Home » Posts tagged with » breaking news (Page 489)

Ecstatic crowds in Cairo prove there is no clash of civilisations – everyone wants freedom. The question is, how to get it? ‘No one predicted this, but everyone could explain it afterwards.” Said of another revolution, as true of this one. “To be honest, we thought we’d last about five minutes,”one of the organisers of the original 25 January protest which began this Egyptian revolution told the BBC. “We thought we’d get arrested straight away.” If they had been, if Hosni Mubarak’s security forces had once again murdered the foetus in the womb, the world wide web would now be filled with articles by experts explaining why “Egypt is not Tunisia”. Instead, the web is abuzz with instant, confident explanations of what nobody anticipated. Such are the illusions of retrospective determinism. So before we go any further, let us make two deep bows. First and deepest to those who started this, at great personal risk, with no support from the professedly freedom-loving west, and against a regime that habitually uses torture. Honour and respect to you. Second, hats off to Lady Luck, contingency, fortuna – which, as Machiavelli observed , accounts for half of everything that happens in human affairs. No revolution has ever got anywhere without brave individuals and good luck. One leathery old victim of this revolution, at whose death we should rejoice, is the fallacy of cultural determinism – and specifically the notion that Arabs and/or Muslims are not really up for freedom, dignity and human rights. Their “culture”, so we were assured by Samuel Huntington and others, programmed them otherwise. Tell that to the people dancing on Tahrir Square. This is not to deny that the religious-political patterns of both radical and conservative Islam, and specific legacies of modern Arab history, will make a transition to consolidated liberal democracy more difficult than it was in, say, the Czech Republic. They will. Maybe the whole thing will still go horribly wrong. But the profoundly condescending idea that “this could never happen there” has been refuted on the streets of Tunis and Cairo. While we are talking determinisms, let’s dispense with another one. In tags like “Facebook revolution”, “Twitter revolution” and “Al-Jazeera revolution”, we meet again the ghost of technological determinism. Talking to friends in Cairo, I am left in no doubt that these media did play a major role in organising and multiplying the popular protests that began on 25 January. As I have been writing this column, I have been watching the growth of the Facebook page set up by Egyptians to “authorise” Wael Ghonim , the Google executive recently released from prison and newly anointed hero of the revolution, to speak in their name. When I first visited it, at 08:51 on Wednesday morning, it had 213,376 people following it; as this article goes to press (and what a gloriously arcane phrase that is!) it has 236,305. Ghonim had been the pseudonymous organiser of an earlier Facebook page which contributed to the protests, and now has more than 600,000 followers. As in Tunisia, it is the interaction of online and mobile social networks with the older superpower of television that creates the catalytic effect. Al-Jazeera TV has produced a compelling narrative of liberation struggle, drawing on blogposts and blurry footage from mobile phone cameras. Ghonim became a popular hero because soon after his release from prison he appeared on an Egyptian television programme, thus reaching a wider mass audience for the first time. So these old and new technologies of communication matter enormously – but they did not prevent popular protest movements being crushed in Belarus and Iran, they do not determine the outcome, and the medium is not the message. Then we have the historical analogies. I have lost count of how many articles I have seen (including, I hasten to add, one by myself) asking whether or not this is the Arab 1989. “The Arab world’s Berlin Wall moment,” shouts one headline. “This is no 1989 moment,” cries another. The comparison may not, in the end, tell us all that much about what is happening in Egypt, Tunisia or Jordan – but it certainly tells us something about 1989. There is no longer any doubt that 1989 has become the early 21st century’s default model and metaphor for revolution. Forget 1917, 1848 or 1789. A close runner-up, in the analogy stakes, is Iran in 1979 – and the prospect of radical, violent Islamists coming out on top. Roger Cohen of the New York Times, who has produced some splendid reported columns from Tunisia and Egypt, follows the first law of journalism (“first simplify, then exaggerate”) when he writes that the “core issue” in Egypt is “are we witnessing Tehran 1979 or Berlin 1989?” To which one answer is: what we are witnessing in Cairo in 2011 is Cairo 2011. I mean this not in the trivial sense that every event is unique, but in a deeper one. For what characterises a true revolution is the emergence of something genuinely new, on the one hand, and the return of a suppressed human universal on the other. New in Cairo 2011 is that it is now Arabs and Muslims standing up in large numbers, with courage and (for the most part) peaceful discipline, for basic human dignity, against corrupt, oppressive rulers. New in 2011 is the degree of decentered, networked animation of the demonstrations, so that even the best-informed observers there struggle to answer the question “who is organising this?”. New in 2011 is the extraordinary underlying pressure of demography, with half the population in most of these countries being under 25. Old in Cairo 2011 – as old as the pyramids, as old as human civilisation – is the cry of oppressed men and women, overcoming the barrier of fear and feeling, however fleetingly, the sense of freedom and dignity. My heart jumped for joy as I watched the footage of the vast, celebrating crowds in central Cairo on Tuesday. But when we have finished humming the prisoners’ chorus from Beethoven’s Fidelio , we must remind ourselves that these moments are always transient. The hard grind of consolidating liberty is all ahead. This is where historical comparisons come into their own. They are no substitute for firsthand, informed analysis of the unique circumstances on the spot. What they do offer, however, is an extensive toolkit of experience, showing the many ways in which a revolution can go wrong and the rare combination needed for it to keep going right. Neither on the opposition nor on the official side do I yet see a vital ingredient for it going right: the organised, credible partners for a negotiated transition. Some proto-organisation has clearly emerged on Tahrir Square. In Ghonim, the protesters have a symbol who might yet become a leader. But we seem still to be a very long way from any alliance of opposition forces that could funnel popular pressure to the negotiating table. On the official side, Hosni Mubarak and his vice-president must give way to an interim government, headed by someone acceptable to all (or at least, most) sides – someone like the wily old Amr Moussa , secretary-general of the Arab League. Only when those two things happen may we begin to have confidence that the Egyptian revolution is on the right road. Egypt Middle East Protest Hosni Mubarak Tunisia Timothy Garton Ash guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

