• Fighting spreads to Tripoli • Libyan regime calls on protesters to surrender weapons • Britons return from Libya • Obama tells Gaddafi to stop violence • Benghazi becomes Libya’s first free city 9.26am: Martin Chulov has been tweeting about Benghazi. 9.14am: An interesting article in the New York Times suggests Gaddafi maybe preparing for a final showdown on the streets of Tripoli today. Witnesses in the city told reporters he has deployed “thousands of mercenaries and irregular security” personnel on roads leading to the capital over the past 24 hours as his hold over the regular army slips away. “(They are) massing on roads to the capital, Tripoli, where one resident described scenes evocative of anarchic Somalia: clusters of heavily armed men in mismatched uniforms clutching machine guns and willing to carry out orders to kill Libyans that other police and military units, and even fighter pilots, have refused. Some residents of Tripoli said they took the gathering army as a sign that the uprising might be entering a decisive stage, with Colonel Gaddafi fortifying his main stronghold in the capital and protesters there gearing up for their first organized demonstration after days of spontaneous rioting and bloody crackdowns. ” The piece claims that Gaddafi has built up this mercenary force over many years. “Distrustful of even his own generals, Colonel Gaddafi has for years quietly built up this ruthless and loyal force. It is made up of special brigades headed by his sons, segments of the military loyal to his native tribe and its allies, and legions of African mercenaries he has helped train and equip. Many are believed to have fought elsewhere, in places like Sudan, but he has now called them back.” 9.13am: Oliva Fairless, who talked to the Guardian earlier this week about her mother, 66, and partner, who were trapped in Tripoli, has told us that they have managed to reach Warsaw thanks to the Polish ambassador in Libya, who was a “star”. They were stuck in the Corinthia hotel in Tripoli and decided to leave for the airport yesterday because they were afraid they would not be able to get petrol as supplies were running low. My mother said the airport was chaotic, it was like a refugee camp with about 10,000 people. There were about 94 people in the British section outside the airport, where many Arab workers were trying to get out. They could hear screaming and they could hear shooting, although it was probably for purposes for crowd control. My mother and partner were stuck there from 11am to 6.30pm, it was raining, muddy and freezing. The Polish ambassador came in person and offered seats on a Polish plane and 22 Brits accepted. He was a star, holding an umbrella for people, offering people shelter in his car. When the Polish plane came, it took three hours to get through the airport and the plane finally left at 12.10am. We’re really disappointed at the FCO response. They were left stranded with no advice and no communications. 8.52am: Passengers landing at Gatwick this morning spoke of their relief to be home as they described the “hellish” scenes in Libya. Helena Sheehan, 66, said she had just experienced “some of the worst hours of her life”. She said: “Libya is descending into hell. The airport is like nothing I’ve ever seen in my whole life. It’s absolute chaos. There’s just thousands and thousands of people trying to get out.” Oil worker Bryan Richards escaped from Libya last night on what he was told was the Polish President’s official plane after being offered one of 50 seats. Speaking to the BBC Radio 4 Today programme from Warsaw, he said: “I am not quite sure how it came about but we had a call saying that there’s a Polish plane going with 50 seats. ‘Does anyone want one?’ It was a bit of no-brainer really. I am in Warsaw. I am out of the sand and into the snow.” He said he was nearly “bludgeoned” as he tried to escape through Tripoli airport. “I was the tail-end Charlie of our little entourage going through the airport. I do this many times a year coming in and out of Tripoli airport. Now, we see organised chaos but we are used to it. This was manic. This was the worst nightmare of pop concerts and football hooligans all mixed into one.” 8.45am: While Muammar Gaddafi has lost control of Benghazi, Libya’s second city, he is fighting tooth and nail to hang on to the capital Tripoli. Just how desperate things are in Tripoli can be gauged by this Reuters report out of Cairo. The Libyan people’s committee for general security called on protesters to surrender their weapons and offered rewards for those who inform on protest leaders, in a statement broadcast live on Libyan TV. “He who submits his weapon and shows remorse will be exempted from being pursued legally. The committee calls on citizens to cooperate and inform on those who led on the youth or supplied them with money, equipment or intoxicating substances and hallucinatory pills,” the statement said. The committee also said those cooperating would be given money. “A lucrative monetary reward will be given to anyone who contributes or informs on them,” the statement, read out by a Libyan army officer, said on television monitored in Cairo. • Benghazi may be free but it has paid a heavy price. Read Martin Chulov’s gripping account of Libya’s first free city , where the rebels are busy erasing all traces of the man who has ruled the country for 41 years. • Ian Black writes about Gaddafi’s increasing isolation as senior aides defect . • Barack Obama finally breaks silence on Libya to condemn ruling regime and make threat of sanctions. Arab and Middle East protests Libya Egypt Bahrain Yemen Saudi Arabia Middle East Mark Tran Matthew Taylor Paul Owen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Can literature inspire revolutions? What role do artists and intellectuals play on the frontline of popular uprisings?
