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And the funny thing is the corpse looked more lifelike than the kisser.
A tale of two presidents: Richard Baehr on the American Thinker site contrasts the legacies of two American presidents—Gerald Ford, an unassuming man who, in his post-presidential years, acquitted himself with modesty and grace, and Jimmy Carter, a self-important, self-righteous blowhard who continues to hog the world stage and refuses to disappear:
…But it is Carter's behavior after his defeat that stands in sharp contrast to Gerald Ford's post-presidential years. Certainly, charitable works are a useful endeavor for public figures after they leave office. Both Ford and Carter have done this - Carter for many years building homes with Habitat for Humanity.
But in other ways Carter has acted as if the last 26 years were an extended second term in office. He has freelanced in foreign policy - lending his ex-presidential imprimatur to the likes of Hugo Chavez, Fidel Castro, Kim Jong Il, and Yassar Arafat. He has been outspoken when he has disagreed with the policies of a sitting President (pretty much every Republican).
In the period leading up to the war with
The invitation to
Gerald Ford was an accidental president. He was the only president not elected either to that office or as vice president. He was the first appointed vice president (after Spiro Agnew's resignation), and when he succeeded to the presidency , it was not the culmination of a lifetime of seeking that office. Ford had been content to be a member the House of Representatives. He never tried to "upgrade" to the US Senate. Jimmy Carter, on the other hand, much like another recent Democratic Southern governor who made it to the presidency, had mapped out a strategy for that oval office run for years before he ran. The contrast between Ford and Carter is between modesty and vanity, service and ambition.
Finally, some public figures do not understand what it means to leave the stage gracefully. Gerald Ford did, and it is no wonder his reputation has grown since he left office, despite troubles on many fronts during his short two and a half year tenure. Ford was a transition president who had to deal with very difficult circumstances that he inherited from Richard Nixon: a deteriorating economy , a collapse in trust in government, and the final phase of the long unhappy Vietnam war experience. By pardoning Richard Nixon soon after taking the oath, Ford eliminated what would have been a distracting national sideshow, enabling him and the government to get on with managing its real business. It was, of course, also an act of mercy for a fallen president, already disgraced. It is impossible to think of Jimmy Carter demonstrating such judgment or compassion.
Jimmy Carter has plenty of compassion—but only for
A New Year’s Eve wish: From me to you:
Have a frolicsome New Year’s,
If you care to risk it.
And here’s hoping the jihad
Bites the bisquit.
Spoiled rotten: MTV has a dreadful reality show about Sweet Sixteen parties thrown by stupid, over-indulgent parents for their obnoxious, grasping, constitutionally ungrateful progeny (usually a daughter, but occasionally a son). For some inexplicable reason, my sister loves the show; I find it unwatchable.
It’s good to know, however, that American aren’t the only ones with daughters who’ve been spoiled rotten. Here, for example, is a deliciously bitchy story about Saddam Hussein’s daughter Raghad, who probably never had a Sweet Sixteen, but who is even more insufferable than any MTV sweet sixteener. From the Daily Mail:
She was relaxing in the Dazzle
It was obviously something important or her personal assistant would not have risked invoking her volcanic temper by passing her the mobile phone mid-treatment.
Indeed it was. On the end of the line was a lawyer telling her that Saddam Hussein had lost his appeal and would hang by the end of the week.
And the tall, slim woman who paled as she received this news was the tyrant's redoubtable eldest daughter Raghad.
There was much arm-waving, cursing and shrieking. But as a member of staff noted when she recounted the story to another customer, this kind of behaviour from Raghad is hardly unusual.
In the
And like her father during his brutal reign, she is used to getting her own way, although unlike him she has relied on nothing sharper than her tongue…
To the annoyance of Jordanians, Raghad enjoys a conspicuously extravagant lifestyle in
Driven wherever she pleases by bodyguards, she has an almost comical appetite for designer clothes and accessories and shops with a gusto that would earn approval from the high-spending wives and girlfriends of
"She buys shoes by the sack load," said a woman close to Raghad's tight circle of friends.
"But the store owners are wary of her because she can be a difficult customer and nothing is ever good enough for her. There's a shop in
Raghad is said to have a penchant for Gucci handbags and £400 Sergio Rossi boots and pays for them - or rather, her personal assistant pays for them - with a thick wad of crisp US dollars.
It is perhaps not surprising then that Raghad was pampering herself in a
If not out shopping she can often be found in Dazzle, or in the Iraqi-owned ladies' gym above it - Body Design - where she works out most mornings.
They are in
Raghad, an avid Hello! reader, also has her hair styled three times a week and is said to have received cosmetic surgery - nose, breasts, bags under the eyes - at the Amman Surgical Hospital…
Raghad's appeals on behalf of her father have surprised her family. "It is not the Arab way for a woman to speak out like this," one of Raghad's cousins told The Mail on Sunday.
"The family do not like it. And they do not like the way she wears his name like one of her designer labels."
Even at the international school her children attend in
"I remember telling her that I was taking one of my kids out of the school and moving her to the British international school because she was struggling with English," said one mother.
"I asked how her children were getting on with English and she said they were doing great. Then she said something extraordinary: 'Can you really imagine the grandchildren of Saddam Hussein not being able to speak English?'
The mother added: "All the mothers avoid her like the plague although she tries very hard to be friends."
So what now for Little Saddam? With her father gone she will no longer have a legal team to manage and will find herself with time on her hands. How will she ever fill it?
We know how she’s going to fill it. The same way another spoiled Arab princess, Suha Arafat, does: by having lots of facials, quackish spa treatments and exfoliations, and wasting oodles of purloined lucre on revoltingly expensive designer gear
Martyr maker: Times reporter John Simpson is impressed by Saddam’s “fortitude” as he met his fate:
SADDAM HUSSEIN met his death on the scaffold in
Having reported on Saddam for more than 25 years, I last saw him on the day he was sentenced to death. He had been expecting it, of course, and he played the scene with great toughness and spirit, condemning the American invasion and challenging the Iraqi government and the judges.
At the end, as he was taken out of the courtroom, he passed within a couple of feet of me. I could see a little smile of triumph on his lips. He must have known then that he had begun to create the legend of Saddam the martyr.
His last moments, face to face with death, were part of that same strategy. He knew Iraqis very well, and he knew what they liked in their leaders. The Saddam legend is only just beginning…
At first, after his surrender in the hole where he was hiding beside the
However, when he challenged the invasion’s legality during his trial, opinion among Sunnis began to swing. Soon they saw him as their champion and he used to address them from the dock, telling them not to despair.
As he stood on the trap door with the noose around his neck, waiting to plunge to his death, perhaps like all martyrs he was reflecting that immediate pain would be followed by an everlasting triumph. In political terms he may well turn out to be right.
Saddam is in no way a martyr, and it’s beyond sickening that Simpson would hitch a ride on the delusional bandwagon that is trying to turn him into one.
EUnuchs against the death penalty: It surprises me not at all to learn that, almost to a man (and woman) tender-hearted European leaders disapprove of Saddam’s execution. From the Los Angeles Times:
Some of the strongest criticism came from the
The execution "is tragic news … that risks feeding the spirit of revenge and sowing new violence," said Pope Benedict XVI's spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi.
"Even though this is a person guilty of grave crimes," Lombardi told Vatican Radio on Saturday morning, the execution "is a motive for sadness."
"The killing of a guilty party is not the way to build justice nor to reconcile society."
The
Several European leaders, spanning the political spectrum, questioned whether justice was served by Hussein's execution and said it could bring further bloodshed.
"We've already seen in the first hours the consequences, with a predictable increase in tension and violence," Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi said from his home in
"The death penalty is not justice, it is vengeance, and so it was in this case," Gustavo de Aristegui, a senior official with the opposition Popular Party, told the Spanish news agency EFE. "But nobody will miss Saddam Hussein."
In
"I welcome the fact that Saddam Hussein has been tried by an Iraqi court for at least some of the appalling crimes he committed against the Iraqi people. He has now been held to account," Beckett said.
"The British government does not support the use of the death penalty, in
But Menzies Campbell, leader of the opposition Liberal Democratic Party, said: "Saddam's death does not vindicate in any way the ill-conceived and disastrous decision to invade
"
In a statement, the Foreign Ministry said: "
European politicians who are friendly to
"We respect the decision, but it is known that the German government is opposed to capital punishment," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.
"But on a day like this my thoughts are mostly on the many innocent victims of Saddam Hussein," she said.
There is, however, one notable exception to this pity party:
Only in
"Justice has been meted out to a criminal who murdered thousands of people in
"This should serve as a warning to all those who would like to follow in Saddam Hussein's footsteps."
Along with having a conservative government,
Family reunion: CNN reports that Saddam Hussein is to be buried in his hometown, Tikrit (one of the few places in
R.I.H. (roil in Hell) the lot of you.
No banality, just pure, unmitigated evil: David Pryce-Jones reminisces about the trial and execution of another totalitarian brute: Adolf Eichmann. From NRO:
In 1962 I attended portions of the trial in Jerusalem of Adolf Eichmann. The experience was bewildering. There, behind bullet-proof glass, sat Eichmann, intently listening through headphones to the ghastly evidence, and adding to it with every interjection he made. Apparently sane and self-possessed, he had no idea of the enormity of his crime, talking about it as though mass murder were a part of everyday life. The sight and sound of the man encased in bullet-proof glass misled Hannah Arendt into coining the phrase “The banality of evil.” This has a journalistic ring about it, but it has consistently irritated me. There was nothing banal about Eichmann and the solemnity of his trial was a milestone for humanity.
With Eichmann in front of me, I questioned the death penalty. To take a person’s life, even after due process and a fair trial, is a fearful deed, seeming to overpower taboo and the instinct to respect one’s fellow men. A day came when his appeal was heard. I was in court. The judge was quoting this and that precedent in international law, and suddenly, without ceremony or pause, he rejected the appeal. Eichmann was escorted away. Everyone else gathered in the small square outside the court, all of us silent, a few in tears. After quite a short time, the news came through, again without ceremony, that he had been hanged. To my surprise, the sun immediately seemed brighter, the sky more blue, the earth cleaner, and I realized that I do not in fact question the death penalty for mass murder.
These responses resurfaced this morning with a surge of emotion at the news that Saddam Hussein has gone to the gallows as once Eichmann had. In the course of his trial, he too had condemned himself with every word he spoke, equally oblivious to the enormity of his crimes, as though mass murder answered to his job description. Anyone who holds that such men really are banal, and shouldn’t pay with their lives for the evil they do, must further explain how justice is to be done to the victims.
I’m so glad that Pryce-Jones, like me, is appalled by the phrase “the banality of evil”—one of the most ridiculous and half-baked notions of the 20th Century. I for one continue to be appalled by the damage wrought by Hannah Arendt, a German Jewish anti-Zionist whose wrong-headed assesments of Eichmann, the Jews, the Holocaust and Israel continue to inform and show up on the syllabuses (syllabi?) of Israel-bashing academics like Dr. Shiraz Dossa.
Saddam’s last words: Q: What do you call people who are bereft at the execution of brutal Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein? A: Palestinians. From YNET News:
Palestinians on Saddam: We lost a leader
(VIDEO) Iraqi tyrant's last words, '
Many in the Palestinian Authority on Saturday lamented the execution of Saddam Hussein, who received a special status among the Palestinians.
"Saddam was known for his ability to stick to his opinion and say 'no' to a world power," said Husni al-Ajal, 46, from a refugee camp near Ramallah.
The pictures of the "butcher from
On Saturday morning, the citizens of
Saddam, on (sic) his part, did not forget the Palestinians also during his last moments. Just before the rope was wrapped around his neck, he shouted, "Allah is great. Long live the Iraqi nation.
Wrong, noose guy. The Palestinian part of
Saddam swings: I have been listening with grim amusement this morning to Ceeb radio coverage about the execution of Saddam Hussein. While describing the details of Saddam’s final moments, reporter Phillip Lee Shannock has been sure to include a few local Iraqi nay-sayers who insist that Saddam didn’t get a fair shake at his trial, and that Iraqis cannot rejoice while the American occupiers are still firmly in place.
This kind of reportage is in keeping with the Ceeb’s bizarro world view; two days ago, I listened in astonishment as a newsreader related as accepted fact that it was a bad thing that the Islamists of Somalia had been pushed back by the Ethiopians and the Somali government.
As an antidote to the Ceeb’s witchy leftoid snake venom, I offer this piece by James S. Robbins on the NRO site:
…There is something grimly primordial about death by hanging. Surely it as ancient a method of execution as rope itself. The placement of the noose, the pause, a final appeal to God, the clatter of the trap door, the snap of the rope, the jerk. A cold and definitive end to a significant historical figure. And the formality ended there, as the witnesses broke into cheers and danced around the body. A native custom I suppose.
Saddam’s final spoken words, “God is great,” were a political statement. They were the last words of a man expecting to be remembered not as a criminal but as a sacrificial victim. This attitude is clear in Saddam’s final missive, released days earlier. He expressed no regrets, apologized for nothing. He counseled his followers against hate, but called for continued violence. He said he would be raised to stand with the martyrs if and when God wills it. But Saddam gave up his genuine chance to be a martyr, unlike his sons. He will not be a greater inspiration dead than alive. The concept of the martyr is overrated — none of history’s villains became more powerful or influential after death. In time it was if they had never existed, except for the evil that they have done, the lives they have destroyed, and the fading memory of just how deadening it was to live in constant fear.
The blandishments of the Baathist holdouts that Saddam’s execution will bring about attacks on the
To employ a Judeo-Christian expression (while I still can), amen to that.
Slip sliding away: Sandro Contenta, the Toronto Star’s man on the scene in Europe, urges “secular” continentals to eschew the “Islamophobia” that’s making it so hard for Muslims to integrate into their and embrace the 15 million Muslims in their midst. In other words, to relax and accept that their future as an Islam-dominated continent is all but inevitable:
…The White House's disastrous
By contrast, bombers have hit London and Madrid, a Dutch filmmaker was butchered in the name of Allah on the streets of Amsterdam, a noticeable flow of European Muslims are taking up jihad in Iraq, and arrests of suspected plotters is practically a monthly event.
In
Immigration patterns made it easier for the
With few exceptions, European governments spent decades using Turkish and North African immigrant "guest workers" for cheap labour. Neglect, and a belief that they would one day return home, meant they got little help to integrate.
Last year, the Paris-based Montaigne Institute conducted an experiment: It responded to job ads with identical CVs and found that CVs with "traditional" French names got five times as many replies as those with Arab names.
Yet since 9/11, European politicians have defined the problem of integration not in terms of economic and social barriers but in terms of religion.
American Muslims also face a disturbing amount of "Islamophobia." But in a country where the dollar bill proclaims trust in God and Bible study groups are held in the White House, the notion religion might be a barrier to integration is inconceivable. Simply put, Muslims feel more at home in God-fearing America than in Godless Europe.
"If the message they hear from us is that the necessary condition for being European is to abandon their religion, then they will choose not to be European," writes Timothy Gordon Ash, professor of European Studies at
Muslims have much to do to help their integration. An attitude of victimization is setting in that risks seeing Muslims accept their marginal status, indeed wear it as a badge of honour. More effort is needed to develop a European brand of Islam, which fully incorporates values of democracy, tolerance and equality, and is preached by homegrown Imams.
Reform is all the harder, however, in an atmosphere where even Tony Blair, a devout Christian, is reluctant to publicly profess his faith. In the run-up to the
The sooner
Wrong, wrong, wrong. The “European brand of Islam” that Sandro is touting is already in full flower—and it differs not a whit from the Sayed Qutb brand of Islam that’s all the rage in the rest of the ummah. Pretending that this is all a matter of a Western failure to integrate, and the
So when Sandro Contera says that the sooner
Back to the future: Pretend 2007 has already come and gone. That’s what James Lileks does in offering a “look back” at the year ahead. Here are a few highlights:
…Fidel Castro died and lay in state for 48 hours while Cubans filed past to pay their respects in the traditional manner. Experts estimated that 24,302 liters of spittle were expelled. Brother Raul declared a "National Day of Mourning and Mopping Up."
Terror plots in
Vladimir Putin prepared for his eventual retirement in 2008 by forcing the Russian Parliament to create a position called "Czar," which he described as "purely ceremonial." Critics of his imperial ambitions and corrupt, gangster-style government were not reassured by the theft of Lenin's body, which turned up on eBay, was then stolen from the winning bidder and was finally discovered in a London alley. Poisoned…
Two can play at the prognostication game. Here are a few of my “backward” glances:
Happy New Year to all! And I hope we can gather a year from now to see which if any of my predictions have come true.
…Every day that goes by under current conditions -- with Israeli forces no longer patrolling the Gaza/Egypt border and no Palestinian security force in place to stop the terrorist organizations from smuggling heavy weaponry into Gaza (or for that matter conducting large-scale military operations against the terrorists already operating there) -- is another day in which Islamofascist forces grow stronger and Israel's deterrent capability grows weaker. Unfortunately, these realities seem lost on policy-makers in Washington and Jerusalem, who doggedly insist that the solution to the current problem lies in strengthening the "moderate" Mr. Abbas so he can "fight" terrorism. Israeli sources say privately that in recent months, the State Department has leaned on Mr. Olmert (a politician in domestic free-fall) to agree to permit Mr. Abbas to expand Force-17, a Fatah militia. Mr. Olmert, for his part, has responded by embracing Mr. Abbas and becoming his number one Israeli cheerleader, something that is probably not a very good long-term strategy. In May, Mr. Abbas appointed Col. Mahmoud Damra, formerly a top aide to Yasser Arafat, to head Force-17 despite the fact that he was wanted by Mr. Olmert's government for running a West Bank terror cell that had killed and wounded scores of Israelis. He was arrested by Israel three months ago.
The Bush administration is vigorously promoting U.S. Army Lt.-Gen. Keith Dayton's efforts to expand Force-17 despite a disturbing history over the past decade in which Palestinians use their American security training to facilitate terrorist operations against Israel. In 1996, CIA Director George Tenet was authorized by President Clinton to begin training the Palestinians in anti-terror tactics. In 1998, Mr. Clinton brow
Anyone who believes Mr. Abbas will reform this situation is deluding themselves. As Miss Rice was praising Mr. Abbas in Jericho, the Israeli group Palestinian Media Watch issued a report showing how PA television (which is under Mr. Abbas' control) and the Fatah-controlled newspaper al-Hayat al-Jadida glorify suicide bombings and the use of children in warfare; support terrorist insurgents in Iraq and depict the United States as a menace to the Arab world. Mahmoud Abbas looks increasingly like Yasser Arafat in a business suit.
A commentary in that bastion of dhimmitude, the International Herald Tribune (link via Martin Kramer), comes to the same conclusion—that it’s useless to deal with Abbas—but, in a dizzyingly wrong-headed assessment, claims there’s only one way forward: deal with Hamas:
…The most fundamental miscalculation of all is the notion that there can be a peace process with a Palestinian government that excludes Hamas. Hamas is not an ephemeral phenomenon that can be extinguished by force of arms. It is as permanent a feature of the Palestinian political landscape as Fatah, which means that no enduring change in relations between Israelis and Palestinians — and certainly no end to violence, or beginning of a political process, let alone meaningful Israeli withdrawals from the West Bank — can occur over its opposition.
There is an alternative, and though it, too, is uncertain, it is far less risky or bloody, and hardly has been given a chance. Hamas wants to govern effectively — that is, without a crippling international siege and Israeli military operations. Although it is not willing to formally renounce violence, it is prepared to abide by a comprehensive cease- fire, and has proved its ability to implement it when
Hamas is willing to deal directly with
Hamas will not, however, recognize
They’re kidding, right? How on earth is Israel supposed to negotiate a peace agreement with people who not only do not recognize the right of Jews to have a sovereign state, but whose charter calls for a genocide of the Jews? That’s not a petty detail that
Me? I say a pox on both Palestinian houses—and phooey on the IHT’s Hamas lobbyists, too.
Ceeb “comedy”: Here’s the website for the Ceeb’s new comedy series, Little Mosque on the Prairie, set to air early in the new year. The Ceeb bills the show as “Halalarious,” but persusing the site, it looks like it follows the Ceeb’s usual deadly earnest (and deadly unfunny) formulation re majorities and minorities, i.e. white folks, especially practicing Christians, are generally bad and ignorant; non-white folks are usually good and wise.
I’m reserving judgement until I see the shows, but from a clip showing a young Muslim man chatting on his cell phone as he lines up at an airport check-in, and the misunderstanding that ensues when he innocently mentions the words “jihad” and “hijacking” (oh, those silly infidels, always so quick to jump to conclusions), I have a feeling I’m going to find it less than amusing.
