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More Repressive violence from the government of Bangladesh

February 14, 2012 in World Unrest

The Committee to Protect Journalists reports that Bangladesh continues to uphold his horrible record for repressions of journalists.

The bodies of Golam Mustofa Sarowar and his wife, Meherun Runi, were found by their 5-year-old son on Saturday morning, news reports said. Both journalists had been hit repeatedly with sharp weapons, according to news reports. Sarowar, a news editor at the Dhaka-based Maasranga Television, had recently returned to Bangladesh from Germany, where he had worked for Deutsche Welle  Runi was a senior reporter at ATN Bangia Telegram Televison   also in Dhaka.

Local journalists demonstrated at the National Press Club on Saturday afternoon and again on Monday, protesting the deaths of the two journalists.

Bangladesh is among the worst nations in the world in combating deadly anti-press violence. Bangladesh ranks 11th on CPJ’s Impunity Index, which calculates unsolved journalist murders as a percentage of each country’s population. Twelve journalists have been murdered in reprisal for their work in Bangladesh.

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A little background on Bangladesh

Although initially Bangladesh opted for a secular nationalist ideology as embodied in its Constitution, the principle of secularism was subsequently replaced by a commitment to the Islamic way of life through a series of constitutional amendments and government proclamations between 1977 and 1988. The Constitution  establishes Islam as the state religion but provides for the right to practice—subject to law, public order, and morality—the religion of one’s choice.

Voices of opposition are ever more at risk in Bangladesh, as groups who document or speak out against the actions of the government have found themselves increasingly threatened and under attack. On January 27, 2005, Shah Abu Mohamed Shamsul Kibria, former Finance Minister and senior member of the secular Bangladesh Awami League, was assassinated. This followed a 2004 attempt to assassinate the leader of the Awami League, Sheikh Hasina, in a bomb and grenade blast. She survived, but twenty-three members of her party were killed. ] Other AL members, junior and senior alike, have reported harassment and intimidation.

Reported cases of HIV/AIDS are growing at an alarming extent, with over a million AIDS sufferers in Bangladesh. Whilst this rise of AIDS is not confined to Bangladesh in particular, the government is doing nothing to prevent the spread of AIDS and is not prosecuting police who rape homosexual men.

Politically vulnerable groups at risk of HIV infection, such as sex workers and men who have sex with men, have not been educated about the risk of AIDS, nor protected by the authorities, and they have found themselves regularly assaulted, abducted, raped, gang raped, and subjected to extortion by the police and by powerful criminals. Organizations have been established to stem the development of AIDS through education, but such projects have been curbed by police brutality towards members who work on them.]

Not a place that I would recommend visiting.

Proclaim the Queen!

    Change is here but many among us refuse to see it, much less admit it.

    November 16, 2011 in Foreign Affairs, World Unrest

    Andrew Bacevich has written a very thoughtful article that appeared in Asia Times titled:  Big Change Whether We like it or not. Like just about anything that Mr. Bacevich writes, I recommend reading his article.  Following is my summary of it.

    Andrew J Bacevich is professor of history and international relations at Boston University. A TomDispatch regular, he is the author, among other works, of Washington Rules: America’s Path to Permanent War and the editor of The Short American Century: A Postmortemforthcoming from Harvard University Press. 

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    Synopsis of Big Change Whether We Like It or Not

    Europeans created the modern Middle East with a single purpose in mind: to serve European interests. With the waning of European power in the wake of World War II, the United States – gingerly at first, but by the 1980s without noticeable inhibition – stepped in to fill the void. What had previously been largely a British sphere now became largely an American one, with the ever-accelerating tempo of US military activism testifying to that fact. 

    According to Bacevich, big change is happening now and it is political, economic and military.

    At least four converging vectors are involved:

    1. The Collapse of the Freedom Agenda
    George W Bush set out to remake the Greater Middle East. This was the ultimate strategic objective of Bush’s “global war on terror”. Intent on accomplishing across the Islamic world what he believed the United States had accomplished in Europe and the Pacific between 1941 and 1945, Bush sought to erect a new order conducive to US interests.

    2.  Second, the Great Recession: In the history of the American political economy, the bursting of speculative bubbles forms a recurring theme. Wall Street shenanigans that leave the plain folk footing the bill are an oft-told tale. Recessions of one size or another occur at least once a decade.  [I, as Bacevich, believe that the American people are now wise to this and I believe this is indeed a game changer in the USA.] As Bacevich writes:
    “. . . Members of the middle class are beginning to realize that the myth of America as a classless society is just that. In truth, the game is rigged to benefit the few at the expense of the many. . . ”

    3. Third, the Arab Spring.  Bacevich writes that “. . . the ongoing Arab upheaval is sweeping from that region of the world the last vestiges of Western imperialism. . . ”   On this point, I am not in agreement with Bacevich.  I believe that is a story that is yet to unfold as certainly western imperialism is alive and well in Bahrain.  Also it would appear to me that the field is being plowed for American imperialism in Libya.

    4. Fourth, Beleaguered Europe’s Quest for a Lifeline: To a considerable extent, the story of the 20th century – at least the commonly-told Western version of that story – is one of Europe screwing up and America coming to the rescue. The really big screw-ups were, of course, the two world wars.  Today, Europe has once again screwed up, although fortunately this time there is no need for foreign armies to sort out the mess. The crisis of the moment is an economic one, due entirely to European recklessness and irresponsibility (not qualitatively different from the behavior underlying the American economic crisis).

    So, since the USA can’t come rescue its cousin, Europe is turning to China.

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    As the article concludes, we are told that the USA is not over, but it is decidedly a different USA than the USA of 1945 and it’s time for most of Washington to realize this.

    Proclaim the Queen!

      Arrest Warrants on War Crimes Charges against top members of Gaddafi Regime

      May 4, 2011 in Libya, World Unrest

      The Guardian reports today that arrest warrants on war crimes charges are expected to be issued against top members of the Gaddafi regime.

