Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Shame On The Top Politicians Of The World: Burma Asks For More


In Solidarity With The Burmese People

This is not the time to try balancing acts. This is not the time to urge restraint on the military devils in Burma. This is the time to take sides.

There is only one way this can end. The military regime is Burma has to totally and unconditionally give up power. Suu Kyi gets to form a multi-party interim government that will take the country to elections to a constituent assembly within a year. The military goes back to the barracks immediately.

In the mean time, all use of force against people using their fundamental human right to peaceful assembly is to be documented. All violations are to be punished after Suu Kyi comes to power. And that punishment part has to be publicized. Those who give orders will get punished. Those who carry out illegal orders will get punished.

If you are a president or prime minister of a country that has been a democracy for two, 20 or 200 years, this is your one chance to stand by the people of Burma. The more clearly and forcefully you stand by the people of Burma, fewer people will die in the protests, fewer will get injured. The sacrifice on the way to democracy will be lesser. If you stay quiet, you will have blood on your hands. That is what it boils down to.

There are not going to be peace talks with the military junta. They have to give up power, totally and unconditionally, and that is the only way.

Suu Kyi's interim government will draft an interim constitution that will put the army where it belongs in that country's power arrangement, firmly under control of the civilian prime minister.

You don't have to be a head of state. You can be somebody, anybody, a nobody, you could be anywhere in the world, and you can express support. The louder, the stronger the support, fewer people will die, fewer will get injured.

The military devils in Burma must be made to feel the entire world has stopped doing everything else it was doing, and the entire world is watching their every move. Everything they do is being recorded in the collective memory of humankind, and there will be hell to pay later if they misbehave now.

Not just the monks, but the masses in Burma must be made to feel the world stands with them clearly and unequivocally and all the way. They must be encouraged to come out in the tens of hundreds of thousands. That is the only way. Freedom is not going to be a gift of some foreign power. Freedom will have to be earned.

There has to be an overwhelming show of force by the masses. Come out into every street in every town, in every city, day after day after day until the military is no longer in power. The more overwhelming your presence out in the streets, fewer people will die, fewer will get injured, the goal will be achieved sooner.

You have done it for a week. Do it for two weeks or more and it will all be over. Do not, do not give up.

The military rulers of Burma must be reached with all channels of communication possible, they have to be threatened with every international law they will be violating if they opt to try and put down the demonstrations violently.

They should be threatened that they will be taken to the international criminal court for crimes against humanity, and that threat has to be carried out if they misbehave.

Sanctions are not enough. Sanctions alone only hurt the people. There have to be threats that violent suppressions of peaceful demonstrations violate international law, and those giving and carrying out the illegal orders will be dealt with later on.

There has to be an attempt to infiltrate the police and the military with warnings that illegal orders followed can come to haunt you later on.

The people of Burma must act brave. It is now or never. It is do or die. Karo ya maro.

The Burmese diaspora must realize this is their last chance. It is now or never. They must be the force that forces the world to pay attention. They must work to extend all possible moral and logistical support to those inside the country. The diaspora in the neighboring countries have a major role to play.

Suu Kyi's democratic government is not going to be against the economic interests of India, China or Russia. Suu Kyi will do business. She will do better business than the awkward military generals.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People

Defy The Curfew, Fill Up The Jails

Fill up the jails in hundreds of thousands. You will all get out within weeks.

How many will they jail? Only so many. How many can they shoot? Only so many. Unlike in 1988, this time they will have hell to pay.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People

2008 Olympics

If China does not actively work on the generals to make sure they don't unleash terror on the demonstrators, the Olympics next year must be boycotted by the democracies of the world.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People

Engineering A Coup

There have got to be some people inside the Burmese military who are not exactly fans of the top guys who come across as every bit dud and boring. If they can be reached, an attempt has to be made to topple the top generals through a military coup.

The soldiers who would actually carry out the orders to kill the people in the thousands: I don't believe they want to do that deep in their hearts. But they have to know this regime is at the brink of collapse. They have to be told so.

In other words, infiltrate the police, infiltrate the army through any and all contacts you might have.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People

Gang Of 200

At most, that is how many guys are going to have to be punished. Identify who they are. Turn the security forces against them. These are the guys living fancy lives while ordinary soldiers are sent out to do dirty work. Those soldiers must think for themselves and their fellow citizens.

The corrupt generals are in it for the money and the lavish lifestyle that they don't share with the ordinary soldiers or even ranking officers. One of those ranking officers could turn the tap on the generals.

These bad guys are not even 0.0002% of the country's population.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People

India

There is no way India can emerge a global superpower if it does not become a staunch force for democracy in the world, starting from its own neighborhood. If India helps Burma now, the Suu Kyi government will also reward it economically later.

