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Fouad Ajami, whose academic credentials are impressive, said in an op-ed in today's New York Times:

[Today's Arab demonstrators for political freedoms] will make their own world and commit their own errors. The closest historical analogy is the revolutions of 1848, the Springtime of the People in Europe. That revolution erupted in France, then hit the Italian states and German principalities, and eventually reached the remote outposts of the Austrian empire. Some 50 local and national uprisings, all in the name of liberty.

Please let us think a moment.  I know that's difficult at times, and during the media blitz about Turmoil in the Mideast, with its focus on the shootings and bombings of unarmed demonstrators very far from easy, but let me try it with you.

Muammar al-Gaddafi is no longer the leader of Libya: he can kill people, but they're not going to allow him to remain in control much longer.

Just within the past few hours Libya has had a "regime change."  Whether it is now Gaddafi's son who is in power or not, the momentum of change is clearly past the point of no return.

Wednesday, five people were killed by security forces in Bahrain, the home of the U.S. fleet in the Persian Gulf; Thursday, the same armed forces opened fire on a crowd of peaceful demonstrators, with, I am guessing, some dozen or so being killed and many dozens more wounded.  But in the immediate aftermath, a participant more or less epitomized the loss of legitimacy of the monarchy:

Dear reader:  Do you understand what is deceptive and transient in this situation, and what is crucial and abiding?  In my last headline I was content to go with what "sources say"; that was in error.  What those many thousands of Egyptians were doing in the public streets -- demonstrating, non-violently, for change -- that was the unquestionable essence of the situation, and the stubbornness of an authoritarian octogenarian could not stand against it.

Please note that I predicted it, repeatedly, in advance.  Please note my reason for so forecasting.

According to Juan Cole, some 300 Egyptians were shot dead in the last week, protesting the dictator Hosni Mubarak's regime.  One can reasonably estimate a couple of thousand (at least) have been wounded.  The resolve of the demonstrators, in the face of the usual tactics of the American Empire, remains.  It is on that basis that I conclude that real change is under way in Egypt.

Yesterday, in the course of demonstrations in protest of the Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak, at least 4 people were killed and many more injured.  Today, despite the use of live ammunition and stern warnings against any further demonstrations, there are clashes with police all over the country.

Thomas Babington Macaulay was a nineteenth-century English politician and historian, whose Essays contain an interesting characterization of a political party.  It seems to me not without relevance to the Pacific Green Party, torn as we now are in the Portland area by internal dissension.

This morning the progressive blogger Glenn Greenwald documents in detail a false statement by the respected New York Times columnist and television commentator, David Brooks.  

Your Vote in 2010

As a voter of the 3rd District of Oregon of the United States Congress, you have the chance to vote for your real views in this election.  You have the chance to vote for peace, for health care for all, and for humane educational standards.