      The Gaddafi regime has committed war crimes against Libyan pro-democracy protesters, opening fire “systematically” on peaceful demonstrations, according to a report to be issued today by the prosecutor for the international criminal court, who will seek arrest warrants against top members of the regime later this month.

      The prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, has said he will ask judges at the court in The Hague for up to five warrants. He has not named his suspects but in his report to the UN security council today, he will indicate that they include people who gave orders for the alleged atrocities.

      “It is indeed a characteristic of the situation in Libya that massive crimes are reportedly committed upon instruction of a few persons who control the organisations that execute the orders,” the report says. “Arresting those who ordered the commission of crimes, should the judges decide to issue warrants, will contribute to the protection of civilians in Libya.”  MORE

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      QUEEN’S COMMENTS

      Well this should open up a whole new can of worms. If Gaddafi and his crew are to be charged with war crimes then, Assad, Mubarak, Saleh, King Hamad and numerous leaders of these Arab nations should be charged with war crimes against their people as well.

      For example, consider this report from Bahrain.

      “Nearly 50 doctors, nurses and other medical staff have been detained in Bahrain in connection with treating anti-government protesters, human-rights officials said Wednesday.

      Those detained included 24 doctors and 23 nurses and paramedics, according to Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights.

      “All of them were held somewhere nobody knows — we think they are in a military base,” Rajab said. “Reports we are receiving say that almost all of them were tortured.”

      Fareeda Dallal, a medical professional married to a doctor who also was detained, appeared on Al Jazeera satellite network Tuesday with a black eye to say she had been harassed by her captors and forced to dance for them.”

       

      Proclaim the Queen!

        The demise of Bin Laden may have been timed to fan the embers of US patriotism and appetite for war

        May 2, 2011 in Talking Politics, World Unrest

        Cynical but Worth Considering, Nonetheless

        Bin Laden’s assassination is sure to draw retaliation from  Al Qaida. Who knows what it will be, but it is certain to fan the flames of American patriotism–just exactly at a time when the American people  are weary of war and are demanding that our troops be brought home and more attention be paid to our domestic needs which are great and many.

        Perhaps the killing of Osama Bin Laden on the day that George Bush announced “mission accomplished” is anything but an accident.  Perhaps it is a military strategy that was specifically designed to fan the embers of  a dying war and justify more killing and Wall Street War profiteering.  After all, the compound where Bin Laden was found has been there since 2005–for six years!

        If Al Qaida is smart, they will not retaliate.  Let’s hope for all our sakes that they are smart.

         

        Proclaim the Queen!

          April 4 Massive China Crackdown on Artists and Writers Worst in 10 years

          April 4, 2011 in World Unrest

          UK Independent reports today that Dissident artist Ai Weiwei is missing

          One of China’s most famous contemporary artists remained missing, more than a day after he was blocked from leaving the country and police raided his home, his wife said.

          The disappearance of artist Ai Weiwei comes as China carries out a massive crackdown on lawyers, writers and activists, arresting and detaining dozens since online calls for protests similar to those in the Middle East and North Africa began to circulate in February. No public protests have emerged.

          The UK Guardian reports that His detention comes amid a wider crackdown on activists and dissidents, which human rights campaigners describe as the worst in over a decade. At least 23 people have been detained, mostly in relation to incitement to subversion or creating a disturbance. Three more have been formally arrested and more than a dozen are missing, including high profile human rights lawyers.

          Proclaim the Queen!

            Saturday March 26 News

            March 26, 2011 in Class War, Uncategorized, World News, World Unrest

            March 26, 2011

            Remember, the most important news happens from Friday Afternoon until Sunday Afternoon.and there is a reason:  fewer people are paying attention on the weekend

            This day in history In 1981 Police and Albanian demonstrators battle in Kosovo Yugoslavi; 1969 Nuclear reactor Dodewaard Netherlands goes into use; 1960 Iraq executes 30 after attack on President Kasse; 1942 20 tons of gelignite in a stone quarry at Easton Pennsylvania kills 21.

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            WISCONSIN REVOLUTION

            Republican lawmakers continue to push forward with their My Way or the Highway

            Late Friday the Wisconsin Republican lawmakers/breakers unexpectedly published despite a temporary restraining order barring publication, sparking confusion and more animosity among legislators who have fiercely debated the issue for weeks. State officials disagreed over whether publication of the law — a procedural requirement — would allow it to be in force on Saturday.  See New York Times

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            MICHIGAN REVOLUTION

            Michigan’s Rick Snyder may not take care of the working people but he and his crones take care of their Insurance buddies.

            The Detroit Free Press reports that Starting July 1, Michigan motorists will pay more than ever — $145 per vehicle – to cover the state’s cost of treating severe accident injuries.

            The MCCA fee has fluctuated since it began in 1979. It is based on predictions of future costs of current and new severe injury claims. Next year, it’s predicted that 850 insured Michiganders will be catastrophically injured. That’s down from the 1,200 severe injuries that were predicted in the past year – a 29% decrease.

            QUEEN’S COMMENTS BETWEEN THE LINES: So if there are going to be almost 1/3 fewer accidents in the coming year, why are the rates being raised on Michigan people?  Remember: one of the reasons the number of accidents anticipated is reduced is because there are few customers for the insurance companies in Michigan to take money from as people are leaving Michigan to find jobs elsewhere as Michigan has the highest rate of unemployment in the nation.  Thus less potential for profit for the insurance companies.  They have to make it up somewhere. I wish that people who work for a living would start paying attention to what the Republican/Tea Party really mean when they talk about lower taxes–they mean lower taxes for the rich. They make up the difference by nickel and diming the majority of us.

            Michigan loves the insurance corporations even more than Texas. Michigan is the only state that requires all drivers to have unlimited medical coverage for injuries suffered in auto accidents.

