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Give ‘Em a Fringe, They’ll Take a Mile

Click here to view this media The Nation’s Chris Hayes filling in for Rachel Maddow takes a look at the negotiating tactics being used by the GOP where they’re more than willing to hold the country hostage to get their agenda passed no matter how damaging it is to our country and the Democrats never ending willingness to meet the crazy half way.

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Empire – The Network Revolution

http://www.youtube.com/v/7QNNbCBFUik?f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata See the rest here: Empire – The Network Revolution

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When I saw that Rummy was going to be interviewed by Andrea Mitchell I figured it would a typical Beltway snore, complete with Rumsfeld trying to be his folksy, charming self and Andrea falling for it since he’s long gone. I have to say it was anything but. Donald Rumsfeld probably thought he would still be treated like the political rock star he was to the Beltway media during the Bush years. You remember those press conferences? But something very strange happened. He didn’t get the Hannity fanboy treatment. Mitchell came out swinging from the beginning of the interview and immediately blamed the Bush administration for taking Gaddafi off the terrorist list since Libya is in the news now and then pummeled him on his aw shucks, I don’t know what you mean attitude to her questions about the lies which engulfed the Iraq war under his watch. She was dumbfounded when he said he didn’t know what ” stove-piping ” meant. You could see from her expression it really got her goat. (About the 6:30 mark in the video) Mitchell: One of the key factors was this source ‘Curveball.’ Rumsfeld: How do you know it was one of the key factors? Mitchell: From all the reports, from all of the writing, the point was that without Curveball, Colin Powell said without being told this man, a single source, that he would not have made the speech that he made to the United Nations. Rumsfeld. Right, and that’s fair. The intelligence people, these are honorable people – George Tenet and John McLaughlin – Mitchell: And all them in the Pentagon in your Office of Special Plans. Rumsfeld: They had nothing to do with it. They were not intelligence gatherers. They did not have anything to do with Curveball at all. It would be a mistake to connect them. The people, the intelligence community gathered information from all kinds of people. Curveball was one of hundreds I’m sure. I’m not in the intelligence business so I can’t say precisely – Mitchell: You actually created for the first time a special unit, this Office of Special Plans. It has been described as an intelligence – Rumsfeld: The policy office created it. Mitchell: On your order. Rumsfeld: Not on my orders at all. I was advised they did that and there was nothing wrong with that. There were a handful of people in there, 2 or 3 people, interpreting intelligence. They weren’t creating it, they weren’t gathering it. And I think the implication of your question I think isn’t consistent with what I understand to be the facts. Mitchell: According to subsequent reports, Inspector General’s reports, that intelligence unit, that analysis unit in the Pentagon was stove-piping information – intelligence information. Rumsfeld: What does that mean? Stove-piping? Mitchell: Mr. Secretary, you know what stove-piping means. It was keeping intelligence information away from other units. Not permitting people in the CIA – Rumsfeld: Oh, not at all. Mitchell: – and not permitting Colin Powell to know all of the factors. Rumsfeld: That is not true. That is factually not true. Mitchell: Tyler Drumheller, the former CIA analyst who has written – Rumsfeld: Never heard of him, Tyler Drumfeller. But I do know is that when I heard about this office and what they were doing and they briefed me once – once is all as I recall, I said, you should brief George Tenet and they did. There was no secret about it – there was nothing mysterious. Mitchell: You were only briefed once? Rumsfeld: To my recollection. By this group. I was briefed every day by the CIA. She continued to hound him on key points of information that were crucial to the run-up to the Iraq war and then he played dumb again when she questioned him about his involvement with torpedoing Gen. Shinseki and trying to squelch others from speaking out about the war. She was well prepared for Donald and quizzed him over his frightful decision to disband the Iraqi army which resulted in a brutal civil war that cost many innocent Iraqi lives as well as our many of our troops. Mitchell: his replacement. Rumsfeld: I did not announce his successor a year before. That is a myth that’s been built up and many people have pointed out – Mitchell: were you trying to send a signal to undercut General Shinseki? Rumsfeld: I certainly was not. Mitchell: So that people would know they could not dissent about what some would argue – Rumsfeld: That’s absolute nonsense, Andrea. It just didn’t happen. Mitchell: What about the decision to disband the Iraqi army? Rumsfeld: What about it? Mitchell: Do you take responsibility for that? You seem to be implying that Jerry Bremer was responsible for that. It could not have happened without your concurrence though. Rumsfeld: You have a lot of conclusions that come from people not involved. I tried to write about it in an accurate way. I’ve got documentation on the website that supports it. The Iraqi army in large measure disbanded itself because you had something I think 11,000 Sunni generals. Mitchell: They were defections, but there was a decision made. Rumsfeld: Just a minute. And a group of Shia conscripts many of whom just went home. There’s no question but that the coalition provisional authority, Jerry Bremer, made an announcement and is it a wrong decision? I don’t think so. I think he probably, it’s – there’s arguments on both sides.. This interview is worth watching. I doubt anybody will attempt to question him like that again because he’ll be careful not to make himself vulnerable. He’s trying to repair his image with this book tour, but he’s discovering that maybe it’s not going to be such an easy sell to the Beltway crowd that once adored him. Andrea Mitchell certainly showed him no respect and I say Brava!