India has the advantage of itself being a democracy, unlike China. And the Indian activists and civil society don't have to have no qualms. They can jump in onto the situation.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People

Monks Alone Can't Do It

Monks are out asking for an "apology." Before the regime manipulates them into getting off the streets, the students and the hard core democracy activists must work to get the larger population out into the streets in the largest demonstrations possible.

There has to be a clear slogan.

End Military Rule, Now!

No talks, no compromise.

In Solidarity With The Burmese People


In The News

Iran’s Media Assail President’s Treatment New York Times adversarial hosts, whom it described as Zionist Jews. ..... “Mr. Ahmadinejad was the center of the world news for the past few days,” said the reporter. ....... the audience booing Mr. Ahmadinejad when he said there were no homosexuals in Iran ...... “New York is the headquarters of Zionist Jews, and they have control over Columbia University,” he said. “It seems that our diplomacy apparatus had not given complete information to the president.”
Miliband to discuss Burma crisis The Press Association called for tough sanctions from the international community if the Buddhist-led revolt was violently suppressed. ...... tens of thousands of monks, nuns and ordinary Burmese citizens ..... In 1988 about 3,000 people were killed when a popular uprising was brutally put down by the regime.
The barefoot art of war Salon Thousands of Buddhist monks have hit the streets in Myanmar, deploying some shrewd political jujitsu against the corrupt, iron-fisted junta. ...... The population has begun openly showing its support too. Tens of thousands of people have reportedly joined the march of the monks. Other spectators form human chains or simply applaud. Brave-hearted monks are holding passionate speeches by Sule Pagoda in downtown Yangon. They speak of the suffering and the desperate poverty of Myanmar's 50 million inhabitants -- and call for the overthrow of the junta that seized power in Myanmar (formerly known as Burma) in 1962. The regime's policies have effectively laid waste to what was once Southeast Asia's richest country.
'Karnataka to soon become Bihar-like' Times of India
CHRONOLOGY-A month of mushrooming protests in Myanmar Reuters
Union's non-choice is loss for Edwards, gain for Obama
Chicago Sun-Times
Obama leads in fundraising again
Newsday Obama is expected to pull in between $18 million and $19 million ..... Clinton will take in between $17 million and $19 million ..... key primary states, trailing Clinton by double digits in all early battlegrounds except Iowa. ..... The former first lady has widened her lead over Obama in the Granite State to a commanding 23 points .... Obama, who is planning a rally tomorrow in Harlem, weighed in on the controversy over Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's trip to New York, telling a radio interviewer he didn't agree with the blanket coverage in city tabloids. "The way to approach petty tyrants is not to inflate them," he told WNYC's Brian Lehrer yesterday.
Troops surround Myanmar monasteries Aljazeera.net, Qatar soldiers and riot police around at least six big monasteries .... An estimated 50,000-100,000 protesters marched through the streets of Yangon on Monday in the biggest demonstration yet against the military government. .... "People do not tolerate the military government any longer." .... Reports from inside the country indicated that the government had cut off internet access and there were also unconfirmed reports that Aung San Suu Kyi, the country's democracy leader and Nobel Peace laureate who has been under house arrest, had been moved to prison. ...... "This morning I'm announcing a series of steps to help bring peaceful change to [Myanmar]," Bush said in a speech to the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday. .... "The United States will tighten economic sanctions on the leaders of the regime and their financial backers, and we will impose an expanded visa ban on those responsible for the most egregious violations of human rights as well as their family members." ..... government agents had been preparing to infiltrate the protests in order to spark trouble and justify a crackdown. ....... Irene Khan, the secretary-general for Amnesty International, a human rights organisation, appealed to the UN Security Council to immediately send a mission to Myanmar. .... "The high risk of a crackdown against the demonstrators makes it imperative for the international community to act urgently," Khan said, adding that China, Japan and India had a role to play in ensuring stability in Myanmar. .... The London-based Burma Campaign UK said it had a received reports of soldiers ordered to shave their heads, apparently to pose as monks and infiltrate the protests. ..... "They would start rioting or attacking police, providing the regime with a pretext for a brutal crackdown on protesters," the group said. ..... "There is an underlying suffering that is now being expressed." ..... About 90 per cent of Myanmar's population is Buddhist. At some point in their lives, every Buddhist male is expected to join the monk hood or 'Sangha'. Every village or neighbourhood has its own pagoda and monastery, which traditionally serves as the focus for community life and the main centre for education. In recent years rising levels of poverty have raised demand for the free education provided by the monasteries.
Myanamar protests unlikely to bring change, analysts say