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            JAPAN AND WORLD-WIDE NUCLEAR DISASTER

            Conditions at Japan Nuke Plan Worsen
            Despite some signs of hope in the past week at Japan’s troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plan, conditions have taken and increasingly alarming turn.  The Chicago Tribune reports that the Japan disaster puts spotlight on 4-decade old Exelon-owned nuclear plant and the campaign that a small group of environmentalists and nuclear critics have fought to shut down one of Exelon Corporations nuclear power plans in New Jersey just got a boast.

            The Oyster Creek plant which is America’s oldest operating nuclear reactor, sits about 5 miles inland from a string of beaches on New Jersey’s coastline known as the Jersey shore.

            Tokyo Electric Power Co. is now rushing to inject the reactors with fresh water instead amid concerns about the corrosive nature of the salt in seawater, Hidehiko Nishiyama of Japan’s Nuclear and Industry Safety Agency said at a briefing Saturday. Workers have begun pumping radioactive water from one of the units, Masateru Araki, a TEPCO spokesman, said Saturday. [Queen Comment: Is anyone asking what they will do with that radioactive water? ]

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            REVOLUTIONS IN NORTHERN AFRICA

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            LIBYA

            Friday at 9:41 PM (Remember the rule about weekend news) The Washington Post reports that:
            U.S. ALLIES PONDER ARMING LIBYAN REBELS
            (Queen’s analysis of headline:  Notice that the Washington Post refers to those who are against Gaddafi as “rebels”. The word “rebel” has certain connotations as–being leftist; against ‘legitimate’ authority.  Other media outlets that are more sympathetic with the people of Libya refer to those against the Gaddafi regime as “pro-democracy fighters”. You may think that I”m nit picking here, but what something is called has a huge influence on our reaction to it. In spite of the cliche about stick and stone. . . Words can indeed influence and hurt you. )

            According to the Post:  “International opponents of arming the rebels have said that both the identity and the aims of the opposition are too uncertain, or that the arms embargo authorized by the United Nations applies to both the Gaddafi government and the rebels.”

            According to CNN, coalition fighter planes in a 24 hour period took out 7 Libyan tanks and people are clinging to the hope that Gaddafi will be defeated. Citizens in the city of Ajdabiya heard that Gaddafis’s thugs were breaking into houses and taking the men away so many families have fled that city and driven away as far as their cars could take them before running out of fuel.  Thousands of them are now huddled with their children out in the desert without any protection.

            QUEEN’S COMMENT: There are three huge problems with this revolution: 1) The people are scattered among the various cities and  2) the overwhelming majority of them have no military experience  3) At least 1/3 if not more of the Gaddafi forces are mercenaries who have no hesitation about firing on the Libyan people.  If you contrast the Libyan situation with that of Egypt, you can easily see that there is no comparison whatsoever.  The heart of that revolution was concentrated Cairo–a city with a population of about 80 million people–most of whom came out in person to support the revolution. The Egyptian army is primarily made up of Egyptians, most of whom were hesitant to fire on other Egyptians. But if you will just consider the sheer number:  80 million to what? several hundred thousand in the military?  Mubarak had no choice unless he wanted to use nuclear weapons against his own people.

            There are only a few choices with Libya:  1) Special forces can come in and take out Gaddafi–capture him and turn him over to and International court.  2) Make a deal with Gaddafi whereby representatives from the U.N. can come into the country and monitor what he is doing–put Gaddafi on probation and protect the people.  3) Send in trained ground forces.  Giving these people weapons would be about like giving me such weapons.  I wouldn’t know the first thing about how to use it.  And there is even more:  Because of the scattered locations, in order to defeat Gaddafi, these people, or a least a few of them, need to be skilled military strategists.  Victory for the Pro-democracy fighters is not going to happen without assistance from military professionals.  I don’t see it as a possibility barring a miracle.

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            EGYPT

            I’m hoping that the U.N. have sent people to Egypt to offer assistance in forming a democratic political party. They will need help in doing this and in learning about campaigning strategies. At the moment there are only two organized parties in Egypt and neither of them are very promising in terms of effecting a democracy.

            All is not well in Egypt.

            In Egypt yesterday (Friday), thousands gathered in the Cairo square that was the heart of Egypt’s uprising to protest a proposed law that would ban protests — and to voice fears that their revolution may not have been much of a revolution, after all.

            Six weeks after President Hosni Mubarak stepped down, protesters in Tahrir Square said they worry that some things have not changed. Exacerbating those worries was the decree this week by Egypt’s civilian Cabinet that will ban protests and strikes deemed harmful to the economy if the military approves it. (SOURCE)

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            TUNISIA

            AFP reports that Italy offers Tunisia a Line of Credit

            Italy is to give Tunisia a line of credit of 150 million euros to help it relaunch its economy, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said in Tunis Friday. It is also to give Tunisia 80 million euros ($113 million) to fight against clandestine immigration. The line of credit should “help priority areas in Tunisia”, Frattini told reporters.He said cooperation could take the form of training young Tunisians, combatting marine pollution, improving fisheries and encouraging tourism. “Every year 60,000 Italians visit Tunisia and we must encourage these potential tourists to come back to the country this year,” he said. A publicity campaign promoting Tunisia will be launched in Italy next month, he added.

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            YEMEN

            The Scenes in Yemen are beginning to look more like those in Egypt in the last stages of its revolution. Last week’s bloodshed prompted a wave of defections by military commanders, ruling party members, and others, swelling the ranks of the opposition and leaving the president isolated.

            Like Mubarak, Saleh has made gestures trying to appease the protesters, to no avail. Over the past month, he has offered to not run again when his current term ends in 2013, and promised to step down by the end of the year and open a dialogue with the leaders of the demonstrators. That offer was rejected as too little, too late.

