Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Gay Priests Ice Cream Adverts Banned

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: An ice cream company has been banned from using an advert showing two gay priests about to kiss, just a month after being ordered to withdraw a campaign featuring a pregnant nun.

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The ASA ruled that the ad must not appear again and told Antonio Federici to ensure future ads were not likely to cause serious or widespread offence. Photo: The Daily Telegraph

The latest Antonio Federici ad, which appeared in Look magazine, showed two priests in full robes eating from a tub of ice cream ''in a seductive pose as if they were about to kiss passionately'', the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) said.

Accompanying text read: ''We Believe in Salivation''.

Defending the advert, the company said it did not mock Catholicism but ''reflected the grave troubles they considered affected the Catholic Church''.

Antonio Federici was a Catholic company, but would continue to produce advertising that challenged the Catholic Church while it believed it remained troubled, it added. >>> | Tuesday, October 27, 2010
Study: Smoking Ups Alzheimer's Risk

Prince Philip and the Sheikha

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MAIL ONLINE: He is a mere eight months shy of his 90th birthday. But when it comes to the art of flirting, there is little doubt Prince Philip can still put a younger man to shame.

The Duke of Edinburgh enjoyed a playful exchange with the statuesque wife of the Emir of Qatar during her state visit to Windsor Castle.

Glancing at a collection of memorabilia from a trip to the Arab state in 1979, the Duke said to his glamorous guest: ‘It’s quite a long time ago. You weren’t born then, were you?’

Sheikha Mozah bint Nasser Al-Missned, who was in fact born in 1959, answered with a coy smile: ‘Yes, I wasn’t born.’

The Duke also appeared to pay her curvaceous figure an admiring glance as she entered a state banquet with her husband. Philip, you old flirt! The Duke turns into Prince Charming as he meets the statuesque first lady of Qatar >>> Fay Schlesinger | Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Mikhail Gorbachev: Victory in Afghanistan Is 'Impossible'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Mikhail Gorbachev, the former leader of the Soviet Union, has warned that Afghanistan risks turning into another Vietnam, telling Nato that victory is impossible.

Mr Gorbachev, who pulled Russian troops out of Afghanistan in 1989 after a 10-year war, said the US had no alternative but to withdraw troops.

"Victory is impossible in Afghanistan. [Barack] Obama is right to pull the troops out. No matter how difficult it will be," he told the BBC.

Mr Gorbachev added that as the Soviets prepared to withdraw from Afghanistan, the US was training militants, "the same ones who today are terrorising Afghanistan and more and more of Pakistan".

He said that because of this, withdrawal would be more difficult.

"But what's the alternative - another Vietnam? Sending in half-a-million troops? That wouldn't work." Read on and comment >>> | Wednesday, October 27, 2010
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Changing values: Camilla Leyland, 32, pictured in Western and Muslim dress, converted to Islam in her mid-20s for 'intellectual and feminist reasons'. Photographs: Mail Online

Why ARE So Many Modern British Career Women Converting to Islam?

MAIL ONLINE: Tony Blair’s sister-in-law announced her conversion to Islam last weekend. Journalist Lauren Booth embraced the faith after what she describes as a ‘holy experience’ in Iran.

She is just one of a growing number of modern British career women to do so. Here, writer EVE AHMED, who was raised as a Muslim before rejecting the faith, explores the reasons why.


Much of my childhood was spent trying to escape ­Islam.

Born in London to an English mother and a ­Pakistani Muslim father, I was brought up to follow my father’s faith without question.

But, privately, I hated it. The minute I left home for university at the age of 18, I abandoned it altogether.

As far as I was concerned, being a Muslim meant hearing the word ‘No’ over and over again.

Girls from my background were barred from so many of the things my English friends took for granted. Indeed, it seemed to me that almost anything fun was haram, or forbidden, to girls like me.

There were so many random, petty rules. No whistling. No chewing of gum. No riding bikes. No watching Top Of The Pops. No wearing make-up or clothes which revealed the shape of the body.

No eating in the street or putting my hands in my pockets. No cutting my hair or painting my nails. No asking questions or answering back. No keeping dogs as pets, (they were unclean).

And, of course, no sitting next to men, shaking their hands or even making eye contact with them.

These ground rules were imposed by my father and I, therefore, assumed they must be an integral part of being a good Muslim.

Small wonder, then, that as soon as I was old enough to exert my independence, I rejected the whole package and turned my back on Islam. After all, what modern, liberated British woman would choose to live such a life?

Well, quite a lot, it turns out, including Islam’s latest surprise convert, Tony Blair’s sister-in-law Lauren Booth. And after my own break with my past, I’ve followed with fascination the growing trend of Western women choosing to convert to Islam.

Broadcaster and journalist Booth, 43, says she now wears a hijab head covering whenever she leaves home, prays five times a day and visits her local mosque ‘when I can’.

She decided to become a Muslim six weeks ago after visiting the shrine of Fatima al-Masumeh in the city of Qom, and says: ‘It was a Tuesday evening, and I sat down and felt this shot of spiritual morphine, just absolute bliss and joy.’

Before her awakening in Iran, she had been ‘sympathetic’ to Islam and has spent considerable time working in Palestine. ‘I was always impressed with the strength and comfort it gave,’ she says.

How, I wondered, could women be drawn to a religion which I felt had kept me in such a lowly, submissive place? How could their experiences of Islam be so very different to mine?

According to Kevin Brice from ­Swansea University, who has specialised in studying white conversion to Islam, these women are part of an intriguing trend.

He explains: ‘They seek spirituality, a higher meaning, and tend to be deep thinkers. The other type of women who turn to Islam are what I call “converts of convenience”. They’ll assume the trappings of the religion to please their Muslim husband and his family, but won’t necessarily attend mosque, pray or fast.’

I spoke to a diverse selection of white Western converts in a bid to re-examine the faith I had rejected. Continue reading and comment >>> Daily Mail Reporter | Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Without wishing to oversimplify the phenomenon, I have noticed the following: The people who have converted to Islam are very often people who have led louche lives in the past: they have slept around, drunk too much, and had loose morals. Furthermore, they often came from broken homes, and certainly from homes in which there were few ground rules. They have often not been raised to have Christian values, or values from another faith; and they often come from households in which anything goes. People don't like living without any ground rules. It makes them feel like flags in the wind, this time blowing this way, another time blowing that way. They are offered no certainties. Islam steps in here to fill the void, to provide the certainties they lack but so desire. – © Mark

Airport Security Checks Are Completely Redundant, BA Chairman Says

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Passengers are needlessly removing their shoes and having their laptops inspected due to pointless security checks at airports, the chairman of British Airways has claimed.

Martin Broughton criticised “redundant” airport checks and said Britain should stop “kowtowing” to American demands for increased security.

He told the annual conference of the UK Airport Operators Association in London that many of the security checks should be scrapped.

Mr Broughton added that there was no need to “kowtow to the Americans every time they wanted something done” to bolster security on flights bound for the United States.

In a speech he said: “America does not do internally a lot of the things they demand that we do. We shouldn’t stand for that. We should say, 'we’ll only do things which we consider to be essential and that you Americans also consider essential’.” Read on and comment >>> Peter Hutchison | Wednesday, October 27, 2010

It would simplify things if Muslims were drawn aside and strip-searched. Muslims are the ones that caused all this mayhem; so Muslims are the ones who should pay the price of inconvenience. The fact that we, in this politically correct and mad world, are incapable of stiffening our spines to profile is pathetic.

We need to identify the cause of our problems, and then act accordingly. And no, please don't should racist. This isn't racist, it's just plain, good old-fashioned common sense. In any case, Muslims are not a race. In race, they are diverse; but in objective, they are pretty much united and one: their objective is to Islamize the world. And that's where the problem starts.
– © Mark


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Interest Rates Set to Rise as Economy Recovers

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Interest rates will start to rise sooner than expected after official figures showed the economy growing at its fastest rate for a decade, economists have said.

Growth over the past six months reached 2 per cent, the fastest pace of expansion over two consecutive quarters since 2000, according to the Office for National Statistics.

The economy received a further significant boost when Standard & Poor's, the ratings agency, revised its outlook on Britain from negative to stable and confirmed the country's AAA credit rating[.] >>> Andrew Porter and Philip Aldrick | Tuesday, October 26, 2010

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Greece reignites Europe debt woes: Europe's debt woes have returned to the fore after Greek premier George Papandreou threw open the door to fresh elections and vowed to liberate the nation from "slavery and surveillance". >>> Ambrose Evans-Pritchard | Tuesday, October 26, 2010

We have remarkable recessions and depressions these days. They used to last for years. Now, if we listen to the so-called specialists, they last for a mere few months! It seems like only yesterday that the UK economy was in danger of losing its AAA credit-rating. Now, its superb credit-rating is not in any doubt. Hmm! What is going on here? Surely Osborne's economic remedies cannot have kicked in yet. They have barely been announced. Methinks the people are being manipulated; methinks they are trying to pull the wool over our eyes. Hype it up, why don't you? – © Mark

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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Queen Accepts Helping Hand from Emir of Qatar

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Queen accepted a helping hand from the Emir of Qatar after welcoming him to Windsor Castle at the start of a three-day state visit intended to cement Britain’s trade links with the Gulf state.

After watching a march past of Household Cavalry and Royal Horse Artillery soldiers, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al Thani guided the Queen down a short flight of steps from a dais.

The Emir, who flew to London with his consort, Sheikha Mozah bint Nasser Al-Missned, one of his three wives, will also meet David Cameron in Downing Street as part of the Government’s drive to strengthen trade with Qatar and other Gulf emirates.

Qatar, a British protectorate until 1971, is a key energy supplier to the UK, and is eventually expected to provide up to one fifth of the country’s gas supply in the form of liquefied natural gas, which is shipped to a terminal in Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire.

It is also a major investor in the UK, with high-profile assets including the Harrods department store in London, which the Qatari Royal family bought in May for £1.5billion. >>> Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter | Tuesday, October 26, 2010
California Governor Contender Meg Whitman Hit by Voter Backlash Over Money

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Meg Whitman, the Republican candidate for Governor of California, is facing a voter backlash over the record amount of money she has invested in her campaign.

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Former EBay Inc Chief Executive and California Republican candidate for Governor Meg Whitman. Photo: The Daily Telegraph

Rich bitch displeases US voters >>>
Bundespräsident Wulff und Islam

George Osborne's Recovery Plans Receive Double Boost as UK Rating Upgraded

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: George Osborne's recovery plans have received a welcome boost with better than expected third quarter growth figures and a crucial upgrade in the rating of the UK economy.



Gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.8 per cent between July and September - less than the 1.2 per cent surge in the previous three months, but double the growth predicted by most economists.

Growth over the past six months has now hit 2 per cent, which is the fastest pace of expansion seen over two consecutive quarters for 10 years.

The data eases fears of a double dip recession and will reinforce government hopes that the private sector will pick up the slack created in the economy by mammoth public spending cuts.

Ratings agency Standard & Poor's added to the cheer by revising its outlook on the UK to stable from negative and confirming the UK's AAA rating. >>> | Tuesday, October 26, 2010

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Banks should be broken up, Bank of England Governor Mervyn King warns: Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England, has thrown his weight behind breaking up the banks as part of wider reforms to protect the taxpayer from another financial industry meltdown. >>> Philip Aldrick, Economics Editor | Monday, October 25, 2010
Janet Daley: US Liberal Media Stamps on Free Expression

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH – BLOGS – JANET DALEY: In New York last week everybody – and I mean everybody, not just the self-obsessed media crowd – was talking about the sacking of Juan Williams by National Public Radio. The significance of this saga seemed to encapsulate all the major points of contention in the political commentary wars which have become such a feature of American public life.

