Thursday, February 10, 2011

Thursday's Daily Brief

Thursday, February 10, 2011
Doctors in white lab coats and lawyers in black robes streamed into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Thursday as labor unrest across the country gave powerful momentum to Egypt's wave of anti-government protests. With its efforts to manage the crisis failing, the government threatened the army could crack down by imposing martial law. The protests in their 17th day - which have focused on demanding President Hosni Mubarak's ouster and the end of his regime's heavy hand on power - have tapped into the even deeper well of anger over economic woes, including inflation, unemployment, corruption, low wages and wide economic disparities between rich and poor.
POLITICS
Obama To Cut Energy Assistance For Poor; Kerry Urges Him To Reconsider
BUSINESS
Report: 3.9 Million Americans Ran Out Of Unemployment Benefits In 2010
WORLD
India, Pakistan Agree To First Peace Talks Since Terror Attack
POLITICS
Chris Lee Resigns Amid Racy Photo Controversy
MEDIA
Anderson Cooper Talks To Letterman About Egypt Attack
BLOG POSTS
Avi Spiegel:Predicting the Future of the Middle East -- The Easy Way
The purely authoritarian regimes in the Middle East can loosely be classified into two categories: monarchies and republics. If you want to know who will be most likely to follow the path of Ben Ali and Mubarak, look at the republics.
Raymond J. Learsy:WikiLeaks Brings Misguided Joy to Preachers of Oil's Peak
The perception of shortage is one of the bedrocks of the oil producers' pricing propaganda, rationalizing steepening prices and profits to the OPEC cartel. Such is the information we are fed by the oil industry.
Martha Stewart:Food Is the New Fashion
What's in your pantry has become a form of self-expression much like a fabulous pair of Christian Louboutins. Just as the label "fashionista" evokes an entire lifestyle, so, too, does the term "foodie."
David Wild:Backstage at the Grammys: From Bob to Bruno, Babs to Bieber
Deep, deep down in our secretly shallow places, we all know the ultimate truth -- that award shows really are better than life.
Jennifer Lauck:Abducted Versus Adopted: For 1.5 Million of U.S. Adoptees, What's the Difference?
Though I am considered to have been 'adopted', and not 'abducted,' I have to wonder what the difference is in these terms, especially when I consider the circumstances of my own birth and subsequent relinquishment.

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An American Democrat