Tonight We are ALL Egyptians 20110202 (Ich bin ein Berliner)

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

I know that many, many featured writers and other contributors have written about this subject, but I think that I have a bit of a different take on this subject than most have.  I know that there are real, difficult, important, and political implications in this entire affair.  I know that the ravers on the right (interesting, Glenn Beck was not on air tonight) and on the left have their version of things.

My outlook on the entire subject is from the perspective of the people who are either participating or affected by what looks like to be the beginning of a revolution proper in Egypt.  A revolution that is fueled by many factors, including generations of oppression, a lousy economy (the wealth difference betwixt the top and everyone else is much worse there than in the United States), suppression of opinion, and the dreaded “knock at the door in the wee hours” are but a few.  Please bear with me for a few moments.

Egypt has an extremely long heritage, millennium after millennium.  Dang it, the Egyptians were amongst the first civilizations in what has become known as Western Civilization.  As a rich culture, there were those who envied their wealth and finally subjugated them, several times as a matter of fact.  But that is not the thrust of this thesis.

The thrust of this thesis is that the “real” protesters appear to be what we would call “people on the street”, just regular folks who finally had had enough.  Where I grew up, people would say that they finally “just got a can full of it.”  The “can” in the cliche was a chamber pot, and everyone knows what went in those!

The reason that I say that we are all Egyptians now is the the United States is intimately involved with the politics of modern Egypt.  Here is a very brief history.

Nasser, the Egyptian strongman when I was little, was very much under the influence of the Soviet Union.  The USSR gave Egypt lots of money for “progress”, mainly lining the pockets of the Egyptian ruling class, but also doing some public works, like the Aswan Dam.  Now, it is a matter of debate whether this was a fundamentally good idea, but it did employ a lot of local folks.  Nasser died, and finally the Egyptian Army installed a new strongman, Sadat.  Sadat saw that the money was more reliable coming from the United States, and broke with the Soviets.

Sadat came to Washington and met with the President of the United States (Jimmy Carter) and with his Israeli counterpart and signed a peace treaty with Israel.  What most people do not realize was that part of the deal was massive monetary aid both to Egypt and Israel from the United States, a practice that continues to this day.  We are talking over a billion and a half dollars in direct aide to both nations, and lots more sort of off of the books.  The power of money to quell bad feelings is always astonishing to me.

Anyway, Sadat’s personal bodyguard force became compromised and one of them, as best as I can tell, shot him to death.  By that time the Egyptian Army was the strongest single force in the country, and they chose Mubarak to be the new President.  Because of the decades of experience of stuffing ballots from the Nasser and Sadat police states, Mubarak had little trouble getting reelected.  He always had over 98% in the final tallies, and obviously those kinds of numbers are bogus in any kind of legitimate election, unless it the the Pope or George Washington who is the top candidate.

So we bought and paid for Mubarak with our tax dollars.  That makes every taxpayer in the United States an Egyptian in a sense.  Ostensibly, that was to enhance the chances for peace in the Near East.  In reality, it was to keep Egypt from attacking Israel, since the Egyptian Army was the only real threat at the time, and the physiological benefit of the single most populous Arab nation seemed like a good idea.

Well, the curtain has been removed.  The reality is that most Egyptian citizens live in what we, in the United States, call crushing poverty, whilst the elites are rich.  The reality is that we, United States taxpayers, have sustained this system since Sadat.  The reality is that modern communication has led to a demonstration of the want for freedom in what are really disenfranchised masses.

Of course there are organized, powerful associations who are playing this situation like a game of chess.  The Muslim Brotherhood is often mentioned, but in my opinion they are bit players.  The real players are the United States, Mubarak himself, the Egyptian Army, Israel, Russia, the UK, and BIG OIL.

Now to get to the folks in the streets.  They, except for the paid Mubarak mercenaries, are pretty much like you and I are.  They want to be good providers to their families, and to give their children something just a little better than they received from theirs.  They all love their children, except for the minority of cruel folks in all cultures.  They all want their nation to be proud once again, and sell the products of her output, rather than be kept on what is essentially welfare provided by US, and I mean us, the United States.  By the way, almost all of this aid goes to the Army.