Bottoms up: Yesterday Reuters reported that Foggy Bottom diva, Condoleezza Rice, wants to use a “back channel” to kick start the moribund Peace in Our Time process. That is, she plans to bypass Hamas, the regime in charge, and deal directly with Mahmoud Abbas, the man in charge of the regime’s rival, Fatah.
I’m not sure who came up with the phrase “back channel”—whether it was some Foggy Bottom functionary or Condi herself. But whoever did has a tin ear, because this unfortunate coinage makes it sound like
Two articles on the FrontPage magazine site shed light on the impending rape. This one, by Jamie Glazov, deals with the psycho-sexual dysfunction of jihadis and the role sodomy, misogyny and masculinity play in their society. The second, by P. David Hornik, is about the State Department’s demands that
In good (and bad) faith: A Muslim leader in the
Commenting on a recent poll conducted by The Guardian newspaper that painted the religion as cause of ills prevails in the society, he said it is only religion that bind the people in the bond of love and brotherhood and create a sense of self restrain from the acts that are harmful to others. He said historically the societies that have been built on religious beliefs were more peaceful and integrated compared to those of non religious.
He said
He said every religion including Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism and Hinduism advocate peace, harmony; justice and love. None of them teach hatred against each other and provoke for wars and destruction. He however, stressed for further interfaith harmony among the different religions to promote peace and tolerance in the society…
Here’s a link to a site that lists the passages in the Koran beseeching believers to wage jihad against infidels. Obviously, the peace, harmony, justice and love contained therein must be implicit, or occluded, or, um, absent since, down through the ages, these words have inspired the faithful to follow the Prophet’s example and use violence and terror to spread the one true faith.
Notice, too, the little tap dance the missionary does around the relationship between church and state, acknowledging Western tradition in dividing the two, but touting the positive social benefits of leaving them intertwined (which is what Islam does). Very clever.
I happen to agree with the maulana (a title of respect that means "master" in Arabic) that religion can be a force for social good. Then again, it can also be the source of disharmony, discord and intolerance, as is the case when the imperatives of one faith clash with the philosophy and modus operendi of the larger society.
He’s got the whole haj in His hands: Muslim pilgrims know the risks they run in making haj, one of the sacred obligations of Islam, but say their safety is in God’s hands. From Reuters:
But that has not stopped the Indian-born London Underground worker and his two sons from joining 2 million pilgrims who will begin the 5-day haj ritual in the birthplace of Islam on Friday.
"I have absolutely no fear, no concern whatsoever. It is part of our faith and that's why we are here," said Hussein, one of some 23,000 British nationals in
"You have to put everything out of your mind because accidents do happen everywhere else in the world."
A duty for every able-bodied Muslim at least once in a lifetime, haj is one of the biggest displays of mass religious devotion in the world. With such large crowds, many of whom gripped by religious fervour, tragedies do happen.
In January, 362 pilgrims were crushed to death due to overcrowding at the
Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef said improvements introduced this year would prevent overcrowding at the
"We hope that this year's haj will not witness any incidents," Prince Nayef told reporters on Tuesday.
Once the three remaining levels of the bridge are completed, the bridge will be able to accommodate over 4 million pilgrims.
IN THE HANDS OF GOD
Ibrahim Mustapha said he had noticed improvements since last year but that the pilgrims' fate was in God's hands.
"I'm not worried about potential incidents because, at the end of the day, it's all in the hands of God," said the 26-year-old Mauritanian, his second pilgrimage in two years…
Maybe so, but while God may be overseeing the big picture, the Saudis, as always, are in charge of the petty logistics. And, as always, should “tragedies” occur due to overcrowding and their own incompetence, they can always pin the blame on the Big Guy.
A good way to prevent pilgrims from suing the haj organizers, I’d say.
Rachel, Rachel: The Toronto Star has two letters to the editor today condemning CanStage’s decision to nix a production of My Name is Rachel Corrie. Here’s the one posted on the Star’s site:
Cancelling play a shameful act
Theatre scraps play on
Dec. 22.
The decision of Martin Bragg, artistic producer of CanStage, to cancel My Name is Rachel Corrie is shameful. Corrie was a brave woman, a supporter of peace and human rights who was killed in a non-violent protest while trying to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian doctor's house in
As a Jew proud of our tradition of social justice, I honour Corrie's memory. We do no service to
Stephen K. Levine, Professor Emeritus of Social and Political Thought,
And, of course, I couldn’t resist sending the following letter:
Like Stephen Levine and David Copelin, I, too, am distressed by Martin Bragg’s decision to cancel a production of My Name is Rachel Corrie—but for an entirely different reason. I had been looking forward to participating in a protest on opening night during which placards would have been hoisted showing photos of Rachel Thaler, Rachel Charhi, Rachel Levi and several other Rachels.
No doubt those names aren’t as familiar to the theatre-going public as Rachel Corrie’s. That’s because these more obscure Rachels, victims of the kind of Palestinian terrorism that Rachel Corrie had gone to Israel to try to defend (she died while attempting to prevent Israelis from demolishing a house in which weapons were being smuggled in order to kill Israeli civilians), have yet to have a theatrical production mounted in their memory. If and when they do, I have no problem with Martin Bragg staging a double bill of My Name is Rachel Corrie along with We Are the Forgotten Victims of Suicide Bombers.
Channel surfers: What do you do when a Peace In Our Time process has been stymied by the genocidal terrorists running the show in the P.A.? Why, you try to bypass the guys in charge and find an entry point through the back door. From Reuters:
Condoleezza Rice last visited the region in late November and held talks with Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. The
Abbas, addressing a news conference after talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in
He said he had a plan to form a "back channel" of negotiations with the Israelis about final status issues and would float the idea again during Rice's visit.
"I think that when Rice is here it will be the time to talk about this issue seriously," he said.
Abbas and
He said the parallel channel would involve one or more members of the quartet of
Taking a “back channel”—what a brilliant idea! But only if you don't mind seeing
Power failure: We easily-gulled Westerners continue to fall for the “religion of peace” line, despite oodles of evidence to the contrary and the attendant cognitive dissonance it entails. However, for progressive-minded Westerners, political Islam does have one very tender Achilles heel: its dreadful treatment of women. As an example, when the government of Ontario was considering whether or not to give legal sanction for Islamic tribunals, it was women from Muslim countries who’d come to Canada to escape the rigidities of sharia law, as well a women of a certain age, many of whom had fought on the barricades during the feminist revolution of the early 1970s, who raised their voices in protest and convinced the province to back down. In an article in The Australian, a scribe named Janet Albrechtsen tries to maintain the proper tone of political correctness while concurring with a UN report that women in the Arab world are extremely downtrodden, and that change is essential:
…A few weeks ago the latest UN Arab Human Development Report was released. It is the final report in a groundbreaking four-part series that calls for nothing short of an Arab renaissance. Groundbreaking because critical self-analysis is rare in the Arab world.
This final report, which focuses on the empowerment of women as one of the main deficits confronting the Arab world, reveals some progress for Arab women. Last year, Kuwait gave women the vote. Some Arab legislators have given equal pay the nod. Small, incremental steps. But, overall, liberation for Arab women is a long way off.
This is not about Western-style feminism, where empowerment in the 21st century is baring one's navel (and the rest), talking dirty and sliding up and down a pole, should that take your fancy.
Understandably, many in the Arab world have little time for Western feminism and are rather wary of Western agendas.
When the UN Arab Human Development Report talks about women's empowerment, it's about basic stuff: half the women in the Arab world are illiterate and in all but four Arab countries less than 80 per cent of girls go to secondary school (the exceptions are Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar and the Palestinian territories.) It's about lack of health care: the maternal mortality rate in Arab countries is about 270 per 100,000 live births, almost 20 times higher than in the US.
It's about lack of political engagement. Although more women in Arab countries now vote, women's participation is largely symbolic. Few women wield real power. In Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, women are still waiting for the right to vote.
It's about Arab women being economically marginalised, with work force participation the lowest in the world at 33 per cent. Where half the population is relegated to "girl jobs" such as nursing and teaching, unable to work without their husbands' consent, forbidden from associating with men in the workplace, it's clear that women are excluded from basic freedoms that we take for granted.
And it's about violence. The report reveals that the family "has been transformed from a place of safety and security to one where any type of violence against women may be practised". Pointing to World Health Organisation statistics, it tells us that 97 per cent of women in Egypt have been circumcised, even though the barbaric practice was outlawed in 1997.
Despite the grim news, we should be heartened by this report. Recognising the need for equality between women and men is a important step in the right direction. But no one should underestimate the size of the task. Empowering women is an incredibly subversive thing to do. It strikes at the heart of a culture that prefers to treat women poorly. Recall that the immediate trigger for the mujaheddin insurgents in Afghanistan rising up against the Soviet-backed communist government in the late 1970s was the introduction of education for women.
Minus the mujaheddin crazies, girl power, even at its most basic, is still not a neutral issue. It raises sensitive questions of religion and culture. Although the report's authors are keen to give Islam a break, claiming that religion is not to blame for the continuing degradation of women, there is no getting around the fact that a fundamentalist interpretation of Islam is not exactly girl-friendly…
“Not exactly girl-friendly”—Ms. Albrechtsen has just won the prize for understatement of the year.
Losing out: This one’s for Patrick “Sid” Ryan and all the other Canadian leftoids lobbying for a boycott of Israeli products. From FrontPage Magazine:
OK. So I understand that you are ticked off at
That's fine with me, as long as you have truly weighed up all the facts.
So, you want to boycott
I'll be sorry to miss you, but if you are doing it - do it properly.
Let me help you.
Make sure that you do not have tablets, drops, lotions, etc., made by Abic or Teva.
It may mean that you will suffer from colds and flu this winter but, hey, that's a small price for you to pay in your campaign against
While we are on the subject of your Israeli boycott, and the medical contributions to the world made by Israeli doctors and scientists, how about telling your pals to boycott the following....
An Israeli company has developed a simple blood test that distinguishes between mild and more severe cases of Multiple Sclerosis.
So, if you know anyone suffering from MS, tell them to ignore the Israeli patent that may, more accurately, diagnose their symptoms.
An Israeli-made device helps restore the use of paralysed hands. This device electrically stimulates the hand muscles, providing hope to millions of stroke sufferers and victims of spinal injuries.
If you wish to remove this hope of a better quality of life to these people, go ahead and boycott
Young children with breathing problems will soon be sleeping more soundly, thanks to a new Israeli device called the Child Hood.
This innovation replaces the inhalation mask with an improved drug delivery system that provides relief for child and parent.
Please tell anxious mothers that they shouldn't use this device because of your passionate cause.
These are just a few examples of how people have benefitted medically from the Israeli know-how you wish to block…
See, Sid, if you decided to boycott
Moo’s “Dear Ben” letter: In keeping with the rules of jihad as set out by the most perfect human being to have ever existed in the entire history of the world, Moo Ahmadinejad, a real by-the-book kinda guy, has sent a letter to the Pope.
The
Pope Benedict XVI received a letter Wednesday from
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's letter was delivered by Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki after the pontiff's general audience at the
The
The
The Pope "reaffirmed the role that the Holy See intends to carry out for world peace, not as a political authority but as a religious and moral one ... so that peoples' problems will always be solved in dialogue, mutual understanding and peace," the
Good luck with that one, your Eminence.
Humaniterrorism in action: Q: When is a genocidal terrorist organization not a genocidal terrorist organization. A: When easily-gulled Westerners note how it bribes, er, tends to the needs of its people. From Der Spiegel online:
The West classifies Hamas as a terrorist organization, but in the Gaza Strip, the Islamist organization is widely respected for helping families in need. International aid groups also praise Hamas for being free of corruption.
Etidal Sinati's life in poverty began one night in March 2003. Israeli helicopters were flying air attacks on the Jabalia refugee camp in northern
"My husband was not a Hamas supporter. In fact, he was for Fatah," says Sinati, now a widow. It is cold in her two-room hut; a mentally ill uncle sits in a corner occasionally laughing to himself and pulling his wool blanket over his head. "But without Hamas we wouldn't have survived, and even with their support it's been difficult."
The official pension for the wife of a "martyr" -- a Palestinian killed by the Israeli military -- is €100 every three months. For a large family living in
A party for the poor
At first glance Hamas, a party that looks after the poor with its money and charity, appears to be playing a well-known tune on the instrument of populism. On the other hand, every major international aid organization is singing the Islamist group's praises when it comes to the quality of its work. "In the International Crisis Group's 2003 report, the most important American NGOs gave perfect marks to Hamas's work; they couldn't have achieved a better result," says Helga Baumgarten, a lecturer at Birzeit University in Ramallah…
Oh, that Hamas. It’s just so…compassionate.
For me the most amusing part of this unintentionally amusing article is the name of the person who wrote it: Ulrike Putz.
The NYT’s faux heroes and villains: A typically clueless New York Times editorial criticizing
The Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, took some encouraging steps over the weekend to ease the frustrations Palestinians face at
We hope Mr. Olmert or
Meanwhile, Mr. Olmert’s positive gestures still deserve recognition, although the hoped-for benefits to Mr. Abbas may now be lost. More than two dozen military checkpoints in the
In addition,
Compared to the sweeping visions of the
Today, the idea of a comprehensive peace between Israelis and Palestinians seems a distant dream. Yet it represents the best long-term assurance of
Don’t you love how the NYT employs the royal “we” as it pronounces on world events? An expression of the paper’s absurd grandiosity and self-regard, I’d say. As for the whole scary, wicked settlers scenario, the one so beloved of the kind of wishful thinkers who were convinced that Gaza disengagement, followed by West Bank disengagement, would result in “a secure Jewish democracy at peace with its Arab neighbors,” it’s a total crock. The settlers aren’t the ones obstructing “the dream” of peaceful cohabitation; the jihad, Islamic supremacism and a soon-to-be nuclear
But it’s so much more comforting to lapse into the familiar and make the settlers the bad guys.
Nuclear watchkitty, declawed: Want to know why the mullahs are laughing at us? Look no further than this AFP report about the U(seless)N(itwit)s’ most laughably (and dangerously) ineffectual agency, the IAEA:
The UN Security Council resolution which on Saturday imposed the sanctions also requested a report from International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei within 60 days on whether
"It is not completely clear that there will be a board meeting in January. But I believe that if there was, it would be procedural and short. The board as the governing body may need to instruct the (IAEA) secretariat to implement the resolution," a senior European diplomat said.
It’s not completely clear if there will be an IAEA board meeting next month. What is completely clear, though, is that the IAEA’s diplomatic fecklessness has helped facilitate the mullahs’ big kaboom.
Good sports: In light of what’s been happening between Ethiopia and Somalia—Somalian Islamists declaring holy war on Christian Ethiopia, and the Ethiopians fighting back and not taking any of their guff—this Nigerian news report about the Islamists re-opening a sports ministry seems deliciously gaga. From the Vanguard:
Following a reconstruction and renovation program the Somali Islamic courts have re-opened the former national sports ministry, the International Sports Press Association (AIPS) reports.
The Islamic courts High Commission for Sports Affairs which functions as the sports ministry under the Islamic law will work at the ministry compound as its base.
Built in 1972, the ministry consists of 20 rooms. Only six have been repaired by the Islamists High Commission for Sports Affairs.
Sheik Abdullahi Ahmed Ibraahim, a former sports fan of the LLPP Jenyo football club addressed the celebration gathering and said that Islamists “are not against sport, because sport makes people stronger and what the Somali Islamists want is that sport must be done in accordance with Islamic law.”
The Sheik said the prophet Mohamed of Islam had allowed some kinds of sport games including: swimming, wrestling, jumping, archery and many others, but all those are to be accomplished under the Islamic law.
First Vice-president of the Somali Olympic Committee Mr Aden hajji Yabarow “Wiish” praised the Islamic courts for dedicating to opening of the national sports ministry after 16 years of civil war in the country.
“This compound is where we used to work and I am to see it working again”, he said. “NOC Somalia was the national flag carrier and represented the nation at many of the worlds’ greatest gatherings and still we are taking the flag into the whole world and we hope the Islamic courts will respect the Somali NOC as an independent leader of the nation,” Yabarow said.
The Islamic courts high commissioner for sports affairs Sheik Abdulkadeer Hajji Hassan Gurey thanked the Somali NOC for what he called “the good co-operation with his office”.
Hilarious! Can’t wait to see the Islamic
Dire forecast: Worst-case scenario: Islamic lunatics eager to bring on the Apocalypse working to construct nuclear weapons. Worst-worst-case scenario: Islamic lunatics, working in hidden, unreachable locations, and completing construction of nuclear weapons. From FrontPage Magazine:
…Once the UN Security Council resolution was passed, Ahmadinejad’s top nuclear advisor, Ali Larijani, said the regime now planned to accelerate the installation of the production centrifuges.
“From Sunday morning [December 24] , we will begin activities at Natanz – the site of 3,000-centrifuge machines – and we will drive it with full speed. It will be our immediate response to the resolution,” Iran’s Kayhan paper quoted him as saying.
How is this possible? Well, for one thing, it is likely that
The Israelis told me this summer this was their “worst-worst case” scenario. But a senior Israeli intelligence official I saw recently said the likelihood of that “worst-worst case” now appeared to be far greater than he or others had previously believed. “There can be no doubt they have a clandestine program,” he said.
And because it’s clandestine, we don’t know the size or shape of it, and therefore can’t make estimates of
After all, they are facing a president in
On December 21 – just two days before the UN Security Council resolution – British Prime Minister Tony Blair gave the bleakest assessment of his entire tenure at
Speaking in
Sorry, but given the situation, describing Iran as “the main obstacle” to hopes for peace seems exceptionally lame; kind of like Churchill (not to say that Blair is a Churchill) calling Nazi Germany the main obstacle to peace. Well, duh! Of course
All I can say is fasten your seatbelts, folks. In coming months, we’re in for a lot of turbulence.
Jimminy’s “Jewish problem”: Michael B. Oren, author of a superb history of the Six Day War, takes on Jimminy Dhimminy’s new book. Oren writes that Jimminy’s problem with
Several prominent scholars have taken issue with Jimmy Carter's book "
Mr. Carter indeed seems to have a religious problem with the Jewish state. His book bewails the fact that
He complains about the fact that the kibbutz synagogue he enters is nearly empty on the Sabbath and that the Bibles presented to Israeli soldiers "was one of the few indications of a religious commitment that I observed during our visit." But he also reproves contemporary Israelis for allegedly mistreating the Samaritans--"the same complaint heard by Jesus almost two thousand years earlier"--and for pilfering water from the
Disturbed by secular Laborites, he is further unnerved by religiously minded Israelis who seek to fulfill the biblical injunction to settle the entire
Whether in its secular and/or observant manifestations,
Carter reminds me of the preacher I met in Kentucky who had just been to the “Holy land” and who had enjoyed seeing all the ancient places where Jesus and the first Christians had tread so long ago, but who clearly was discomfited by Israel’s being a modern Jewish state full of real live modern Jews.
An “F” in History: Like Ehud Olmert, George Bush seems determined to follow the road map to Stupidville and try to pump up the deflated political fortunes of Mahmoud Abbas and Fatah with tons of cash. As if it’s the paucity of cash in Fatah’s treasury that’s the impediment to peace. In FrontPage Magazine, Eric Umansky explains why a policy that harkens back to a time when Israel and U.S. reanimated the moribund fortunes of another sidelined Fatah-head, Yasser Arafat, is just as crappy (and maybe ever crappier) today:
…Ironically, the strategy isn't likely to help Fatah or Abbas, whose problem isn't lack of money or guns but paucity of support. "Our image in the streets is very bad," one "senior Fatah official" told Time. "We are seen as self-interested and collaborators [with
Of course, propping up the security forces isn't just a solid bet to backfire on Fatah's interests but also on our own.
In the long run, the world would benefit from a Palestinian government that was truly representative of and responsive to its people. (Polls consistently show Palestinians support a two-state solution.) It's not an easy task, and
If Palestinians are so consistent in their support for a two-state solution, why do they consistently choose leadership that’s committed to
On desecration and delusion: Another must-read by the great Caroline Glick in the Jerusalem Post:
You have to wonder what thoughts passed through the minds of
On April 2, 2002, as IDF forces swept into Bethlehem to root out the terrorists who had taken control of the city, between 150 and 180 Fatah terrorists under Yasser Arafat's command shot their way into the Church of the Nativity. For the next 39 days they held the sacred site and some 150 clergymen hostage.
Three weeks into the siege, three Armenian monks escaped from the church through a side entrance and revealed what was happening inside. Friar Narkiss Koraskian told reporters: "They stole everything. They stole our prayer books and four crosses. They didn't leave anything."
