Wednesday, February 2, 2011

MUBARAK SUPPORTERS

Mubarak supporters (In pictures: Cairo clashes - BBC News)

On 2 February, the Financial Times reports on the Pro-Mubarak crowds supporting the regime


"One woman at the protests said some of the pro-government supporters seemed to be ordinary citizens frustrated at what they described as the chaos and disruption of the past few days.

"In conversations with lower-income shopkeepers in the city centre, she said, many told her they were angry that the protests had continued despite the president’s pledge on Tuesday night to step down.

"'There were so many Egyptians who were really angry yesterday [Tuesday] after seeing posters of Mubarak stepped on and [protesters] doing really shameful things,' she said.

Much of the media is describing the Mubarak supporters, like the lady above, as hired thugs. (Mubarak supporters - In pictures: Cairo clashes - BBC News)

"One witness said that both sides were contributing to the growing violence in the square.


"'I just saw a man take a machete to a head [of a person] who was captured by the pro-Mubarak people ... but when I was with the anti-Mubarak people I saw people beaten to within an inch of their lives,' he said"

SO, there are pro-Mubarak supporters. Lots of them.

BUT, they have presumably been infiltrated by people who want to discredit Mubarak, by causing violence.

Most Mubarak supporters do not look as posh as the anti-Mubarak supporters? (Mubarak supporters - In pictures: Cairo clashes‎ - BBC News) Mubarak has made the poor richer, and the rich poorer.

There is something fishy about many of the anti-Mubarak forces.

Researcher Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich has written 'Rude Awakening!' at Information Clearing House: ICH (Who's Behind The Uprising In Egypt? Rude Awakening!)

"They would have us believe that in spite of the fact that the Egyptians cry over the price of wheat, they have cell phones and access to social media.

"We are to accept that the poor, hungry, and jobless Egyptians are revolting against their lot by 'tweeting' in English.

"Their access to modern technology aside, we are told to accept that the knowledge of English among 80 million Egyptians is so strong that they can 'tweet' - fully comfortable with tweeter abbreviations and acronyms.

"Else, we are to believe that Egypt is busy 'tweeting' in Arabic even if Twitter does not lend itself to Arabic any more than it does to Persian.

EGYPT-PROTEST/
Anti-Mubarak forces in Cairo - poor, ragged and malnourished? Photo by Gaelic Neilson

"When Iran's opposition leader, Mir-Hossein Mousavi compared the Egypt uprising to the 2009 post-election protests in Iran, he had a point.

"Both had an outside source.

"During the 2009 protests in Iran, 'tweets' were traced back to Israel.

"The rumors and support for the 'opposition' initiated in the West though Tehran Bureau - partnered with the American PBS.

"A CNN desk was created to give the protests full coverage." ('Rude Awakening!' at Information Clearing House: ICH)



ABOVE: Malak Habashy: "I’m an Egyptian citizen who’s come here today to say that progress has happened during President Mohamed Hosny Mubarak’s rule.

"The political opposition are free not to acknowledge this progress if they wish. I’m neither a member of the National Democratic Party nor a member of the opposition.

"I’m an Egyptian and supporter of el wataneya. And from the perspective of el wataneya President Mubarak has many advantages which are clear to everyone." Photo by Sarah Carr

045
Tahrir square, in Cairo, Egypt, 02 February 2011. By Nasser Nouri

SO, what next for the CIA plot?

The CIA will create more violence and then the Egyptian generals working for the CIA will send Mubarak off to some far away place?

We assume that the military contains various factions, including a 'CIA-faction' and a pro-Mubarak faction.

The creation of more chaos may allow the 'CIA-faction' to emerge supreme.

The CIA presumably has a strong hold over many key people in the Egyptian military.

We are told that "Three Decades of Weapons Sales and Training for Egypt Keep US In Loop"

"$1.3 billion in assistance ... includes ... training and joint missions.

"U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates spoke to Defense Minister Mohammed Hussein Tantawi yesterday, the second time in recent days. And Navy Admiral Mike Mullen, Obama’s top military adviser, has maintained contact with his counterpart, armed forces chief of staff Sami Hafez Enan...

"The Pentagon has 625 personnel in Egypt...

"More than 500 Egyptian military officers study each year at U.S. institutes...

"Mubarak’s cabinet reshuffle this week put officers of the army, the air force and the intelligence service in charge. In addition to elevating Defense Minister Tantawi, an army field marshal, to deputy prime minister, Mubarak on Jan. 31 named intelligence chief Omar Suleiman as vice president and former air force commander Ahmed Shafik as prime minister..."