All they want, at least the overwhelming majority of them who are decent people, is to have a fair chance to have some decent representation in their governing body, a fair chance at finding gainful employment, and a fair chance of leaving a better life for their progeny.  Egypt is NOT a radical Islamic culture, although there is a fair chance that those who are would use this moment of disarray to attempt to make is so.  I am not too worried about that.

One of the few benefits that derives from our massive military aid is that almost without exception their top military officers have been trained in the United States.  Perhaps the training is not as important as the fact that they lived here for several years, and can see what benefits a relatively free society can offer.  I seriously doubt that Egypt will go the way that Iran did in 1979 (I am old enough to remember that well), because the psychology is very different.

I welcome any and all comments, and everyone that reads my work knows that I love to be corrected, debated, and challenged.

Once again, we paid for it.  So, tonight, we Americans are all Egyptians.

Warmest regards,

Doc

Mr. Grumpy Vs. The Snow Plow Driver

(10 am, – promoted by ek hornbeck)

It’s pretty obvious who wins this battle.

The moral to the story is: Don’t piss off a Snow Plow Truck Driver.  So feel free to skip the rest of this post.  What follows is all of the useless details that make the story extra funny to me and perhaps my family.

The story starts three days ago at about six o’clock in the evening.  Our land line rang and the caller ID said it was city hall.  Because none of us owe city hall any money, we figured it was safe to answer.  It was a robocall from our newly elected small town mayor.  We call him Mayor NoNeck Jr. due to the physical deformities caused by his steroid use while he was in high school.  (We feel Mayor NoNeck Jr. is a kinder nickname than the one for his other steroid induced deformity.) It’s kind of tough to blame the poor kid for juicing.  His father, a known juicer himself, has been the high school football coach for the last twenty some years.

As part of the new reverse 911 system the young Mayor NoNeck was calling to inform us that he had declared a snow emergency and that there was a parking ban.  No parking on the streets of our tiny town for the next 48 hours.

We were expecting three to six inches of snow overnight followed by rain, followed by sleet, followed by freezing rain in the morning, followed by another three to six inches of snow overnight followed by rain, followed by sleet, followed by freezing rain the next morning.

What we found the first morning was only three inches of snow with a crusty top about a half inch thick.  It was raining but I figured it was better to lift three inches of slush twice than to try to lift six inches of icy slush once.  I should mention we do have one of those new modern snow blowers; however we’ve found that if the snow is actually heavy enough that you’d want to use it, that’s when it’s too heavy for the machine.  

I started shoveling the driveway where it meets the road.  Our home is on the side of a hill and the steep part of the driveway is towards the street.  I thought I’d get a head start by doing a quick first pass on the hard part before the apron was plowed in.  No plows had hit our road… yet.  

Our neighbor, Mr. Grumpy, had parked his new pickup on the road along the twenty feet between our two driveways.  It’s a nice truck. 4 wheel drive with all the bells and whistles.  Mr. Grumpy doesn’t talk to any of the neighbors because…well…he’s grumpy.  

When the Grumpy family purchased their property a few years ago they had their cousin, a Registered Land Surveyor, measure their yard out based on one monument at the bottom of the street. By their cousin’s measurements our 70 year old retaining wall was 5 feet over their property line at the back end of the yard and even with the line where the property meets the road. Within a week contractors were cutting down our trees and putting up a fence in our yard. It was your typical suburban neighborhood property line dispute. Our family hired a lawyer and our own land surveyor.  Our surveyor registered his map with city hall.  We went to court and won.  It turns that out our entire block has property lines that are at 89 degree angles and you need to use more than one monument to accurately draw the lines.  Had Mr. Grumpy hired a decent surveyor, rather than his cousin, maybe we wouldn’t know him as Mr. Grumpy.  

I was making good time. I had cleared about the first 10 feet of heavy slush in about twenty minutes and my boots weren’t even close to being soaked through yet.  I might have made it most of the way through the driveway with dry feet if I could keep up the pace.  It turns out I wouldn’t get that lucky.  I was distracted by an “incident”.

