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The Middle East meant only Israel to many. Now the lives of millions of Arabs have been brought to Europe’s attention The Arab revolution is consigning skip-loads of articles, books and speeches about the Middle East to the dustbin of history. In a few months, readers will go through libraries or newspaper archives and wonder how so many who claimed expert knowledge could have turned their eyes from tyranny and its consequences. To a generation of politically active if not morally consistent campaigners, the Middle East has meant Israel and only Israel. In theory, they should have been able to stick by universal principles and support a just settlement for the Palestinians while opposing the dictators who kept Arabs subjugated. Few, however, have been able to oppose oppression in all its forms consistently. The right has been no better than the liberal-left in its Jew obsessions. The briefest reading of Conservative newspapers shows that at all times their first concern about political changes in the Middle East is how they affect Israel. For both sides, the lives of hundreds of millions of Arabs, Berbers and Kurds who were not involved in the conflict could be forgotten. If you doubt me, consider the stories that the Middle Eastern bureau chiefs missed until revolutions that had nothing to do with Palestine forced them to take notice. • Gaddafi was so frightened of a coup that he kept the Libyan army small and ill-equipped and hired mercenaries and paramilitary “special forces” he could count on to slaughter the civilian population when required. • Leila Ben Ali , the wife of the Tunisian president, was a preposterously extravagant figure, who all but begged foreign correspondents to write about her rapacious pursuit of wealth. Only when Tunisians rose up did journalists stir themselves to tell their readers how she had pushed the populace to revolt by combining the least appealing traits of Imelda Marcos and Marie-Antoinette. • Hearteningly, for those of us who retain a nostalgia for the best traditions of the old left, Tunisia and Egypt had independent trade unionists, who could play “a leading role”, as we used to say, in organising and executing uprisings. Far from being a cause of the revolution, antagonism to Israel everywhere served the interests of oppressors. Europeans have no right to be surprised. Of all people, we ought to know from our experience of Nazism that antisemitism is a conspiracy theory about power, rather than a standard racist hatred of poor immigrants. Fascistic regimes reached for it when they sought to deny their own people liberty. The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the forgery the far-right wing of the decaying tsarist regime issued in 1903 to convince Russians they should continue to obey the tsar’s every command, denounces human rights and democracy as facades behind which the secret Jewish rulers of the world manipulated gullible gentiles. Syrian Ba’athists, Hamas, the Saudi monarchy and Gaddafi eagerly promoted the Protocols, for why wouldn’t vicious elites welcome a fantasy that dismissed democracy as a fraud and justified their domination? Just before the Libyan revolt, Gaddafi tried a desperate move his European predecessors would have understood. He tried to deflect Libyan anger by calling for a popular Palestinian revolution against Israel. That may or may not have been justified, but it assuredly would have done nothing to help the wretched Libyans. In his Epitaph on a Tyrant , Auden wrote: “When he laughed, respectable senators burst with laughter And when he cried, the little children died in the streets.” Europe’s amnesia about how tyranny operated in our continent explains why the Libyan revolution is embarrassing a rich collection of dupes and scoundrels who were willing to laugh along with Gaddafi. His contacts in Britain were once confined to the truly lunatic fringe. He supplied arms to the IRA, funded the Workers’ Revolutionary Party, Vanessa Redgrave’s nasty Trotskyist sect, and entertained Nick Griffin and other neo-Nazis. We should not forget them when the time comes to settle accounts. But when Tony Blair, who was so eloquent in denouncing the genocides of Saddam, staged a reconciliation with Gaddafi after 9/11, his friendship opened the way for the British establishment to embrace the dictatorship. It was not only BP and other oil companies, but British academics who were happy to accept his largesse. The London School of Economics took £1.5m from Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, money which by definition had to have been stolen from the Libyan people, despite being warned to back away by Professor Fred Halliday, the LSE’s late and much-missed authority on the Middle East, who never flinched from looking dictators in the eye. “I’ve come to know Saif as someone who looks to democracy, civil society and deep liberal values for the core of his inspiration,” purred the LSE’s David Held as he accepted the cheque. Human Rights Watch, once a reliable opponent of tyranny, went further and described a foundation Saif ran in Libya as a force for freedom, willing to take on the interior ministry in the fight for civil liberties. Meanwhile, and to the surprise of no one, Peter Mandelson, New Labour’s butterfly, fluttered round Saif at the country house parties of the plutocracy. Last week, Saif, the “liberal” promoter of human rights and dining companion of Mandelson, appeared on Libyan television to say that his father’s gunmen would fight to the last bullet to keep the Gaddafi crime family in business, a promise he is keeping. The thinking behind so many who flattered him was that the only issue in the Middle East worth taking a stand on was the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and that the oppression of Arabs by Arabs was a minor concern. The longevity of the regimes presided over by the Gaddafi, Assad and Mubarak families and the House of Saud ought to be a reason for denouncing them more vigorously, but their apparent permanence added to the feeling that somehow Libyans, Syrians, Egyptians and Saudis want to live under dictatorships. The European Union, which did so much to export democracy and the rule of law to former communist dictatorships of eastern Europe, has played a miserable role in the Middle East. It pours in aid but never demands democratisation or restrictions on police powers in return. That will have to change if the promise of the past month is to be realised. If it is to help with democracy-building, Europe will need to remind itself as much as the recipients of its money that you can never build free societies on the racist conspiracy theories of the Nazis and the tsars. They are and always have been the tunes that tyrants sing. Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East protests Middle East Egypt Israel Nick Cohen guardian.co.uk

