while stacking the deck against three white lacrosse players arrested for the rape of a black stripper. The paper defended its coverage even as the case imploded and it was revealed that the players were victims of lies by the stripper and misconduct by the local prosecutor. Even on the war on terror, a vital local issue after 9-11, the supposedly unserious tabloid New York Post had more complete and comprehensive coverage of local terror plots then did the “paper of record.” McGowanwent after the Times for scuttling two successful anti-terror programs and laid out “The Times’ alienation from military culture” in the “War” chapter. “Gray Lady Down” reminds us of the ad the Times ran (at a healthy discount) for the left-wing anti-war group MoveOn.org, notoriously headlined “General Petraeus or General Betray Us?” That ad appeared in September 2007, just as the troop surge in Iraq began to bear fruit under the leadership of U.S. Army General David Petraeus. McGowan concluded by circling back to the departure of Abe Rosenthal, the symbol of the old-fashioned journalism he believes was exemplified under Rosenthal’s regime. He’s not a boycotter or even an enemy of the Times; most of his criticism is of the sorrowful, not angry, variety. He just longs for “a much better version of the Times than is being produced by the current regime.” This article was adapted from a longer version on Times Watch .
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Move seen by some as reaction to pro-democracy calls across Middle East and follows announcement of overdue elections The Palestinian Authority cabinet has resigned in a move seen by some as a response to calls for democratic reform echoing around the Middle East. The prime minister, Salam Fayyad, tendered the cabinet’s resignation to the PA president, Mahmoud Abbas, and is expected to form a new team of ministers within a few weeks. The move follows the announcement at the weekend that long-delayed general elections will be held by September . Hamas, the Islamist movement that controls the Gaza Strip and which welcomed the fall of Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak, said it would not take part in the elections nor recognise their outcome. Fayyad, the unelected prime minister of the PA, is respected by the west for implementing a programme of reforms and state-building measures in the West Bank. He is thought to be keen to form a cabinet dominated by technocrats. After Mubarak’s departure on Friday , there were street celebrations in Ramallah, the West Bank’s main hub, in solidarity with Egyptian protesters. Elections have not been held since January 2006, when Hamas won an overall majority. Abbas’s term as president expired two years ago. He has not declared whether he will be a candidate in the elections this year, but has repeatedly threatened to quit in the past. Many ordinary Palestinians complain of increased repression in the West Bank, including the intimidation, detention and torture of political dissenters. Hanan Ashwari, a veteran Palestinian legislator and member of Fayyad’s Third Way party, rejected the idea that the cabinet’s resignation was connected to events in Egypt. “This has been in the making for some time, so it would be a mistake to overload the timing with significance,” she said. “This has nothing to do with Egypt. The delay was due to technical problems.” She said Fayyad wanted a cabinet of “qualified, professional people” to oversee elections and assist in building institutions in preparation for a Palestinian state. The PA, which is dominated by the Fatah political faction, has limited rule in the West Bank. Israeli military and civil authorities control about 60% of the territory. Since Hamas took control of Gaza in June 2007, 18 months after winning the elections, there has been a split between the two territories and their dominant political factions. Hamas accuses the Fatah-led PA of assisting Israel’s economic stranglehold of Gaza. Meanwhile, Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator who handed in his resignation on Saturday following the leak of thousands of documents from his office , cancelled a press conference to explain his move. Palestinian territories Middle East Gaza Fatah Hamas Mahmoud Abbas Egypt Hosni Mubarak Israel Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
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Police dismantle remaining tents in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, as Egyptian troops attempt to get the country back to work
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Muammar Gaddafi has resorted to the oldest trick in the Arab-dictator book: distract attention from authoritarian rule at home by beating the Palestinian drum.
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Over the next few days, Al Jazeera will be looking at the impact of rising food prices around the world. With increasing wealth in China, expensive culinary tastes have grown in popularity. And as Al Jazeera’s Melissa Chan now reports from Beijing, it is also impacting waistlines.
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