Regime Dominos–and Global Solidarity Protests

05 Civil War, 07 Other Atrocities, 08 Wild Cards, Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Corruption, Counter-Oppression/Counter-Dictatorship Practices, Government

Fearless protesters challenge regimes around Middle East

Los Angeles Times, 30 January 2011

The toppling of Tunisia's president is having a ricochet effect across the Arab world with demonstrators trading fear for solidarity.

. . . . . .

The uprisings are having a ricochet effect across the Arab world. People are watching the events unfolding on television and Facebook and identifying with the people in the streets.

. . . . . .

“It's political challenge to autocratic systems that have degraded and dehumanized people and humiliated them to the point where they just can't take it anymore and they finally started to erupt,” said Rami Khouri, a commentator and analyst affiliated with the American University of Beirut. “That's combined with intense social and economic pressures and disparities which are accentuated by the lavish lifestyles of the rich who made their money by being close to the regime.”

Read rest of this very fine overview….

`All repressive regimes must go!' — Asian socialists in solidarity with the uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia and the Middle East

January 29, 2011 — The Socialist Party of Malaysia (PSM) would like to express its solidarity with the revolutionary masses in Egypt, as well as in Tunisia and other countries in North Africa and the Middle East, for their courageous struggle against repressive regimes which are mostly backed by US-led imperialist powers.

January 29, 2011 — The progressive movement and peoples of the Philippines stands in solidarity with the Egyptian people and the mass movement in the streets in these critical moments in their struggle for the ouster of the dictatorial Mubarak regime. We salute them for their tremendous courage in fighting a vicious regime, which has an infamous reputation for the brutality of its police and security forces, and that has been responsible for arbitrarily arresting and cruelly torturing government opponents. We support the people’s message that Mubarak must go and that the people no longer want his government and system.

We also salute the upsurge of the Tunisian peoples in overthrowing the US-backed dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali on January 14, and how their victory has electrified and inspired the people of Egypt and the Middle East, while dictators shake with fear.

Phi Beta Iota: The repeated refrain associated with the regime change movements singles out the USA for its decades of support for oppressive regimes.  Two things are happening here: the public has lost its fear and found its solidarity; and the public is now thinking in historical context and holding the USA accountable for its role in supporting Israeli genocide against the Palestinians, and dictators all over the world (less North Korea and Cuba).

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Egypt’s Perfect Storm: Associated Press Shines

08 Wild Cards, Communities of Practice, Cultural Intelligence
Click Image to Enlarge

Egypt's uprising unites society in rage

(AP) – 5 hours ago

CAIRO (AP) — For Gamal Hassanein, it began with a slap.

The unemployed 24-year-old was arguing with a police officer when the man struck him across the face — a blow that seemed to sting for months.

Click Image to Enlarge

“He stole my dignity with that slap,” said Hassanein, who does odd jobs to make money. “We could never stand up to those officers before because we were afraid. But we're no longer willing to be silenced by our fear.”

The tens of thousands of protesters who have thrown Egypt's 30-year-old regime into tumult come from all walks of life — conservative Muslims and Christians, yuppies and the unemployed, young and old. For many, the protests demanding that President Hosni Mubarak step down were a catalyst for years or decades of repressed anger at mistreatment at the hands of the state.

Click Image to Enlarge

One after another, they describe a moment buried in their memory that came gushing to the surface as they saw others taking to the streets.

. . . . . .

“They are taking us lightly and they don't feel our frustration,” she said. “This is a uprising of the people and we will not shut up again.”

Click Image to Enlarge

Read rest of this SUPERB collage of deep insights…..

Phi Beta Iota: Especially noteworthy in this professional piece is the observation that the Muslim Brotherhood, while a key player, is not the whole enchilada–the public has been mobilized across the board by a whole range of preconditions and personal experiences.

OpenBTS Egypt — Need to Flesh Out OpenBTS USA

Autonomous Internet

OpenBTS Egypt

simplifing the GSM network architecture

Worth a look. Activists and concerned citizens in the USA should be ramping up ham radio as well as OpenBTS and OpenMoney.  Facebook credits might be an intermediate solution.  As we saw in relation to Wikileaks with Amazon, MasterCard, and PayPal, corporations cannot be trusted to honor their contracts in the face of the slightest pressure and without a court order and the US Government is perfectly capable of shutting down the Internet without a court order.  US activists should plan a “dead hand” response to any shutdown, i.e. into the streets, burning tires, non-violence, and general strike until all public systems are restored.