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Goldman, AP to Lawmakers: Keep Spending Like Mad or Economic Growth Will Suffer

Thursday, an odd warning emanated from the halls of the supposedly esteemed investment firm known as Goldman Sachs: If Uncle Sam spends $61 billion less during the second half of the current fiscal year, and ends the year with “only” $3.758 trillion in spending instead of the administration's anticipated $3.819 trillion , economic growth will be seriously harmed. Yesterday, similar nonsense was put forth by Jeannine Aversa at the Associated Press in reaction to the government's report that economic growth during the fourth quarter was revised down to 2.8% from 3.2%, when experts (like the geniuses at Goldman) had expected the number to come in at 3.3%. The headlined whine: “State and local budget cuts are slowing US economy.” First, here is the Financial Times report carried at CNBC reporting on Goldman's federal spending gibberish: Goldman Sees Danger in US Budget Cuts

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Thunderbirds

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Thunderbirds

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Republicans Push to Legalize Anti-Abortion Terrorism

enlarge Credit: New York Times During his 2004 campaign, Oklahoma Republican Senator Tom Coburn declared, “I favor the death penalty for abortionists.” Four years later, vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin famously refused to condemn an abortion clinic bomber as a “terrorist.” Last week, a GOP mayoral candidate in Jacksonville joked that bombing an abortion clinic “may cross my mind.” Now, deadly serious Republican lawmakers in Nebraska and Iowa are pushing legislation that would in essence legalize the murder of abortion providers. Less than two years after the assassination of Dr. George Tiller and less than two weeks after South Dakota Republicans shelved a similar bill, Nebraska state Senator Mark Christensen has introduced an even more onerous version in LB 232. As Mother Jones explained: Unlike its South Dakota counterpart, which would have allowed only a pregnant woman, her husband, her parents, or her children to commit “justifiable homicide” in defense of her fetus, the Nebraska bill would apply to any third party. “In short, this bill authorizes and protects vigilantes, and that’s something that’s unprecedented in our society,” Melissa Grant of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland told the Nebraska legislature’s judiciary committee on Wednesday. Specifically, she warned, it could be used to target Planned Parenthood’s patients and personnel. Also testifying in opposition to the bill was David Baker, the deputy chief executive officer of the Omaha police department, who said, “We share the same fears…that this could be used to incite violence against abortion providers.” Meanwhile in Iowa , two new measures backed by House Republicans could together enable “the justifiable use of force against abortion or family planning providers.” In violation of the Supreme Court’s Roe v Wade ruling, House File 153 would ban abortion by mandating the state must protect “life” from the moment of conception. House File 7 would provide civil and criminal immunity for citizens using “reasonable force, including deadly force, to protect themselves or a third party from serious injury or death or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony.” Together, the Iowa Independent explained, the two bills could enable the very kind of necessity defense for anti-abortion terrorists a Kansas judge rejected for Tiller murderer Scott Roeder: If passed into law, the two bills — House File 7 and House File 153 — would offer an unprecedented defense opportunity to individuals who stand accused of killing such providers, according to a former prosecutor and law professor at the University of Kansas, and are something that might have very well led to a different outcome in the Kansas trial