Click here to view this media While protesters gather on their state capitals across the country to show their support for the workers in Wisconsin, CNN thought they’d take some time out letting us all know that their astroturf tea party Republican re-branding effort just turned two. Here’s some of what CNN managed to ignore today from TPM — Workers Of America Unite: Pro-Union Rallies Cropping Up Nationwide . And from D-Day at FDL — VIDEO: 100,000-Plus in Madison for Rally for Workers’ Rights . CNN transcript below the fold. TRAVIS (voice-over): Meet the woman who is considered, by many activists, to be the godmother of the Tea Party movement. MARY RAKOVICH, TEA PARTY ACTIVIST: You should know what you believe in and stand up for it. TRAVIS: She’s an anti-abortion rights, pro-environment vegetarian, with two bad hips, cared for Medicare. She may have been the first to publicly protest the stimulus in early February, 2009. It was outside an event in Fort Myers, Florida, where President Barack Obama was promoting his plan. (on camera): Critics might actually blame you, say, hey, this woman, Mary Rakovich, is responsible for the Tea Party movement. RAKOVICH: Well, I think they should look at Rick Santelli instead. TRAVIS (voice-over): He’s the CNBC host who, days after Rakovich, ranted on the president’s plan to help struggling homeowners. RICK SANTELLI, CNBC: How many of you people want to pay for your neighbor’s mortgage that has an extra bathroom and can’t pay their bills? Raise their hand. We’re thinking of having a Chicago Tea Party in July. TRAVIS: That went viral. Then Tea Party groups formed and the protests spread. The movement has seen political success, like helping Republicans take back the House, and setbacks, like being accused of tolerating racism and losing key elections. As we look toward the presidential election and the Tea Party’s impact, Sarah Palin may greatly benefit from her Tea Party ties if she runs. She’s even warned Republicans. (on camera): Governor, what if the Tea Party movement winds up splitting the Republican Party in two? Who will you stand with? SARAH PALIN (R), FMR. ALASKA GOVERNOR: You know, I don’t think that it will, because I think more of the machine within the GOP is going to understand that this “We, the people” message is rising because it’s just so full of common sense and time-tested truths that can put the economy on the right track, that heaven forbid that the GOP machine strays from this message. If so, the GOP is through.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media While protesters gather on their state capitals across the country to show their support for the workers in Wisconsin, CNN thought they’d take some time out letting us all know that their astroturf tea party Republican re-branding effort just turned two. Here’s some of what CNN managed to ignore today from TPM — Workers Of America Unite: Pro-Union Rallies Cropping Up Nationwide . And from D-Day at FDL — VIDEO: 100,000-Plus in Madison for Rally for Workers’ Rights . CNN transcript below the fold. TRAVIS (voice-over): Meet the woman who is considered, by many activists, to be the godmother of the Tea Party movement. MARY RAKOVICH, TEA PARTY ACTIVIST: You should know what you believe in and stand up for it. TRAVIS: She’s an anti-abortion rights, pro-environment vegetarian, with two bad hips, cared for Medicare. She may have been the first to publicly protest the stimulus in early February, 2009. It was outside an event in Fort Myers, Florida, where President Barack Obama was promoting his plan. (on camera): Critics might actually blame you, say, hey, this woman, Mary Rakovich, is responsible for the Tea Party movement. RAKOVICH: Well, I think they should look at Rick Santelli instead. TRAVIS (voice-over): He’s the CNBC host who, days after Rakovich, ranted on the president’s plan to help struggling homeowners. RICK SANTELLI, CNBC: How many of you people want to pay for your neighbor’s mortgage that has an extra bathroom and can’t pay their bills? Raise their hand. We’re thinking of having a Chicago Tea Party in July. TRAVIS: That went viral. Then Tea Party groups formed and the protests spread. The movement has seen political success, like helping Republicans take back the House, and setbacks, like being accused of tolerating racism and losing key elections. As we look toward the presidential election and the Tea Party’s impact, Sarah Palin may greatly benefit from her Tea Party ties if she runs. She’s even warned Republicans. (on camera): Governor, what if the Tea Party movement winds up splitting the Republican Party in two? Who will you stand with? SARAH PALIN (R), FMR. ALASKA GOVERNOR: You know, I don’t think that it will, because I think more of the machine within the GOP is going to understand that this “We, the people” message is rising because it’s just so full of common sense and time-tested truths that can put the economy on the right track, that heaven forbid that the GOP machine strays from this message. If so, the GOP is through.