A snow plow appeared down the hill at the bottom our street and he was headed up our side of the road.  The plow guy made it half way up to Mr. Grumpy’s truck, stopped, and started on his horn.  The horn sounded like an air raid alert, loud enough to wake the dead. He hung on the horn for nearly ten minutes waiting for someone at Mr. Grumpy’s house to respond. The whole time he was looking at me as if it was MY truck blocking the way.  I walked to the end of the driveway with my back to Mr. Grumpy’s house, shrugged my shoulders at the plow driver and surreptitiously pointed towards the Grumpy’s.  

The plow guy got out of his truck, went to Grumpy’s front door, rang the bell and pounded on the door until someone finally answered.  He told them the pickup truck had to be moved and went back to his plow.  

He waited another 3 minutes and then started on the horn again.  By this time my family had joined me in the driveway worried I had fallen under the plow and other neighbors had come outside to see what all the commotion was about.  

After another minute of horn blowing, the plow guy had lost all patience.  He backed up his plow a half a car length, adjusted the angle of his blade, turned his wheels and headed forward pushing a half a block worth of snow straight into Mr. Grumpy’s driveway.  He backed up again and narrowly slid past the pickup and headed the rest of the way up the hill.  At the top of the block the plow guy turned around and headed back down the hill.  

By this time Mr. Grumpy was finally outside to move his pickup. He went to the end of his driveway and met the plow truck driver on his way back down the hill.  

The plow truck driver rolled down his window.  Words were exchanged. Among them: “Where am I supposed to move my truck?” followed by “It’s supposed to be in your driveway!” The rest of the words were swears.

The snow plow driver left and never returned to finish clearing our road.  Mr. Grumpy took his keys and ground his 4 wheel drive pickup through the three foot high snowbank into his driveway.  

Later while my family gathered in our kitchen to dry off and chuckle about Mr. Grumpy’s misfortune I remarked about how the snow plow driver looked a lot like our Mayor NoNeck Jr.  

Maybe he was a NoNeck cousin?

Maybe not all nepotism is bad.

A Warning To The US Government

(11 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

A revolution is coming – a revolution which will be peaceful if we are wise enough; compassionate if we care enough; successful if we are fortunate enough – but a revolution which is coming whether we will it or not. We can affect its character; we cannot alter its inevitability.” — Robert F. Kennedy



Posted to YouTube January 31, 2011 by user NewWorldKnowing

We are Anonymous – We are legion – We do not forgive – We do not forget – Expect us

–A n o n y m o u s

WikiLeaks Cable Viewer

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,…
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/blog/…
http://newsjunkiepost.com/2011/01/24/…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10D…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10T…
http://wikileaks.ch/reldate/2011-01-2…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/Egyptian-Military…
http://wikileaks.ch/Evidence-of-tortu…
http://wikileaks.ch/origin/106_0.html?1
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
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http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/01/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/01/10C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2009/07/09C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2009/07/09C…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2009/05/09C…
http://www.renesys.com/blog/2011/01/e…
http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2010/02/10D…

writing in the rAw: recommended reads

I’m really happy to be part of this writers’ alliance and the opportunity it affords to reconnect with some of my favorite bloggers. It feels good.

Here are some of the essays on our reading list, including birthday girl Diane G’s Groundhog’s Day post…

Photobucket

cometman describes Mohamed Bouazizi as a World Shaker, a man who had nothing and yet managed to change the course of history…

Mexican Culture Tour Ends In Super Bowl Tailgate for a couple of accidental tourists. Penned by Pinche Tejano

The GrandWazoo writes that this might be a good Time for Strange Bedfellows, politically speaking.

Most nights, Night Owl publishes his Overnight Caption Contest party… and it’s always a hoot!

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Bloody clashes rock Cairo as regime stands firm

by Samer al-Atrush, AFP

29 mins ago

CAIRO (AFP) – Partisans of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak stormed the Cairo stronghold of anti-regime protesters on Wednesday, sparking bloody clashes in which the government said three people were killed.

Washington, which has called for restraint since demonstrations broke out nine days ago, deplored the violence against “peaceful protesters” while UN chief Ban Ki-moon said the attacks on demonstrators were “unacceptable.”

