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Does Melo’s Exit Elevate Rockies (VIDEO)!! A Cacatua Verde Cagliari-Juventus 1-3 SKY Melo To Knicks Carmelo Anthony has been traded to the New York Knicks by the Denver Nuggets. Quick Thoughts on the Melo Trade | The Wages of Wins Journal Although members of the media might think so, Melo is simply not that productive. Yes, he can play very well over short periods of time (he was doing very well early in the season). But as time progresses, Melo seems to regress to the … The Point Forward » Posts Knicks land ' Melo , but Denver gets … They know they can get ‘ Melo now. And they are going for it. Two other criticisms you are going to read soon: 1) The Knicks could have waited to sign Anthony as a free agent without giving up anything. Again: Maybe. … At Drama's End, Uncertainty, Disappointment – NetsDaily As Melo Drama Finally Comes to a Close at Madison Square Garden, Nets Moving Harris, May Gain Felton. Feb 2011 by Net Income – 2234 comments … Open Thread: Melo Trade FINAL. Feb 2011 from Denver Stiffs – 1138 comments … Denver Trades Melo for Sanity | Gunaxin Sports Melo and the insanity of basketball dreams return to NY. Chandler, Felton, Gallinari, picks, money and the sanity of basketball reality return to Denver. generalcity says: MELO TO KNICKS: Hollinger's Grades: Melo to KnicksESPNDid Isiah have the lot to do with Melo getting to … http://bit.ly/gX5IAj

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Cameron says UK prejudiced for believing Muslims cannot manage democracy

Prime minister will tell Kuwait national assembly that Britain was wrong to prop up ‘highly controlling regimes’ as way of ensuring stability Britain has been guilty of a prejudice bordering on racism for believing that Muslims cannot manage democracy, David Cameron will say as he recasts foreign policy in light of protests across the Arab world. In a speech at the national assembly in Kuwait, the prime minister will abandon decades of so-called “camel corps” diplomacy by saying Britain was wrong to prop up “highly controlling regimes” as a way of ensuring stability. Cameron – who is facing anger in the UK for placing defence exports at the heart of his long-planned visit to the Gulf – will use the speech to show that Britain is promoting political reform in the region. The prime minister, who attended a ceremony in Kuwait with Sir John Major to mark the 20th anniversary of the first Gulf war, said: “Now, once again, this region is the epicentre of momentous changes, but pursued in a very different way. History is sweeping through your neighbourhood.” Cameron, who on Monday visited the scene of the demonstrations in Tahrir Square in Cairo that toppled President Hosni Mubarak, said the protests had highlighted a hunger for freedom across the Middle East. He depicted the protests as “movements of the people” that were not ideological or extremist. But he indicated that the demonstrations presented a challenge for Britain as he dismissed as a “false choice” the old calculation that authoritarian regimes needed to be supported as the price of ensuring stability. “For decades, some have argued that stability required controlling regimes and that reform and openness would put that stability at risk,” Cameron said. “So, the argument went, countries like Britain faced a choice between our interests and our values. And to be honest, we should acknowledge that sometimes we have made such calculations in the past.” He added: “But I say that is a false choice. As recent events have confirmed, denying people their basic rights does not preserve stability – rather, the reverse.” The prime minister said Britain and other western countries cannot impose any democratic model on the Arab world, but stressed: “That’s not an excuse, as some would argue, to claim that Arabs or Muslims can’t do democracy – the so-called Arab exception. “For me, that’s a prejudice that borders on racism. It’s offensive and wrong and it’s simply not true.” Cameron’s speech has been designed to lay to rest decades of British foreign policy which held that authoritarian regimes in the Gulf must be supported to guarantee stability. The strongest example is Britain’s close relationship with Saudi Arabia. The prime minister will not be visiting Saudi Arabia during his three-day tour of the Gulf. This is because King Abdullah is in poor health and not because Cameron wants to distance the UK from the kingdom. He is also distancing himself from US neocons who believe democracy can be imposed. Cameron outlined his thinking on this issue on Monday in Cairo, when he said: “Democracy is an important part of our foreign policy. “But I am not a naive neocon who thinks you can drop democracy out of an aeroplane at 40,000ft or that, simply by holding an election, you have satisfied the needs of democracy. You have had plenty of elections in Egypt, but that does not mean you have had a functioning democracy.” He developed this theme in his speech at the Kuwaiti national assembly in which he said the “building blocks” of democracy – an independent judiciary, free media and a “proper place” for the army – had to be laid with care. “Democracy is the work of patient craftmanship – it has to be built from the grassroots up,” he said. “It can’t be done overnight.” The prime minister outlined his approach to foreign policy in Kuwait because Britain believes its national assembly is a strong example of democracy in the Gulf. Its 50 members are elected by universal suffrage, though the majority of the population, many of whom come from the Indian sub-continent, do not have the vote. There are four woman members. The Kuwaiti prime minister, Sheikh Nasser Mohammed al-Ahmed al-Sabah, who was summoned for a grilling last year, only survived a confidence vote by 25 votes to 23. David Cameron Foreign policy Kuwait Middle East Egypt Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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Iran naval ships enter Suez canal

