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The once-untouchable notion of teacher tenure might be in danger around the country, reports the New York Times . Republican governors in five states are moving to either abolish or water down long-held laws that make it all but impossible to fire even poor-performing teachers. What’s more, they have solid chances…

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Egypt revolt has Iran in a spin | Simon Tisdall

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s regime has finally decided what line – and what credit – to take for the demonstrators’ actions Iranian officials and clerics are insisting Egypt’s insurrection, and similar popular revolts across the Arab world, are inspired by Islamist political ideology and have their origin in the 1979 Iranian revolution that overthrew the late Shah. But opposition leaders and independent analysts take a very different view. They say the common rallying cause is democracy, not Islamism – and that the Tehran regime is increasingly fearful of an Egypt-style uprising there. After days of nervous hesitation, the Islamic Republic appeared today to have decided what line to take. A statement signed by 214 MPs pledged strong “spiritual” support for Egyptians in opposing “the tyranny of their rulers”. It also condemned “efforts by certain western countries [code for Britain and the US] as well as the Zionist regime [Israel] to exhaust the uprising and separate it from Islamic values". Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who ordered a violent crackdown on Iran's pro-democracy protesters in 2009, claimed on his webpage to have predicted and personally encouraged Egypt's pro-democracy revolt. He offered no explanation for this apparent contradiction. President Hosni Mubarak's persecution of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's biggest Islamist party, and his collusion with the US and Israel, were his undoing, Khamenei suggested. In a webpage entry entitled Supreme Leader's View Of Egypt, quoted by Shayan Ghajar on InsideIran.org, Khamenei said the Brotherhood's struggle "is just like the yell that the Iranian nation let out against America and against global arrogance and tyranny" in 1979. Other Iranian officials are singing the same tune. Major-General Yahya Rahim Safavi, Khamenei's military adviser, told Fars news agency that Mubarak would share the same fate as the shah, vanquished by the forces of Islamist revolution. And in case western governments missed the point, pro-regime cleric Ayatollah Seyyed Ahmad Khatami rammed it home. The uprisings heralded "an Islamic Middle East" based on religion and religious democracy, he said. Iranian-style Islamist governance, not US-style liberal democracy, was the coming model. This official Iranian interpretation of events is open to challenge, to put it mildly. Evidence so far from the streets of Cairo and Tunis suggests Islamist groups have followed, rather than led the popular mood. Egypt's protesters say they are united in opposition to Mubarak, as a symbol of injustice, and are protesting against a lack of democratic freedoms, poverty, a dearth of economic opportunity, and official corruption. Islam is not much mentioned. Purists point out the Iranian revolution was not, initially, Islamist-led. It, too, was intrinsically a response to poor governance. This is why, paradoxically, Mir Hossein Mousavi, the Iranian opposition leader who many believe defeated Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the 2009 presidential election, is also lauding events in Egypt – and claiming credit. "What we are witnessing in the streets of Tunis, Sana'a, Cairo, Alexandria and Suez take their origins from the millions-strong protests in Tehran in 2009," Mousavi said on his Persian-language website, Kalemeh.com. Shayan Ghajar said Iran's attempts to spin the story revealed "more about the Islamic Republic's anxiety than the actual facts on the ground in Cairo". Western governments will have differing assessments of the Islamist role in events in Egypt. But Iran's mullahs have at least one firm if unlikely ally in their corner: Israel. Step forward Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu. "Our real fear," Netanyahu said this week, was that Egypt and other destabilised Arab governments could become "repressive regimes of radical Islam". Egypt Iran Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Middle East Protest Islam Mir Hossein Mousavi Israel Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk

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James Franco is everywhere , doing seemingly everything—hosting the Oscars, starring in movies, acting on General Hospital , working on a PhD, and now this … He’s developing a class at Columbia College Hollywood where the course material is— himself, MovieLine reports. It’s really a class to teach editing, but the principle…

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Google spent more on lobbying last year than Apple, Facebook, and Yahoo combined, dropping a total of $5.16 million—or 29% more than the year before, according to its Lobbying Disclosure Act Database filing. The jump is pretty understandable, given that net neutrality and online privacy were major issues,…

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The west’s itch to meddle is no help. Leave Egypt alone  | Simon Jenkins

