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Amazing what two years can do. Barack Obama's promises to stir up Washington and reject the status quo seem like distant memories. We imagine they'd elicit a chuckle from most Americans if uttered today. In his latest Washington Post column, Charles Krauthammer writes that “Obama's Democrats have become the party of no.” Real cuts to the federal budget? No. Entitlement reform? No. Tax reform? No. Breaking the corrupt and fiscally unsustainable symbiosis between public-sector unions and state governments? Hell, no. We have heard everyone – from Obama's own debt commission to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff – call the looming debt a mortal threat to the nation. We have watched Greece self-immolate. We can see the future. The only question has been: When will the country finally rouse itself? Amazingly, the answer is: now. Led by famously progressive Wisconsin – Scott Walker at the state level and Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan at the congressional level – a new generation of Republicans has looked at the debt and is crossing the Rubicon. Recklessly principled, they are putting the question to the nation: Are we a serious people? But why the shift from “hope and change” to the “party of no”? Washington Examiner columnist Tim Carney estimates that Democrats simply misunderstand the brand of populism to which most Americans ascribe: The Left has misread the postbailout populist sentiment all along, assuming public anger was directed at the rich. But American anger, I suspect, is directed not at some people who have money or success, but at those who profit through cronyism and their connections to power. In other words, anti-bailout anger is not anger at the rich, but anger at those unfairly getting rich — at the taxpayer's expense. Is that what's behind this shift in partisan roles? Where do you see the cause?

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Earlier today I noted that mainstream media have not been critical of the Obama administration's poor efforts at evacuating American nationals from Libya. Oddly enough it appears the taxpayer-subsidized NPR has. From Bill Chappell's Feb. 24 blog post, “U.S. Struggles to Evacuate Libya; Others Don't” : U.S. efforts to evacuate hundreds of Americans from Libya are being stymied by bad weather on the coast — and by the refusal of Moammar Gadhafi's government to allow American charter planes to land there.

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Clueless Malkin: Richard Trumka and Andy Stern are "Kings of Astroturf"

Click here to view this media Nothing really gets my blood boiling like seeing people sit in unrighteous judgment of others decrying a lack of civility while being demeaning and nasty themselves. This three minute segment has more insults and insinuations about unions, President Obama, and Democrats than anything they’re whining about. I realize this is the third post in as many days about Fox News crying about meanies on the left, but really, this stuff has to be called out for what it is — an effort to deflect and inflame. It’s part of a larger strategy to surround people with misinformation and turn the tables on their opponents (anyone who isn’t a flaming conservative). Malkin is a real expert at it. Beginning with the unions, she refers to Andy Stern and Richard Trumka as thugs and bullies, then says this: And of course the White House has been trying to disavow these — what’s happening, and try and make it as though it’s some sort of grassroots thing. These are the kings of astroturf , and they’ve been coordinating since day one and of course, well before that to help get Barack Obama elected, and before Richard Trumka, of course, it was Andy Stern, another thuggish Big Labor head. And they can no — they can no — Barack Obama can no more disassociate himself from this kind of trash than he can disassociate himself from his own shadow. Compare and contrast that little mini-rant with her outrage over the Tea Party protests in 2009, where Malkin swore up and down that the Tea Party movement was just a grassroots effort to save those rich folks from the tax burdens imposed on them by mean liberals. Matt Taibbi’s glorious rant on Malkin in 2009 is worth revisiting for this description: And that’s fine, good for her. But that doesn’t make her readable. However, this move of hers to spearhead the teabag movement really adds an element to her writing that wasn’t there before. Now when I read her stuff, I imagine her narrating her text, book-on-tape style, with a big, hairy set of balls in her mouth. It vastly improves her prose. Now think about that when considering this little slam later in the clip, where Hannity brings up signs seen at the Wisconsin protests that say things like “Death to Tyrants” or “Walker the Mubarak of the Midwest.” Granted, these are not very nice things to say, but then…Governor Walker is not being a very nice person. Telling workers to take their union contracts and shove ‘em is hardly my idea of having an adult conversation. But listen to Malkin indulge herself in some projection while accusing Democrats and union members of the same thing. Hannity says the media is “virtually silent on this (the signs) and asks for Malkin’s reaction: Yes, well, it’s a tactic they always use. It was born of an entire Alinsky strategy, of demonizing and marginalizing the left’s opponents. It’s what they always do. And what they’ve always engaged in is this massive, chronic psychological projection, accusing their opponents of what they fundamentally do to fight for their power grabs and for their power agenda. That’s really what it’s all about. And it’s interesting to hear some of these Big Labor thugs defend what they’re doing in Wisconsin, demonizing Governor Walker, trying to prank him, trying to embarrass him, trying to distract him from being an adult and that’s what the voters of Wisconsin wanted — adults. And this big temper tantrum just shows you that there are no adults in Washington, there are no adults in the Democrat party. These people are still in their Huggies PullUps crying all the way. Er, yes. Pullups. Democrat party. Alinsky strategy. Yes, that’s really adult, don’t you think? I have three words for Michelle Malkin with regard to her whining about projection, punking and adult behavior. ACORN . Sherrod . Breitbarted . That is all.