of the man who shot Dr. George Tiller in a church foyer. If terrorism is defined as “as the deliberate murder of civilians or destruction of property in order to achieve a political objective,” the wave of attacks on American abortion providers certainly qualifies. After the 2003 capture of Atlanta Olympic Park and Birmingham family planning clinic bomber Eric Rudolph , then Attorney General John Ashcroft agreed, announcing “this sends a clear message that we will never cease in our efforts to hunt down all terrorists, foreign or domestic, and stop them from harming the innocent.” Shelley Shannon , one of the nation’s most notorious anti-abortion extremists, agreed with Ashcroft. In 1993, Shannon was sentenced to 10 years in a Kansas prison for shooting Dr. Tiller in both arms outside his clinic. Two years later, Shannon pled guilty to setting fires to abortion clinics in Idaho, Nevada, Oregon and California. And as the New York Times recounted in 1995, Shannon was quite clear as to whether she considered her crimes terrorism: Handcuffed and nondescript in jailhouse blues, Shelley Shannon, a housewife from rural Oregon, stood before a Federal judge here on June 7 and admitted waging a terrorism campaign against abortion clinics and doctors. Asked in 2008 by NBC’s Brian Williams if “an abortion clinic bomber a terrorist, under this definition, governor,” Sarah Palin said no . While denouncing such violence as “unacceptable,” Palin instead argued, “I don’t know if you’re going to use the word terrorist there.” Now in Iowa and Nebraska, some of her GOP colleagues apparently have a different word for the likes of Rudolph, Shannon, Roeder, and James Kopp : hero . Mercifully, neither the Iowa nor the Nebraska effort to codify the intimidation of family planning providers is likely to become law as currently written. Christensen, the author of what might be deemed the Cornhusker Calamity, said that he’s prepared to revise the legislation and “narrow it down to just protecting mother and unborn child.” Then “it’ll be noncontroversial and we’ll be ready to go.” In Iowa, the twin bills face an uncertain future in the state Senate. Nevertheless, the Republican crusade against the reproductive rights of American women continues to gain momentum. While Republicans in Congress debate the redefinition of rape, defund Planned Parenthood and try to ban life-saving emergency room abortion procedures, emboldened GOP majorities in the states are putting draconian new abortion restrictions onto the books. Exceeding the harsh regulations in Mississippi , which now has one abortion clinic for the entire state, Virginia is set to pass a new law that would close at least 17 of its 21 clinics by forcing first-trimester abortion providers to offer the same medical facilities as hospitals. While Kentucky Republicans like their Texas counterparts are pushing a bill making it mandatory for patients to view an ultrasound image before undergoing an abortion procedure, several other states are planning to follow Nebraska’s lead in passing so-called ” fetal pain ” laws. And while the Ohio GOP is pushing a ” Heartbeat bill ” would prohibiting women from ending their pregnancies after the “first discernible heartbeat,” Georgia legislator Bobby Franklin seeks to prosecute – and execute – any woman who can’t prove her miscarriage occurred naturally . Only time will tell if these unprecedented assaults on the privacy and reproductive rights can withstand the political process and judicial scrutiny. But if some Republican lawmakers in some states get their way, the curse of anti-abortion terrorism will be redefined as a blessing. (For more background, see The Washington Post for a summary of current state laws. ThinkProgress and the New York Times detail the myriad ways in which Republican state legislatures are trying to curb or eliminate Americans’ reproductive rights.) (This post also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Greta Van Susteren’s Hour-Long Tea Party Love Song

