Will 2011 “Rock the World” Like 1968 Did?
Posted: February 19, 2011 Filed under: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Foreign Affairs, Iraq, Middle East, Tunisia, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics, worker rights, Yemen | Tags: May 1968, Paris, worldwide protests, year that rocked the world 27 CommentsFor the past few weeks, as the protests in Tunisia spread to Egypt and then to several other countries, I’ve been reminded of the worldwide political uprisings that took place back in 1968, “the year that rocked the world.” Now that we are even seeing Americans protesting in the streets of Madison, Wisconsin and Columbus, Ohio, I wonder: could it happen again?
In case you weren’t around in 1968 or your memory is fuzzy, the Guardian published a summary of some of the events of that unbelievable year back in 2008. Sean O’Hagen describes how in May 1968, Paris
…was paralysed after weeks of student riots followed by a sudden general strike. France’s journey from ‘serenity’ to near revolution in the first few weeks of May is the defining event of ‘1968’, a year in which mass protest erupted across the globe, from Paris to Prague, Mexico City to Madrid, Chicago to London.
[….]
These rebellions were not planned in advance, nor did the rebels share an ideology or goal. The one cause many had in common was opposition to America’s war in Vietnam but they were driven above all by a youthful desire to rebel against all that was outmoded, rigid and authoritarian. At times, they gained a momentum that took even the protagonists by surprise. Such was the case in Paris, which is still regarded as the most mythic near-revolutionary moment of that tumultuous year, but also in Mexico City, Berlin and Rome.
In these cases, what began as a relatively small and contained protest against a university administration – a protest by the young and impatient against the old and unbending – burgeoned into a mass movement against the government. In other countries – like Spain, where the Fascist General Franco was still in power, and Brazil, where a military dictatorship was in place – the protests were directed from the start against the state. In Warsaw and Prague, the freedom movements rose up briefly against the monolithic communist ideology of the USSR. And in America, capitalism was the ultimate enemy, and Vietnam the prime catalyst.
Those protests, along with revolutions in music, art, fashion, and mores truly changed the world. Could it be happening again? Have we really reached a tipping point?
I thought I’d just put up some links to the important events that have taken place today in the many ongoing protests. You can add your own links in the comments (if anyone else is still awake).
More below the fold….
CSM: “Inspired by Tunisia, Egypt’s protests appear unprecedented”
Posted: January 25, 2011 Filed under: Breaking News, Egypt, Foreign Affairs, Lebanon, Middle East, The Media SUCKS, Tunisia | Tags: 2011: days of revolt 43 Comments
Egyptians protest in central Cairo today. Photograph: Khaled El Fiqi/EPA (Click image for live updates from the Guardian)
Good afternoon everyone. I wanted to put up a quick thread of the headlines and developments coming out of Egypt so we have a place for us to discuss and keep adding more links as they become available. It’s a true shame that Obama’s upcoming SOTU is driving so much of the news coverage today, not to mention a convenient distraction since “power to the people of the Middle East” doesn’t exactly fit the Western media’s narrative. Take a look at what is going on–it is simply incredible.
Guardian: “Protests in Egypt and unrest in Middle East – live updates”
CSM: “Inspired by Tunisia, Egypt’s protests appear unprecedented”
NYT: “Broad Protests Across Egypt Focus Fury on Mubarak”
BBC: “Egypt protests: Clashes in Cairo on ‘day of revolt’”
BBC: “Anger of protesters in Cairo ‘surprised police‘”
BBC: “Egypt protests: Three reported dead in ‘day of revolt’”
Looks like censors are hard at work trying to stop the twitter revolution:
WaPo: “Twitter blocked in Egypt as protests turn violent (Video)”
Heredict.org is tracking the reports of twitter outage in Egypt today (H/T Minkoff Minx who found the heredict.org link via the AFP’s report on the twitter blockage)
Live Tweets
Nonetheless, the revolution continues to be tweeted. Check out Blogs of War for live tweets (H/T Taylor Marsh)
Another good place to check for updates: Ahram online
via the WaPo link above — “Live updates: Opposition groups protest on Police Day… Ahram Online will be posting updates about planned protests by opposition activists in Cairo and elsewhere”
Also, some links on Lebanon’s Day of Rage…
Guardian: “Lebanon protesters clash with army over new Hezbollah-backed PM… Supporters of previous prime minister, Saad Hariri, clash with troops and burn tyres as Najib Miqati assumes office”
Guardian: “Lebanon’s ‘day of rage’ – in pictures”
NYT: “Amid Protests, Ex-Lebanon Leader Assails New Premier”
And, on Tunisia…
LA Times: “Key diplomat says U.S. approves of Tunisia revolt… Jeffrey D. Feltman, assistant secretary of State for Near Eastern affairs, says Washington has offered Tunisia ‘whatever support is appropriate and requested’ in conducting a nationwide election.”