The European Union added its voice to calls from US President Barack Obama for the transition from Mubarak’s three-decade-long rule to begin immediately after the veteran president announced late on Tuesday that he would not seek re-election in September.

2 Egypt’s Mubarak agrees to step down — but not yet

by Jailan Zayan, AFP

Tue Feb 1, 7:19 pm ET

CAIRO (AFP) – Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said on Tuesday he will not seek re-election in September but rejected demands that brought a million people on to the country’s streets demanding he quit immediately.

The veteran president’s announcement in a televised address drew angry jeers from demonstrators who again defied a curfew to spend the night in the capital’s Tahrir Square — epicentre of eight straight days of protests.

Mubarak’s insistence that he would remain at the helm to oversee the transition also fell far short of the demands of opposition groups that have set him a Friday deadline to quit to allow a clear break with his 30-year rule.

3 Egypt clashes turn deadly as Mubarak supporters storm Cairo rally

by Samer al-Atrush, AFP

Wed Feb 2, 1:26 pm ET

CAIRO (AFP) – Partisans of President Hosni Mubarak stormed a crowded anti-regime rally in central Cairo on Wednesday, sparking pandemonium in which at least 500 people were hurt and one killed, witnesses said.

The White House, which has called for restraint since demonstrations broke out nine days ago, deplored the violence against “peaceful protesters” while UN chief Ban Ki-moon said the attacks on demonstrators were “unacceptable.”

Supporters from both sides threw stones and battled with sticks and fists in Tahrir Square, the epicentre of nine days of protests, in the clashes that broke out early afternoon and were continuing after sunset.

4 Egypt troops fire warning shots as protesters clash

by Samer al-Atrush Samer, AFP

Wed Feb 2, 10:14 am ET

CAIRO (AFP) – Egyptian troops fired warning shots at the main rally against President Hosni Mubararak in central Cairo on Wednesday in a bid to end clashes with regime supporters and the protesters reacted jubilantly, an AFP correspondent reported.

“The army and the people hand in hand,” the crowd shouted after dozens were injured in running battles between pro and anti-Mubarak demonstrators on Cairo’s central Tahrir Square.

The army has positioned its tanks and troops around the square but this is thought to be the first time they have opened fire since they were deployed on Friday and police vanished from the capital’s streets.

5 Chaos as pro-, anti-Mubarak protesters clash

by Samer al-Atrush, AFP

Wed Feb 2, 9:30 am ET

CAIRO (AFP) – Supporters of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak clashed violently with opposition protesters on Wednesday after storming their rally in central Cairo, with dozens hurt, AFP correspondents and witnesses said.

Partisans from both sides threw stones and set on each other with sticks and fists in Tahrir Square, the epicentre of anti-regime demonstrations, a day after the embattled president rejected demands to step down and vowed to stay on to the end of his term.

Fighting took place around army tanks deployed in the square, with stones bouncing off the armour, an AFP reporter said, adding that at least 10 people were injured in the first fighting.

6 Under-fire Yemen leader pledges no life term

by Hammoud Mounassar, AFP

45 mins ago

SANAA (AFP) – Yemen’s Ali Abdullah Saleh, under opposition pressure to stand down, said on Wednesday he will freeze plans to change the constitution that would have enabled him to remain president for life.

On the eve of a “day of rage” called by civil society and opposition leaders, Saleh told parliament he had also put off controversial plans to hold elections in April without a promised dialogue on reform, and appealed for an end to street protests.

“I will not extend my mandate and I am against hereditary rule,” said Saleh, who has headed the Arab world’s poorest nation for decades and whose term is due to end in 2013.

7 Spain signs ‘grand social pact’ for economic overhaul

by Daniel Silva, AFP

Wed Feb 2, 8:47 am ET

MADRID (AFP) – Spain’s government, unions and business leaders signed a “grand social pact” Wednesday on sweeping reforms to revive the economy and cut a sky-high jobless rate.

The deal is critical to Spain’s campaign to convince the markets that it can push through difficult labour reforms so as to speed up the economy, cut spending, and finance the debt.