Looking southeast, from the Cairo Tower, El-Gezira
Cairo by Fouad GM

Some figures (Egypt.):

1. Between 1980 and 2007 Egypt’s Human Development Index (HDI) rose 42%.

2. Egypt’s average annual HDI growth was 10th fastest worldwide and almost double the global average.

3. Between 2005 & 2008 Poverty, as defined by those living under $2/day, fell over 11%

4. Only 16% of the population now live on less than $2 per day.

5. The Gini Index, the international measure of wealth inequality, fell 7% between 1999 & 2007.

6. The share of the poorest 10% in national income rose 5% and the share of richest 10% feel 6% in the same period.

The ratio of the wealth of the richest to the poorest 10% also fell 10%.

~~

Those who oppose Mubarak should note that they are on the same side as the BBC and CNN?

CHILD SEX ABUSE 'COVER UP'

Photo - Haut de la Garenne (First pictures inside 'Colditz' care home as police find secret ...)

There will be no committee of inquiry into historic child abuse in Jersey, chief minister Senator Terry Le Sueur has announced.

(No Jersey care homes historic child abuse inquiry / Our Interbred Halfwits )

Perhaps some non-government group could organise an inquiry.





aangirfan: JERSEY CHILD ABUSE COVER UP; VICTIM SENTENCED

aangirfan: THE ZANDVOORT NETWORK, JERSEY, DUTROUX, PORTUGAL...

Worst of the Night: February 1, 2011

ball
Ball.

The Washington Wizards Generals: The Generals seemed to catch a break when the Hornets' Emeka Okafor -- who averages a double-double (11.1 PPG and 10.1 RPG) and nearly 2 blocked shots -- went down with a left oblique muscle strain.

Enter: The Dragon Jason Smith!


Going into this game, Smith's scouting report read something like "tall white guy who does Chris Paul's laundry and passes out Gatorade during timeouts." Well, Smith hit his first nine shots, scored a team and career-high 20 points, and finished with a better plus-minus score (+6) than CP3 (0).

That dude must on a steady diet of powdered toast, because launching into the air with the power of VITAMIN F!

Washington has now lost six in a row and [GRIM REALITY ALERT!!] and are 0-25 on the road. That means the Generals are a mere four road losses from matching the 1992-93 Dallas Mavericks' all-time worst 0-29 start on the road.

Am I dreaming? Somebody pinch me!

Said Andray Blatche: "We're not giving in and we're not giving up. We're just playing scared. It's tough when you fight the whole game and you come up short. ... I'm sure that if we keep playing like we're playing, we're going to pull off a road win."


John Wall: 4 points. 2-for-10. His lunch money stolen by Chris Paul. That Rookie of the Year award keeps slipping further and further away...

Monty Williams, backhanded compliment machine: On Smith's big night: "He brought the right kind of energy tonight. Sometimes, Jason will go for offensive rebounds he doesn't have a chance to grab or foul someone for no apparent reason, and tonight he was knocking down shots, he was attacking the rim, he made the right cuts and got to the free throw line. Defensively he didn't get exploited as bad as most people would have expected."

Way to throw a wet blanket on your boy, coach.

The San Antonio Spurs: I have a question for the Frail Blazers:


I'm kidding, but, seriously, how are they doing it? These guys have been left for dead more times than Jonah Hill's genitals. Greg Oden: Out for the season. Brandon Roy: Out indefinitely. Marcus Camby: Out indefinitely. Joel Przybilla: Seriously considering retirement.

If you think about it, they have no business being 16-9 without Brandon Roy (versus 10-13 with him). Or, for that matter, taking down the league's best team. But that's what they did last night. Pretty convincingly too.

How'd they do it? Well, the Spurs are 5th in both FGP (47.0) and eFG% (52.0), but Portland held 'em to 42.7 and 47.6, respectively. The key was limiting San Antonio's transition opportunities. According to TeamRankings.com, the Spurs rank 5th in fast break points per game (15.6). Last night, the Men in White and Black were held to 2 points in transition.

Beyond that, the Spurs didn't do much defensively. LaMarcus Aldridge had a career-high 40 points on 16-for-23 shooting and Portland finished with an Offensive Rating of 118.1 despite going 2-for-13 from downtown.

Said Frail Blazers coach Nate McMillan: "To go toe-to-toe with most teams, we can't do that. We've got to outwork you, we've got to be smarter, execute. And if we do that, we play hard, we're going to give ourselves a chance to win. Tonight, we beat the best team in the league."

Random bizarre story from the AP game notes: "A helicopter that was readying to pick up Blazers' owner Paul Allen and take him to his yacht went down in the water off Argentina this week. The two pilots were rescued from the water by Allen's crew and treated for minor injuries."

