Showing posts with label general. Show all posts
Showing posts with label general. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Army General in Sexual Assault Case to Plead Guilty to Lesser Charges

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RALEIGH, N.C. — The Army general prosecuted in the military’s most closely watched sexual assault case has agreed to plead guilty to lesser charges in exchange for the dismissal of accusations that he twice forced his longtime mistress into oral sex, threatened to kill her and her family, and performed consensual but “open and notorious sexual acts” with her in a parked car in Germany and on a hotel balcony in Tucson.


The new guilty pleas, outlined in a document obtained by The New York Times, are expected to be entered by Brig. Gen. Jeffrey A. Sinclair in military court at Fort Bragg, N.C., as soon as Monday morning. They would end an embarrassing two-year case against one of the military’s rising stars that was derailed this year after prosecutors concluded that their chief witness, a captain who was the general’s mistress, may have lied under oath at a pretrial hearing.


The pleas could still set up a showdown. Defense lawyers say military prosecutors may call the captain — as well as her parents, who are from Nebraska — as witnesses at a sentencing hearing this week, in an effort to persuade the military judge to impose tougher punishment on General Sinclair.


But that would allow the general’s defense team, led by a former federal prosecutor, to cross-examine the 34-year-old woman, a military intelligence officer, with what they assert are numerous instances of contradictions or deceptions discovered during a year of trial preparation. The woman already testified earlier this month about what she said were threats from General Sinclair and forced oral sex, but she was not cross-examined because the court-martial was postponed.


General Sinclair, 51 and married with two children, was deputy commander of the 82nd Airborne Division as well as of American forces in southern Afghanistan when he was recalled in 2012. Until then, he was seen within the military as an officer who could progress to division commander or higher.


The general’s punishment will not be determined until a judge finishes holding the sentencing hearing. Prosecutors are expected to argue for prison time, while defense lawyers will contend that officers in similar cases have not faced jail time and have been allowed to retire at reduced rank. As one example, they cite the recent case of an Army brigadier general who lost his command and paid a $ 5,000 fine but was allowed to keep his rank after it was determined he had assaulted a girlfriend and committed adultery.


Had prosecutors proceeded with the sexual assault charges, General Sinclair would have faced the possibility of life in prison and permanent registration as a sex offender if convicted.


Defense lawyers also say General Sinclair is willing to retire as a lieutenant colonel — two rungs below his current rank, and the last at which no illegal acts are alleged to have occurred — which would probably cost him more than $ 1 million in total retirement pay.


Though his former lover’s problematic testimony at a hearing in January shook the prosecution team, and led the chief military prosecutor to quit the case after his bosses rejected his advice to drop charges that relied solely on her testimony, Army officials say they do not question her account of the general’s forcing her to perform oral sex against her will.



But the prosecution suffered another major setback last week when the military judge, Col. James L. Pohl, ruled that the senior Army commander overseeing the case may have been wrongly influenced by political considerations when he rejected the general’s earlier offer to resolve the charges by pleading guilty to lesser counts.


The judge’s ruling suggested that he thought military officials, under political pressure, may have stuck with the toughest charges against General Sinclair despite qualms in an effort to show new resolve against sexual misconduct.


General Sinclair pleaded guilty earlier this month to charges that included adultery, requesting explicit photographs from female Army officers, possessing pornography in a combat theater and seeking a date with a lieutenant.


The new guilty pleas expected to be entered Monday include disobeying a commander’s order not to contact his mistress, using demeaning language to refer to female officers and using a curse word when confronted about that conduct, and misusing his government travel charge card.


Yet the one guilty plea that may have been the break that allowed the deal to come together is a charge of “maltreatment” that a member of the defense team said was of critical importance to the general’s accuser, a member of the defense team said.


In that portion of the plea document, General Sinclair admits that he treated the captain “in a manner which when viewed objectively under all the circumstances was unwarranted, unjustified and unnecessary and reasonably could have caused mental harm or suffering during the course of an ongoing inappropriate sexual relationship.”


The lead Army prosecutor on the case, who has not spoken publicly about the matter outside of the courtroom, did not respond to an emailed request for comment on Sunday.


In an interview, Richard L. Scheff, the lead defense lawyer, said the plea deal would allow General Sinclair to move on with his life.


“The Army finally agreed to what were the essential terms for us, taking off the table all the charges that required General Sinclair to be a registered sex offender,” he said.


