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Rush Calls Out AP For Critiquing Montana Legislators While Ignoring Obama Admin ‘Lawlessness’

Thursday, the Associated Press's Matt Gouras “reported” (“Tea party vision for Mont. raising concerns”) on legislative proposals in Montana. It got the attention of Rush Limbaugh, who skewered it as only Rush can. Gouras's opening paragraphs read like a press release from an opposition party: With each bill, newly elected tea party lawmakers are offering Montanans a vision of the future.

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This is NOT democracy at work. After a Democrat finishes his debate time and yields the floor, there’s a “flash vote” and the Republican majority passes it. Talking Points Memo: After much buildup in the 61-hour debate — of Republicans wanting things to be over, and Democrats railing against Republicans who they said would cut off debate — at about 1 AM Speaker Pro Tempore Bill Kramer (R) announced that he would hear a voice vote for a roll call on final passage. Immediately, the majority Republicans shouted their ayes, and the Democrats were booing, as they tried to be recognized to demand a separate motion to cut off debate. Then Kramer called the vote. Within seconds, the digital vote system on the wall announced 51 ayes and 17 nays, and voting was suddenly closed. With a total of 96 members, that got to a majority for the bill but left 28 members who hadn’t had a chance yet to vote. At that point, the Democrats got up, chanting “Shame! Shame! Shame!” and similar exclamations, as the Republicans filed out of the room. Shame, indeed. After agreeing to hear debate on amendments, cutting that debate off in what certainly appears to be a coordinated and orchestrated move isn’t democracy and certainly not representative democracy. It is, however, a taste of the arrogant Republican thuggery that seems to be all the rage these days. One of the concerns over this flash vote was the possibility that the Capitol building would be closed to protesters, who have created a little city inside during the protest. According to the WSJ, all but the first floor will close to overnight protesters now that there are no legislative hearings or sessions. I don’t think that will deter anyone, especially after seeing the strongarm tactics of the Birch Republicans in Wisconsin. Update: The National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) just released a statement in solidarity with the Wisconsin workers. New York, February 25, 2011 — “ Last night’s vote by the Wisconsin Assembly was an attempt to undermine organized labor and the men and women across the country who depend on their unions for a voice in the workplace. The NBPA proudly supports our brothers and sisters in Wisconsin and their stand for unequivocal collective bargaining rights.” – Billy Hunter, NBPA Executive Director “Wisconsin public-sector workers tirelessly deliver services on a daily basis to millions of Wisconsin residents. The right of these hard-working men and women to organize and bargain collectively is fundamental. Wisconsin’s workers deserve better than last night’s vote. Today, our union stands proudly with our fellow union members throughout the state as they continue their fight.” – Keyon Dooling, NBPA First Vice President, Milwaukee Bucks UPDATE: Lawrence O’Donnell talked to Democratic Assemblyman Cory Mason and Republican Assembly Majority Leader Scott Suder on the outrageous and unprecedented behavior of the Assembly Republicans. Watch how Suder employs the Republican playbook of deflecting all of O’Donnell’s questions and talking over Mason’s airtime.

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The Alyona Show, August 2010 In a long-needed move, the Southern Poverty Law Center has named Pamela Geller and her followers a hate group : Manhattan blogger Pamela Geller and her posse of anti-Islamic protesters have been branded a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Stop the Islamization of America was included in the civil rights organization’s annual roundup of extremist groups – a rogue’s gallery that includes everything from the Ku Klux Klan to white supremacists and Nazis. Geller’s group was one of the most vocal opponents of the proposed Islamic Center near Ground Zero. The group was also behind ads that were placed on city buses urging Muslims to leave “the falsity of Islam.” Geller, who runs a blog called Atlas Shrugs, dismissed the Law Center as an “uber left” group that has “failed to address the greatest threat to our national security.” “My group is a human rights group,” she said. “And these people are taken seriously? This is the morally inverted state of the world.” I love the irony of someone who co-opts a badly written treatise for sociopathic selfishness as the name of her website declaring that the Southern Poverty Law Center has an inverted sense of morality. Pamela Geller’s blind and wildly grasping hate for Muslim s (inspiration for Hitler? Really?) is nothing less than a mental disorder. It’s about time that she was labeled for what she is.

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“Two men say they’re Jesus, one of them must be wrong.” As it turns out, those 1982 Dire Straits lyrics sum up the current dire straits of the 2012 Republican presidential field . With the premature withdrawal of John Thune and Mike Pence from the ranks of the GOP White House hopefuls, social conservatives are nervously waiting for Mike Huckabee, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann to announce their candidacies. But whatever Huckabee, Palin and Bachmann ultimately decide, each has already claimed God is on their side . Despite his lead in recent polling , Governor Huckabee has been engaged in a highly public Hamlet act in deciding to be or not to be a Republican presidential candidate. Even as he frets about his finances, Huckabee admits to being ” bored ” by foreign policy and acknowledging simply ” I don’t know ” what to do about Afghanistan. Nevertheless, as Huckabee began his latest book tour this week, he assured his fellow Fox News host Sean Hannity he could defeat President Obama . “I think he can be beat,” he said, adding, “I frankly think that I would be in a very good position to do it because I believe that standing head-to-head with him, articulating the very clear decisive difference between our positions would be a great contrast.” And having the Lord in your corner doesn’t hurt, either. Back in December 2007, Huckabee attributed his dramatic surge in Iowa , a state he later won, to His divine intervention: “There’s only one explanation for it, and it’s not a human one. It’s the same power that helped a little boy with two fish and five loaves feed a crowd of 5,000 people and that’s the only way that our campaign could be doing what it’s doing. And I’m not being facetious nor am I trying to be trite. There literally are thousands of people across who are praying that a little will become much and it has, and it defies all explanation. It has confounded the pundits, and I’m enjoying every minute of their trying to figure it out. And until they look at it from a just experience beyond human, they’ll never figure it out. And that’s probably just as well. That’s honestly why it’s happening.” Huckabee similarly gave the Lord props for his strong debate performances during the 2008 GOP primaries. Asked by BeliefNet if there were any moments during the campaign when he felt God’s presence, Huckabee replied: “Oh, absolutely. Especially some times in the debates when I get asked some question and I’m thinking, ‘Oh my’…I felt like the Lord truly gave me wisdom and responses that were truly needed at that time.” As it turns out, Huckabee’s communication with the Almighty goes both ways. Mike Huckabee doesn’t merely follow Him on Twitter; he sends God direct messages as well. Addressing a 2004 gathering of Republican governors, Huckabee playfully took a cell phone call from God , promising Him GOP support of His platform while assuming His backing for the Republican Party and President George W. Bush: “We’re behind [Bush], yes, sir, we sure are. Yes, sir, we know you don’t take sides in the election. But, if you did, we kind of think you’d hang in there with us, Lord, we really do.” Five years later, the former Baptist minister joined Newt Gingrich and Iran-Contra villain turned Fox News regular Oliver North at Rock Church in Hampton Roads, Virginia, where he testified to God’s role in furthering both the American Revolution and Huckabee’s own reactionary social policies. As the Virginia Pilot recounted: “The notion that we are just one of many among equals is nonsense,” Huckabee said. The United States is a “blessed” nation, he said, calling American revolutionaries’ defeat of the British empire “a miracle from God’s hand.” The same kind of miracle, he said, led California voters to approve Proposition 8, which overturned a state law legalizing same-sex marriages. Voters “did it because some things are right and some things are wrong and they had to make a stand.” As it turns out, among the Republicans’ would-be White House wannabes Mike Huckabee is far from alone in claiming to be touched by the hand of God. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann may not have the smarts to get to the White House, but she does have the cash and the connections. And among them, apparently, is direct line to the Almighty. As to whether she’ll make a run for the White House, Tea Party darling Bachmann insisted last week it was His call : “I think it will be an inner assurance more than anything of what I am supposed to do,” she said of contemplating a run for president. She said she and her husband “look to the Lord for guidance, and I can’t say enough how important that’s been to us to give us that rock of assurance on which path we should go.” Bachmann is nothing if not consistent on that point. In August 2009 , she explained how she would decide to seek the presidency: “If I felt that’s what the Lord was calling me to do, I would do it,” she answered. “When I have sensed that the Lord is calling me to do something, I’ve said yes to it. But I will not seek a higher office if God is not calling me to do it. That’s really my standard. “If I am called to serve in that realm I would serve,” she concluded, “but if I am not called, I wouldn’t do it.” As Bachmann told a mega-church audience in 2006 , she got that call from God about running for Congress. His message, apparently, was to go for it: “And then in the midst of that calling, God then called me to run for the United States Congress. And I thought, ‘what in the world would that be for?’ And my husband said, ‘You need to do this,’ and I wasn’t so sure. And we took three days and we fasted and we prayed, and we said, ‘Lord is this what You want? Is this Your will?’ And after the — along about the afternoon of day two, He made that calling sure. And it’s been now 22 months that I’ve been running for United States Congress. Who in their right mind would spent two years to run for a job that lasts for two years? You’d have to be absolutely a fool to do that. You are now looking at a fool for Christ. This is a fool for Christ.” Truer words were never spoken. Then there’s Sarah Palin . As her former aide Frank Bailey revealed in his tell-all book, Palin has for years sought the assistance of her “prayer warriors” in what she deemed a “divine calling.” In an email to Bailey in June 2006, Palin explained: “I was at Wasilla Bible Church…and the service was awesome b.c. he talked about just knowing that you know that you know…you know when you’re called for something…there’s no guarantee of the outcome but you just know, with a confidence that can only comes (sic) from God, that you’re doing what you’re supposed to be doing, even though there’s no crystal ball to tell you how it will all end. Our pastor…talked about Solomon having to build the temple when he was young & inexperienced & there were political tensions and struggles all over the place…my mom looked at me and said: do you think he’s talking to you?!” Of course, you don’t have to take Frank Bailey’s word for it. Sarah Palin’s own statements on the subject are more than sufficient. Her April address to an evangelical group called Women of Joy provides a recent case in point. Palin wasn’t content to advocate the demolition of the wall separating church and state (“Lest anyone try to convince you that God should be separated from the state, our Founding Fathers, they were believers”). She announced she was “so appreciative” of the “prayer warriors” battling on her behalf: “Prayer Warriors all across the country — and I know some of you are here tonight — your prayer shield allows me and others to go forth. You give out strength, providing a prayer shield. That is the only way to put one foot in front of the other, and get through some of these days with joy.” And while you’re at it, Sarah Palin suggested to the Tea Party Convention in February, you can pray for America, too. Unlike President Obama’s repeated warnings to the American people not to assume that “our progress was inevitable — that America was always destined to succeed,” Palin declared that “divine intervention” and not being “unafraid to do what was hard” was the key to the nation’s future: “And then I think kind of tougher to, kind of tougher to put our arms around but, allowing America’s spirit to rise again by not being afraid, not being afraid to kind of go back to some of our roots as a God fearing nation where we’re not afraid to say, especially in times of potential trouble in the future here, we’re not afraid to say, you know, we don’t have all the answers as fallible men and women so it would be wise of us to start seeking some divine intervention again in this country, so that we can be safe and secure and prosperous again.” Of course, in Sarah Palin’s telling, the Lord is going rogue with her. As the Washington Post summed it up in its review of her 2009 book, Palin’s worldview is “an Alaskan frontierswoman’s trinity” of “God, Todd and dominion over animals.” And to be sure, the Quitta from Wasilla sees the hand of God everywhere in her life: Right away, Palin posits her faith as the pillar of her career, as if her successes have unfolded according to a grand divine plan. Her selection as McCain’s running mate was a “natural progression,” she writes in one section. “I don’t believe in coincidences,” she writes in another. But as it turns out, Sarah Palin doesn’t just have the Lord in her corner, she’s also His spokesman. The war in Iraq, as then Governor Palin told students at the School of Ministry at the Wasilla Assembly of God, is “a task that is from God.” And when it came to the multibillion natural gas pipeline she hoped would span her state, Palin lectured, “I can do my job there in developing our natural resources…But really all of that stuff doesn’t do any good if the people of Alaska’s heart isn’t right with God,” adding: “God’s will has to be done in unifying people and companies to get that gas line built, so pray for that.” A jaw-dropping expose in Vanity Fair revealed the shocking extent of Palin’s divine narcissism: When [her son] Trig was born, Palin wrote an e-mail letter to friends and relatives, describing the belated news of her pregnancy and detailing Trig’s condition; she wrote the e-mail not in her own name but in God’s, and signed it “Trig’s Creator, Your Heavenly Father.” Of course, Sarah Palin apparently has long believed she was touched by both the voice – and hand – of God. In May 2005 process complete with a laying on of hands, Kenyan pastor Thomas Muthee prayed over Palin, imploring Jesus to protect her from “the spirit of witchcraft.” As Election Day approached in the fall of 2008, the GOP vice presidential candidate claimed to be unconcerned by her ticket’s dismal poll numbers. Victory, she insisted, was in God’s hands : “To me, it motivates us, makes us work that much harder. And it also strengthens my faith, because I’m going to know, at the end of the day, putting this in God’s hands, that the right thing for America will be done at the end of the day on Nov. 4. So I’m not discouraged at all.” God, it seems, wanted Barack Obama in the White House. Which brings us to the quandary for God’s Own Party. Serial flip-flopper Mitt Romney ran pro-choice Senate campaign in 1994, even going so far as to contribute to Planned Parenthood. While Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels has to confront his past youthful indiscretions with drugs, Newt Gingrich was embarrassed again this week by his belief that marriage is an institution between one man and three women in rapid succession. Meanwhile, Mike Huckabee, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann have yet to announce whether each has the Lord’s endorsement for a 2012 White House run. All of which is ironic, to say the least, for the Party of Lincoln. After all, Abraham Lincoln famously said, “Sir, my concern is not whether God is on our side; my greatest concern is to be on God’s side, for God is always right.” And while millions of Americans – including presidential candidates – feel the presence of God in their daily lives, Lincoln’s Second Inaugural sounded a cautionary note for those believing it to be something more: “Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes His aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God’s assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men’s faces, but let us judge not, that we be not judged. The prayers of both could not be answered. That of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Newsweek Keeps Sinking With ‘Saint George’ Clooney Cover Story: He ‘Saved Millions of Lives’ as ’21st Century Statesman’

Newsweek’s latest issue shouted from the rooftops that Tina Brown and the Daily Beast are now in charge. The cover story’s on George Clooney, and the cover headline is “Mr. Clooney, The President Is on Line 1: On the ground in Sudan with a new kind of statesman.” Inside, the gooey story has a gooey headline: “A 21st Century Statesman: In the age of Twitter-shortened attention spans, fame is an increasingly powerful weapon of diplomacy. How George Clooney is helping to bring change – and a hefty dose of hope – to Sudan.” It comes with Tina Brown touches, like focusing on what he’s wearing: “Clad in a khaki-colored ExOfficio vest, white safari shirt, lightweight pants, and worn hiking boots, Clooney doesn't look or act like a buttoned-up diplomat.”

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Inside Story – What would a new Libya look like?

After more than a week of unrest, thousands of Libyans are still calling for the end of Muammar Gaddafi’s rule. But the man who has led Libya for more than 41 years is clinging to power. What does the current political structure in Libya look like and what kind of Libya would emerge if Gaddafi falls?

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Pro-reform protests in Vietnam

Calls for political reform have not been confined to the Arab world. Al Jazeera has obtained rare footage of a demonstration in Vietnam – a country where political dissent is swiftly put down by the government. Al Jazeera Steve Chao has this exclusive report.

