On Wednesday's NBC Nightly News, correspondent Michael Isikoff claimed a prank phone call on Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker “provided his critics with evidence that his real motivation is what they've been saying all along, to crush public unions.” On Thursday's CBS Early Show, co-host Erica Hill declared the “embarrassing” call revealed Walker's “plan for putting pressure on the big unions.” Isikoff suggested that Walker's private phone conversation with Ian Murphy of the left-wing Buffalo Beast website (who was pretending to be billionaire donor David Koch) ran counter to the Wisconsin Governor's public statements on his budget-cutting proposal: “Publicly, Governor Scott Walker has insisted the standoff over union rights in Wisconsin is all about saving money.” On the Early Show, correspondent Dean Reynolds proclaimed: “Walker is heard discussing strategy to force Democratic senators to return to Wisconsin and vote. In another exchange, he tells of plans to punish state workers with layoffs.” ABC News refrained from reporting on the prank phone call. It was not mentioned on Wednesday's World News or Thursday's Good Morning America. Isikoff warned of Walker's plan: “[It] would force government workers to contribute more for pension and health benefits, severely limit their rights to collective bargaining, and make it more difficult to collect union dues. If he succeeds, it could dry up a major source of campaign cash for Democrats.” Reynolds fretted: “The Governor's plan would end the right of the unions to bargain collectively over benefits and working conditions.” Near the end of his report, an amazed Reynolds remarked: “Though Wednesday's prank call lasted 20 minutes, the Governor never caught on.” Reynolds then noted how “At a press conference later, Walker suggested the call was hardly newsworthy.” A clip was played of Walker explaining, “The bottom line is the things I said are things I've said publicly all along.” Reynolds couldn't help but play a sound bite of one of Walker's critics, “a Democratic opponent [who] took the mike and trashed him” moments after the press conference ended. A clip was played of Wisconsin State Representative Brett Hulsey ranting: “He [Walker] is acting like a dictator, not a leader. The guy's a megalomaniac.” Here is a full transcript of Isikoff's February 23 Nightly News report: 7:00PM ET TEASE: BRIAN WILLIAMS: The domino effect from the showdown in Wisconsin, and the prank call that fooled the Governor and is now all over the web.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Way to go, MSNBC! After this story broke earlier in the day — BREAKING: Gov. Scott Walker Punked By Blogger Posing As David Koch — does anyone think their audience might have wanted to hear what he had to say about it? Apparently MSNBC didn’t think so because they cut away from his press conference just before he started taking questions from reporters. Neither did CNN or Fox, who also cut away just as questions from the press were coming. You have to expect it of Fox, considering how much they’ve invested in demonizing the protesters, but CNN too? I didn’t include the entire press conference MSNBC aired, just the last couple of minutes before Thomas Roberts broke in. Walker was explaining how wonderful it was going to be for their workers not to be forced to pay their union dues. In other words, how he’s planning to break their unions financially by turning the workers into free-riders. And he claims this is not about busting unions. Every time he opens his mouth he proves this is all it is about. Digby writes : I really have to wonder why the national political press is so unwilling to engage on this Walker/Koch story. Both MSNBC and CNN allowed Walker to give his prepared statement (which included an absurd statement that his budget will save workers’ money because they won’t have to pay union dues!) — and then cut away from the Q and A when the Wisconsin press tried to ask him about his statements in that prank call today. Have they been scared away from this story by Republicans calling it a “Breitbart” hoax? Or is it that the evocation of the Big Money Koch brothers makes them squeamish. (After all, going after ACORN and Planned Parenthood only affect a bunch of low income women, so who cares?) I don’t know about that but the Wisconsin press is very, very interested.[..] The bigger question Walker has to answer now is why he’s taking calls from millionaire out-of-state donors and coordinating strategy with him. Even if it’s not illegal, his constituents might not find it quite as benign as the jaded cable news networks. And then there’s the fact that he admitted that his goal wasn’t to balance the budget but to break the unions. You’d think that would be newsworthy.
Continue reading …Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan leader, has said in a speech on state television that al-Qaeda is responsible for the uprising in his country. This is the first 7 minutes of his speech. Speaking on the phone from an undisclosed location, Gaddafi said the protesters were young people who were being manipulated by al-Qaeda, and that many were under the influence of drugs.
Continue reading …Muammar Gaddafi claimed that al-Qaeda’s Osama bin Laden was behind the Libyan uprising. The Libyan leader said the country’s young people were being manipulated and drugged by al-Qaeda in speech aired on Libyan state television on Thursday.