The Sacramento Kings: Okay, seriously, nobody thought they were going to beat the Lakers, Hornets and Celtics back-to-back-to-back, right?

By the way, what's up with those band-aids on the back of Ray Allen's calves. Does anybody know what's up with that?

Kevin Garnett, selective memory machine: In case you missed it, there was a bit of a dustup between Garnett, Rajon Rondo and DeMarcus Cousins last night. Basically, KG ended up on the floor after diving for a loose ball. Cousins tried to stand up over him and Rondo shoved him away.


Said Cousins: "It was all in the game and it wasn't nothing personal or dislike. That was the Celtics, and I was standing my ground. But it was really nothing."

Uh, standing your ground, DeMarcus? Standing is one thing. But the video shows Cousins walking toward KG when the play was clearly over. That's not "standing your ground"...and it's not surprising either.

Anyway, dig was KG had to say about the situation: "We're a very proud team. We don't really do that to other people and just want hold up some decency in this game and respect. We all have each other's back. I guess [Rondo] felt he was standing over me, which is inappropriate to us."

Wait. What?


As always, I'm just sayin'.

The Los Angeles Lakers: As Wild Yams put it: "Lamar Odom with the animal style double double tonight, Kobe with 32 points and 11 assists, and Pau with 26 points, 16 boards and 4 blocks... and the Lakers need overtime at home to beat the Rockets. Dunno if missing Bynum is enough of an excuse to account for this."

I should also point out that L.A. couldn't do anything with Kevin Martin (20 points, 12-for-20, 10-for-11 from the line) or Luis Scola (24 points, 12-for-20, 15 rebounds). Oh, and get this, K-Mart was the only Houston player to attempt a single free throw. The Lakers, unbelievably, managed to avoid giving up a single freebie to 10 other Rocketeers in a game that went to overtime.

Huh. Weird. (Is...is that mom's homemade apple pie...?)

Random factoid: The Lakers seem to be pretty good in most areas, except they rank 21st in Defensive Rebound Percentage. Last year they were 9th. Dunno if that means anything, but...

The Houston Rockets: At this point, the Rockets seem to exist solely to be a pain in the ass to other teams. They're good enough on offense to keep things interesting (5th in O-Rating) but bad enough on defense to lose a lot of close ones (24th in D-Rating).

They've lost 13 of their last 20 games. That includes three overtime losses (to the Jazz, Hornets and Lakers), a six-point loss to the Heat, a three-point loss at Portland, a six-point loss to the Thunder, a five-point loss at Memphis and a five-point loss at Dallas. They're 22-28, but their point differential is +0.1.

Said Shane Battier: "Our margin of error is so small because we're a small team. As you saw, the rebounding game is something that continues to hurt us, especially when it's tight. We were right there, played good defense and forced tough shots, but we have to maintain concentration and discipline and really get five guys rebounding for the entire game."

Kobe Bryant, quote machine: "When I'm out there being aggressive and doing my thing, he needs to follow suit and just be just as aggressive which is hard for him because it's kind of against his nature. But I think tonight was a good step. Even when he was in Memphis and he was the go-to guy, he was always very nice. Very white swan. I need him to be black swan."

And you've gotta love this follow up from the AP: "Less Natalie Portman. More Mila Kunis. Gasol got the point just in time to help the Lakers avoid another embarrassing fall in their treacherous midseason dance."

I want it noted that I didn't make the girl joke this time.

Chris's lacktion report:

Generals-Hornets: Quincy Pondexter can certainly buy himself quite a bit of king cake for Mardi Gras this year, after a collection of 1.4 trillion (1:24)! DJ Mbenga made himself noticed by belaying a board in 3:26 with a foul and turnover for a 2:1 Voskuhl.

Rockets-Lakers: Jordan Hill climbed into the ledger tonight with a one-brick +1 in 2:46.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Bawful After Dark: February 1, 2011

Bucks Clippers Basketball
"Damn Maggette, your breath is funky! Ever heard of Listerine?"

Attention Bawfulites! This Joe Posnanski blog post about the Cleveland Cavaliers Cadavers is required reading: Losing As Destiny.

The Mavs are at it again. This time, we are treated to Tyson Chandler Punch-Out:


Body blow! Body blow!


Worst of the Night in Pictures:

Nuggets Nets BasketballNuggets Nets Basketball
Only one thing comes to mind: that one sound from The Price is Right


Nuggets Nets Basketball
Pacers fans are a never-ending source of entertainment


Raptors Pacers Basketball
Speaking of the Pacers, here's their new head coach, Frank Vogel. I can see we're gonna have fun with this guy


63279342
LeBron, now with karate chop action!


63279357
Back off, Sean Combs Puffy Daddy P. Diddy. You haven't been relevant in a decade


Bobcats Jazz Basketball
Elbow stinger to the crotch = best way to freeze your defender, apparently


Bobcats Jazz Basketball
"Oh, sorry. You weren't drinking that, were you?"


