President Obama’s entrepreneurship campaign is getting a helping hand from the tech industry. AOL co-founder Steve Case will lead the “Startup America Partnership,” a drive to increase investments in startups and small businesses, Bloomberg reports. The initiative already has the backing of a number of tech giants: Intel says it…
Continue reading …Over the weekend, libertarian billionaires Charles and David Koch convened a conference of like-minded businessmen and policymakers at the Rancho Las Palmas resort to discuss election strategy and the future of classical liberalism. Outside, a hodgepodge of lefty protest groups gathered to whine about the influence of money in politics. In a completely unsurprising show of hypocrisy, Soros-funded groups such as Common Cause and the Center for American Progress joined the ruckus. The irony was not lost on conference participant Tim Carney, who wrote in Monday's Washington Examiner : In other words, money from billionaire George Soros and anonymous, well-heeled liberals was funding a protest against rich people's influence on politics. When Politico reporter Ken Vogel pointed out that Soros hosts similar “secret” confabs, CAP's Fang responded on Twitter: “don't you think there's a very serious difference between donors who help the poor vs. donors who fund people to kill government, taxes on rich?” In less than 140 characters, Fang had epitomized the myopic liberal view of money in politics: Conservative money is bad, and linked to greed, while liberal money is self-evidently philanthropic. Jane Mayer wrote in the New Yorker magazine, for instance, that the Kochs' anti-regulation, anti-bailout, low-tax agenda “dovetail[s] with the brothers' corporate interest.” Of Soros, Mayer asserted flatly “none of his contributions are in the service of his own economic interests.” This is the Obama campaign's tune, too. While decrying Republican campaign contributions in an Obama fundraising e-mail, someone at Organizing for America apparently got self-conscious about the irony and tagged the e-mail with a subject line saying: “Our Donations Are Different.” Carney goes on to thoroughly debunk that tired sophism. “The moral difference is this,” he concludes: “Only one side is trying to compel others to conform to its preferences.” How do you generally respond when ineviably confronted with the “Our Donations Are Different” line? It's virtually ubiquitous when debating liberals. What's your retort, or is it similar to Carney's?
Continue reading …From revolutionary France and America to modern north Africa, this is a concept that can topple governments The day after popular pressure forced Tunisia’s autocratic president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali from power on 14 January, Egypt’s government declared that it “respects the will of the Tunisian people”. So did the governments of Yemen and Iran, and so did the Arab League. Jordan’s government followed suit the next day. In his state of the union address on 25 January, Obama also celebrated Tunisia as a place “where the will of the people proved more powerful than the writ of a dictator”, before reminding the world that “the United States of America supports the democratic aspirations of all people”. Routine reference to “the will of the people” has long been one of the most formulaic turns of phrase in the modern political lexicon. The actual mobilisation of such a will, however, is less easily dismissed. Ongoing protests in Egypt – and in Algeria, and Yemen, and Jordan, indeed throughout the Middle East – may well oblige their governments to decide fairly soon whether they mean what they say. So may renewed mobilisations here in the UK and across Europe, against the latest phase in the long neoliberal assault on public services and welfare. Needless to say, the US and its far-flung clients have never hesitated – in Guatemala, Vietnam, Chile, Palestine, Haiti, Turkey – to undermine or crush those people whose wills did not dovetail with their own. But however facile its diplomatic invocations might seem, the “will of the people” remains in both theory and practice a profoundly transformative notion, and even a superficial consideration of its history should be enough to remind us of its revolutionary inflection. In the 18th century, no less than today, to affirm the rational will of the people as the source of sovereign power was to reject conceptions of politics premised on either the mutual exclusion of society and will (a politics determined by natural, historical or economic “necessity”) or on the primacy of another sort of will (the will of a monarch, a priest, an elite). Conceived in terms that frame it as both inclusive and decisive, Rousseau and the Jacobins forced evocation of a popular or “general” will to the divisive centre of modern politics. Reference to la volonté du peuple underlay the French revolution’s Declaration of the Rights of Man and of Citizens in 1789 and Robespierre’s constitution of 1793. Jefferson anticipated much of the subsequent history of his newly independent nation when he emphasised the struggle between “those who fear and distrust the people, and wish to draw all powers from them into the hands of the higher classes”, and “those who identify themselves with the people, have confidence in them” and consider them the “safest depository of their rights”. Clarification and concentration of the people’s will would remain the guiding thread of Bolshevik strategy in the run-up to 1917, and Lenin’s main concern, early and late, was to achieve a militant and tenacious “unanimity of will” powerful enough to overcome the defences of an indefensible status quo. For Mao, likewise, the goal was to unify and