Mr. Scheff added that he was preparing for the possibility that he would be able to cross-examine the accuser at the sentencing hearing this week.


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Army General in Sexual Assault Case to Plead Guilty to Lesser Charges

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

The Open Anti-Second Amendment Ideology of Obama’s Surgeon General Nominee Vivek Hallegere Murthy

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The Open Anti-Second Amendment Ideology of Obama’s Surgeon General Nominee Vivek Hallegere Murthy

Monday, March 10, 2014

Attorney General Eric Holder Being Investigated For Lying Under Oath

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Attorney General Eric Holder Being Investigated For Lying Under Oath

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Attorney General Eric Holder hospitalized


Christopher Bedford
Daily Caller
February 27, 2014


agholdAttorney General Eric Holder was hospitalized Thursday morning after experiencing “faintness and shortness of breath” at a meeting of senior Department of Justice staff.


“During his regular morning meeting with senior staff, the attorney general began experiencing symptoms including faintness and shortness of breath,” DOJ Director of Public Affairs Brian Fallon wrote in a statement.


“As a precaution, the attorney general was taken to MedStar Washington Hospital Center to undergo further evaluation. He is currently resting comfortably and in good condition. He is alert and conversing with his doctors. Additional information will be provided as it becomes available.”


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This article was posted: Thursday, February 27, 2014 at 12:36 pm










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Attorney General Eric Holder hospitalized

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Russian consul general, wife stabbed in Sudan: police

KHARTOUM (Reuters) – A Russian diplomat and his wife were stabbed in Sudan’s capital on Tuesday by a man enraged by the death of his brother in strife-torn Central African Republic, Khartoum police said.


Reuters: Top News



Russian consul general, wife stabbed in Sudan: police

Friday, January 3, 2014

General Mills to make GMO-free Cheerios after consumer, activist outcry


By End the Lie


(Image credit: mutantlog/Flickr)

(Image credit: mutantlog/Flickr)



After significant outcry from consumers and activist groups, General Mills has announced that they are now going to produce their famous Cheerios cereal free from genetically modified organisms (GMOs).


Read our latest articles: “Report: NSA developing quantum computer that could crack most encryption” and “Companies join forces to develop eye-tracking control system for video games


While the company says they never used genetically modified oats, they are now sourcing non-GMO pure cane sugar instead of beet sugar, according to spokesman Mike Siemienas, quoted by USA Today.


The company still maintains, however, that it has nothing to do with pressure from consumers or advocacy groups and nothing to do with safety.


Interestingly, the company said they have no plans to remove GMOs from their other cereals sold in the U.S., though most varieties of Cheerios sold in Europe are GMO-free.


“For our other (non-organic) cereals, the widespread use of GM seed in crops such as corn, soy, or beet sugar would make reliably moving to non-GM ingredients difficult, if not impossible,” the company said in a statement.


This move will also not affect anything except the original variety of Cheerios. That means that Honey Nut Cheerios, for instance, will still contain GMOs.


Even with the “Not Made With Genetically Modified Ingredients” label on the Cheerios box, General Mills notes that the product could still “contain trace amounts due to contamination in shipping or manufacturing,” the Wall Street Journal reports.


“Why change anything at all? It’s simple. We did it because we think consumers may embrace it,” wrote Tom Forsythe, vice president of Global Communications for General Mills, in a blog post.


Forsythe also pointed out in his post that the company stands by their position on GMOs.


“On safety – our number one priority – we find broad global consensus among food and safety regulatory bodies that approved GM ingredients are safe,” the company stated.


General Mills also contributed $ 1.1 million to fighting California’s Proposition 37, which would have put mandatory GMO labeling into law, as The Huffington Post points out.


While Cheerios will have the label pronouncing their lack of GM ingredients, other General Mills cereals will not have labels pointing out the presence of GMOs.


Inc.com points out that the move against GMOs appears to be gaining steam.


Grocery chain Whole Foods removed Chobani yogurt last month, reportedly because they want to make room for GMO-free products and/or clearly labeled products.


Connecticut also became the first state to pass a law requiring GMO labeling last month, though it won’t take effect until four other states pass labeling laws.


A high-profile GMO labeling law in Washington state was rejected in November, with 54.8 percent voting against the initiative.


Still, anti-GMO campaigners see this is as a major victory.