All The Games:
Wizards Generals at Hornets, 8pm: Twenty four road game losses to start the season. The Generals have now secured at least the third worst start away from home. In hindsight, perhaps having Red Klotz take over the team was a bad idea.

Spurs at Frail Blazers, 10pm: Speaking of playing on the road, it's time for the Spurs' annual Rodeo Trip. Nine consecutive road games while the rodeo takes over the AT&T Center. They tend to use their rodeo trip to work on problems and get set for the stretch run to the playoffs. So what a better way to start than a slowdown, defensive grindout against the Blazers? I don't really have a joke here -- I am just interested to see how the Spurs respond to this particular game.

Celtics at Kings, 10pm: Intriguing matchup. Both of these teams have taken down the mighty Lakers recently! (Of course I'm being facetious and fully expect the Purple Paupers to revert back to the mean and resume their usual sucky ways)

Rockets at Lakers, 10:30pm: STOP THE PRESSES! According to ESPN, "Sore knee keeps Andrew Bynum out of Lakers' practice." Of course it does. Whomever had "before February" in their "Bynum Jacks up His Knees" pool, please collect your winnings.

Also, there's talk that Mitch Kupchak may not be opposed to making some moves to strengthen the Lakers roster.
Head coach Phil Jackson was asked what changes his team would make.

"Suicide," Jackson deadpanned. "We'll commit suicide ... mass suicide."

Lakers forward Lamar Odom assured reporters that nobody was jumping off a ledge.
"No, no, no," Odom said. "There's no coming back from that, that's it. I'm not committing suicide."
So, that's good news I guess? The Lakers aren't going to commit suicide. You can rest easy now, Wild Yams.

ISRAEL'S PLANS FOR EGYPT

Desert Girl

Egyptian girl by dvlazar



What does Israel really think about Egypt?



1. We suspect that Israel wants Egypt to be more fundamentalist, feudal, backward, weak and easy to control.



That should not be too difficult.



According to the Pew Research Center, Washington:



82% of Egyptian Moslems support the stoning of adulterers.



77% support amputations and whipping of thieves.



84% support the death sentence for apostasy.



http://pewglobal.org/files/2010/12/Pew-Global-Attitudes-Muslim-Report-FINAL-December-2-2010.pdf





Once Mubarak is toppled by the CIA-Mossad-NATO, Israel may again find an excuse to invade Egypt. Israel wants to control the Nile and the Suez Canal.



2. Does Israel want us to think it is frightened of the CIA's Muslim Brotherhood?



On 1 February 2011, Time magazine reports that "As the Egypt's Crisis Grows, So Do the Anxieties in Israel"



"Shlomo Avineri, a political scientist at Hebrew University... describes two possibilities:

"military rule, with or without Mubarak as figurehead,

"or 'chaos and disintegration' that ends with rule by Islamists and nationalists descended from Gamal Abdel Nasser, Egypt's second President.



"Israelis most dread the ascent of the Muslim Brotherhood (who are linked to the Masons and the CIA - Aangirfan)....



"'What will not come to pass is ... a democratic neighbor, because democracies don't appear overnight,' Avineri tells TIME...



" U.S. diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks last year included diplomats' complaints that the Egyptian military continued to regard Israel as its principal enemy and prepared for war in the Sinai Desert, which lies between them."









3. Israel wants good relations with all its neighbours?



Think of Gaza, Lebanon, Turkey...



Egypt crisis: Israel faces danger in every direction



A comment on the above story at the UK Telegraph:



"Why murder Mabouh in Dubai? Why murder Sulieman in Syria? Why murder those nuclear scientists in Iran?



"...You murdered those Turkish activists on the Mavi Marmara..."




A Friendly Smile In Cairo

Cairo by El-Branden Brazil



4. What is the Israeli attitude to fundamentalist Islamic countries like Iran?



Israel supplied the Ayatollahs with weapons.



According Trita Parsi:[2]



Arms sales to Iran totaled an estimated $500 million from 1980 to 1983 according to the Jaffee Institute for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University.[3]



"According to Ahmad Haidari, "an Iranian arms dealer working for the Khomeini regime, roughly 80% of the weaponry bought by Tehran" immediately after the onset of the war originated in Israel. [4]



Arms shipments from the U.S. to Iran in the Iran-Contra Affair were facilitated by Israel.



Israel is reported to have supplied instructors and non-armaments help to Iran for the war effort.



Israel kept Iranian planes flying in spite of a lack of spares; and Israeli instructors taught Iranian commanders how to handle troops.