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media From CNN’s Your Money , apparently we’re all supposed to think that there’s nothing that can be done to get rid of the income inequality in the United States that we’re seeing now because… hey, the rich just always figure out how to game the system. That’s just the way it goes. Our political dialog in this country has moved so far to the right that it’s taboo to even suggest that the fat cats on Wall Street and the have-mores should do more than throw the rest of us some crumbs to fight over or that heaven forbid these markets should be regulated. The rich win! Get over it suckers! If what’s going on in Wisconsin and around the country is any indication, the peons look like they’re not ready to settle for serfdom quite yet. VELSHI: Over the last decade, the income of 90 percent of the American public has remained stagnant. Take a look at this. The story changes dramatically for the other 10 percent. That bottom red line is 90 percent. That yellow line is the wealthiest 10 percent. The folks, the super wealthy, they’ve gotten richer; a whole lot richer while everybody else has stayed the same. Those superrich, by the way, account for one-half of America’s wealth. Top 10 percent, half of the American wealth. This does not sound like the America we knew. Christine, how do the rich become the superrich? ROMANS: The rich always come out on top when there’s an economic debacle. We’ve had the biggest economic debacle since the great depression. I never count out the rich for being able to figure out how to become richer. I think you can talk about how business has done, technology has allowed out sourcing — VELSHI: And mostly, working stiffs, Richard depend on their paycheck. Other people, the rich make money in other ways. They can invest in the stock market, they can invest in property like we’re talking about, and they buy the services of other people. QUEST: Look, look, it’s fundamental. If you are one of those people who was making money when you are asleep because some business is making it on your behalf, or you are one of those people who makes money because their money makes money, you’re going to be all right. But if you’re like most of us, which literally, and I challenge you, Christina, and myself, how many paychecks would it take before you are in trouble if you suddenly started losing them? Then, inevitably, it’s going to be that way. The rich have always sailed majestically on the good ship dollar big bucks. ROMANS: And you know, the rich take risks. And not all of us are big risk takers. And this has been a good world to take risks in, big risks, because you get bailed out if you fail, and if you win you win big, right? VELSHI: That’s exactly right. All right, guys, we’ll leave it at that. Great to talk to you all. Richard a pleasure to see you as always, Christine Romans.
Continue reading …Think Progress features this piece on USUncut , the U.S. version of the United Kingdom grassroots movement that dares to ask the impertinent question, “Why should our public services be slashed when we have huge corporations who don’t even pay any taxes?” I think this movement has real potential — its success in Great Britain is grounded in its broadbased appeal. After all, not many people agree corporations should pay less in taxes than they do. Anyway, I hope you’ll check them out. The website has some good tips for organizing an action: In an interview with In These Times, Carl Gibson, the founder of US Uncut , which is organizing some of today’s UK-inspired massive demonstrations against tax dodgers, explains that while ordinary Americans are being asked to sacrifice, major corporations continue to use the rigged tax code to avoid paying any federal taxes at all. As he says, if you have “one dollar” in your wallet, you’re paying more than the “combined income tax liability of GE, ExxonMobil, Citibank, and the Bank of America “: [Gibson] explains, “ I have one dollar in my wallet. That’s more than the combined income tax liability of GE, ExxonMobil, Citibank, and the Bank of America. That means somebody is gaming the system .” Indeed, as politicians are asking ordinary Americans to sacrifice their education, their health, their labor rights, and their wellbeing to tackle budget deficits, some of the world’s richest multinational corporations are getting away with shirking their responsibility and paying nothing . ThinkProgress has assembled a short but far from comprehensive list of these tax dodgers — corporations which have rigged the tax system to their advantage so they can reap huge profits and avoid paying taxes: – BANK OF AMERICA : In 2009, Bank of America didn’t pay a single penny in federal income taxes , exploiting the tax code so as to avoid paying its fair share. “Oh, yeah, this happens all the time ,” said Robert Willens, a tax accounting expert interviewed by McClatchy. “If you go out and try to make money and you don’t do it, why should the government pay you for your losses ?” asked Bob McIntyre of Citizens for Tax Justice. The same year, the mega-bank’s top executives received pay “ranging from $6 million to nearly $30 million .” – BOEING : Despite receiving billions of dollars from the federal government every single year in taxpayer subsidies from the U.S. government, Boeing didn’t “ pay a dime of U.S. federal corporate income taxes” between 2008 and 2010. – CITIGROUP : Citigroup’s deferred income taxes for the third quarter of 2010 amounted to a grand total of $0.00 . At the same time, Citigroup has continued to pay its staff lavishly. “John Havens, the head of Citigroup’s investment bank, is expected to be the bank’s highest paid executive for the second year in a row , with a compensation package worth $9.5 million .” – EXXON-MOBIL : The oil giant uses offshore subsidiaries in the Caribbean to avoid paying taxes in the United States. Although Exxon-Mobil paid $15 billion in taxes in 2009, not a penny of those taxes went to the American Treasury . This was the same year that the company overtook Wal-Mart in the Fortune 500. Meanwhile the total compensation of Exxon-Mobil’s CEO the same year was over $29,000,000 . – GENERAL ELECTRIC : In 2009, General Electric — the world’s largest corporation — filed more than 7,000 tax returns and still paid nothing to U.S. government. They managed to do this by a tax code that essentially subsidizes companies for losing profits and allows them to set up tax havens overseas. That same year GE CEO Jeffery Immelt — who recently scored a spot on a White House economic advisory board — “earned total compensation of $9.89 million .” In 2002, Immelt displayed his lack of economic patriotism, saying, “When I am talking to GE managers, I talk China, China, China, China, China ….I am a nut on China. Outsourcing from China is going to grow to 5 billion.” – WELLS FARGO : Despite being the fourth largest bank in the country, Wells Fargo was able to escape paying federal taxes by writing all of its losses off after its acquisition of Wachovia. Yet in 2009 the chief executive of Wells Fargo also saw his compensation “more than double” as he earned “a salary of $5.6 million paid in cash and stock and stock awards of more than $13 million.” In the coming months, politicians across the country are going to tell Americans that the only way to stave off huge deficit and balance the budgets is by gutting programs for the poor, eviscerating support for the middle class, eliminating labor rights, and decimating the government’s ability to serve the public interest. This is a lie. The United States is the richest country in the history of the world, and income inequality is higher now than it has been at any time since the 1920′s , with the top “top 1 percentile of households [taking] home 23.5 percent of income in 2007. ”It is simply unfair for Main Street Americans who’ve already been battered by one of the worst economic crises in our history to have to continue to sacrifice while the rich and well-connected continue to rip off taxpayers and avoid paying their fair share. That’s why a Main Street Movement consisting of Americans who are fed up with the status quo is rocking the nation, and one of its first targets should be tax dodgers like Bank of America and Boeing.”
Continue reading …From PoliticusUSA, a reminder that the massive media corporations just aren’t all that interested in covering anything that might give people (or politicians) ideas. After all, they’d rather pay out money in dividends than in salaries and benefits, right? Over 100,000 people in Madison, Wisconsin were joined by thousands of other Americans around the country in protest of Gov. Scott Walker’s attempt to strip collective bargaining rights from the state’s unionized workers, but you would not have known any of this if you watched cable news on Saturday as the coverage of the protests ranged from disappointing (MSNBC) to scant (CNN) to non-existent (Fox News). AFL-CIO spokesman Eddie Vale estimated that the crowd was over 100,000 people before the rally began at 3 PM. According to the Wisconsin State Journal, police estimated the crowd size at around 70,000 three hours before the rally began, “Madison police spokesman Joel DeSpain said the number of protesters around the Capitol is on the scale of last Saturday’s peak crowd of an estimated 68,000 and could swell even more for a 3 p.m. Hundreds of thousands of Americans around the country march on their governments in an event that would be a perfect fit for the 24 hour cable news cycle. Even better, the protests were occurring during the news cycle dead zone of Saturday afternoon. The coverage should have been everywhere in the media, but if you turned on your television in hopes of watching the rally from Wisconsin live, you were disappointed. As the official state run television of the Republican Party, Fox News has been openly and loudly supporting Gov. Walker. It is no surprise that the right wing network would ignore the events in Madison and around the country today. A propaganda outlet never spends much time relaying information that is detrimental to their message. CNN, which is supposed to be moderate network in the cable news ideological spectrum, sort of thought they should cover the story, so they did a few minute and half live cut ins here and there. No wall to wall coverage of course, but they at least managed to pull themselves away from celebrating the Tea Party long enough to take a quick glance at Madison. Yes, CNN wished a happy birthday to the Tea Party . No, I’m not making this up. You can read here about turnout in Los Angeles , Atlanta , Harrisburg PA , San Francisco , Charleston WV , Lansing MI , Salt Lake City UT , D.C., Annapolis MD and Richmond VA , St. Paul MN , NYC and Albany NY , Frankfort KY , Columbia SC , Boston MA , Albuquerque NM , Juneau AL , and Philadelphia PA. Were you there?