Click here to view this media Cable news is obsessed with the Tea Party. It’s not unique to Fox News, either. Chris Matthews did an hour-long special on them. CNN hires them as commentators, despite their ugly daily behavior online. and now Greta Van Susteren has gotten in on the Tea Party gravy train with an hour-long love song to them last night. There are some revealing moments mixed in with the usual nonsense from the likes of Dick Armey and Sarah Palin about how the tea parties are all organic and populist. Humbug and idiocy, that. But two segments in particular are worth watching, both from Utah Senators. Orrin Hatch looks like a deer caught in the headlights. He’s being squeezed hard by the Tea Party and moves farther right with each passing day, but this interview tells me he isn’t very happy about it. It’s interesting to hear him repeat several times in the beginning, middle and end of this segment how he believes most of them are good people who are ‘just fed up’. Here’s the revealer though: They’re good people. You always have the radicals in any organization , but the vast majority of them are honest, decent people who are sick and tired of what’s happening in our country. That disclaimer about radicals in any organization was an interesting one for him to make. I think Hatch knows he’s a goner in 2012 but will hang on as long as possible in the hopes of moving the Republican party back toward reason because he knows the truth: the majority of them are radicals with a few honest and decent angry folks on the fringe edges. Former Senator Robert Bennett is a very interesting man. There’s no question that he was (and is) very frustrated with how the Tea Party swept through the 2010 primaries in Utah leaving him high and dry. Click here to view this media Bennett is clear about his opinion of the tea party and the 2010 midterm elections. He blames Utah’s weird primary system — a convention of Republicos — for his loss last year . He also points out that the midterms resembled European-style elections where voters don’t really care who the candidate is as much as who the party represents. He points out that it worked well for them in the House races, but says Republicans lost the Senate because of them. One of the best moments is when he mentions Dino Rossi’s loss to Patty Murray, noting that while Rossi wasn’t a pure tea party candidate, he had “that odor around him.” I’m not sure I agree with Bennett entirely, but I do think his analysis holds up about the difference between the House of Representatives and the Senate. The House, he says, is more fluid (and I would add, more populist), with people not necessarily even knowing who their Representative is or what they’ve done. The Senate, on the other hand, with the longer terms and higher statewide profiles, tends to be less of a party choice and more of a people choice. He likens the Tea Party to the difference between John Adams and Sam Adams . In response to where he thinks the Tea Party will be in two years: Well, let’s go back in history just a little and this may be too much of an analogy. But as I’ve tried to think about it, I think you know, this is kind of like Sam Adams and John Adams. Sam Adams — I don’t know that he was there at the first Tea Party but he certainly was their spiritual leader. He was THE patriot in Massachusetts that riled everybody up and let’s just take on the British. But when it came to putting the country together and making things work, that’s when they needed John Adams, not Sam Adams. You needed somebody who knew something about government and he became a leader. Right now you’ve got a bunch of Sam Adams. The question is, in the current House and Senate, are we going to get out of this Tea Party movement some John Adams? I’m betting not. How about you? A couple of the commenters on my Fox News lament yesterday referred to it as pure invention, a 24/7 propaganda machine that invents, promotes, and flogs narratives until they’re woven into the fabric of our politics. I consider the Tea Party to be one of those inventions. It was born from intentional strategies, caught fire because people’s anger was stoked and stroked daily on demand, and continues because of PR specialists and news networks willing to treat this group of unruly characters like a legitimate populist grass-roots movement when there is nothing at all organic about it at all. Finally, allow me one moment of snark: Dick Armey’s tanning salon must make a fortune on him. Whatever he pays, it’s too much.

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AZ Republican: If You Foreclose On Something, You Should Tell Them Who Owns The Property

Michele Reagan, AZ Republican legislator. I was shocked when I read this, but when I found out it was sponsored by a Republican legislator who couldn’t get information about who owned her mortgage, it made a lot more sense. After all, Republicans only care about problems when they affect them directly! Anyway, if passed, this will be a real help to Arizona homeowners in foreclosure: Arizona may become the first state to require lenders to prove they have the right to foreclose by providing a complete list of any previous owners of the mortgage , under a bill passed yesterday by its Senate. The legislation, which is headed to the House after being approved 28-2 in the Republican-dominated Senate, would allow foreclosure sales to be voided if lenders that didn’t originate the loan can’t produce the full chain of title. Arizona permits nonjudicial foreclosures, meaning property can be seized from the homeowner without a court order. Lawmakers in states including New York, Oregon and Virginia also have proposed legislation to address concerns among consumer advocates that lenders or mortgage servicers are using incomplete or false paperwork to repossess properties in default. The attorneys general of all 50 states are jointly investigating how the mortgage-servicing industry operates. “If you foreclose on somebody you should have to tell them who owns the property,” Michele Reagan, who sponsored Senate Bill 1259, said in a telephone interview. “People have the right in this country to face their accusers.” The Republican lawmaker is in litigation with her mortgage servicer, which she said won’t identify the owner of the loan .