Update –Video on Cairo protests posted on youtube by Al Jazeera English a couple hours ago:
Update 2 — see the twitter/live tweet section above. I added some links.
Update 3 — Amazing Photo (Egypt, Jan 25) circulating on twitter:
Gotta Love those Wikileaks
Posted: January 17, 2011 Filed under: commercial banking, Corporate Crime, Diplomacy Nightmares, financial institutions, Foreign Affairs, investment banking, Tunisia, Wikileaks | Tags: corruption, jasmine revolution, Julian Assange, offshore banking, Rudolf Elmer, Swiss banks, Tunisia, whistle blowers, Wikileaks 14 CommentsI’m still waiting for the BOA Wikileaks data drop but the idea of a Swiss Banker from offshore banking haven, The Cayman
Islands, dropping a dime on a few of those tax evading customers is almost as sweet. I can sense the thickness of air hanging in private clubs all over the world from my little corner of the ninth ward.
Rudolf M. Elmer, the former head of the Cayman Islands office of the prominent Swiss bank Julius Baer, refused to identify any of the individuals or companies, but told reporters at a press conference that about 40 politicians and “pillars of society” worldwide are among them.
He told The Observer newspaper over the weekend that those named in the documents come from “the U.S., Britain, Germany, Austria and Asia — from all over,” and include “business people, politicians, people who have made their living in the arts and multinational conglomerates — from both sides of the Atlantic.”
Mr. Assange said that WikiLeaks would verify and release the information, including the names, in as little as two weeks. He suggested possible partnerships with financial news organizations and said he would consider turning the information over to Britain’s Serious Fraud Office, a government agency that investigates financial corruption.
That’s a wow story! But then, there’s been a series of them coming from Assange’s organization and the entire thing is just too great for words. Any one that really doesn’t see that Wikileaks is becoming THE way for little guys to undermine the power elites of the world is basically a tool of oppressors and autocrats. Just as Bradley Manning witnessed tapes that revealed the incredibly war crimes and inhumanity of a few American soldiers, Rudolf Elmer has witnessed pilfering that probably includes profiteering from crimes against humanity. However, like every one else, I want NAMES.
Check out the CIA’s list of the RICHEST countries in the world in per capita terms. I always love to quiz my students on which ones shake out at the top and they nearly always get it wrong. The top ten countries–with the exceptions of oil rich Kuwait and Norway–are all havens of offshore banking, tax evasion, and gambling. The USA has dropped to number 11 on the richest country list. Undoubtedly, it still holds that position because of its Investment Bankers. As I mentioned in the Friday Reads, it’s not because we reward our brain surgeons, 4 star generals, or great minds. I’m appalled that this might be the century that proves Karl Marx right on how ‘capitalism’ eventually falls. I’m only afraid that it will not be replaced with any kind of utopia; worker or otherwise.
What was Rudolf Elmer’s motivation?
Mr. Elmer said he had turned to WikiLeaks to educate society about what he considers an unfair system designed to serve the rich and aid money launderers after his offers to provide the data to universities and governments were spurned and, in his opinion, the Swiss media failed to cover the substance of his allegations. “The man in the street needs to know how this system works,” he said, referring to the offshore trusts that many “high net worth individuals” across the world use to evade taxes.
This, is the beauty of the Wikileaks. (I’m going to take some time here to wave to our junior G-guys and G-gals!) It gives a voice to those of us that work in the trenches holding up a system that rewards our work with pink slips, loss of insurance, and raises that don’t keep up with the cost of living don’t have much power. The information we sit on frequently has a lot of power. Once released to the public domain, it has even more power. These leaks expose corruption and thievery; pure and simple.









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