“Original Cheerios in its famous yellow box will now be non-GMO and this victory sends a message to all food companies that consumers are increasingly looking for non-GMO products and companies need to meet that demand,” said Todd Larsen, director of corporate responsibility for Green America.


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General Mills to make GMO-free Cheerios after consumer, activist outcry

Sunday, December 1, 2013

DREAM TOY STORE ATTORNEY GENERAL KKK INDIANA SAFE STREETS CIVIL RIGHTS ALLEN COUNTY SHERIFFS

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Friday, November 15, 2013

Where Does General Tso Chicken Actually Come From?



Part 2 of the TED Radio Hour episode Misconceptions.


About Jennifer 8. Lee’s Talk


Journalist Jennifer 8. Lee talks about her hunt for the origins of familiar Chinese-American dishes — exploring the hidden spots where these two cultures have combined to form a new cuisine.


About Jennifer 8. Lee




I really kind of came to understand that what I’d been experiencing in New York restaurants on the Upper West Side was not Chinese… at all.





Journalist Jennifer 8. Lee is the author of the book The Fortune Cookie Chronicles. Her fascination with American Chinese food led her to research and write the book, in which she solves some of the mysteries around this indigenous cuisine, including such questions as: “Who is General Tso and why are we eating his chicken?” and “Why do Jews eat Chinese food on Christmas?” She is currently working on a documentary based on her book.




Arts & Life



Where Does General Tso Chicken Actually Come From?

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Still counting: Republican holds 55-vote lead in attorney general race


HOLDING TIGHT: GOP state Sen. Mark Obenshain

HOLDING TIGHT: GOP state Sen. Mark Obenshain’s lead over Democrat Mark Herring has shrunk in the Virginia attorney general’s race — with more counting still ahead.



By Kenric Ward | Watchdog.org Virginia Bureau


ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Republican Mark Obenshain’s tenuous triple-digit lead in the Virginia attorney general race dwindled to just 55 votes, according to the latest count Sunday.


Democrat Mark Herring closed in after Fairfax County tabulated a batch of previously untallied absentee ballots from Democratic Rep. Jim Moran’s congressional district.


More results will be coming as electoral boards around the state complete their count of provisional ballots – votes cast by people who didn’t present legally permissible identification at the polls.


Initially, provisional voters had until noon Friday to appear before electoral boards to say why their ballots should count.


Fairfax — the Democrat-heavy county that is the state’s largest — extended its deadline for appeals until 1 p.m. Tuesday, after just over 20 people out of 493 provisional voters appeared, the Washington Post reported.


Once the statewide vote is certified on Nov. 25, a statewide recount will be conducted in December.


The AG contest is the Republican Party’s last hope to hold a statewide executive office, having lost the governorship and lieutenant governor’s office. Democrats occupy both U.S. Senate seats.


At midnight on election night, Obsenshain, a state senator from Harrisonburg, held a 7,000-vote lead. An hour later, his lead over fellow state Sen. Herring, D-Leesburg, had shrunk to 700.


In percentage terms, both candidates were tied at 49.88 percent Sunday. More than 2.21 million votes were cast in the race.


See Watchdog’s earlier story here.


Kenric Ward is chief of the Virginia Bureau. Contact him at kenric@watchdogvirginia.org or at (571) 319-9824. @Kenricward



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Still counting: Republican holds 55-vote lead in attorney general race

Still counting: Republican holds 55-vote lead in attorney general race

Still counting: Republican holds 55-vote lead in attorney general race
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/e1287__nsa__obenshain_headshot-200x300.jpg


HOLDING TIGHT: GOP state Sen. Mark Obenshain

HOLDING TIGHT: GOP state Sen. Mark Obenshain’s lead over Democrat Mark Herring has shrunk in the Virginia attorney general’s race — with more counting still ahead.



By Kenric Ward | Watchdog.org Virginia Bureau


ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Republican Mark Obenshain’s tenuous triple-digit lead in the Virginia attorney general race dwindled to just 55 votes, according to the latest count Sunday.


Democrat Mark Herring closed in after Fairfax County tabulated a batch of previously untallied absentee ballots from Democratic Rep. Jim Moran’s congressional district.


More results will be coming as electoral boards around the state complete their count of provisional ballots – votes cast by people who didn’t present legally permissible identification at the polls.


Initially, provisional voters had until noon Friday to appear before electoral boards to say why their ballots should count.


Fairfax — the Democrat-heavy county that is the state’s largest — extended its deadline for appeals until 1 p.m. Tuesday, after just over 20 people out of 493 provisional voters appeared, the Washington Post reported.