There were never less than about a 100 Israeli advisers and technicians in Iran at any time throughout the war, living in a carefully guarded and secluded camp just north of Tehran; they remained there even after the ceasefire.[8]



Recently declassified Pentagon documents reveal the 1980s operation called 'Tipped Kettle,' in which weapons stolen by Israel from the PLO in Lebanon were transferred to the Contras and to anti-American elements in Iran.



(The truth about Israel, Iran and 1980s U.S. arms deals - Haaretz ...)



El Caire, Egipte.

Cairo by JordiGP



5. On 1 February 2011, Winter Patriot (http://www.winterpatriot.com/) puts the Egyptian Revolution in Context

Among the points made:

1. Israel wants three things to come out of this conflict-



A pipeline transporting water from the Nile to Israel for their swimming pools.



Control of the Suez Canal, as it is a choke point for trade between Europe and Asia (read China) and



The break up of Egypt to remove it as a military force and as an economic ally of China



2. The Zionists want a land stretching from the Nile to the Euphrates.

3. Mubarak recently stated outright that no Egyptian water would be delivered to Israel.



4. Israel was involved in the coup in Tunisia. Events in Tunisia increased pressure on Mubarak.

5. There already exists a pipeline delivering water from the Nile to Al Arish in the Sinai, forty kms from the Israeli border.

There is the possibility of a future Israeli invasion into Sinai and onto the Suez Canal.



Egypt by Joey Harrison

6. Israel intends to plant itself in the middle of the oil trade routes.

The pipelines to the ports of Haifa and Eilat together with the Suez canal are critical control points to choke off oil to China in the event of war.



7. The US and Israel are currently causing trouble for Yemen, Somalia, Sudan and now Egypt.

All these countries adjoin the strategic sea route of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Other countries on the Red Sea are Saudi Arabia, Eritrea and Djibouti. Can they expect the same? I think so.



8. In Egypt, the protesters are being set up as patsies.

The new "extreme" government will provide a cassus belli for war with Israel who will plead 'self defence', as they always do.



The resulting war and internal civil strife for Egypt will lead to it being broken up into at least two countries, Upper and Lower Egypt and weakening and impoverishing it in the process.

Old Egypt



9. The US, the UK through NATO together with Israel are past masters at Balkanising countries that have strategic importance to them.

The process impoverishes these countries through weakening their ability to resist the criminal trade in drugs and humans (incl body parts) that NATO sponsors.

Kosovo, for instance, is far worse off now than it ever was. As is every single country that has seen military intervention from the great liberators, US and NATO and the budding colonialists, Israel.

This fate awaits the people of Egypt. They will cease to be a military threat of any kind.

10. However the Globalists have had their failures.

They have failed to maintain control over Russia with the rise of Vladimir Putin. They failed in their invasion of Lebanon in 2006.

They have failed to overthrow and retake the governments of Venezeula, Bolivia and Equador.



Allen Pope during his trial in Jakarta, 28 December 1959

Some bloggers believe the Egyptian revolt has not been long planned by the CIA-Mossad-NATO.

These are the sort of people who cheered for Obama before he got elected.

These are the sort of people who have never heard of Allen Lawrence Pope and Operation Haik



Mubarak is very rich, but so is Dick Cheney.

And let's not forget $1.3 TRILLION dollar tax gift to the richest 43,000 multi-millionaires/billionaires in the U.S.A.

Some figures (Egypt.):

1. Between 1980 and 2007 Egypt’s Human Development Index (HDI) rose 42%.

2. Egypt’s average annual HDI growth was 10th fastest worldwide and almost double the global average.

3. Between 2005 & 2008 Poverty, as defined by those living under $2/day, fell over 11%

4. Only 16% of the population now live on less than $2 per day.

5. The Gini Index, the international measure of wealth inequality, fell 7% between 1999 & 2007.

6. The share of the poorest 10% in national income rose 5% and the share of richest 10% feel 6% in the same period.

The ratio of the wealth of the richest to the poorest 10% also fell 10%.

~~

"Revolutions and Manipulations" are reported on at the Veterans Today Network (Jan 29, 2011)‎



According to unnamed intelligence sources:



"A cadre within the governments of Egypt, Israel and the United States, are seeking to expand Israel’s influence to the Nile and into Africa, has gotten behind Egypt’s new Vice President, Omar Suleiman, Israel’s 'man in Cairo'...



"Reports from intelligence sources in Europe and North Africa, sources with a good track record, tell of Israeli mobilization and troop movements toward the border of the Sinai...



"The long term objective of US, Israeli and Egyptian aims ... to split Egypt, followed by a destabilization based on the Tunisian model, of Northern Sudan...