When the siege ended, the released hostages told of frequent beatings of clergymen. The terrorists, they told The Washington Times, "ate like greedy monsters," gorging themselves on food and slurping down beer, wine and Johnny Walker scotch they stole from the rectory as their hostages went hungry.
CATHOLIC priests said that the terrorists used their bibles as toilet paper. Franciscan priest Nicholas Marques from
On Saturday night, as part of his massive effort to "strengthen" Abbas, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert agreed to convene a joint committee to discuss the return of these terrorists to the city.
Speaking of his good friend Mahmoud on Sunday afternoon to a Kadima audience in
IT IS TRUE that business sometimes can be done with enemies. But what business can Olmert do with Abbas? And how does any of this business advance
Good question. Surely Olmert must realize that if the Palestinians have their way, they will treat the entire State of Israel with the same kind of delicacy and respect they accorded the besieged Church of the Nativity.
'Shmuck' writes letter: A nasty piece of anti-Israel invective in the Globe and Mail’s letters to the editor (sorry, no link):
The Hamas debate
Prime Minister Stephen Harper is right to reject talks with Hamas (Harper Calls Hamas ‘Genocidal’—Dec. 21). First, those irrational Palestinians refused to give up their lands to create a homeland for European Jews fleeing European anti-Semitism. Then they stubbornly insisted on calling themselves a ‘people’ even former Israeli prime minister Golda Meir informed them that they were not. With preposterous temerity, Palestinian refugees who fled or were expelled still want to return home. Now these restless natives expect the world to recognize the government they democratically elected.
Such intolerable chutzpah knows no bounds.
JOHN DIRLIK,
Good for John: save for explicitly denying the Shoah, he’s managed to hit all of the avowedly genocidal Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s talking points. Israelis as alien, European interlopers: check. Selective citation of history so as to ignore the following: Israel’s Jewish identity (which predates the appearance of Islam by many centuries); the centrality of Israel and Jerusalem to the Jewish people and the Jewish religion; the unceasing presence of Jews in Israel down through the ages; the provenance of the almost equivalent number of Jewish refugees who fled or were expelled from Arab/Muslim lands at the same time the Palestinians fled or were expelled, and who were settled without argument (and without UN intervention) in Israel. Check, check, check and check. Palestinians (an obdurate, stiff-necked, stubborn people, full of “chutzpah”) as the new Jews: mega-check.
Even though I am weary of making the same points over and over again, and even though I know there is no budging the John Dirliks of the world, immoveable in their world view and how
John Dirlik’s sarcastic letter about the Palestinians’ supposed “chutzpah” is a perfect example of the kind of identify theft that, unfortunately, now pervades the Israel-Palestine debate. In this carefully-crafted narrative, the Palestinians, forced to leave their homeland and wander in a diaspora when the Jewish state was declared in 1948, are perceived as the “new” Jews while the Jews, who are solely responsible for the “catastrophe” that led to the Palestinians’ dispersal, are styled as their oppressors. The tables have thus been turned and the Jews, with their sad history of persecution have, irony of ironies, themselves become the persecutors.
The problem with this formulation is that it overlooks the facts—the fact that the Palestinians have many opportunities to become a separate nation, and have for various reasons declined to do so; the fact that, while there are over 50 Arab and Muslim nations in the world, there is a single Jewish one, and that Israel still has the cheek, the “chutzpah,” to insist on its right to exist on a planet where the odds are so skewed against it.
Thus, when Mr. Dirlik mentions that millions of “restless” Palestinians have the “right to return” to Israel—by the way, another concept appropriated from the Jews who, throughout the centuries of their dispersal retained the hope, the “hatikvah” (fittingly, the title of Israel’s national anthem) of returning to their ancestral homeland—he’s adhering to a narrative that can end only one way: with the termination of Jewish sovereignty in Israel.
If that isn’t “chutzpah,” I don’t know what is.
A counterproductive request: Question: why is the
As I write, it is exactly a year since the desolate banlieues of
The violence, moreover, is endemic and ubiquitous. In 2005, there were 110,000 incidents of urban violence, including 45,000 vehicles burnt out. This year, there has been an average of over 100 incidents a day. Since the riots supposedly subsided last January, some 3,000 police officers are reported to have been injured.
This 'French intifada' was merely the culmination of a process that has turned many suburbs into no-go areas for the police and increasingly for non-Muslims too. In particular, the Islamist rabble-rousers who are behind the insurgency have incited their followers to attack Jews, who are now outnumbered by Muslims in
How has it come to this? In this devastating indictment, the cri de coeur of an Englishman who loves
The perils of Haj: Fires. Overcrowding. Getting trampled to death by a crowd that’s stoning the Devil. Not to mention the threat of an attack by al Qaeda. Just a few of the potential dangers awaiting the estimated 2 million+ pilgrims making Haj this year. From CNN:
Intelligence reports indicate al-Qaida's plans to set off a wave of suicide bombings and assassinations. The situation is tense given that more than 2 million Muslims from all over the world come to
Adding to the concern is the threat of Shia-Sunni violence with sectarian killings that have brought neighbouring
Besides that stampedes due to overcrowding at the
"We have been prepared to deal with the worst, may God forbid it, including things that can be deadlier than sectarian violence, stampedes or building collapses," said a senior police officer in Makkah.
Over 2 million Muslims begin the Haj in
Iranian and other pilgrims have used the Haj for political protests in the past. "There is enough violence and bloodshed on the news about Muslims. Shame on those who provoke or get involved in more violence against fellow Muslims and spoil the Haj for themselves and others," said Iranian teacher Ahmed Nasifi, in Makkah for Haj…
Yeah, haven’t they heard it’s a religion of peace?
Short guy, short lists: Guess who was on the short list for World Mayor (an annual award acknowledging mayoral excellence) in 2005? I’ll give you a hint: he’s currently on the short list for World Leader Whose Political Agenda Most Closely Resembles Hitler’s.
Speaking to Iranians: A story in the Boston Globe describes the schizophrenic mindset of the Iranian people (who, we keep being assured, just need a little more support before some day soon, any time now, maybe the day after tomorrow, how about next summer?, take matters into their own hands and muster the gumption to topple the mully-bullies): on the one hand, they detest the religious party-poopers who are in charge of their government; on the other hand, while they adore American culture, they aren’t too fond of America’s foreign policy:
TEHRAN -- At a time of worsening tension between Iran and the United States, many Iranians are asking whether the two estranged nations can still move past their old arguments and at least communicate civilly, if not reconcile.
Young Iranians are often quick to say they don't like their government's handling of the issues that divide the two countries, but many also say the
"If the United States just corrects its behavior against Iran, we can open the door," said Deputy Foreign Minister Saeed Jalili, who has worked closely with the nation's top clerics. "We have a proverb: 'We don't expect any benefits, but just don't hurt us.' "
Formal contacts between the two countries all but stopped after the countries broke relations after the seizure of American diplomats at the US Embassy in
But many Iranians go out of their way to tell visiting Americans that they think their government's "Death to
In a restaurant in
Asked about it, the owner leapt from his chair.
"You are Americans? We apologize!" he exclaimed. "It's the politicians. That's just how it goes here. I am a fanatic of
The restaurateur, an Iranian in his 20s who didn't want his name printed, confided that the recipe for the fudge mint cake beneath his row of flags came home with him from Atlanta, where he worked for the restaurant chain for two years.
The mixed message matches Iranians' mixed feelings about the
Prospects for increased contact got a boost this month when the Iraq Study Group, the bipartisan American panel established to recommend solutions to the
Oy vey. From the sounds of it, the Iranian people are as clueless about the true nature of those who rule over them as the Iran Study Group is (or was); they have absolutely no sense of Iran as being the mothership sustaining a whole gamut of terrorist/jihadist organizations in the region and around the world; they are blind to the fact that their leaders are the world’s bad guys, this era’s version of the Nazis and the Communists. As such, they pose an immense threat to the entire world, a threat that won’t, that can’t, be resolved by those who are oblivious to it. Which means that, for the sake of our own survival, perhaps it’s best not to rely on regular Iranians or the Iran Study Group to defend our interests against belligerent, remorseless, fanatical, Apocalpse-minded Shias who will soon be armed with nuclear weapons.
Jews apart: Alan Dershowitz proposes a new category to describe those Jews—like Norman Finkelstein and Neturai Karta—who work against Jewish interests: Jews for Hezbollah.
I have another name for them: scum.
Of course, I’d put people like Jimmy Carter and Kofi Annan in that category, too.
One jihad, indivisible:
Ethiopian fighter jets bombed
There was no immediate information about casualties, but several buildings used by the Islamic forces were hit. Islamic officials were not immediately available for comment.
The Russian-made jets swept low over the capital at midmorning, dropping three bombs on
Somali troops, backed by Ethiopian soldiers, captured a key border town early Monday and residents celebrated as government soldiers moved through the town and headed south in pursuit of fleeing Islamic militiamen, a Somali officer said.
Islamic fighters left the town of
Col. Abdi Yusuf Ahmed, a Somali government army commander, told The Associated Press that his forces entered Belet Weyne early Monday without a shot fired. He held up his telephone and a reporter could hear street celebrations.
Ahmed said his troops would pursue the Islamic fighters south on one of
Heavy artillery and mortar fire continued to echo through the main government town of
Sunday marked the first time
"Our defense force has been forced to enter a war to defend against the attacks from extremists and anti-Ethiopian forces and to protect the sovereignty of the land," Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said in a television address Sunday night. "Our intention is to win this war as soon as possible."
Experts fear the conflict in
The Islamic group's strict and often severe interpretation of Islam raises memories of
Meanwhile, deigning to connect the dots that connect the jihad against
"I would love to, in some fashion, be able to facilitate a coming together and a discussion," Peter MacKay told CTV in a report broadcast Sunday. MacKay said he was not trying to "set unreal expectations - but I think we have to constantly try."
His announcement comes at a time when a roughly month-old ceasefire between
Earlier this month, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in calling for an immediate return to the stalled roadmap to peace, warned that tensions in the
MacKay said he also hopes to restart talks on settling the refugee status of hundreds of Palestinians in nearby Arab countries, many of whom fled
"We hope to, in some way, be able to reconstitute that discussion and perhaps find a niche where
How’s this for a “niche,” Pete: Fight the jihad and try to take in the big picture so you can see that there’s no “road map” to peace anywhere—and certainly not in the
Two more for the holidays: I’m all for “peace on Earth, goodwill toward men.” With some notable exceptions, of course:
(To the tune of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer”)
Jimmy the old Jew-hater
Had a real obnoxious line.
And if he had his druthers,
Mid-East would be Judenrein.
All of the leftoid blowhards
Thought that Jim’s ideas were great.
Said his disdain for
Had nothing to do with Jew hate.
Then one bright November day
“Jimmy makes me want to cry
When he spews that great ‘Big Lie.’”
Then how the dhimmis wised-up
As they shouted out with glee,
“Jimmy the old Jew-hater
Go down in ignominy.”
(Mahmoud Abbas sings to the tune of “Santa, Baby”)
Ehud, baby, slip some shekels into my hands,
It’s grand, to finally have some moolah to spare.
Ehud, baby, so Peace in Our Time can be a go.
Ehud, baby, some prisoners locked up,
If you please,
Release. Just let them out.
Ehud baby, so Peace in Our Time can be a go.
Think of all the strife and fuss
Think of all the agita caused by Hamas.
Next year, a con’frence I’ll permit,
Unless Moo scores a bull’s eye hit.
Ehud, baby, I wanna shot
And, really, that’s not a lot.
Ehud, baby, so Peace in Our Time can be a go.
Ehud, cutie, there’s one thing I really do need,
The deed,
To all of greater Pa-al-estine.
Ehud, cutie, so “right of return” can be a go.
Ehud, baby, fill my pockets up with the gelt,
It’s spelt,
V-I-C-T-O-R-Y for me,
You’ll see.
Then Peace in Our Time will be go.
Think that I’m a “moderate?”
Think that I’m not ridden with Haniyah’s hate?
Then you’re as blind as blind can be.
And you don’t know your enemy.
Ehud, baby, forgot to mention on little thing,
I sting.
You’re gonna feel it real soon.
Ehud, baby, now Peace in Our Time will be a go.
Pumped up bully: How Moo sees himself. What he’s really like.
Moo's response: As expected, the mullahs ain’t exactly quaking in their bed sheets at the prospect of UN sanctions. In fact, it sounds like their front man, the hairy Islamic Hitler, who up till now has been promising a March surprise for the Zionist entity, may have moved up the Apocalypse by a month. From AP:
Ahmadinejad also said the United Nations must accept
Christmas wishes for the EU and you: A seasonal greeting, in verse:
Fröhliche Weihnachten,
Felix Navidad.
And here’s hoping the New Year
Brings far less jihad.
(But don’t count on it.)
Good will hunting: My late Bubby, who as a young girl evaded a marauding hoard of frenzied locals taking part in the second pogrom in her hometown, Kishinev, (because a first pogrom, two years earlier in 1903, just hadn’t done it for them), used to have a number of tried and true sayings that she’d trot out, depending on the occasion. When something was inevitable but undesired, for example, she’d say, “Goodbye shirt, meet me on the clothesline.” I have no idea what that meant. I think it was probably the punch line to some long-forgotten Vaudeville-era joke. For that matter, I don’t know who was bidding the shirt farewell and for what reason. The provenance and meaning of another of her sayings was equally cryptic: “One meat ball, you get no potato.” A line from some Depression-era song, I believe, although even with the Internet, I’ve never been able to track it down.
Along with her cryptic snippets, she had some other more recognizable favourites. One of them was, “Where there’s a will, there’s way.” A cliché, yes, but it expressed her sincere belief that, if a desire was strong enough, one could always find a way to fulfill it.
Take Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (please!, to borrow that old Henny Youngmanism). He undoubtedly has the will to wipe the Jews off the map (and thus make the
So Ahmaninejad’s will is a given. And soon enough, with the world issuing toothless, feckless warnings and not doing much of anything else to thwart him, he will have the way, an arsenal full of nuclear weapons. And since
The question remains: since no one seems to be coming to the Jews’ rescue, and since the new U.S. Defense Secretary, Robert Gates has already told
…AS I looked around the restaurant I wondered about a couple of things. We all seemed relaxed and at ease, secure enough to enjoy an evening out without much thought of danger. Could we be living in a fool's paradise, refusing to recognize a menace far more horrifying than a suicide bomber? How seriously should we take all this apocalyptic rhetoric about hidden imams, nuclear bombs and eliminating the "Zionist entity"? Are we, as Victor Davis Hanson and other experts have written, actually living in a 21st-century version of 1939? Above all else, if the threat is real, can it be eradicated?
The answer seems, at least in theory, to be yes. Anyone who reads commentaries or blogs or listens to television pundits knows that there is no shortage of ideas being tossed around. Some strategists' brainstorms sound a lot more practical than others, some more politically correct, some more perilous. I don't know what is possible in terms of real-world diplomatic, political, military, technological or economic actions. What I do know is that, if history is any indicator, for
With all that in mind, I really don't think the question is whether there is a way. It seems to me that the question is whether there is a will. Is there enough Israeli fortitude, enough determination, enough hutzpa available right here, right now, to summon all the brains and brawn of this nation and put them to good use in stopping the Iranian madman and his mullahs in their tracks?
O Jerusalem, I hope so! Because as you have proved time and time again, if you possess the will, you will most certainly find the way.
To quote another of my Bubby’s favourite words, “halevai”—if only.
Incroyable!: In a goodwill gesture, Ehud Olmert has agreed to release oodles of boodle to the P.A.
My question: is he senile, insane, suicidal, or all of the above?
A true Mel fan: Three years in an Austrian hoosegow hasn’t improved Holocaust-denier David Irving’s attitude toward Jews. If anything, he's even more obnoxious than he was before he was thrown in the slammer. From the Jerusalem Post:
British writer David Irving wasted no time Friday offending Jews and black people at a news conference, a day after his return from
At a news conference in
He also referred to his success as an author in the 1970s by talking about how be used cash to buy a Rolls-Royce - the color of which he described by using a racial slur against blacks.
Asked Friday if he was anti-Semitic,
But then he said: "In many respects Mel Gibson was right."
"They (Jews) should ask themselves the question, 'Why have they been so hated for 3,000 years that there has been pogrom after pogrom in country after country?' and it's the one question they seem to be very shy of,"
"My books will be the ones that survive into the next century," he said.
He said sales from his book on World War II German Gen. Erwin Rommel enabled him to walk into a car showroom with a paper bag stuffed with cash to buy a "(racial slur) brown" Rolls-Royce.
Actually, Dave, I've looked into that matter of 3,000 years of Jew-hatred. As far as I can tell, it has a lot to with the Jews having had the audacity and the misfortune to be the first monotheists, and the difficulty that successive monotheisms have had in coming to terms with that unalterable fact.
As for your "(racial slur) brown" Rolls, well, aren't you just as cute as the Dickens? Tell me, do you also own one of those lampshades made out of the epidermis of dead Jew? I hear they're all the rage among (racial slur) brown Rolls owners. Sad, though, that you got out of the slammer too late to hobnob with David Duke, Dr. Shiraz Dossa and other like-minded thugs and losers at Moo’s Denialpalooza. But, hey, maybe Dr. D. can put in a good word for you if and when there’s an opening for a prof at StFX.
Among the non-believers: According to a new poll, most Brits say they have no religious affiliation. At the same time, the vast majority see religion as the source of a great deal of societal tension, and say that generally speaking, religion is more a force for bad than for good.
Um, would that be all religion? Do they, for example, see Buddhist and Bahais as being implicated in social disharmony?
Hard to say, since it appears those surveyed weren’t asked that kind of politically-charged question. From the Guardian:
More people in
The poll also reveals that non-believers outnumber believers in
Most people have no personal faith, the poll shows, with only 33% of those questioned describing themselves as "a religious person". A clear majority, 63%, say that they are not religious - including more than half of those who describe themselves as Christian.
Older people and women are the most likely to believe in a god, with 37% of women saying they are religious, compared with 29% of men.
The findings come at the end of a year in which multiculturalism and the role of different faiths in society has been at the heart of a divisive political debate.
But a spokesman for the Church of England denied yesterday that mainstream religion was the source of tension. He also insisted that the "impression of secularism in this country is overrated".
"You also have to
The Right Rev Bishop Dunn, Bishop of Hexham and
The poll suggests, however, that in modern
Non-Christians are the most regular attenders - 29% say they attend a religious service at least weekly. Yet Christmas remains a religious festival for many people, with 54% of Christians questioned saying they intended to go to a religious service over the holiday period...
Hmm. I wonder to which faith the majority of these faithful unspecified non-Christian attendees belong.
I agree with the Right Rev, though. Faith often is misused for other uses. (Okay, so maybe the Right Rev isn’t the most articulate chap.) Like the misuse where misusers attempt to eviscerate themselves and as many infidels as possible because they’ve been taught it’s a foolproof path to martyrdom and Heavenly nookie.
A definite misuse, if you ask me.
Another choice:
As Caroline Glick writes, there is a third way forward. From JWR:
…In the interest of "strengthening" Abbas, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert refuses to take any actions to defend southern
A policy for victory would also start from a recognition that the common thread joining all the Palestinian terror factions together is jihad. In light of the ideological nature of their common war against
Since jihadist ideology is what makes the Palestinian war against the Jews intractable and vests it with its central importance to the global jihad, the defeat of this ideology in the marketplace of ideas will go a long way towards defeating the global jihad as a whole. And the ideology of jihad is far from indestructible.
With its call for genocide of Jews and subjugation of all other non-Muslims, and with its demand that Muslims live under a literal interpretation of Shariah law which enslaves women and abolishes the very notion of human freedom — jihad is an inhuman ideology. It is inherently unattractive to people who sanctify life rather than death. So central to a strategy for
The unattractiveness of the notion of jihad is most apparent to the jihadists themselves. This is why they spend billions of dollars on a never-ending stream of propaganda aimed at brainwashing as many people as possible. The aim of the jihadist mosques, television and radio stations and internet sites is twofold. First they work to indoctrinate and mobilize supporters. Second they serve to demonize anyone who fights them — be that George W. Bush, Tony Blair, Salman Rushdie, or
The Olmert government's inability to recognize the actual state of Palestinian society and act accordingly has two major sources. First, the government is incompetent. As with the Palestinians so with
Yet, aside from the specific incompetence of the Olmert government, in its inability to contend with the ideological nature of the war being waged against
Victory: what a concept. Too bad the Olmert government is too short-sighted and too inept to even conceive of such a thing. And too bad Western leadership as a whole has failed to confront the reality of the jihad.