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During the Bush administration, the media perpetually pounded on news developments that highlighted real or imagined incompetence and/or the low regard with which the administration was held in foreign capitals. But with the Obama administration's poor handling of the Libyan crisis, the MSM have been strangely mute. Take for example the evaucation of American expatriates from Libya. Hundreds of Americans crammed aboard a solitary ferry boat may not be able to leave Libya for Malta until tomorrow, the British paper the Daily Mail is reporting . What's more: [W]ith Libyan authorities still refusing to let American chartered aircraft land in Libya, there are growing calls for the U.S. military to join the evacuation effort.

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“U.S. still awaiting Libya's permission to evacuate Americans,” blared the headline for a page A6 story in today's Washington Post. “The United States has been unable to get Libya's permission to evacuate American citizens from the country, State Department officials said Tuesday, prompting the administration to temper its response to the Libyan crackdown,” Post staffers Mary Beth Sheridan and Colum Lynch noted. Gee, you'd think that should be front-page news, and it's difficult to imagine this not being front-page news had it happened under President George W. Bush's watch. Since that article's publication, the State Department has chartered a ferry to evacuate American citizens from the country. From a story filed by Sheridan and Lynch at 11:15 a.m. EST today : A ferry chartered by the United States was docked off the coast of Libya Wednesday and available to evacuate American citizens, the U.S. Embassy said.

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Middle East protests: Is it time for the west to come clean?

Western backing for the old regimes in the Middle East and north Africa precludes any cosy narrative about popular uprisings There has been a tendency among western commentators during the past few weeks of popular uprising in the Middle East and north Africa to interpret the events as occurring along starkly defined fault lines. There are the people versus the regime; Islamists versus the secular; and autocratic, corrupt rulers pitted against a popular desire for democracy, human rights and economic inclusion. All of which contains some truths, but it remains a partial picture. In our desire to create a joined-up narrative out of the unrest, from Yemen to Iraq and Bahrain, we have ignored the specifics. In the rush of politicians such as Hillary Clinton to support the new wave of “freedom”, western governments seem to be replicating the same errors they made during the “colour” revolutions, mistaking the act of revolt for the outcome of a long period of revolution, and accepting the incomplete in the name of “stability”. For, like Tolstoy’s unhappy families, each of the autocracies now embroiled in popular uprisings is autocratic in its own way. What can be said about the events in Tunisia is as inapplicable to Egypt as it is to Bahrain or Yemen. In truth, there are some broad common strands: each country has a young population with a significant, well-educated segment and many people looking for work. In each, power has been monopolised by a small elite, either drawn from a royal family or from a figure backed by the military and business and the west. Corruption is often rife; a culture of repression is vigorous and deeply ingrained. But that tends to be where the similarities end. Take, for instance, comparisons between Egypt and Bahrain. The former is a huge state with a massive urban hinterland centring on Cairo, one of the planet’s megacities. Its recent history includes a “revolution” in 1952 that was in reality a coup. Its social conflicts have been defined by the notion of the threat – in substantial part manufactured by the old regime – of the Muslim Brotherhood and a corrupt system of patronage overseen by the military and the associated National Democratic Party which have enjoyed a monopoly on power and economic opportunity. Bahrain, for all of the similarity of some of the chants at the Pearl roundabout – and the violence used in the attempts to break the protest movement – has a social conflict very differently defined. It has been underpinned by a long-festering sectarian conflict in a Shia-majority country where a Sunni royal family has ruled since the 18th century. Preferment for jobs, including the military and police, has not been through party patronage but through sect, resulting in a situation where the capital is largely Sunni and the far poorer countryside is Shia. Which leaves a profound challenge for the west, whose interventions in the region have historically tended to support exactly those autocrats whose power is now being challenged, while promoting neo-liberal economic policies that have enriched the minority elites while making daily life more difficult for many in the region. It is not good enough to talk, as Clinton, Barack Obama, William Hague and others have done, in feeble generalities about “stability”, “freedom” and “restraint” in a networked world where the weakness and slowness of expression of those sentiments is so rapidly exposed. If western diplomacy – and media commentary – has a function in these times, it should be to expose and focus on the precise dynamics of the awful inequalities in these societies and the routine violence and oppression that sustains them. If the west has a contribution to make, it is in an honest and accurate audit of the nature of the states our governments have for so long been supporting, not prevarication. To describe reality, not vague ideals, and in describing it, reboot the policies that have for so long supported repression and corruption. Arab and Middle East protests Middle East Bahrain Egypt Libya Tunisia Yemen Protest Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Intel to spend $5 billion on new 14nm fab in Arizona, create 4,000 new jobs this year

