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Arianna Huffington's crazy left-wing, pro-Democrat website gets bought out by AOL for $315 million. Professional Angry Man Keith Olbermann follows up by joining Al Gore's deservedly unknown Current TV effort. Before that, decrepit Newsweek was absorbed by one of the lesser liberal lights of the blogosphere – Tina Brown's Daily Beast. To journalists desperate for a direction – any direction – turning left seems an easy way to go. Forget MSNBC's brief propaganda attempt to “lean forward.” That is going nowhere. Old-style, supposedly neutral journalism is collapsing. Out of the rubble, we are seeing more and more journalists declare themselves to be what we've always known they were – liberal, left-wing, progressive or even ” socialist ,” as MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell admitted late last year. Faster than a congressman can take off his shirt, journalists have proven every complaint about media bias conservatives have leveled for decades. Yes, journalists are liberal. Yes, they blatantly spin stories to benefit both liberals and Democrats. Yes, hosts like Chris Matthews play ” Hardball ” with conservatives and play a thrill-ing game of slo-pitch softball with their Democrat buddies.

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Mubarak teases Egypt as his regime fragments | Brian Whitaker

Hosni Mubarak’s insulting speech showed why he ought to go, but the struggle on the streets is no longer the only game in town The victory celebrations in Tahrir Square had been going on for hours when the moment arrived for what almost everyone assumed would be Hosni Mubarak’s resignation speech, but the Egyptian president was determined to tease them a little longer. On state TV, the news bulletin came and went, with no sign of the president. Then came the weather forecast. Then a promotional film showing what a wonderful place Egypt is and then, rather surprisingly, a discussion about high-level corruption. Finally, the man who has presided over high-level corruption for the last 30 years appeared – about 40 minutes late. By that stage, anyone tuned to Alarabiya – the Saudi TV channel set up as a rival to al-Jazeera – already knew what he was going to say. Someone had leaked the speech to them. And what a speech . By the standards of any modern politician, it was truly dreadful: in turns vain, arrogant, patronising, condescending and defiant. Above all, it showed Mubarak totally out of touch with the mood of the country and the will of the people that he governs. The only thing to be said in its favour is that it illustrated, in just a few hundred words, all the reasons why he ought to go (even if he’s still refusing to do so). He began by addressing the people as his “sons and daughters” – a phrase that might slip past unnoticed, though in fact it encapsulates the fundamental problem with Arab leaders and how they perceive themselves and their citizens. They behave like the traditional head of an Arab household, the paterfamilias – a remote, supposedly wise and almost God-like figure who rarely speaks but, when he does, must always be obeyed because he knows what’s best for his children. By the time he got to “I am determined to live up to my promises” a few sentences further on, it was clear he had no intention of resigning – and he followed this up with a series of “commitments” which, on past form, cannot be taken at face value. He even appeared to backtrack on Egypt’s much criticised and semi-permanent “emergency” law, saying it would be lifted only when “calm and stability” return and conditions are “suitable”. Just a few months ago, the regime had been promising that the 43-year “emergency” would end as soon as the draft of its new anti-terrorism law had been finalised. Before long, though, the speech was drifting off into familiar blather about Mubarak’s service to the country and his military achievements: “I was as young as Egypt’s youth today, when I learned the Egyptian military honour, allegiance and sacrifice for my country. I have spent a lifetime defending its soil and sovereignty. I witnessed its wars, with its defeats and victories … It was the happiest day of my life when I raised the flag of Egypt over Sinai.” In Tahrir, the cheers turned to jeers and chants of “Mubarak out!” resumed. By the end, people were taking off their shoes and waving them at the TV screens – the ultimate Arab insult. What are we to make of these extraordinary events, and what do they herald for today? One theory among Egyptians is that the speech was intentionally provocative, calculated to arouse the ire of the protesters, goading them into violence – and thus providing a pretext for martial law. That may be a bit too conspiratorial. There is also the mysterious business of the ominously titled ” Communique Number One ” from the supreme council of the armed forces saying that the military has begun taking “necessary measures to protect the nation” and “support the legitimate demands of the people”. What exactly does that mean, and how does it relate to Mubarak’s non-resignation speech? Indeed, why did Mubarak need to make a speech at all if he is not resigning? According to reports, the supreme council has met only three times in its history: in 1967 and 1973 (when the country was at war) – and on Thursday. Thursday’s meeting was held without its chairman, Mubarak, and apparently the meeting was adjourned without formally concluding. A second communique has failed to clarify the army’s position. Possibly, as one Egyptian commentator suggested on the BBC, the army was attempting a coup which Mubarak had fended off by threatening to unleash his Republican Guard upon them. Whatever the truth in that, when the head of the ruling party says it’s time for the president to step aside, when the government media seem increasingly uncertain about the message they are supposed to be conveying and three former ministers have been forbidden to leave the country pending possibly corruption charges, the inescapable conclusion is that the struggle on the streets is no longer the only game in town – and that key members of the regime are now fighting amongst themselves. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Protest Middle East Brian Whitaker guardian.co.uk

