
It begins sometime in early December, in a screening room near you, with a handful of middle-aged men and women impatiently awaiting the start of a new movie. Related Entries January 27, 2011 Critics Call ‘King’s Speech’ Historically Incorrect January 25, 2011 Sundance and the Art of Democracy
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Robert Gibbs calls on President Hosni Mubarak to address ‘legitimate grievances’ of protesters Barack Obama has warned the Egyptian leader, Hosni Mubarak, that he must reform his regime and refrain from violence against protesters. But the US president’s message suggested that Washington will go on supporting its longstanding ally for now. Obama said that he spoke to Mubarak and asked him to turn “a moment of volatility in to a moment of promise,” after the Egyptian leader addressed his nation to say he would replace his government but not tolerate what he called a continued threat to the security of the country from protesters demanding his resignation. “When President Mubarak addressed the Egyptian people tonight he pledged a better democracy and greater economic opportunity,” said Obama. “I told him he has a responsibility to give meaning to those words. To take concrete steps and actions that deliver on that promise. Violence will not address the grievances of the Egyptian people and suppressing ideas never succeeds in making them go away. “What’s needed right now are concrete steps that advance the rights of the Egyptian people; a meaningful dialogue between the government and its citizens and a path of political change that leads to a future of greater freedom and greater opportunity and justice for the Egyptian people.” Obama demanded an end to violence against the protesters after a day of clashes on the streets of Cairo, Suez and other cities left 25 people dead and hundreds wounded. The US president also called on the Egyptian government to restore mobile phone and internet connections it has severed apparently in an attempt to hinder the protesters from organising. But Obama, while pressing for political reform, held back from a call for legitimate elections amid fears in the US and among its allies in other parts of the Middle East, including Israel and Jordan, of political power shifting to the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood. Instead, the White House appears to be looking for reform that will keep the present power structure in place. But it has added to the pressure on Mubarak by saying it is reviewing its $1.5bn (£946m) in annual aid to Egypt, most of it military. The White House spokesman, Robert Gibbs, said continued assistance would in part depend on how the military behaves in the face of the protests. “We will be reviewing our assistance posture based on the outcome of events, now and in the coming days,” he said. Asked if the US government had condemned the placing of the opposition activist, Mohamed ElBaradei, under house arrest, Gibbs said: “Obviously, this goes in to our concern about expression, association and assembly.” Gibbs was also asked about reports that the British company, Vodafone, was responsible for cutting mobile phone access in Egypt on government orders. He said repeated a call for mobile and internet services to be restored but would not be drawn on whether the US would pressure Vodafone directly. “I don’t want to speak about the specific company because I want a little more information,” he said. Egypt US foreign policy Protest Middle East United States Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
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A 68-second video released by Detroit police Friday shows a gunman striding into one of the city’s precinct stations, spraying volleys from a shotgun at surprised officers before being fatally wounded within inches of three of his victims. (Jan. 28)
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Egyptian army appears on streets of Cairo in attempt to quell uprising after curfew imposed by Hosni Mubarak is ignored
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enlarge Not that you’d know it from our corporate news cartel or anything, but there’s an uprising in Egypt . A rather large one, threatening to destabilize the country and possibly the region. I use the term “threatening” guardedly, because I would definitely like to see Egypt transition to an open and true democracy. And wouldn’t you know, the Egyptian arm of the US Chamber of Commerce (AmCham Egypt) has gone to bat for the Mubarak regime . Think Progress: However, there is at least one powerful, multinational entity that has continually stood by Mubarak and the Egyptian elite and has continually fought efforts to democratize the country. As ThinkProgress previously reported, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce maintains a network of foreign affiliates known as Amchams, “which are foreign chambers of the Chamber composed of American and foreign companies.” In Egypt, this foreign affiliate is known as the American Chamber of Commerce in Egypt , known in short as AmCham Egypt. AmCham Egypt’s relation to the Mubarak dictatorship stretches back decades. In fact, the Egyptian dictator even personally intervened to create the organization. In 1981, Mubarak issued an order to allow for the creation of the AmCham by giving it an exemption from Egypt’s strict NGO laws — which help limit the influence human rights and democracy promotion organizations. Since then, the chamber has grown to have hundreds of members. While roughly 75 percent of the organization’s members are Egyptian businesses, many of them are also large Western multinational corporations , like Coca Cola and BP. The Chamber’s member companies account for nearly 20 percent of Egypt’s GDP. ThinkProgress goes on to detail how AmCham Egypt intervened to scuttle Russ Feingold’s bill calling for an end to crackdowns on pro-democracy advocates, and how just recently, John Negroponte was sent to