Once the statewide vote is certified on Nov. 25, a statewide recount will be conducted in December.


The AG contest is the Republican Party’s last hope to hold a statewide executive office, having lost the governorship and lieutenant governor’s office. Democrats occupy both U.S. Senate seats.


At midnight on election night, Obsenshain, a state senator from Harrisonburg, held a 7,000-vote lead. An hour later, his lead over fellow state Sen. Herring, D-Leesburg, had shrunk to 700.


In percentage terms, both candidates were tied at 49.88 percent Sunday. More than 2.21 million votes were cast in the race.


See Watchdog’s earlier story here.


Kenric Ward is chief of the Virginia Bureau. Contact him at kenric@watchdogvirginia.org or at (571) 319-9824. @Kenricward



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Read more about Still counting: Republican holds 55-vote lead in attorney general race and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, October 11, 2013

US sacks nuclear missiles general


Breaking news


A US general in charge of the country’s long-range nuclear missiles is to be sacked due to “loss of trust and confidence”, officials have said.


The exact reasons for Maj Gen Michael Carey’s removal from his 20th Air Force role were not immediately clear.


The sacking was not linked to the operation of the nuclear arsenal, which was safe, the officials insisted.


On Wednesday the US Navy announced an admiral overseeing nuclear weapons forces had been sacked from the role.


That was due to illegal gambling activities, officials said.




BBC News – US & Canada



US sacks nuclear missiles general

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

UN General Assembly: Can Obama win over a skeptical audience?

Revelations about NSA spying and Obama’s recent readiness to bypass the Security Council and go it alone on Syria could chill his reception at the UN. US diplomacy on Iran and the Mideast could help.



Once a rock star – now a fallen star?


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President Obama makes his annual trek to the United Nations in New York this week with little of the aura of international fascination and hopeful anticipation that accompanied him when he was received as a new and different American leader four years ago.


When Mr. Obama speaks to the UN General Assembly (GA) Tuesday morning, he’ll face a skeptical audience mindful that just two weeks earlier, Obama was prepared to bypass the UN and the Security Council to bomb Syria over the use of chemical weapons in the civil war there.


For much of the international community, that posture was reminiscent of President George W. Bush and his unilateral decision to invade Iraq in 2003 after having deemed the UN “irrelevant.” Obama’s finger on the Syria trigger made him look to the world like other US presidents: ready to use the military might of the world’s sole superpower.


The impression of an arrogant America that holds itself above the rest will also tinge Obama’s relations with world leaders who are still smarting over recent revelations of widespread National Security Agency spying on America’s allies and partners.


“These issues haven’t been played as smoothly as they might have been, and now the repercussions are coming back on Obama and he’s going to pay a price,” says Michael Doyle, a professor of US foreign and security policy at Columbia University in New York and a former assistant secretary-general at the UN. “He’s dug himself a hole he’s going to have to start climbing out of at the General Assembly.”


Obama can expect to confront the international fury over the NSA’s widespread “spy on our friends” operations even before he takes the General Assembly stage. President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil – the country that by tradition gives the first leader’s speech, just before the US – is expected to raise the NSA spying program in her address.


“Things may get pretty dramatic … if Rousseff carries Brazil’s outrage over the NSA spying into the GA, and then is immediately followed by Obama,” says Dr. Doyle.


Not everyone agrees that Obama has distanced himself from his penchant for diplomacy – or that recent events doom him to a poor reception at the UN.  


White House officials say the president’s handling of the Syria crisis and in particular administration efforts to address Syria’s chemical weapons challenge through multilateral channels – an effort that will be on display at the UN this week – demonstrate Obama’s deep preference for diplomacy over military action.


What the evolution of the Syria chemical weapons crisis demonstrates is how “diplomacy backed by a credible threat of force can … change the equation” of countries involved, says Ben Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser.


The regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, which the US accuses of carrying out a large-scale chemical weapons attack against civilians last month, is now committed to giving up its chemical weapons stockpiles, the White House notes. And Russia, which has blocked Security Council action on Syria for two years, is now negotiating with the US and other countries a council resolution to provide the framework for ridding Syria of its chemical weapons.    


And despite the downsides for Obama in the Syria crisis and the NSA scandal, the UN this year also offers some rays of sunshine, some foreign policy analysts insist. Other perennial diplomatic challenges that have faced Obama before at the UN are less contentious than in past years and should allow him to project the diplomatic aptitude the world prefers to see.