Lurking in the minds of investors is the fear that Spain may fall into the debt quagmire that swamped Ireland and Greece, forcing it to request a bailout from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

8 Aussie swimmer Thorpe to return for 2012 Olympics

by Amy Coopes, AFP

Wed Feb 2, 11:16 am ET

SYDNEY (AFP) – Five-time Olympic freestyle champion Ian Thorpe announced his return to swimming for the 2012 London games, saying he could “actually taste” his desire to compete.

“Ian Thorpe is very much back,” said John Borghetti of sponsor Virgin Blue, opening a joint press conference with Thorpe on Wednesday.

“He registered this morning with the international drug testing register and he’s planning to win lots of gold at the 2012 Olympics.”

9 Mona Lisa model was a male say Italian researchers

by Eleanor Ide, AFP

2 hrs 51 mins ago

ROME (AFP) – Italian researchers who specialise in resolving art mysteries said Wednesday they have discovered the disputed identity of the model for Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa — and claimed he was a man.

Silvano Vinceti, chairman of the Italian national committee for cultural heritage, said the Florence-born Renaissance artist’s male apprentice and possible lover Salai was the main inspiration for the picture.

However his claim was immediately disputed by experts at the Louvre in Paris, where the painting is on display.

10 Murdoch launches iPad newspaper ‘The Daily’

by Charlotte Raab, AFP

2 hrs 37 mins ago

NEW YORK (AFP) – News Corp.’s Rupert Murdoch on Wednesday launched “The Daily,” a digital newspaper created for Apple’s iPad, in the latest move in his drive to get consumers to pay for news online.

“New times demand new journalism,” the 79-year-old News Corp. chairman and chief executive said as he took the wraps off the hotly awaited publication at a press event at the Guggenheim Museum in New York.

Murdoch, an enthusiastic fan of the iPad, said there will be no print version of The Daily and it will only be available on Apple’s touchscreen tablet computer for at least this year.

11 ‘Year of the Rabbit’ could be year of the love rat

by Joyce Woo, AFP

Wed Feb 2, 8:40 am ET

HONG KONG (AFP) – The Chinese calendar may be set to welcome in the ‘Year of the Rabbit’ but the new year could be auspicious for love cheats, astrologers predict, and those who want a younger partner.

China celebrates the first day of the Lunar New Year on Thursday and many Chinese people are keen on using the occasion to get a glimpse of what might be in store next year.

“The ‘Year of the Rabbit’ will see a lot of unusual romantic relationships,” Hong Kong astrologer Anthony Cheng told AFP. “Including extra-marital affairs and relationships with huge age differences.”

DocuDharma Digest

Regular Features-

Featured Essays for February 2, 2011-

DocuDharma

from firefly-dreaming

9 pm.

Regular Daily Features:

Essays Featured Sunday, January 30th:

Essays Featured Monday, January 31st:

Essays Featured Tuesday February 1st:

Essays Featured Wednesday February 2nd:

firefly-dreaming

The American Economy Is Back?

(4 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Stocks are up but housing prices are down. While Wall Streeters are cheering that “The U.S. economy is back!” with the Dow, S&P, and the NASDAQ on the upswing, the housing market continues to sink.

As economist Robert Reich notes the upswing in the stock market is only good if you’re member of the elite 1% that owns half the stock traded on the market and part of the 9% that owns another 40%.  Plus the recent turmoil in the Middle East has  foreign investors “pushing more foreign money into the relatively safe and reliable American equities market.”

The average American isn’t a member of that club. For the average American the biggest investment they have are their homes and the housing market is a rumbling bear. That’s the real story about the economy.

According to the Wall Street Journal’s latest quarterly survey of housing-market conditions, home prices continue to drop. They’ve dropped in all of the 28 major metropolitan areas, compared to a year earlier. And remember how awful things were in the housing market a year ago! In fact, the size of the year-to-year price declines is larger than the previous quarter’s in all but three of the markets surveyed.

Home prices have dropped most in cities already hard hit by the housing bust – Miami, Orlando, Atlanta, Chicago. But declines increased in other markets that had before escaped most of the downdraft, such as Seattle and Portland.

Reich also  points out that there are a record number of homeowners facing foreclosure, are seriously behind in their mortgage payments and the number of American’s owing more on their home than the home is worth is increasing. Many will just walk away which will further increase the foreclosures and weaken the housing market.