The race to the 2012 GOP presidential nomination begins in earnest tomorrow, when the annual Conservative Political Action Committee shindig kicks off in Washington. Nearly all the party’s hopefuls will be there—with the notable exceptions of Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee—vying both to define themselves against the field…

Continue reading …
HP TouchPad vs. iPad vs. Xoom vs. PlayBook: the tale of the tape

At last, the webOS -empowered TouchPad , HP’s answer to the growing tablet market. And make no mistake, it’s coming in with guns blazing — specs-wise, the slate stands up pretty well to the competition currently in play (e.g. iPad ) and the other up-and-comers not quite out the gate (e.g. Motorola Xoom and BlackBerry PlayBook ). Stacked side-by-side, it’s clear Apple’s entry is lacking a bit in both memory (256MB vs. 1GB for everyone else) and front-facing camera — not that we expect that to be the case for all of 2011 . When it all comes down to it, what’ll set these slates apart will be the platforms and software themselves — should make for an interesting summer, no? In the meantime, for the nitty-gritty on technical specifications, venture past the break. Continue reading HP TouchPad vs. iPad vs. Xoom vs. PlayBook: the tale of the tape HP TouchPad vs. iPad vs. Xoom vs. PlayBook: the tale of the tape originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
‘Do Your Part,’ Michelle Obama Says on ‘Let’s Move’ 1st Anniversary

In its first year, Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” program to fight child obesity enlisted a broad coalition of parents, teachers, businesses, and doctors. Now she’s calling on all Americans to do their part.

Continue reading …
‘Do Your Part,’ Michelle Obama Says on ‘Let’s Move’ 1st Anniversary

In its first year, Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” program to fight child obesity enlisted a broad coalition of parents, teachers, businesses, and doctors. Now she’s calling on all Americans to do their part.

Continue reading …

Another milestone in Gabrielle Giffords’ recovery: She’s starting to speak for the first time since last month’s shooting. As noted first by Politico , she asked for toast with breakfast earlier this week and since then has been speaking “more and more,” a spokesman tells AP . “It’s huge and it’s great,…

Continue reading …

A teenage beauty queen in Texas is suing to keep her crown, after she was stripped of her title for—in part—gaining weight. Domonique Ramirez, 17, won the local pageant in April, but was informed last month that the runner-up would take her place as Miss San Antonio—meaning…

Continue reading …
On the Street…..Plaid Femme, Florence
Continue reading …
How hard would it be to back Egyptian democracy, Mr President? | Joshua Treviño

