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Perpetual presidential candidate Mitt Romney has performed more flips than an X Games champion. The pro-choice Senate candidate (and Planned Parenthood donor ) of 1994 did a hard right turn on abortion for the approaching 2008 GOP primaries, prompting adviser Michael Murphy to acknowledge “he’s been a pro-life Mormon faking it as a pro-choice friendly.” On immigration, disinvestment from Iran, the significance of Osama Bin Laden and even his state of residence, Romney’s gymnastic contortions are the stuff of legend. But in his embarrassing effort to whitewash his support for a Massachusetts health care law virtually identical to the federal Affordable Care Act, Mitt Romney has literally rewritten his own book – and history. On Friday, the former Massachusetts governor delivered a blistering assault on President Obama at the CPAC conference. But 24 hours before a speech in which Romney omitted any mention of his signature health care law, the Boston Phoenix explained that he carefully rewrote critical sections of the paperback edition of his year old book, No Apology . In a book otherwise unchanged, the Phoenix and later ThinkProgress reported, Romney added new criticism of the Obama stimulus program and performed major surgery on the section about the “Massachusetts Model:” In the original hardcover, Romney tried to carefully distinguish between the Massachusetts law and the national version that was nearing passage as he wrote. But the Massachusetts model has become Romney’s bête noire among conservatives, who loathe the national reform they call “Obamacare.” The rewritten paperback swings much harder, proclaiming that “Obamacare will not work and should be repealed,” and “Obamacare is an unconstitutional federal incursion into the rights of states.” Just as important as what Romney put in is what he took out. The 2010 hardcover edition included an explanation of the major difference between his RomneyCare and ObamaCare: a public option . Sadly for Mitt (and the American people), the Affordable Care Act did not include a public option. Which may explain why the following paragraph was amputated from the paperback version of No Apology : In 2009, the national health-care policy supported by Barack Obama was often and erroneously reported as being based on the plan we enacted in Massachusetts. There were some big differences — in particular, our plan did not include a public insurance option. The notion of getting the federal government into the health-insurance business is a very bad idea. Government-supplied insurance would inevitably be subsidized at great cost to the taxpayers and, combined with Medicare and Medicaid, it would give government the kind of monopoly we would never allow a private entity to claim. Clearly, the public insurance option is simply a transitional step toward the president’s stated goal of creating a single-payer system, one in which the nation’s sole health insurer would be the federal government. It’s no wonder Romney altered his conclusion from “We can accomplish the same thing for everyone in the country, and it can be done without letting government take over health care” to “And it was done without government taking over health care.” It also comes as no surprise that the once and future GOP White House hopeful added seven paragraphs in the vain hope of explaining his Massachusetts health care plan now gone national. Vain, that is, because of past statements like these : In October of 2009, Romney urged Democrats to use the Massachusetts law as a model to expand coverage. “We have found that we can get everybody insured without breaking the bank and without a public option,” Romney told CNN’s Sanjay Gupta. “Massachusetts is a model for getting everybody insured in a way that doesn’t break the bank, doesn’t put the government in the driver’s seat and allows people to own their own insurance policies and not to have to worry about losing coverage. That’s what Massachusetts did,” he said. That’s not all he said. In 2008 , Romney proclaimed, “I like mandates,” adding, “The mandates work.” And once upon a time, Governor Romney praised the late Senator Ted Kennedy for the vital role he played in the 2006 passage of the Massachusetts health care reform that reduced the ranks of the uninsured to a national low 3%. In November 2007, Time’s Karen Tumulty documented their alliance in ” Mitt Romney’s Defining Moment “: “I asked for his help on certain legislators: ‘Could you give a call on this one?’” Romney says. On March 22, 2006, Kennedy did more than that. He went to the floor of both the house and the senate on Beacon Hill and spoke in very personal terms about the battles with cancer his son and daughter had faced. “This whole issue in terms of universal and comprehensive care has always burned in my soul,” Kennedy said. The Federal Government had failed the country