Chicago Tribune, United States decades of inward-looking rule and Western sanctions ..... vehicles fitted with loudspeakers into the streets, warning people "not to follow, encourage or take part in these marches." ..... The warnings appeared to significantly reduce the size of the protests ...... On Tuesday, many supporters appeared to stay home, reducing the crowd of protesters—mainly monks—to about 10,000 people ...... the sanctions campaign, similar to what the U.S. has imposed on Cuba, is more likely to continue hurting the nation's people than forcing change in Myanmar's 45-year military leadership. ....... the country, which has large natural gas reserves, is between China and India, two emerging superpowers with a growing thirst for natural gas. In recent years both countries have cut deals to build gas pipelines across Myanmar, and Russia has signed an early deal to explore for offshore oil and natural gas reserves. Thailand similarly is investing $6 billion in a huge hydropower project. ..... "You can never isolate a country sandwiched between two of the fastest-growing economies in the world ..... Myanmar's top generals, most of them devout Buddhists, have been cautious about cracking down on the monks, widely seen as the country's top moral authority. ..... under house arrest for 12 of the last 17 years. ...... hard-line young monks, ready to face bullets rather than return to their monasteries...... "what is not possible is the collapse of this militarized state," Zarni said. "You can't compare what is happening in Burma right now with the Orange or Velvet Revolution in Europe," where protests movements looked for inspiration to perestroika in Russia. In Myanmar, "the state is deeply supported by China and they're not about to launch perestroika"
Regime in Myanmar bans gatherings
New York Daily News, NY Bush accused the regime of imposing "a 19-year reign of fear" that denies basic freedoms of speech, assembly and worship. ..... pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi had been moved from house arrest to the notorious Insein prison
Myanmar police, soldiers deployed to pagodas and monasteries New Straits Times, Malaysia
Myanmar monks defy junta, resume rallies
Kansas City Star, MO soldiers in full battle gear were deployed Tuesday in the country's largest city, setting the stage for a showdown with a determined pro-democracy protest movement. ...... When faced with a similar crisis in 1988, the government harshly put down a student-led democracy uprising. Security forces fired into crowds of peaceful demonstrators and killed thousands, traumatizing the nation. ....... Authorities announced the ban on gatherings and a 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew through loudspeakers on vehicles cruising the streets of Yangon, the country's biggest city, and its second city, Mandalay. The announcement said the measures would be in effect for 60 days. ...... the Dalai Lama and South Africa's Archbishop Desmond Tutu ..... "Americans are outraged by the situation in Burma," Bush said in an address to the U.N. General Assembly in New York. ..... Human Rights Watch said Myanmar's allies including China, Thailand, India and Russia, should urge the military government to respond to the peaceful protests without violence. ...... At least 35,000 Buddhist monks and sympathizers defied official warnings Tuesday and staged another anti-government march. ....... Authorities in cars cruised Yangon's streets Tuesday morning, announcing the clergy had been directed not to take part in "secular affairs" ..... The head of the country's official Buddhist organization, or Sangha, issued a directive Monday ordering monks to stick to learning and propagating the faith, saying young monks were being "compelled by a group of destructive elements within and without to break the law," the state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper said. ....... A monk who addressed the crowd at the end of the march vowed the protests would continue until the government apologizes for mistreating monks at an earlier demonstration in northern Myanmar.
Narrow vision marks Myanmar generals they claim to be binding a fractious nation together and safeguarding against anarchy that could come from many contending ethnic groups. And they see themselves as paragons of development. ......... destroyed what had been one of Southeast Asia's most dynamic economies, and what little resources remained were put into the army's battle against ethnic minority groups along the border seeking autonomy ........ Gen. Than Shwe ... is said to be superstitious and consult with astrologers, but otherwise has a public image that is taciturn in the extreme. .... Stories abound that the two leaders are more rivals than friends. ...... Rumor has it that Than Shwe cannot even bring himself to utter her name, while Maung Aye is believed by some to have been behind an attack on her convoy when she was making a political trip in northern Myanmar, from which she barely escaped with her life. ...... The 62-year-old Oxford-educated Suu Kyi is every bit as urbane as the generals are roughhewn.
Protesters defy junta Hindu, India
Monk demonstrations continue Xinhua, China
Myanmar military rulers impose curfew, ban assembly in 2 cities ... Malaysia Star, Malaysia
Britain eyes return of Suu Kyi as 'rightful' Myanmar leader Times of India, India
Myanmar bans gatherings and imposes curfew after monks defy ...
The Canadian Press
Myanmar Junta Deploys Troops in Yangon as Tension Mounts
eFluxMedia
China Nudges Myanmar on Protests
The Associated Press A senior Chinese official asked junta envoys this month to reconcile with opposition democratic forces. And China arranged a low-key meeting in Beijing between Myanmar and State Department envoys to discuss the release of the leading opposition figure. ...... China's influence in Myanmar is second to none and could be decisive in restraining the junta from a violent confrontation with protesters. ....... China has deftly filled the diplomatic and economic vacuum, eyeing Myanmar as a strategic path to the Indian Ocean, investing in its teak forests, gas and mineral fields and picking up an ally in the junta. ...... Myanmar "was a vassal state of China's for centuries, and it's fast reverting to that status ...... With an Olympics in Beijing next year already bringing China heightened scrutiny, Chinese leaders are likely loath to be associated with another repressive, unpopular regime. ....... caused Beijing to pare back lending to Zimbabwe and put pressure on Sudan ..... the "Genocide Olympics" if Beijing did not act ..... the Chinese government's senior diplomat told visiting Myanmar leaders to seek a peaceful resolution. ..... In May, Beijing telegraphed its frustration with Myanmar's rulers. The Foreign Ministry briefly posted on its Web site a critical account of the junta's decision to move the capital from Yangon to Naypyidaw, a remote site with a shoddy airport and no cell phone service.