This is a simple enough choice between liberty and tyranny, yet the White House has done nothing but equivocate and dodge The administration of Barack Obama has reacted to the uprising against Hosni Mubarak with the enthusiasm of a man condemned to consume a gallon of plain yoghurt. The president of the United States is not against Egyptian democracy, exactly – but neither is he especially for it. His administration’s pronouncements on events have reflected his dilatory approach: the day of the revolution’s inception saw his secretary of state affirming the “stability” of the regime; then there was the infamous Robert Gibbs presser in which confusion and uncertainty were clearly communicated; then, there was the White House’s efforts to leak to the press its masterful behind-the-scenes engagement with Egyptian power brokers; and then, there was this past weekend’s jaw-dropping declaration by its envoy Frank Wisner that Mubarak ought to stay . Following that was the secretary of state’s declaration that the American government’s own man in Egypt “does not speak for the American government”. Well. During the 2008 Democratic presidential primaries, Hillary Clinton ran an ad asking whom voters trusted to receive the “3am phone call”. At this point, Egyptians and Americans both would be happy if President Obama handled a call at 3pm. The inability of the United States’s foreign policy apparatus to develop a coherent and public response to the Egyptian revolution is not simply a condemnation of the president’s management. Nor is it a stumble with limited consequences. As the UAE journalist Habiba Hamid quipped, “Imagine the tremendous outpouring of US support that 60 million Egyptians [sic] would have shown had the US actually supported democracy in Egypt.” Indeed, imagine that. Now, though, the post-Mubarak era is both imminent and inevitable – it was so on 25 January – and when it comes, over 80 million Egyptians will remember not that Obama was nuanced and deliberate, but that the United States of America stood against its advent. The real tragedy of the president’s epic mishandling of Egypt is not merely the sceptical-at-best Egypt that will emerge. It’s that Egypt is merely the latest episode in a pattern laid down by Barack Obama in the first two years of his presidency. In just two years, he has faced multiple crises of liberty, democracy and the American national interest abroad – and he has failed each test. Even rhetorical support for those seeking freedom, the bare minimum a president can do, is strikingly absent except under duress. The plain and pathetic reality is that Barack Obama chooses the existing regime over any alternative, and/or against the American ally, every time. Ask the Hondurans who ejected their Chavista president. Ask the Falkland islanders sold out by the Secretary of State Clinton intoning on the “Malvinas”. Ask the east European Nato members stripped of a full American deterrent in the name of a Russia “reset”. Ask the Tunisians who received not a word of endorsement as they ejected Ben Ali. Ask the Iranians who fought and died for their freedom in the hot summer of 2009. And now, ask the Egyptians who gather, once again, in Tahrir Square as you read this. None of this is to say that there is no legitimate apprehension over the Egyptian revolution. That apprehension is well-founded in a country where a “supermajority” polls in favour of the most brutal criminal sanctions in Islam’s name, and where the most organised opposition force, the Muslim Brotherhood, has ideological spinoffs including Hamas and al-Qaida to its credit. The rightful fear of the new Egypt cloaks itself in many justifications, ranging from appeals to Edmund Burke’s cautionary doctrine, to insane conspiracy theories of socialism and universal caliphates. President Obama’s lacklustre response to Egypt’s liberation reflects none of these concerns: only his profound apathy towards the aspiration for freedom, and his striking disconnect from America’s best historic role in the world. Even if the president did share those concerns, the conduct of the Egyptian revolutionaries to date has been generally exemplary in the face of attack, murder, deprivation and arduous struggle. America’s own Declaration of Independence asserts that Egyptians deserve liberty by their very nature as men. Their actions since 25 January only underscore that case. Perhaps they do not deserve American support – but they have earned it. The American people understand that, as shown in the latest Gallup poll revealing 82% public support for Egypt ‘s revolution. Americans who just celebrated the centenary of President Ronald Reagan may well recall his 1982 address to the British parliament, in which he famously declared that Marxism-Leninism would end up “on the ash-heap of history”. But he said something else there that bears repeating as we witness millions of Egyptians seizing their liberties: “[D]emocracy is not a fragile flower. Still it needs cultivating. If the rest of this century is to witness the gradual growth of freedom and democratic ideals, we must take actions to assist the campaign for democracy.” Reagan knew it then. The American people know it now. The Egyptian people know it now. Why doesn’t Barack Obama know it? Egypt Middle East Obama administration Barack Obama United States US foreign policy US politics Ronald Reagan Hosni Mubarak Joshua Treviño guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Bush’s EPA Told Him CO2 Should be Regulated, Was Overruled by Cheney

Photo: Telegraph And I thought I’d never have to write another post about Bush again. Alas, here’s yet another revelation perfectly befitting the post-office portrait emerging of our last president — a man with perhaps the best intentions, but easily influenced by the Dicks around him. Or rather, just the one Dick. It turns out that Steven Johnson, the EPA Administrator in the Bush administration , sent a letter to the president’s off… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …