Saturday, March 10, 2007

Demand for fallout shelters in Israel surges as fears of nuclear attack grow

THE TIMES: As world leaders debate sanctions to curb Iran’s nuclear programme, hundreds of Israeli families are already installing bunkers in their homes to protect against radioactive fallout from a possible attack.

Thousands of private homes have been equipped with nuclear-proof equipment ranging from air filters to water-decontamination systems. But builders and contractors say that the demand in the past few months for fully fledged atomic shelters has surged, fuelled by speculation that Iran is building a nuclear weapon that it would not hesitate to use against Israel.

Atomic shelters range in price from £70,000 to £500,000. They feature 70cm thick blast-proof doors, ballistic windows, water and air-decontamination systems, which promise to sustain life for up to six months. Bunker mentality as Israelis prepare for nuclear fallout

Mark Alexander

Friday, March 09, 2007

The US problem few politicians have the stomach to do anything about

When a Dallas pizza chain began accepting Mexican money, its owner received a flood of hate mail. The Times reports on the rise of Hispanic America and the ‘culture war’

THE TIMES: Antonio Swad presses a button on his answerphone. A deep male voice fills his office. “F*** you,” it says slowly and deliberately. “Your attempt to Mexicanise our country is an insult to all of us...I and my buddies in the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars and all the other organisations I belong to are going to spread the word and do all we can to f*** you. You have insulted this wonderful country.” Mr Swad, a trim 50-year-old American of Italian-Lebanese descent, merely laughs. He has become used to such abuse since announcing in early January that Pizza Patron, his Dallas-based chain of pizza shops, would accept Mexican pesos. He has been deluged with similar messages from across the US.

“Pizza for pesos” was meant to be nothing more than a promotional stunt to curry favour with the Latinos who are Pizza Patron’s core market, and to soak up the loose change that Mexican workers bring back to the US after Christmas visits home. In fact it provided a new rallying point — and a fresh source of outrage after last year’s row over the Spanish version of The Star-Spangled Banner — for the legions of white Americans who believe that Hispanics are overrunning their country, destroying their culture and threatening their Anglo-Saxon dominance.

At most Swad expected a few paragraphs in the trade press. But after The Dallas Morning News ran a story on his offer one Saturday morning, he found reporters and television trucks beseiging his outlets with their “Aceptamos pesos” signs.

The story made the national news, the Tonight Show with Jay Leno and The Colbert Report. CNN gave it 20 minutes. It was picked up by Rush Limbaugh. “This stuff doesn’t go away,” fumed America’s leading right-wing chat-show host. “It’s just like gay marriage. It’s like illegal immigration...It’ll grow.” Soon abusive e-mails, irate calls and even death threats were pouring in to Pizza Patron’s headquarters. No matter that countless countries around the world accept US dollars, or that the Canadian dollar is accepted along America’s northern border, or that pizza is a foreign import. The sheer hatred of the e-mails — 5,400 at the latest count — was remarkable.

“You’re catering to illegal immigrants and promoting Mexico over the US...damn you to Hell and take your freaking wetback illegals with you when you go!!!!!,” said one. “You absolutely sicken us taxpaying citizens that want these cockroaches OUT OF THIS COUNTRY,” said another. Yanqui doodle dandy by Martin Fletcher

Mark Alexander
In pursuit of bin Laden

THE TELEGRAPH: America is stepping up its hunt for Osama bin Laden by dispatching additional CIA operatives and paramilitary officers to Pakistan to kill or capture the al-Qa'eda leader.

US officials said that the mission is intended to intensify the pressure on the terrorist leader, who turns 50 tomorrow, and perhaps force him into making a mistake. He is widely believed to be hiding in the region bordering Afghanistan.

Satellite photographs and details of communications intercepts were given to President Musharraf of Pakistan last week by Stephen Kappes, deputy director of the CIA, as part of a strategy to persuade him to give US intelligence agencies more assistance.

Mr Kappes, a Middle East specialist who has served in Pakistan, travelled to Islamabad to brief Gen Musharraf along with Vice President Dick Cheney. His detailed presentation showed evidence of al-Qa'eda building its strength on Pakistani soil.

