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Show me a teabagger who doesn’t vote their feelings. Go ahead, I dare you. The entire Tea Party “movement” is based on emotion. On angry, hot, flowing, oozing emotion. If you’re a college student and you’re reading this, it’s your turn to be angry over this little clip of New Hampshire House Speaker Bill O’Brien explaining why he wants to disenfranchise you and stop you from voting. Talking Points Memo: “They go into these general elections, they’ll have 900 same day registrations, which are the kids coming out of the schools and basically doing what I did when I was a kid, which is [vote liberal],” he said. “They don’t have life experience and they don’t have life experience and they just vote their feelings and they’re taking away the town’s ability to govern themselves, it’s not fair.” The remarks were caught on tape by a tracker with the New Hampshire Democratic party, but up until today they haven’t caused O’Brien much embarrassment. Now while this little whine wouldn’t ordinarily be a huge big deal, it is offensive, condescending and selfish, which is to be expected from the far right wing these days. But when it backs up a defense of Voter ID initiatives in 18 states which in turn is backed up by the Koch/Bradley/Olin triumvirate in the form of an organization known as ALEC, whose “Private Enterprise Board” includes Mike Morgan (Koch Industries), Toby Spangler (Altria Client Services), and not one, but two representatives from the American Bail Coalition , it should definitely cause winger alert radar to bleep loudly. CampusProgress.org : Deemed the “ political player you’ve never heard of ” by Fortune magazine earlier this year, ALEC was launched in 1973 by Heritage Foundation founder Paul Weyrich and is funded by conservative organizations including the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, and the John M. Olin Foundation. ALEC’s “ Private Enterprise Board ,” includes representatives from companies including Peabody Energy, Coca-Cola, AT&T, Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, and Wal-Mart, as well as Koch Industries. ALEC charges corporations a fee and gives them access to members of state legislatures. Under ALEC’s auspices, legislators, corporate representatives, and ALEC officials work together to draft model legislation, generally on business-related issues. As ALEC spokesperson Michael Bowman told NPR, this system is especially effective because “you have legislators who will ask questions much more freely at our meetings because they are not under the eyes of the press, the eyes of the voters.” Tea Party organizations, like the Wisconsin Patriot Coalition, also look to ALEC for guidance. The group lists the Voter ID Act in its legislative agenda [ PDF ] and directly links back to ALEC as its source. Charles Monaco, the press and new media specialist at the Progressive States Network, a state-based organization that has been tracking this issue, says, “ALEC is involved with a vast network of well-funded right wing organizations working to spread voter ID laws in the state legislatures. It is clear what their purpose is with these laws—to reduce progressive turnout and tilt the playing field towards their preferred candidates in elections.” Some of the ties between these networks are easily identifiable: Courtney O’Brien, the staff member at ALEC responsible for the group’s elections task force, previously worked at the Charles G. Koch Foundation. The legislation targets college students by requiring a photo ID issued by the government. That excludes students from using student IDs and voting from their campus unless they choose to vote by absentee ballot. It also would set up the perfect caging scheme for Republicans by allowing them to challenge any ballot where the address on the photo ID didn’t match the address on their voter registration. Since that’s a fairly common issue with students and indigent people, it effectively disenfranchises the groups who typically vote liberal, even if it is “with their emotions.” Now Wisconsin, as you may recall, is where there was a coordinated effort between the Tea Party, the Wisconsin Republican Party under the direction of Reince Preibus, and Americans for Prosperity to target minorities and college students in a voter caging scheme . The Republican Party of Wisconsin will use its “Voter Vault” state-wide voter file to compile a list of minority and student voters in targeted Wisconsin communities. Americans for Prosperity will use this list to send mail to these voters indicating the voter must call and confirm their registration information, and telling them if they do not call the number provided they could be removed from the voter lists. The Tea Party organizations will recruit and place individuals as official poll workers in selected municipalities in order to be able to make the challenges as official poll workers. On Election Day, these organizations will then “make use” of any postcards that are returned as undeliverable to challenge voters at the polls, utilizing law enforcement, as well as attorneys trained and provided by the RPW, to support their challenges. One Wisconsin Now has requested an investigation into this plan, but in the meantime, Republicans are quietly placing Voter ID legislation on their agendas in the hopes that the confusion and challenges will simply suppress young and poor voters. Wow, I’m so glad they love democracy enough to let people vote. It doesn’t escape my notice that young and poor voters don’t usually vote Republican in droves, and it shouldn’t escape yours. For decades, the right wing has cried about voter fraud when there is none so they can legislate away voters who don’t agree with them. Now for the very first time, they’re on the verge of seeing their dreams come true. While we’re out there protesting union-busting, we might also want to toss democracy-busting into the mix, since they’re busy little bees these days. And by the way, has anyone seen any legislation that might actually create jobs introduced? Yeah, me either.

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Egypt’s revolution means nothing if its women are not free | Jumanah Younis

A mob of men attacking an International Women’s Day demo should not be allowed to happen in the new Egypt A demonstration commemorating International Women’s Day was attacked on Tuesday afternoon in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. More than 200 men charged on the women – forcing some to the ground, dragging others out of the crowd, groping and sexually harassing them as police and military figures stood by and failed to act. It was a shocking wake-up call. Even in Tahrir Square , the symbol of Egypt’s newfound freedom, it seems that it’s going to take much more than a revolution to overhaul the deep-seated misogyny that some Egyptian men so freely and openly impose on the country’s female population. The female demonstrators – myself among them – had been protesting against Egypt’s chronic sexual harassment problem, against the many barriers women face in public life, and against the pervasive conservatism that curtails the freedom of women in society at large. The women chanted slogans that had been used in the revolution itself, calling for freedom, justice and equality. But their demonstration quickly attracted a counter-protest. The women’s chants calling for an “Egypt for all Egyptians” were drowned out by retaliations such as “No to freedom!” shouted by the opposing group. The men charged at the female protesters, who had been standing on a raised platform in the middle of Tahrir Square, and shouted: “Get out of here.” Many women were dragged away individually by small groups of men who attacked them. I remained on the platform with five other women. A small circle of sympathetic men held hands around us to protect us from the crowd, which swelled on all sides. Against the charge of the counter-demonstrators, the circle quickly caved. Several women fell to the ground and a number of attempts were made by the attacking group to steal belongings. As I struggled to stay upright, a hand grabbed my behind and others pulled at my clothes. When, a few minutes later, I found the other women I was with, one told me that a man had put his hand down her top, while another woman had been pushed to the ground and held down by a man on top of her. The police continued to direct traffic around the square as the incident was taking place. Such outrageous displays of contempt for women cannot be allowed to persist in the new Egypt. Time and time again so-called “women’s issues” have been relegated to the bottom of the agenda: we must end corruption first, we must have political freedom first, etc, etc. On Tuesday, Egyptian women said: “Now is the time.” There is no freedom for men without freedom and equality for women. This is not a free society if a woman cannot walk down the street without fear of being harassed, attacked, or even molested. Women have a right to participate in Egyptian society as equals – and this revolution will have achieved nothing if it does not recognise the basic right of the Egyptian women to exist, to demonstrate, to work, to live and walk the streets with dignity. International Women’s Day Egypt Arab and Middle East protests Middle East Gender Equality Women Jumanah Younis guardian.co.uk

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Muslim-Christian clashes in Cairo leave 11 dead

Violence breaks out in Egyptian capital during protest against burning of church Clashes between Muslims and Christians in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, have left 11 people dead and more than 90 wounded. The clashes broke out on Tuesday night as thousands of Christians protested against the burning of a Cairo church last week. The church was set on fire after tensions escalated over a love affair between a Muslim and a Christian that set off a violent feud between the couple’s families. Security and hospital officials said six Christians and five Muslims died from gunshot wounds and 94 people – 73 Muslims and 21 Christians – were wounded. Christian protesters blocked a highway, burning tyres and pelting cars with rocks. The two sides fought pitched battles for about four hours. The 18-day uprising that toppled the president, Hosni Mubarak, on 11 February has left a security vacuum. Police pulled out of Cairo and several other cities three days into the uprising and have yet to fully take back the streets. Mubarak handed power to the military when he stepped down, but it does not have enough troops to police every street in Cairo. On New Year’s Day, a suicide bombing outside a Coptic church in the port city of Alexandria killed 21 people , setting off days of protests. An off-duty policeman boarded a train on 11 January and shot dead a 71-year-old Christian man, wounding his wife and four others. Egypt’s ruling generals pledged last week to rebuild the burned church. The country’s new prime minister, Essam Sharaf, has met Christian protesters in central Cairo to reassure them they would not face discrimination from his interim government. However, at least 2,000 Christians joined the protest on Tuesday and a separate crowd of several hundred has been camping out outside the TV building for days to voice their anger at what they perceive to be official discrimination against them. Egypt Middle East Christianity Religion Islam guardian.co.uk

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Cairo women’s march turns into shouting match