Continue reading …When Virginia's Assembly passed a law requiring abortion clinics to be regulated like hospitals, The Washington Post responded Sunday with an article on the top of the front page of Metro, trumpeting how “Abortion providers wary of new law.” Reporter Brigid Schulte's story had 21 paragraphs, almost entirely devoted to the complaints of abortionists. Pro-lifers were in paragraphs four and 11, just for a tiny rebuttal: Supporters of the vote hailed it as “historic”….But [Rosemary] Codding, 68, sees it as more “shenanigans” in the long-running war over abortion rights. And depending upon how state regulators write the rules later this year, she fears that abortion opponents may succeed in practice what they have failed to achieve in court: an overturn of the landmark Roe v. Wade…. “Let's be clear,” Codding said late Friday. Women came in throughout the day for abortions, Pap tests, fertility consultations and gynecologic cancer treatments. “This is not about health and safety. This is about targeting abortion providers and making it more difficult if not impossible to provide women affordable access to abortion with respect and dignity.” What the story does not have is a photograph of Codding or the other abortionists. (Here's Codding on a YouTube video with Rep. Jim Moran touting that “hero” Dr. George Tiller, the infamous late-term abortionist, as a “devout Christian.”) The first three paragraphs of the story were all sympathy for the “shenanigans” Codding has had to endure: Before Rosemary Codding allows visitors into the Falls Church Healthcare Center , a self-described “pro-choice women's center,” she asks them to sign a confidentiality agreement. And show a photo ID. “Because,” she says matter of factly, “there's all kinds of shenanigans when it comes to abortion.” As a veteran abortion rights activist and founder and director of this center, she has beaten back attempts to zone her out of existence and found plumbers and HVAC workers to replace the ones she says were harassed away by round-the-clock protests outside her door. Over the years, she has complied with every new requirement: the 24-hour wait before a woman has an abortion; parental notification for minors; notarized parental consent for minors; and she makes sure all would-be patients have state-mandated information about alternatives to abortion. But when the General Assembly passed legislation late last week requiring all offices, clinics and centers like hers that perform first-trimester abortions to be regulated as hospitals – arguably the strictest requirement in the country – Codding turned so red that she went into one of the clinic's exam rooms and checked her own blood pressure. Codding's ire was also the pull quote inside on C-5: “I live in a state where there's an earthquake around abortion. So I had to build a center that could withstand whatever came down the road.” Pro-lifers are merely an “earthquake.” They aren't compassionate human beings trying to save lives. They're a disaster movie.