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            REVOLUTIONS IN MIDDLE EAST

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            SYRIA

            BBC reports that U.S. and the U.N. have condemned the Syrian Government

            There has been international condemnation of the Syrian government following reports that troops fired on peaceful demonstrators on Friday. The US said Syria was trying to “repress and intimidate demonstrators”, while UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged Damascus to exercise restraint.

            In the US, White House spokesman Jay Carney said: “We strongly condemn the Syrian government’s attempts to repress and intimidate demonstrators,” Mr Carney said late on Friday. Meanwhile, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon telephoned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to urge “maximum restraint” And he also stressed that Damascus had an obligation to respect the fundamental rights of its citizens. Amnesty International – which expressed fears that 55 people have died in Syria in the past week – also condemned the treatment of demonstrators by Damascus.

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            BAHRAIN

            Los Angeles Times reports that on Friday the Bahraini government set up military and police cordons at the main roads into Shiite villages. By mid-morning, ski-masked soldiers in tanks and armored personnel carriers and riot police with batons, guns and tear gas had established checkpoints and taken up positions on the Budaiya highway, which threads together villages such as Sar, Bani Jamra and Duraz.

            But protests flared around 3 p.m., as groups of young men ranging in number from a few dozen to a few hundred gathered by mosques and cemeteries in villages and moved toward the blockades. On the highway by Duraz, riot police surged down a street leading into town, firing tear gas. In the village, young men collected before a small Shiite mosque and walked down the main street toward the police, unarmed, some wearing scarves and white rags to shield themselves from the tear gas, whose acrid smell hung in the air. [Queen's comment:  tear gas that is supplied by American manufacturers.  When will our  millionaire Congress make it a crime to sell weapons to dictatorships?]

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            JORDAN

            The New York Times has a very descriptive article of the fighting in Jordan that was published on Friday.

            Witnesses said the violence — the worst since demonstrations began in Jordan in January — came after some 200 pro-government counter-demonstrators using sticks and rocks attacked the protesters, who fought back. The riot police were called in, and they broke up the fighting as well as the tent camp.

            The Interior Ministry said the man who died in the fighting, Khairi Jamil Saad, 56, an unemployed father of five, had suffered a fatal heart attack. But his son Nasser Saad said in an interview that the riot police had attacked and beaten them both. He said he saw his father’s body at the hospital. His teeth were broken, and he had signs of being beaten on his hands, legs and ears.

            Note:  Two previous articles on Jordan from the Queen yesterday.

            Jordan has fully entered into its revolution today

            A Different Perspective on the Jordan Revolution from the Wall Street Journal

            Proclaim the Queen!

              Friday March 25 News UPdate

              March 25, 2011 in World News, World Unrest

              March 25, 2011

              On this day in 1947 Coal mine explosion in Centralia, Ill, claims 111.   In 1955 United States Customs seizes copies of Allen Ginsberg’s poem “Howl” as obscene. In 1960 - DH Lawrence’ “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” ruled not obscene (NYC).  In 1971  - European council accepts Mansholt plan laying off 5 million farmers [a reminder just in case may think that this conspiracy of the rich against the majority is a new thing.]

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              JAPAN

              Reactor Core at Japan’s Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Plant May have been breached

              Huffington Post reports this morning that Japanese nuclear safety officials said Friday that they suspect that the reactor core at one unit of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant may have breached, raising the possibility of more severe contamination to the environment.

              Toyota Hybrid to Re-start Production on Monday

              Reuters reports that Toyota is to restart production of three hybrid models on Monday.Production will resume for the Prius, Lexus HS250h and CT200h at the Tsutsumi factory in central Japan and Toyota Motor Kyushu in the south, spokeswoman Shiori Hashimoto said. All 18 factories that assemble Toyota and Lexus vehicles in Japan, including those operated by group units, have been closed by the quake.

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              LIBYA

              New York Times reports that the United Arab Emirates said it would commit warplanes to joint patrols with Western allies. Early on Friday, the United Arab Emirates said it would commit 12 aircraft — six F-16 and six Mirage warplanes — to join patrols enforcing the no-fly zone authorized a week ago by the United Nations Security Council, the official Emirates News Agency reported. It quoted the foreign minister, Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan, as saying the deployment would begin “in the coming days.”

              Bloomberg reports that U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague reaffirmed that there will be no invasion of Libya by Western countries, though he said he “can’t exclude” the small-scale use of special forces on the ground.

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              SYRIA

              Syria may grant more freedom for political parties, a salary increase for public workers, greater freedom for the news media and an end to the 48 year old emergency rule

              Bloomberg reports that Syria said it may end emergency rule and grant more freedom for political parties, in response to protests that reportedly left many dead.

              New York Times reports that Syria‘s repressive leadership came under unexpectedly heavy pressure on Thursday as thousands of angry demonstrators massed again in the southern city of Dara’a, demanding democratic reform and protesting the deaths of more than a dozen people shot by security forces in the past week.

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              YEMEN

              Saleh’s promise to step down next election didn’t pacify protesters did not work

              QUEEN’S COMMENTS: It appears that Saleh, the current dictator of Yemen is following the game plan of Mubarak in trying to at least appear to meet the demands of his people if they will allow him to stay.  Like Murbarak, these tactics are not working with the people. Eventually over the next month Saleh will be forced out of office.  Bloomberg reports that the political opposition to President Ali Abdullah Saleh plans a nationwide protest against the state of emergency ordered by the president after a massacre of demonstrators last week.

              Ali Abdullah Saleh announces that he is willing to step down

              Al Jazeera did in fact just report that Yemen’s president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, has offered to stand down – but only to hand over power “to capable, responsible hands”. The longtime leader addressed crowds shown on state TV and said he was ready to meet with protesters, as tens of thousands gathered in a “day of departure” rally.

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              BAHRAIN

              In Bahrain, Bloomberg reports that mostly Shiite Muslim opposition supporters plan a rally to denounce government violence that has left about 20 of them dead.