Myanmar key is with China
Gulf News, United Arab Emirates
Myanmar junta sets curfew amid mass protests
Wiener Zeitung, Österreich
Britain wants to see Suu Kyi installed in power
Sify, India
Monks rekindle hope for change in Myanmar
Hindustan Times, India
Myanmar: Riot Police Deployed To Yangon
Stratfor
Myanmar troops patrol streets after mass protests
Euronews.net, France
Eighth day of protests by monks in Myanmar
USA Today
Burmese Monks Protest Despite Junta’s Warning
New York Times, United States People are not to follow, encourage or take part in these marches,” the announcements said. “Action will be taken against those who violate this order.” ....... Yangon and Mandalay would be under the control of the local military commanders for 60 days. ...... five army trucks, each capable of carrying 50 soldiers, were parked less than a kilometer from City Hall and the Sule Pagoda ...... an ethnic militia that has been fighting a decades-long guerrilla war said that government troops had been withdrawn from their remote jungle area. ........ “The government has ordered the 22nd Division troops to pull out of Karen state and return to Yangon,” Colonel Nerda Mya of the Karen National Union told the news agency. “We believe the troops will be used as in 1988.” ..... the government might use provocateurs to stir violence and justify a crackdown, as it did in 1988. The Burma Campaign UK said its sources had reported the junta ordering large numbers of maroon monastic robes and telling soldiers to shave their heads, possibly to infiltrate the monks. ....... the National Council of the Union of Burma, a coalition of opposition groups based in Thailand ..... the cheers and the vigor of the day’s demonstrations were as strong as ever, but with a new sense of trepidation over the possibility of a violent crackdown. ..... “Sufficiency in food, clothing and shelter, national reconciliation, freedom for all political prisoners.” ....... protests by monks had also spread to cities like Mandalay, Hinthada and Monywa in seven of the 14 states and divisions. ..... these “destructive elements” included the political party led by Aung San Suu Kyi, the democracy advocate who is being held under house arrest; remnants of the now-defunct Communist Party; and some foreign radio stations. ...... “If serious loss of life is to be averted, those United Nations members with influence over the government are going to have to come together fast,” he said in an allusion to China, Russia and India.
Myanmar Monks Ordered to Cease Nationwide Protests
FOX News
Suu Kyi 'rightful' leader says Britain
Gulf Daily News, Bahrain
Junta confronts Saffron Revolution
Globe and Mail, Canada How do you put down a protest led by Buddhist monks carrying nothing more threatening than begging bowls and banners extolling "love and kindness." That is the conundrum for Myanmar's military regime ........ a problem familiar to dictators throughout history: Let the protests continue and risk seeing the country spin out of their control or open fire on the protesters and risk a backlash at home and infamy abroad. ....... most belonging to the Theravada sect predominant in Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia. ...... in a long red river. As they passed, people gave them drinking water, flowers and balm for their feet. ....... roughly 100 Buddhist nuns in pale pink robes joined the protest. ...... in 1988, the regime showed no compunction about using force against unarmed demonstrators, mowing down thousands in the streets and cremating the bodies to cover its crime. ....... appeared on state television to accuse the monks of being manipulated by Myanmar's enemies at home and abroad ..... claimed that the protesting monks represented just 2 per cent of the country's population and warned that, unless senior monks did not rein them in, the regime would act "according to the law." ....... Roughly half a million men sport the shaven head and saffron or vermillion robe that marks them as monks, walking barefoot through the streets asking for alms with their familiar round begging bowls. ..... Nearly every Buddhist, including officers and top generals, has a brother or cousin or friend who is a monk. ...... the Saffron Revolution, after the Rose and Orange revolutions that peacefully overthrew entrenched regimes in Georgia and Ukraine ...... the long, disciplined lines of monks in towns and cities across the country, marching through monsoonal downpours, chanting prayers for loving kindness ...... Like Pakistan's military government, which funds mosques and Islamic schools to pose as the protector of Islam, the regime has spent millions refurbishing temples, placing gold leaf on the dome of Rangoon's famous Shwedagon Pagoda and building retreats for Buddhist meditation. ....... To make the barb bite deeper, they have also refused to perform religious duties for its members. In effect, they are excommunicating the generals. ..... Along with calling for an apology, they are now demanding the freeing of imprisoned democracy activists. ...... "Long life and health for Aung San Suu Kyi, may she have freedom soon," the monks chanted in the rain.
Junta threatens monks leading protest throngs Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX increasing pressure on the junta to either crack down on a reinvigorated democracy movement or compromise with it.
Western countries urge junta to exercise restraint
Montreal Gazette, Canada He said the pro-democracy movement isn't strong enough to topple the military regime.
Thousands protest in Myanmar
KTUU, AK