Williams wails: Dr. Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury and one of the least perceptive religious leaders on the planet, blames the West for spurring on the jihadists and imperilling Christians in the
Christians in the
In an extraordinary attack, Dr Williams accuses Tony Blair and the
He has been backed by bishops across the Church of England, who say that Christians in the
Dr Williams, writing in today’s Times, says that one prediction that was systematically ignored was that Western military action would put the whole of the
Writing from
“The results are now painfully adding to what was already a difficult situation for Christian communities across the region,” he says. “The first Christian believers were Middle Easterners. It’s a very sobering thought that we might live to see the last native Christian believers in the region.” In some Middle Eastern countries where Muslim-Christian relations have always been good, he says that extremist attacks on Christians are becoming “notably more frequent.”
Dr Williams, who is visiting
No, Dr. Williams. It symbolizes what is deeply wrong with the Arab mindset, i.e., its inability to fathom and accept the concept of Jewish sovereignty in
Come to think of it, the Anglican Church has had a bit of a problem with that one, too.
Meanwhile, back on the scepter’d isle, the Times reports that British police are on the lookout for a gang called the "English brothers" (even though they're not all English). The "bruthas" are said to have return from a stint at a jihadist training camp and eager to unleash some holiday havoc on unsuspecting infidels:
Police are trying to trace a gang of British Muslims who are thought to have returned to plot terror attacks in Britain after being trained abroad for more than a year by al-Qaeda, Nine Britons, all said to be in their twenties, were among a group of 12 Western recruits groomed by al-Qaeda at a secret camp near the Afghan border to set up new terror cells in London and other Western capitals.
Police do not know the real identities of this gang, who are known as the “English brothers” because of their shared language. As well as nine Britons, they include two Norwegians and an Australian who were smuggled into the
They are believed to have been under the command of an al-Qaeda veteran suspected of training some of the Britons accused of the alleged plot to blow up passenger planes flying to the
Dr. Williams has a point. If only there were no Westerners in
Dossa strikes back: Dr. Shiraz Dossa, the Canadian political science professor who delivered a load of anti-Israel twaddle at the hairy Islamic Hitler’s Denialpalooza, has come out swinging at his critics. The combative non-Holocaust-denier (he says he was only there to advance the cause of “academic freedom”) wants all his critics to knock it off, already.
I know where he’s coming from. After all, it’s not like he attended the Wannsee Conference or something.
The Canadian professor who addressed a recent Holocaust-denial conference in
Shiraz Dossa, of
"The conference was unfortunately tainted by the presence of a small number of Holocaust deniers," he wrote in a two-paragraph notice, "but I feel it is a mistake to boycott any academic conference because of the presence of participants whose views one finds repugnant.
"It is more appropriate to participate and confront and challenge repugnant views directly."
The message represents Dossa's first public statement since attending a forum last week that drew 67 delegates from 30 countries to
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has called the Holocaust a "myth" and advocated that
Dossa's statement came shortly after he met with academic vice-president Mary McGillivray and dean of arts Steve Baldner. It was the second such meeting at which the professor was asked to explain himself.
"I would like to express my disappointment in my university for its failure to defend my academic freedom," Dossa wrote in his message. "The hallmark of a truly great university is that it will protect its academic staff from attempts to silence them or to suppress their work."
Dossa was the only Canadian to attend the
Why he did so and what he said in his conference speech remain central to the controversy, but all that is known is the title of his paper: "Liberalism, Holocaust and War Against Muslims."
"I have no direct knowledge of what he said or the paper that was presented," university president Sean Riley said yesterday in a phone interview.
Asked if he had asked to see it, Riley said: "It's his property. Essentially, it is his decision who he shares it with and how widely it is disseminated."...
It sounds like President Riley, exasperated by all the unwanted attention, wants everyone to knock it off, too.
Here’s the letter I sent the Star:
Since Dr. Shiraz Dossa is a long time professor of political science, one would assume he would have a keen sense of the political currents of our times. Apparently, that’s not the case. Dr. Dossa willingly agreed to participate in a conference that was called not to advance the cause of academic inquiry, but to advance the agenda of a brutal totalitarian who has vowed to excise what he calls “the tumour” of Israel from the body politic of the Middle East—and who will soon have the nuclear means to do so.
The irony of all this—a Holocaust denial conference being used specifically to help lay the groundwork for a second Holocaust—seems to be lost on the professor. And no wonder. He’s far too busy touting his “academic freedom,” which he seems to believe—wrongly, I would say—is his absolute right.
Dr. Dossa says it would have been “a mistake” to boycott the conference just because those who attended held repugnant views. I agree. He should have declined to take part because the entire conference and its raison d’etre were repugnant. That he is pleased to have participated in this charade of academic inquiry, this mockery of academic freedom, is more than repugnant: It is shameful.
Ironic juxtaposition: Read this story. Then read this story. (It works just as well in reverse order.)
Radical steps to curb radicalism: That tiny minority of extremists seems to be mushrooming as radical Islam spreads its tentacles around the globe. Victor Davis Hanson accounts for its growing appeal, and offers these suggestions for how we can help stop it. From FrontPage Magazine:
Bluntly identify radical Islam as fascistic - without worrying whether some Muslims take offense when we will talk honestly about the extremists in their midst.
At the same time, keep encouraging consensual governments in the
Establish that no more autocracies in the
Seek energy independence that would collapse the world price of oil, curbing petrodollar subsidies for terrorists and our own appeasement of their benefactors.
Appreciate the history and traditions of a unique Western civilization to remind the world that we have nothing to apologize for but rather much good to offer to others.
Finally, keep confident in a war in which our will and morale are every bit as important as our overwhelming military strength. The jihadists claim that we are weak spiritually, but our past global ideological enemies - Nazism, fascism, militarism and communism - all failed. And so will they.
Worthy ideas all. But do we have the wit and the gumption to act on them? And to do so before it’s too late?
Sorry, no Corrie story in T.O.: I had so looked forward to participating in a protest next fall, with everyone carrying placards showing a Jewish Rachel who’d been blown away by a jihadi “martyr.” But it looks like there’s no need for that now: My Name is Rachel Corrie is not coming to town. Plans to bring it here were shelved because, for once, cooler heads prevailed, and it was decided that in the context of
Theatre scraps play on
CanStage boss insists artistic merit, not political pressure, behind decision
Opting to avoid the dangerous liaisons of
Martin Bragg, artistic producer of Canstage, said in a phone interview yesterday that he has changed his mind and decided not to make the controversial play the centrepiece of the theatre's 2007/2008 subscription series as he was publicly suggesting only a month ago.
Corrie was the 23-year-old American activist from
And just as there is more than one version of just who Rachel Corrie was and why she died, there also appears to be more than one version of why her story will not be coming soon to a stage near you.
Bragg's version: When he read the script (based on Corrie's journals) he had an emotional reaction and was "absolutely reduced to tears" as he told the Star's Richard Ouzounian five weeks ago. But later when he went to see it on stage at the
The alternate version being told among CanStage insiders: Members of Bragg's board were alarmed by negative response from influential supporters of the theatre, especially in
"I was asked what I thought, and I told them I would react very badly to a play that was offensive to Jews," says veteran cultural activist Bluma Appel, whose name is affixed to the theatre where CanStage presents its mainstage productions. "I would react just as badly to a play that was offensive to blacks or Muslims or white Christians," Appel said from her winter home in
A complicating factor: CanStage posted a loss of almost $700,000 this year and has seen its audience dwindle. This is no time to alienate subscribers and risk controversy.
Developer Jack Rose, a member of the CanStage board who, like Appel, has not read or seen the play, says: "I had one phone conversation about this. There was a question whether it would be a mistake to proceed with it, and my view was it would provoke a negative reaction in the Jewish community."
If that's why CanStage backed away from the material, it wouldn't be the first time it happened in the short, troubled life of this play. After having its premiere at
"We had a very edgy situation," he later told The Guardian. "We found that our plan to present a work of art would be seen as us taking a stand in a political conflict that we didn't want to take."
Months later
After one extension, it closed ahead of schedule Dec. 17.
The Seattle Repertory Theatre is scheduled to open its production in March.
Bragg plans to announce next season's playbill in mid-February. "I pick the plays," he says. "No one on our board has ever told me what we can and can't do."
Bragg may proclaim that the decision was his and his alone, but you just know which reputedly diabolical and powerful group is going to catch heat in certain overheated quarters for convincing him to axe the show.
You can say that again: I found this story irresistible, because the names sound like something out of Harry Potter by way of Gogol by way of Tales from the Arabian Nights, and because it involves a country,
Stay with me for a moment. It seems that Suparmurat Niyazov, supreme leader of, yes,
Despite that somewhat disquieting fact, the story does have one more amusing bit (at least, I found it amusing, remembering Neil Simon’s play The Sunshine Boys and the part where one of the “boys” explained that words starting with the letter “k” are intrisically funny): Niyazov the late Turkmenbashi was born in Kipchak.
In defence of “academic freedom”: Dr. Shiraz Dossa, the St. Francis Xavier University political science professor who delivered a paper amidst less than august company at Ahmadinejad’s Denialpalooza, is back at home, and according to this entry in the Western Standard’s blog, he’s keeping “a low profile.” So low a profile, in fact, that Anna Maria Temonti, host of Ceeb radio’s The Current, couldn't wrangle an interview with him and had to settle for one with one of his colleagues at StFX, Phil Milner. Milner wrote an opinion piece for the Halifax Chronicle Herald in which he affirmed Dossa’s inalienable right to “academic freedom” (I searched the C-H site, but couldn’t find a link to the piece)—a right which the Ceeb, being the Ceeb, is on side with, even if it entails the “freedom” to be an utter putz and help further the genocidal agenda of a hairy Islamic Hitler.
Initially as I listened to Milner make his case for this so-called “academic freedom” I couldn’t help but be confused. Milner says he’s extremely upset that Dossa’s attendance has resulted in such a ruckus, and that so many people, including the university president and even the Catholic Archbishop of Antigonish (the Bish of ‘Gonish?), have come down so hard on him. Then again, he’s also none too pleased that faculty at StFX have circulated a petition (and half of them have signed it) supporting Dossa’s (and everyone else’s) right to academic freedom but—and here’s where it gets confusing—he himself declined to sign the petition. Why? Well, obviously, not because he doesn’t believe in academic freedom, because that was the subject of his comment piece in the Herald Chronicle, and the reason the Ceeb asked him to gab with Anna Maria. However, he was displeased with the way the petition was worded. He says that its assumption that academic freedom accords everyone the absolute right to say absolutely anything they want any time they want to say it is, well, “absolutely wrong.” He then spent the rest of the interview telling Anna Maria that Dr. Dossa did have an absolute right to attend the conference because—BINGO!—those, like Dr. Dossa, who are critical of what Milner calls “Israeli aggression” and how it’s abetted by—DOUBLE BINGO!—its partner in agression, the U.S., should be able to voice their criticism whenever and wherever they want to—even if it's at a Hitlerian Holocaust denial conference (or, as Anna Maria described it, employing weasly Ceebspeak, a conference that “was seen as a Holocaust denial conference"—as if there were some debate at to its true nature).
Okay, so maybe I’m still a little confused.
What made the interview so interesting was the fact that, even though he was defending Dossa, Milner clearly couldn’t abide the man. Even though they have both taught at the same university for a long time—Dossa for 18 years, Milner for 20—Milner says they are not friends, and their entire relationship consists of nodding to each other on elevators and in hallways. In other words, no relationship at all. This lack of rapport seems to be not a matter of conflicting political outlooks, but of conflicting styles, Dossa being what Milner describes as a “vigorous” person fond of “hot button issues,” Milner being someone with a quieter, more retiring demeanour--the J. Alfred Prufrock of StFX (and thus, not someone who’d likely elicit an invite to something as flashy as Denialpalooza).
So, what have we learned here? Well, I give the last word to some of Dr. Dossa’s more perceptive students. They have exercised their own academic freedom by skewering him on the website Rate My Professor (as quoted in the Western Standard):
By attending that holocaust conference he is dignifying it and the opinions of others who presented along with him. It does not matter if he says he doesn’t deny the holocaust, what matters is his silence in debating against the nazi’s presenting before him. He automatically lends credit to them. Get this nazi creep out of my school.
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The anti-semetic undertones of the conference were obvious to him even before he packed his bags and left carrying the Holocaust paper he presented. Like many, he’s morally detached from the horror of the Holocaust and complains in his paper that Jews have gotten political gain from it.
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The University should take strict action on Dr. Dossa for attending the conferance and not informing the universuty of the content of the conferance. I do not like him as a teacher!!! All we do is watch the daily show and listen to him trash talk George Bush. His style of teaching is****!!! HE IS NOT A GOOD PROFESSOR AT ALL . Dont take the class
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This guy is an anti-American anti-semitic misogynist. Unless you’re a left wing moonbat like him, you’re doomed in his class. St. FX is starting to become just like a lot of other Canadian schools - intolerant of any view other than the CBC-approved left.
Some of the spelling is, shall we say, inventive, but you must admit that in the context of Milner’s interview with Anna Maria, that last comment hits the nail on the head with a particularly satisfying and accurate thwhack.
Truth teller: Such is our political climate, one in which euphemism, hedging and prevarication prevail, that when a Canadian Prime Minister states the obvious, it merits a banner headline in
"We will not solve the Palestinian-Israeli problem, as difficult as that is, through organizations that advocate violence and advocate wiping
"It's unfortunate because with Hamas, and with Hezbollah in Lebanon, it has made it very difficult to have dialogue -- and dialogue is ultimately necessary to have peace in the long term -- but we are not going to sit down with people whose objectives are ultimately genocidal."
Many Canadians expressed discomfort with the strong pro-Israeli stand Mr. Harper took soon after his election and again this summer during
But the Prime Minister said he doesn't believe
"My own assessment of
Mr. Harper said he has made it clear to allies in the region that
"But I think all of the civilized world is agreed -- and it's not just
Under the Conservatives,
It seems Gloria Galloway (any relation to George, loathsome head of the Respect Party, a character and organization that would not be out of place in one of Evelyn Waugh’s more antic satires?), the Globe scribe who wrote the story is of the opinion that perhaps it wasn’t a “measured response”—a measured response, in leftoid/UN/Muslim parlance (where euphemism, hedging and lies generally DO prevail), being one in which Israel agrees to not defend itself effectively. I may be going out on a limb here, but Gloria’s probably one of those reporters who does not “get it.” About Hamas and the global jihad, I mean. Prime Minister Harper, on the other hand, “gets it” about Hamas, but clings to the widely-held myth that Abbas offers the only way out of the abyss. He does not. He merely offers a more roundabout, meandering path to
So, yes, I suppose it’s a breakthrough when a Western leader eschews the usual mealy-mouthed blather about democratic mandates always being a good thing, even when they empower a regime of genocidal terrorists, and I certainly appreciate Harper's willingness to be so forthright. But I’m waiting for a Western leader who is willing to take that next step, who will boldly go where no leader has gone before and recognize the truth about Abbas and Fatah. Now that would be big news.
Sick and obscene: I’ve had far too much of Neturai Karta, the evil Jewish group that, while claiming to be the purest of the pure, does nothing but assist the enemies of the Jewish people. But I missed this story in the Sunday Times about the stupefyingly idiotic things one of Nuturai Krackpots had to say upon his return from Moo’s conference and, well, I just had to share. Rabbi Ahron Cohen, of
A BRITISH rabbi who angered fellow Jews by speaking at a “Holocaust denial” conference in
Ahron Cohen, an Orthodox Jew from Greater Manchester and a leading member of the anti-Zionist Neturei Karta movement, sparked new controversy on his return from
Cohen, whose house in
“However, our approach is that when one suffers, the one who perpetrates the suffering is obviously guilty but he will never succeed if the victim did not deserve it in one way or another.
“We have to look within to improve and try to better ourselves and remove those characteristics or actions that may have been the cause of the success of the Holocaust.”
Cohen’s trip to
Cohen ended his speech to the conference with a prayer “that the underlying cause of strife and bloodshed in the
The rabbi claimed “learned gentlemen from both sides of the fence” were at the latest conference. They included David Duke, former “imperial wizard” of the Ku Klux Klan.
Cohen said on his return: “President Ahmadinejad is not a man of war. He is a man of peace. I have received criticism for meeting him and attending the conference, but Jewish people are adopting an attitude of criticism from an emotional point of view, not a logical or sensible one.
“We know there was a Holocaust. We lived through it. I had relatives who died in it . . . But in no way must the Holocaust be used to further the aims of the Zionist concept.”
Rabbi Yehuda Brodie, registrar of the Jewish Ecclesiastical Court for Greater Manchester, said: “Rabbi Cohen has for a long time been ostracised by the vast majority of Jews for associating with and thus giving support and legitimacy to the enemies of
“He represents an insignificant minority. His involvement is a stab in the heart of the Jewish community and of all decent law-abiding people.”
If he doesn’t deny the Holocaust, what was he doing at a Holocaust-denial conference?
Bad timing: One of the world’s most famous (though less hirsute) Holocaust deniers, historian David Irving, is free today after spending three years in an Austrian jail for a crime that will get you wined and dined in Iran.
And isn’t Dave just plum out of luck to have missed Ahmadinejad’s Denialpalooza by just over a week?
Get he’ll just have to wait for the next one to come around.
Insights from a long-time LGF poster: For several years now, I’ve been reading posts by EE on the Little Green Footballs site. I don’t know who EE is, but I am always impressed by EE's breadth of knowlege, how articulate s/he is and the high quality of the analysis on offer.
On a thread yesterday about how a Muslim leader in the
Here’s one:
As best I can tell, mainstream Islam has two poses:
(1) Islam must conquer the world (at least that is the stance of radical Islam, and at least that is the classic pose of Islam especially during the first century of Islam, and is inherent in the concept of jihad); and
(2) Muslims are the perpetual and gravely injured victims of non-Muslims.
Regarding the victimology, there is material in my newspaper referring to a finding of a European group that there is mistrust of Muslims, and that this constitutes "Islamophobia". This mistrust of Muslims is apparently being regarded as a grave sin. I think that for some perspective on this, one should put, side by side, the grievances that non-Muslims have concerning Muslims, versus the grievances that Muslims have concerning non-Muslims.
Problems caused by Muslims, against non-Muslims, in
Problems caused by non-Muslims, against Muslims, in
First of all, the seriousness of the grievances are orders of magnitude apart.
Rape and murder and massacre are vastly more serious crimes than being the victim of suspicion.
Secondly, the general suspicion may be deserved, because of the rape and murder and massacre. That is, one causes the other. If Muslims would not be so active in rape and murder and massacre of non-Muslims, then there would be less suspicion.
On the other hand, if there were less suspicion, then it would be possible to have a lot more rape and murder and massacre.
"Islamophobia" is trivial compared to deadly Kafirophobia. "Islamophobia" is a gimmick for turning the perpetrating society -- the society producing the rapists and the murderers and the massacring jihadists -- into appearing as the victimized society.
And another one:
“Mr Bari drew compared the Government’s treatment of Muslims with the Nazis’ persecution of Jews.”
This is part of the identity theft that is going on in the Muslim world.
According to Mr. Bari, regarding Muslims with suspicion, because of the global jihad that is being carried out, is exactly the same as constructing death camps, which is what was done to carry out genocide against the Jews; and after that to carry out genocide against the Gypsies; and also to murder gay men, and to murder people with mental retardation, and to murder all those protecting or sheltering the targeted; and to murder political opponents of the Nazis. To Mr. Bari, the genocide against the Jews (the targets of the identity theft that is going on in the Muslim world) is the same as the regarding of Muslims with suspicion.
Another part of the identity theft is the claiming of the patriarchs and prophets of the Jews as being Muslims. Abraham is converted, post-humously, into being a Muslim. Even the legendary Adam, is converted to being a Muslim. Moses is converted to being a Muslim.
The identity theft also involves taking the Promised Land of scripture, promised to the Jews according to Jewish scripture, and claiming that as a Muslim trust (according to the Hamas covenant). The Jewish homeland doesn't exist, according to them, it's a Muslim trust.
The identity theft also involves robbing the Jews of their history. According to Yasser Arafat, the Jews never lived in the
But the main players in the identity theft are the Persian mullahs, who are seeking a nuclear weapons capability, in order to pursue nuclear jihad. And they have made it very plain to their followers in the Muslim world, that their first act of nuclear jihad will be to wipe
And, finally, this one:
As far as I can tell, the Islamists' war against the Jews has 5 pillars.
(1) Religious bigotry. For example, the Hamas covenant quotes their scripture as saying that in the end of days Allah will wage war against the Jews. Hamas uses that to incite eternal hatred against the Jews.