intensify the people’s “will to fight” against their oppressors, before establishing a form of government that might most “fully express the will of all the revolutionary people”. Mao’s revolutionary contemporaries (Giap, Castro, Che Guevara, Mandela) adopted similarly militant and “universalisable” priorities. So did, in a different context, the more radical partisans of the US civil rights movement. The ANC summarised this whole line of thought when it insisted in its 1955 Freedom Charter that “no government can justly claim authority unless it is based on the will of all the people”, and posed as its first demand: “The people shall govern!” Around the same time, one of north Africa’s most influential writers and activists, Frantz Fanon , conceived of political practice along comparable lines. The whole of Fanon’s contribution to Algeria’s liberation struggle (1954-1962) is oriented by a popular “will to independence”, the “national will of the oppressed peoples”, their “will to break with exploitation and contempt”. The outcome of the Algerian revolution would be decided, he argued, by “the will of 12 million people; that is the only reality”. Rejecting all distraction through “negotiation” or “development”, Fanon insisted on decisive action here and now – the goal was not to reform an intolerable colonial situation over an interminable series of steps, but to abolish it. The “fundamental characteristic of the struggle of the Algerian people”, Fanon maintained, is suggested by their “refusal of progressive solutions, their contempt for the ‘stages’ that might break the revolutionary torrent, and induce them to abandon the unshakable will to take everything into their hands at once”. The fate of their revolution depends on the people’s “co-ordinated and conscious” participation in their ongoing self-emancipation. In today’s Tunisia and Egypt, as in 1950s Algeria, to affirm the will of the people is not to invoke an empty phrase. Will and people: rejecting the merely “formal” conceptions of democracy that disguise our status quo, an actively democratic politics will think one term through the other. A will of the people, on the one hand, must involve association and collective action, and will depend on a capacity to invent and preserve forms of inclusive assembly (through demonstrations, meetings, unions, parties, websites, networks). If an action is prescribed by popular will, on the other hand, then what’s at stake is a free or voluntary course of action, decided on the basis of informed and reasoned deliberation. Determination of the people’s will is a matter of popular participation and empowerment before it is a matter of representation, sanctioned authority or stability. Unlike mere “wish”, if it is to persist and prevail then a popular will must remain united in the face of its opponents, and find ways of overcoming their resistance to its aims. Whether it takes place in Tunis or Cairo , Caracas or Port-au-Prince, Athens or London, to ground political action in the will of the people is to reassert a collective capacity for deliberate and revolutionary transformation. As the people who are defying the governments of north Africa demonstrate, there are circumstances in which collective courage and enthusiasm can be more than a match for coercive state power. The cliche remains hollow until adopted in practice: “Where there’s a will there’s a way.” Egypt Tunisia Protest Algeria Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali France Middle East United States Peter Hallward guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …No one wants the Muslim Brotherhood to take over, no one wants violence – just elections and a new constitution This is a sweet, sweet revolution; it is peaceful. Tell everyone we are peaceful. We do not owe this revolution to the Muslim Brotherhood, not to anybody. They say the Ikhwan is more organised – maybe. But this is the people on the street; this is not about any political party. Look, he says, more and more people are coming; Tahrir Square is getting more and more full. I am sorry, the man tells me, but I hate your president. What is this speech he gives? Why can’t he support us? He says we can have human rights but he gives us no political rights? To America, we are monkeys, monkeys, monkeys. We Egyptians don’t deserve a constitution, don’t deserve freedom, don’t deserve democracy. We are in the streets every day since 25 January and you give us Omar Suleiman , an agent? We are out here demanding our rights and you give us the head of intelligence? We will not accept Suleiman. America puts the security of Israel above the people of Egypt. We are monkeys to America. They are saying we Egyptians don’t deserve political rights, don’t deserve freedom. It’s over… the fact that the outside world continues to engage this guy Mubarak is ridiculous. It’s over. This has nothing to do with any political party. It is truly a popular movement. There is concern about what is going to happen next. We need to continue to experience this with joy. We have to remain peaceful until we get our demands. Look, there are more and more people walking into Tahrir Square. We want new elections to set up a committee to write a new constitution. We want clean elections; once we have a new constitution, we can elect a new government. We are not less than South Africa. Tell the Americans we are not less than South Africa. We deserve our rights. So far the judges have not spoken yet. We are waiting to hear from the judges about bringing about the constitutional changes that we need. But the judges are not being allowed to speak to the people. Clinton just spoke: she says we deserve human rights. We want political