Low wages and unemployment also plague the economy. No, the American economy is not back, at least for the average American.

What’s In Taco Bell Beef?

Nothing unusual about Taco Bell’s meat, experts say

Ingredients what you’d expect from fast-food restaurants; no advertising rules broken

By Gregory Karp and Ellen Gabler, Tribune reporters

February 2, 2011

Soy lecithin (is) a byproduct of soy bean processing that is used as an emulsifier. That means it helps blend and bind substances that would otherwise separate like oil and water.



(A)utolyzed yeast extract. Made by breaking down yeast cells with salt, it’s a flavor-enhancing additive similar to monosodium glutamate (MSG), without the known side effects of MSG some people experience. It gives foods a full, savory, beeflike taste, Brewer said.

Maltodextrin is derived from starches, usually corn in the United States. It can be used as a sweetener and a thickener.

Isolated oat product is a binder, kind of like how an egg is used in homemade hamburgers or meatballs so they don’t fall apart in the pan. And soybean oil is used as a so-called anti-dusting agent, meaning it prevents finely ground, powdery ingredients from literally billowing into the air, as would happen if you clapped flour-coated hands.

Caramel color is caramelized sugar used to give the mixture a consistent brown appearance, Brewer said. Heating some of the ingredients, such as cocoa powder and chili pepper, causes them to change colors and potentially combine to turn the mixture a hue the customer wouldn’t like, she said. It doubles as a flavor component. Flavor experts identify caramel as a component flavor of beef that can be lost in processing, said Betsy Booren, director of scientific affairs for the American Meat Institute.

“Natural smoke flavor” can be added by burning wood chips, capturing the smoke and piping it into the oven where meat is cooking, similar to how you burn wood chips to give smoky flavor to meats on a backyard grill, Booren said. The same aroma can also be captured in a viscous liquid that can later be sprayed onto meat to give it a smoky flavor, the method probably used for ground beef, she said.

Punting the Pundits

“Punting the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Punting the Pundits”

Katrina vanden Heuvel: Science, yes. But don’t forget the poor

In a speech to the National Academy of Sciences shortly after taking office, President Obama, while faced with a teetering economy, vast numbers of unemployed and uninsured, and two seemingly endless wars, nonetheless paused to embrace a vision of the future. He spoke of President Lincoln’s commitment to science and innovation, even in the midst of great turmoil and uncertainty. . . . . .

So it came as no surprise, then, that a central theme of President Obama’s State of the Union address last week was the modern extension of Lincoln’s commitment to science and innovation and of his insistence that we add “the fuel of interest to the fire of genius.” . . . . .

But while Lincoln was committing himself to the advancement of science and innovation, he remained focused on ending the nation’s more immediate and immobilizing crises. President Obama must do the same; it is today’s job market, not tomorrow’s, and the victims of our historic chasm between great wealth and deep poverty, that deserve his primary focus now.

We live in a country with nearly 15 million unemployed, and many millions more underemployed. A country where job creation can barely keep pace with population growth, where for a staggering number of people, the pain of recession continues without any real relief. These are people who cannot wait for a decade-long economic transformation; they need relief – and jobs – now.

And yet, with more Americans now mired in poverty than at any time in the last 40 years – a record 47 million – the president did not include a single mention of poverty or the plight of the poor in his speech.

Laura Flanders: Killing the Internet Not Just a Problem in Egypt

As we speak, Egypt is struggling with a near-total Internet and communications shut-off, and not just Egyptians are grappling with the implications. Can the flow of social media information to an entire country simply be cut? Apparently, yes. And that’s not just an Egyptian concern.

It’s very much an American concern, in that a US-based company seems to be the maker of the Internet off-switch. As Tim Karr of Free Press notes, the US company Narus was founded in 1997 by Israeli security experts. Based in Sunnyvale California, Narus has devised what business fans call a “social media sleuth.”

As boosters put it: “Narus is the leader in real-time traffic intelligence for the protection and management of large IP networks…. Used by the world’s service providers and governments, Narus has developed and patented state-of-the art algorithms to detect network anomalies and manage unwanted IP traffic. Additionally, Narus has the unique ability to precision target and fully reconstruct all types of IP traffic, including e-mail, Web mail and instant messages.”