(2) Identity theft. This includes their dogma of abrogation. It includes their obsession with stealing the Jewish homeland. And it also includes their desire to be called the "new Jews" in terms of victimology. But they forget that the "old" Jews are still around. In
(3) Lust for genocide. This is based, like Hitler's lust for genocide, on great paranoia. They say that the Jews want to wipe out Islam, just as Hitler said that the Jews want to wipe out
(4) Global jihad. The Islamists have an almost mystical notion that the conquest of the Jews, will open the gates to conquest of the world in their global jihad.
(5)Colossal envy and greed. Although the Jews are, compared to the Muslims, miniscule in number, have a homeland that is miniscule compared to the Muslim land, with natural resources that are miniscule compared to the petroleum wealth of the Muslims, the Islamists' colossal envy and greed make them dissatisfied with what they have, and they want to steal what the Jews have, or else destroy it.
Thank heaven there’s a blogosphere, because you would look long and hard (and generally, in vain) to find this kind of incisive—and concise—analysis anywhere in the mainstream media.
Ignoring the signs: Jeff Jacoby compares the hairy Islamic Hitler’s demonization of the Jews and his boasts about wiping Jews off the map—and how the world is ignorning them—to the way Hutu threats were ignored prior to their mass slaughter of Tutsis in Rwanda. From the Boston Globe:
…In
There is nothing cryptic about
Ahmadinejad is not some obstreperous politician whom
"There is only one solution to the
For many months preceding the Rwandan genocide, there was similar incitement to mass-murder. Yet international authorities did nothing to silence the inciters -- with catastrophic results.
The situation in
At the
If I may be so presumptuous as to answer
Ditto for what’s happening in
And ditto, unless something drastic happens in the next few days and weeks, for the world’s only sovereign Jewish state.
Dhimmi Santa: Dry Bones cartoonist Yaakov Kirschen illustrates what happens when Ho Ho Ho! conflicts with Allahu Akbar!

Scary carbs: A scene from one of the late Dr. Atkins’ nightmares, perhaps?
Hey Man’s rap: Confession time: Aymam Al-Zawahiri is my favourite holy warrior, a man so devout, so attentive to the rituals of his faith, that he has an angry red welt permanently etched on his forehead, the result of a lifetime of face-first prostration. I like to call him “Hey Man” Al-Zawahiri, ‘cause he’s such a cool dude, in a dapper rapper sort of way. Zawahiri is al Qaeda’s #2, but since Osama seems to be, ur, indisposed, he’s become the official voice of Jihad International.
You can always count on Hey Man to say something compelling—loopy, bananas, demented, yes, but also something designed to make the infidels sit up and take notice. Today, for example, al Jazeera, the jihadists’ media arm, played a tape of Zawahiri weighing in on Abbas’s call for a Palestinian election. Not surprisingly, since there’s a (fat) chance that free elections could turf out Hamas, the holy warrior party, Hey Man is agin’ the idea. From Fox News:
CAIRO, Egypt — The deputy leader of the Al Qaeda terror group, Ayman Al-Zawahri, has come out against early elections in the Palestinian territories, saying in a video tape broadcast on Al-Jazeera on Wednesday that voting would lead only to defeat and the right policy was armed struggle.
Entering the argument over Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's proposal for early elections to resolve the conflict between the Fatah and Hamas parties, al-Zawahiri said the only way was armed struggle.
"Any way other than holy war, will lead us only to loss and defeat," al-Zawahiri said.
In what appeared to be a reference to Abbas and his Fatah party, al-Zawahiri said: "Those who are trying to liberate the Islamic territories through elections based on secular constitutions, or on decisions to hand over Palestine to the Jews, will not liberate one grain of sand of Palestine."
In a Wednesday morning news bulletin, Al-Jazeera broadcast a short clip of a video tape that it had received, saying it would air a longer The broadcast came two days after a posting on a militant Islamic Web site announced that a message from al-Zawahiri was coming.
The video was the 15th time this year that al-Zawahiri has sent out a statement.
In Wednesday's tape, he wore a black turban and a white robe. As usual, he had a rifle behind his right shoulder, leaning against a plain brown backdrop.
His two previous videos were broadcast in September to mark the anniversary of Al Qaeda's attacks of
Not one grain of sand, eh? You know what that means. Time for James “Eff the Jews” Baker to try to enlist Hey Man and al Qaeda in that regional confab he’s trying to jumpstart, the one where the infidels “negotiate” with
Mo’s head rolls—and only one person says boo: From Der Spiegel:
After a great deal of sturm and drang about artistic freedom, opera fans and politicians attended the controversial Hans Neuenfels production of Mozart's Idomeneo opera. The holy heads rolled, but the night was otherwise peaceful.
When a controversial production of Mozart's Idomeneo premiered in 2003, it was an uneventful night at the Deutsche Oper in
The controversy stems from the final scene of the opera, conceived by director Hans Neuenfels, not Mozart, in which the Prophet Muhammad, Jesus, Buddha and Poseidon are stripped down to their underwear and decapitated as a metaphor for man's liberation from organized religion.
One man yelled "stop it!" and "boo!" from the nearly sold out auditorium, but was quickly overruled by cries to "continue, continue" and prolonged applause, as dozens of plainclothes security officers looked on. But despite the disruptions, the reaction from the audience was decidedly anti-climactic, given the hefty debate that preceded the production.
The polemic erupted when the piece was dropped from the schedule in September due to vague concerns about a possible violent backlash from religious fundamentalists. The Deutsche Oper's General Manager Kirstin Harms later put it back on the plan after she was widely accused of sacrificing artistic freedom in an act of "self-censorship out of fear," as German Chancellor Angela Merkel put it...
Personally, I’m not much of an opera buff; that is, I like it except for the singing. And I’m glad I was spared the spectacle of seeing all those holy guys in their civvies getting decapitated—because who the heck wants to pay good money to see something like that? But I have to say that the absence of any seething has me utterly gobsmacked. One would have thought that the sight of Mo in the flesh and in his tighty whities and getting his head chopped off would be far more—what’s that word the Canadian Jewish Congress used to describe the publication of the Danish Mo ‘toons?—oh, yeah, “provocative” than a few black and white drawings in a newspaper.
Those seethers just love to keep us guessing, don't they?
The Church in
“While
In other words, the Holy Roman Catholic Church may not be ready to give up the ghost (so to speak) just yet, but the reality of demographics—and fear of speaking out lest offence be given and taken—suggests it’s probably only a matter of time before more Catholic entities become places where the festival of Eid has more significance than Christian holidays.
Citizen Dion: Ezra Levant, publisher of the Western Standard, the only Canadian magazine brave enough to print the Danish Mo ‘toons, isn’t too thrilled that Stephane Dion, newly-elected leader of the Liberal Party, is also a citoyen of France. And, as Levant points out, neither are the Liberals.
The revelation that the new Liberal leader, Stephane Dion, is a loyal citizen of
A classic response was published on this page last week by my friend Warren Kinsella, an alumnus of the Liberal election "war room," and author of Kicking Ass in Canadian Politics -- the definitive manual on negative campaigning. It is surprising to hear
It's obvious why Warren and Liberal partisans are so uncomfortable with the news of Dion's dual citizenship: It undermines the Liberal party's claim to be the true defenders of
Of equal concern to political combatants like
As for moi, I have no doubt that M. Dion is a loyal Canadian whose French affiliation won’t in any way compromise his ability to lead his party and put the interests of Canada first. However, when
I can understand why Stephane Dion is proud to hold French citizenship, a gift he received from his mother. Anyone who’s ever been to France, as I have a number of times, cannot help but be blown away by the sensual marvels of the country—the
Still, there are some aspects of modern
I would never question Mr. Dion’s loyalty to
Palestinian rhapsody: The lead editorial in the Globe and Mail asserts that “[Palestinian President Mahmoud] Abbas’s election plan is the sanest course.” Here are the editorials’ first and last paragraphs:
In calling for early presidential and legislative elections, Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas has acted with welcome decisiveness in the face of rising factional violence, political paralysis and a complete breakdown of civil order in
…At the end of the day, Palestinians will be best served by a coalition government capable of restoring order and negotiatiating with
There are many words that can be used to describe Abbas’s last ditch effort to save his own political hide by calling an election which, according to the rules of his own “democracy” he has no right to call. “Sanity” is not one of them. And speaking of sanity, the editorialist seems to be a few falafel balls shy of a full pita if s/he thinks Hamas has any intention of “embracing” anything other that what it currently embraces—i.e. terrorism, Islamic supremacy and the implacable desire to overrun and destroy Jewish sovereignty in Israel.
As for Abbas’s effort, borne entirely of his own self-interest, “to bring his people back from the brink of chaos,” ‘tis laughable. To paraphrase Steven Englander of the IHT, Abbas is but a tender reed who toils not but who doth spin mightily. And it’s precisely that spin that has hooked so many wishful thinkers in the West, including the Globe’s editorialist.
In “honour” of Moo Abbas’s danse macabre, I have reworked Queen’s Bohemian Rhadsody, the song that includes (but is not the inspiration for) my nom de Web:
This is his real life. This ain’t no fantasy.
Caught in a landslide, No escape from reality.
Open your eyes, look up to the skies and see,
He’s just a poor man, he needs our sympathy.
Because he’s easy come, easy go,
Been up high, been down low.
And the way the wind blows
Matters quite a lot to him, to him.
(Abbas sings):
Yasser, just made a call.
Said elections will come soon.
It’s time to play my tune.
Yasser, life’s been on hold
Since Fatah got sidelined and shoved away.
Yasser, oo-oo-oo-oo, we used to have it good.
If I’m not back in charge after elections
I’ll carry on, carry on, as if it doesn’t matter.
It’s not too late.
My time’s not past.
Got shivers down my spine,
Thinking ‘bout Peace in Our Time.
Hello, Ehud and George, I’m here to say.
Gonna stay until I get another shot.
Yasser, oo-oo-oo-oo,
Wish you were still around
But since you’re not I found I’m so alone.
I see a little silhouetto of a man:
Arafat, Arafat, in a chequered kafiyah.
Stoked the intifada,
Caused a lot of botha.
He loved the Mufti, loved the Mufti,
Mufti of
(Rot in Hell, oh.)
Abbas is no Arafat,
Such a poor substitute.
(He is no Arafat,
Just a poor substitute.)
Hardly a match for that monstrosity.
Easy come, easy go,
Abbas no longer runs the show.
Allahu Akbar! Hamas now runs the show.
Allahu Akbar! Hamas now runs the show.
(Let it go!) They will not let it go.
(Let it go!) They will not let it go.
(Let it go!) Ah, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Oh Kofi Annan, Kofi Annan, Kofi Annan’s out the door.
Ahmadinejad has reactors set aside for nukes,
For nukes, for nukes.
So you think you can up and defeat the jihad.
So you think they will let you prevail—
Well, you’re mad.
Oh, Abbas, you’re merely one casualty,
They just want you to get out,
Just want you to get right outta here.
Nothin’ really matters,
Long as jihad’s on.
Peace In Our Time's
One gigantic con…
Saving Abu Mazen: Despite the best efforts of Ehud Olmert, George W. Bush and Tony Blair to resuscitate the moribund political fortunes of Mahmoud Abbas so he can participate in the charade of a Peace In Our Times process, it looks like they are flogging the proverbial dead horse. At least, that’s what Steve Erlanger of the International Herald Tribune figures. (I have taken the liberty of bolding some of Erlanger’s more “amusing” phrases):
Blair argued that the West must strengthen Abbas and support his call for early presidential and parliamentary elections, because the West can deal only with those who are prepared, unlike Hamas, to recognize
But Abbas today is a weak reed, with little power to implement his decrees or his will. Two years after his election to the presidency, following the death of Yasser Arafat, Abbas is perceived by a majority of Palestinians in opinion polls to be a great disappointment, having brought little reform to Fatah or improvement to people's lives while appearing to carry water for the Israelis and Americans.
It may be too late for Abbas, and for Fatah, to be bolstered very effectively, even by a new
On Saturday, before a crowd of Fatah supporters at the Ramallah muqata, where a large mosque and mausoleum are being built for Arafat, Abbas made great drama out of announcing these early elections. But it seems unlikely they will be held.
Abbas is standing on shaky constitutional principles: It seems clear that he has no legal right to dissolve Parliament without its consent, not that constitutional principles are so holy here. But Abbas also lacks the power to implement what he has decreed.
Hamas has promised to boycott and disrupt legislative elections, seeing them as an attempted coup. A Hamas boycott would make any form of voting hollow.
At the same time, Hamas would welcome the resignation of Abbas, which would mean an early presidential election, letting the movement try to defeat him and take full control of the Palestinian Authority.
"He's declared elections, but we all know that to implement them won't be easy," said Khaled Duzdar, a Palestinian political analyst. "Without Hamas's acceptance they won't happen."
Palestinians, who have a deep aversion to civil war when they believe the real opponent is the Israeli occupation, hope that Hamas and Fatah will come to a political agreement and form a unity government based roughly on a reconciliation document, already negotiated, that would allow their lives to continue in some safety and even improve…
Of course, “reconciliation” will be more or less moot if the hairy Islamic Hitler gets to lob his nukes at the Zionist entity and the entire preoccupation with the “occupation” (along with everything else in the bombs’ ambit) goes up in smoke.
Tony’s “insight”: Tony Blair, riding shotgun on the Mahmoud Abbas bandwagon, gives thumbs up to the Silver Fox’s election call. On a visit to the region, Tony says that while he feels all warm and fuzzy about “any democratic mandate” (any one, Tony?—even one that brings a fascist terrorist regime to power?), he doesn’t think Hamas should be allowed to “have a veto on the process or progress" that "we all want to see"--that being the fabled two-state solution.
Speak for yourself, Tony. Sure, a significant portion of the “we” you refer to and on whose behalf you presume to speak want to see that Peace In Our Time process get going again. But, looking down the road a ways (as Abbas is doing) a lot of them wouldn’t be at all unhappy were Israel—a thorn in the side, a fly in the couscous, a blot on the map, a tumour in the international body politic—to disappear once and for all.
Which is kind of the reason why Abbas, a man with far more patience than, say, Ismail Haniyeh or Mahmoud Abbas, is so keen to participate in the Peace In Our Time fandango.
Jimminy’s Saudi sponsors: There’s a good reason why Jimminy “Cricket” Carter’s pronouncements on the Israel-Palestinian situation sound so similar to the ones advanced by the Saudis. Let’s just say it’s in Jimminy’s interest to keep the oily sheiks happy. By Jacob Laskin in FrontPage Magazine:
…Especially lucrative have been Carter’s ties to
Meanwhile the Saudi Fund for Development, the kingdom’s leading loan organization, turns up repeatedly on the center’s list of supporters. Carter has also found moneyed allies in the Bin Laden family, and in 2000 he secured a promise from ten of Osama bin Laden's brothers for a $1 million contribution to his center. To be sure, there is no evidence that the Bin Ladens maintain any contact with their terrorist relation. But applying Carter’s own standard, his extensive contacts with the Saudi elite must make his views on the
High praise for Carter’s work -- and not inconsiderable financial support -- also comes from the
On top of these official honors, Carter was offered a forum at the Abu Dhabi-based
Nor does this exhaust the list of Carter’s backers in the Arab world. Still other supporters include Sultan Qaboos bin Said, who sits atop
On its face, there is nothing objectionable about these contacts. What has raised critics’ eyebrows is Carter’s immense chutzpah: In securing the financial support of assorted Arab leaders, Carter has gradually come to parrot their anti-Israel political agenda -- even as he styles himself as a dispassionate mediator in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict…
He’s about as “dispassionate” as James “Eff the Jews” Baker who, not co-incidentally, also has strong ties to the Saudis (as does the Bush family).
Protocols of the Elders of Riyadh, anyone?
Faux phobia: A new EU report notes a startling rise in what it calls “Islamophobia.” From the
"Many European Muslims, particularly young people, face barriers to their social advancement. This could give rise to a feeling of hopelessness and social exclusion," the report said. "Racism, discrimination and social marginalization are serious threats to integration and community cohesion."
It called on EU nations to improve "equal access to employment" for Muslim jobseekers, revise school policies and textbooks to offer more balanced perspectives on Western culture, and require "discussion of racism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia."
The report praised some initiatives such as interfaith studies in
The report was accompanied by a study based on interviews with 58 Muslims from 10 EU nations. Many complained of feeling like second-class citizens because of perceptions that the Muslim community is intolerant of Western values and supports terrorist groups such as al-Qaida…
And that couldn’t possibly be because the Muslim community is intolerant of Western values and supports terrorist groups such as al-Qaida, could it? Nope, it must be due entirely to innate bigotry engendered by the sight of “the other.”
Yeah, that’s the ticket (to European oblivion, that is; and note how the EU dhimmis want to help move it along by revising school policies and textbooks so that they boost the cause of Islam at the expense of “Western culture”).
A commenter on the JPost site helps put the report and its conclusions in perspective. Lorraine E. of the
Today's focus seems to be mostly on the poor, aggrieved, and misunderstood Muslims, with no questions raised about the Islamic roots of jihad terrorism. What have 'moderate Muslims' done with the unmistakable evidence that jihad terrorists are working within mainstream Islamic traditions and using the Quran to exhort Muslims to wage war against unbelievers? Instead of presenting an alternative vision of Islam or rejecting the teachings of jihad, they've invented "Islamophobia."
And it’s working like a charm.
Update: The other advantage of lobbing charges of “Islamophobia” is that it masks the real hate crimes being committed in the EU—by Muslims.
Jimminy’s last word: For some unfathomable reason (actually, due to the lens through which it scans and interprets events), Newsweek magazine gives Jimminy “Cricket” Carter, self-proclaimed conscience of the world (and scourge of the Jewish state) “the last word.” If only. It was his last word, I mean. In an interview with Eleanor Clift, Jimminy explains once again why his fatuous piece of dreck, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid--currently #5 on the New York Times Bestseller list of hard cover non-fiction--has received a bit of a rough ride:
…Why do you think you're under attack for the book and the title?
You and I both know the powerful influence of AIPAC [the American Israel Public Affairs Committee], which is not designed to promote peace. I'm not criticizing them, they have a perfect right to lobby, but their purpose in life is to protect and defend the policies of the Israeli government and to make sure those policies are approved in the United States and in our Congress—and they're very effective at it. I have known a large number of Jewish organizations in this country [that] have expressed their approval for the book and are trying to promote peace. But their voices are divided and they're relatively reluctant to speak out publicly. And any member of Congress who's looking to be re-elected couldn't possibly say that they would take a balanced position between
In some of your interviews you've said that this is a debate that's out in the open in
Oh yes—that's correct. Not only in Israel—all over Israel, the major news media, every day—[but] obviously in the Arab world, even in Europe. In this country, any sort of debate back and forth, any sort of incisive editorial comment in the major newspapers, is almost completely absent…
Ah, yes. Those shadowy elders of AIPAC have clamped down on debate and prevented Jimminy’s voice from being heard across the land.
Too bad they weren’t powerful enough to have his screed reclassified and marketed as what it really is: fiction.
Method to his madness: It's not that the hairy Islamic Hitler is such a stickler for historical accuracy. It's just that, in seeking to remove the underpinnings that justify the existence of the Jewish state, he thinks he's justifying his impending completion of the Nazis' Final Solution.

Harpoon’s poison pen: No need for Moo to deploy his nukes. Israel can implode very nicely on its own, with help from the subject of Harpoon Siddiqui’s latest poison pen letter to the Jewish state—one which Harpoon, canny chappy that he is, frames as a love letter to Israeli democracy.
The column is so ugly, so toxic, so venomous, that I refuse to post an excerpt from it. You’ll have to follow the link and read it yourself.
However, here’s the letter I sent in response:
Yehuda Shaul, the Israeli soldier who Haroon Siddiqui lauds for “exposing” the brutality of the Israeli army, insists the issue is not whether or not
In fact, the issue is precisely one of Israel’s existence, because the land in question came under Israeli control during a war launched by Israel’s neighbours who refused to acknowledge Israel’s right to exist and chose instead to try to annihilate it. After winning that war in a scant six days,
Last year, Israel took steps to end the occupation, not only because it has no desire to rule over Palestinians, but because “the occupation” has been used to bludgeon Israel by Israelis like Yehuda Shaul, the soldier who believes Israel’s self-defence comes at too high a moral cost, and pundits like Haroon Siddiqui, who, while pretending to praise Israel’s democracy, have shown again and again that they side with Islamic interests over Western democratic ones. Unfortunately, the Palestinians took the occasion of
These actions, along with the war against Hezbollah in
Given this, the cynic in me says that, rather than wanting to end the occupation, the Palestinians and their supporters have a vested interest in ensuring the occupation remains firmly in place. Without it, they lack the ammunition they need to help them fulfill their real ambition: not a two-state solution, not the construction of a viable Palestinian state existing in peace beside Israel, but a one-state solution, with the Jewish state being the odd one out.