"Reports that the trail has gone stone cold are not correct," an American official said afterwards. "We are very much increasing our efforts there." US sends spies into Pakistan to kill bin Laden by Toby Harnden and Thomas Coghlan

Mark Alexander
The changing House of Saud

THE TELEGRAPH: Just what has come over the Saudis? For as long as anyone can remember, the House of Saud has been a model of discretion and reticence in its dealings with the outside world. Whenever the royal family has found itself having to deal with some unpleasant local difficulty, such as Saddam threatening to overrun their oil fields, or Osama bin Laden plotting to murder the king, its time-honoured response has been to reach for the chequebook and buy its way out of trouble. No publicity, no fuss.

Well, that was then. Nowadays, if you look at any of the key issues affecting the region, whether it is Iraq, Iran or the stalemate over Israel/Palestine, you'll invariably find the Saudis spear-heading some bold initiative to find a solution.

Take the talks they hosted last month to persuade the rival Hamas and Fatah Palestinian factions to stop the bloody infighting that nearly brought Gaza to the brink of all-out war.

Had it not been for the personal intervention of King Abdullah, the rival Palestinian groups would still be trying to resolve their differences through violence. But after he managed to persuade Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas leader, and Mahmoud Abbas, the veteran Fatah activist who is nominally the Palestinians' president, to get together in the Saudi holy city of Mecca, the two sides agreed to patch up their differences and form a government of national unity - albeit one that still declines to recognise the right of Israel to exist.

Even more daring was the Saudi initiative this week to try to talk some sense into the nuclear-obsessed Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Saudi Arabia's hardline Sunni regime has always been a source of friction for the Shia zealots who seized control of Iran during the 1979 revolution, so much so that Iran's Revolutionary Guards were blamed by the Saudis for training the al-Qa'eda terror group that blew up the Americans' military base in Dhahran in 1996, killing 19 people and wounding 500.

Yet the new-look Saudis have been able to ignore the bad blood and laid on a lavish welcome for Mr Ahmadinejad. And, if Saudi reports are to be believed, the summit achieved a tangible result, with the Iranian president, who normally makes impassioned speeches calling for Israel's destruction, actually supporting an Arab peace plan to end the Israel-Palestinian crisis (although there was, strangely, no mention of this historic volte face in the official Iranian media). Prince Bandar shows the House of Saud how to punch its weight by Con Coughlin

Mark Alexander

Thursday, March 08, 2007

A perfectly accurate assessment of Europe today

“Islam itself is the problem. Islam is a violent religion. The Prophet Mohammed was a violent man. The Quran is mostly a violent book. We should invest in Muslim people but they have to first get rid of half the Quran and half of their beliefs.” – Geert Wilders

“It [the burqa] is a medieval token of a barbaric time, of how not to treat women, even if they want to wear it themselves.” "Allowing Muslims to wear the burqa in the Netherlands, or to have segregated swimming sessions so as not to offend religious sensitivities, amounts to 'religious apartheid'". – Geert Wilders
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Photo courtesy of Google Images
THE TELEGRAPH: An anti-immigrant politician is making a meteoric rise with his call on the Dutch - once one of the most tolerant nations in the world - to stop Islam taking over Europe.

Geert Wilders, the 43-year-old leader of the Freedom Party, is convinced that governments are being forced to accommodate a 'tsunami of Islamisation' that is fundamentally incompatible with European social values.

"Islam itself is the problem. Islam is a violent religion," he told The Daily Telegraph. "The Prophet Mohammed was a violent man. The Koran is mostly a violent book. We should invest in Muslim people but they have to first get rid of half the Koran and half of their beliefs," he said.

The Freedom Party has jumped from six to 10 per cent in opinion polls since November. His passionate campaign for a ban on the Islamic veil, or burqa, in public places is gaining such momentum that the country's new coalition government could be forced to introduce the ban it does not support.

On the burqa, Mr Wilders is adamant: "It is a medieval token of a barbaric time, of how not to treat women, even if they want to wear it themselves," he argues.

