CELEBRITY IN CHIEF BARRY O HAS BEEN CAUGHT IN YET ANOTHER LIE. DESPITE CLAIMING THAT "AS MANY AS 129 MILLION AMMERICANS -- HALF OF THOSE UNDER AGE 65 -- COULD BE DENIED COVERAGE OR CHARGED MORE" WITHOUT OBAMACARE, THE REALITY IS: NOT TRUE!!!
REACHED FOR COMMENT, BARRY O'S LATEST BOY TOY, JAY CARNEY, DECLARED THAT SOON "WE'LL BE DOING THINGS THE EGYPTIAN WAY AND JUST SHUTTING DOWN THE INTERNET AND THEN WHERE WILL YOU BE! HUH!"
FROM THE TCI WIRE:
Today Baghdad was slammed with bombings. Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports,  "Three people were killed and 14 others injured Thursday morning when three  bombs exploded in different neighborhoods in Baghdad, the Interior Ministry  said." All three were roadside bombings and Hamid Ahmed (AP) also reported on  those bombings. However, those bombings were soon dwarfed by another  Baghdad bombing. BBC News reports a  Baghdad car bombing "near a funeral ceremony" has claimed at least 30 lives and  left approximately fifty more people injured. Last week, waves of bombings began  targeting various cities in Iraq and that has continued this week (Baghdad,  Tikrit, Karbala, etc).  Ned Parker and Salar Jaff (Los Angeles  Times) provide this context, "The explosion was the fifth major attack  in the last 10 days, leaving a death toll of nearly 200 people. The relentless  pace of bombings was something the country has not seen in more than two years."  
 BBC, like many others, had to  update the death toll throughout the day, including when it reached  37 and to note that, "Angry mourners attacked police who rushed to the scene,  accusing them of failing to provide protection." Laith Hammoudi and Shashank Bangali (McClatchy  Newspapers) report, "Perhaps inspired by the protest movement that's  sweeping the Arab world, demonstrators fired guns in the air, hurled stones and  shouted curses at police officers who responed to the scene of the funeral  attack, residents said."   Al Mada notes that roads leading into that section of Baghdad  (Shula) were immediately closed.  Laith Hammoudi and Shashank Bangali (McClatchy  Newspapers) note that before that happened the demonstrators made clear that  their anger was "that Iraqi police had allowed the attack, because Shaula is  relatively small and has only one entrance" and that the police, faced with the  crowd, withdrew. Al Jazeera reports,  "The military sent in soldiers to restore order." Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) adds, "Iraqi  troops have since sealed off the area, and have ordered residents to stay in  their homes.  There is as yet no indication of the number of casualties in the  post bombing clashes, nor any claim of responsibility for the bombing itself."  
 Of the funeral bombing, Reuters adds, "Iraq's deputy health  minister Khamis al-Saad said 35 people were killed and 65 wounded. An official  at a hospital gave the same death toll after the explosion in the Shula  district, a former stronghold of anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, but now thought  to be controlled by a violent splinter group called Asaib al-Haq." Al Jazeera reports,  "The military sent in soldiers to restore order."  Ammar Karim (AFP) notes, "Prime Minister  Nuri al-Maliki ordered the arrest of the area's security chief, army Lieutenant  Colonel Ahmed al-Obeidi, in the immediate aftermath of the attack." Al Rafidayn calls it "the deadliest  blast in the capital of Iraq for months" and they note, "Witnesses said the  bomber blew himself up in a mourning tent filled with mourners and relatives [.  . .] in the Shula district of Baghdad, which was formerly a stronghold of  Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr is believed to be now  under the control of the  League of the Righteous splinter group that advocated violence." Al Mada states the Baghdad police released a press  statement that the car bombing at the funeral had resulted in a death toll of 60  with ninety people injured.
 Meanwhile Basaer News reports the "so-called Baghdad Operations  Command" has declared that it will have completed construction on the Baghad  security fence this year and that there will be "cameras and observation towers"  throughout Baghdad.  The newspaper notes the fence is constructed "under the  pretext of control in a security situation which has remained uncontrollable"  and is being rammed through "regradless of the problems it causes citizens." In  other 'defense' news, Ahmed al-Zubaidi (Iraqhurr.org) reports Nouri and his  Cabinet have agreed to purchase 18 F16 fighter aircraft from the US in order to  strengthen the air force fleet that they hope to be functioning within two to  three years.  The 18 are "part of a plan by the Iraqi Air Force to buy an  estimated 96 F16 airplanes from the US over the next ten years."
 Abdel Hamid Zebair (Iraqhurr.org) reports that  members of Iraq's Parliament and the Kurdistan Regional Government's Parliament  are taking part in an international conference in Erbil which started today and  focuses on "the role of women in peace-building, reconciliation and  accountability in Iraq." Aswat al-Iraq adds that the conference  ends tomorrow and is being attended by "international female personalities and a  number of world activists in women affairs and representatives of international  organizations."  No Peace Without Justice explains:
 The International Conference, which is the culmination of a long  programme of reconciliation and accountability related advocacy and research  undertaken by the organisers, both in Iraq and abroad, will be a major  international event and represent a significant step towards securing Iraqi  women an equitable voice within their country's political, judicial, economic,  and other public institutions. Achieving these aims, and thereby promoting and  mainstreaming gender equality within Iraq's ongoing reconciliation and  accountability process, is one of the preconditions of its  success. 