Exposed to Israeli attacks for decades,
Riiight. So it’s the exposure to Israeli attacks that’s at the root of the discord, and not that each fractious faction is determined to be top dog. And, sorry to let a trace of truth intrude here, but, um, weren’t the Arabs the ones who started the various wars to which
To continue:
The supporters of al-Fatah rejoiced at the news and took to the streets to celebrate the development, whereas the radical Hamas party in power, which declared Abbas’s decision to be an illegal attempt to mount a coup, took to the streets to protest the call. Violence escalated after an assassination attempt against Prime Minister Ismail Haniye. Eighteen people were wounded yesterday during three demonstrations held in three different cities yesterday.
Making a speech yesterday seeing that the efforts on establishing a national unity government came to a complete halt, President Abbas, also the leader of al-Fatah, announced that he had dismissed the Hamas-led government based on the right granted to him by the constitution. In his speech, he also held Hamas responsible for the ongoing bloodshed in the country, asking for a transitory government of technocrats be established for the duration of the period until the elections.
"According to the basic law, the people are the source of all authority - so they have to decide this issue and they will be the judge," Abbas said in his speech broadcast live on Palestine TV. He was cheerfully applauded by those present in his Ramallah headquarters where he made the speech. Abbas also noted that he had signed the presidential decree for early elections. One of his aides, Yasir Abed Rabbo, recorded that the exact date of the elections would be determined in a week and it would probably be as early as March though an advisor told Abbas that early elections could not be held until mid-2007 because of legal and technical requirements.
March, huh? He might want to co-ordinate that with the hairy Islamic Hitler, who’s announced his nukes will be all systems go around the same time. Wouldn’t want a mushroom cloud to mess with the democratic process, would we?
But let’s look on the bright side, as
And, hey, isn’t it heartening to see the democratic process in action, even if Abbas called the election illegally, and even if, no matter who wins the hearts and minds of Palestinians this time around,
Lovely sentiments. And for those who may have wondered why he chose to depict a Muslim girl, the governor explains on the back of the card that "While it may seem odd to put a portrait of a young Muslim woman on a Christmas card, this Season reminds us that He loves His children most of all.”
How true. Unfortunately for the well-meaning but somewhat maladroit Gov, not everyone is bowled over by his good wishes. From The Tennesseean via Muslim News:
Khaled Sakalla, spokesman for the Islamic Center of Nashville, said the local Muslim community also wishes Christians a peaceful and happy holiday. But, he said, if the governor saw a Muslim woman in
"Women shouldn't have their faces fully covered, nor should they have their hair half-uncovered," Sakalla said.
A local conservative Christian minister also wasn't sure.
"If he is saying Christmas is about honoring all religions, I don't agree," said the Rev. Maury Davis of
Oh, well, at least the governor’s heart was in the right place, even if his head wasn’t.
Who calls the shots in the
THE head of the Serious Fraud Office has said he agrees with the view that ministers succumbed to “blackmail” by the Saudi government by dropping the criminal inquiry into allegations of corruption involving its royal family.
Robert Wardle, the SFO’s respected director, said his inquiry into a £60m slush fund run by BAE Systems was scrapped in the face of “obvious pressure” from the Saudis, who had threatened to ditch a £10 billion arms deal and sever diplomatic and intelligence ties.
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Wardle said he felt “further investigation was justified”, effectively undermining claims by No 10 and his boss Lord Goldsmith, the attorney-general. Asked if the Saudi pressure amounted to blackmail, he replied: “Of course it is . . . I think if that (inquiry) happened the Saudis simply weren’t going to have anything to do with us. Call it blackmail, call it what you will.”
The move to end the criminal investigation was announced by Goldsmith last week. Opposition MPs and pressure groups said
From “Rule, Britannia” to “banana republic” in less than a century.
Tragic, really.
And the winner is…: I am pleased to reveal the name of the person who has been named TIME magazine’s person of the year: me.
Well, actually, not just me. You, too. Also U2. And Bono and Sir Bob Geldof and, heck, every single frikkin’ person on the planet, including all the revolting ones, like Kim Jong Il, Hugo Chavez and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Also, Jimmy Carter, James Baker, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and CUPE Ontario President Patrick “Sid” Ryan. Because rather than be so elitist as to narrow it down to one singular sensation, TIME has cast its net as widely as humanly possible—in fact, even more widely than humanly possible—and chosen us all.
I guess that means we ARE the world.
And, even better, it looks like we all get to add an extra credit to our C.V.s: 20006—
Can’t wait to receive my plaque in the mail.
Why, I couldn’t be more thrilled if I’d been suddenly handed a Nobel Peace Prize.
The most recent vote will set up yet another UN bureaucracy devoted exclusively to meeting the needs of Palestinians, because, heaven knows, there aren’t nearly enough of those around. From the Jerusalem Post:
The UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly Friday to establish an office to register Palestinian claims for damage stemming from the construction of the security barrier.
Those who voted against the resolution, along with Israel and the US, were Australia, Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, Nauru and Palau; while those who abstained were Cameroon, Canada, Cote d'Ivoire, Malawi, Papua New Guinea, Tonga and Uganda.
The General Assembly resolution said the register was being established to comply with an advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice in July 2004 that found the barrier illegal.
The court said, "
A Foreign Ministry representative said
According to the representative, about 140 claims have been filed, 96 of which have been settled, and
The resolution authorizes the new office - comprising a three-member board, an executive director and a small staff - to record damage from the barrier's construction. At this stage, it rules out any evaluation or assessment of the losses.
"There would be no need for a security fence" were it not for Palestinian violence, he said…
True enough, Mr. Gillerman. But there would be no need for Palestinian violence if the Jews recognized their lowly dhimmi status and agreed to voluntarily rescind their sovereignty. Then again, the UN is doing whatever it can to persuade them to give it up, and the hairy Islamic Hitler, the one with a penchant for pristinely Islamic maps, is getting set to lob one of his illegal nukes at Tel Aviv.
Funny how they don’t seem to be setting up an office to field complaints about that.
The verdict on Kofi—guilty as charged: The last word on Kofi Annan and his wretched legacy goes to the Kansas City Star:
PRO-CON: Has Kofi Annan left a positive legacy? NO
It is by turns both appropriate and distasteful that outgoing U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan decided to give his last major policy address at the presidential library of Harry S. Truman, the American commander in chief who presided over the world body’s creation.
Appropriate, because it gives the world a chance to reflect on the founding values the United Nations and all that body could be. And distasteful because of the mockery of those values that has taken place in the 10 years Annan has led that organization.
To focus exclusively on
And is standing by (and running on empty) once again as the hairy Islamic Hitler in
Totalitarianism in action: There is something delectably absurd, something gloriously loopy, about totalitarian press accounts of totalitarians pretending to be democratic, as in this report of Iranians voting for their Assembly of Experts (yes, that’s really what it’s called). From MEHR News:
…Results were still being counted from elections for the Assembly of Experts -- the body that chooses and supervises the supreme leader -- and municipal polls.
It is still too early to see a clear trend.
Unofficial and partial results suggest voters backed a range of candidates, giving all political groups something to cheer about but allowing none to claim outright victory, Reuters reported.
The Interior Ministry announced winners in several constituencies for the 86-member Assembly of Experts. Expediency Council Chairman Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani was leading the race in
The Guardian Council spokesman said the turnout was around 60 percent of the 46.5 million eligible voters, which is higher than previous municipal council and Assembly of Experts elections.
It is being predicted that Tehran Mayor Mohammad-Baqer Qalibaf's backers will get eight seats on the Tehran City Council, President Mahmud Ahmadinejad’s backers four, and reformists three.
Abdolvahed Musavi Lari of the Assembly of Combatant Clerics said the massive turnout shows that Iranians have a deep understanding of the county’s political realities.
“Some thought that only slogans about boosting the standard of living would attract people, but the people proved that they take other factors into consideration when voting,” the former interior minister added…
Factors like the chances of their being hauled off and murdered by the Islamist thought police if they say or do anything to disrupt the mullahs’ police state, perhaps?
Le mot unjuste: Headline in the Telegraph--Abbas calls for fresh elections.
How can they be "fresh" when all they're likely to result in is the return to office of stinky old Hamas?
Canadian pickle: Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. Guy named Mo, angry sort of dude who’s on a first name basis with Osama and who, like him, wants to restore the caliphate, seeks refuge in Canada.
And that, in a nutshell is the Canadian predicament. Islamists: can’t live with ‘em; can’t deport ‘em.
Here’s the tongue-in-cheek letter I sent to the Star re its Mo story:
I read the story of Mohamed Mahjoub, the Egyptian said to have close ties to al Qaeda and thus a terrorist threat to Canada not as an example of Canadian injustice, but as a cautionary tale. It shows how well our enemies can read us and use our compassion against us. They know, for example, that, because they are refugees fleeing oppression, they can likely gain entry. Meanwhile, once here they can work to subvert and destroy our way of life.
Since it seems we have no option but to keep Mahjoub in the country, as sending him back to
How about
Hail Rex: Here’s why I love Rex Murphy (the shoot-from-the-hip Globe and Mail columnist Rex, not the namby-pamby Ceeb radio host Rex): because in a piece about Moo’s Denialpalooza (available, alas only by subscription), he throws in a semi-obscure literary reference (describing KKK recreational plastic surgery buff/Jew-hater David Duke as “a veritable Causabon-under-a-white-sheet”—Middlemarch, anyone?); and because this is what he has to say about Dr. Dossa, the political science prof who claims to have strayed unwittingly into Moo’s den of vipers:
There was also a Canadian professor, Shiraz Dossa from StFX, who evidently travelled to this zoo of mountebanks unawake to the thought that a conference called to discuss the myth of the Holocaust would be a gathering dedicated to the idea of the Holocaust as a myth.
When the news broke that the professor was attending this festival of blight, he lamented that the gathering was full of “hacks and lunatics” and that he wouldn’t even “shake hands with most of them.” One can only hope for the students of StFX that Professor Dossa is not teaching either logic or holiday planning.”
Good point. He happens to be teaching political science--has for the past 18 years--a discipline that requires no logic and can be moored to the most illogical and unhinged world view, like that of Chomsky and Co.
Tone deaf to the ridiculous: Sid Ryan, head of CUPE Ontario, has had to endure a lot of backtalk from what he charmingly calls “the
Sure, Sid’s taken some shots during his obsessive effort to give
…Despite the brouhaha from the Israeli lobby, the boycott and anti-apartheid campaign are picking up steam at home and around the world with such noteworthy supporters as Jimmy Carter.
In his book, the Nobel Prize winner castigates
In a recent interview with Democracy Now, a radio and TV station in the
Former
I'm sure by now that president Carter's e-mails, voice mail and phone calls are filled with sick and vile allegations of Nazi, anti-Semite and Jew-hater. The truth, however, is that the more people speak out against the atrocities in
Let’s see. So Jimminy Carter and Desmond Tutu both think that
And Sid thinks that mentioning two of the world’s most egregious anti-Zionists, men whose biases are so evident and overwrought as to make their opinions on the subject of the Jewish state completely worthless--that helps make his case?
Isn’t it delicious when the Sids of the world get hoist on their own petard—and don’t even realize it?
The abysmal bandwagon: Just in time for Chanukah, here’s my “tribute” to the lunatics, villains and fools who make life so entertaining—but not in a good way:
Or the Moo who embraces the Jew.
One must ask: Hey, just who’s using who?
That’s their derangement.
Turns his eye, and then runs plum away.
While the Moo still enriches each day.
That’s their derangement.
A plot that’s too hot simply teeming with nukes.
A man with a plan who will hear no rebukes.
It won’t be one of those flukes
When his bombs are enabled
His victory will be fabled.
The fool who applauds the misrule
Of the folks who complain, seethe and mewl
And says Jews are so racist and cruel.
That’s his derangement.
Asks for help from his sworn enemy.
It’s insane, that’s as plain as can be.
The world is a stage,
The stage is a whirl of his derangement.
The scribe from the Islamic tribe
Who hurls taunts, jeers, invective and gibes.
“New world order” is what he prescribes.
That’s his derangement.
It might be a fight that is known as jihad.
A war at its core that is creepy and mad.
It might be there in
Where a lot is the matter
And Sunnis and Shias splatter.
The crime that was done back in time.
They deny and tell Hitler’s “big lie.”
It’s too late.
It’s one
The world is a stage.
The stage is a whirl of their derangement.
Man with a mission: Not that we’ve missed him, but Palestinian P.M. Ismail Haniyeh has been away from
…Earlier, three Palestinian government cars crossed through the Rafah border crossing into
An agreement was reached between Israeli and Egyptian security officials whereby the money would remain in the border town of
The Egyptians guaranteed that the money, seemingly collected by Haniyeh during his recent visits to
And I’m sure we can count on the Egyptians to keep their word.
Fitting image: I found this on the Political Science page of the St. Francis Xavier University website. The poli-sci department (one of whose faculty members, Dr. Shiraz Dossa, is winging his way home after participating in a Holocaust Denial Conference along with assorted scoudrels, reprobates and academic thugs) is represented by an etching by Francisco Goya called--wait for it--"The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters."
How appropriate, since it's precisely the "sleep of reason" that produces fascist, Jew-hating monsters such as Hitler and Ahmadinejad--and that allows silly academics like Dr. Dossa to help enable and validate their evil.

Francisco de Goya. The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters.
(El sueño de la razón produce monstruos). 1799
Today’s groaner: Israelis have been warned not to travel to Goa, India, a resort popular with Israeli vacationers, because al Qaeda may be getting set to attack it.
I guess that makes it the latest “no
The banality of Holocaust deniers and their enablers: Shiraz Dossa, a tenured professor who’s taught political science at
Now, Dr. Dossa wants everyone to know that he himself does not deny the reality of the Holocaust—perish the thought—and had he known that that was the true intention of a conference sponsored by a man who wants to wipe the Jews of the map of the Middle East as a prelude for the return of his Messiah, well, he would never, ever have attended. As he explained in yesterday’s Globe and Mail, he’s not a Jew-hater; he’s just an acolyte of Noam Chomsky and, as such, he believes Israel is an alien, colonizing Jewish interloper that has no place intruding on ruining the integrity of an otherwise entirely Muslim-ruled region.
Dr. Dossa says he was shocked—shocked—“to find that Holocaust deniers played such a visible role in the event.”
Yeah, and to quote the late, great Dorothy Parker, I am Marie of Romania.
Nonetheless the good doctor says that, while he applauds President Ahmadinejad for standing up to American hegemony and giving us arrogant Westerners a good what-for, when it comes to Shoah-denial, he and Moo have absolutely nothing in common. As he explains,
My essential point is that the Jewish loss -- which is, of course, a reality, and anyone who denies it is a lunatic -- the focus here is on how the Holocaust is a political construct, distinct from the Jewish loss at the hands of the Nazis. And that political construct has been used to justify certain policies by people, some of whom are Zionists. And now that whole issue plays into the war on terrorism, which is essentially a war on Islam.
“Jewish loss,” eh? Sounds a lot like the Dr. thinks those Jews went astray, or were misplaced, instead of having been intentionally murdered and shovelled into ovens because a fascist with delusions of grandeur used Jew-hatred as the linchpin of his global agenda. (Remind you of anyone, Dr. Dossa?) As for the rest of the statement, it differs not a whit from Moo’s, and could very well have been uttered as part of the proceedings at his other loopy conference, “The World Without Zionism.”
Hmmm. I wonder if Dr. Dossa was invited to that one, too.
Understandably, Canadian Jewish leaders aren’t too impressed by Dossa’s appearance. Ed Morgan, President of the Canadian Jewish Congress, is quoted in the National Post as calling Dossa’s attendance “startling.” And David Matas, of B’Nai Brith
And Dr. Sean Riley, the president of
Indeed.
Dr. Riley says there are no plans for any disciplinary action, but he certainly intends to have “a conversation” with Dossa when he returns.
Sounds scary. I’m sure Dossa (whose views on
Meanwhile, at least one of Dr. Dossa’s former students has rushed to his defence. In a letter to the editor in today’s Globe, Clark Banack of
on the work of Jewish scholar Hannah Arendt, a thinker who was perplexed by the outrageous evil committed by German soldiers. A second scholar he often cites is Norman Finkelstein, also Jewish, who has repeatedly questioned why Palestinians are forced to pay for the crimes of
Arendt and Finkelstein—“the banality of evil” and the banality of a self-loathing Jewish anti-Zionist. It seems that Banack has imbibed his lessons well.
With “friends” like these…: Raja Khouri, a member of the Ontario Human Rights Commission and former president of the Canadian Arab Federation says it's "Time for Canadian Arabs and Jews to work together.” Writing in the Globe and Mail, Khouri acknowledges that the smear campaign against Bob Rae conducted during the recent Liberal Leadership Convention, and specifically, the revoltingly anti-Semitic comments (my description, not Khouri’s) lobbed at Rae’s Jewish wife, were “in very bad taste and do not represent the majority view.”
Good to know. However, before we all join hands in a rousing chorus of “We Are the World,” Khouri thinks we should know that there is a bit of a stumbling block to complete amity between us Canadian Semites and it comes in the form of that teensy weensy “apartheid state” that looms so immense in Arab consciousness (you might say they just can’t wrap their noggins around the reality of it).
Here’s how Khouri expresses the, uh, difficulty:
Nevertheless, it must be said that many people agree with former
Interesting. But if that’s the case, how is one to classify
So you know what, Mr. Khouri? You can take your fraudulent offer of friendship—and offer that seems to hinge on Jews renouncing the Jewish state—along with your autographed copy of Jimminy’s latest piece of fiction, and stick them. Both.
I don’t think I need to tell you where.
The Pope’s mixed messages: On the one hand he says some anti-terrorism efforts flout “international humanitarian law”—a veiled shot at Gitmo. On the other hand, he acknowledges the scourge of terrorism (while failing to mention the religious motivations behind it) and says nations might find a balance between security and breeching their citizens’ human rights. He decries the practice of waging wars in God’s name, saying as he has in the past that such warfare is never justified. He also criticizes ‘regimes that impose a single religion on everyone’—presumably referring to Saudi Arabia, although not actually mentioning it by name because that might be perceived as being divisive and undo some of good P.R. he received for his fence- mending visit to Turkey; behaving like an abject dhimmi is bound to sit well with a lot of the faithful (though not necessarily the Catholic ones).
So, cut to the chase, what does it all add up to?
Beats the heck out of me, but I have the feeling that the Pope is, shall we say, impressed by the sheer number of those who took offence to his suggestion that Islam had some violent proclivities and is doing what he can to try to put the lid back on Pandora’s box. However, I also have the sense that there are limits to his self-effacement and that, at a certain point, there is a line he will be unwilling to cross. At this point, it remains to be seen what it will be.
A tree grows in
The two Moos: On the FrontPage Magazine site, David Bedein points out a disturbing discrepancy. It is this: purported “moderate” Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is every bit as much a Holocaust denier as obvious extremist Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Abbas has never disavowed his 1982 doctoral thesis on the “myth” of the Holocaust. Of course, unlike the Iranian Moo, the Palestinian Moo prefers to keep his Shoah denial mostly on the q.t., the better for bamboozling gullible Westerners into thinking that, once he finally manages to get the recalcitrant Hamas onside in a “unity” government (not that that’s ever likely to happen), he’s the “go to” guy in Palestine for effecting a peace deal. As Bedein notes, it seems Holocaust denial is unacceptable in
Sieg Heil: Participants in Moo’s Denialpalooza have nothing but praise for the Iranian Fuhrer. And no wonder. He’s helping them put Holocaust denial—an effort that used to be all but unmentionable in polite company—front and centre. From AP on the Fox News site:
Participants at a conference questioning whether the Holocaust took place praised Iran's hard-line president on Tuesday, saying the gathering gives them the chance to air theories casting doubt on the Nazi genocide that are banned in parts of Europe.
International condemnation continued to pour in against the government-sponsored conference in
British Prime Minister Tony Blair said it was "shocking beyond belief" and called the conference "a symbol of sectarianism and hatred."
He said he saw little hope of engaging
The
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad initiated the two-day gathering, which began on Monday, in an attempt to bolster his image as a leader standing up to Israel, Europe and the United States — an image he has used to whip up support at home and abroad…
And unless something unforeseen comes up, he’s soon going to “stand up to
Which, looking on the bright side, will obviate the need for any more of these conferences.