Allowing Muslims to wear the burqa in the Netherlands, or to have segregated swimming sessions so as not to offend religious sensitivities, amounts to "religious apartheid" he says. Islam is taking over, says Dutch politician by Bruno Waterfield
Mark Alexander
Yet again, Iran demonstrates its commitment to women’s rights!

”The Iranian authorities marked International Women’s Day by attacking hundreds of people who had peacefully assembled to honor women’s rights. Once again, Iran’s government has signaled that it is ready to use violence to suppress peaceful public assembly of any sort.” - Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch

Police in the Iranian capital Tehran have prevented protesters from taking part in a rally outside parliament to mark International Women's Day.

The authorities deployed large numbers of riot police and plain clothes officers in front of the parliament.

A few people tried to gather but were dispersed. One women was seen lifted up and carried away by female officers. Iran police stop women’s protests

Watch BBC video: Iranian women's protest ban

International Women’s Day (March 8, 2007)



Mark Alexander
The fanaticism of Islam

Is it racist to condemn fanaticism?

THE TIMES: Once I was held captive in Kabul. I was the bride of a charming, seductive and Westernised Afghan Muslim whom I met at an American college. The purdah I experienced was relatively posh but the sequestered all-female life was not my cup of chai — nor was the male hostility to veiled, partly veiled and unveiled women in public.

When we landed in Kabul, an airport official smoothly confiscated my US passport. “Don’t worry, it’s just a formality,” my husband assured me. I never saw that passport again. I later learnt that this was routinely done to foreign wives — perhaps to make it impossible for them to leave. Overnight, my husband became a stranger. The man with whom I had discussed Camus, Dostoevsky, Tennessee Williams and the Italian cinema became a stranger. He treated me the same way his father and elder brother treated their wives: distantly, with a hint of disdain and embarrassment.

In our two years together, my future husband had never once mentioned that his father had three wives and 21 children. Nor did he tell me that I would be expected to live as if I had been reared as an Afghan woman. I was supposed to lead a largely indoor life among women, to go out only with a male escort and to spend my days waiting for my husband to return or visiting female relatives, or having new (and very fashionable) clothes made.

In America, my husband was proud that I was a natural-born rebel and free thinker. In Afghanistan, my criticism of the treatment of women and of the poor rendered him suspect, vulnerable. He mocked my horrified reactions. But I knew what my eyes and ears told me. I saw how poor women in chadaris were forced to sit at the back of the bus and had to keep yielding their place on line in the bazaar to any man. How my eyes were opened to the barbarity of Islam by Phyllis Chesler

Mark Alexander
”No military solution to Iraq”

THE TIMES: The new US commander in Iraq has admitted that insurgents have intensified their attacks during the security crackdown in Baghdad, as he warned that there was no military solution to the nation’s bloody conflict.

General David Petraeus, appointed last month to oversee the White House’s fresh plan for Iraq, said that his troops were limited in what they alone could achieve and that some of the militant groups causing violence in the country would have to be engaged in political discussions. No military solution to Iraq, warns new US commander

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

What the Mullahs and Ayatollahs don't want you to know about

The Gay Scene in Egypt

Part 1:



Part 2:



The Gay Scene in Iran

Part 1:



Part 2:



Part 3:



Iran: Have a sex change on us!




Mark Alexander
Greek and Turkish YouTube users trade insults on Web

A holding page on YouTube informs users in Turkey that "Access to this site has been denied by court order!"

A court in Istanbul has issued an order denying access to the video-sharing website YouTube. The state owned Turk Telecom implemented the ban today after an escalating dispute between Greek and Turkish users of the site.

The court order was issued yesterday and most internet users logging onto the site in Turkey are met with a holding page with a

Turkish message, which translates as: “Access to this site has been denied by court order ! ...”.

Greek and Turkish YouTube users have been trading video insults over the past few months, attracting much coverage in the Turkish press. Greek videos reportedly accused the founding president of the Turkish Republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, of homosexuality; a Turkish user responded by calling Greece the birthplace of homosexuality. YouTube banned in Turkey after video insults by Nico Hines

Mark Alexander
Muslim protestor found guilty at the Old Bailey

A man demonstrating against cartoons of the Islamic Prophet Mohammed has been found guilty of soliciting to murder.