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Spartacus Season 3

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Spartacus Season 3

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A Cry In the Night

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A Cry In the Night

Click here to view this media [YouTube] Via CNN : A woman in Tripoli, Libya’s capital, speaks with Anderson Cooper and issues a plea for help to the rest of the world. This is an excerpted part of a 15min segment aired last night on A360 with Anderson Cooper. COOPER: Are you — you’re scared to go out in the streets? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Very scared. no, we close the door. We close the window. We don’t go out. But nobody is leaving the house and we all stay together in one room in the center of the house. COOPER: I hear fear in your voice and I hear sadness in your voice. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Very much — is very much stress, very much sadness and hopelessness, because, you know, we can’t go outside. I wish I can go outside and protest, say OK, they arrest you, they beat you, they do something. But the problem is, you go outside, they’re going to shoot you. This is not protest. You cannot protest. I wish we can protest. We cannot protest. I will have to find another way to say — this is not protest. This is massacre. COOPER: I hope you know that people around the world are watching and praying and wanting to do something. I hope you know that. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Thank you, Mr. Anderson. Thank you for your efforts for the scene and effort — thank you for the people who care. But I’m telling you — I don’t mean to be rude. Please, don’t misunderstand me. But the only way something can happen is to put the right kind of action, the right kind of movement. And the first step, make Libya a no-fly zone. If you make Libya a no-fly zone, no more mercenaries can come in. Then after that, because this crucial, real thing — you know, we listen closely to Mr. Obama. We listen closely to the European Union. We listen closely to what’s happening in South America. We listen to closely to all the Arab nations, what they are saying. They are not saying read between the lines. We are dying. And the problem is, OK, you are — I’m talking to you and you are listening to me and you are seeing the videos and people are talking to you from inside, outside of Libya. But the action — there needs to be action. How much more waiting, how much more watching, how much more people dying? COOPER: How much longer can you hold on? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I don’t know. You know, I feel like — sometimes, really, like I’m going to go crazy. And then, sometimes, I have to say, no, no, you have to be stronger than that. Your freedom is not something easy. It’s not cheap. You have to fight for your freedom. COOPER: You told my producer before that you have reached the end point. What do you mean when you say you have reached the end point? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Everybody has had enough. We have had enough a long time, not just this last week or this month or this year, or even before things happening internationally in neighboring countries. We have all had enough. But what I mean in the end point, that I don’t care. Like — like, I’m talking to you now, you know? This is not safe for me, not safe for my family. COOPER: You know you’re taking a great risk right now? You know you’re taking a great risk? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: A great risk. And I ask — I ask of you and CNN and anybody to please just come and see what is going on, you know, because, even though this is great risk on anybody who comes inside of Libya, but you cannot believe, as much as we — we don’t even know how many people died. I’m expecting — not because I’m overestimating, but when we know how many people died — I just keep hearing names, names. I’m making a list of paper of each time I hear of people dying. And we can’t even get the bodies. We don’t even know who we should say I’m sorry for the loss of some — your family member. We cannot move. We cannot do anything. And the problem is nothing will change in Libya unless drastic, important measures taken from outside, because this man, he is crazy. He doesn’t care about you or what you think. You already understand he doesn’t care about his people. He doesn’t care if I die. He doesn’t care if he burns the whole city. He doesn’t care if all of us in Tripoli die, all of us in Libya will die. He doesn’t care. I don’t — he said this in his speeches. He is not even just saying. He is doing. His action is telling you what’s happening. He doesn’t care. He wants us all to die. COOPER: I can hear… UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: And the only way we can fix this is if somebody takes action, if you just make Libya a no-fly zone. He’s bringing African mercenaries because he has so much money. He can buy people with money. He don’t care. They go inside to kill us, to rape us, to destroy our country, to — enough. COOPER: I don’t want to keep you on the phone for too long, just for safety reasons. So, please stay safe. And we will talk to you tomorrow. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Thank you, Mr. Anderson. And I — I hope I was able to — I hope you understand me. And thank you for your patience with me. And thank you, CNN, and thank you, America, for listening and for caring. Thank you very much.