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Egypt protests – Friday 11 February

• Mubarak’s defiance enrages protesters • Mass demonstrations beginning • Military believed to be considering its position • US criticises Mubarak ترجم هذه الصفحة إلى العربية 8.49am: Here is some video of Hosni Mubarak’s speech last night. ____ 8.32am: President Hosni Mubarak’s announcement last night that he would not stand down after a day of fevered speculation has enraged protesters . In a televised address he stunned crowds massed in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and elsewhere by saying he would hand power to his vice-president, Omar Suleiman, but stay on as president until elections in September. Mass demonstrations are expected once more today as opponents of Mubarak’s regime show their anger at his refusal to step down. Protesters are already gathering in Tahrir Square, outside the state TV building in Cairo and the presidential palace. The president’s statement not only angered the Egyptian protesters but also the US , as Barack Obama issued his strongest criticism of Mubarak so far, criticising the Egyptian government’s failure to put forward a “credible, concrete and unequivocal path to democracy”. The military is expected to issue a statement in the next two hours, before Friday prayers, amid continued speculation of a military takeover. There are hopes among some protesters that the military will oversee the transition to democracy. Egypt Middle East Hosni Mubarak Protest Live video Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk

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The BBC’s Persian TV service is being jammed from within Iran due to its coverage of the unrest in Egypt. It appears that the trigger point was a joint broadcast on Wednesday by the corporation’s Persian and Arabic services in which Iranian and Egyptian callers exchanged views. Many Iranian viewers said during the interactive programme that they were watching events unfold in Cairo extremely closely. Peter Horrocks , head of BBC Global News, called for an end to the jamming, saying: “It is wrong that our significant Iranian audience is being denied impartial news and information… “The BBC will not stop covering Egypt and it will continue to broadcast to the Iranian people.” BBC Persian TV launched in 2009 and has suffered similar attempts to interfere with its signal intermittently ever since. But it continues to stream live online. Coincidentally, today marks the 31st anniversary of the uprising by the Iranian people against the Shah. Source: BBC Global News press release BBC Iran Egypt Censorship Press freedom Roy Greenslade guardian.co.uk

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Fury in Egypt as Mubarak refuses to leave