• Two vessels headed towards the Mediterranean, officials say • Israel has said it would take a ‘grave view’ of ships’ passage Two Iranian naval ships have entered the Suez canal and are heading towards the Mediterranean sea, a canal official said. The move is certain to anger Israel. “They entered the canal at 5.45am (3.45am GMT),” the official told Reuters. No other details were available. The Suez canal cuts through Egypt and allows shipping to pass from the Middle East to Europe and vice versa without circumnavigating the southern tip of Africa. The canal’s northern mouth, Port Said, is about 60 miles from Israel, but the ships’ route to Syria, their intended destination, would take them parallel to the Israeli coast. The vessels are a frigate and a supply ship. The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has said he would take a “grave view” of the passage of the ships, the first Iranian naval vessels to go through the canal since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution. Iran appears to be testing the state of affairs in the Middle East after the fall of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak. A longstanding peace treaty with Egypt is crucial to Israel’s regional security. Israel is anxious about political upheaval in Egypt and other Arab states aligned with its ally, the United States. Polls in Egypt suggest most of the main political forces will be less compliant with Israel and the US. A recently completed Israeli war game, the first since Mubarak quit Egypt’s presidency, concluded it would boost military preparations but try to avoid confrontation unless it sees a greater threat from arch-foe Iran. Egypt’s ruling military council, facing its first diplomatic headache since taking power on 11 February, has approved the vessels’ passage through the canal, a vital global trading route and major source of revenues for the Egyptian authorities. The decision was a difficult one for Egypt’s interim government. Cairo is an ally of the US while its relations with Iran have been strained for more than three decades. Analysts say Iran sees itself benefiting from the upheaval across the Middle East. Dislodgement and weakening of leaders sympathetic to the US is likely to embolden Tehran and lessen the chances of it making concessions on its nuclear programme. Iran denies it intends to build atomic weapons. Iran Middle East Israel Binyamin Netanyahu Egypt Hosni Mubarak US foreign policy United States guardian.co.uk

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Lawrence O’Donnell: Walker Becomes Top GOP Presidential Candidate If He Wins Wisconsin Union Battle

Lawrence O'Donnell on Monday made a prediction that most who hadn't heard of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker until a week ago might find astonishing. On MSNBC's “The Last Word,” the host told his perilously liberal guest Ezra Klein that if Walker's budget repair plan goes through, “He would instantaneously become the greatest hero in the Republican Party nationwide, I think would go to the top of Republicans' lists for possible presidential nominees in the upcoming election” (video follows with transcript and commentary): LAWRENCE O’DONNELL, HOST: Ezra, it seems to me his,his personal and political ambition is served by trying to get the full deal. If he were actually to get this thing through and get his Republican senators a chance to vote on it, he would instantaneously become the greatest hero in the Republican Party nationwide, I think would go to the top of Republicans' lists for possible presidential nominees in the upcoming election because I don’t think there’s an accomplishment quite like this out there that any other Republican can point to that would thrill the Republican base as much as this. EZRA KLEIN, WASHINGTON POST: He’d become a hero. I don’t know if he has enough time to go for 2012. But you know, Chris Christie’s become a very prominent Republican in part through some very well-publicized showdowns with union employees and union members at essentially press conferences. Walker is being able to do something he didn’t even dream of. With no one emerging as the presumptive favorite, and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie who could fit that role claiming he's not ready, O'Donnell could be quite prescient in his observation. As I sat there watching Walker's press conference last Friday, I was struck by his calm and obviously intelligent manner. With all the attention he's currently getting, a victory here could indeed catapult him to national prominence. Consider, too, that President Obama, the Democrat Party, and all their media minions are now fully engaged in this battle. If when this is all over, Walker is the man left standing, he will be perceived as the David that slew the entire left-wing machine in our nation. As O'Donnell correctly observed, is there anyone else in the Republican Party today with those credentials? With this in mind, it is a metaphysical certitude the Left and their willing accomplices in the press are going to pull out all the stops to defeat Walker's budget repair plan, for O'Donnell surely isn't the only liberal media member recognizing the Wisconsin governor's potential invincibility if his stone hits its mark.