Two such challenges are Iran, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.


Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, is setting a new tone for Iran at the UN – and providing Obama with an opening to re-extend the hand of engagement that he first offered to Iran in his first inaugural address.


Much of the buzz in UN hallways is over speculation that Obama and Mr. Rouhani will find a moment to shake hands and exchange greetings – something that would have been unthinkable at past GA meetings, when Iran was represented by the fiery anti-American president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.


Obama and Rouhani have already exchanged letters. And even if the two presidents don’t meet, the White House confirmed Monday that the highest-level meeting of US and Iranian officials in more than three decades will take place Thursday, when Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zariz take part in a meeting of the so-called P5+1 group of powers – Security Council permanent members US, Russia, China, France, and United Kingdom, plus Germany – on Iran’s nuclear program.


And this year Obama can report to the General Assembly that US-brokered negotiations are under way to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with security for Israel and a state for Palestinians. That will cast Obama in a much better light compared with the past two years, when two Palestinian gambits for achieving statehood without negotiations put the US – and Obama – in the awkward position of siding against the Palestinians on aspirations that most of the world supports.


Just how much luster Obama can return to his star remains to be seen. But Columbia’s Doyle notes that Obama is climbing out of his diplomatic “hole” right at the time when recent presidents were turning to international affairs to secure their legacies.


“The second term is when presidents turn to global diplomacy and leadership,” Doyle says. “It would be too bad if these circumstances Obama finds himself in – the NSA scandal and poor management of the Syria crisis – handicap his global agenda for the next four years.”




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UN General Assembly: Can Obama win over a skeptical audience?

Friday, September 13, 2013

Tax take is down: OK general revenue collections drop 10 percent in August


.

BEARER OF GLAD TIDINGS: Oklahoma state government tax revenues subject to appropriation were down in August, Finance Secretary Preston Doerflinger reports. The decline resulted from taxpayers accessing exemptions and credits allowed under state law, Tax Commission analysis showed.



By Patrick B. McGuigan | Oklahoma Watchdog


OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma state government tax revenue subject to appropriation (known as general revenue receipts) declined in August, but that’s not a subtle hint of bad news for the economy.


Turns out, taxpayers in the Sooner State accessed exemptions and credits to keep more of their own money.


In his monthly analysis of general revenue fund (GRF) receipts, Secretary of Finance Preston L. Doerflinger said, “This was a single-month collection anomaly rather than any reflection of Oklahoma’s economy. One month does not diminish the strength Oklahoma’s economy has shown for going on three years now.”


Doerflinger and officials at the Oklahoma Tax Commission attributed the dip in direct revenue to reduced income tax collections, which were 27.9 percent ($ 40.2 million) below last year’s level.


Doerflinger stressed the commission “is processing far more corporate and personal income tax refunds at this time of the year than it normally does, which has led to temporary distortions of income tax collections. As a result, the GRF received no corporate income tax collections in August because corporate income tax refunds exceeded corporate income tax collections.”


His staff’s release on the August data continued, “Personal income tax collections fell $ 36.2 million or 25.9 percent from a year ago due in large part to an $ 11 million increase in personal income tax refunds processed compared to the same month a year ago.”


Total revenue for state government from all sources continues to be robust, previous analyses have found. The state has one of the lowest unemployment rates in the nation, at 5.3 percent.


You may contact McGuigan, bureau chief for the Watchdog.org in Oklahoma City, at Patrick@capitolbeatok.com



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Tax take is down: OK general revenue collections drop 10 percent in August

General Hayden on FOX 5



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General Hayden on FOX 5

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Strongman of Egypt: How General Al-Sisi Took the Revolution"s Thunder


Bahira Galal is a sweets maker in Giza. Her shop is in the rising middle-class neighborhood of Mohandiseen, where she makes and sells a novelty item: chocolate treats with General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s picture on top. Galal is “showing support for the army” according to a local report at al-Watan news.


“I like al-Sisi very much and think of him as a national symbol because he saved the country from the deposed president’s danger,” Galal said.


Her sentiment towards the Egyptian general is not unique. In fact, al-Sisi’s image can be seen almost everywhere, from posters on cars and shops to little personal items, and even heard on TV songs.