Tuesday, September 25, 2007

February To September: Little Change



Silicon City

February To September: Little Change


Hillary was at 48% in February, she is 47% in September. Barack was 23% in February, he is 25% in September nationally.

Moral of the story is the average American voter, the people who actually make the decision, have not been paying attention. For the political junkies, the presidential race started earlier than usual this year. But for the voters that has not been the case.

Barack: Nowhere To Go But Up

When the anti-lobbying people who have rallied behind Edwards realize on January 21 that their candidate is basically out of the race, who do you think is going to get their current 10 plus percent? Barack Obama. When the Hispanics finally realize Bill Richardson is actually Hispanic and not Anglo, but before they have had a chance to express their ethnic pride, they realize Richardson has lost and dropped out, that he does not stand a chance, who do you think will cash that ethnic pride? Barack Obama. The Biden, Dodd, Kucinich and Gravel people are also going to go with Obama.

Iowa

If Hillary emerges second or third in Iowa, that is going to kill her momentum and possibly her candidacy although she will have enough money to go all the way to February 5. Front runners can't afford to lose Iowa. If Obama is second in Iowa, that will be a better than expected show, and that will give him a lot of momentum.

Ideas, Ideas, Ideas

Barack is the only one doing it. All the others have been rehashing old ideas that sound new because they are different from W's ideas.

South Carolina

South Carolina is going to be the big, big surprise of the first four states. Barack is going to carry that state by a wide margin. The black people want to rally behind Barack with a tribal fervor and song and dance but they want to do it so late in the process they don't get too noticed, or so they hope.

Scenario 1

Barack wins Iowa. He wins Nevada. He wins New Hampshire. He wins South Carolina. At that point Hillary all but drops out. She giver her concession speech midnight of February 5 that she wrote herself a week earlier. It concludes by saying, Go get 'em tiger.

Scenario 2

Barack is second in Iowa, Edwards wins Iowa. Hillary is third.

Barack wins Nevada, Hillary is second. Richardson is third.

Hillary wins New Hampshire, Barack is second, Edwards is third.

Barack wins South Carolina by a wide margin. Hillary is second. Edwards is a distant third, and all else have dropped out.

Barack wins big on February 5. He carries California, he carries New York. The game is over.

Scenario 3

Hillary wins Iowa, Barack is second. Barack wins Nevada, Hillary is second. Hillary wins New Hampshire, Barack is second. Barack wins South Carolina, Hillary is second.

On February 5, Barack wins big, Hillary wins big. At that point Barack has 55% of the delegates, Hillary has 45%.

That leads to much February action and a March madness. Tsunami Tuesday prepares ground, Super Tuesday decides.

Barack has much more money than Hillary after February 5 because all of Barack's million strong contributors who gave $100 or less make repeat contributions.

He wins.


In Solidarity With The Burmese People

In The News

Nepal's largest party re-unites BBC News
George Clooney, girlfriend shrug off Harley crash
MSNBC
Clinton Camp Expects Obama to Best Them by Over $10 Million
ABC News Blaming a vacationing donor base during the summer months of July and August, and suggesting previous donors have "maxed out" their contributions to the New York senator in the first two fundraising quarters, the Clinton campaign predicted Obama's campaign will beat them by over $10 million. ........ over 472,000 individual donations from over 333,000 different people ..... "He has demonstrated a capacity to raise money from donors who aren't traditional Democratic party donors. That is extraordinary," Dunn said. "He appeals to younger voters who are much more comfortable giving money online." ..... younger voters, who are traditionally unreliable when it comes to turning out at the polls.. ...... On Monday, Obama took his fundraising pitch to Broadway for a theatre fundraiser that cost $250 to $2,300 per ticket. ..... hopes to have a total of 500,000 donations from 350,000 donors at the quarter's end. ...... Thompson's fundraising push shows he lacks a national financial structure.
Win a Debate Date With a Clinton Washington Post
What's new: Bush said to be quietly advising Clinton on Iraq ...
USA Today "President Bush is quietly providing back-channel advice to (Sen.) Hillary Rodham Clinton ........ Bush told Sammon he thinks Clinton will win the Democratic nomination ...... By telling us in the most explicit terms yet that she will not withdraw from Iraq in 2009, she must believe she has the nomination wrapped up. ..... 'Iowa always tends to punish the front-runner right down at the end of the campaign. ..... "Early this summer, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign for president learned that the men's magazine GQ was working on a story the campaign was sure to hate: an account of infighting in Hillaryland. So Clinton's aides pulled a page from the book of Hollywood publicists and offered GQ a stark choice: Kill the piece, or lose access to planned celebrity coverboy Bill Clinton. Despite internal protests, GQ editor Jim Nelson met the Clinton campaign's demands, which had been delivered by Bill Clinton's spokesman, Jay Carson, several sources familiar with the conversations said." ..... "Top Republicans are privately bracing for the possibility that they could lose additional House seats in next year's elections as a result of untimely retirements, ongoing scandals and unexpectedly gloomy fundraising forecasts
Bayh backs Clinton for leadership traits Indianapolis Star
Nepal parties mull compromise NDTV.com Nepal's eight main parties are planning to bring in a resolution in the interim Parliament expressing their ''joint commitment'' to make Nepal a Republican country ...... Prachanda on Monday indicated that some ''new consensus'' was possible on declaring Nepal Republic state and proportionate voting system
For GOP, Michigan Looms Large CBS News