Abdul Muhid was convicted on two counts at the Old Bailey.

Muhid, from Whitechapel, east London, led the crowd in chanting "bomb, bomb the UK" and produced placards with slogans, the court heard. Cartoon protest man found guilty

Mark Alexander
Have German bishops gone over the top?

A group of German bishops sparked controversy yesterday when they compared Israel's treatment of the Palestinians with the Nazis' maltreatment of Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto.

The comments were made by the 27-strong German Bishops' Conference after its tour of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.

Several of the bishops were upset by the Jerusalem Wall, the 30ft high concrete barrier illegally built by Israel to separate Palestinian suburbs from the rest of the city.

While crossing one of the checkpoints into East Jerusalem, Cardinal Joachim Meisner, Archbishop of Cologne, said he had been particularly incensed. 



"This is something that is done to animals, not people," he said referring to the wall and heavily fortified checkpoints where Palestinians are subjected to intrusive questioning and demands for Israel-approved documentation.

The Archbishop was brought up in Communist-controlled East Germany.

"For me it is a nightmare. I didn't think I would see such a wall again in my life," he said.

"Just like they brought the Berlin Wall down, so too will this wall come down. It will not endure." German bishops compare Israel to the Nazis

Mark Alexander

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Wafa Sultan on the Glenn Beck Show

Glenn Beck seems to think that Islam can be reformed. It is my belief that Islam cannot be reformed. Islam is what it is, and it will remain as it has always been. It would appear that Wafa Sultan is of the same opinion as I.

Islam hasn’t been reformed in over fourteen hundred years. In any case, how can a religion be reformed when not a single vowel in the Qur’an has been changed in all those 1400 years? The message of Islam has been written in stone, so to speak. Further, the Qur'an are thought, by Muslims, to be the actual words of Allah. Who would dare try and change those words? Devout Muslims would consider any such attempt to change the Qur'an to be sacrilege. This is hardly a good starting point for a reformation. Add to this the propensity of Muslim Arabs to accept things literally - Arabs are not given to abstract thought and metaphor – and we have a poor basis for change. ©Mark Alexander


Mark Alexander
Wafa Sultan Accepts Award at Secular Islam Summit



Mark Alexander
Secular Islam Summit: The St. Petersburg Declaration



Mark Alexander
Glenn Beck Show: Secular Islam Summit



Mark Alexander
A World Without America

With thanks to RustResistance for drawing this video on 18 Doughty Street to my attention.



Mark Alexander
Saudi cleric praises Islamic limb amputations of criminals



Mark Alexander
Saudi professor calls for positive “hatred” of Christians



Mark Alexander
George W Bush and the King of Saudi Arabia



Mark Alexander
Riyadh - Kingdom of Saudi Arabia



Mark Alexander
Kingdom Mall, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia



Mark Alexander

Monday, March 05, 2007

The other side of Allah’s Kingdom: Abayah guarantees no virtuous behaviour

Saudi women, it seems, are not all we might think they are!. Woman to woman relationships at some schools by Hayat Kharbash

600,000 Saudi women smoke

Mark Alexander
Heavy losses on stock markets throughout the world continue unabated

The global stock market slump has powered into its second week, pushing the UK's main share index below 6,000 for the first time since October.

By midday the FTSE 100 had recovered slightly but was trading down 97.8 points, or 1.5%, at 6,018.4.

In the past five sessions, about £111bn has been wiped off the index's value.

The drop mirrored heavy losses in Europe and Asia, with investors dumping stocks because of concerns they are overvalued and growth will slow.

"It looks like it's becoming a domino, with one market pulling down the other and I don't know where the domino effect will stop," said Jose Vistan of AB Capital Securities.

"You throw away technical and fundamentals out of the window," he explained. "Emotions are the ones driving share prices right now." World stock drop hits second week

FTSE falls as global sell-off gathers pace

Mark Alexander
Woe is Denmark!

THE TIMES: Riots that have resulted in 643 arrests in Copenhagen are expected to continue this week after anarchists travelled from across Europe to protest against the eviction of anticapitalist squatters.