 The Conference aims to provide a venue for high-level political  discussions involving Iraqi politicians, policy makers, civil society activists,  and other opinion leaders, as well as international experts from across the  world with first-hand experience of promoting women's rights and organising  women's organisations in the pursuit of positive social change. 
Most importantly, the Conference will provide a wide range of Iraqi women's groups and participants with a very significant opportunity to work together and organise in pursuit of their common goals of protecting and promoting the rights of women in Iraq, and leading their country's ongoing accountability and reconciliation process. The recommendations for institutional, legislative, and organisational reform that will emerge from the Conference will provide a crucial foundation for future initiatives promoting gender equality, and consolidate progress towards securing an inclusive democratic future for Iraq on the basis of comprehensive accountability and reconciliation. The organisers aim to repeat this event in Baghdad next year.
 Most importantly, the Conference will provide a wide range of Iraqi women's groups and participants with a very significant opportunity to work together and organise in pursuit of their common goals of protecting and promoting the rights of women in Iraq, and leading their country's ongoing accountability and reconciliation process. The recommendations for institutional, legislative, and organisational reform that will emerge from the Conference will provide a crucial foundation for future initiatives promoting gender equality, and consolidate progress towards securing an inclusive democratic future for Iraq on the basis of comprehensive accountability and reconciliation. The organisers aim to repeat this event in Baghdad next year.
Abdulla Sabri (AK News) notes that the conference  comes as Nouri al-Maliki faces criticism over "the lack of women" in his  Cabinet.  Iraq Daily Times points out, "Only one  woman was named to Maliki's 42-member cabinet, sparking an outcry in a country  that once was a beacon for women's rights in the Arab world and adding to an  ongoing struggle over the identity of the new Iraq. Whether this fledgling nation becomes a  liberal democracy or an Islamist-led patriarchy might well be judged by the  place it affords its women." 
 Al Rafidayn reports on US State  Department documents WikiLeaks has which state that the CIA helped officers of  Saddam Hussein's elite Republican Guard leave Iraq via Turkey and resettle in  the US in 2003.  On the issue of WikiLeaks, John Wihbey (On Point with Tom Ashbrook, NPR) provides  this news and link resource:
  Bill Keller, executive editor of the New York Times and a  past guest of ours, is publishing a detailed  account in the Sunday magazine of the  Times' relationship with Wikileaks and its founder Julian Assange. The  Times was one of several news outlets that reported on diplomatic  cables given to them by Wikileaks.
 It's all part of a controversial new chapter in the history of the  First Amendment and its limits. Some U.S. lawmakers have called for Assange's  prosecution. The real-world blowback from the leaked cables stretches all the  way to the Arab world, where anti-government sentiment in places like  Tunisia and Yemen has been  fomented by cables that were damning of their leaders. (See our memorable show  in which John Perry Barlow and John Negroponte  debated issues around secrecy.)
 Listen back to our interview with  Keller; see his very interesting On Point blog debate  over coverage of Catholic issues [. .  .]
 Bill  Keller appeared on The Takeaway today and spoke with John  Hockenberry and Celeste Headlee about WikiLeaks.  Excerpt:
 John Hockenberry: How has this relationship evolved to one of  enough credibility for the Times and the Guardian to  proceed?
 Bill Keller: Uhm.  Well, we -- We sort of knew from the get-go --  because WikiLeaks had already started to establish a profile -- that this was  going to be a tricky relationship.  You know, sources -- You don't get to pick  your sources, they tend to come to you with complications, agendas of their  own.  So you -- You know what you really do is foces on the material.  Is it --  Is it genuine? Is it legit? Is it newsworthy?  And what he brought to the  Guardian and the Times and Der Spiegel and a few other papers ultimately was the  real deal.  I mean -- And genuinely, I think, important.
 Celeste Headlee: Bill Keller, there is a lot of talk -- and I  imagine there will be studies to come over the motives and agendas of Julian  Assange.  This is a man who, obviously, seems to like privacy of his of his own  in terms of his own address.  But many people say he's motivated by an agenda  against the US government. Does that change the motivations or the missions of  WikiLeaks?
 Bill Keller:  I -- I mean, he clearly has a strong distaste for the  US government, regards it as more a force for evil than for good in the  world.  And that's one factor in why he's developed such a kind of large, cult  following -- particularly in parts of Europe where the United States is resented  for throwing its weight around too much. And that's certainly added an extra  layer of caution in dealing with WikiLeaks and the material.  But you know I  think he came into believing that one effect of all this transperancy would be  to embarrass and compromise the United States.  At one point he called for [US  Secretary of State] Hillary Clinton to resign in shame.  In fact, a lot of  people have been surprised that particularly the documents that relate to the  State Dept show diplomates behaving in pretty compentent and-and well motivated  ways.
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