When Paul Otellini isn’t too busy talking about being jilted by Nokia , he spends his time hosting presidents and splashing billions of dollars on new manufacturing facilities. Intel’s CEO is wrapping his tumultuous week on a high note, having welcomed Barack Obama to Chipzilla’s Oregon facility and treated the president to the happy news that Intel will invest $5 billion back into the US economy by building its most advanced fab yet — which will introduce an impossibly small 14nm production process — in Arizona, to begin operation in 2013. Construction starts in the middle of this year and is expected to create “thousands” of jobs, both temporary and permanent. Aside from that, Otellini has disclosed Intel’s intention to create 4,000 new jobs in the US, mostly in R&D and product development. Music to Obama’s ears, we’re sure. Continue reading Intel to spend $5 billion on new 14nm fab in Arizona, create 4,000 new jobs this year Intel to spend $5 billion on new 14nm fab in Arizona, create 4,000 new jobs this year originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Feb 2011 15:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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GOP comes up short on FP | Alex Slater

The Egyptian crisis and Middle East protests have exposed the Republican party as lacking a clear foreign policy message As protests for democracy spread throughout the Middle East , one thing is clear: the White House is walking a tightrope. President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have been put in the uncomfortable position of addressing dictatorial regimes that are longtime American allies while urging peaceful and orderly protest and, potentially, democratic transition. But from the panoply of prospective Republican presidential candidates, many of whom have engaged in “fact-finding missions” in the Middle East before the Egyptian crisis (a transparent, if time-honoured, ploy to bolster foreign policy credentials), the silence is deafening. Rather than speaking out, they seem content to cede the upper ground to the White House, however difficult the task may be. Even Sarah Palin, who never misses an opportunity to criticise Obama, remained uncharacteristically silent for a period on the subject of Egypt and completely mute on the knockon effects in countries like Bahrain. This is ironic given the publication of her ghostwritten book, which attempts to burnish her weak ( “You can see Russia from here in Alaska” ) foreign policy credentials. Republican party leaders have unconvincingly ascribed the silence of Republican candidates to a need for America to speak as one on matters of foreign policy – an approach that is both novel and disingenuous. Rather, the calm in the midst of this storm underscores the inability of Republican candidates to draw meaningful lines between themselves and Obama on foreign policy (think Iraq in the last election). Some, like Mitt Romney and Haley Barbour, have offered mild rebukes to the president for not distancing himself from Mubarak earlier in the Egyptian revolution. Easy to say when a vital US strategic ally was in the middle of a very unstable situation. But compare this feeble political contrast being drawn to the red-meat attacks on the president over domestic policies, such as government spending or healthcare, which solicit almost daily Republicans beatings. A notable exception is Ambassador John Huntsman , who built real expertise as US envoy to China. His foreign policy credentials could hardly be more polished, and his recent hiring of influential strategists like Tim Miller, who specialise in the very type of social media outreach spurring the revolutions, underscores his savvy in this realm . Part of the overall silence may be the Tea Party effect. Calculating that Tea Party supporters and evangelical voters may be the deciding factor in next year’s Republican primaries, the presidential candidates have decided to “sit this one out”, in deference to the more pressing concerns of that voting bloc (spending, spending, spending). The absence of meaningful Republican debate on the crises unfolding in the Middle East – reinforced by anaemic coverage by traditional rightwing media outlets – underscores the failure of Republicans to build a “deep bench” when it comes to foreign policy. But if foreign policy concerns continue to occupy a high profile in the landscape of issues, such expertise – or even a willingness to engage – could prove critical in the general election. And the result on the left? For what it’s worth, it leaves President Obama as the sole proprietor of the foreign policy limelight . When he said in a press conference this week that, on Egypt, the administration had got it “about right” , who was to gainsay him? Any accusations of presidential mismanagement have been so muted that he has been able to seize the limelight and look authoritative and statesmanlike In fact, together with Hilary Clinton, the White House team – whatever you think of their specific take – has appeared calm and professional by comparison. In these testing and evolving times, that’s a contrast to revel in. US foreign policy Hillary Clinton Barack Obama Obama administration Republicans Mitt Romney Sarah Palin US politics United States Egypt Middle East US elections 2012 Alex Slater guardian.co.uk