They were answering an appeal to demonstrate against the seizure by antiterror police of Youth House, a centre for far-left activists. Once host to Lenin, it has now been bought by a Christian group.

Barricades were set up in surrounding streets, cars were burnt and officers pelted with petrol bombs after clearing the building on Thursday. Police responded with teargas but the clashes continued despite the arrests that included 140 foreigners. Anarchists move in after international appeal to join rioters

BBC: Bulldozers have begun the demolition of a building at the centre of rioting in the Danish capital Copenhagen, after the eviction of squatters last week.

About 650 people have been arrested following three nights of clashes between protesters and police.

The unrest has been some of the worst seen in the Danish capital for decades. Denmark rioters’ squat demolished

Mark Alexander

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Felipe and Letizia (the Lady in Red): Bringing a splash of colour and oodles of style, beauty and class to our world - a world which is all too often bereft of all. Enjoy!



Mark Alexander
Ahmadinejad Pays Visit to Saudi King

”Iran is a rising power bolstered by the removal by the US of its two great enemies - the Taleban in Afghanistan and Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq. Iran's Shia allies are now the dominant force in Iraq, while Tehran's influence is spreading more widely into Lebanon and the Palestinian territories. Sunni-ruled states like Jordan and Saudi Arabia are watching Iran's rise with a degree of anxiety.” - Jonathan Marcus, BBC’s Diplomatic Correspondent

The president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has left Saudi Arabia after a brief visit for rare talks between the two Middle Eastern powers.

His discussions with King Abdullah in Riyadh focused on regional issues including Iraq, Lebanon and the Palestinians, correspondents say.

Mr Ahmadinejad said the two nations wanted to "expand our stable ties".

The meeting comes at a time of tension over regional conflicts and a growing divide between Sunni and Shia Muslims.

Correspondents say the fact that the meeting is taking place at all is an indicator of Iran's growing influence. Saudi king meets Iranian leader

Watch BBC video: Iranian leader makes Saudi visit

Mark Alexander

Friday, March 02, 2007

Wafa Sultan: Terrorism and Islam



Mark Alexander
Bill O’Reilly: 75% of all world violence comes from Muslims

Although this video clip is a few months old now, it is well worth watching.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached". - the erudite Byzantine emperor Manuel II Paleologus



Mark Alexander
Mein Kampf: A film of devastation and brutality born out of one man’s megalomania and egregious anti-Semitism

It’s worth remembering that a megalomaniac can be a living person or a person who has long expired. The danger comes when the megalomaniac’s ideas, whether current or from the ancient world, take hold in the minds of the people. Lest we forget, the horrors shown in these videos took place little more than sixty years ago!

These videos are not in any way uplifting; indeed, they are anything but. I bring them to you today because the modern world seems to be drifting in the same direction that the world drifted in in the 1930’s. As we all know, that was a period in history characterized by anti-Semitism and the determination of one man, Adolf Hitler, to dominate the world. Don’t you think, ladies and gentlemen, that this has a rather familiar ring to it today?

We should NEVER forget the lessons of history. This is why I bring you these videos today, courtesy, of course, of YOU TUBE. Many of you will have seen similar film clips before in television documentaries. We cannot see such movie clips enough, however, for we must never ever forget the heinous crimes and brutalities which can ensue from a radical, extremely dangerous and ridiculous ideology.

Once we abandon the idea of ’living and letting live’, then humanity finds itself in deep trouble! - Mark

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Part 2:



Part 3:



Part 4:



Mark Alexander
Glenn Beck: America is Europe’s Greatest Hope



Mark Alexander
Apparent confusion at the Vatican over the identity of the Antichrist

An arch-conservative cardinal chosen by Pope Benedict XVI to deliver this year’s Lenten meditations to the Vatican hierarchy has caused consternation by warning of an Antichrist who is “a pacifist, ecologist and ecumenist.”

Cardinal Giacomo Biffi, 78, who retired as Archbishop of Bologna just over three years ago, quoted Vladimir Solovyov (1853-1900), the Russian philosopher and mystic, as predicting that the Antichrist “will convoke an ecumenical council and seek the consensus of all the Christian confessions”.