"The next scheduled targets are: Uganda, Somalia, Eritrea and Kenya"





Worst of the Night: January 31, 2011

sad cavs
Suffering flu-like symptoms with every orgasm? Still not as sad as this.

The Cleveland Cavaliers: There aren't many stories sadder than a man who spent 30 years suffering from a deadly allergy to his own spunk, but the saga of the 2010-11 Cleveland Cavaliers is definitely one of them.

Last night, the Cavs lost for the 21st time in a row. That's the third-longest single-season losing streak in the history of the Association. In failure, they became the first NBA team this season to reach 40 losses.

According to the AP recap, Cleveland is now a mere two losses away from tying the "single-season NBA futility streak record" co-owned by the 1995-96 Vancouver Grizzlies and 1997-98 Denver Nuggets.

Overall, the Cavaliers have lost 31 of 32 games...and 24 straight on the road.

Wait. I'm not done yet.

According to ESPN Stats and Information, the Cavs -- who went 0-16 in January -- became just the third team in the last 20 seasons to finish a month winless when playing at least 15 games. The Orlando Magic went 0-15 in December 1991 and the Vancouver Grizzlies went 0-17 in March of 1996.

I'm still not done. Here's some added perspective from ESPN Stats and Information:

When the Cavaliers and Heat met for the first time on December 2nd, the Cavs were hanging around 500 while the Heat were off to an underwhelming start. What a watershed moment that proved to be. Since LeBron's return to Cleveland, the Heat have gone 23-6 while the Cavs have staggered to a 1-30 mark, getting outscored by an average of more than 15 points per game.
There was no talk of karma last night, only pity, as LeBron finally took the high road in what one assumes was a statement carefully crafted by his public relations team:

Said King Crab: "I have nothing bad to say about the players that I left and the team. I wish the organization the best. And I wish the fans, more than anything, the best because we had a lot of great years together."

That's some serious change of heart. I guess he remembered that God sees everything.

Well, maybe not everything. I think even God is hiding his eyes when the Cavs play these days. And here's some more ominious data from the AP recap: "Cleveland's franchise...already owns the all-time NBA losing-streak record, a 24-game slide that spanned from March to November 1982."

Let's check their next four games: versus Indiana and their dead coach bounce (see below), at Memphis against the improving Grizzlies (see below), verus the Frail Blazers and at Dallas. In short: 25 straight is a very real possibility.

Said Cavs coach Byron Scott: "We just keep fighting. That's all you can do."

Well, that and Seppuku.

byron scott facepalm
No, really. It's an option, Byron.
Are you ready to get pumped?

The Toronto Craptors: What killed the Dinosaurs? A meteor? Volcanos? Their disturbing lack of genitalia? Science may never know for sure. But last night, anyway, it was the dead coach bounce. Speaking of bouncing...


Frank Vogel won his Pacers coaching debut, and, trust me, there aren't many teams he'd would have rather debuted against than the Craptosaurs. They showed up with an 11-game losing streak and they left with a 12-game losing streak. Now that, my friends, is a considerate guest.

I'll give Vogel this much: He used his dark coaching arts to resurrect Roy Hibbert (24 points, 11 rebounds, 2 steals, 2 blocked shots). It was Hibbert's highest-scoring game since November 28. And Frank did it in such a novel way: By playing the big man where big men are supposed to play.

Said Hibbert: "It was an emphasis tonight of, 'Roy, get in the post, get in the post.' I don't think I made a lot of plays from the foul line area and the thing was, if you have a seven-footer, put them down low and make some plays."

Toronto was outrebounded 56-38 and went only 1-for-6 from three-point ra...wait...1-for-6? What is this? 1987?

Said Jose Calderon: "We have to be frustrated. Everybody is thinking we want to win. We have to keep working and take the positive parts. We just have to keep working and stay together."

Oh, yeah. That'll totally work.

Frank Vogel, quote machine: "They threatened to dump my head into some of their little ice buckets where they sink their ankles into. And then they threatened to dump those on me. And I said 'there's two of them, so whoever dumps me is going to get one themselves.' So they did not do that."

The Washington Wizards Generals: As long as we're talking about teams with a thing for losing, how 'bout them Generals, huh?

Last night's loss in Dallas was Washington's fifth straight loss...and it dropped the Generals to 0-24 on the road. That represents the third-worst road start in NBA history. Somewhat ironically, the 1992-93 Mavericks own the all-time worst road start, 29 straight losses away from home to begin the season.

Said John Wall: "You think about it every time you lose a game. You're disappointed and you've got to move on. We've got one more road game tomorrow [at New Orleans], and I think we're close to getting a win. We've got to learn how to finish and make the plays down the stretch."