Massive protest expected after president hands over some powers to vice-president Suleiman – but remains in office President Hosni Mubarak dashed the hopes of hundreds of thousands of Egyptians waiting for what they thought would be his resignation speech last night by defiantly announcing that he would not bow to domestic or foreign pressure to quit. In a televised address that has set the stage for further confrontation on the streets – as well as heightened tensions with the US – Mubarak said he would hand powers to his deputy, Omar Suleiman, but would stay on as president, with his regime controlling the transition to free elections. Although he appeared to have surrendered much of his power, Mubarak said he will stay in office until an orderly transition to an elected government, planned for September. He repeated a pledge not to seek re-election and said there was no going back on a commitment to long-term political reform, after the two weeks of protests demanding his resignation. But while the president’s surrender of his legal powers was a significant concession, unthinkable just a month ago, it fell far short of the demands of the shocked crowds packed into Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the centre of protests against Mubarak’s 30-year rule. In a day of growing euphoria, many had come to believe he was about to resign entirely after senior government politicians predicted as much. The president’s defiant tone and attempts to paint the revolt as inspired by foreign interference angered the crowds. As the mood turned sour, protesters waved their shoes, a sign of contempt, and chanted: “He must leave” and “We’re off to the presidential palace. We’re going as millions of martyrs.” Opposition leaders said the transfer of power to Suleiman, the former intelligence chief who has played a central role in years of political repression, did not change the regime. They said they will escalate the protests, which in recent days have spread to include strikes that have shut down the public transport system, some hospitals and factories. Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel peace prize winner and retired nuclear inspector who is now a leading opposition politician, wrote on Twitter: “Egypt will explode. Army must save the country now.” But the role of the military remained unclear when, earlier, it said it would act to “protect the rights of the people”. Egyptians will be watching to see if the army allows the latest of the mass protests, planned for today, to go ahead without interference. Mubarak’s speech also wrongfooted the US administration, which has been pressuring him to take steps toward democratisation, including lifting the hated state of emergency which has been used to suppress political activity. Last night, Barack Obama convened a meeting with his security team to discuss the crisis. The Egyptian leader appealed to the protesters, suggesting that his refusal to resign was due to national dignity because he was resisting foreign pressure. “Your demands are legitimate and just … There is no shame in hearing your voices and opinions, but I refuse any and all dictations from abroad,” he said. “I have announced my commitment to peacefully hand over power after upcoming elections … I will deliver Egypt and its people to safety.” Mubarak said he would transfer powers to Suleiman to prove that the demands of protesters for political change will be met. Shortly afterwards, Suleiman appeared on television and missed a chance to win over the protesters by announcing immediate and major political changes. Instead, he aggravated tensions by warning that he would not allow the country to be dragged into chaos and appealing for the protesters to return to work. “Youth of Egypt, go back home, back to work, the nation needs you to develop, to create. Don’t listen to foreign radio and TV, whose aim is to tarnish Egypt,” he said. ElBaradei dismissed Suleiman as an alternative to the president. “There is no way that the Egyptian people right now are ready to accept either Mubarak or his vice president,” he told CNN. “Suleiman is considered to be an extension of Mubarak, they are twins. Neither of them is acceptable to the people – even Suleiman is less acceptable.” Stunned protesters listened to Mubarak in disbelief. In the hours before his speech, thousands of pro-democracy activists had poured in to Tahrir Square for an impromptu victory party in expectation that the president was about to quit after the prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, and other senior politicians said they expected him to announce he would go as the political crisis deepened with the spread of strikes and demonstrations across the country. Hossam Badrawi, the new secretary general of the ruling party, was quoted in the state press as saying he had requested that Mubarak transfer his powers to Suleiman, who had appeared to be running the country in recent days. The mood of optimism had been reinforced when General Hassan al-Roueini, military commander for the Cairo area, told the crowd: “All your demands will be met today.” State television shifted from relentless anti-protester propaganda to showing Tahrir Square, in what was widely seen as reflecting a political change. But, behind the scenes, there appeared to be a struggle involving the army underway over the terms of Mubarak’s departure. Activists have also been demanding an immediate lifting of the 30 year state of emergency that has been used to lock up the government’s opponents without trial. They have also been pressing for parliament, elected in a tainted ballot last year from which leading opponents including the Muslim Brotherhood were barred, to be dissolved. Some opposition leaders have said they would accept an interim administration, controlled by civilians with the military, for up to a year to make constitutional changes to permit free elections and also to allow for the creation of new political parties and to give them a chance to become rooted. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

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Why They Hate Him — Luntz Focus Group Repeats What They Heard on Fox

Click here to view this media The staff at The Ed Schultz Show did a nice job putting this mash up together explaining just where the people in Frank Luntz’s focus group the other night on Sean Hannity’s show might have gotten some of their ideas about President Obama. Brave New Films’ Robert Greenwald who’s organization has been documenting Fox for years now joined Ed to discuss how their viewers, some of whom were obviously represented in Luntz’s focus group, are propagandized daily and exposed to nothing but a steady stream of hatred and lies. John posted the video of the original segment earlier today.