The “masses” would follow the Antichrist, “with the exception of small groups of Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants” who would fight to prevent the watering down and ultimate destruction of the faith.

The Pope traditionally withdraws from public view during the first week of Lent, conducting “Spiritual Exercises” in retreat with close advisers in the Redemptoris Chapel in the Vatican. He cancels all engagements, instead listening to “meditations” by a keynote speaker.

The choice of Cardinal Biffi raised eyebrows in the Vatican, given the cardinal’s forthright and sometimes eccentric views. The cardinal warned of the coming of the Antichrist during his two decades as Archbishop of Bologna, and said an “invasion” of Muslim immigrants was undermining Europe’s Christian values. Cardinal’s ‘Antichrist’ warnings raise eyebrows by Richard Owen

Mark Alexander
Egyptian blogger jailed

“For as long as Islam exists on this planet all your efforts to end wars and disputes and upheavals will fail because Islam’s dirty finger will be found behind every catastrophic event to humanity.” – Abdelkareem Nabil Soliman


Mark Alexander
Egypt: Christian Exodus from Muslims Lands



Mark Alexander

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Monday, February 26, 2007

"Now They Call Me Infidel." Ex-Muslim Christian Nonie [Darwish] Speaks Out



Buy Nonie Darwish's book, 'Now They Call Me Infidel', here

Mark Alexander
Terrorist incident in Saudi Arabia

Three French nationals have been shot dead in Saudi Arabia, the Saudi and French governments say.

Saudi sources told the BBC that police were treating the incident as a "terrorist attack".

The shooting happened near the ruins of Madain Saleh, in north-western Saudi Arabia, which is popular with tourists.

Saudi TV said the victims were part of a group of French nationals, some of whom were Muslims heading to the holy city of Mecca on a pilgrimage.

Major General Mansour al-Turki, an interior ministry spokesman, said two men were killed instantly as they rested at the side of the road and came under fire from gunmen.

Another died later in hospital and a fourth was in serious condition, he said.

Some women and children were also part of the group, but were not hurt, he added.

A French diplomatic source, quoted by the French news agency AFP, said an unknown number of attackers "machine-gunned them while they got out [of their vehicle] to go for a walk". French killed in Saudi shooting

Watch BBC video: French dead in Saudi shooting

Mark Alexander
William Rees Mogg! You’re wrong! What al-Qaeda preaches IS Islam!

”We certainly cannot say that all religious influences are benign; al-Qaeda is a religious cult, but a perverted one.” – William Rees Mogg

From the earliest days Christianity has been opposed to slavery. In his Letter to the Galatians, St Paul wrote: “As many of you that have been baptised in Christ, have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek: there is neither bond nor free: there is neither male nor female. We were all one in Jesus Christ.” Undoubtedly Christians have compromised with slavery — as with other social evils — in the course of history, but the orthodox Christian doctrine is one of liberty and equality.

The Christian belief was the inspiration in William Wilberforce’s long campaign to end the slave trade. His Bill received the Royal Assent on March 25, 1807, 200 years ago. That was the most important of all the great reforms of the 19th century; essentially it was a Christian reform, inspired by the Protestant conversion of Wilberforce himself. March 25 was the old New Year’s Day; it is also the feast of the Annunciation of Mary, the Mother of Jesus.

We live in an age when modernists regard religion with something approaching panic. It is like the Devil’s attitude to Holy Water. There was a comic example of Christianophobia in The Sunday Times yesterday. Michael Portillo, who used himself to be seen in Brompton Oratory, was hyperventilating at the idea of David Cameron going to church. “I worry,” he wrote, “because men of power who take instruction from unseen forces are essentially fanatics . . . I would be more reassured to hear that the Tory leader goes to church because that is what it takes to get a child into the best of state schools, not because he is a believer.”

Perhaps this neurotic response to Mr Cameron’s habit of going to church reflects Mr Portillo’s recognition that religion is again becoming an important influence on society. Many of the current news stories show that religion is back in public consciousness; for those who feel uneasy about religion, that is unwelcome.