on health care, he told the politicians, but “Massachusetts has a chance to do something about it.” Of course, these days Mitt Romney has little to say about Ted Kennedy. Instead, Romney declared in 2007, “My life experience convinced me that Ronald Reagan was right.” But years before claiming Reagan’s mantle for the 2008 Republican primaries, Mitt Romney during his failed 1994 Senate run against Kennedy rejected the Gipper outright: “I was an independent during the time of Reagan-Bush; I’m not trying to return to Reagan-Bush. My positions don’t talk about the things you suggest they talk about; this isn’t a political issue.” Pressed on that point the last time he confronted conservative Republican primary voters, Mitt Romney in 2007 adopted an evasion akin to his current health care Houdini act: “Now, I wasn’t always a Ronald Reagan conservative. Neither was Ronald Reagan, by the way.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
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Egyptian minister says thieves targeted most-valuable artefacts after breaking in through roof and descending by ropes Thieves have stolen 18 priceless artefacts from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, including two gilded statues of King Tutankhamun, during the political unrest. Zahi Hawass, the antiquities minister, said the losses were discovered during an inventory of the museum after the protests died down. Among missing items are a statue of Tutankhamun being carried by a goddess and another of him harpooning. Also stolen is a limestone statue of the pharaoh Akhenaten holding an offering table, a statue of Nefertiti making offerings and several other stone and wooden artefacts. Hawass said that an investigation is underway and that the “police and army plan to follow up with the criminals already in custody”. The museum is on the edge of Tahrir square, the heart of three weeks of protests that brought down the president, Hosni Mubarak. It was raided on 28
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I don’t know how many Pakistanis accepted the “official” version of the Bhutto assassination, but I always thought there was more to it because of the conflicting stories. Since Musharraf was funded and propped up by the Western powers, this news will naturally cast suspicion on us: ISLAMABAD – A Pakistani court issued an arrest warrant for ousted military leader Pervez Musharraf on Saturday over allegations he played a role in the 2007 assassination of an ex-prime minister and rival. It was a major setback for the onetime U.S. ally, who was plotting a political comeback from outside the country. Musharraf, who has not been charged, described accusations that he had a hand in the attack on ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto as a smear campaign by a government led by her aggrieved husband. The stunning allegation that Musharraf — a self-declared opponent of Islamic militancy — was linked to extremists accused in the attack was likely to keep him out of Pakistan, at least in the short term. His possible arrest abroad did not appear imminent, but Pakistan’s information minister, Firdous Ashiq, Awan said the government will contact Interpol about seeking Musharraf’s detention if the court requests it. Musharraf’s spokesman said the former leader was in Dubai, with no plans to go to Pakistan. Speaking from London, where Musharraf has lived in self-imposed exile, Fawad Chaudri quoted him as saying that the accusations were “absurd and ridiculous.” Musharraf left Pakistan for Britain in 2008 after being forced out of the presidency he secured in a 1999 military coup. Though Musharraf does not have a large support base in Pakistan, he has vowed to return to lead a new political party. Bhutto was killed Dec. 27, 2007, in a gun and suicide bomb attack after returning to Pakistan to campaign in elections Musharraf reluctantly allowed. Musharraf blamed the Pakistani Taliban for the attack, but government prosecutors now say he was part of the plot .
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Hundreds of Egypt’s police have been protesting outside the country’s Interior Ministry. They are demanding better wages. Often accused of violence against pro-democracy protesters, the police are also seeking to clear their name. Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh reports from cairo.
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Bangkok, Thailand’s capital, is a city of more than 10 million people, but it has few public ambulances. In order to fill the gap, which stands at 1 ambulance for ever 67000 citizens, a volunteer service began to run its own ambulances. While it used to have an unsavoury reputation, however, things are now changing. The volunteer services have developed into highly organised teams who are proud of their self-appointed roles. Al Jazeera’s Aela Callan in Bangkok has more.