Nice try but no dice: The enemies of freedom have a compelling weapon in their arsenal, and it isn’t made of fabric and semtex. It’s the very freedoms afforded by Western societies, a commitment to “human rights” that frequently (and ironically) offer a safe haven for those who, given the chance, would tear down those freedoms and replace them with sharia law—laws that enshrine the greater rights of some (male Muslims) over others (everyone else).
In a
The Federal Court ruled against Issam Al Yamani, a volunteer at a Palestinian non-profit organization in
Mr. Al Yamani, 50, had argued that his activities for the PFLP terror group were protected by sections of the Charter of Rights that guarantee freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression.
But the judge ruled that Mr. Al Yamani's complaint was "without merit" since "his right to belong to a terrorist organ
ization does not fall within the rights protected by Section 15" of the Charter.
The Canada Border Services Agency said the decision "brings us one step closer" to deporting Mr. Al Yamani. "Individuals that commit crimes against humanity, war crimes, acts of terrorism or pose a threat to Canadian society are not welcome here," spokeswoman Anna Pape said yesterday.
Mr. Al Yamani volunteers at Palestine House, which describes itself as "an educational, social and cultural centre to the Palestinian community" in
Reached at its
You do that, Mr. Al Yamani. (May I call you Al?) And while you’re at it, I’m sure he can help you drag out the process for as long as possible. At the end of the day, though, here’s hoping you’re back where you belong—with your landsmen in
Here’s a link for
Misunderestimating Moo: George W. Bush, pushed into a corner by the election of all those Dhimmicrats, says
President George W. Bush, opening a week of consultations with senior advisers to determine a new course in
``We believe that most of the countries understand that a mainstream society, a society that is a functioning democracy is in their interests,'' Bush said today in Washington after meeting with State Department officials, including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice…
Uh, actually, Mr. President, despite what those boobs at Foggy Bottom are telling you, Iran’s religious wackos have a stake in ensuring that the region is as unstable and raucous as possible. Along with the elimination of the Zionist “tumor” (Dr. Ahmadinejad’s colorful description/diagnosis of the Jewish state), they believe destabilization is essential if he’s to return.
Time to wake up and smell the Apocalypse—a subject I’m sure you’re familiar with—before it’s too late.
Kofi gives ‘em hell: If you thought that Kofi Annan had already plumbed the depths of obnoxiousness, think again. In his final speech as Secretary General of the international body that is one of the world's foremost enablers of the global jihad—a speech he had the audacity to deliver in Harry “The Buck Stops Here” Truman’s hometown—Annan hurled a few stink bombs at George W. Bush and the only nation powerful enough to impede the jihad’s advance. Kofi wants said nation to quit with all its rugged individualism and get with the multilateralists’—and not co-incidentally, also the jihadists’—one world program:
Mr. Annan, I know about Harry Truman. Harry Truman is a hero of mine. And you, sir, are no Harry Truman.
…In a clear reference to the lack of international support for the American action in
He said the
“Its current moment of world supremacy gives it a priceless opportunity to entrench the same principles at the global level,” Mr. Annan said.
He reminded his audience that President Truman had once said, “We all have to recognize no matter how great our strength, that we must deny ourselves the license to do always as we please.”
Mr. Annan also cited Truman’s statement that “the responsibility of great states is to serve and not dominate the peoples of the world,” and noted approvingly how Truman had used American power to face down a threat to international order during his administration.
“He believed strongly that henceforth security must be collective and indivisible,” Mr. Annan said. “That was why, for instance, that he insisted when faced with aggression by
Citing the necessity of United States-United Nations understanding, Mr. Annan said that “none of our global institutions can accomplish much when the
“The sky’s the limit”—isn’t that what Mo Atta, anticipating the posthumous rewards of martyrdom, said as he plowed the hijacked airliner into the skyscraper?
Thanks, Idiotic, Sightless Gits: Michael Ledeen says we ought to be grateful for the Iraq Study Group’s report. Not because it offers any valuable recommendations, because, clearly, it doesn’t. What it does do is help shed light on something that Americans had purposely (and purposefully) avoided dealing with: the menace of
At first I, too, thought the Iraq Surrender Commission Report was a total downer. But I’m more and more convinced that it was a great blessing. Not that they intended it to work out this way, but the Wise Men (and the token Lady) have elevated
The Surrender Commission Report underlines the basic truth about The War, which is that we cannot possibly win it by fighting defensively in
The Surrender Commission members do not shrink from humiliation. They want American troops out of
Evil Moo’s stupid Jews: I don’t know what’s worse—the fact that the hairy Islamic Hitler is holding a Holocaust denial conference that’s attracted participants from 30 countries, or that a bunch of crazy Jews are attending.
Pretty much a toss-up, I’d say.
…The organizers, the Foreign Ministry's Institute for Political and International Studies (IPIS), said the two-day conference has drawn 67 foreign researchers from 30 countries.
In his opening speech, the institute's chief, Rasoul Mousavi, said the conference "seeks neither to deny or prove the Holocaust.
"It is just to provide an appropriate scientific atmosphere for scholars to offer their opinions in freedom about a historical issue," Mousavi said.
He said the conference provided an opportunity to discuss "questions" about the Holocaust away from Western taboos and the restrictions imposed on scholars in
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki dismissed the foreign criticism as "predictable," telling conference delegates in a speech that there was "no logical reason for opposing this conference."
"The objective for organizing this conference is to create an atmosphere to raise various opinions about a historical issue. We are not seeking to deny or prove the Holocaust," Mottaki said.
Meanwhile, Yad Vashem on Sunday voiced renewed alarm over
"The Iranian government's pseudo-academic conference... is an effort to mainstream Holocaust denial and must be unequivocally rejected,"
Yad Vashem will host a seminar on Thursday for the diplomatic corps stationed in
"There is only one reason for this conference, and that is to spread anti-Semitic propaganda and to besmirch the Jewish people and the State of Israel," said Nazi hunter Dr. Efraim Zuroff, who heads the
He noted that none of the individuals invited to speak at the event have any expertise whatsoever regarding the Holocaust, and the only reason they were invited to speak was because of their "relentless efforts" to attack Judaism, the Jewish people and the State of Israel.
Zuroff added that it was particularly discouraging and outrageous that extremist Jews from the virulent anti-Zionist sect Natorei Karta were participating in the event…
On second thought, Jews who are so racked with hatred for the Jewish state that they would deny the Holocaust and dignify the genocidal ambitions of a new Hitler are even worse than the new Hitler. Stupid, too, because if Moo unleashes his Apocalypse and vaporizes
Trend setters: Guess what’s pushing Abbas into a “showdown” with his Hamas rivals, at least according to a Palestinian news service? Why, it’s none other than a nefarioius “Zionist trend.”
A “Zionist trend” among Fatah, eh? I know that such a trend is a figment of Hamas’s overheated, not to mention pathological, imagination, but as they say in Yiddish, “halevai.”
And speaking of misguided good intentions…: Rachel Ehrenfeld and Alyssa Lapin explain that America’s two failed wars—on drugs and terror—intersect in one locale: Afghanistan. From The American Thinker:
…
The Pakistani government, the recipient of at least $2.5 billion in
Before 2001,
Despite this, neither the American government nor its NATO allies have yet recognized the importance of aggressively targeting this funding source. The alleged reason is that attacking the drug trade will destabilize the Afghan government. Meanwhile, billions of dollars in drug revenue fuel the Taliban, al-Qaeda and most other Islamic terrorist organizations elsewhere…
“Gliberal” good intentions paving our road to Hell: A commentary about how misguided good (the ISG, Jimminy Carter) can end up being the handmaiden of evil—and imperilling the very people it seeks to protect. From JWR:
The problem is that the Study Group is disconnecting the war in
I am not referring to the war in
If one is looking for a first major skirmish, one can lay it at the feet of that hypocritical, holier than thou, false prophet of peace, Jimmy Carter, who paved the way for the Iranian revolution of Shia Islamo Fascism and who received in gratitude from the Ayatollahs the capture of the American Embassy in Teheran and the kidnapping and hostage taking of all its inhabitants.
If you think that wasn't a start of a war, flash forward a few years to the killing of two hundred-forty-one Marines in
Regardless of what you think or don't think of the war in
Sing along with Abu Ayman: “Islam, Islam, uber alles, uber alles in der Welt…”
Through a lens, blindly: David Warren on the dangers of seeing events through “gliberal” eyes.
What’s a “gliberal”? It’s someone who cannot wrap his/her noggin around the concept that there is true evil out there, and that a portion of it is motivated by an understanding of a religion practiced by 1.3 billion inhabitants of our planet.
It’s someone like James Baker, Lee Hamilton and their panel of Chamberlainesque “experts,” who think if they wave a white flag and offer up
It’s someone who thinks CNN, for one, has a really good handle on world events.
A “gliberal,” in other words, is someone who has neither the wit to understand what we’re up against, nor the will to resist it.
…I foolishly ordered a goat curry in a neighbourhood West Indian establishment, Wednesday night. The food was great, but I was exposed to CNN for nearly half an hour: Paula Zahn and company "discussing" Baker-Hamilton, with a dig at Bush every 12th second. Again I'm amazed that, despite the 24/7 broadcast of such garbage, a significant proportion of Americans remain sane.
I am often amazed by feats of human endurance and stamina. The ability of my children to withstand the public school system, for instance. A certain lady's ability to survive
It is like this. The U.S., with precious little help from allies, who even in the case of Canada refuse to contribute anything like their fair share to the alliance's military costs, for even the most conventional defensive preparedness on the home front, is fighting our common enemy in Iraq. We could be fighting them elsewhere, but that's where our enemy's efforts are concentrated at the moment -- as opposed to, say, the streets of
And such media as CNN (perhaps unfairly singled out), persist in airing a worldview tantamount to blaming the police for the existence of crime. For the consistent argument of the talking heads amounts to, "We may need more troops on the ground in the short term, but the long-term answer is to get out." Translation: "We may need more cops in the short term, to deal with the mess they've already stirred up, but the long-term solution can only be to let the criminals get on with it."
To the criminal mind, even working on low wattage, the response to that has got to be "wait them out". To the mind I call "gliberal" -- to distinguish it from the honourable and responsible tradition of liberal thought -- the very concept of a mortal enemy is beyond processing. Even those who recall what happened on
And now for something completely different: Just in time for Chanukkah--SpongeBob (whose Hebrew name is "Bob Sphog") sings Ma’oz Tzur.
Funny, he doesn’t look Jewish.
Guess who?: In coming days we will know who TIME Magazine has selected as its person of the year.
Several names are in contention, a bizarre assortment of candidates that includes George W. Bush, Condoleezza Rice, Nancy Pelosi, Kim Jong Il Hugo Chavez, Al Gore (Al Gore?!) and the YouTube guys (apparently, they don't have actual names). But this being a reprise of 1938, the year when TIME’s newsmaker of the year was Adolf Hitler, there’s one name on the list that should have the inside edge.
The ISG report, in short and not so sweet: No need to wade through the sewage. Here’s the gist of it, in the form of the chorus of a popular tune from the Great War:
Pack up the Zionists in one report.
Appease, appease, appease.
Try to placate that Ahmadinejad.
Fall, boys, to your knees.
What’s the use of
Let’s give it the deep freeze.
So—pack up the Zionists in one report.
Appease, appease, appease.
Apocolypto, now?: No thanks. I’d rather pass a kidney stone.
Here’s how you know for sure that the Iraq Study Group’s proposals are really, really bad: Because Iran thinks they’re good. (And the Saudis like them, too.)
Blind to jihad: The latest illustrious recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, Bangladeshi “Banker to the Poor” Muhammad Yunus, doesn’t have much time for the “war on terror.” He pinpoints the root cause of our current civilizational conflict as being—wait for it—“poverty.”
Yeah, if only those poor Saudis and Iranian jihadis had scads more cash with which to feed the hungry, the world would be awash in peace and goodwill.
Bangladeshi economist Muhammad Yunus has urged world leaders to get on with the fight against poverty, upon receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.
He has called on world leaders to stop spending money on wars like the one in
The 63-year-old and the Grameen Bank he founded have won the peace prize for their work to lift millions out of poverty by granting tiny loans to the poorest of the poor, especially women in rural
Mr Yunus and Grameen Bank representative Mosammat Taslima Begum have received gold medals and diplomas at a ceremony at
The prize created by the Swedish philanthropist Alfred Nobel comes with a cheque for 10 million Swedish crowns ($A1.85 million) to be shared by the prize winners.
In the prepared text of his acceptance speech, Mr Yunus says the link between a peaceful world and fight against poverty is clear.
"Poverty is a threat to peace," he said.
He says the new millennium began with a dream to cut poverty in half by 2015, as agreed by world leaders in the United Nations millennium goals in 2000.
"But then came September 11 and the
"I believe terrorism cannot be won over by military action."
The man often named the banker to the poor says the
Mr Yunus says terrorism has to be condemned "in the strongest language" and the world must tackle its root causes.
"I believe that putting resources into improving the lives of the poor people is a better strategy than spending it on guns," he said.
Agreed. But the jihadis, who believe they have a divinely-inspired mission, want to use those resources in an entirely different way--to conquer the world for Islam. And that won’t change should we heed Yunus’s call and shift the paradigm back to a war on poverty. In fact, were that to happen the world would become that much more impoverished, and in more ways than one.
I think that insight is deserving of a Nobel Peace Prize, don’t you?
Imbecilic Surrender Geezers?
Well, the ISG -- the Illustrious Seniors' Group -- has released its 79-point plan. How unprecedented is it? Well, it seems
But, alas, such flashes of originality are few and far between in what's otherwise a testament to conventional wisdom. How conventional is the ISG's conventional wisdom? Try page 49:
"RECOMMENDATION 5: The Support Group should consist of
Er, OK. I suppose that's what you famously hardheaded "realists" mean by realism. But wait, we're not done yet. For this "Support Group," we need the extra-large function room. Aside from
". . . the key regional states, including
Er, OK. So it's basically an Arab League meeting. Not a "Support Group" I'd want to look for support from, but each to his own...
A tough sell: There’s an effort afoot in the
A GOVERNMENT-BACKED Islamic organisation is teaching young Muslims that dying while fighting for the British armed forces is an act of martyrdom.
The British Muslim Forum (BMF) explains to young people that even if a Muslim soldier dies in combat while fighting in an Islamic country such as
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The BMF is holding talks across
Its aim is to counter radicals’ misuse of the term “martyr”, which has become associated with terrorist suicide operations. The BMF was a leading member in a taskforce set up by Tony Blair after the July 7 bombings to combat extremism among Muslims.
In its forums its case workers and imams cite Lance-Corporal Jabron Hashmi, 24, a British Pakistani from
Islamic extremists have called him a “salaried traitor” as he died fighting Taliban Muslims at the command of non-Muslim generals. They argue he should not have received an Islamic burial as he died an “infidel”.
However, BMF case workers counter that he died a martyr. “We are calling him a martyr because he died fighting for his country. Islam teaches us to be loyal and abide by the laws of the land. We believe fighting for
The BMF, a body representing 600 mosques, is one of
Good luck with that one, guys.
From the “You’ve Got to be Kidding” dep’t: An ad for a new book in the Globe and Mail’s Books section caught my eye just now. It’s for a book in a series called “BIOGRAPHIES OF BOOKS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD published by Douglas & McIntyre. The ad says “Give peace a glance.” Underneath is a photo of the book being flogged, a biography of, you guessed it, “The Qur’an.” And here’s the quote that's offered to give you a taste of what’s inside:
“So closely is the concept of peace [salam] related to surrender [islam] that the two become interchangeable, from the first revelation till the final Day of Judgement. It is angelic intermediaries who mark the first revelation of the Qur’an, and they mark it with greetings of peace.”
Good to know. To translate for those who might be lulled by the ad and this excerpt into thinking the religion in question served as the inspiration for John and Yoko’s bed-in and subsequent pacifist anthem, what Bruce Lawrence, the Qur’an’s biographer, is really saying is that in Islam, complete surrender by one and all will bring peace.
A timely message, I’d say.
I have a feeling that Lawrence, who agreed to write the book after noted Islam shill, Karen Armstrong, turned it down, could be a bit perturbed at how his book is being marketed on Amazon.com. It suggests that purchasers pick up another book along with this one, because the two go “BETTER TOGETHER.” The book? “Messages to the World: The Statements of Osama bin Laden.”
Oops! So much for glancing at peace.
Jimminy hits back: Jimminy “Cricket” Carter has been catching all sorts of heck in certain quarters for his ahistorical Israel-bash,
Clearly, Jimminy hasn’t been reading the NYT, the WaPo, the LAT, TIME, Newsweek, etc., etc. etc.
I wonder what he has been reading.
I’d attribute the lies he tells in his book to incipient senility if I didn’t know it follows a pattern he established long ago. Apparently, way back when, the Cricket told Golda Meir (or was it Menachem Begin?—not that it matters; he loathed them both) that Israelis weren’t religious enough.
When I first heard this anecdote a few days ago, I thought it sounded familiar but couldn’t quite place it. Then I realized: it’s not unlike the charged lobbed in the Koran against “the Jews,” i.e. that they were not abiding sufficiently by the rules of their religion.
Of course, were they doing religion properly they would be—wait for it—Muslim.
It looks like Jimminy has so imbibed the Arab line that he thinks about Jews in the same terms as Arabs do.
Ahmadinejadjungend: From Al Bawaba:
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Saturday termed the youth as the 'driving force' of the society and said the youth are in search of perfection and their innocent nature is the guarantor for a healthy society. According to IRNA, he was making the remark at a gathering of young people who are eligible to cast their votes for the first time.
Referring to
The Iranian nation has chosen their path and is to pursue it with pride, he stressed. According to him, a nation whose youth are capable of mastering nuclear fuel cycle and running the country's economy, and industry, the enemies should be aware that the nation is independent and does not need them.
"Our enemies have not properly understood the power of the Iranian youth and will never understand it," he said.
Actually, Moo, some of us understand it only too well.
Palestinian brain drain: In yet another instance of the Palestinians never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity, the Palestinians are missing the opportunity to establish their own viable sovereign state. That’s because Hamas isn’t interested in establishing a viable state so much as it is in disestablishing the viable Jewish state next door. And since the regime has made life in
But I’m pretty sure that’s all part of Hamas’s plan. From Forbes:
A technician armed with $7,000 in savings and a tourist visa plans to seek political asylum in
Driven by fear of civil war and increasingly bleak economic prospects, Palestinians are fleeing their violence-wracked lands in growing numbers. Many are skilled and educated, and are leaving behind an increasingly impoverished and fundamentalist society.
The brain drain reverses a trend of the 1990s when, fueled by peace hopes, thousands of well-to-do Palestinians returned from the diaspora to the
Palestinians have emigrated in large numbers before, a response to decades of war, unrest and displacement, but Palestinian government officials fear this is a particularly strong wave.
The emigration is hurting Palestinian prospects for statehood, says pollster Nader Said. "What
Some 10,000 Palestinians emigrated between June and October and another 45,000 have made preparations to leave, said Ahmed Suboh, a Palestinian Foreign Ministry official, citing reports from Palestinian missions abroad. He did not have comparisons to previous years or a breakdown of destination countries…
Dissing Bush’s diss: An editorial in the Boston Globe chides President Bush for his “ingratitude” toward the hard-working ISG and its raft of helpful recommendations:
PRESIDENT BUSH let the ball roll under his glove Thursday when he hinted that he has little enthusiasm for the recommendations of the commission co-chaired by former secretary of state James Baker and the former House International Relations Committee chairman Lee Hamilton. Whatever might be questioned in any particular recommendation of the report, the bipartisan spirit and consensus-building purpose of the Iraq Study Group deserve grateful praise from the president, not a defensive rejection.
Had he shown proper appreciation for the work of the panel's 10 senior members and their aides, Bush could have made his own task easier as a commander in chief trying to cope with the disastrous consequences of his own war of choice. Had he enlisted in the Iraq Study Group's common-sense project of seeking to limit the damage from his administration's blunders in
The members of the Iraq Study Group may not have come up with all the right answers; in their pursuit of unanimity, they may have settled for split-the-difference compromises where only one straight path makes sense. But in their bipartisan spirit of cooperation, they gave Americans a much-needed reminder of how statecraft once was conducted -- and how it ought to be conducted once again.
So even though the report itself warns that there is no guarantee of success for its proposals for regional diplomacy, for example, or its imposition of milestones and deadlines on the Iraqi government, or its plan for redeploying and withdrawing US military forces, the nation clearly needed a lucid analysis of realistic options for halting the loss of American blood, treasure, and goodwill in Iraq.