Islam is, of course, the alarming religious issue that will not go away. In the 20th century the world failed to adjust to two major belief systems, nationalism and Marxism. Now we face a similar global challenge from Islam, which opposes Judaism in Israel, Hinduism in India, Buddhism in South East Asia, Christianity in Europe and America and modernism in the whole advanced world. We certainly cannot say that all religious influences are benign; al-Qaeda is a religious cult, but a perverted one. Religion isn’t the sickness. It’s the cure by William Rees Mogg

Mark Alexander

Friday, February 23, 2007

Virgil Goode in Congress on the Surge Resolution and Muslims

With thanks to Always On Watch for drawing this powerful video to my attention:



Mark Alexander
”Fears grow over Iran”

THE TIMES: Tony Blair has declared himself at odds with hawks in the US Administration by saying publicly for the first time that it would be wrong to take military action against Iran. The Prime Minister’s comments came hours before the UN’s nuclear watchdog raised the stakes in the West’s showdown with Tehran.

The International Atomic Energy Agency concluded that Iran had expanded its nuclear programme, defying UN demands for it to be suspended. Hundreds of uranium-spinning centrifuges in an underground hall are expected to be increased to thousands by May when Iran moves to “industrial-scale production”. Senior British government sources have told The Times that they fear President Bush will seek to “settle the Iranian question through military means” next year, before the end of his second term if he concludes that diplomacy has failed. “He will not want to leave it unresolved for his successor,” said one.

But there are deep fissures within the US Administration. Robert Gates, the Defence Secretary, who has previously called for direct talks with Tehran, is said to be totally opposed to military action.

Although he has dispatched a second US aircraft carrier to the Gulf, he is understood to believe that airstrikes would inflame Iranian public opinion and hamper American efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan. One senior adviser to Mr Gates has even stated privately that military action could lead to Congress impeaching Mr Bush. "Blair opens-up US divide over Iran military action"

Mark Alexander
Truth about islam from an ex-muslim lady, Wafa Sultan

I present you, my visitors, with this video for the second time. I do so simply because it is so powerful. It is so powerful because it comes from an ex-Muslimah. Although the video is in Arabic, there are sub-titles.



Mark Alexander

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Islam starts to make an impact on Alaska

ANCHORAGE DAILY NEWS: ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - A 1998 newspaper story about two Muslim children mistakenly buried on top of each other in Palmer left Ake Dobrova weak with outrage.

One of the children had to be exhumed and reburied, a violation of Muslim beliefs. The cemetery mix-up caused anguish all around.
"I was feeling so bad about it," said Dobrova, a small-business owner from Albania. "What kind of people are we (that) we don't have no cemetery?"

That year, he decided to make a cemetery himself. This year, what he started has become the first official Muslim resting place in Alaska.

Islamic teaching, or "sunnah," is strict and specific about the treatment of the dead. A body must be washed by the family, prayed over by the men, wrapped in a shroud and laid in the ground facing Mecca. Burial must occur quickly after death, and the grave must be located near those of other Muslims. . First Muslim Cemetery Opens in Alaska

Mark Alexander
Islam in Britain: A Candid Viewpoint

The conviction this week of a Muslim radical for inciting racial hatred once again highlights the growing threat posed by the pernicious fringe of Islamism. We have only ourselves to blame, says Ruth Dudley Edwards

'UK you will pay, Islam is on its way," is the chilling slogan favoured by Muslim radical Abdul Saleem, who was convicted this week of stirring up racial hatred at a rally in London last year. Addressing the crowd in Belgravia Square, near the Spanish and German embassies, Saleem was filmed saying: "There will come a time when we will stand inside these embassies. There will come a time when we will remove that flag. There will come a time when we will raise the flag of Islam – whether you like it or not, Islam is superior and cannot be surpassed."

His defence should have pointed out that he was merely stating the obvious. He and his kind believe that through intimidation, conversion and out-breeding, the United Kingdom – and the world over – can be brought under Sharia law.