              Friday to be DAY OF RAGE in Bahrain according to al Jazeera. However, it was not clear who was behind the marches, named Friday “day of rage”, plans for which were circulated by email and internet on Friday.

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              EGYPT

              UPDATE ON RESULTS FROM THE EGYPTIAN VOTERS YESTERDAY: ELECTIONS WILL BE HELD SOONER RATHER THAN LATER

              In case you missed it, the results were in yesterday and Egyptian voters overwhelmingly approved changes in the constitution, opening the way for parliamentary and presidential elections within months, according to final results from a landmark referendum announced Sunday. Opponents fear the swift timetable could boost the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood and members of the former ruling party.

              The Brotherhood had campaigned heavily for a “yes” vote in the referendum. Critics say that since it and the former ruling party are the best organized political forces in the country, they stand to gain the most in an early election — which will bring in Egypt’s first democratically elected government to replace the regime of ousted President Hosni Mubarak.  MORE

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              HAITI

              “Baby Doc” hospitalized

              AFP reports that  Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier was being treated in a private hospital Thursday for an undisclosed ailment, the judge handling cases filed against him told AFP.

              Duvalier was taken to the hospital late Wednesday, soon after receiving a court order limiting his movements to the Haitian capital, said Judge Jean Carves. Police officer Auguste Aristidas confirmed that Duvalier had been hospitalized. Haitian police could be seen outside Duvalier’s hospital room.

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              WISCONSIN

              Minnesota Post reports that An energetic, deliberate and calculated campaign to recall eight GOP state senators who backed Gov. Scott Walker’s anti-union and educational budget-cut agenda is under way. The two-front campaign aims first to retake Wisconsin’s Senate for the Democrats — and ultimately unseat Walker himself.  One major effort is happening now 150 miles east of the Twin Cities in La Crosse, home district to teetering Republican Sen. Dan Kapanke.  Besides his Walker backing, Kapanke has faced ethics charges. It’s led to signs at public gatherings that read: “Recall Hanky-Kapanke.”

              Right now, the Republicans control the Senate 19-14. If the Democrats can flip three of the districts, they would gain control 17-16.

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              MICHIGAN

              Michigan Lawmakers Approve Jobless Benefit Changes

              Bloomberg reports that Thousands of unemployed people in Michigan could continue receiving extended federal unemployment benefits under a plan approved by state lawmakers Wednesday, though state-level benefits would be limited for people filing new jobless claims next year.

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              INDIANA

              Suggestion to Governor Walker Cost man his job

              The San Francisco Chronicle reports today that an Indiana prosecutor said one of his deputies resigned Thursday after admitting that he sent an e-mail to Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker suggesting the Republican fake an attack on himself to discredit public employee unions.

              Johnson County Prosecutor Brad Cooper said Carlos Lam initially denied sending the Feb. 19 e-mail suggesting that Walker have someone posing as a union sympathizer fake an attack on him, perhaps using a gun. Lam first said someone hacked his account but later acknowledged sending it. Lam did not return a message left Thursday at a phone listing for him.  The e-mail was sent amid daily protests at the Wisconsin Capitol against Walker’s plan to strip nearly all public employee collective bargaining rights.

              Proclaim the Queen!

                Thursday Morning March 24 News UPdate

                March 24, 2011 in Uncategorized, World News, World Unrest

                On this day in History:

                March 24, 2003  - The Arab League votes 21-1 in favor of a resolution demanding the immediate and unconditional removal of U.S. and British soldiers from Iraq.

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                WISCONSIN

                CREW Reports on Punishment Mission of Wisconsin Republican Senators–They wasted taxpayer money by knowingly sending out troopers to look for Democratic Senators.

                Scott Walker Knowingly lied to the People of Wisconsin – For many of the rich and those who represent the rich, you will find that the end always justifies the means when it comes to promoting their broken ideology.

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                MICHIGAN

                The Associated Press is pumping sunshine for Governor Rick Snyder.  Headline for a piece that appeared in the Bloomberg news reads:  Michigan’s unemployment rate continues to dip

                The state said Wednesday that February’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 10.4 percent. That’s a decrease of three-tenths of a percentage point and is well below the February 2010 rate of 13.5 percent.  They barely mention at the end:  There also are fewer workers active in the state’s labor force.

                DUH! In 1960, Michigan had 19 seats in the U.S. House of Representative. Because of the state’s population decline, the number of seats has been whittled to 14.  Detroit has lost 25% of its population. The unemployed population in Michigan is decreasing because its residents are moving away to other states that offer more hope, but you can bet that the Republicans will promote the false notion instead of what these statistics really represent.

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                JAPAN

                Wall Street Journal reports that the disaster business is working out well for Corporate America

                Japanese beverage makers are ramping up production of mineral water amid increasing demand from quake-devastated areas and escalating fears about radioactive contamination from the heavily damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, and have asked foreign mineral-water producers to increase shipments to Japan. Coca-Cola (Japan) Co. has been operating all of its seven mineral-water plants in Japan at full capacity since the March 11 earthquake, a company spokeswoman said Thursday.

                Toyota to Resume Japan Hybrid Out put: Honda Extends Closures [Bloomberg]

                Toyota Motor Corp. will resume production of three hybrid models in Japan on March 28, after an earthquake and tsunami shut down plants for two weeks. Toyota will restart output of the Prius, Lexus HS250h and Lexus CT200h hybrid models, which are in high demand. Honda will extend closures at its two car assembly factories until April 3, spokesman Tomohiro Okada said today.

                Fukushima workers in hospital after radiation exposure (BBC News)

                The pair had been attempting to restore the cooling system in reactor 3, which was damaged by the quake on 11 March. Several workers have now been hurt on the site, an indication of the scale of the task facing them. Radiation levels in Tokyo’s water supply have now fallen, but remain high in other areas of northern Japan. The official death toll from the magnitude 9.0 quake and subsequent tsunami has now risen to 9,523. Another 16,094 people are listed as missing.