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‘He’s not going? What the hell does he want?’ Ahdaf Soueif in a packed square in Cairo on the reaction to Mubarak’s speech The clock on the Arab League building said 8.30. Everyone was in Tahrir Square. I stood in front of one of the many impromptu stages – stood isn’t quite right. I bounced. Everybody was clapping, swaying, singing. Wust el-Balad was playing: “Put your shoulder by my shoulder/ we’ll break bread together/ and however hard it is/ we’ll invent/ a modern revolution.” The square was rocking. There was even a half moon nestling in the fronds of a palm tree above us. The air was happy, excited, anticipatory. Now, at midnight, how very different. We stood in the square and listened to Mubarak’s speech over a loudspeaker. Every once in a while someone would start an angry chant but people would shush them. Everyone was listening intently, and no one could believe their ears. Exclamations erupted: “He’s not going? What the hell does he want?” When Mubarak started on the “I was once young like you” riff, a great collective groan went up. As he finished his speech the drums and chanting started: “Don’t you understand? We. Will. Stand!” This was interspersed with the usual “Irhal!” – depart. The dominant feeling at that moment was of disbelief. No one could credit that after millions of people had demanded the departure of the regime and all the scandals that have erupted over the past days, Mubarak could come on and simply repeat the same tired old tropes. Adding to them a further smokescreen about not succumbing to foreign pressure. It defied belief that a president who has alienated and ruined his country by following American policies for 30 years was now staking a claim to independence of foreign influence. The other dominant feeling was that we, the people, had been insulted. Mr Mubarak patronised the protesters – again. And once again, he demonstrated how much less he is than the people he has brutalised for so long. The protests, as the whole world knows, have been open, peaceable, cohesive, good-humoured. Once again, the president played the divisive card: here was a man standing against foreign intervention, worried about the economy, wanting security and stability for his country – every one of these a misrepresentation aimed at discrediting the protests. By choosing this path, Mubarak is deliberately pushing Egypt further into crisis. He is putting the army in a position where they will soon have to confront either the Egyptian people or the president and his presidential guard. He is also ensuring that by the time the revolution is victorious, the military will be in a far stronger position than when all this started. We are on the streets. There is no turning back. Egypt Protest Middle East Ahdaf Soueif guardian.co.uk

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The president’s obstinacy puts the military on the spot at a time when the power of the people has spilled across the country’s political landscape President Mubarak last night laid a powder trail that could explode today in the disastrous confrontation between the army and the people which Egypt has managed to avoid until now. The military now faces an enormous dilemma. President Mubarak’s brief and mumbling reference to handing over some powers to his vice-president last night will satisfy nobody. Will the army now attempt, on the back of suppressive action in the streets, to shape a new version of the Nasserist state, or will the demonstrators shouting “We want a civilian government” in Tahrir Square prevail? The president’s obstinacy puts the army on the spot at a time when the power of the people, like the Nile flooding its banks, has spilled across Egypt’s political landscape in a torrent hardly imaginable only a few weeks ago. As the waters recede a new Egypt will be revealed, but still nobody knows how much of the old will remain and how much of the new will persist. What is clear is that the army must move swiftly to demonstrate that they are in charge and that Mubarak is now an irrelevance if a violent deterioration of the situation is not to take hold. In effect the soldiers have to decide whether Egypt is revisiting 1952, to create a supposedly better version of the hybrid military-civilian state that was set up by the Free Officers, or going back to the revolution of 1919, to renew the British-style parliamentary democracy that was created after that upheaval. It is a momentous decision. Egypt is split between an older generation of leaders, including some in the established opposition, most of whom appear mystified by what has happened, and a younger generation, who have been propelled by events into the political frontline. Many of these newcomers may be as confused as their elders. If the older generation have shown themselves reluctant to cede power, the younger generation is unprepared to exercise it. But that is the way things are when the impulses for change have been dammed up for so long. The most notable thing about the situation in Egypt is the absence of strong leaders on all sides. The barons of the army and the ruling party are elderly, and compromised by their complicity in the oppressive system they have served. On the opposition side, both the head