If Bush sensed an implicit rebuke to his own statecraft in the Baker-Hamilton call for a return to the traditional practice of negotiating with adversaries, he was right. This matter should not be reduced to some displaced Oedipal struggle Bush may be waging with his father or his father's old advisers. Whatever the psychological sources, they pale in importance beside the world-changing fact that Bush, by refusing to negotiate with regimes he defines as evil, has broken radically with all his predecessors. The results include avoidable nuclear proliferation in
With its revival of the tradition of seeking consensus on foreign policy, the Baker-Hamilton report offers Bush a chance he should not miss -- a chance to become a uniter of the country, not a denier of reality.
Au contraire, anonymous editorial writer. The Baker-Hamilton report offers Bush a chance to be a wimp, deny the reality of the global jihad and serve up
The wrongs of the Human Rights Council: In a breathtaking display of understatement, Toronto Star columnist Olivia Ward notes that the UN’s Human Rights Council is “off to a bad start.”
Gee, ya think? That’s like saying that Ahmadinejad has issues with the Holocaust.
Ward says that fact that the Council, like its predecessor, a Commission, has been commandeered by some of the least free countries on the planet and, because these nations wouldn’t recognize a human right if it plowed into them while driving a Hummer, as well as their obsessive-compulsive focus on Israel, the HRC’s future as the arbiter of the world’s human rights may be in doubt.
Promise?
The Council’s immorality and relentless Israel-bashing is also putting a damper on a day I know I always look forward to every year—Human Rights Day. (I like to celebrate by going out for a festive brunch and, later on, reading selected passages from the Koran):
Tomorrow is Human Rights Day, a day when contentious issues are aired as accusers and accused face off with allegations and denials of terrible deeds.
But this year, one of the most inflammatory issues is an institution created to monitor human rights: the United Nations' new Human Rights Council.
With a membership of 47 countries elected from the UN's 192-member General Assembly, the council was meant to be a
It replaced a discredited earlier body, the Human Rights Commission, often described as "the foxes guarding the henhouse."
But as 2006 comes to an end, the council's report card is dangerously close to a failing grade, as critics from all sides of the political spectrum attack its obvious faults. Some are already calling for its demise.
"Unless it can begin to address some of the most serious abuses occurring around the world, the (council) is headed into irrelevancy," pronounced Jennifer Windsor, executive director of the right-leaning Freedom House think-tank.
And, argued the liberal International Humanist and Ethical Union, "however selective and political the old human rights commission may have been, it rarely sank to the level of farce just witnessed at the human rights council."…
I say time to chuck the whole rotten enterprise and move on. But then, that’s also what I say about the UN as a whole.
Back to the books: J. Peter Mulhern on The American Thinker site explains why the ISG is in dire need of remedial study:
"The situation in
There it is, the Iraq Study Group (ISG) report in a nutshell. Definitive proof that the cream of our establishment has exiled itself from planet earth and it has no apparent intention of coming home. If the ISG set out to secure a humiliating American defeat it couldn't have come up with more destructive recommendations.
The political class, Republicans and Democrats alike, insists on taking the ISG report seriously. Our leaders are struggling to formulate some new policy for
There is nothing complex about the problems in
Supporting the Iraqi Army
The ISG report is all about facilitating our retreat from
The unpleasant reality in
President Bush is as guilty of confusion here as either the ISG or the softest-headed congressional Democrat. He is, in fact, the principal author of the "cut and run" strategy. From the beginning of the war in
The truth is that any government we set up in
Talking about how to organize our departure is almost as destructive as leaving would be. As long as we keep talking about removing ourselves from the picture in
We can't build Iraqi security forces if the Iraqis see those forces as assets to be secured for use in the coming civil war. We can't terminate troublemakers like Moqtada al Sadr if the powers that be are planning to rely on him for support when we depart. We can't even keep the Shiite dominated Iraqi government from gravitating toward
If we want Iraqi partners to help us install and maintain a useful government in
We are stuck in
The recipe for victory in
Sorry to break it to you, J. Peter, but too many Americans in positions of power never had a grip, and have already let go.
‘Tis the season to be wary: For your enjoyment, some songs of the season.
(To the tune of “Deck the Halls”)
Deck the Jews
With lots of fallout
"Ha ha ha ha ha,"
Says Moo to you.
Come next March
His nukes he’ll haul out.
And he thinks there's nothing we can do.
Wants to bring on Armageddon.
And he will unless we stop him now.
End of days is where we’re headin’.
He can’t have a nuke—no way, no how!
(To the tune of “God Rest Ye, Merry Gentlemen”)
God rest ye, Iraq Study Group,
Let someone you deter.
You want George Bush to bargain
With a hairy, crazed Hitler.
He’s over in
And revving up for war.
Oh, tidings of genocide to you;
Please get a clue.
Oh, tidings of genocide to you.
James Baker and Lee Hamilton
They manned a sinking ship.
They say if there’s a
The world’ll get a grip.
But global jihad’s hungry
And the Jews are just a blip.
Oh, tidings of genocide to you;
Please get a clue.
Oh, tidings of genocide to you.
(To the tune of “Santa Claus is Coming to Town”)
You better bow down.
You better submit.
They’re taking
And taking no sh*t
Hezbollah is coming to town.
Democracy’s fine
As long as you know
No matter who wins
Hassan runs the show.
Hezbollah is coming to town.
You know that they’re Islamists.
They’re working for
An Anschluss meant to cow you all--
That’s what the mullahs plan.
So, you better bow down.
You better submit.
You better agree
They’re not gonna quit.
Hezbollah is coming to town…
(To the tune of “Frosty the Snowman”)
Nancy Pelosi
Is the Speaker of the House.
From experience
There are lots of hints
Of the views that she’ll espouse.
Nancy Pelosi wants the troops out of
And she really thinks
It’ll all calm down
Once the soldiers have come back.
She thinks like Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Man’s a noble, good-willed sort.
But what to do
When there’s a Moo
Who’s nasty, brutish and short?
Nancy Pelosi
Is as blind as she can be.
If she only saw
That sharia law’s
What they plan for you and me.
Food for thought: I heard on the news that James Baker is dismayed because the President has rejected one of the ISG's key proposals, i.e., "negotiate" with Iran and Syria. Baker is miffed at the President and says the ISG report "isn't fruit salad."
You're right there, Jimbo. It isn't fruit salad. What it is is a wretched piece of stewed tripe.
Moo to infidels—“revert” or die: Guess what, Jimbo? You can serve up the Jews on a platter, along with sage stuffing and giblet gravy, and it won’t be enough to satisfy the hairy Islamic Hitler.
So you can stick your ISG Report in a dark, dank passage where the crescent moon don’t ever shine (but just might, if you keep bending over backwards for the Mahdi summoner).
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has warned Western leaders to follow the path of God or "vanish from the face of the earth".
"These oppressive countries are angry with us ... a nation that on the other side of the globe has risen up and proved the shallowness of their power," Ahmadinejad said in a speech in the northern town of
"They are angry with our nation. But we tell them 'so be it and die from this anger'. Rest assured that if you do not respond to the divine call, you will die soon and vanish from the face of the earth," he said.
The outspoken president also maintained Iran's defiance over its controversial nuclear programme, saying it was on course to fully master nuclear technology.
"Thank to God's help, we have gone all the way and are only one step away from the zenith.
"We hope to have the big nuclear celebration by the end of the year (March 2007)," Ahmadinejad said, echoing comments he has made on numerous occasions in recent months…
“Funny” fundamentalists: Macleans magazine has a heads up about the Ceeb’s new comedy show that's slated to run in the new year—Little Mosque on the Prairie:
Fatima and Rayyan are headed to aquafit when they notice a man wearing a tiny black Speedo standing on the pool deck. They scramble to cover their hair with towels before approaching Johnny, who they discover is their instructor. "There's been a mistake. We can't take this class," says Rayyan. "Oh, have you never met a friend of Dorothy?" says Johnny. "Friend of Dorothy?" whispers
The scene -- filmed last week at a public pool in Etobicoke, Ont. -- is part of the CBC's newest half-hour comedy, Little Mosque on the Prairie. The first eight episodes, originally slated for the fall of 2007, were rushed into production and will now debut on Jan. 9 at
Some of the other topics include how Muslims in
Nawaz says she watched Little House on the Prairie as a kid, but that her show's title is just a cute play on words -- not an homage to Michael Landon's classic series. Born in
Her short films, while all comedic, have been more closely tied to current events. Me and the Mosque was about gender segregation in
Little Mosque is "more Northern Exposure than Corner Gas," she says. "The Muslim community is dying for a portrayal of Muslims that is more dynamic and more nuanced than the traditional terrorist villain."...
“Dying for” it, are they, Zarqa? Perhaps not the best choice of words.
Of course, I just had to dash off a letter to Macleans:
I have long been of the opinion that there are few situations in life that cannot be improved if those involved would only resolve to “lighten up.” Still, I’m having a hard time wrapping my head around the idea that it is possible, as Zarqa Nawaz suggests, to “put the fun back in fundamentalism.” It seems to me that in order to put “the fun” back in something, it has to have been there in the first place—and clearly, that’s not the case with Islamic fundamentalism, a faith which demands complete submission and shuns any trace of irreverence.
Or is Ms. Nawaz suggesting there are untapped reserves of hilarity to be found in, say, fatwas, the jihad and the more Draconian aspects of sharia law?
Same old tricks: Ralph Peters uses a seasonal analogy to characterize Baker’s anachronistic scheme to crucify the Jews:
THE difference between the child-killers in the Middle East 2,000 years ago and those today is that Herod's men rode into
The Iraq Study Group doesn't get it.
Today's butchers are far more merciless, indiscriminate and dangerous. For Herod's henchmen, killing was a job. For today's faith-fueled fanatics, slaughtering the innocents is doing Allah's will. Our modern magis' negotiations won't fix
Former Secretary of State James Baker and his panelists are trying to shore up the failing regional system that their generation designed. Released yesterday, their report doesn't offer "a new way forward." Its recommendations echo past failures. And it shows no sense of how gravely the world has changed.
The report doesn't offer a plan, but a muddle of truisms and truly bad ideas.
To stay with that Christmas metaphor just a bit longer, the Flight into
Certainly, the most perverse: By tying
Really, what Baker - and this is Baker's issue - argues for is the traditional Saudi and Arabist view that the
Nor old Jew haters either.
Another one bites the dust: David Warren on the loss of John Bolton, a man who dared to speak clearly and truthfully, and was thus a fish out of water at the barracuda-infested UN:
…At its best, it [the UN] has at least been a clearing house, to avoid war through the unpublicized backroom transmission of credible threats and deadlines to the world's most depraved exponents of misrule. But its membership reflects the plurality of the depraved. The General Assembly is permanently stacked against the interests of all constitutional democracies. It provides a karaoke chamber to enhance the babblings even of despots as tone-deaf as Hugo Chavez of
But it is there, and until the Americans finally take up Jesse Helms's suggestion, to "throw it brick by brick into the East River" -- or remove it to a more appropriate host city, such as Mogadishu -- it will continue to undermine the security and freedom of people everywhere, by its machinations, while its barbarous "peacekeeping" troops rape and pillage defenceless women and children, in Cambodia, Rwanda, Liberia, Haiti, and seemingly any hot spot to which they are sent.
John Bolton understood the reality; yet he was also grittily determined to undo the reality, and make the U.N. focus on the few things it could actually accomplish to ameliorate pestilence, war, famine, and death. His ability to speak in coherent English sentences was, like Donald Rumsfeld's, among the qualities that would be held against him. Both acquired the reputation of leading from the chin.
There is a deep principle at work here, contradicting what is embraced as "diplomacy" today. It is that reasonable ideas can invariably be communicated in clear language. For the reasonable assertion has nothing to hide. "Doublespeak", as Orwell defined, is the substance within which ideas are hidden, that would be rejected if they were stated plainly. "Diplomatic doublespeak" goes a step further. It is the language in which such dubious ideas are absorbed and accepted; by which Western diplomats seek to fool themselves.
Jacques Chirac, the President of France, has recently said a very clear thing: that the Syrian regime, currently re-arming Hezbollah in
Godspeed, John Bolton. We’ll miss your courage and your clarity, both of which, sadly, are in mighty short supply these days.
Curioser and curioser: Not even John Le Carre could come up with this one, the story of a former Russian spy, poisoned by a radioactive substance by persons unknown (but thought to be his former employers) who, in the throes of an agonizing death, “reverts” to Islam at the last possible moment—or does he? From the Times Online:
The former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko will be buried after private Muslim and non-religious funeral services today.
The Muslim service for Litvinenko, who converted to Islam shortly before his death from radioactive poisoning, will take place at
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|
|
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The family friend said that after the Muslim service, Litvinenko will be buried in a sealed coffin at a
Around 30 family members and friends have travelled to
Litvinenko's father Walter told Radio Free Europe that his son converted to Islam before his death and was given the Muslim equivalent of the last rites in hospital.
However, Litvinenko’s friend Alexander Goldfarb said today that was wrong.
"There has been suggestion that he had converted to Islam before his death; that is completely wrong - he was not a religious man. His wife has insisted that the funeral is non-denominational," Mr Goldfarb told The Associated Press…
So let’s see if I have this straight: his father says he did; his Jewish friend says he didn’t. If he did, why did he, and who was he really spying for? If he didn’t, why would his wife say he did and have him buried as a true believer?
Stay tuned for the next thrilling episode of “Death Bed Revert or: The Radioactive Spy.”
Lame ‘toon: Want to know what passes for trenchant political humour across the pond? Here’s today's editorial ‘toon by Peter Brookes, who the Times Online has named cartoonist of the year. It depicts a—wait for it—dumb George Bush who is such an idiot that he doesn’t realize the Iraq Study Group report he’s reading is upside down.
Actually, I think it probably makes a whole lot more sense if you read it that way.
Steak eating surrender monkeys: Jimbo Baker’s Iraq Study Group, or as I like to call it, the Cry Uncle and Get the Aitch Outta Here Study Group (the Toronto Star describes it as a “blue ribbon panel”; more like a “white flag” one, if you ask me) has handed down its report. As expected, it includes some of the most useless, dangerous ideas this side of Chamberlain’s
Great plan, guys! Should put you in line for one of those much-coveted Nobel Peace in Our Time Prizes.
It occurred to me that the Iraq Study Group could also be called by another name, something a little more Runyonesque--the newest established temporary floating crap shoot in
The Dhimmicrats wanted a crack, a crack at “solving”
And to prove his bi-partisan cred,
Bush made James “Eff the Jews” Baker its head.
Now his study group’s laid down the law and, what a surprise,
Thrown the Jews to the wolves.
And things being how they are,
It appears Neville Chamberlain ain’t dead.
Why, it’s bad old despicable Jimbo, Jimbo, Jimbo Baker is back.
If you’re lookin’ for Jew-hate, he’ll give you your fill.
And if the Muslims kill us all it won’t give him a chill.
Not for bad old despicable Jimbo,
Hopes “the right of return” is on track
In the newest established temporary floating crap shoot in
There are cut and runners everywhere, everywhere,
There are cut and runners everywhere.
And a lot of sly appeasers
Who are trying to be pleasers of
They’ve a plan and
Look, it’s bad old despicable Jimbo, Jimbo, Jimbo Baker is back.
Like a bad case of shingles, he’ll always return,
Tho’ not a single lesson from the past will he have learned.
That’s ‘cause bad old despicable Jimbo’s
Runnin’ with the Jew-hating pack
And the newest established temporary floating crap shoot in
Here’s how the Guardian, a noted jihad-enabling media outlet, describes this camel excrement. (The article also appears in the Globe and Mail, where I first read it.) I’ve retained the headline and subheads to give you a more complete sense of the disorienting Orwellian-Twilight Zone-ness of it all.):
Britons to attend
· Gathering will consider whether deaths took place
· Event 'will not be a forum for anti-semites'
Iran announced yesterday details of a conference questioning whether the Holocaust really happened, prompted by an international outcry a year ago when President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad described the slaughter of six million Jews by the Nazis as "myth" fabricated to justify Israel.
The foreign ministry said "intellectuals and researchers" from 30 countries - including
The idea for the gathering was dismissed earlier this year as "shocking, ridiculous and stupid" by Tony Blair.
A Foreign Office spokesman said it had no record of who was going. "I think the government's views on
Participants will consider documentary, pictorial, physical and demographic evidence in what Iranian officials depict as an academic investigation to establish the Holocaust's authenticity and whether the reported number of victims was exaggerated. Organisers say it will include submissions for and against. It will also focus on the plight of the Palestinians…
I’m so glad the conference will, in the deathless words (pun intended) of the Guardian ‘consider whether deaths took place’ and ‘will not be a forum for anti-semites.’ I can’t imagine the type of thrashing the Jews and their state would be in for if it were a forum for Judenhass. (I trust I don’t need to tell you that that was pure, unadulterated and very bitter sarcasm.)
Mo smears Bob: As I watched coverage of the Liberal Leadership Convention last Sunday, I couldn’t help but notice a familiar face in the crowd: Mohamed Elmasry, president of the Canadian Islamic Congress.
“Hmmm,” thought I to myself, “I wonder what Mo’s been up to at the convention.”
Well, as Tarek Fatah, a Bob Rae supporter, reveals in the Globe and Mail, it turns out Mo was up to no good:
…Another religious group, the Canadian Islamic Congress, organized by Mohamed Elmasry, sent out a mass e-mail to its members with the subject line: "More Canadian Muslims than ever before will help determine Liberal Leadership Outcome." A religiously observant breakfast was arranged for Muslim delegates to the convention, and one Kennedy delegate organizing among the Muslim community sent out a letter to the country's mosques, asking for Muslims to vote "en masse" for one candidate. The Islamic Congress had given Mr. Kennedy an A grade, while listing other hopefuls on a scale from a B to an F. This led to a spirited response from Ignatieff delegate Salma Siddiqui, who is a vice-president of the secular Muslim Canadian Congress. "Muslims are not a herd of cattle to be sold to the highest bidder," she responded.
Then, during the convention, the president of the Canadian Arab Federation, Khaled Mouammar forwarded a mass e-mail to Muslim delegates. The e-mail, with the subject line, "Don't elect a Leader who supports Apartheid," had a picture of Bob Rae with the following text plastered over his face: "Rae's wife is a Vice President of the CJC, a lobby group which supports Israeli apartheid and
It became a popular refrain. On Friday, a group of delegates coming from a breakfast arranged by the Canadian Islamic Congress taunted me: "Is Bob Rae going to be the prime minister of
Two rookie MPs, Omar Alghabra, a Muslim, and, Navdeep Bains, a Sikh, held the strings of as many as 400 delegates in the Kennedy camp. When the time came, these delegates moved as a bloc to Mr. Dion.
Stéphane Dion may not know this, but his victory came in part through a political process that feeds on racial and religious exploitation. I respect the diversity of
Amen to that, Tarek. Let’s just hope one of the highest bidders doesn’t happen to be France, Mr. Dion’s other home and native land. (Actually, he wasn’t born there and only holds citizenship by virtue of it being his mother’s place of birth.)
I often have a time hard with Fatah, who seems to “get it” about the perils of Islamism, but who offers as “street cred” with his community the fact that he was a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. I was also less than impressed when Fatah, in his former capacity as head of communications for the Muslim Islamic Congress, a secular group (he resigned because of death threats from some of his more ardent co-religionists), issued a press release supporting CUPE Ontario’s boycott of
By the by, I wonder if that Ignatieff delegate, Salma Siddiqui, is any relation to our old friend Harpoon.
Dion’s dual allegiance: In the
In
Some Canadians, like Stephane Dion, the newly-elected leader of the Liberal Party, see that as a definite plus. Dion himself is pleased to be a citizen of both
The new Liberal leader told reporters he does not see the need to renounce his French citizenship and brushed off inquiries about a potential conflict of interest, saying such a possibility was "impossible" even if he were prime minister.
He snapped when a reporter raised New Democrat MP Pat Martin's opposing opinion on the matter: "He may keep his opinion to himself. I am proud of who I am, and I am fully loyal to my country. I think I have proven it, and no one will question it."
Mr. Martin said it would be "common sense for Dion to renounce his French citizenship."
"Mr. Dion should not have divided loyalties," the Manitoba MP said.
"If he were ever to be the premier leader of
He noted he would question the loyalty of someone if they carried memberships to both the Liberals and NDP.
Mr. Dion also challenged reporters to give him a reason to renounce his French citizenship…
Pleasure to oblige, M. Dion. You should renounce your French citizenship because:
And if that’s not enough, I’m sure I could think of some more.
AP spin: The Toronto Star prints the Arab, er, Associated Press story about a just-released report decrying Hezbollah’s tactic of purposely putting non-combatants in harm’s way. Notice how cleverly AP has worded the story so as to make