The Orlando Magic: I keep seeing Orlando near to top of John Hollinger's Power Rankings, and I wonder what Mr. Wizard's Bat Computer is doing with these numbers: The Magic are .500 in their last 12 games and a mere one game above .500 on the second night of back-to-backs (7-6).

Oh, well. Numbers don't lie.

Speaking of numbers, Orlando's awesome D allowed the Care Bears to shoot better than 53 percent from the field and post six players in double figures. Mike Conley finished with 26 points and 11 assists...which was the first time he had more than 20 points and 10 assists in the same game.

Said Magic coach Stan Van Gundy: "Again, we dug ourselves a big hole and ... we fought back and came up short. It's becoming some of the same old story all the time."

The same old story. All the time. I hate that.

By the way, speaking of coming up short and the same old story...

Gilbert Arenas: Only 40 seconds to go. His team down two points. Gil steps to the line with a chance to tie the game. Makes one of two. His team goes on to lose a close one. I'm just sayin'...missed freebies costing his team a game. Sound at all familiar?


Dwight Howard: You want to talk about untimely technical fouls: His team down a single point with five seconds to go and someone on the other team (Conley) already going to the line. The Magic lucked out when Conley missed one of his two foul shots, but Z-Bo hit the technical 'throw, which put Orlando down three and forced a way-too-long three-pointer by Jason Richardson at the buzzer.

And worse: That puts Dwight two techs away from a one-game suspension.

The Charlotte Bobcraps: Since starting 15-5, the Jazz had gone 12-15, and they were missing Deron "I'm the best point guard in the league" Williams.

Instead of taking advantage, the Bobkittens had the same iffy decision-making, made the same mental lapses, and showed the same general ineptitude that got Larry Brown fired earlier in the season. Charlotte started 0-for-7 from the field, shot 35.6 percent on the night and finished with only 78 points. They also had 10 shots blocked and wasted a 27-14 advantage in free throw attempts.

Oh, and they failed to capitalize on the fact that Earl Watson was Utah's starting PG in Williams' absence.

Said Bobcraps coach Paul Silas: "It's still the little things. I don't want excuses...just admit, 'Hey, I messed up coach, and that's it.' I can accept that. But we still, as I've been saying, have a long way to go, but we are getting there."

The Milwaukee Bucks: Despite one of their best offensive showings of the season -- 98 points on 49.3 percent shooting and an amazing O-Rating of 112.3 -- the Bucks still lost to the Clippers and their O-Rating of 120.4. And get this: The Other L.A. Team has won 14 of 20 games against Milwaukee since 2001. If that's not a shameful statistic for any team, I don't know what is.

In related news, Blake Griffin.


The New Jersey Nyets: Memo to Carmelo Anthony: In Denver, you refuse to play for Nyets. In Soviet New Jersey, Nyets refuse to play for YOU!

Or...something.

Anyway, the Nyets led by as many as 19 points and knocked off the Nuggets 115-99, improving their record to 5-3 since New Jersey owner Mikhail Prokhorov said, "How you say in English? Ah, yes. Fuck Carmelo Anthony."

And that's exactly what the Nyets did, both to 'Melo and his team. New Jersey shot 53.2 percent from the field, went 9-for-15 (60 percent) from downtown, scored 27 points off 16 forced turnvoers, and outrebounded the Nuggets 38-27.

That's what we call ownage. But, as Anthony noted, the Nyets were motivated.

Said Carmelo: "Why shouldn't they feel a little extra motivated tonight in a game like this, knowing that their names have been in cahoots with the Denver Nuggets for the past couple of months."

In cahoots, 'Melo?


Oh, I love this little, ahem, nugget from the AP recap: "Anthony gave the fans who jeered and cheered him at different times a clear indication why he is so valued, scoring 37 points -- two shy of his season high -- to keep his team in the game."

To keep his team in the game? If you check the box score, you'll notice 'Melo had a game-worst plus-minus score of -18. I'm just sayin'.

Speaking of Mr. Anthony...

Carmelo Anthony, quote machine: "If I sit here and say I'm willing to lose 15 or 20 million dollars, I'd be lying to you. But at the same time this has never been about money. In my career so far I think I've made enough money. Now I'm focused on trying to win a championship. That's the only thing that's on my plate and on my mind right now."

Not willing to lose money...even tho' it's not about the money. Love it.

Chauncey Billups: The line: 4-for-11 and 7 turnovers. And his counterpart, Devin Harris, had a career-high 18 assists. Makes Chauncey my pick for Worst Player of the Night.