discourage any uprising or nasty pro-democracy talk. During a brief question-and-answer session at the conclusion of his address, Negroponte said he was surprised by the unrest in Tunisia that ended the 23-year presidency of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. He said that what happened in Tunisia is “not necessarily transferable” to other countries. He blamed the news media for sensational coverage of self-immolation protests in Egypt, Algeria and Mauritania, and urged “a little bit of patience.” “Let’s hope the country doesn’t descend into chaos,” he said. “Chaos is in no one’s interest.” The protest in Egypt has been going on for three days now. The Mubarak government has shut down Egyptians’ access to the internet so protesters cannot get any news out. There’s been almost a complete news blackout in the US about it, but BBC, AlJazeera, and other international outlets are reporting almost continuously. Whether this protest ends with a vicious Iran-style crackdown or an overthrow of Mubarak remains to be seen. Nobel Peace Prize winner Mohammed El Baradei has joined the protesters’ call for Mubarak to step down and make way for a democratically-elected leader. Mr ElBaradei, a campaigner for reform in Egypt who won the peace prize for his earlier work as head of the UN nuclear agency, says it is time for Mr Mubarak to step aside. “He has served the country for 30 years and it is about time for him to retire,” he said. “Tomorrow is going to be, I think, a major demonstration all over Egypt and I will be there with them.” His arrival could spur protesters who have no figurehead, although many activists resent his absences in recent months. Egyptians torched a police post in Suez early on Thursday in response to the killing of three demonstrators earlier in the week. “Our government is a dictatorship. A total dictatorship,” said Mohamed Fahim, a 29-year-old glass factory worker, as he stood near the charred skeleton of a car. “It’s our right to choose our government ourselves. We have been living 29 years, my whole life, without being able to choose a president.” One thing you can be sure of, though, is that the US Chamber of Commerce will do whatever is within their power to protect their corporate masters at the expense of the people standing up for their rights. On Twitter, you can follow hashtag #Jan25 for information on the protests. This is not any “official” reporting outlet, but only snippets of what people on the ground are able to get out via whatever means are still available to them. Also, this article on Al Jazeera from January 14th got my attention, not because I didn’t understand this to be the case, but because I wonder why similar protests are not being undertaken across this country over the same issues. From Tunisia and Algeria in the Maghreb to Jordan and Egypt in the Arab east, the real terror that eats at self-worth, sabotages community and communal rites of passage, including marriage, is the terror of socio-economic marginalisation. The armies of ‘khobzistes’ (the unemployed of the Maghreb) – now marching for bread in the streets and slums of Algiers and Kasserine and who tomorrow may be in Amman, Rabat, San’aa, Ramallah, Cairo and southern Beirut – are not fighting the terror of unemployment with ideology. They do not need one. Unemployment is their ideology. The periphery is their geography. And for now, spontaneous peaceful protest and self-harm is their weaponry. They are ‘les misérables’ of the modern world. Update 2:48 PM 1/28 : As you may have heard, the protesters are out in force . There are rumors that elites are fleeing Egypt in private jets, and Mubarak has just made a statement blaming the protesters, firing the government (except him) and affirming his stubborn delusion that he has nothing to do with current unrest. The military is remaining neutral at this time. Mubarak claims these protests would not have taken place if citizens did not have the freedoms they have. It was a remarkable end play, but I’m not sure it will hold.
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When “Left, Right & Center” aired Friday it was still unclear whether Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak would stay in power as mass protests persisted in the Mideast nation, but show regulars Robert Scheer and Tony Blankley … Related Entries January 28, 2011 Watch the Egyptian Revolt in Real Time January 28, 2011 Egypt Declares Curfew, Corrals ElBaradei
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For those of you who don’t know, Peter wrote the script! The story also co-stars his wife Jennie Garth. The story is about “A struggling waitress and single mom finds herself falling down the rabbit hole when she falls in love with an actor hiding a secret identity in “Accidentally In Love,” a Hallmark Channel Original Movie World Premiere Saturday, February 12 (9p.m. ET/PT, 8C). ” Thanks Twilight… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Twilightish Discovery Date : 29/01/2011 00:41 Number of articles : 3
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About 13% of high school biology teachers nationwide push creationism as the process by which humans came to exist on Earth, LiveScience reports. A Penn State survey found that the majority of bio teachers—about 60%—take a soft stance on the contentious issue, avoiding definitive statements about either creationism…
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The FBI is looking for a man suspected of trying to incriminate Planned Parenthood in a scam that resembles the hidden-camera sting that took down ACORN , reports TPM Muckraker . Eight clinics across five states had similar experiences over a single week: a young man came in looking for treatment for…
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US secretary of state says Egyptian government needs to engage with the Egyptian people in implementing reforms
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