Maureen Dowd: Bye Bye, Mubarak

If only W. had waited for Twitter.

And Facebook. And WikiLeaks.

Revolutionary tools all, like the fax machine in the Soviet Union.

The ire in Tahrir Square is full of ironies, not the least of which is the American president who inspired such hope in the Middle East with his Cairo speech calling around this week to leaders in the region to stanch the uncontrolled surge of democracy in the Arab world.

Egyptians rose up at the greatest irony of all: Cleopatra’s Egypt was modern in ancient times and Mubarak’s was ancient in modern times. The cradle of civilization yearned for some civilization.

President George W. Bush meant well when he tried to start a domino effect of democracy in the Middle East and end the awful hypocrisy of America coddling autocratic rulers.

Amy GoodmanWhen Corporations Choose Despots Over Democracy

“People holding a sign ‘To: America. From: the Egyptian People. Stop supporting Mubarak. It’s over!” so tweeted my brave colleague, “Democracy Now!” senior producer Sharif Abdel Kouddous, from the streets of Cairo.

More than 2 million people rallied throughout Egypt on Tuesday, most of them crowded into Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Tahrir, which means liberation in Arabic, has become the epicenter of what appears to be a largely spontaneous, leaderless and peaceful revolution in this, the most populous nation in the Middle East. Defying a military curfew, this incredible uprising has been driven by young Egyptians, who compose a majority of the 80 million citizens. Twitter and Facebook, and SMS text messaging on cell phones, have helped this new generation to link up and organize, despite living under a U.S.-supported dictatorship for the past three decades. In response, the Mubarak regime, with the help of U.S. and European corporations, has shut down the Internet and curtailed cellular service, plunging Egypt into digital darkness. Despite the shutdown, as media activist and professor of communications C.W. Anderson told me, “people make revolutions, not technology.”

Greg Mitchell: Why Julian Assange Hates the ‘New York Time

As many know, Bill Keller, executive editor of the New York Times, wrote a piece for his paper’s Sunday magazine this past week (actually it’s just an extract from their new book) critical of Julian Assange, even mocking him. WikiLeaks (presumably Assange) quickly called it a smear in a tweet and there was much made of the falling out between the paper, one of WikiLeaks’ media partners since last June, and Assange. Yet today, on NPR, Keller gave credit to WikiLeaks for fueling the recent revolt in Tunisia (and by extension, Egypt).

So what sparked the rift with Assange?

For one thing, Assange was upset that the Times refused to link directly to the WikiLeaks site. Then there was a shaky profile last summer of Bradley Manning.

As it had promised, The New York Times, the day after the release of the megaleak on Iraq, published a lengthy profile of Assange on its front page, written by John Burns (left) and Ravi Somaiya, and including the interview with the WikiLeaks leader over lunch at an Ethiopian restaurant in London the previous week. During that sitdown, when asked about finances and other non-content issues, Assange had responded by calling such queries “facile,” “cretinous,” and from “kindergarten.”

Even though the same newspaper had collaborated with WikiLeaks on its most recent two megaleak packages, and was still covering the latest one heavily, this profile was notable for its harsh tone and criticism of Assange . . . .

Robert Dreyfuss: Iranium: ‘Wanna See Somethin’ REALLY Scary?’

Back in 1983, in the opening scene of the movie The Twilight Zone, as the echoes of the plaintive song “The Midnight Special” hung in the air, Dan Aykroyd turns to his passenger with an evil grin and says, “Wanna see something really scary?”-and then turns into a monster.

Yesterday, at the Heritage Foundation, a passel of neoconservative would-be Aykroyds showed up in a new film, Iranium, and one by one they each took a turn at scowling and saying, in effect, “Wanna hear something really scary?” As ominous music played in the background, Jim Woolsey, Harold Rhode, John Bolton, Michael Ledeen, Frank Gaffney and many others-including a cadaverous Bernard Lewis, doing what appeared to be an impression of Ernest Borgnine, tried their best to scare viewers about Iran’s supposed plot to destroy Israel, the United States and the rest of the civilized world.

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