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Birgilio Marin-Fuentes drove himself to an Oregon hospital early Thursday morning because he was coughing and couldn’t sleep, and he almost made it—but he crashed his car into a pillar and wall in the medical center parking garage. After 20 minutes, police found him and started CPR, as another…

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Ron Paul may have won the CPAC straw poll , but Young Americans for Freedom apparently doesn’t care. The conservative activist group booted Paul from its national advisory board over a disagreement on national security issues and a dispute regarding Paul’s anti-war activities, Politico reports. “It’s a sad day in American…

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On Friday we Egyptians celebrated. But today we

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Charlie Sheen might have wanted Kacey Jordan to babysit his kids, but probably not quite like this: The porn star is pregnant, she tells Sheen in a text that was magically leaked to TMZ. Jordan says she’s pretty sure the baby’s not Sheen’s, and TMZ notes that he used protection—…

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Egypt: Doubts cast on Turkish claims for model democracy

Supporters say Turkey’s ruling AKP party’s brand of political Islam could be role model for Muslim Brotherhood, but opponents warn of authoritarianism According to conventional wisdom, Turkey has become the template of our times: a large Muslim-majority country that has moved from military domination to civilian rule in a few years, spearheaded by a popular democratically elected government trumpeting its EU membership ambitions. If Egypt is seeking a path to help it navigate the transition from authoritarianism to democracy, the argument runs, then Turkey surely provides it. The once all-powerful Turkish armed forces – which have toppled four civilian governments in the past 50 years – have been cut down to size by the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) as it has sought to transform the national political landscape. Fuelling the AKP’s rise, according to its advocates, has been the emergence of a new religious, conservative middle class from Turkey’s Anatolian heartland, whose increasing affluence has undermined the economic power base of the army and other traditional secular pillars, such as the judiciary. Supporters depict the AKP, a party rooted in political Islam, as a modernising role model for other Middle East Islamist movements, such as Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, to reinvent themselves as democratic parties. That rosy view is challenged by opponents who believe the ruling party is driven by an authoritarianism that aims to subvert Turkey’s traditional secular constitution. Erdogan – Turkey’s prime minister – is a former radical Islamist who even in his supposedly new moderate incarnation has bitterly criticised Israel and fostered warm ties with Iran and its fiercely anti-western president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Some fear Turkey is turning its back on the west. The army, long a key component in Nato strategy, appears ever more defeated. Worse still are accusations that the assault on the armed forces has lurched into persecution. Hundreds of serving and retired officers have been arrested in connection with two separate but linked alleged plots to overthrow the AKP in military coups. In the latest development, police at the weekend arrested 162 officers charged with involvement in an alleged 2003 plot called “sledgehammer”, which aimed to topple the government after sowing chaos by bombing mosques and provoking war with Greece. The army denies the charges and has described the plan as a war-game exercise. Gareth Jenkins, an Istanbul-based specialist in Turkish security affairs, said Turkey provided no model for Egypt to emulate. “Turkey has been exchanging a military form of authoritarianism for civilian authoritarianism,” he said. “What we have seen in the last couple of years is blatant political persecution, suppression of the free press and people being thrown in jail without knowing what they are charged with. The police have been used as an organ of internal repression. Far from being a model, Turkey has been becoming more like Egypt.” Robert Tait is a senior correspondent with RFE/RL and former Istanbul correspondent for the Guardian Turkey Middle East Europe Muslim Brotherhood Egypt Robert Tait guardian.co.uk

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Uncle Sam’s wallet is so empty, it’s enough to make John Boehner cry: “We’re broke,” he told Meet the Press today. “What’s really dangerous is if we do nothing…We’re going to deal with the entitlement problem.” Furthermore, with Tea Partiers in the mix, “there’s no limit to the amount…

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The women of Italy have had it up to here with Silvio Berlusconi’s never-ending antics, and they’re flooding city streets all over Italy to show it. “Women are offended. The image of our country that Berlusconi is presenting to the world is just unbearable,” says one protester. Reuters estimates that…

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Gazans hope for free border

The fall of the regime in Egypt has raised hopes in the Gaza Strip, as Palestinians look for an easing of restrictions at the border. Before Egypt’s mass demonstrations began, it would allow up to 500 Gazans a day to enter Egypt. But only patients, foreign passport holders and people who had special co-ordination with Egyptian intelligence. The Rafah crossing has been closed for the last few weeks and patients can not get out of Gaza for treatment. Al Jazeera’s Nicole Johnston reports from Gaza

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Russell Brand bounded across the Atlantic to host Saturday Night Live last night, and not everyone is glad he made the trip. Some reactions from around the blogosphere: Brand’s presence “(begat) a gaggle of English-themed content, and not one but two period sketches. (Sort of.) We just can’t get…

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Tutankhamun statues among priceless items stolen from Cairo museum

Egyptian minister says thieves targeted most-valuable artefacts after breaking in through roof and descending by ropes Thieves have stolen 18 priceless artefacts from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, including two gilded statues of King Tutankhamun, during the political unrest. Zahi Hawass, the antiquities minister, said the losses were discovered during an inventory of the museum after the protests died down. Among missing items are a statue of Tutankhamun being carried by a goddess and another of him harpooning. Also stolen is a limestone statue of the pharaoh Akhenaten holding an offering table, a statue of Nefertiti making offerings and several other stone and wooden artefacts. Hawass said that an investigation is underway and that the “police and army plan to follow up with the criminals already in custody”. The museum is on the edge of Tahrir square, the heart of three weeks of protests that brought down the president, Hosni Mubarak. It was raided on 28

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