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Wisconsin State Senator Smacks Down Chris Matthews: ‘You’re Completely Uninformed’

MSNBC's Chris Matthews tried Monday to push the liberal media meme that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker exempted police and firefighters from his budget repair plan because their unions endorsed him in last November's election. “Well one more time you're completely uninformed,” replied Republican State Senator Glenn Grothman who then proceeded to tell the facts to the obviously clueless “Hardball” host (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Let me go to the Republican, Senator Grothman. My question of course is why does the Governor pick on the unions that didn't endorse him in the last campaign but give a free ride to the firefighters and the cops who did and the localities? Why did they get off and are allowed to continue to negotiate collectively? STATE SENATOR GLENN GROTHMAN (R-WISCONSIN): Well one more time you're completely uninformed. The firemen’s union around this state have campaigned against Republicans, and the statewide police have repeatedly campaigned against Republicans. Governor Walker is doing this out of financial necessity. And out of financial necessity the state with a $3 billion budget deficit has to do something. Governor Walker as well as the cities, counties and schools which all rely on state money can either lay people off or have everybody take a mild reduction in take home pay. Myself with a mild reduction in take home pay is part of that. Now we understand… MATTHEWS: Okay, you just said I’m wildly, once again I’m wildly out of, out of, wrong on the facts. GROTHMAN: Absolutely. MATTHEWS: You’re telling me that there aren't local affiliates, there aren't local union organizations at the county level, municipal level that didn't endorse your governor candidate when he ran. Are you saying they didn't endorse him, the firefighters and the cops? GROTHMAN: I can think of two small locals. The vast majority, the Wisconsin Professional Police Association, the vast majority of firemen's unions worked against Walker in this campaign and to say otherwise is completely to mislead your listening audience. So who's right? Well, as NewsBusters reported Friday, Walker addressed this very question with CBS's Chris Wragge on that morning's “Early Show”: WRAGGE: You say this is a modest request. Now some state workers have been hit harder than others. Your teachers union, which votes Democratic under normal circumstances, hit very hard. Yet your police, state trooper, firemen unions, who all supported and endorsed you, did not get touched in any of this. Why is that? WALKER: Well, Chris – Chris that actually is not true. There are 314 fire and police unions in the state. Four of them endorsed me. All the rest endorsed my opponent. But let's not take his word for it. Let's see what Politifact had to say about this very subject Monday: During the campaign last November, leaders of the Milwaukee Professional Firefighters Association and Milwaukee Police Association appeared in an ad supporting Walker and blasting his opponent, Democrat Tom Barrett. Walker also won endorsements from the West Allis Professional Police Association and the Wisconsin Troopers Association Walker didn’t get the endorsements of two statewide unions, the Wisconsin Professional Police Association and the Professional Fire Fighters of Wisconsin, which both backed Barrett. For the record, the governor told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the charge that he was exempting police and firefighters was “ridiculous.” He said he didn't recommend changing the rules for police officers and firefighters because he didn’t want public safety work disrupted. We then contacted the Wisconsin Professional Police Association, the statewide union that endorsed Walker's opponent last year. Executive director Jim Palmer said the statewide organization is much larger than the local Milwaukee police union that endorsed Walker. The state group has approximately 11,000 members versus Milwaukee’s roughly 1,400, he said. Similarly, the state firefighters association has more than 3,000, compared with the Milwaukee union’s 875. In reality, if Matthews or any of his staff knew had to do a Google search, this information is all a few keystrokes away. For instance,” THE WPPA ENDORSES TOM BARRETT FOR GOVERNOR “: Surrounded by law enforcement officers at a May 12th [2010] event, Tom Barrett received the endorsement of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association in his race to become the state’s next governor. The WPPA represents over 11,000 active and retired members from over 375 locals statewide. With over 70 years of service to law enforcement personnel, the WPPA is recognized as the leading law enforcement association in Wisconsin. Or how about ” Wisconsin Professional Fire Fighters endorse Tom Barrett for governor .” Finally, on an even grander scale, ” Barrett endorsed by National Association of Police Officers “: On behalf of the more than 240,000 men and women of law enforcement it represents, the National Association of Police Officers (NAPO) today endorsed Tom Barrett for Wisconsin governor in recognition of his long record of support for and public safety officials and issues. “NAPO is pleased to support your campaign and is confident of your support of Wisconsin’s law enforcement community,” NAPO executive director William J. Johnson wrote in a letter to Tom. NAPO is a coalition of police unions and associations from across the United States that serves to advance the interests of America’s law enforcement through legislative and legal advocacy, political action and education. Founded in 1978, NAPO now represents more than 1,000 police units and associations, 241,000 sworn law enforcement officers, 11,000 retired officers and more than 100,000 citizens who share a common dedication to fair and effective crime control and law enforcement. As such, this media meme advanced by Matthews Monday is a total fabrication. Either the “Hardball” host and his staff are completely incompetent and are incapable of identifying what is clearly available on the internet, or they are intentionally misinforming their viewers in order to show support for the protesters in Madison. Whatever the answer, the higher-ups at MSNBC should be doing something about this blatant negligence if they want their network to be in any way taken seriously.