Since President Mohamed Morsi was deposed by the army in early July after mass protests against his regime, General al-Sisi’s star has been rising — not only in Egypt, but in the strong reactions his military rule has evoked across the region.


Al-Sisi, as Galal and her peers see him, is a hero who saved Egypt from the Muslim Brotherhood and is now battling a war on terror, with the approval of Egypt’s majority. The violent armed attacks from Brotherhood affiliates on police stations and governmental institutions has only seemed to cement al-Sisi’s appeal, rallying millions behind him.


Morsi could not know on August 12, 2012, that he was appointing the man who would force him out of power only 10 months later. The 58-year-old general, who studied for one year, in 2006, at the United States Army War College, is the youngest member to be made a part of Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF). Under fallen dictator Hosni Mubarak, he was the head of military intelligence and commander of the Northern Military Region in Alexandria in 2008.


In seeking to replace the old guard generals, Morsi may have seen al-Sisi as the right candidate due to his reputation as a devout Muslim. The appointment received warm welcome from the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies, who praised Morsi for choosing “a military leader who prays.” Shortly after his appointment, a picture of al-Sisi leading a prayer group of soldiers was shared and cheered on social media.


In early July, the military’s overthrow of Morsi became an easy task after tens of millions of Egyptians took to the streets demanding he step down and calling on the military to protect them. Al-Sisi gave all parties 48 hours to work out differences, threatening that the army would otherwise intervene with a “road map” for the future. Morsi rejected the military proposal and said he would “protect his legitimacy with his life.” Clashes erupted between pro- and anti-Morsi supporters during the countdown.


“We [the military] rather die than see Egyptians afraid,” al-Sisi then said in a televised speech as he deposed Morsi, suspended the constitution and appointed Adli Mansour, the head of the Constitutional Court, as interim president.


Al-Sisi’s decision was met with widespread celebration as Egyptians held posters with his image high in the air, and he emerged to many as a national hero. But to the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Sisi quickly became “a traitor” who had deposed their democratically elected president, foreshadowing more violence to come. Al-Sisi later told The Washington Post that “simple Egyptian people were crying in their homes” after he took over.


In the subsequent weeks, the violent response from supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood saw scores killed and a number of churches and police stations attacked. In one case, the Kirdasa town police station was raided by militants as gruesome videos of the attack burst out on social media websites.


In one video, militants killed the Kirdasa police chief and dragged and beat his dead body in front of the camera. The Egyptian Ministry of Interior has said over a 100 of its police force has been killed in recent weeks.


Middle-class, religiously-moderate Egyptians who were largely the driving force behind the revolution welcomed the state of emergency and the curfew for the sake of bringing an end to violence. Today, al-Sisi’s image in the press depends on which bent it is coming from: the national, leftist and liberal media tend to portray him as the defiant patriotic leader who is fighting an enemy that seeks to drag Egypt back into the Dark Ages, while the Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliates paint him as a traitor realizing an “American-Zionist” plan to divide Egypt, and have called for al-Sisi’s removal and trial.


But in popular terms, not since Gamal Abdel Nasser, the regional and international symbol of anti-colonialism in the 1950s and 60s, have Egyptians been so attached to a leader as they are now with al-Sisi.


Even after more than 500 people died in the attack and evacuation of two large sit-ins of Morsi backers, many Egyptians support the military’s choice of using force — even if unequal and lethal — to disperse the protests and stabilize the streets. Liberal media aired footage of armed protesters shooting at the police, dispelling the belief that the sit-ins and protesters were all peaceful. They also aired national love songs in support of the military, with some channels showing a side bar that read, “Egypt fights terrorism.”


Al-Sisi spoke openly about why the actions taken against Morsi and leaders in the Muslim Brotherhood were necessary. He accused Morsi of having close ties with Hamas and allowing Jihadists to enter the country and train in Sinai during his year in power. One leader in that group told the press that the prison breakout which freed Morsi during the 18 days of rage in 2011 was in fact orchestrated by Jihadist groups, and he named Hamas.


Now, while Morsi remains held at an undisclosed location, accused of treason and inciting violence, al-Sisi has become a public candidate for the office. Last week, the movement that sparked the June 30 protests, Tamarod, or Rebel, said it would support General al-Sisi for president if the current security situation lingers. Leftist leader and former presidential nominee Hamdeen Sabah expressed his approval for al-Sisi’s nomination.