See Also:

Reference: OpenBTS Open Access Cellular Ham Hack

Journal: Unlicensed Spectrum Open for Super Wi-Fi

Continue reading “OpenBTS Egypt — Need to Flesh Out OpenBTS USA”

Egypt, Turkey, the Muslim Brotherhood…

05 Civil War, 08 Wild Cards
Youssef Qaradawi

Qaradawi Urges Mubarak To Leave Egypt

The widely respected Sunni Muslim cleric who holds Egyptian and Qatari nationalities, also encouraged Egyptians to keep up peaceful protests, in an interview with Al-Jazeera television. “President Mubarak … I advise you to depart from Egypt … There is no other solution to this problem but for Mubarak to go,” Qaradawi said on Saturday.

Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood Organizes More Anti-Government Protests

Egypt protests: America's secret backing for rebel leaders behind uprising – Telegraph

This is a fluff article.  It represents the ignorance of both the media and the Western governments about reality on the ground.

Recommended by Berto Jongman:

Turkey, the Global Muslim Brotherhood, and the Gaza Flotilla

Phi Beta Iota: Turkey is making its move.  This has been years if not decades in the making, and what we are seeing in an extraordinary coming together of the Muslim Brotherhood, Turkey, and a wide variety of interested parties who see in Israel, the Arab dictators, and the USA's military presence in the region all they believe to be the Great Satan.  The fall of the dictators and the exit of the US from this region are, in our collective view, inevitable.  The fate of Israel hangs in the balance–they will be lucky to end up with a small separate state after giving up half the waterfront, the occupied lands, and all presence in and around Gaza.  Interestingly, because secular corruption has played so prominent a role in the region, the rise of Islamic fundamentalism is virtually assured, taking “blow-back” to the next level.  In this context, the Assisi Peace Summit and the prospects for inter-faith agreement on the need for multinational information-sharing and sense-making take on even more importance.

CIA In Egypt: Silence of the Goats

05 Civil War, 07 Other Atrocities, 08 Wild Cards, Corruption, Government
Who, Me?

A never ending goat rope!

What should the CIA do in Egypt?

By Jeff Stein

The ghost of the 1979 Iranian revolution is very much on the minds of veteran intelligence officials as Egypt explodes in street protests.

Most historians agree that the CIA was largely in the dark when anti-American students, radical Islamists and mullahs ignited street protests in Tehran because the U.S.-backed shah had forbidden the CIA to have contact with opposition groups.

Read the rest of this empty article….

Phi Beta Iota: Stein is a low-rent version of Ignatius, and most of his sources rarely have anything substantive to contribute.  This is puffery.  CIA is in the liaison business, not the espionage or the analytics business.  The Safari Club (the fifth CIA that does rendition and torture) is built around Egyptian intelligence officers whose idea of a good time is sodomizing drugged kids and taking photos to turn the kids against their fathers.  Not only is CIA worthless in Egypt and across the region, but the minute they are asked to do something they will out-source it because they have no internal bench–indeed, the place looks like a geriatric ward now, with annuitants all over the place.

Seven Answers–Robert Steele in Rome

About the Idea, Articles & Chapters, Media Reports

The Questions:

1) Mr. Steele, you co-founded Earth Intelligence Network. Which are its main objectives?

2) You created the concepts of Smart Nation, Information Arbitrage, and Information Peacekeeping. May you explain them briefly?

3) You also point to the need of a faith-based global intelligence exchange. What do you mean?

4) When you speak about the sharing across the eight “tribes” of intelligence (academia, civil society, commercial, government, law enforcement, media, military, non-profit), which specific approach to intelligence do you suggest?

5) You argue that proper use of intelligence material derived from open sources (OSINT) could replace some of the more secret (and expensive) aspects of intelligence collection, claiming that “OSINT will displace 80% of the dollars devoted to secret sources and methods…”. But is OSINT really intelligence?

6) A close relationship between intelligence and diplomacy always existed. Which do you think should be the evolution of this relationship to counter the emerging threats and specifically the role of intelligence services in backing the negotiating and mediating efforts of governments?

7) Wild Card…

See Also:

Continue reading “Seven Answers–Robert Steele in Rome”

President Barack Obama: Shallow Hypocrite at Best

Cultural Intelligence, Government
Who, Me?

Watching Channel 4 and seeing President Barack Obama speak of his conversation with the Egyptian President, Penguin could not help but be shocked when Obama had the audicity to claim, with a straight face and no shame, that he had called on the Egyptian president to “give meaning to his words” in promising democracy and whatever.

Change we can believe in, anyone?

500 Promises Card Set

Related external links:

2010 The Complete List of Obama Statement Expiration Dates

2009 Obama's trail of broken promises

2009 Barack Obama's broken promises

Truth-O-Meter (Barack Obama)

Obama's Gaffes, Lies, Hypocrisy, Broken Promises & Exaggerations!

Obama's 50 Lies

Phi Beta Iota: Our contributors have almost complete liberty.  The above should not be construed as a personal attack on President Barack Obama (we deleted the links on treason and birth issues), but rather as documentation of how dysfunctional the current system is, completely divorced from the public interest.