rights. Please tell the people in America we want our rights. Please explain we don’t have internet. Everyone has to understand that the rights of the Egyptian people are being sold for Israel’s security. Our rights are being sold. It’s as if we are monkeys. They have one strategic consideration and that’s Israel. We sleep at night in fear. We sleep without police at night. Do you know what that’s like? To wake up one day and there’s no police, no prisons, no safety? The police is over. We are scared. The curfew was for 6pm and the police were told to go home. There are two theories of what happened to the police a) the police were shocked by the people’s reaction, got scared and took off b) the ministry of the interior is teaching us a lesson, so they withdrew the police to scare us. But it backfired. We were out all night in the streets guarding our neighbourhood in Zamalek. Together, neighbour with neighbour. We worked together. Most of us hadn’t even met before this. The ministry of the interior pulled all the police to scare us: it backfired. We are taking care of each other. There is too much anger at police. Some are good and tried to stop the chaos. But there is a lot of anger: in one neighbourhood someone got shot. The interior ministry is under siege; they are shooting live ammunition into the crowds. There is a street battle. This is why they turned the phones back on because the ministry of interior people needed to be able to talk to each other – they had no phones themselves, they were using walkie-talkies. In some police stations, there are stand-offs. Police are trapped and they are shooting. The army needs to take over the interior ministry. Nothing short of this. The level of demand is high. The people are so aware, they know what they want. The majority of people are happy but some are scared and concerned about what will happen next. No one wants the Muslim Brotherhood to take over, no one wants violence. We are being peaceful, tell them we are being peaceful. On Thursday night they shut down the internet. Khalas . Tell them we have no contact, no texting, no internet, nothing. Listen, they are chanting in the streets: “Gamal, Gamal, tell your father we hate you.” Are the crowds anti-US, I ask. Not so far, no anti-American sentiments in the crowds. They have brought back the slogan from the 1980s: “Mubarak traitor, agent of Americans.” It’s a sweet, peaceful revolution. Tell them. Look, more and more people are coming into Tahrir… Egypt Protest Middle East Amr Shalakany guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It seems these days whenever Bill Maher opens his mouth, he's bound to stick his foot in it while saying something totally devoid of logic or factual basis. Consider Friday's “Real Time” on HBO when with his final “New Rule,” he claimed the economic business philosophy of NFL football is similar to that of the Democratic Party while Major League Baseball's is more in line with the Republicans (video follows with transcript and commentary): BILL MAHER: So it's not a surprise that some 100 million Americans will watch the Super Bowl next week. That's 40 million more than go to church on Christmas. Suck on that, Jesus. It's also 85 million more than watched the last game of the World Series. And in that is an economic lesson for America, because football is built on an economic model of fairness and opportunity, and baseball is built on a model where the rich always win and the poor usually have no chance. The World Series is like the “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills”: you have to be a rich bitch just to play. Whereas the Super Bowl is like Tila Tequila, anyone can get in. Or put it another way, football is more like the Democratic philosophy. Democrats don't want to eliminate capitalism or competition, but they would like it if some kids didn't have to go to a crummy school in a rotten neighborhood while others get to go to a great school and their Dad gets them into Harvard, because when that happens, achieving the American dream is easy for some and just a fantasy for others. That's why the NFL literally shares the wealth. TV is their biggest source of revenue and they put it all in a big commie pot and split it 32 ways because they don't want anyone to fall too far behind. That's why the team that wins the Super Bowl in the next draft picks last – or what the Republicans would call punishing success. [Applause] For those of you familiar with how both sports work – something that Maher clearly isn't – you know the “Real Time” host was once again misrepresenting the truth to advance his liberal agenda. The NFL does indeed have what's called revenue sharing, but so does baseball. As reported by CBS Business Network in 2008: After hashing out their competing interests, large-market owners, small-market owners, and the players’ union initially struck a major revenue sharing deal during collective bargaining in 2002. Under the latest version , in effect through 2011, all teams pay in 31 percent of their local revenues and that pot is split evenly among all 30 teams. In addition, a chunk of MLB’s Central Fund — made up of revenues from sources like national broadcast contracts — is disproportionately allocated to teams based on their relative revenues, so lower-revenue teams get a bigger piece of the pie. As such, baseball's revenue sharing is actually more socialistic than football's for the lower-revenue teams get a bigger chunk of the shared funds. Makes Maher look like a bit of a jerk, doesn't it? So does his point about the winner of the Super Bowl getting the lowest pick in the following year's draft. Baseball does the same thing giving the last pick to the winner of the