Click here to view this media About a thousand women turned out to march on International Women’s Day Tuesday in Cairo to demand “fair and equal opportunity for all Egyptian citizens — beyond gender, religion or class.” The activists in Egypt, who had called for a “Million Woman March,” were disappointed when some men chanting anti-feminist slogans caused the rally to degenerate into a shouting match. “Men are men and women are women and that will never change and go home, that’s where you belong,” was one of the chants heard at the march. “As the women stood there and they chanted, suddenly this group of young men started chanting things, that women should go home, that they should stay in the home and the proof of that is that God didn’t make any female prophets,” NBC’s Anne Thompson reported from Cairo Tuesday. In a Facebook post, organizers of the March said they were not after minority rights. “We are not after symbolic political representation,” they said. “The bodies of women, so often used as ideological battlegrounds, have withstood all kinds of police violence, from tear gas to live bullets. The real battleground did not differentiate between women and men.” Tahrir Square, the epicenter of Egypt’s revolution, was chosen for the march because the women demand to be part of the new Egyptian government. Only one woman was included when Egypt’s new cabinet was sworn in Monday. “When the prime minister came to Tahrir to speak to the people, was he blind?” Nehad Abu El Komsan, head of the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights, asked upon hearing the news . “Did he not see that half of the people filling the square were women?” “If we’re not involved in building the constitutional and legislative future of this country now, then when? Why do we see women, who were almost 50 percent of the protesters in Tahrir, not represented in decision-making rooms?” U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declared Tuesday that women must get a role in the new government. “The United States will stand firmly for the proposition that women must be included in whatever process goes forward,” she said. “They have now insisted that their voices be heard,” Clinton added. “And in the coming months and years, the women in Egypt and Tunisia and other nations have just as much right as the men to remake their governments — to make them responsive, accountable, transparent.” Tuesday marked the 100th anniversary of the first International Women’s Day.

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S Stephen Colbert has been on a brilliant streak that has been going for years now. Mike Huckabee was put On Notice by Colbert because of two strange and mentally challenged rants last week by the Foxer. Stephen was a bit perturbed when ‘The Huckster’ attacked Natalie Portman for being pregnant, but not married. However, what really got his goat was Mike telling right wing talkie, Steve Malzberg that Obama was born in Kenya and then just digging deeper into dog whistle territory . Yeah, Huckabee said he misspoke because he really meant to say Indonesia, but he freakishly then went into a dissertation on the Mau Mau Revolution. Did the Mau Mau Revolution take place in Indonesia? And is there any evidence Barack Obama had ever even heard of it while growing up? Huckabee: When he gave the back the … bust of Winston Churchill, a great insult to the British. But then if you think about it, his perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather, their view of the Mau Mau Revolution in Kenya is very different than ours because he probably grew up hearing that the British were a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather. Colbert said this bothered him: Colbert; Now, in case you missed it, he said Obama grew up in Kenya, with his Kenyan father. Kenya, Kenya, Kenya. First off, Obama didn’t grow up in Kenya, he was born in Kenya before moving to Islamistan to where he traveled back in time to plant his birth announcement in a Hawaiian newspaper. But I understand the Governor’s point. The Kenyan view of the Mau Mau revolution is far different than the American view which is generally ” what is the Mau Mau revolution? ” — OK, he simply misspoke for five minutes about the Mau Mau revolution which he evidently thought happened in Indonesia for five minutes. The important thing isn’t where the Mau Mau revolution happened. The important thing is for people to start associating Barack Obama with the words Mau Mau.. . Leslie Savan of The Nation writes about the coded racism Huckabee is deploying: That’s when Huckabee, to the surprise of most everyone, started squawking that President Obama grew up in Kenya, where he was influenced by his father’s and grandfathers’ anticolonial Mau-Mauism to despise the British Empire—and, by implication, all white power. Only after being called out did the Fox News host say he “misspoke” on the growing up in Kenya part (he later claimed he apologized, though that, too, isn’t true). Then he blamed the media for attacking him, and simply relocated the lie from Kenya to Indonesia. “Most of us,” he told far-right radio talker Bryan Fischer , “grew up going to Boy Scout meetings and, you know, our communities were filled with Rotary Clubs, not madrassas.” (Of course, Obama was born and grew up primarily in Hawaii, spending only the years between ages 6 and 10 in Indonesia—where, by the way, there were Rotary Clubs and he was a Cub Scout . In fact, according to the Boy Scouts of America, “The BSA is the second-largest Scouting organization in the world. The largest is in Indonesia .”) Huckabee even managed to trash his relatively decent stand on Obama’s birthplace. “What I have never done,” he said ,“is taken the position that Obama was born in Kenya or Indonesia or anywhere other than Hawaii, where he claims to have been born.” That little “claims” is of a weasely piece with John Boehner, who says he “believes” that Obama is an American-born Christian because he takes the president “at his word.” To be an electable Republican today you don’t have to be racist, you just have to convince racists that you’re not going to make them feel uncomfortable. You have to genuflect, speak ambiguously, and hope that independent voters forget all that by the general election. All this garbage started last year with Dinesh D’Souza’s repulsive headliner for Forbes , which maintained that Obama’s “anti-business” policies could be explained only by his “Kenyan anti-colonialism.” That other presidential flirt, Newt Gingrich, had hailed this nonsense as the “most profound insight I have read in the last six years about Barack Obama” and “the most accurate, predictive model for his behavior.” “What if he is so outside our comprehension” that he can be understood “only if you understand Kenyan, anti-colonial behavior?” (The media long ago should have retired its characterization of Gingrich as an “intellect,” but, remarkably, you still hear it.) But here’s a simpler theory: The right spews this bizarre “anticolonial” claptrap because it gives them a chance to say “Mau Mau,” which conjures a more fearsome threat than the N-word itself. You can always count on Dinesh to be one of the most disgusting of the wingnuts, but one who manages to fly under the radar most of the time.