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If A Tree Falls In The Forest, Will Senator John McCain Hear It?

Credit Ansel Adams, US Government Felicity Barringer writes a fascinating article in the New York Times about the effect of noise on fauna in forests , and about recent attempts to lower the volume. The impact of noise on wildlife ranging from birds to whales to elk has been a growing focus of scientific study. Increasing evidence suggests that animals in natural settings modify their behavior, though sometimes only briefly, in response to human commotion.

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Arab League urged to condemn Gaddafi by angry protesters in Egypt

Demonstrators outside Arab League headquarters in Cairo accuse members of being out of touch Entrance to the Arab League headquarters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square is normally through a grand set of wrought-iron gates, which open onto a courtyard with fountains. But after a crowd of rowdy protesters blocked off the main door, reporters and delegates alike had to make to do with the back route instead – squeezing past the staff toilets and edging round a rusting portable building. Following two months of uprisings that have shifted the fulcrum of power in the Arab world away from the region’s ageing political elites and into the street, this new method of entry seemed not entirely inappropriate. “25 January marked the beginning of the age of democracy and transparency, the age of Arabs withdrawing their consent to be humiliated and patronised, the age when we decided to create a future for ourselves,” said Hakim Abdel Ali, a 32-year-old Libyan living in Egypt, and one of those demonstrating outside the building. He was referring to the date on which Egypt’s 18-day revolution erupted , toppling the 30-year rule of Hosni Mubarak and sending shockwaves across the region. “The men in there have to decide whose side they are on, this is their final chance,” added Ali. “Either they speak out now and order Gaddafi to fall, or they make themselves an irrelevancy forever.” In the street the demands of protesters were clear: the Arab League must unequivocally call on Gaddafi to stand down, or face expulsion. “They sit passively while Libya is burning, and they call themselves Arabs,” said Bassem Tarek, a 20-year-old Egyptian involved who wanted to express solidarity with Libya’s anti-regime uprising. “Many think that Moussa [the secretary general] is just a client of dictators, a spewer of lies,” added Abdel Rahman Ashraf, 19. “If he wants to prove us wrong then he has to come and talk to us here.” If the age of democracy and transparency has begun, news appears yet to have reached the Arab League’s largely greying coterie of permanent diplomats, who gathered for an emergency summit on the dramatic events unfolding across the border in Libya. Secretary general Amr Moussa made a short-lived effort to step outside and speak with protesters, but his words were quickly drowned out by chants of “Gaddafi is a butcher” and he was whisked away. Inside the graceful if rather dilapidated marble corridors of the headquarters, it was business as usual – with delegates tight-lipped, security guards ubiquitous, and journalists shut out of all deliberations. The press pack was allowed only one brief glimpse into the main hall, just as delegates were standing for a moment of silence to honour those killed in Libya – which the Iraqi representative described as “terrible bloodshed” and “unprecedented circumstances”. When the Arab League did made a decision, it was to suspend Libya from the organisation – but whether that will be enough to placate the youth on the streets remains unclear. Inside, the round table at the centre of the room was packed but for one conspicuously empty chair: that of Major Abdel-Moneim Al-Huni , the Libyan representative who has resigned his post in protest at Gaddafi’s violence. “The regime has failed miserably, and Gaddafi must leave,” said Al-Huni in a statement issued earlier. “The people have stated their final verdict which cannot be retracted; it is no longer acceptable for Gaddafi to continue another moment in power.” He went on to confirm he was stepping down from his role at the Arab League: “I declare to the international community, Arab world and every Libyan man and woman that I have resigned my post because it is dishonourable to serve a regime which kills its people and annihilates them in this inhumane manner.” Speaking just before the meeting, Amr Moussa – who is believed to be keen on challenging for the Egyptian presidency in upcoming elections – described the demands of Arab populations for development and political reform as legitimate and acknowledged this was a “pivotal stage of Arab history”. However, he offered no response to accusations that the 22-state Arab League is little more than a talking-shop, and went on to warn against those trying to “stir up sedition between sister states”. “They will now sit and talk for hours, because they have nothing else to do,” remarked one journalist with a long history of covering the institution. “These are crumbling old men completely out of touch with reality. I wish they would go to their graves instead of the brave people of Libya.” Around them demonstrators waved Egyptian, Tunisian and pre-Gaddafi tricolour Libyan flags, and sang “Egypt and Libya, on one hand”, and “Into Libya we march, martyrs in our millions”. The contrast in energy on each side of the gates was clear; whether Moussa and the Arab League can win round those Arabs disillusioned by the old political status quo and establish a new voice for itself remains to be seen. Arab and Middle East protests Egypt Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk

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As Heather already pointed out , WI Gov. Scott Walker’s budget fix bill also grants him the ability to sell off the state’s power plants with no bids. The Kochs are probably hoping that Wisconsin legislators may pass the rest of the bill in hopes of saving collective bargaining. Now, we can’t know for sure, but it’s a pretty good guess that the Kochs the ones who are apparently so confident they’re going to own the Wisconsin state-owned power plants, they’re already advertising to hire new plant managers! Energy client is looking for experienced Plant Managers for multiple power plants located in Wisconsin. You need 15+ years of operations & maintenance experience in a power plant environment. You should have at least 5 years of experience managing operations & maintenance teams in an operational power plant. The ideal candidate has experience in a coal fired power plant. Salary is commensurate with experience. For heaven’s sake, media types: Do your jobs!

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That's right, Rahm Emanuel will be Chicago's next mayor. The former White House chief of staff took 55 percent of the vote Tuesday, enough to avoid a runoff. By itself that would not be so noteworthy, but he was facing five challengers. The Chicago Tribune reported : In a city with its share of racial divisions, Emanuel appealed to voters across those lines. He won the predominantly white wards of his former congressional district on the North and Northwest sides. And the former chief of staff to President Barack Obama also scored substantial margins in predominantly African-American neighborhoods. “All I can say, you sure know how to make a guy feel at home,” Emanuel, who faced a high-profile legal challenge to his residency, told a packed room at a plumbers union hall on the Near West Side. “Because of the people of Chicago, this is the warmest place in America.” Emanuel will become Chicago's first Jewish mayor and 46th overall. He'll succeed Mayor Richard Daley, the city's longest-serving chief executive. Thoughts?

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Al Jazeera English broadcasts live from inside Libya

Hoda Abdel Hamid reports from the city of Tobruk, around 140km west of the border with Egypt. Egyptians on the road fleeing Libya told her that there had been fighting in towns along the way, and the situation remains chaotic. One man told her there had been a “bloodbath”. Mercenaries, some French-speaking and allegedly from Chad, roam during the night. Police have fled or are in hiding, citizens told Hamid, and they control the east up to the city of Benghazi.

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Defiant Gaddafi vows to ‘fight on’

Libya witnessed another day of chaos on Wednesday, as a defiant Muammar Gaddafi refused to step down in the face of widespread protests, calling instead for his supporters to “cleanse” the country “house by house”. Calling those who stand against him “rats” and “mercenaries”, he said during a televised address on Tuesday that he would fight to the last, and that he would rather die “a martyr” than quit office. On Wednesday, Franco Frattini, the Italian foreign minister, said that reports of 1000 people being killed in a violent anti-government crackdown on protests that has raged since February 17th were “credible”. Al Jazeera’s Lawrence Lee reports.

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Libya unrest raises oil concerns

This is the first time that the changes sweeping the Arab world have hit a major oil producer and there are now fears that the spike in oil prices could hurt the fragile global economy. While Libya only produces two per cent of world oil production, 85 per cent of that is sent to Europe. Al Jazeera’s Nick Spicer reports from Berlin.

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