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The Right Word: Deficit disorder | Sadhbh Walshe

Rush Limbaugh both deplores and welcomes a government shutdown. Confused? Not as much as Michael Savage is As the budget debate gets more heated, fiscal conservative radio hosts are prepared to do anything to block the president’s proposals, even if it means shutting down the federal government. Rush Limbaugh Rush Limbaugh believes that not only is a government shut down inevitable if an agreement cannot be reached on the budget, but that the President may actually be pushing for this outcome ( listen to clip, read transcript ). “Don’t think for a moment Obama’s not setting up a government shutdown here and try to recreate 1995: shift the blame to the Republicans. I mean, they’re doing their own budget. Obama’s budget’s a blueprint; all presidents’ budgets are. Congress actually does the budget. And they’ll send it up there, and if Obama vetoes the thing, then he wants a shutdown. He wants a shutdown because he thinks he can reverse his own fortunes, just like Der Schlick Meister, Bill Clinton, did in 1995.” Limbaugh is referring, of course, to the government shutdown orchestrated by Newt Gingrich in 1995, which didn’t work out so well for Republicans, particularly Gingrich who has not held office since. Limbaugh is pretty sure, however, that the outcome will not be so favourable for Democrats this time round. People in the email ask, “Well, are you for a shutdown, Rush? You were for it last time.” Damn right I am! Shut it down! Let’s prove again we can live without it for a few weeks! But as ready as Limbaugh is to exploit a government shutdown as a means to show Americans that we don’t really need a government anyway (who cares if the fire truck shows up on time?), he is anxious that Republicans avoid any political fallout by making sure, this time round, that they are not seen to be the responsible party. We make it clear that he [Obama] is shutting down the government for his own political reasons. We make it clear that he and his media are treating this as a giant political game all for him to win. 1995 was what it was. This is a different time and different place today. For one thing, Obama is not Clinton. Clinton, there was no better liar than Clinton, and there still isn’t. Obama is a stumbler! You take the teleprompter away, and he’s got zilch. And Limbaugh believes it will be easier for Republicans to shift the blame this time because of the rise in rightwing media outlets. In 1995, basically it was still me. There was no Fox. There was no giant blog network. The new media was in its birth stages, if you will. It’s a whole different day, today. It’s a whole different time. We’ve gotta tell people exactly what’s going on. Barack Obama is holding the government hostage for his own political ambitions. He’s playing a game with it! His whole budget is a game. There’s nothing serious in it. Limbaugh may find, however, that there aren’t too many Americans who think playing with their economic wellbeing is a game. Laura Ingraham Laura Ingraham stopped short of pushing for a government shutdown, but she was far from supportive of the president, whom she believes is spending the country into oblivion ( listen to clip ). “What was he saying about monopoly money not so long ago? Here’s my message to you [President Obama]. Do not pass go, do not collect 200. Go directly to jail!” Ingraham, like many fiscal conservatives, managed to get through the Bush years without bursting a blood vessel, despite the fact that the Republican-led Congress and the Republican president turned a budget surplus into a $1tn deficit by instigating tax cuts at the same time as launching the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Now, however, she has become hyper-aware of the dangers of living beyond our means. So, what happens? Well, America ceases to have any influence in the world – and here’s the story that isn’t getting written about. The dollar becomes gradually more and more worthless as time goes on. Now, why do I say that? Because people start believing that the investment in the United States doesn’t make any sense. When the deficit gets so big, when the national debt reaches these levels, it means that no longer is the United States the “good old USA” as a good old investment. Ingraham refers to a Washington Post editorial that criticises the president for not taking bold enough steps to “raise revenue and curb entitlement