Continue reading …Nicholas Benton, the leftist editor of that tiny community paper he calls “the mighty Falls Church News-Press,” is clearly enjoying his role as the publisher of Helen Thomas diatribes. He's now in Helen's “entourage.” On Wednesday , he described how he witnessed the great Helen get a “giant hug” from the great Rosie O'Donnell at CNN after a taping of the Joy Behar show: As she [Thomas] exited the studio with her entourage, including me, a CNN assistant came up and said, “There's somebody here who wants to meet you.” When we got to the green room, O'Donnell burst through the door from the other side and with an irrepressible enthusiasm and fervor charged at Thomas to give her a giant hug. It was an extraordinary moment, totally authentic with no cameras or recorders running. It was an unforgettable, spontaneous encounter of two of the most important women leaders and role models of our time. O'Donnell did most of the talking. More than just talking, it was loud and passionate accolades, praises strung together and hurled at Thomas for her pioneering role on behalf of women everywhere. “Don't let them tell you that you are anything less than an absolutely historic, indispensable pioneer of the cause for the equality of women,” O'Donnell intoned, this admittedly being a paraphrase by me, who was hardly prepared to take careful notes at the moment. Thomas, who had just come from setting Behar back on her heels in the studio with a sharp, articulate defense of her views, was unprepared for O'Donnell. Caught off guard by the force of O'Donnell's love, Thomas got emotional. “You're making me cry,” she said, truthfully. O'Donnell asked Thomas about her parents as role models for her and her new career with the News-Press. She assured Thomas that when she begins her new talk show on Oprah's network in the fall, that Thomas will be an honored guest. As long as Rosie is the subject, on her XM/Sirius satellite radio on Thursday, O'Donnell explained that social-media sites like Facebook and Twitter would have gone a long way to curbing the secrecy fetish of the Bush administration:
Continue reading …Rapper El Général helped spark the uprising in Tunisia, and in Egypt musicians bravely played their part in their nation’s transformation with these impassioned and incendiary tracks The soundtrack to the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt is brilliantly reported by Andy Morgan elsewhere on this site. Andy used to manage the Tuareg band Tinariwen , but is now a full-time journalist, with his own blog devoted to world music . Here, with videos culled from YouTube, are some of the acts he describes in his piece on how the Arab world found its voice. TUNISIAN RAP Tunisian rapper El Général uploaded his song “Rais Le Bled” (President, Your Country) to Facebook on 7 November. “Within hours,” as Andy Morgan writes, ” the song had lit up the bleak and fearful horizon like an incendiary bomb.” Here it is with English subtitles. VOICE OF THE STREETS “Leave” by Ramy Essam, with lyrics comprising all the most popular chants and slogans of the revolution heard on the streets. This song became the hit of the uprising, going viral on YouTube. Essam lived in Tahrir Square’s tent village for the entire revolution, composing songs, and playing almost every hour on one of the many stages that sprouted there. EGYPTIAN POETRY IN SONG “Egyptian Intifada”, the lyrics written by the poet Ahmed Fouad Negm, sung by Sheik Imam. DEFIANT FOLK Egyptian folk act El Tanbura and others from the El Mastaba Centre for Egyptian Folk Music filmed in the streets of Cairo with a cut titled “Tahrir Square Jam”. HIP-HOP CALL TO ACTION “Rebel” by Egyptian rappers Arabian Knightz, sung in English, its lyrics rewritten by the group’s Karim Adel Eissa, aka A-Rush, on the night of Thursday 27 January. ROCK SOLID Cairo rock luminaries Amir Eid, Hany Adel and Sherif Mostafa with their rousing anthem to the revolution “Sout Al Horeya” (The Voice of Freedom). RAP TRIBUTE Iraqi rapper Narcicyst with other MCs from the Arabic rap diaspora in North America, including Omar Offendum, Freeway, Ayah and Amir Sulaiman, with “#Jan25″ – a reference to both the date the protests began in Egypt, and its prominence as a trending topic on Twitter. POP GOES THE REVOLUTION “Ezzai” by one of Egypt’s best-known musicians, Mohamed Mounir. Tunisia Egypt Arab and Middle East protests Protest Caspar Llewellyn Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …For years, musicians in Tunisia and Egypt were terrified of aggravating the authorities. Then a song by a little-known rapper showed it was possible to protest and survive It was early morning on Friday 11 February and the streets of central Cairo were throbbing with adrenaline and fear. Long-haired American professor Mark LeVine and Shung, founder of the Egyptian extreme metal band Beyond East, were caught in the flow of a million Egyptians who seethed towards Tahrir Square, past tanks, burnt-out buildings and soldiers with taut faces, through the rubble and detritus of two weeks of revolution. Mubarak’s surprise announcement that he was holding on to his rotten throne had sent a collective groan of frustration through the nation. The crowd feared that the time had come for desperate measures. Marvelling at the mood of coiled rage all around, LeVine and Shung looked at each other, wavelengths firmly locked, and said: “This is really metal!” Before the revolution, Egypt’s metal heads lived in fear of arrest. Bullet belts, Iron Maiden T-shirts, horn gestures and headbanging were closet pastimes for foolhardy freaks. Bands such as Bliss, Wyvern, Hate Suffocation, Scarab, Brutus and Massive Scar Era rocked their fans like the priests of a persecuted sect who lived in constant wariness of the ghastly Mukhabarat, Mubarak’s secret police. Since 1997, when newspapers had “exposed” the metal scene as a sordid sewer of satanism and western decadence, metal