Continue reading …Tuesday night’s episode of The Good Wife on CBS gave prime time legitimacy to the presumption the Tea Party is racist as a lawyer in a courtroom tried to discredit an expert witness ( Gary Cole as Sarah Palin supporter “Kurt McVeigh”) who testified against a since-exonerated black defendant, by demanding he admit he’s “a member of the Tea Party.” The lawyer asserts “it is our contention that my client’s prosecution was racist,” citing McVeigh’s “membership in a racist organization,” namely the Tea Party. To illustrate, the program created a photo taken at “a Tea Party rally in Milwaukee last January” showing a man near “McVeigh” holding up a “Go Back to the Jungle” sign which the lawyer asks McVeigh to confirm “refers to our current President.” (large jpg image of the picture ) The February 22 episode marked the return of Cole’s ballistics expert “Kurt McVeigh” character as the love interest for Chicago law firm partner “ Diane Lockhart ,” played by Christine Baranski, a liberal who knows Hillary Clinton and has disdain for Palin. (Audio: MP3 clip )
Continue reading …Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan president, has always promoted himself as one of Africa’s great leaders touting a vision of progress and wealth for the entire continent. Now, after a week of violence in Libya, the African Union has condemned his actions against the pro-democracy movement. Al Jazeera’s Yvonne Ndege reports from Abuja.
Continue reading …International rescue teams intensified their search for earthquake survivors in New Zealand, with the death toll nearing 100 and police said they were gravely concerned about the more than 200 people still missing. Al Jazeera’s Tania Page reports from New Zealand’s quake-shattered Christchurch.
Continue reading …While the international community pushes for sanctions against Libya over Muammar Gaddafi’s brutal crackdown – his son, Saif al-Islam, says everything is normal. He says the problem lies in the eastern regions. In the city of Tobruk close to the Egyptian border, there is no presence of security forces. The province of Cyrenaica is also in the hands of pro-democracy protesters according to Franco Frattini, Italy’s foreign minister. And it is the same situation in the western city of Misurata where army officers have reportedly thrown their weight behind calls for Gaddafi to go. Tripoli is said to be on virtual lockdown – it has always been Gaddafi’s stronghold . Al Jazeera’s Charles Stratford reports.
Continue reading …Piety figures large in Alabama politics, but the righteous are few and the courageous questioner even more uncommon. Having seen more than its fair share of injustice, this state has not been helped by its major media over the years. I am not just talking about the ancient history of lynching reports or headlines about Martin Luther King Jr’s ‘communist ties,’ either. As Scott Horton wrote of the Don Siegelman case in Harper’s just four years ago , The response to (Dana Jill) Simpson’s affidavit has been a series of brusque dismissive statements—all of them unsworn—from others who figured in the discussion and the federal prosecutor in the Siegelman case, who has now made a series of demonstrably false statements concerning the matter. She’s been smeared as “crazy” and as a “disgruntled contract bidder.” And something nastier: after her intention to speak became known, Simpson’s house was burned to the ground, and her car was driven off the road and totaled . Clearly, there are some very powerful people in Alabama who feel threatened. Her case starts to sound like a chapter out of John Grisham’s book The Pelican Brief. However, those who have dismissed Simpson are in for a very rude surprise. Her affidavit stands up on every point, and there is substantial evidence which will corroborate its details . This disclosure was treated as explosive news by Time Magazine and the New York Times . However, newspapers inside of Alabama reacted with awkward silence, as if these disclosures were very unpleasant news, best swept immediately under the living room carpet . I will single out the Birmingham News and the Mobile Register. I took some time earlier this week to review their coverage of the Siegelman story from the beginning. It left me wondering whether these publications were really newspapers . (Emphasis mine) Local television news is not any better here. During the 2010 campaign primary, Democrat-turned-Republican Parker Griffith got oozing coverage from WZDX, the Huntsville FOX affiliate, for a made-up award he presented to a pair of schoolboys who had rescued a man. The segment came across as little different from a fawning state-media production , with exactly the same production values. And it was not the worst thing I have seen, or heard, from Alabama’s for-profit media. Which is why I am crashing the gates of Goat Hill next week. If you don’t hear from me by Wednesday, it might be that I have been “disappeared” by Karl Rove’s black ops team. Much more after the jump… There have been several failed attempts to give the Alabama state capitol a more dignified name than “Goat Hill.” The name has stuck because it fits. Make no mistake: what I’m about to do has its dangers. It will likely make it impossible for me to ever find a real job again in this state. I’ve already been fired once for blogging in Alabama; so has Roger Shuler , who had undoubtedly written more about Karl Rove’s deep ties to Alabama than any other blogger when he was fired from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Observing the news from Egypt on Monday, Shuler wrote : Modern Egypt, (Fareed) Zakaria writes, has been marked by what might be called “disinformation campaigns.” Does that happen in the United States? Yes, indeed, and I’ve seen it firsthand. In my ongoing employment lawsuit against the University of Alabama, about a half dozen UAB officials filed affidavits–sworn under oath–stating that the exercise