Chris's daily lacktion ledger:

Nuggets-Nyets: Johan Petro provided a 25% shooting percentage (on four attempts) in 9:42 along with four fouls for a 4:2 Voskuhl, while fellow ruble rouser Quinton Ross can now afford a private jet flight to Mikhail Prokhorov's compound with a 1.1 trillion (1:06)!

Cavs-Heat: Ryan Hollins had two points in 10:06, but also two fouls and a lost rock for a 3:2 Voskuhl. Samardo Samuels smoothly sidelined a field goal and two boards in 22:18 with four fouls and three turnovers for a 7:5 Voskuhl.

Also on the ratio list was Miami's Joel Anthony, despite a block in 25:02, as he garnered a pair of fouls for a 2:0.

Magic-Grizzlies: Xavier Henry delivered up a 2.85 trillion (2:52) for the baby cubs.

Generals-Mavs: Kevin Seraphin once again had a short stint on the hardwood, with eight seconds of eight-bit gaming for a SUPER MARIO!

For Dallas, Brendan Haywood certainly wasn't a hero tonight, bricking twice from the charity stripe in 9:22 and additionally fouling twice and giving away the ball once for a +5 suck differential and a 3:0 Voskuhl!

Bobcats-Jazz: Kyrylo Fesenko flaked out from field goal range once in 4:58 and also fouled for a +2 that doubled as a Madsen-level 1:0 Voskuhl.

Bucks-Clippers: Rasual Butler retrieved a brick, foul, and giveaway for Donald Sterling's credenza in 9:47, earning a +3.

EGYPT - LOOK AT THE PATTERN

Boy and his Donkey

Egypt by dvlazar



Is any 'Moslem' country safe from the CIA-Mossad-NATO?



1. Look at the pattern.



Palestine has been wrecked.



Iraq and Afghanistan have been wrecked.



Pakistan and Egypt are being wrecked.



"Will Malaysia become like Egypt and Tunisia?



"This is a question which many Malaysians are asking in the wake of people power and street demonstrations which have rocked several Muslim countries." (Malaysia, Tunisia, Egypt)



And the Egypt protests could spread to Saudi Arabia and other such countries



"The Saudis control the world's largest known reserves of oil..."



According to Zbigniew Brzezinski: "Egypt is seething. And if it erupts it is not only going to destabilize the country... it will affect Saudi Arabia, because the masses there are also seething underneath the surface." (Zbigniew Brzezinski Discusses Egypt Protests - Newsweek)



I Have a Gun...

Cairo by Modest and Jill



2. Look at what is happening to Egypt's economy.



"Investors, on whom the economy depends, are ... quick to retreat and, according to assessment by Credit Suisse, are not likely to return, at least until the crisis ends...



"It warns, foreign and private investment risks collapsing even if Mubarak manages to cling on to power.



"Tourism, which along with remittances from Egyptians living abroad is the biggest source of foreign currency, looks most vulnerable of all. (Egypt in crisis: Business collapse piles pressure on Mubarak)



And Tunisia.



Moody's Investor Service has downgraded Tunisia's sovereign rating to negative, citing political instability caused by the toppling of the government. (Tunisia Slams Ratings Downgrade)



Giza Boys

Egypt by hazy jenius



3. Look at how Egypt may become the new Pakistan.



Richard Norton-Taylor, in the Guardian 31 January 2011, reports that Egypt could become a greater threat than Pakistan, according to analysts



"Egypt has the potential to take Pakistan's place as the country posing the greatest threat to Britain's security, intelligence analysts said today..."



Egypt: Egyptian Girls

Old Egypt - Brooklyn Museum



4. Look at the biggest 'Moslem' country in the world.



Indonesia's first president was Sukarno and his policy of 'non-alignment' did not suit the CIA and its friends.



The CIA and MI6 undermined the Indonesian economy.



MI6 trained Islamists in Sumatra, in order to weaken Sukarno.



The CIA bombed churches in Indonesia, and blamed this on Islamists.



(aangirfan: USA SEEKS CONTROL OF INDONESIA? / aangirfan: THE USA IN INDONESIA /

aangirfan: SUHARTO)



The CIA used its assets in the Indonesian military to topple Sukarno.



General Suharto, a CIA asset, was put into power as president.



The CIA gave the Indonesian military lists of people who were to be killed.



Up to one million people were slaughtered.



The Pentagon trained the key generals and the spooks.



When Suharto and Indonesia were beginning to become too powerful, and Suharto was not giving enough contracts to US firms, the CIA took action.



The Indonesian economy was undermined.



Soldiers, dressed up as students, organised riots.



The CIA used its assets in the Indonesian military to topple Suharto.



Indonesia then endured several years of deep poverty and chaos.



And who now rules Indonesia?



The current president is a former general, trained in the USA.



~~