Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

February 28, 2011

Scapegoating Social Spending

The US continues it's race to the bottom.

February 26, 2011

Chomsky: Only a Massive Uprising Will Change Our Politics

PatriotsImage by Rickydavid via Flickr
What has to be done is what's happening in Madison, or Tahrir Square. If there's mass popular opposition, any political leader is going to have to respond.
Reminds me of another great US Patriot who had a checkered and controversial history.

A little rebellion now and then ... is a medicine necessary for the sound health of government.... The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)

See the whole interview here:

Part two:



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February 23, 2011

Far right's vision would have an America with a tiny elite corporate community and the wealthy ruling a vast working class with no social services

MADISON, WI - FEBRUARY 22: Protestors demonstr...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Keith Ellison, one of my heroes these days, speaks the unadulterated truth. Surprising to see this from any politician in public.
Ellison said Gov. Scott Walker, who says the collective bargaining changes must be made to help resolve the state's budget deficit, is showing signs usually associated with a dictator: "He won't negotiate; that's not the spirit of a public servant. He's being extreme, radical and reckless, and he's going to fail."
The conference call was arranged by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which works to elect progressive candidates.
Adam Green, the group's co-founder, said the Wisconsin battle has become a "proxy for what Americans are feeling nationally, massive tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy, followed by cuts to the middle class."
He said rallies will be held Saturday, at noon local time, in all 50 state Capitols, to support the Wisconsin state workers.
Ellison said that the far right's vision — which Walker is pushing in Wisconsin — would have an America with a tiny elite corporate community and the wealthy ruling a vast working class, with no social services. He said it would be similar to Nigeria or Pakistan.

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February 10, 2011

Wael Ghonim vs. Barack Obama: Change we Can Believe in, Yes we Can

Juan Cole eviscerates Obama comparing him dis-favorably to the hero of the Egyptian revolution. Follow the link and read. Open your eyes to the fact that the US is no longer the beacon of freedom. I'm beginning to think that nothing short of bringing it to the streets in the US will make a difference.
It is no secret that President Barack Obama has been in some regards a profound disappointment to the American Left, and his erratic and often disgraceful performance on the Egypt crisis exemplifies his faults in this regard. (Tom Engelhardt puts it best regarding the administration: “It has shown itself to be weak, visibly fearful, at a loss for what to do, and always several steps behind developing events.”) Obama just seems to lack empathy with the little people and is unwilling to buck the rich and powerful, even though they all opposed his run for the presidency.

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February 06, 2011

Muslim Brotherhood Join Egypt Talks as Hamas Begins to Shake

Egyptian Intelligence Director Omar Suleiman a...Image via Wikipedia
I never thought I'd see this day.
Members of the Muslim Brotherhood joined other opposition groups meeting with Vice President Omar Suleiman on Sunday in what seemed a significant departure in the nation’s uprising and political history.
The Brotherhood is an outlawed Islamist organization often depicted by the authorities as committed to the overthrow of the secular order in the heart of the Middle East. Official attitudes toward it here have swung between outright repression and reluctant tolerance. But it has remained Egypt’s biggest opposition force against the autocratic rule of President Hosni Mubarak.
After the meeting had started, The Associated Press said that talks included some of the top issues for the opposition — including freedom of the press and the release of those detained since anti-government protests started — as well as agreement to begin setting up a structure to study amending the country’s constitution.
A spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood, Gamal Nassar, said the huge and sometimes violent demonstrations that have paralyzed Cairo for 13 days, reverberating around the Middle East, would continue “until the political path can have a role in achieving the aspirations of the protesters” — an apparent reference to their goal of removing Mr. Mubarak.
Mr. Nassar said mediators had brokered the encounter with Mr. Suleiman, who Saturday received public backing from the Obama administration and other Western governments that confirmed him as the West’s choice to guide any transfer of power.
“The brothers decided to enter a round of dialogue to determine how serious the officials are achieving the demands of the people,” Mr. Nassar said. “The regime keeps saying we’re open to dialogue and the people are the ones refusing, so the Brotherhood decided to examine the situation from all different sides.”

So do you suppose Israel will talk to Hamas? er...  Maybe Hamas is in trouble now.

Ripple effects of the Egyptian uprising are now spreading to Gaza, where some groups are planning a new rally next week. Moves by some Gazans to mimic protesters in Egypt, Tunisia and Yemen by taking to the streets are making the Hamas government nervous.
Government officials sponsored an official rally in solidarity with the Egyptian protesters earlier, but when a small group of journalists and bloggers organized their own, six women and eight men were arrested. Two of the women, known for their outspoken criticism of the regime, were beaten up.

And with Al Jazeera, bombed by US plans in Iraq, banned at various times by the Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Egyptian, Palestinian Authority, I suspect they may be the future of journalism and one of the few places you can get news without the spin of the plutocracy.
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood has cast doubt on the government's willingness to follow through on promised reforms, following talks with authorities aimed at ending the country's political crisis.
One of the group's leaders told Al Jazeera that the Muslim Brotherhood does not trust the government to make its proposed changes - a development that came as pro-democracy rallies continued across the country on Sunday - the 13th day of protests in Egypt.
Tens of thousands of protesters observed a "day of the martyrs" in Cairo's Tahrir Square - the focal point of the protests - calling for an end to Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.
Al Jazeera correspondent Ayman Mohyeldin, who was at the square, was arrested by the military on Sunday afternoon, prompting calls from the channel and international media-rights groups for his release. He was released nine hours later.
The army fired tracer rounds into the air at a cordon they had set up near the Egyptian Museum, an Al Jazeera correspondent in the square reported late on Sunday evening. An army tank also moved towards the 6th of October bridge, where protesters often gather, he said.
Both Muslims and Christians held prayers at the square for the victims of the uprising.


The world has changed a lot in the past couple weeks. Muslims were killing Coptic Christians a couple weeks ago.


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