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                LIBYA

                USA IS PRESSING TO TURN THE HOT POLITICAL POTATO OVER TO NATO

                BBC News reports that Nato members debated who should lead the intervention, with the US keen to hand over operational control to Nato. Nato members have been holding talks about assuming responsibility for the no-fly zone over Libya, so far without agreement. Turkey is an integral part of the naval blockade, but has expressed concern about the alliance taking over command of the no-fly zone from the US. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has again urged Col Gaddafi to step down and leave Libya.UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged all sides in Libya to cease hostilities. “All those who violate international humanitarian and human rights law will be held fully accountable,” his spokesman Martin Nesirky said.

                MSNBC reports
                :  NATO quarrels as Gaddafi Keeps Up Attacks
                NATO again failed to agree to take over command of the military operation “Odyssey Dawn” from the United States, chiefly because of objections from Turkey, diplomats said. The USA with its forces already tied up in Iraq and Afghanistan, said it wants to give up its lead role in Libya in a “matter of days,” with NATO playing an important role in the command of the operation, although the exact structure of its role was still under discussion.

                QUEEN’S COMMENTS: What all these people seem to be forgetting is that Gaddafi qualifies as a legally insane person.  Among other things, such as maintaining underground prisons where he puts people who disagree with him, this is a man who dresses up in women’s clothing–hardly the recommendation for a stable identity for a leader of people.  Gaddafi is a zero sum game.  Either he is taken out or he will commit an unspeakable act of terror, likely with the USA as his first target, after the dust settles. You can absolutely take that to the bank.  Here are the problems that are not likely to be overcome:  1) The rag-tag “army” of pro-democracy people are not trained soldiers. They cannot stand up to trained killers.  2) At least 50%  of Gaddafi’s army are paid professional mercenaries.  Unlike the Egyptians soldiers, these people are trained killers who have no hesitation on firing on Libyans.  They are not likely to willingly put down their arms because among other things, it means they won’t have a job any more.  Unless NATO is willing to bring in ground troops, you can forget about taking over Libya.  Gaddaffi must either be captured or killed for this to ever end in any kind of way that is beneficial to the majority.  If you are going to walk in and disturb a hornet’s nest, then you better bring a can of gasoline to pour on it unless you want some serious consequences.  Until this is settled all the NATO nations can consider themselves as nations whose national security is destabilized.  It would be a toss-up as to which nation Gaddafi would go after first:  France or the USA.

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                SYRIA

                Al Jazeera and other sources report that the violence continues to escalate in Syria. Around 20,000 Syrians chanting freedom slogans marched on Thursday in the funerals of nine protesters killed by security forces in the southern city of Daraa, witnesses said. “The blood of martyrs is not spilt in waste!” they chanted in Deraa’s southern cemetery.

                QUEEN’S COMMENTS

                You can expect the Syrian government to continue to come down hard on the protesters. Daraa is a city that the government of President Bashar al-Assad cannot afford to lose. Like most of Syria – is overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim. This makes it potentially unfriendly territory for Alawites like the Assad family and their allies. The biggest loss would be would be the loss of control over the Jordanian border. The nearby city of Irbid (Jordan) has close ties to the Muslim Brotherhood who still hold a grudge against the Syrian government for the massacre of thousands of Muslim Brothers and Civilians in the northern city of Hama in 1982. [See Wiki for detail on the Hama massacre. Remember these are tribal people who pass grudges from generation to generation for centuries. 1982 is a drop in the bucket to them.]  My final assessment for Syria is that even if the people got rid of Bashar al-Assad that they would have to deal with yet another repressive regime.]

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                BAHRAIN

                Bahrain cancels flights in feud with Lebanon (Montreal Gazette)

                Bahrain has suspended flights to and from Lebanon a day after it warned its nationals not to travel there following declarations of support by Iranian-backed Shiite group Hezbollah for protests by Bahrain’s Shiites.Bahrain’s state-run Gulf Air also said in a statement on its website that all flights to Iran and Iraq had been suspended until March 31, without giving a reason.

                Bahrain Protests Bring Economy to a Halt (Reuters)
                Once a relaxed and business-friendly island on the edge of the conservative kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain’s economy has been brought to a standstill by unrest that has sucked in neighboring armies and sent investors and expatriates running. Gulf Hotel has closed some of its floors and cut back restaurant hours while some of its staff are on voluntary leave. Bahrain’s Spring of Culture, a festival set to take place this month, has been canceled.  [Queen's comments: It's too bad, but history has shown that the only way to get the attention of the ruling rich minority is by making them feel the same economic pain that is felt by the majority--a lesson that Americans of the 21st century have yet to learn.]

                Amnesty International Reports on the Violence in Bahrain
                Dr Hani Mowafi, a US medical doctor who was part of the Amnesty International team, found a pattern of fatal and serious injuries during February’s violence showing that the security forces used live ammunition at close range, and apparently targeted protesters’ heads, chests and abdomens. They also fired medium-to-large calibre bullets from high-powered rifles on 18 February.

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                YEMEN

                Exclusive Interview with Yemen General (Reuters)

                General Ali Mohsen, who sent troops to protect pro-democracy protesters in Sanaa, said military rule in Arab countries was outdated and that the people would decide who would govern them in the framework of a modern, civilian state.”Ali Mohsen as an individual has served for 55 years and has no desire for any power or position,” he told Reuters in a written response to questions. “I have no more ambition left except to spend the remainder of my life in tranquility, peace and relaxation far from the problems of politics and the demands of the job.”