World Series. I guess you could call that strike two. But there were more wildly errant swings still to come: MAHER: Baseball, baseball, on the other hand, is exactly like the Republicans. And I don't just mean it's incredibly boring. I mean their economic theory is every man for himself. The small-market Pittsburgh Steelers go to the Super Bowl more than anybody, but the Pittsburgh Pirates? Levi Johnston has sperm that will not grow up and live long enough to see the Pirates in a World Series. Their payroll is 40 million. The Yankees is 206 million. The Pirates have about as much chances getting to the playoffs as a poor black teenager from Newark has of becoming the CEO of Halliburton. That's why people stopped going to Pirate games in May, because if you're not in the game you become indifferent to the fate of the game and maybe even get bitter. That's what's happening to the middle class in America. [Applause] It's also how Marie Antoinette lost her head. So you kind of have to laugh that the same angry white males who hate Obama because he's redistributing wealth just love football, a sport that succeeds because it does just that. To them, the NFL is American as hot dogs, Chevrolet, apple pie, and a second giant helping of apple pie. But then again, they think they're macho because their sport is football, when, honestly, is there anything gayer than wearing another man's shirt? As San Francisco Giants announcer Mike Krukow often says when someone strikes out, “Take some pine, meat”: The San Francisco Giants won the World Series in 2010. They had the tenth-highest payroll in the league. Their opponent, the Texas Rangers, had the 27th-highest payroll. Only three teams spent less last year. In 2008, the Tampa Bay Rays made the World Series with the second-lowest payroll. In 2007, the Colorado Rockies went with the 26th-highest payroll. In 2006, the Detroit Tigers went with the 14th-highest . In 2003, the Florida Marlins won the Series with the 20th-highest payroll. In 2002, the Anaheim Angels won the Series with the 15th-highest payroll beating the Giants who had the tenth. In 2001, the Arizona Diamondbacks won the Series with the eighth-highest payroll. So much for his “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” analogy. Add it all up, and the differences between the economic philosophies of these two sports as depicted by Maher Friday evening were totally non-existent. Funnier still is that the “Real Time” host completely ignored what does indeed separate these leagues financially: football has a salary cap and baseball doesn't. This is what allows teams like the Yankees and Red Sox to spend so lavishly. Maher ignoring this suggests he really knows little about these sports, for there's nothing more Republican than the belief that achievement should come with unlimited rewards, and nothing more Democrat than it shouldn't. On the other hand, maybe the “Real Time” host didn't bring this up because he doesn't want to admit support for salary caps fearing that such a thing could some day be implemented by one of his employers to spread the wealth within the organization he works for. As likely one of the highest paid at HBO, Maher mightn't think such a program was “Democratic” if he was forced to participate in it. Now THAT'S entertainment!
Continue reading …There is simply no understanding the prevalence of gun violence in America – as evidenced by the recent attempted assassination of a congresswoman during a mass shooting – without discussing the nefarious role played by the National Rifle Association (NRA). Once an organisation primarily concerned with the education and training of sportsmen, in a coup that came to be known as the Cincinnati Revolt in 1977, hardliners took over the leadership and believed that any gun regulation would take us down a slippery slope to Khmer Rougism. In the years since, unlike the US in the wake of the 1968 assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy – or for that matter Australia after the Port Arthur Massacre – the response to senseless gun violence has been to discuss everything from the rhetoric on our airwaves to the weather outside. But any public conversations regarding restricting who has access to guns has been considered verboten (although, thankfully, this time some cracks are beginning to show). This is largely because the NRA’s duping its own members, which we’ll discuss below, and coming to the realisation that the real money was in actually protecting the rights of gun manufacturers, which we’ll discuss in Part II of this series. If the NRA leadership is not radical, they certainly see the benefit in playing radicals on TV in order to enrich their financial benefactors who produce and sell the weaponry of death. In the 1990s, in a climate of fear and paranoia that produced the Oklahoma City bombing, they were all too happy to refer to the government authority that tries to enforce gun laws, the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco & Firearms (ATF), as “jack-booted thugs”. This led former president George H.W. Bush to resign his membership. They then decided to up the ante by accusing former president Bill Clinton of murder and saying he “had blood on his hands” – all for the crime of supporting background checks at gun shows – which is among the many legislative proposals to reduce gun violence that they have repeatedly blocked. Others include a ban on high-capacity magazines, banning sales to those on terrorist watch lists, and fully funding the aforementioned ATF (think about the latter when they say they want to “strengthen existing gun laws” after each new tragedy). In fact, just a few days after the mass shooting in Tucson it was reported by Ryan Reilly from TPMMuckraker that a “jihadist” in America who was… “a moderator and contributor on Islamic extremist web forums, posted songs praising suicide bombers, discussed his jihad fantasies in the open…” was able to get an AK-47, no questions asked. Emerson Begolly, the “jihadist” in question, responded when queried about this with laughter and facetiously exclaimed that “someone at the FBI showed up to work drunk”. Perhaps, but if they were, it was only because the NRA forced them to do keg stands. More… Follow me On Twitter: @cliffschecter