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Fox News Fatigue, Firsthand

I say this to the world: Dave Neiwert is my hero. Anyone who can seriously monitor the Fox News grind day after day deserves a medal of honor. I have spent a week watching, and come away with the understanding that a steady diet of what they serve over there will leave you sick, angry, and spelling-challenged. I knew something was wrong yesterday when I had to stop and think about how to spell a word I’ve known how to spell forever. It was something simple, like “labelled.” But I had to think about it for more than a few seconds. This is not like me. I am anal about spelling and rarely make a mistake. Using a spell-checker is a matter of pride with me. I could, but I won’t. What evil influence could possibly be corrupting my spelling abilities? I found myself not even caring if I could spell it right just as long as I could be done with what I was doing. And then it hit me. I realized yesterday marked a full week of watching Fox. I knew it had to be the culprit. As one who has banned Fox News from my house for years, it is never, ever on. But with Dave gone, I volunteered to monitor it for a week in his absence. I did learn a few things, about myself and about their techniques. enlarge I learned there is a “theme of the day”, set at 3AM California time when Fox and Friends comes on with their faux friendly little coffee klatch. Yesterday’s theme was “Liberals are less civil than Tea Partiers.” It began last night with Bill O’Reilly’s ongoing claim that he’s unfairly accused of being unfair. But today, it was the overriding, dominant theme. Every show serves their own flavor of the theme inside the context of the main story, which happened to be the Wisconsin showdown with Governor Walker. Whether they were talking about the reporter punking the governor, or protests in solidarity with Wisconsinites, it is hammered home over and over and over and over again. No one is exempt or escapes The Theme, not even Glenn Beck. Watch here, as he takes a break from his incoherent ranting about President Obama making a statement about Libya while they were sleeping, and how that must have been because he had to coach his daughters or something. I’m convinced he was just pissed that his show was interrupted for it. Here’s the clip: Click here to view this media For Beck, it’s all about the SEIU, and how horrible it would have been if Tea Partiers sang their new “fight song”. There’s The Theme: Liberals are evil, tea partiers were unfairly maligned. Moving on to Hannity, here’s the opening screen: enlarge This, from the guy who refers to the President as “the anointed one”. And later in the show, he had this horrible awful video supplied to him by FreedomWorks showing awful, awful mean liberal racists being mean and racist to a black guy holding a Gadsden flag. Here you go. One interesting thing is how they interpreted the shouts to “go back to your own side.” I watched it twice, and it appeared to me that protesters were separated by ropes, and he had wandered over to the side where the union protesters were. Click here to view this media There was one clearly racist question tossed at him by the older woman who wanted to know if he had any children — that he admitted to. That was uncalled for and was definitely rude. But it doesn’t rise to the level of punching someone out , or any of the effigy-burnings and related symbolic violence we saw with the tea partiers. And of course, Monica Crowley calling Obama “Obama Mubarak” over the DOMA decision was certainly civil, don’t you think? Next, we move into the O’Reilly hour where he does his very best to be “fair” while gabbling on with the Fox and Friends crew about the President’s “defiance” with regard to DOMA. No mention of mean liberals (remember, he started that on Wednesday), but I do note that his word of the day is ” meretricious “. This is what it’s like every single day. I started out sort of understanding what Glenn Beck was saying in the beginning of the week, but by the end of the week not only did I not understand him, the sound of his voice gave me a migraine. Someone said he speaks in tongues. Yes, he probably does but the spiritual language he speak is the language of liars and fools. Even conservatives wonder about him , but even with all of that, he still has one helluva dog whistle and he uses it…liberally. They take the theme and flog it mercilessly for that day, then let up as the next theme emerges. It’s a symphony of sorts — a symphony with lots of percussion, dissonance, and out of tune clanging cymbals with a shrill, high-pitched, irritating whistle barely audible at all times. It does something to viewers, even viewers who are discerning or fair in how they view the world, issues and the political landscape. It keeps them angry all the time. Outraged. Either they share the outrage and anger of their TV hosts, or they’re outraged and angry at the BS being shoved in their face. It’s as much a brainwashing technique as strapping someone in a chair and forcing them to watch the same themes over and over and over again. There are code words. Lots and lots of code words. And of course, the classic slams wrapped in a question. O’Reilly earlier: “Is Barack Obama an effective leader?” Repeating the same graphic over and over of the “fleebaggers” — the 14 Democrats who left the state as the only effective method of filibuster. All of this leads to fatigue; fatigue turns to irritation; irritation turns to apathy. I would shrug at comments that would have gotten a rise out of me earlier in the week. They count on that. For people like me that constant cymbal clang becomes overwhelming and I just shut down, sick of the whole thing. This is how they win. They wear you down over time with fear, anger, and apathy unless you’re strong enough to resist. It’s why John and David wrote Over the Cliff, and why we here at Crooks and Liars come back every day and debunk their lies in small, bite-sized chunks that can be barely tolerated but still digested. I wonder how long detox will take?