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                HAITI

                The votes are being counted from the recent election.  The New York Daily News reports that Haiti expats living in Brooklyn have lively election debates.  Queen’s comment: I agree with Baker Marie Voltaire, 35, said she’s excited for the prospect of a female president, adding that Martelly’s reputation as misogynistic and vulgar would make Haiti the laughingstock of the world, were he president.  [ but Martelly would be a much easier tool for USA corporate interests to manipulate.  AND an important fact that many seem to overlook is that regardless the “winner”, that person will face Senate and Chamber of Deputies controlled by the party of outgoing President Rene Preval, who was barred by the constitution from running for  re-election. As president, Préval was a strong supporter of investigations and trials related to human rights violations committed by military and police personnel.  Martelly is an idiot, but his female opponent Manigat is a 70-year-old university administrator and former senator who is a conservative.

                Proclaim the Queen!

                  Morning News: Wednesday March 23–Japan, Libya, Syria, Bahrain, Yemen, Haiti, Wisconsin, Michigan

                  March 23, 2011 in World News, World Unrest

                  Today is March 23, 2011. On this day in 1925 – An evolution law, enacted on this day in the great State of Tennessee, made it a crime for a teacher in any state-supported public school or college to teach any theory that contradicted the Bible’s account of man’s creation. Within two months, a Dayton, Tennessee high school science teacher, John T. Scopes was indicted, and later convicted, in the famous ‘Monkey Trial’ for teaching his students the theory of evolution; that man descended from a lower order of animals … or monkeys. Scopes was fined $100. Defense Attorney Clarence Darrow stated that this was “the first case of its kind since we stopped trying people for witchcraft.” QUEEN’S COMMENT: I’m with Darrow’s opinion on this one.

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                  JAPAN

                  Cost of Earthquake estimate at $308 Billion

                  Wall Street Journal’s Market Watch reports that The Japanese government said Wednesday that the economic cost of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami could be as much as $308 billion, more than double the cost of the 1995 Kobe earthquake.

                  Adobe Shares have Declined 5.7% Since Earth Quake
                  Bloomberg reports this news which “I”m sure will be foremost on the minds of millions of Americans who need a job.”  So much for the “security” provided by global markets.  Adobe lowered its revenue forecast by $50 million because of the disaster in Japan, where the company gets 10 percent to 15 percent of its revenue each quarter, making it Adobe’s second-largest market after the U.S. Some analysts had expected a bigger sales impact after the March 11 quake and tsunami shut down some power and transportation systems and disrupted business.

                  Status of the Six Reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant

                  CNN reports on the status of the reactors:

                  Reactor 1: On Tuesday TEPCO reported that seawater did more damage electrical and cooling systems for this reactor than previously believed, and the unit will take longer to repair than expected.
                  Reactor 2:White smoke emerged from the building Monday and Tuesday, but the cause had not been determined.
                  Reactor 3:  Black smoke emerged from the building housing this reactor Wednesday. Officials have not said what caused it, or whether any radiation was released.
                  Reactor 4: the pool that houses the spent fuel rods is a chief concern. Crews continued using cement pumps to spray water on the pool Wednesday to keep fuel rods cool.
                  Reactor 5: Workers created vent holes in the building’s roof to avoid a hydrogen explosion.
                  Reactor 6: [Ditto 5} Workers created vent holes in the building's roof to avoid a hydrogen explosion.

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                  LIBYA

                  Viewpoint from the Left

                  CNN reports that  Congressman Dennis Kucinich is talking impeachment. Ralph Nader is grumbling that the president of the United States is a "war criminal." Michael Moore is venting his spleen on the subject of U.S. hypocrisy.  CNN makes some very good points.  Obama has been consistent on his opinion about war from long before he ran for president.  Just because he was opposed to the war in Iraq and spoke out against it publicly as a Illinois State legislator, we should remember that he opposed it not because he opposed war.  He opposed it because he considered it a stupid war.  CNN reminds us of this stance by Obama with a quote from his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize: "I believe that force can be justified on humanitarian grounds, as it was in the Balkans, or in other places that have been scarred by war. Inaction tears at our conscience and can lead to more costly intervention later. That is why all responsible nations must embrace the role that militaries with a clear mandate can play to keep the peace."  Personally, I think the starting point for progressives and liberal in the Democratic Party is to recognize the fact that Barack Obama has NEVER been a member of their club.  Perhaps they have been confused by all the mainstream media's references to Obama as a "socialist".  As I've said before:  If Obama is a socialist, then David Koch is a communist.  Both men have their personal fortunes increased as a result of Obama's maintaining the status quo of Wall Street.

                  Oil Futures: Crude rises as Libya remains in focus
                  Wall Street reports that Crude futures rose slightly Wednesday, edging closer to recent highs as the ongoing conflict in Libya and unrest elsewhere in the region kept concerns about supply disruptions alive.

                  Pro-Democracy Fighters in Libya form an Interim Government

                  Al-Jazeera reports that Libya's pro-democracy fighters have formed an "interim government" even as forces backing the country's leader, Muammar Gaddafi, press ahead with attacks against them. Heading up the new government as an interim prime minister is Mahmoud Jibril, who had been working as a representative to foreign powers. He is best known on the international stage for meeting Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, which led to France diplomatically recognising the rebels' transitional council as the sole representative of the Libyan people.

                  **************************************************************************

                  SYRIA

                  No fly Zone for Syria and Yemen
                  UK Telegraph's Executive Foreign Editor rhetorically poses the question that many all over the world are asking:  If a no-fly zone is good enough for Libya, why not for Syria and Yemen?  He answers the question:  There is, of course, the issue of the West’s military capacity. (The Libyan operation is still very much a Western affair. To date the Arabs, who called for the no-fly zone in the first place, have provided precisely two Qataris warplanes.) With resources already stretched to the limit over Afghanistan, it is as much as the West can do to round up enough aircraft to enforce the no-fly zone against Libya. The simple truth is that we just don’t have enough aircraft to take on every Middle Eastern dictator who decides to turn his guns on his own people.   QUEEN'S COMMENT:  Yes that is true, but it does not follow what we must do business with these people.