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Click here to view this media Well, it won’t make The Donald very happy, but here we go again: For the second year in a row, Ron Paul won the presidential straw poll at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, earning 30 percent of the vote. The Texas congressman, known for his libertarian views, ran for president in 2008 but was never a serious contender for the GOP nomination. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a 2008 GOP candidate who is expected to run again, came in second place with 23 percent of the vote. Romney won the previous three presidential straw polls before Paul snapped his streak last year. Many convention-goers booed when the results were announced but the Paul supporters drowned them out with chants of “Ron Paul! Ron Paul! Ron Paul!” Paul’s consecutive victories in the straw poll have frustrated many GOP faithful who would rather see a more credible contender win. A CPAC official told Fox News that the big story is not Paul winning again but rather the strength of Romney’s second-place finish. I think we can just pretty much repeat what Logan said last year at this time : Now, I don’t disagree with everything Ron Paul has to say, but I would never vote for him and boy, did he ever get destroyed by the GOP base during the 2008 Presidential campaign. Talk about the proverbial ship without a rudder. This wasn’t some online poll that got freeped, this was taken in person at the GOP’s biggest annual event. It’s always helpful when a guy who really is a right-wing extremist gets the support of the GOP’s most ardent activists. Tells us a lot about the direction they want to go, at the very least.
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Truncheons drawn as thousands march in capital Sana’a amid fears over stability in the region Yemeni police have clashed with anti-government protesters staging a third consecutive day of demonstrations calling for political reforms and the resignation of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Several thousand protesters, many of them university students, tried to reach the central square in the capital, Sana’a, but were pushed back by police using truncheons. The fall of the Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, has emboldened protesters in Yemen and raised questions about the country’s stability and other western-allied governments in the region. Saleh has been in power for three decades and has tried to defuse the unrest by promising not to run for re-election in 2013. Witnesses in Sana’a said several protesters were injured and 23 were detained by police in Sunday’s clashes. They said plainclothes police officers holding daggers and sticks joined the security forces in driving the protesters back. The protesters – chanting “people want to overthrow the regime” – tried to reach Hada Square in the downtown area of the city. Demonstrators tried to reach Tahrir (Liberation) Square on Saturday, but security forces pushed them back. Buses ferried ruling party members, equipped with tents, food and water, to the city’s main square to help prevent attempts by protesters to gather there. On Sunday, local officials provided qat, leaves Yemenis chew as a stimulant, to plainclothes police and government supporters who spent the night in the square, witnesses said. Police also set barbed wire around the square to prevent protesters from taking it over. The anti-government protests started on Friday night as thousands of Yemenis took to the street to celebrate the resignation of Mubarak and demand the overthrow of their own president. The US finds itself in a delicate position in Yemen, where it is seeking a balance between democratic reforms and stability in a country that has become a key ally in the fight against Islamist militants. Yemen is the Arab world’s most impoverished country and has become a haven for al-Qaida militants. Critics accuse the government, which has little control outside the capital, of corruption. Oil – Yemen’s main source of income – could run dry in a decade. The country has been the site of anti-US attacks dating back to the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in Aden harbour, which killed 17 American sailors. The radical US-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, thought to be hiding in Yemen, is suspected of having inspired some attacks, including the 2009 shooting at Fort Hood, Texas, in which 13 people died. Yemen Middle East Hosni Mubarak Egypt guardian.co.uk
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With hundreds of thousands taking to the streets for the third week demanding a change of regime, can there be an honourable exit for the president? And is the army about to take sides?
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Egypt’s military has started taking down the makeshift tents in Tahrir Square after days of protests in central Cairo
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They may be bottom of the Spanish Primera Division, but Malaga could change the face of football in Spain after becoming only the second club to be owned by foreigners. Sheikh Abdullah Al Thani, a member of the Qatari royal family, has invested heavily since purchasing the Andalusian club for about $50 million, with only Real Madrid spending more. Former Real coach Manuel Pellegrini has been able to buy five new players in the January transfer window, including Brazilian World Cup star Julio Baptista. With few other clubs outside the Real-Barca stronghold able to afford such luxuries, could the top two face a challenge from newly-rich teams in the future? Matt Rumsey reports from Malaga.
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