Continue reading …The uprisings in North Africa have shown that Britain needs a more ethical approach to the wider world British citizens facing great danger in Libya have a right to expect more than David Cameron’s shambolic, incompetent government gave them last week. All of us have the right to expect a more coherent and principled foreign policy than the one on show: trying to pretend a trade mission for defence manufacturers and other businesses is a “democracy tour” really doesn’t cut it. But the wider truth is that all western governments are profoundly challenged by the chain of events that began, 10 weeks ago, with a young Tunisian man setting himself on fire in anger and desperation. The central assumption of the durability of long-standing and unpleasant regimes has been swept away. This change in circumstance has left many of the old orthodoxies seeming out of date and on the wrong side of history. All western governments have been taught a lesson: democracy has been shown to be valued by ordinary people in the Arab world as much as it was in eastern Europe in 1989 or in the western world before. Where this popular will exists, it is clear that stability based on the suppression of these demands is no genuine stability at all and serves neither the interests of the people of these countries nor those of the wider international community. We need to celebrate and embrace this new reality. Our true interests lie in supporting the development of democratic principles, strong civil society and entrenched individual rights in the Middle East and beyond. The extraordinary events of the past few weeks have served to underline that our alliances should be defined by our values, rather than our values defined by our alliances. Our approach must combine hard-headed internationalism and practical support for democratic values with better co-ordination to help achieve functioning self-determination in the region. So what should the new rules of the road be? First, we should be led by the people of these countries. Where there are clearly demonstrated demands for democracy, we should avoid the appearance of ambivalence. That is why we must say very clearly that Libya’s future after Colonel Gaddafi is as a country which upholds basic rights and freedom. Second, we must recognise that we should never reduce foreign policy to a narrow pursuit of commercial gain for Britain. Those who would claim ideological purity risk looking naive, but those who suggest our approach can be reduced simply to the demands of commerce risk our wider national interest if it leaves us bound tighter to regimes whose legitimacy is – at best – questionable. That is why we should also examine our arms sales to ensure that UK weaponry is not used for the repression of people in those countries. Third, the honest truth is that part of the support western governments offered the likes of President Mubarak was because he appeared to be a guarantor of stability in the region, including his welcome recognition of the need for the security of Israel. Above all, these events must spur us on to seek a solution to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict which matters to young Arabs in a way that would be foolish to ignore. This is seen as a litmus test of our sincerity. So I support the government’s efforts to get the peace process moving again and I regret the US administration’s decision to veto a United Nations resolution calling for a freeze on Israeli settlement building. The basis of a deal is clear: watertight security guarantees for Israel and a democratic Palestinian state. Fourth, the neocons were wrong to think we could impose democracy at the point of a gun. In this new era, soft power will often be a better way to achieve hard results. That is why support for civil society, the promotion of national assets such as the British Council and the BBC World Service, is so important. Our template should be the EU’s response to the democratic revolutions of 1989 which helped make change in eastern Europe irreversible, with economic aid, technical assistance and institution building. Against the odds, people are bringing about extraordinary change. Ripples of hope have spread out across a region and touched a new generation in many Arab states. That should give us all a sense of optimism about human progress and the power of people to change our world. We must be on the right side of their struggles. Arab and Middle East protests Foreign policy Tunisia Egypt Libya Bahrain Ed Miliband guardian.co.uk
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