Continue reading …They say it’s better to be lucky than good. But on Thursday, Fox News host Glenn Beck may have been both. The night before, his pay-for Insider Extreme web site premiered ” Rumors of War ,” an incendiary pseudo-documentary designed to drum up support for conflict with Tehran by claiming, among other things, “now the Iranians are positioning themselves, so they will be able at some point in time, to penetrate the southern borders of the United States with terrorists.” Then almost on cue, the next morning a ” Fox News Exclusive ” ominously reported, “Iranian Book Celebrating Suicide Bombers Found in Arizona Desert.” Immediately picked up by the conservative echo chamber, within hours Beck himself was reporting the story. That extraordinarily happy coincidence for Beck and his right-wing allies started with a new flash from Foxnews.com Thursday morning: A book celebrating suicide bombers has been found in the Arizona desert just north of the U.S.- Mexican border, authorities tell Fox News. The book, “In Memory of Our Martyrs,” was spotted Tuesday by a U.S. Border Patrol agent out of the Casa Grande substation who was patrolling a route known for smuggling illegal immigrants and drugs. Published in Iran, it consists of short biographies of Islamic suicide bombers and other Islamic militants who died carrying out attacks. But while Fox quoted a Homeland Security statement which cautioned, “At this time, DHS does not have any credible information on terrorist groups operating along the Southwest border,” Beck’s employer left out some vital information that might cast some doubt on the growing Iranian threat south of the Rio Grande. Credit: Amazon.com Those omissions included the fact that the worse-for-wear copy of “In Memory of Our Martyrs” was written not in Farsi or even Arabic, but in English . Listed on Amazon.com (pictured here), the book was published by Iranian Ministry of Islamic Guidance in 1982, the short book “contains biographies of Islamic suicide bombers, along with final letters they wrote to their families,” presumably during Tehran’s war with Iraq beginning in 1980. Nevertheless, as CBS affiliate KPHO Channel 5 in Phoenix reported: Still, the story has gone viral on the web, with blog posters suggesting this is proof Islamic terrorists who intend to do harm are using our porous border with Mexico to enter the United States. Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., called on the Obama administration to secure the border. “If terrorists ever come across our border with nuclear weapons… they (could) hold an entire city hostage,” Franks said. “This book is a grave reminder of the mindset and intent of the indescribably dangerous enemy we face.” Within hours of the Fox story, the right-wing blogosphere was doing its best to warn of the reading list of the would-be Muslim martyrs in Mexico. Hot Air and Townhall predictably ratcheted up the warning. Then, Glenn Beck’s own web site The Blaze amplified the threat, leading its story with “Fox News has an exclusive report detailing how a book celebrating suicide bombers has been found in the Arizona desert just north of the U.S.- Mexican border .” No surprise, The Blaze added a promotion for the Beck’s ” Rumors of War ” documentary, which just happens to be a jeremiad on the same topic. Editor’s note: A portion of the recent documentary, “Rumor of War,” released by Glenn Beck deals specifically with this topic. It discusses Iran’s infiltration of Mexican drug cartels and the push to enter America through its southern border. That documentary can be viewed here. By Thursday night, Glenn Beck himself completed the conservative news cycle of life on his own Fox News show: I want you to know, there are enemies within our own borders. Did you see this FOX News exclusive today? An Iranian book celebrating suicide bombers has been found in the Arizona desert. Gee, you think? The discovery of that book could be very bad news for the people of the United States of America. Or, given its almost miraculously timed appearance in the Arizona desert, very good news for Glenn Beck. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …Who needs virtual farming when you can go virtual hunting? The Oregon Trail—that classic computer game that brought us back to the America of 1848—is coming to Facebook on Feb. 2, and will be followed by Where in the World is Carmen San Diego? one week later. “We…
Continue reading …Article by WN.com Correspondent Dallas Darling. Much like President Herbert Hoover, President Barack Obama got it wrong in his State of the Union Address. If there was ever a time for government intervention and relief for millions of America workers, it was during The Great Depression, something Hoover did not recognize. Simultaneously, if there was ever a time for government involvement and intercession on behalf of America’s moral life and with its collective ideals, it is now, something Obama did not acknowledge. Whereas Hoover never understood the politics of an economic depression, Obama does not understand the politics of a moral depression. It is an unfortunate twist of fate, in…
Continue reading …