Monks defy warnings to protest in Myanmar
International Herald Tribune
China Calls for Stability in Myanmar as Monks Protest (Update4) Bloomberg
Monk demonstrations continue Xinhua

Beijing gets ready to welcome Sonia, congratulates Rahul Times of India
India's crown prince Rahul Gandhi takes top party job AFP
Bush Pushes UN to Live Up to Charter Commitments
FOX News
Musharraf will remain general if not elected
International Herald Tribune
Google and Microsoft after Facebook for its bigger aspirations
National Post active users at roughly 42 million, growth of 3% per week and hundreds of thousands of applications in development ..... Microsoft is in talks to buy a minority stake in the popular Web site. Google also is rumoured to be interested. ..... the more “complex mission” Facebook is pushing. ..... a technology company, not a media company – much like Google ..... Facebook is also trying to enable more efficient sharing of information. And if it executes properly, it could be worth billions or more in the next five years ...... it took a few years for people to realize that Google has very broad ambitions to organize the world’s information – all of it, not just the stuff that was already present on the Internet today ....... While Google funds, tags, ranks and present information, Facebook takes that data and other more personal info, and helps people share it. ...... “We believe where one leaves off, the other begins” ..... “real value is created when Facebook can match advertiser and consumer intent.”
Go Public Now, Facebook Motley Fool Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) appears to be ready to pay as much as $500 million for a 5% stake in hip-and-happening Facebook. .... Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG) taking a 5% stake in AOL two years ago ...... Like Google to AOL, Microsoft is Facebook's ad-serving partner. .... values Facebook at a lofty $10 billion. ..... the $1 billion price tag Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO) was supposedly offering to buy all of Facebook last year. ..... The company is growing quickly. Opening up its site to third-party developers is sheer, visionary genius. ..... Facebook may be holding out for a valuation closer to $15 billion ..... at $15 billion, it would command nearly half the market cap of Yahoo! or the equivalent of 13 CNET Networks ....... should be one of the hottest IPOs of 2008. ..... Facebook is becoming the Internet's most talked-about private company. ..... Facebook was right not to settle for being Yahoo!'s billion-dollar wingman. ..... Google has also approached Facebook about taking a minority stake in the company. ..... monetization of social networking .... Google is paying at least $300 million a year to News Corp. to field the search queries on MySpace. ...... Take the money. Then turn around, go public, and take the money again.
Is Eklavya a good choice for the Oscars? Rediff
"The War" Re-Examines WWII
CBS News "The problem with the second World War, for years we mediated it, made it the good war and bloodless war and mediated it by having celebrity generals and strategy and tactics everything and weapons," Burns said. "We want to find out what happened. These people are dying at a rate of 1,000 a day. If we don't record what they experienced, what war is like, which is just as horrible as it is now, more." ........ "Think about it, you're 18, 19 years old, you go to war. The thing about war is you're scared, you're bored, you're hot, you're cold, you see bad things, you do bad things, you lose good friends. How can you come back and explain it?" he said. "The guys who saw the worst stuff were quiet and helped deal with it by making funny stories. We had a guy in the Battle of the Bulge, we took over a French farmhouse, 'They had a wine cellar, we all got drunk.' " Later, the man's son said he had never heard that story before, Burns said.

A restless Sarkozy vows to lead Europe into a new era Garowe Online
In TV blitz, Clinton goes on Iraq offensive
AFP
Florida Democrats Affirm an Early Primary
New York Times
Romney Wins Mackinac Straw Poll
New York Times
Merkel angers China over Tibet
Guardian Unlimited
Merkel defies China, meets Dalai Lama Bangkok Post
China's Criticism Heats Up Ahead of Merkel Meet With Dalai Lama Deutsche Welle
5 Cool Google Tools You Should Know About
InformationWeek how Google approaches product development, which is certainly unlike any other company. .... Google is incredibly retro in its research model; it's like the old Bell Labs, or IBM when it was in its glory days. You've got engineers, programmers, and PhDs of various specialties working on stuff, with little or no pressure to produce stuff that can be monetized. ....... Google gives no hints as to where its thousands of projects might ultimately take the company. ..... Web apps, followed by mobile (gPhone anyone?) are the next big areas after search. ..... this "throw stuff against the wall and see what sticks" model is a far better way to pick winners and losers than to make bets internally.
Wal-Mart maps out grand plan to go greener MSNBC