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How Many Unions Would Jesus Bust?

Click here to view this media Good old Hucka-Jesus decided to carry a little water for Wisconsin’s Gov. Scott Walker by bashing the protesters and striking teachers there, of course all under the guise of Huckabee’s “aw shucks”, good old boy shtick he’s down pat. I’m just wondering Huck, how many unions would Jesus want to see busted? Who’s side do you think he’d be on here? The Koch brothers, or the workers? These supposed “good Christians” like Huckabee astound me. Someone needs to remind Huckabee that unions gave us weekends, child labor laws, minimum wage, sick days, vacation, collective bargaining and workers having the ability to earn a living wage. Huckabee and his buddies at Fox want to start a class war between what’s left of our dying middle class and the poor. That seems pretty un-Christ-like to me. Here’s something for Huckabee the next time he’s in the mood to quote scripture while he’s drawing that big paycheck from Fox while trying to turn working people against each other who should be on the same side of this fight. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.

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Joe Scarborough Whines About Meanies on the Left

Click here to view this media I am so tired of the constant drumbeat of false equivalence from the likes of Joe Scarborough. Right at the top of his show this morning he jumps out with a little whine in his coffee about how mean the awful left is to him, and how hateful their signs in Wisconsin are. enlarge How quickly they forget. I did a quick Google Image Search on “health care town halls” and then another on Wisconsin union protest signs . There’s no comparison. Not even close. Joe’s little rant follows last week’s rant where he called Wisconsin teachers “sick and selfish” for standing up for their rights instead of taking their medicine like everyone else. Of course, we all now know right from Governor Walker’s own lips that this isn’t about the budget, but about union-busting. He’s said it over and over again over the past three days. Yet no one took Scarborough to task for calling working people who want the right to collectively bargain “sick and selfish.” Not a one. About that whole civility thing, Joe. Let’s talk on that for a minute, because the language of hatefulness seems to be the native tongue of the Tea Party. Let me share a few email headlines I’ve received over the past couple of days, sent from Tea Party leaders to the Tea Party faithful. President Stupid Run by Fools Obama’s Incredible Shrinking America Those are just a random sampling of headlines. The text is far worse. It’s an intentional effort to keep tea party members engaged by enraging them. Those email blasts go out at least three times every day to the membership with little teases in them like this: The socialists, from Obama on down, are spreading the word that if there is a government shutdown, the world as we know it will come to an end. There will be no military, security, air traffic control and grandma won’t get her social security check. Guess what? They are lying! Yeah, nothing to see here, move along. Sure, the lefties send emails like this to their members every single day, working them into a lather over the tiniest, most trivial, ginned-up issues. And yeah, sure we have a 24/7 propaganda machine called Fox News out there amplifying that rage for the world to see. Sure we do, Joe. People on the left understand that we have no mainstream media that can be considered “liberal.” At best, we get Rachel Maddow’s brilliance offset by Joe Scarborough’s whining ways on MSNBC. Meanwhile, Fox News just grinds out the propaganda hour after hour, day after day. So forgive me, Joe, if I don’t weep big salt tears for the nasty emails you receive. I’ll delete mine if you delete yours. That’s about all anyone can do.