                  Deaths as Syrian forces storm mosque

                  Al Jazeera Residents said heavy gunfire was heard near the Omari mosque in the early hours of Wednesday in the city, which has been the scene of anti-government protests since Friday.reports that authorities in Syria blame "armed gang" for violence in Southern city of Daraa. "It seems that security forces may be trying to storm the complex. It is not clear because electricity has been cut off. Tear gas is also being used," one resident told the Reuters news agency.  QUEEN'S COMMENT:  Another suggestion--ban the sale of tear gas to countries run by dictators. Oh, I guess that means we must ban the sale of tear gas in the USA as well.

                  ******************************************************************

                  BAHRAIN

                  Reuters reports that USA issues new warning against travel to Bahrain because of violent political demonstrations.

                  Bahrain Protest Crackdown Defended by European Union Envoy
                  UK Guardian reports that EU foreign policy adviser Robert Cooper downplays violence against pro-democracy protesters saying "accidents happen."  QUEEN'S COMMENT: OUTRAGEOUS!  "Accidents" happen?  what an insult to Twenty-one people who have been killed and up to 100 others are still missing after King Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifa unleashed his security forces last week, putting an end to two months of growing protests that had threatened the legitimacy of Bahrain's monarchy and stoked sectarian tensions throughout the Gulf.

                  *****************************************************************************

                  YEMEN
                  Saleh "wins" emergency rule vote!

                  Bloomberg reports Ali Abdullah Saleh won backing to enforce emergency rule from loyalists in parliament, after about half the assembly shunned the vote amid a growing protest movement aiming to oust the president. Nobody who attended today’s debate voted against the proposal for a 30-day state of emergency, called by Saleh on March 18 after the killing of dozens of protesters by pro-regime gunmen in the capital.
                  Queen's comment:  I agree with Abdulmalik al-Mikhlafi, an opposition leader who said that the regime is “using emergency to prolong its stay in power,” and that it " will fuel the revolution and by the end, the regime will fall.”  Spin meisters like Gregory Johnsen, a Yemen "expert" at Princeton University said that Saleh's calling of a parliament vote shows that "he is still adhering to some gestures in the direction of a democracy."  NONSENSE! About 130 members of the 301 seat parliament were present and I'm guessing they were all members of Saleh's tribe who will lose their financial asses if not their lives should the revolution succeed.

                  ******************************************************************

                  HAITI

                  What could be more wacky the the choices that the people of Haiti had to choose between on Sunday for their leader:  Manigat is a 70-year-old university administrator and former senator; or Martelly is a 50-year-old pop star who has no college degree and a history of crude onstage antics.  Regardless the "winner", that person will face Senate and Chamber of Deputies controlled by the party of outgoing President Rene Preval, who was barred by the constitution from running for re-election. In addition, they will also likely have to deal with a surge in cholera once the rainy season starts and anger over the fact that 800,000 people are still in what were once optimistically labeled "temporary settlement camps" after the January 2010 earthquake.

                  Jamaica Observer reports mixed reviews for round two of Haitian elections--most of the complaints were from late opening of the polls.  However voter turnout was good.

                  *************************************************************

                  WISCONSIN

                  Recall Efforts Official for 16 State Senators

                  Channel 3000 com from Madison reports this morning that the Government Accountability Board received paperwork Tuesday from committees to recall Democratic Sen. Julie Lassa of Stevens Point and Sen. Lena Taylor of Milwaukee. With both committees approved by GAB, all 16 eligible senators are now targeted for recall by officially recognized committees.

                  **************************************************************

                  MICHIGAN

                  Snyder says that Census shows that it's crucial to "reinvent Michigan"

                  Detroit Free Press reports this morning that Governor Rick Snyder is stating the obvious.  Snyder states that "We cannot cling to the old ways of doing business."  Apparently the governor doesn't see the past 30 years of giving huge tax breaks to the rich and corporations as the "old way of doing business" [See Queen's post Michigan's GOP Gov. slashes corproate tax by 86% and hikes taxes for working poor.]

                  I also found it interesting that he is suggesting that census trends be used as “guideposts” since his party spent months wasting taxpayers time and money railing against the census.  Remember Michell Bachmann was even telling people to not fill out the forms?

                  Proclaim the Queen!

                    Maybe if the West didn’t arm Bahrain and other bullies in the Middle East

                    March 22, 2011 in Israel, World Unrest

                    War is Business reports that

                    In a visit to Bahrain Saturday, [US Defense Secretary Robert] Gates told Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa and Crown Prince Sheik Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa that they needed to speed up reforms and make meaningful concessions to the opposition …

                    The opposition, which has staged street protests for a month, is demanding an end to long-time discrimination against Bahrain’s Shiite citizens, who make up 70 percent of the population, as well as democratic reforms. …

                    “Saudi Arabia is acting in self-interest [by occupying Bahrain] because what happens in Bahrain has direct implications for Saudi Arabia — it cannot simply avoid intervention,” said Fares Braizat, an analyst at the Qatar-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies.

                    By sending in troops, the kingdom is sending “a very strong sign that it will not allow significant change to happen in Bahrain,” Braizat added.

                    As reported in this video, weaponry sold to Bahrain by the USA and by the French was used against peaceful protesters.  It was also reported that USA tear gas was used against the citizens.  In Egypt MADE IN USA tear gas was also used against the Egyptian people.

                    “Egyptian riot police are firing tear gas canisters bearing the label ‘Made in U.S.A.’ against street demonstrations in Cairo. … According to the canister labels, the tear gas is produced by Combined Systems International of Jamestown, Pennsylvania. … A company spokesperson did not return calls by ABC News seeking comment.”—ABC NEWS, Jan. 28, 2011

                    Window into Palestine also reports that Israel uses deadly tear gas that is made in the USA.  Please remember that this tear gas is also used against American citizens right here in the good ole USA

                    Proclaim the Queen!