20000 join Burma's 'saffron revolution' The Sunday Times
Burma march 'largest in 20 years' BBC News
Challenge to Myanmar's military junta gains momentum International Herald Tribune
Monks' protest swells
Bangkok Post, Thailand
Security beefed up around Suu Kyi's residence
Hindu, India
Emboldened Myanmar monks challenge junta rule
AFP
Monks' challenge gathers strength against Burma's military government
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
Monks lead huge protest in Yangon
Aljazeera.net, Qatar
Burma monks call on public to join dissent
The Age, Australia
Monks increase pressure on junta
Channel 4 News, UK
Veering towards breaking point
Malaysia Star, Malaysia
Nearly 5000 march against military rule in Myanmar
Inquirer.net, Philippines
Witnesses: 10000 monks stage Myanmar protests
CNN
Dissident reveals his hand in Burma protests
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom A pro-democracy leader who tops the "wanted" list of Burma's military rulers has revealed to The Sunday Telegraph how his movement has helped orchestrate the escalating street protests against the country's dictatorship. ...... had been secretly liaising with the Buddhist monks ..... the two groups are working to form a joint challenge to the regime. ..... hopes that, this time, the country's generals might lose their nerve rather than respond with force. ...... such is the dire state of Burma's economy now that many of its 53 million people feel they have little left to lose. .... "Our cadres have for weeks been coaxing the Buddhist clergy to join the protest movement," said Mr Saw. ..... "People might be encouraged to shed their fears if the monks take to the streets. The senior clergy close to the regime were reluctant to take part, but the younger monks are showing a keen interest." ....... Democracy activists began the protests a month ago, but they petered out until they enlisted the monks last week. Because of the respect the monks enjoy in the religiously devout nation, the ruling generals are wary of suppressing them with the kind of brutality used against others. ....... She came out of her house and wept as they filed past. ...... You knock on a door late at night, and whisper, 'Let me in, brother'. ..... "The junta spends 40 per cent of its budget on its 450,000-strong army. Only a sliver of the budget goes to health care and education. ...... "There was a time when Burma was known as Asia's rice bowl, yet today nearly a third of Burmese are malnourished or physically underdeveloped." ..... "I was held in tiny seven-by-10ft cells, where I saw my fellow inmates beaten to death in front of me."

China Catholics throng to church BBC News
China steps up space exploration programme
Belfast Telegraph
Constitutionally Suspect Presidential Election in Pakistan
JURIST
'Karan Johar says that he hates growing old'
Hindu
America's billionaires get a lot richer
AFP
Merck HIV Vaccine Study Shut Down, Volunteers Infected
Gay Wired
Clooney could face charges after motorcycle crash
Independent