of my First Amendment rights on this blog had nothing to do with my termination. Compare that to the tape-recorded conversation I had with UAB human-resources rep Anita Bonasera, where she admits that I was targeted because of my blog–especially the content about the Siegelman case: Audio: UAB and the Cost of Blogging About the Siegelman Case Lisa Huggins, UAB’s in-house counsel, reviewed my termination letter and therefore was involved in the decision-making process. She has every reason to know these affidavits are false, and under the law, she and the affiants should be held in contempt of court. Has that happened? Nope. I’ve filed a motion seeking contempt charges, but U.S. Judge William M. Acker Jr., the 83-year-old Reagan appointee in charge of the case, has ignored it. Not only do we have a corrupt judiciary, we have a legal community filled with lawyers who know they can file false documents, sworn under oath, and get away with it. Karl Rove perfected his craft here. As Joshua Green wrote in the Atlantic seven years ago , Rove’s closest election was not the 2000 Florida recount, but the 1994 recount of the Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice race. Once known for being cheap, state judicial races are now incredibly expensive . Our state judiciary is now packed with Republican know-nothings. So it goes in the land of cotton, where the GOP has just won control of the state legislature for the first time in 136 years — and immediately set about the task of destroying the state teachers union under the guise of “ethics reform.” This, too, is part of the national pattern we’ve seen in Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, and elsewhere. As another Alabama blogger put it , What we are left with is the inescapable conclusion that this session had nothing to do with ethics. It had everything to do with passing anti-AEA bills, banning teachers from running for the Legislature, and banning public entities from deducting AEA and ASEA political contributions from paychecks . (I am still waiting for the explanation of why it’s more unethical for a Democratic teacher to vote on an education budget, than it is for a Republican insurance agent to vote on a bill impacting the insurance industry.) Those bills would have been at serious risk of a Bentley veto come January, as well as being maneuvered behind budgets in a regular session. The 52-49 final House vote passing the payroll deduction bill shows that there was insufficient support to pass the bill in a regular session, with a governor more sensitive to employee rights . (Emphasis mine) That would be the Alabama Education Association that bucked the anti-union trend during desegregation . It isn’t exactly calling out the Wisconsin National Guard, but it serves no one except the Republican Party. Nor is that bill isolated: the Alabama legislature only meets for thirty days a year, and Republicans plan to fill that time by further eroding the teachers union. My local daily : Republican State Rep. Jay Love, of Montgomery, says he will offer a bill to provide liability insurance for all Alabama teachers and other school workers. The bill would remove a financial incentive for educators to join the Alabama Education Association, which provides insurance coverage . On another front, Alabama’s two-year college system has notified its schools that AEA can no longer enroll members on the campuses . A spokeswoman for the Department of Postsecondary Education says the membership drives violate a state law that bans the use of state property to promote political candidates , which AEA does. (Emphasis mine) Get that? Alabama Republicans — who fell all over themselves to oppose Obamacare — want to give teachers a “public option” for the sole purpose of destroying their union. The state’s two-year college system is a land of political patronage; Republican governors have packed higher education with appointees for most of the last 25 years in pursuit of this dream. And they are master opportunists . The Montgomery Advertiser : The new Republican leaders of the Alabama Legislature are planning to restrict access to legislators’ offices in the wake of the shootings in Tucson, Ariz . House Speaker Mike Hubbard and Senate President Pro Tem Del Marsh said Monday the public would no longer be able to wander into legislators’ offices in the State House on days when the Legislature is in session. Don’t you love the use of “wander” as a pejorative, as if concerned citizens are merely loitering armed bums? It’s almost as much fun as Republicans worried about a militant political climate they whipped up themselves. But it won’t matter next week, because I will crash these gates . Inspired by the Netroots Nation panel last year on “Blogging A Red State Blue,” the 2011 Goat Hill Project is an experiment in open-sourcing: all the video content will go out on a dedicated YouTube channel — with a widget available to any Alabama blogger who wants to run it, with content posted after every session day at Left In Alabama . Things kick off next Tuesday. I’ll be there to cover (hopefully) the entire legislative session — and explore the apparatus of governance in Alabama more thoroughly. Lobbyists, power players, and the state capitol itself will all fall under critical eyes. Montgomery also lies in a part of Alabama that was once the heart of darkness in the south, and remains frighteningly backward today — unexplored and underexposed. The Goat Hill Project will take precedence over C & L. It will take precedence over my own blog. It must . Alabama’s government is opaque; local news media does not put resources into investigation; no one else seems willing to do the hard work of bringing citizen journalism to the most consequential event in this state. I’ve already raised a thousand dollars, mostly from Alabama residents — as should be! — but if you’d like to help the Goat Hill Project, please click here to contribute .