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Bozell Tackles Media Bias in Wis. Protest Coverage, Slams Media for Ignoring Docs Handing Out Fraudulent Sick Notes

“The mainstream media was late to the party when it came to covering” the Wisconsin budget protests, Fox Business Network's Stuart Varney noted as he introduced NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell earlier today on the February 21 edition of “Varney & Co.” But are the media now skewing coverage in favor of the perspective of the public sector labor unions, Varney asked. Most certainly they are, Media Research Center founder Bozell answered. [Video of the segment and

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Egypt’s media undergo their own revolution

Does the political upheaval in Egypt spell the end of state-controlled media? It was a front page few thought they would ever see. After weeks of dismissing pro-change Egyptian protesters as traitors, anarchists and malevolent foreign agents – at one point it was even suggested that demonstrators were secretly receiving free meals from the American fast-food giant KFC – the country’s most venerable official daily carried a single headline in the heady hours after Hosni Mubarak’s fall. The people have brought down the regime, declared Al-Ahram, triumphantly. As one newspaper vendor remarked, state-controlled media’s own revolution had begun. But discontent at the status quo within Egypt’s colossal state media complex – which comprises eight TV channels, numerous radio stations, dozens of newspapers and magazines and 46,000 employees in Cairo alone – had been rumbling long before Mubarak’s resignation. Grievances against Egypt’s government-appointed paper editors and broadcast network chiefs – often ageing regime acolytes parachuted in – have been stewing for years, as has internal disillusion with an entity notorious for corruption scandals, compromises of editorial integrity and an institutional aversion to reform. Jaw-dropping videos It is only now though, in the aftermath of the president’s departure, that these frustrations are erupting messily into the open. Jaw-dropping videos are circulating of state TV bosses being chased out of their offices, writers at state newspapers are striking, and age-old bastions of regime propaganda are improbably restyling themselves as cheerleaders of radical change. Amid the turmoil, many are asking whether, as the new, post-Mubarak Egypt takes shape, state media will have a long-term role to play. “The great revolution in Tahrir Square that brought down the president has given rise to small revolutions in every Egyptian institution, including the media,” says Abdel Latif Al Manawy, the Egyptian state media’s head of news. Over the past week Al Manawy has required the protection of the army to save him from the wrath of underlings, who accuse him of fabricating news and spreading propaganda to discredit the revolution in its early days – a charge Al Manawy denies. He rejects any suggestion that his channels are facing an existential crisis. “I believe public media will always be there, as long as we serve the public,” he says. “The form and content will change, but we will always be the eyes of the public and its connection to the state.” Others are not so sure. Following a tumultuous 18 days of street protests that saw Al Manawy’s channels first ignore massive anti-government demonstrations, then pump out relentless pro-Mubarak propaganda, before finally switching sides as the ruling clique began to crumble – while tanks held back irate crowds from his downtown Cairo studios – there is a growing consensus among Egyptian media experts that state broadcasters and papers are facing an uncertain future. “There is a genuine desire for root and branch reform inside government media institutions as Egypt enters a new era, but I think it’s too late,” says Nailah Hamdy, a journalism professor at the American University in Cairo. “These outlets have lost their credibility completely owing to their initial anti-revolution bias and you can’t regain your audience overnight. It wasn’t one errant report, or a single misquote; this was the creation of a completely parallel reality. The last time that happened was during the 1967 war, and those that were alive then still don’t trust the state media to this day.” Hamdy adds: “We’re going to see major political alterations in the coming months, and that means altering the media landscape as well. In a democracy I can’t imagine that there will be any role to play for state TV channels or official newspapers which take diktats from a Ministry of Information; they will have to look to other models, such as BBC-style public broadcasting, to survive.” With unparalleled levels of penetration into every corner of Egyptian society, state media has long played a critical role in shaping public discourse within the Arab world’s most populous nation. It was therefore no surprise that, as a dictator was toppled, the media outlets found themselves stuck between pro-democracy activists and the old regime. This was not just a physical skirmish, and nor was it merely an ideological struggle between two opposing visions of Egypt’s political future. As communication blackouts cut Egypt off from the world and crowds rallying in Tahrir Square set fire to bundles of government newspapers, the nature of news dissemination itself was at stake. Here was a system built around the top-down distribution of information, pitted against a plethora of digital, collaborative networks from below. The latter emerged victorious. “To a large extent, the contest of wills between a spontaneous, grassroots movement and an entrenched authoritarian regime became a battle of words and images, in which issues of national authenticity were paramount and modes of communication vital,” says the Cairo-based reporter Ursula Lindsey. “Who could legitimately claim to speak for Egypt? Who could not?” Now, as a transitional army-led government takes the reins of power, state media employees are asking themselves that same question – and taking much-needed reform into their own hands in an attempt to recover a legitimate voice for themselves. Internal purges are under way; many hope that structural reform will follow. “Corruption is so deeply entrenched in these buildings, and so much money has been squandered,” claims Shahira Amin, a former deputy head of the state-run Nile TV news channel, who resigned at the start of the demonstrations. “I liken it to a carpet that needs to have the dust thoroughly beaten out, not just lightly swept, and unless that happens then nothing can really change.” Family connections Amin is planning to deliver a list of proposed media reforms to the military’s representatives in Maspero, the state broadcasting headquarters, which includes changes to journalist training programmes and a shakeup of recruitment policy. “Under my watch I saw so many good people being sent away because they were too good. They would have embarrassed other under-qualified employees who only secured their jobs through family connections,” she says. Lina Attalah, the managing editor of the independent Egyptian news outlet Al Masry Al Youm – expected to benefit if media liberalisation intensifies under a future democratic government – believes the changes have to go further, including less regulation. “We’re experiencing post-revolution euphoria right now, but soon we’ll have to engage with a broader campaign which looks at media organisation on the level of