Continue reading …Once the dominant force in Arab culture, post-revolutionary Egypt now has the chance to return to this role I grew up in the post-Sadat Arab world. The 80s was a time when Egyptian drama, music and film monopolised Arabic media; we imbibed the Egyptian accent and colloquialisms as well as our local influences. The evening soap opera in most Arab countries was Egyptian, and I spent many an evening captivated by dramas set in Alexandria, Cairo and El Saeed. Cairo was the main holiday destination for other Arabs and many bought properties in the city. To some northern Sudanese, Cairo was a second home, almost as familiar as Khartoum. When I was a child, my mother would regale me with stories of growing up in the 60s and 70s; accounts of her and her siblings gathering around a crackling radio set to listen to Gamal Abdel Nasser’s speeches, of how when Abdel Halim Hafez, a renowned Egyptian classical singer, died, the shock reverberated in cities throughout the region. Post-independence Arab history always seems to involve Egypt in some crucial way. Egypt was the state that represented the Arabs in the international arena. Its politicians, entertainers, actors, musicians and writers featured prominently in Arabic popular culture. It had both rich heritage and an avant garde movement. Most people knew far more about Egypt and its culture than they had any business knowing. Gulf or Levantine influences were almost entirely absent from the Arab consciousness. The image of the Egypt I grew up with was not the one that met me when I eventually went to university in Cairo. Over the previous 20 years, the country’s stature had diminished both culturally and economically. The arrival of Arabsat and region-wide satellite channels in the 90s amplified Gulf culture, and with the end of the civil war in Lebanon, Levantine media seemed to take over the airwaves almost overnight. The stories that came out of Egypt became increasingly Dickensian and distressing: crushing poverty, sexual harassment, police brutality, corruption, religious tension, and a joke of a president. A far cry from the country that, having established itself politically ahead of the rest of the Arab states, reigned imperious. Politically, the fall was dramatic : “absent in Iraq, no genuine impact on the Arab-Israeli peace process and seen as complicit in sieges in Gaza”. But even with the petro-dollars pumped into media and construction in the Gulf, no nation ever managed to fill the void that Egypt left. Even the economically mighty Saudi Arabia, considered by the west to be the religious and historical centre of gravity of the region, never succeeded in forming a core or Arab culture. This is why, even though Tunisians have inspired the near miraculous events of the past few weeks in Libya, Bahrain and elsewhere, it is really Egypt that has inspired the Arab psyche. In a region where there is significant tension between nationalities, people flocked to the streets to welcome Egypt’s return to its rightful position. It was fascinating to note that in the immediate aftermath of Mubarak’s resignation, commentators and opinion formers on television channels echoed this sentiment. It wasn’t about the removal of a decrepit dictator, it was about the rebirth of Egypt. Dignity was the theme of the revolution. The songs, the chants, the placards, displayed a unique artfulness, spirit and a sense of humour. One Egyptian commentator, minutes after Mubarak resigned, said that now Egypt could return to penning the literature, music and drama that had produced Omar Sharif, Youssef Chahine and Naguib Mahfouz — it was the end of the era of “fallen art and kitsch popular culture”. The chant that resonated around the Arab world was ” ahom, ahom, el masriyeen ahom “, meaning “here, the Egyptians are here”. It heralded not the arrival, but the return of Egypt. Of course no one knows exactly what the future holds, and there will be an at times painful process of adjustment. But there is indeed a sense that the Egyptians are here, Egypt is back. And the Arab world, desperate for a leader in the absence of effective, representative heads of state, welcomes its return. Egypt Arab and Middle East protests Middle East Nesrine Malik guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …enlarge International pizza solidarity on the board at Ian’s State Street Pizza in Madison, WI. I’ve been listening to blog readers say for years, “But what can I do?” This week, we have plenty. You want rallies? We got rallies. All over America, people will be standing tall in solidarity with the Wisconsin and Ohio public sector strikers this Saturday. MoveOn has called for rallies at 50 statehouses this Saturday, Feb. 26, at noon. But wait, there’s more! You can also stand up this Saturday to be counted with the workers of the United Kingdom and Europe , who will be demonstrating against their countries’ austerity cuts. In solidarity with UKUncut, USUncut will be holding rallies this Saturday across the country. ( Look for your state here .) They focus on corporations that pay little or no taxes while services for the rest of us are cut (hence the name). Remember, 72% of foreign and 57% of US corporations pay no tax in USA. Join the Facebook group here! Remember: If 13 hedge fund managers were taxed like the rest of us, they’d fund 300,000 teachers. Here are the some of the other rallies I found: PHILADELPHIA Rally in solidarity with the workers of Wisconsin and Ohio 11:30, Thursday, February 24 Municipal Services Building Plaza 15th & JFK Blvd (across from City Hall and LOVE Park) Saturday, Feb. 26, noon US Uncut rally against tax-dodging Comcast at the Comcast Building 17th & Arch Streets NEW JERSEY Stand Up For Working People! Rally at 12 Noon at the Statehouse, 125 West State Street, Trenton NJ Friday, February 25, 2011 INDIANA Peaceful Protest of Corporate Tax Dodging Saturday, February 26 · 12:00pm – 2:00pm Bank of America 52710 State Road 933 South Bend, IN Bank of America nabbed $45 billion in government bailout funds while funneling its books into 115 offshore tax havens. CALIFORNIA San Francisco, Sat Feb 26th 2011 2/26/2011; 10:30am-12:30pm; Union Square Park (Powell St. b/n Post & Geary), San Francisco OREGON Medford, Oregon, Sat Feb 26th 2011 Bank of America 222 West Main Medford OR They are open from 9am to 2pm Please bring signs, try to get peaceful and lawful attention, please don’t block the sidewalk. UTAH Salt Lake City, Sat Mar 5th 2011 Info here. Check #usuncut, #ukuncut or #226demo in Twitter for more updates. Don’t just sit there, DO SOMETHING!
Continue reading …Muhammad al-Senussi, who would be Libya’s crown prince if the country still had a monarchy, has spoken out about the ongoing violence in the country from London. Libya was a monarchy until Muammar Gaddafi took power in a military coup in 1969 and the exiled King Idris has long since died. In an interview with Al Jazeera’s Barnaby Phillips, al-Senussi asked the international community to help remove Gaddafi from power and stop the ongoing “massacre”.
Continue reading …Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan leader, has said in a speech on state television that al-Qaeda is responsible for the uprising in his country. Speaking on the phone from an undisclosed location, Gaddafi said the protesters were young people who were being manipulated by al-Qaeda, and that many were under the influence of drugs.
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