Our sole contribution to Muslim states wrestling with self-determination is plunging their neighbours into bloodbath and chaos We are hypocrites. We cheer on the brave Tunisians and Egyptians as they assert the revolutionary power of the street. Hands off, we cry. Let them do it their way. It has taken a long time, but let the people get the credit and be strengthened thereby. We gave no such licence to the Iraqis or Afghans. We presumed it was our job to dictate how they should be governed. We accused their leaders of crimes and decided to punish them all, massacring thousands. We declared a “freedom agenda”, and bombed them to bits. Hosni Mubarak of Egypt is another Saddam Hussein, a secular dictator ruling a Muslim country with a rod of iron through a kleptocracy of cronies. Less wealthy than Saddam, he had to rely on American support, but he was only a little more subtle in his ruthlessness. We are told that there were sound strategic reasons for supporting Mubarak – as there once were for supporting the Ba’athists, Assad of Syria and Saddam himself. There were similar reasons for backing the Ben Ali dynasty in Tunisia and “Britain’s good friend”, the outrageous Colonel Gaddafi of Libya. All offered a supposed bulwark against Muslim extremism, a monster of which Americans and Britons are told to show a pathological, all-consuming and costly terror. Now, apparently, that no longer applies to Egypt. In reality there is no such thing as an ethical foreign policy. There is something philosophical called ethics and something pragmatic called foreign policy. The art of diplomacy lies in navigating between them. The Blair-Bush “crusade for democracy” failed to do so. It was motivated by the most dangerous thing in politics, religious fervour. What is happening in Egypt is plainly exhilarating to any lover of civil liberty. So too was Georgia’s rose revolution, Ukraine’s orange revolution, Burma’s saffron revolution, Iran’s green revolution and Tunisia’s jasmine revolution. Few people scanning the pastel shades of designer Trotskyism will remember which were successful and which not, but they made great television. In each of these cases people burst out in visceral opposition to dictatorship. Driven beyond endurance, they took the last option available to autonomous individuals and marched down the street. The outcome depended on the security and self-confidence of the regime and its command of the army. It rarely depended on the approval or assistance of outsiders. Indeed the most effective weapon deployed against an uprising in a moment of national crisis is to call it a tool of foreign interests. This was certainly the case in Iran. To western eyes, watching revolutions is re-enacting our own democratic origins. They remind us, sometimes smugly, that much of the world has yet to find the path to free elections, free speech and freedom of assembly. But they are also the political equivalents of earthquake or flood. Surely these people need our advice, our aid, at least our running commentary. The itch to intervene becomes irresistible. Britain, with a history of ineptitude in handling Egypt, offered its pennyworth at the weekend . The Foreign Office said: “We don’t want to see Egypt fall into the hands of extremists … We want an orderly transition to free and fair elections, and a greater freedom and democracy in Egypt.” Who cares what Britain “wants” in Egypt? Egypt is not Britain’s responsibility any more, insofar as it ever was. The US is in an equally absurd position . Having intervened for three decades, backing Mubarak with $1.5bn a year for armed forces alone, Washington has slithered from declaring him a “force for stability in the region” to “demanding an orderly transition of power”. The message to all allies is that an American friend in need is a friend who will vanish at the first sign of

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Omar Suleiman, Hosni Mubarak’s intelligence chief, pulls the strings