Continue reading …This is an excellent ad. Governor Walker, public employees have agreed to the cuts you asked for, and now they’re simply asking that you not take away their rights. We stand together or we fall together, and we’re asking the people of Wisconsin to stand with us.” TPM: On the back of a new union poll suggesting the Wisconsin public is ready to stand with the protesters gathered in and around the Capitol in Madison, a coalition of unions is going on air in the Badger State with an ad calling on the public to do just that. As Greg Sargent first reported , the AFL-CIO, National Education Association, American Federation of Teachers and others are paying for the spot, which features a Racine, WI firefighter urging Gov. Scott Walker (R) not to ban collective bargaining for teachers, nurses and other unionized state employees. “They’re simply asking that you not take away their rights,” the firefighter says. The ad also talks about the wage and benefits concessions the unions have already offered as the battle has dragged on in Wisconsin. The AFL-CIO says that letting voters know about the compromises offered by labor so far is a winning move for the workers and their supporters across the state. The ad is so good that even Bill O’Reilly admired it. By the way FOX was busted for lying about recent poll results about the WI protests. What a shock. In a segment of Fox & Friends, the faux news network apparently didn’t like the results of an USA Today/Gallup poll that showed that 61 percent of Americans oppose measures like Wis. Gov. Scott Walker’s (R) that eliminate the right of public workers to bargaining for good jobs. The poll found just 31 percent agreed with Walker. But, as Think Progress’ Zaid Jilani points out today, Fox, “with incredible brazenness” simply reversed the numbers. Think Progress has the graphic and much more.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly was really upset because Wisconsin protesters were shouting down FOX News reporters who were trying to cover the story. O’Reilly claims that FOX is playing it straight with the protests and so the unions are making a big mistake and they better watch out. Hey Bill, It might actually be because FOX News regularly denounces unions as a whole and these WI protests 24/7. These protesters also know that FOX actively helped create and organize the Tea Party protests using their top personalities like Cavuto, Beck, Hannity and Greta as well as many of their guests who advertised on FNC dozens of times they were going to lead protest Tea Party protests themselves and everybody should go and support them. His propaganda is shameful. Alan Colmes did a good job of telling O’Reilly these facts after his talking points segment, but as usual BillO denied that actually occurred and was getting upset about it. Monica ” Alesiter ” Crowley was on too and was pushing her Armageddon-like fearmongering that the we’re all going to die if unions are allowed to exist as usual. FOX Transcript: One of the strategies for the pro-union people is to attack Fox News because FNC is one of the few media outlets not sympathizing with the protesters. Rather, we are trying to play it straight. That is not sitting well with some on the union side: (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) JEFF FLOCK, FOX BUSINESS: Most of the protesters, despite this gentleman here. Most of the people have been… UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Fox lies. FLOCK: …fairly reasoned, calm and willing to talk. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Fox lies. FLOCK: Because, as you know, we have done our best to give everybody a voice here. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Fox lies. MIKE TOBIN, FOX NEWS: You’re going to have to listen beyond the hecklers as I answer your question but yes Gov. Walker shot that right down. He said limiting collective bargaining on a temporary basis is just moving a budget problem along to the next election cycle. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And we’re hoping to go back and try to do a basic calculation of just how many people…. PEOPLE: Tell the truth. Tell the truth. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Our best guess at this point that there are hundreds if not… STUART VARNEY, FOX BUSINESS HOST: OK, and here’s what I’m going to do. I’m going to ask you to get off TV for a second. Get on the phone. Get to a place where we will be able to hear you telling the truth and away from that raucous crowd in the background. (END VIDEO CLIP) “Talking Points” believes that pro-union demonstrators are making a big mistake by attacking Fox News and portraying themselves as unreasonable. The Democratic senators in Wisconsin are also making a huge error in leaving the state… read on Bill then claimed that the disgusting Rasmussen poll was accurate to indicate that it was the people that were losing the battle for public opinion. Nate Silver analyses the polling questions and writes: Because of the problems with question design, my advice would be simply to disregard the Rasmussen Reports poll, and to view their work with extreme skepticism going forward. And Americans are supporting the unions over Scott Walker . To FOX, their Big Lie is that the Tea Parties were a totally organic and natural uprising and not sore losers who were aided by Koch Brothers corporation types that funded many of their phony grassroots gatherings. In our book, Over The Cliff , David and I document every step FOX News took in their promotion of the Tea Parties, which was seismic and the first time in the history of broadcasting that a network took such an active roll in creating a movement to derail a newly elected president and the agenda he was elected to enact.
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