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Thank you Congressman Weiner for calling out these hypocritical Republicans for their so-called conservative views. As Anthony Weiner pointed out here, Republicans are all for less government regulation, unless it means the right to regulate a woman’s uterus. They don’t want government to get between a patient and their doctor unless it means making sure that poor women don’t have access to a legal procedure. Sarah Seltzer at AlterNet has more on what the House has been keeping themselves busy with when they’re not making sure they take care of their millionaire and billionaire campaign donors — The GOP Unleashes a Horrifying Attack on Women : Republicans came to D.C. “and immediately started putting the government in charge of every single pregnancy in America,” said Rachel Maddow on Tuesday night. She’s right, and it’s horrifying: the blows to women’s rights keep coming out of Washington every hour, it seems. The latest? A bill that would strip Planned Parenthood of all funding. This bill is no surprise coming on the heels of a coordinated right-wing attack on Planned Parenthood and a spate of nasty undercover videos by discredited right-wing prankster Lila Rose. But it would do a lot of damage to a lot of women, explains Nick Baumann at Mother Jones: “[It] will cut $327 million in family planning funding that goes to organizations like Planned Parenthood but that cannot be used to pay for abortions. This money, instead, is used to fund cancer screenings, birth control, and other health care services for poor people. The $327 million is the sum total of this sort of funding under current law. The House GOP is trying to zero out Planned Parenthood.” Republicans’ twisted justification for cutting funds is that any money that goes to Planned Parenthood, even for cancer screenings, frees up the organization’s funds for abortion. But the pragmatic reality shows that cutting such funding would be devastating to women, ending the ability for many of them to prevent pregnancy at low cost and thereby potentially causing more abortions. Cuts that would deprive women of cancer screenings are unconscionable. Because Planned Parenthood treats sexually active women as human beings, it has become target #1. What’s shocking about all these attacks is that the GOP doesn’t even pretend to care about women this time around, as they sometimes do–instead, they’re waging an all-out war on women’s health. One of the most egregious salvos in this war on women is the treatment of “rape” exceptions to a proposed abortion funding ban. A massive outcry arose when the phrase “forcible rape” appeared in the notorious H.R. 3 bill–essentially redefining “acceptable” rape using an arbitrary term. It was a nasty bit of work, allowing for rape exceptions only if was the “right kind of rape.” Note to Republicans, women said: all rape is forcible. The bill’s sponsors claimed the offensive phrase had been removed. But according to reports on Wednesday, it was still there. And yet another controversy has followed in this one’s wake, thanks to anti-choice congressman Joe Pitts (PA) who introduced a new facet to yet another awful bill, H.R. 358. This new provision would allow emergency room and other hospital and health personnel to refuse emergency care rather than perform abortion procedures they disagree with. As Dante Atkins at Daily Kos writes, “This modification is simple: it would allow hospitals to make a ‘decision of conscience’ to let women die.” Yes, you heard that right. Jill Filipovic at Feministe points out the irony that when hospitals refuse life-saving abortions to women, the fetus often dies along with her. So, she writes, “the entire purpose of this bill is to allow ideologues to refuse necessary, life-saving care to patients, if those patients happen to be pregnant.” Read on…

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