Discreet spymaster who faces scrutiny as he holds the key to the political future of the Arab world’s largest country Omar Suleiman, Hosni Mubarak’s intelligence chief and now his vice-president, is the keeper of Egypt’s secrets, a smooth behind-the-scenes operator who has been intimately involved in the most sensitive issues of national security and foreign policy for close to 20 years. As mass protests continued in Cairo and elsewhere, this discreet spymaster faced intense scrutiny both at home and abroad as he holds the key to the political future of the Arab world’s largest country. Famously loyal to Mubarak, Suleiman looks likely to determine his fate. Late on Monday he went on TV to announce that he had been ordered by the president to tackle “constitutional and legislative reforms” and, crucially, to include opposition parties in the process. That looked like an attempt to defuse the crisis by starting a dialogue it is hoped will ensure the survival of the regime. Suleiman’s appointment as vice-president on Saturday carried two significant messages: for the first time since coming to power in 1981 Mubarak had decided on a successor, squashing speculation it would be his son Gamal; and that successor has the full confidence of the military. Suleiman, 74, is bald and mustachioed and despite his military bearing has a penchant for dark suits and striped ties. Acquaintances remark on his exquisite manners – as well as a taste for good cigars supplied by ever-attentive aides. “Suleiman is an imposing man,” recalls former British ambassador David Blatherwick. “He’s pretty wily, very polished and extremely intelligent. People are scared of him, for obvious reasons.” In 1995, two years after taking over Egypt’s General Intelligence Service (the mukhabarat ), he saved Mubarak’s life during an assassination attempt in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, having insisted his boss travel in an armoured car. He also played a key role in defeating the insurrection mounted by armed groups such as Islamic Jihad, some of whose members went on to found al-Qaida. In the mid-1990s he is said to have worked with the CIA on handing over wanted militants, a practice that continued as “extraordinary rendition” after the 9/11 attacks. For 30 years before that Suleiman served in the army, fighting in Yemen and in the 1967 and 1973 wars against Israel, rising to be director of military intelligence. He was trained in the Soviet Union — and later on in the US. He believes fervently in the military and its view of Egypt’s core national interests. This consummate insider is “the second most powerful man after Mubarak”, in the words of commentator Hisham Kassem. “Suleiman is a decent man, not a thug,” one old acquaintance says. “He’s very pragmatic, a subtle and smart guy. I don’t think he has personal ambition other than to try to hand on the underpinnings of the regime to a worthy recipient.” In recent years one of Suleiman’s biggest preoccupations has been dealing with the volatile Palestinian file, mediating between the western-backed Fatah movement and the Islamists of Hamas – a group with special resonance in Egypt because of its control of the Gaza Strip and its links to the banned Muslim Brotherhood, which he is said to loathe. The Israelis trust him, not least because of his open line to the president. “Suleiman doesn’t pull the strings in Egypt,” a well-placed source told Ha’aretz. “He pulls the ropes.” He has also been involved in the tangled affairs of Sudan and has mediated between rebels and the government in Yemen. The US and other western governments still see him as a safe pair of hands, and are now in intensive contact with him and other top military men as Egypt’s future hangs in the balance. The turbulent events of the last 10 days have thrust the spy chief into unaccustomed limelight – and the challenge of a lifetime of dedicated service. Suleiman is one of a rare group of Egyptian officials who hold both a military rank (lieutenant general) and a civilian office as a minister. Like other members of the military top brass, he is profoundly hostile to the Muslim Brotherhood, who he has described as “liars who only understand force”. But the political manoeuvring to manage the crisis will almost certainly involve dealing with them as the largest opposition group in the country. “Suleiman never had a role in national politics before,” warns a former colleague, “though he would have been consulted. “The question now is how he will manage in this new situation.” Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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The protesters who rallied outside Charles and David Koch’s latest conservative pow-wow over the weekend were out of line, the LA Times argues in an editorial today. “We’re not sure the marchers were quite clear on the concepts of democracy and free speech,” the paper opines. Listen to their complaints…

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New Kids on the Block’s Jonathan Knight joined Ricky Martin and Lance Bass in the club of “Former Boy-Band Heartthrobs Who Are Gay.” And that has Mary Elizabeth Williams pondering why girls are drawn to boys who croon “Be My Girl”—and don’t mean it. After all, when these former…

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Democrats have picked Charlotte, NC, as the site of the 2012 convention, which the AP sees as a signal that the Obama campaign intends to fight hard to retain the gains it made in traditional GOP territory in 2008. Obama became the first Democrat to take the state since 1976,…

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Foreign Office offers Britons charter flight out of Egypt – at £300 a head

William Hague tells parliament he will send more flights if needs be as Egypt witnesses biggest anti-government protests so far Britain will send a charter flight to Cairo to bring home British nationals, the foreign secretary announced today, but passengers will have to pay to use the service. Speaking in parliament, William Hague said he had arranged for an aircraft to be sent to supplement commercial travel. The Foreign Office later said it would cost around £300 for a seat on the flight. Days of protests in Egypt have culminated in up to a million people taking to the streets today, the largest demonstration so far against President Hosni Mubarak’s regime. “We have been advising people in Cairo or Alexandria or Suez to leave if they can, if they don’t have any pressing reason to remain,” Hague told parliament . The foreign secretary said the “vast majority” of those seeking to leave have been able to do so on commercial flights, but he added: “I have decided to send a charter flight to Cairo tomorrow, to allow those who wish to leave to do so. I will send further flights if we see a need to do so.” Although the flight will leave the UK tomorrow, it will not return from Cairo until Thursday, a spokeswoman for the Foreign Office said. Departure and arrival times had not been finalised yet. The foreign office took to Twitter and its website to warn that there would be a £300 charge for using the charter flight. Passengers will be able to pay at the airport, it said. The Foreign Office has advised against all but essential travel to Cairo, Alexandria, Luxor and Suez. Those wishing to travel on the Foreign Office’s charter flight should register by calling 020 7008 8765. Egypt Middle East Egypt Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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