spending”. She reads through most of the article on the air and agrees wholeheartedly with the parts that project dire estimates for future deficits and that deride some of the president’s proposals as “gimmickry”, but she has a swift change of heart when she gets to the final paragraph in which the Washington Post editors mention the “T word”. The Washington Post, of course, loses us at the end because it says that we should have across-the-board tax increases – so it starts off at Paul Ryan and it ends up at Chris Dodd. Love of country is all very well, apparently – just not when it comes to paying taxes. Michael Savage Michael Savage had no time for budget and deficit discussions, so concerned was he about the rise of Islam, the fall of Israel, and how it all affects him ( listen to clip ). He plays an excerpt from a recent speech given by former President Jimmy Carter – whom Savage introduces as the “well-known Jew-hater” and “one of the most dangerous men to have walked the earth” – in which Carter says that there is little reason to fear that the Muslim Brotherhood will be taking over Egypt. Savage interprets the speech as a direct endorsement of radical Islam and goes into a long diatribe about why he thinks the radical Islamists enjoy the support of liberals and self-loathing Jews in America. He gets very worked up and does some shouting, and then part of broadcast appears to have been edited out (perhaps in deference to the new era of civility). He sounds calmer after the break. I am not agitated. I’m cold and I’m clear, I’m seeing as clearly as I’ve ever seen. I’m seeing that Jimmy Carter is once again destroying a nation of moderate Muslims and ushering in radical Islam. You have to ask yourself: he did it once in Iran, he’s doing it now in Egypt and the media is complicit. Savage goes on to single out several prominent Jewish figures, including David Axelrod, Rahm Emmanuel and George Soros, whom he seems to believe are intent on destroying the state of Israel (by emboldening Islamist radicals). He realises that he will probably come under criticism from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) for what he is saying, but he doesn’t care. I sent letters to Abe Foxman of the ADL (about his ban from England). I sent letters to every Jewish organisation saying, “how did my name wind upon a list with Muslims who bashed in the heads of Jewish children. How can you permit this to happen?” And they did not even answer my letters. It may seem a little confusing that the source of Savage’s frustration at what he believes is a widespread movement to promote Islamism at the expense of Judaism is his anger at Jewish organisations for refusing to help him in his fight against the British ban, but he does attempt to clarify his position. Now, you say, “why turn this whole thing into you?” I’ll tell you why: because I’m the canary in the coal mine. I am the first member of the American media to have been targeted specifically in order to make the radical Muslims in England feel good, and not one member of the American media of any great, large, known quality has come out and said what has happened to Savage must be stopped. I am the canary in the coal mine, and I’m so fed up with it you can’t believe it. And when I see this rabid Jew-hatred now spreading around the world, coming out of the mouths of Jimmy Carter and the Muslim Brotherhood, I am telling you we are very close to the end in this country – unless there is a revolution in thinking and a revolution of people in the streets. At least, it’s keeping his mind off the budget. Republicans US television Radio Talk radio US politics Barack Obama Obama administration US Congress Bill Clinton Jimmy Carter Religion Islam Egypt Middle East Judaism US taxation Public finance Newt Gingrich Sadhbh Walshe guardian.co.uk

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US wavers on Middle East

The US and president Barack Obama continue to waver in their position regarding the unrest sweeping through the Middle East. The country says it will not dictate events in the region. But Obama has criticised the Iranian government’s violent response to protests there, while at the same time maintaining a more neutral tone with Bahrain. Many find the US’s response disappointing, and some feel the White House will only react strongly to those governments it does not have a stake in. Al Jazeera’s Patty Culhane reports.

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