I take Islam – a religion which, at its best, greatly improves the lives of its adherents – and Islamism – its pernicious fringe – very seriously. The Qur'an is beside my bed, along with Bruce Lawrence's The Qur'an: A Biography; I've just finished Karen Armstrong's hagiographical Muhammad and its antithesis, Robert Spencer's The Truth About Muhammad; I try vainly to persuade visitors to watch my DVD of Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West; Michael Gove should pay me commission for having persuaded so many people to buy his Celsius 7/7; I've just ordered Nick Cohen's What's Left?: How Liberals Lost Their Way to join the pile of Islam-related books on my to-read pile, which I have little time to address because, in addition to working for a living, I spend at least two or three hours a day reading about Islamic matters or talking to similarly obsessed friends and colleagues at speeches and seminars.

There is much in my personal and working life that, early on, put me in the camp of those who believe Islamism is a totalitarian threat that could destroy our civilisation within a few decades with the help of the West-loathing Left, the wimpish Right, the political and diplomatic wishful thinkers, the massed ranks of risk-averse politically correct bien-pensants and the cowards who want to avoid confrontation at all costs – not to speak of the innumerable peaceable British Muslims who allow bullies and bigots to represent them in the media and who buy into the comfort blanket of victimhood.

I grew up in the Republic of Ireland under an authoritarian religion that bossed about submissive governments; as a British public servant, I saw the damage done by pusillanimous jobsworths; as an historian of the 1930s, I learnt how the wishful thinking of the deluded intelligentsia helped Hitler and Stalin; researching a book on the Foreign Office I came to understand the limitations of a diplomacy that believes the best of everyone; and fascination with the wilder shores of Irish republicanism that I encountered at my mad granny's knee led me subsequently – as a journalist and campaigner – to spend many years in intellectual combat with militant Irish republicanism, struggling, with some success, to understand the terrorist mind.

And then there is academia, which I know well: my new crime novel centres on the degradation of the humanities by politically correct moral relativists who collude with those who seek to destroy a dangerously apologetic civilisation. As for the media, for which I write, they have become so terrified of offending Muslims and making Islamists cross that they refused to do their job as reporters of news and publish the series of cartoons mocking the prophet Mohammed that appeared in a Danish newspaper and which led to Danish citizens being threatened and their country's goods boycotted.

Not only did British newspaper proprietors and editors think freedom of speech not worth fighting for, but Jack Straw, then our Foreign Secretary, condemned as "disrespectful" those European newspapers honourable enough to print the cartoons.

The Ireland from which I fled in 1965 taught me how a powerful religion can get its way by bullying and frightening politicians and influencing a susceptible electorate. Still, it would be unfair to compare the Irish version of Rome Rule with what Islamists wish to impose on us: even our most reactionary bishops were educated; the Enlightenment had not passed them by. Islamists would burn our books, indoctrinate our children into thinking like seventh-century nomads and outlaw joy. "An Islamic regime must be serious in every field," explained Ayatollah Khomeini. "There are no jokes in Islam. There is no humour in Islam. There is no fun in Islam." Roman Catholics might believe in an after-life but they do not yearn to get there: IRA terrorists – even the hunger-strikers – hoped to live. The Islamist brainwashing of the vulnerable – combined with what Bernard Lewis, author of The Crisis of Islam, describes as "the minutely described delights of paradise" – has given us the suicide bombers. Sleepwalking with the enemy by Ruth Dudley Edwards

Mark Alexander
South African radio station set up to promote peace between Palestinians and Israelis

A new English-language FM radio station intended to promote Israeli-Palestinian dialogue has joined the crowded airwaves in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

RAM FM, operating from Ramallah in the West Bank, is backed by a South African media group previously involved in setting up a similar station before the end of the apartheid era in the 1980s to promote inter-racial harmony.

The station, an independent commercial venture, is to broadcast a mix of 20 news bulletins a day, chat shows, entertainment and pop music.

"Being from South Africa, where independence and freedom of speech were hard-won victories, we understand these things better than others... we are committed to getting both sides of the story," RAM FM news director Andrew Bolton said. Radio dialogue opens in Ramallah by Peter Feuilherade

Mark Alexander