Al-Sisi’s supporters see this as a needed step for the country to regain stability, and for the road map toward democratic rule to be implemented. But al-Sisi was not so forthright about his willingness to accept the position. He told the Washington Post that he “does not aspire for high office” and that Egyptians’ love “is all what he wants.”


The increasing calls of support for al-Sisi have made some Egyptian liberals uneasy; though they may support the military in its effort to curb militant Islam attacks, they have not come to agreement on a military president in post-revolution Egypt. And for the Islamists, the goal has clearly shifted from reinstalling Morsi to deposing al-Sisi.


Meanwhile, on Sunday, the Constitutional drafting advisers were named as the newly appointed government appears more on track toward reviving the country’s economy. The following weeks will paint a clearer picture of the road map for Egypt — as well as the true aims of General al-Sisi as he attempts to steer the country away from further violence.




Truthout Stories



Strongman of Egypt: How General Al-Sisi Took the Revolution"s Thunder

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

General strike brings Greece to a halt, as unions protest austerity




  • A general strike affects public transit, flights, garbage collection and hospital staffing

  • It is the fourth general strike called by the labor unions this year

  • Parliament is to vote Wednesday on further austerity measures

  • Greece has to reform its public sector in order to receive international bailout funds



Athens (CNN) — A 24-hour general strike called Tuesday in protest over further austerity measures has brought many public services in Greece to a grinding halt.


Public transit systems, flights and garbage collection services are affected by the nationwide action — the fourth such to be held this year — while hospitals are running on skeleton staffing.


Labor unions held a rally in central Athens on Tuesday morning, to be followed by a march to the national parliament building.


A rally was also held outside parliament Monday night, but it did not attract large numbers of protesters. Many people have left the capital to escape the summer heat.


The general strike takes place ahead of a vote in parliament Wednesday on a bill containing further austerity measures. One would make it easier to fire people in the civil sector.


They must be voted in for Greece to receive the next tranche of international bailout funds.


The measures are expected to go through, as the coalition government holds a slim majority in parliament.


Greece, the first country to receive a European Union bailout more than three years ago, is struggling to bring its huge public debt under control.


The country is in its sixth straight year of recession, and unemployment stood at 26.8% as of March this year, according to official figures. The jobless rate among young people in Greece has soared to nearly 60%.


CNN’s Elinda Labropoulou reported in Athens, and Laura Smith-Spark wrote in London.




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General strike brings Greece to a halt, as unions protest austerity

Saturday, June 29, 2013

VIDEO: Top Tech Stories of the Day: In the Instagram Vs. Vine War for Social Video, We Still Don"t Know Who"s Winning







In the Instagram vs. Vine War for Social Video, We Still Don’t Know Who’s Winning. Bits Blog: After Fighting Mobile Trend, Intel Now Embraces It. Why Oracle And Salesforce, Once Bitter Rivals, Are Now On Cloud Nine













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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Seahawks Coach Peppered 4-Star General With 9/11 ‘Conspiracy’ Questions


CBS New York
June 15, 2013



Seattle head coach Pete Carroll hosted a retired four-star general at the Seahawks facility last spring and blitzed him with questions about whether the 9/11 attacks “had been planned or faked” by the government, according to Deadspin.com.


Decorated general Peter Chiarelli, who had just called it a career, was discussing football and brain injuries with Carroll before the conversation took a turn, Deadspin reported.


“Every 9/11 conspiracy theory you can think of, Pete asked about,” former NFL linebacker Riki Ellison told Deadspin.


Read full article


This article was posted: Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 12:46 pm


Tags: 9/11









Infowars



Seahawks Coach Peppered 4-Star General With 9/11 ‘Conspiracy’ Questions

Seahawks Coach Peppered 4-Star General With 9/11 ‘Conspiracy’ Questions


CBS New York
June 15, 2013



Seattle head coach Pete Carroll hosted a retired four-star general at the Seahawks facility last spring and blitzed him with questions about whether the 9/11 attacks “had been planned or faked” by the government, according to Deadspin.com.


Decorated general Peter Chiarelli, who had just called it a career, was discussing football and brain injuries with Carroll before the conversation took a turn, Deadspin reported.


“Every 9/11 conspiracy theory you can think of, Pete asked about,” former NFL linebacker Riki Ellison told Deadspin.


Read full article


This article was posted: Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 12:46 pm


Tags: 9/11









Infowars



Seahawks Coach Peppered 4-Star General With 9/11 ‘Conspiracy’ Questions