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BREAKING: Mubarak defiant in speech, isn’t stepping down UPDATED

Click here to view this media From MSNBC: President Hosni Mubarak addressed an expectant Egypt on Thursday, saying that he had delegated his powers to the vice president and saying those who died during Egypt’s unrest did not die in vain. Saying he was addressing Egypt’s youth and people in Tahrir Square and the nation, he said he believed in the honesty of the demands of the protesters and their intentions. “I am addressing from the heart,” he said. “The blood of the martyrs and injured will not go in vain … My heart aches for your heartache.” Earlier, two sources told NBC News that Mubarak was expected to step down, losing his 30-year grip on power after 17 days of dramatic mass uprisings across the nation. That clearly did NOT happen. We’ll have the video up ASAP. UPDATE: The crowd at Tahrir is clearly angry and dismayed: The speech was immediately derided by protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Watching on a giant TV, protesters booed and waved their shoes over their heads at his image in a sign of contempt. “Go, go, go! We are not leaving until he leaves,” they chanted. One man screamed, “He doesn’t want to say it, he doesn’t want to say it.” UPDATE II: More on the crowd from CNN : Thousands of people waved Egyptian flags and roared, “Get out! Get out!” in Cairo’s Tahrir Square late Thursday as it became clear during Hosni Mubarak’s address that the longtime president was not stepping down as reported. “I don’t know if he has a brain or if his brain is elsewhere,” one protester in the square said, expressing frustration that Mubarak appeared to be saying that he enjoyed support from most Egyptians. Watching Mubarak’s Thursday-night address on what appeared to be a sheet hoisted over their heads in the square, the crowd became angry as the president made promises to amend the constitution. They broke into cries of, “Illegitimate!” and “Mubarak the coward must stand down” upon learning that Mubarak was transferring some authority to his vice president rather than resigning. After the speech, a group of demonstrators began walking down a road that led to the state television offices, though their ultimate destination wasn’t immediately clear. The state-run media outlets have been seen as a mouthpiece for the Mubarak administration. Other protesters threatened to march to the presidential palace, which would surely ratchet up the tension in the capital. The palace is not near the square and is dotted with military checkpoints.

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The Engadget Show returns next Thursday, February 17th

Gentlemen and ladies, it’s that time again — that’s right, the Engadget Show is back next Thursday, February 17th ! We’ll have more details for you on Monday, but clear your schedules, cancel your hot dates, put down Dead Space 2, and get yourself to New York City next Thursday. As usual, we’ll be streaming live right here on Engadget, but you’ll have to trust us when we say you’re gonna want to be at this one in person. Stay tuned! If you’re a member of the media who wishes to attend, please contact us at : engadgetshowmedia [at] engadget [dot] com, and we’ll try to accommodate you. All other non-media questions can be sent to: engadgetshow [at] engadget [dot] com. Subscribe to the Show: [ iTunes ] Subscribe to the Show directly in iTunes (M4V). [ Zune ] Subscribe to the Show directly in the Zune Marketplace (M4V). [ RSS M4V ] Add the Engadget Show feed (M4V) to your RSS aggregator and have it delivered automatically. The Engadget Show returns next Thursday, February 17th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 17:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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