John Lennon:
Category: Power to the People
Jubilation
Mubarak has stepped down. He’s asked the military to take over and manage the country until they elect a new leader.
So in an irony of ironies, we’re cheering a military takeover.
Watch live here. It’s just amazing.

Arrests
Can you imagine a U.S. news organization doing a good job despite government orders to shut down? I can’t:
The chief of Al Jazeera’s Arabic-language bureau in the Egyptian capital has been arrested along with a reporter from the same channel, the Qatar-based news network reported early Saturday morning.
“Egypt’s security services have arrested Al Jazeera bureau chief in Cairo Abdel Fattah Fayed and the journalist Ahmed Yousef,” Al Jazeera said on its website.
This comes a day after a group of unidentified men stormed the Cairo offices of the pan-Arab news channel, starting a fire and smashing equipment.
Al Jazeera reportedly also said that nine of its journalists were detained on Friday amid a huge rally against President Hosni Mubarak and that its broadcast signal faced “unprecedented levels of interference.”
Yeah, I lost the signal several times yesterday and wondered if the government was trying to shut them down.
Juan Cole
Top ten accomplishments of Egyptian protestors.
How to start a progressive tea party
This is the only article I’ve read about organizing that’s really worth a hill of beans. Read it, try it!
‘A national plantation run by the Koch brothers’
Van Jones at the anti-Koch rally this weekend:
I hear a lot of talk now about liberty. There is a movement in our country that has grown up, the Tea Party movement, that has raised the question of liberty, and I say, “Thank goodness.” I’m glad that someone’s raised the question of liberty. There’s nothing more precious to an African American than liberty and justice for all. I’m glad to hear that somebody’s concerned about liberty.
But I think that what we have to be clear about is liberty always has two threats, there’s always two threats to liberty. One is the excessive concentration of political power — excessive concentration of political authority — the totalitarian threat to liberty. And that is a threat to watch out for. But there is another threat. And it is in our country a graver threat. And it is the threat that comes from excessive concentrations of economic power. Excessive concentrations of economic power in our country pose as big a threat, and frankly a greater threat than any concentration of political power. What we have to remember is that our republic is founded not just on the question of liberty, but also on democracy and justice.
And it is when the predatory, monopolistic dimension of the economic system starts to gain momentum, then the question of justice and democracy has to come forward too. Not just liberty and property rights, but justice and human rights, and democracy, and the people’s rights to be free from economic tyranny and economic domination. We will not live on a national plantation run by the Koch brothers. We’re not going to do that. We refuse to do that.
Egypt
“The square is absolutely packed, there is hardly standing room for people. Tens of thousands of people are still streaming towards the square,” she said.
Our producer in Egypt reports on the latest developments
“The mood and atmosphere is incredible.”
Our correspondent said the army was “facilitating” the protests.
Soldiers at Tahrir Square have formed a human chain around protesters, and are checking people as they enter for weapons. Tanks have been positioned near the square, and officers have been checking identity papers.
‘Walk like an Egyptian’
We’re not seeing a lot of this on the teevee, because they wouldn’t want us to get ideas. Looks like courage really is contagious:
Thousands of university, college and school students – joined by workers – are marching in London and Manchester against Tory cuts to education, fee rises and attacks on jobs and services.
The revolution in Tunisia and uprising in Egypt have clearly inspired the marches. Marchers have chanted, “Egypt, Egypt everywhere.”
A student in Manchester has made a placard reading, “Egypt, Tunisia thank you for the inspiration”. In London one said, “Walk like an Egyptian.
London
Socialist Worker spoke to protesters in London as they assembled to march.Aisha, an FE student from Camden in north London said, “I’ve been on all the demonstrations, but some of my friends are here who haven’t been out on the protests before.
“I like the slogan ‘This is only the beginning’, because it’s going to be a long fight against this government.”
Theo, a school student from south east London, took part in the Day X walkouts last year.
He said, “Lots of people who want to go to university won’t be able to and people will definitely be affected by the cuts to EMA [Education Maintenance Allowance]. The government is making the wrong people pay – the bankers are getting hundreds of thousands in bonuses.”
For workers, the student protests have been an inspiration.
Continue reading “‘Walk like an Egyptian’”