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George Soros: Fox Has Imported the Methods of George Orwell Newspeak

Click here to view this media On Fareed Zakaria GPS , George Soros responded to the attacks being made against him by Glenn Beck and Fox News and he weighed in on the so-called “tea party” members being duped by the big monied interests pulling their strings. Sadly the network this aired on isn’t far behind Fox with the propaganda and the promotion of this astroturf Republican rebranding effort called the tea party. ZAKARIA: So, George, Glenn Beck has been on this kick that you are actually the mastermind who is trying to bring down the American government. How do you react when you see this kind of thing? SOROS: Well, I would be amused if — if people saw the joke in it, because what he is doing, he is projecting what FOX, what Rupert Murdoch is doing, because he has a — a media empire that is telling the people some falsehoods and this — and leading the government in the wrong direction. But, you know, by accusing me of doing that, it kind of makes it rather hard to see that it’s really, he is working for the man who is doing it, which is FOX News. ZAKARIA: But it’s very personal. I mean, he talks about you as a 14-year-old boy and he accuses you of — of essentially helping to round Jews up — you’re Jewish yourself. You’ve lost — SOROS: Yes. ZAKARIA: You lost many, many people in the holocaust. How did you feel when you heard that? SOROS: Well, look, FOX News makes a habit — it has imported the methods of George Orwell, you know, newspeak, where you can tell the people falsehoods and deceive them. And you wouldn’t believe that at an open society and a democracy these methods can succeed. But, actually, they did succeed. They succeeded in Germany where the Weimar Republic collapsed and you had a — a Nazi regime follow it. So this is a very, very dangerous way of deceiving people, and I would like people to be aware that they are being deceived. Now, I — because I saw it as a child, I immediately react that way. But people in America, they are innocent. They — they haven’t had the experience. But having the experience now, and I hope they wake up and they realize that they are being deceived. ZAKARIA: What do you think of this broader movement of the Tea Party, of — of what’s going on on the right? SOROS: Look, I think the people in the Tea Party are very decent people, hard-working. They’ve been hit by a force that — that comes from somewhere which they can’t fully understand, and — and they are being misled. And they are misled by people who are using it for their selfish purposes, namely to remove regulations and — and reduce taxation. So reduce taxation and regulation, and they are being used and deceived. ZAKARIA: Do — do you think that there is some — I’m struck by the fact that when I first met you, you were always accused of being this ultra capitalist. You were the speculator, you were the person who, you know, understood markets better than anyone. And now, you’re painted as this kind of left wing iconic figure. It’s been quite a journey. SOROS: Well, you just had the experience of speaking through the — to the puppet master and the extreme left wing manipulator, and you and the audience can make their own decisions.

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