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News Bulletin – 09:35GMT

The main headlines on Al Jazeera English, featuring the latest news and reports from around the world.

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Libya in crisis – live coverage

Colonel Muammar Gaddafi is defying calls from world leaders to end the violence against his own countrymen as sanctions against him are stepped up. Follow the latest from Libya and across the Middle East 11.21am: Residents in Tripoli say Gaddafi’s regime is arming civilian supporters to quash dissent, AP reports. Locals contacted by the news agency on Saturday said trucks of pro-regime civilians were patrolling the streets. The move follows a speech Gaddafi made to his loyalists in Green Square on Friday, in which he called on them to “retaliate” against the anti-government demonstrators. 11.08am: Here’s further details on the ongoing efforts to get foreign nationals out of Libya. • The latest flight left to retrieve Britons stranded in the crisis left Gatwick this morning and is expected back tonight. A Foreign Office spokeswoman said it was likely to be the last rescue flight, but that was not confirmed. SAS troops are understood to be ready to move in to evacuate around 170 British oil workers stranded in the desert. • Greek officials say 2,800 Chinese workers have arrived in Crete after sailing by ferry from the Libyan port of Benghazi. It is the first of three ferries transporting a total of 6,000 Chinese workers to the island. The Chinese government has chartered four ferries and 11 hotels on the island, and is expected to begin special flights from Crete to China on Monday, AP reports. 10.39am: In this audio clip on the February 17 Voices audioboo channel , a woman in Tripoli describes how government forces pursued anti-government protesters into their houses to kill them. She also claims that the dead have been buried immediately by Gaddafi’s soldiers in a bid to cover up their atrocities.(Please note, we are unable to independently verify these audio clips.) In another clip, a woman from Tripoli expresses her fear for her daughters, saying they only have knives to protect themselves against government forces. She also calls on the international community to take immediate action against Gaddafi: “If there’s anything you can [do to] help, do it now. Please do it now.” 10.24am: This video, posted on Al Jazeera English’s YouTube channel, purports to show an army officer carried on the shoulders of anti-government protesters in the city of Zuwiya. Protesters claim this scene is being repeated across the country as soldiers uneasy with the bloody crackdown defect. A female protester interviewed by Al Jazeera in the eastern city of Benghazi says they want Gaddafi to faces justice for killing his own people. We do not want him to flee to another country. We want to punish him because he shed Libyan blood. He killed our young people. 10.16am: Good morning and welcome to the Guardian’s live blog of the twelfth day of unrest in Libya where, despite growing international condemnation, Muammar Gaddafi’s regime continues it bloody crackdown on anti-government protesters. Here are the main developments overnight and so far this morning. • Anti-government protests are continuing across Libya, including in the capital, Tripoli, where protesters are reported to have taken control of some areas of the city. • The UN security council is to meet later on Saturday to decide what action to take against Gaddafi. This could include an arms embargo against the government, a travel ban and asset freeze against the Libyan ruler, his relatives and close allies, and referring the violent crackdown to the International Criminal Court so it can investigate possible crimes against humanity. • The US has announced sanctions against the Libyan government, with Barack Obama signing an executive order blocking property and transactions related to Gaddafi’s regime. • Libya’s UN ambassador, Mohammed Shalgham, has denounced Gaddafi, just three days after praising him as “my friend”. • Foreign governments are continuing efforts to evacuate their citizens from Libya. The latest – and probably last – flight from Gatwick to bring back Britons stranded in the country left early on Saturday morning. But further missions to rescue oil workers trapped in the desert are being prepared. Arab and Middle East protests Libya Middle East Egypt Muammar Gaddafi David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Frost Over the World – Sting

In a special interview Sir David meets rock legend, Sting. The singer-songwriter has won 16 Grammy Awards and is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Finally, Italian Senator Emma Bonino discusses the controversial ties between Italy and Libya and the scandal surrounding Silvio Berlusconi.

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