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Managing Editor's Note:

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Maddow vs. Megyn, FTW

Click here to view this media Rachel Maddow had a great segment last night where she called out embarrassing Republican moments. Of course, Alan Simpson was at the top of the segment, but the best moment in the whole thing was when she nailed Megyn Kelly for trolling on Twitter. Go ahead. Watch the video. It’s short and classic. It seems that Megyn Kelly trolled Twitter with this tease for her show yesterday morning: enlarge Well, of course he could be right in that world where it’s totally fine for men to beat women (regardless of size and weight) into a pulpy coma, right? I join Rachel in wishing Megyn Kelly a happy International Women’s Day. What a bizarre woman that Megyn is. But wait, there’s more. Rachel had a text poll to decide who was most embarrassing: Simpson with his Snoopy Snoop Poop Dog, Simpson with his reference to “enema”, or Kelly. Here are the results: enlarge FTW.

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Maddow vs. Megyn, FTW

Click here to view this media Rachel Maddow had a great segment last night where she called out embarrassing Republican moments. Of course, Alan Simpson was at the top of the segment, but the best moment in the whole thing was when she nailed Megyn Kelly for trolling on Twitter. Go ahead. Watch the video. It’s short and classic. It seems that Megyn Kelly trolled Twitter with this tease for her show yesterday morning: enlarge Well, of course he could be right in that world where it’s totally fine for men to beat women (regardless of size and weight) into a pulpy coma, right? I join Rachel in wishing Megyn Kelly a happy International Women’s Day. What a bizarre woman that Megyn is. But wait, there’s more. Rachel had a text poll to decide who was most embarrassing: Simpson with his Snoopy Snoop Poop Dog, Simpson with his reference to “enema”, or Kelly. Here are the results: enlarge FTW.

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Maddow vs. Megyn, FTW

Click here to view this media Rachel Maddow had a great segment last night where she called out embarrassing Republican moments. Of course, Alan Simpson was at the top of the segment, but the best moment in the whole thing was when she nailed Megyn Kelly for trolling on Twitter. Go ahead. Watch the video. It’s short and classic. It seems that Megyn Kelly trolled Twitter with this tease for her show yesterday morning: enlarge Well, of course he could be right in that world where it’s totally fine for men to beat women (regardless of size and weight) into a pulpy coma, right? I join Rachel in wishing Megyn Kelly a happy International Women’s Day. What a bizarre woman that Megyn is. But wait, there’s more. Rachel had a text poll to decide who was most embarrassing: Simpson with his Snoopy Snoop Poop Dog, Simpson with his reference to “enema”, or Kelly. Here are the results: enlarge FTW.

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Maddow vs. Megyn, FTW

Click here to view this media Rachel Maddow had a great segment last night where she called out embarrassing Republican moments. Of course, Alan Simpson was at the top of the segment, but the best moment in the whole thing was when she nailed Megyn Kelly for trolling on Twitter. Go ahead. Watch the video. It’s short and classic. It seems that Megyn Kelly trolled Twitter with this tease for her show yesterday morning: enlarge Well, of course he could be right in that world where it’s totally fine for men to beat women (regardless of size and weight) into a pulpy coma, right? I join Rachel in wishing Megyn Kelly a happy International Women’s Day. What a bizarre woman that Megyn is. But wait, there’s more. Rachel had a text poll to decide who was most embarrassing: Simpson with his Snoopy Snoop Poop Dog, Simpson with his reference to “enema”, or Kelly. Here are the results: enlarge FTW.

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