Barack Obama caught between lines in race battle Times Online, UK
Obama Floats Social Security Tax Hike
ABC News "If we kept the payroll tax rate exactly the same but applied it to all earnings and not just the first $97,000," Obama wrote this week in an Iowa newspaper, "we could eliminate the entire Social Security shortfall." ....... "one possible option" .... a higher retirement age should be "on the table." .... Obama has distinguished himself as the presidential candidate most willing to touch the "third rail" of American politics. ...... the roughly five percent of Americans who earn more than $97,000 per year. ..... "It would end the contributory idea of Social Security, where you get back something for what you put in." ...... Obama's consideration of a tax hike is under fire from Republicans for its sheer size. ...... Income between $97,000 and $200,000 would continue to be exempt from Social Security taxes under the Edwards proposal. ..... Clinton opposes both ..... her focus would be on getting back to fiscal discipline in the non-Social Security portion of the budget ...... "When you cut off the contribution at $90,000, $95,000, that's a lot of money between $95,000 and the $46 million that Warren Buffet made last year. And he's honest enough to say, 'Look, tax me because I'm a patriotic American and I want to make sure our country stays strong and is fair.'"
Obama’s game plan lets Hillary do the fighting Times Online, UK stumbling over even the name of his wife. The effortless grace of that spellbinding 2004 convention speech seemed from another era. ...... I’d just been bored by a black politician on tax policy. ..... The days in which African-American politics were defined by Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, or, even worse, Louis Farrakhan, are over. ...... The conventional wisdom about Obama is that his campaign is flailing before the relentless bulldozer of the Clinton machine. ...... some time this spring, he stalled and she rallied. ...... His support hasn’t slumped much since then; it has simply trodden water at about 20%. ..... after some superb debate performances, is now about 39%. ..... in the key early races, the polling is much closer. ..... She has global name recognition and deep loyalty among the most partisan and loyal Democrats. ...... If fellow Democrat John Edwards drops out in the early stages, his 10% could go to Obama. If Obama seems a viable candidate in South Carolina, that primary’s substantial black vote could break at the last minute for the black man in the race. ....... In a polarised climate, where Rudy Giuliani is already lambasting Hillary and itching for a fight, Obama is sticking to a disciplined message of reconciliation, unity, responsibility. ...... He detects an enormous weariness among Americans about their internal divisions in a time of war, overlaid by the anger and divisions that have deepened and widened under the Bush presidency. He suspects that if he can get past Clinton’s aura of inevitability, Democrats will realise he has a much better chance of winning a real national majority in the general election than Clinton does. Clinton polarises the way Bush polarises. She can hope for a Karl Rove-style 51% majority in a deeply divided country. He’s aiming for 55%. ..... Clinton .. represents payback for the Democrats and liberals after the Bush era ..... Obama .. offering Americans something else: not payback, but a new page.
Candidates vie for MySpace generation Sunday Herald Her official website has links to MySpace, Facebook, and LinkedIn, as well as video and photograph collections on YouTube and Flickr. ...... the 1920s with radio and the 1940s and 50s with television .... aged 18-29. ... "the demographic that is virtually unreachable by other media. ..... By the mid-term elections of 2006, YouTube had joined the blogs as a key online battleground. It was widely credited with the downfall of at least one Republican Senator, George Allen, who lost a close race in Virginia after aiming a racist comment ........ Nixon was unguarded when his stubble was obvious when he was on TV debating against Kennedy ..... giving MySpace and MTV.com users the chance to interrogate the main presidential contenders by email, text or instant message
Obama: Expand Senior Volunteer Programs The Associated Press Obama said Friday he wants to increase opportunities for older Americans to contribute to society by creating new volunteer programs. ...... sought to reach across generations by including younger Iowans in his effort to increase senior volunteer opportunities. ...... More than 60 percent of the activists who showed up for Democratic precinct caucuses in both 2000 and 2004 were older than 50. ..... "If the greatest generation can teach today's generation anything, it's that a greater America is still possible," Obama said. ..... a statewide canvass involving hundreds of volunteers working out of 46 offices in virtually every corner of the state this weekend.
Obama focuses on seniors, ties to youth KGAN
Clinton tough, Giuliani energetic, Obama optimistic
Baltimore Sun, United States
Ushering in Obama In Atlanta
Washington Post, United States R&B singer Usher Raymond to launch his "Countdown for Change" tour in the South. ..... Obama gracing the cover of Vibe magazine this month and mentions in songs this summer by rappers Common and Talib Kweli. "My raps ignite the people like Obama," raps Common. ...... Some African Americans in the crowd wore all black in a show of solidarity with marchers in Jena ..... "That we don't have people getting 100 times bigger penalties for [the sale of] crack cocaine versus powdered cocaine." ..... The city is home to about 45 colleges and universities and a short drive from South Carolina, a key primary state.
The candidates: Bill Richardson and the Latino vote Economist Republicans are repelling Hispanic voters. That is good news for Democrats...... he lived in Mexico until he was a teenager ...... After 14 years in Congress, he was America's ambassador to the United Nations. He has run a large federal bureaucracy (as Bill Clinton's energy secretary), and a state (he is currently the governor of New Mexico). ....... Mrs Clinton's main qualification—eight years as the unofficial chief adviser to a president—is marred for some voters by the fact that she was married to him. ...... the Hispanic electorate will have nearly doubled between 2000 and 2008, from 7.5m to 14m ..... Hispanics are both the largest and the fastest-growing minority .....George Bush wooed them assiduously and won 40% of the Latino vote in 2004—twice the share his fellow Republican Bob Dole ..... the Democrats' 19 percentage point lead in 2004 swelled to 39 points in 2006. ..... Duncan Hunter, who boasts he will build not one but two fences along the Mexican border ..... Florida, a big swing state where 11% of those who voted in 2006 were Latino .... Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado, which are all heavily Hispanic. ...... thanks to his name, many Latinos do not even realise he is one of them. ....... “If you build a 12-foot wall, people will get 13-foot ladders.” He is vying for third place in New Hampshire. ...... his most realistic shot may be at the vice-presidency. The Democratic nominee is likely to be a white female senator from the north-east. A male Latino governor from the south-west would balance the ticket nicely. One snag, though, is that Mrs Clinton is said not to be a huge fan. It is not clear why, but a joke Mr Richardson told in 2005 cannot have helped. .... “We've got a lot of good ones,” he said. “There's Governor [Tom] Vilsack of Iowa—he'd bring back the Midwest. There's [Senator] Joe Biden—he'd bring back the national-security voter. And there's Hillary Clinton—she'd bring back the White House furniture.
Obama unveils new tax plan DesMoinesRegister.com, IA