Mr Williams is an engaging, black liberal broadcaster who has been a pillar of NPR’s left-of-centre journalist tradition. In addition to the day job, he appeared regularly as a panellist on Fox News discussions, representing the left-liberal opposition to the channel’s more rightwing commentators. It is widely suspected that this established connection with Fox had something to do with the bizarre vindictiveness with which he was summarily dismissed by his bosses at NPR. Officially, Mr Williams’s sacking offence was to have declared (on a Fox News programme, as it happened) that he felt uneasy when he entered an airplane and encountered Muslims in tradtional religious dress.

That was it. He did not expand this comment into an anti-Islamic diatribe or make any hostile remarks about Muslims or their religious beliefs. But NPR felt that this was sufficient cause for terminating his employment (of many years’ standing) without further notice. Whereupon, virtually every sentient being of every political persuasion from Whoopi Goldberg on the left to Bill O’Reilly on the right, condemned NPR – whose knowledge of the constitutional right to free speech seemed surprisingly inadequate considering that it is exists by virtue of government subsidy - and Fox News immediately offered him a contract worth a reported $2 million. Read on and comment >>> Janet Daley | Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Related >>>
EU Plans for Direct Tax Would Lead to British Referendum

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The European Union's plans to levy direct taxes on Britons and those in other member countries would amount to a "transfer of sovereignty" that would force the Coalition Government to hold a Europe referendum.

Janusz Lewandowski, the European budget commissioner, has told The Daily Telegraph that his recent proposals to finance the EU through VAT, carbon, aviation or financial transaction taxes would touch on "holy" elements of national sovereignty.

So sensitive is the plan, tabled last week, to move from payments made by national treasuries to giving the EU "own resources" through direct European taxation, that it would have to be "ratified" in every country, the commissioner admitted.

"It needs ratification because it is prerogative of a national state to set its own taxes. No taxation without representation – it must be ratified," said the commissioner. "This is a sacred prerogative of national parliaments."

Under the Coalition Government's promised "referendum lock" any transfer of powers, such as tax raising powers, from Westminster to Brussels would be subject to a popular vote by Britons at a time when public hostility to the EU is growing. >>> Bruno Waterfield in Brussels | Monday, October 25, 2010
Tariq Aziz Sentenced to Death

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Tariq Aziz, Saddam Hussein's former deputy prime minister, has been sentenced to death, according to Iraqi state television.

In the first such sentence handed down against the longtime international face of the Saddam regime, the report said: "The supreme criminal court issued an execution order against Tariq Aziz for his role in eliminating religious parties".

It said that the court also ordered death sentences against two other top Saddam lieutenants, Saadoun Shaker, the former Iraq interior minister, and Abid Hamoud, the executed dictator's secretary.

All three were sentenced for their roles in a crackdown on members of Iraq's Shiite majority community that followed a 1991 uprising against Saddam.

By law, the sentences have to be confirmed by the presidential council before being carried out. >>> | Tuesday, October 26, 2010

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Vatican calls for clemency for Tareq Aziz: The Vatican on Tuesday urged clemency for Iraq's former deputy premier Tareq Aziz, after a court sentenced him to death for murder and crimes against humanity. >>> | Wednesday, October 27, 2010

RADIO VATIKAN: Vatikan: „Todesstrafe an Aziz nicht vollziehen“ : Der Vatikan ruft den den Irak dazu auf, den früheren Außenminister des Saddam-Regimes Tarek Aziz nicht hinzurichten. „Die Haltung der Kirche zur Todesstrafe ist bekannt“, erklärte Vatikansprecher Federico Lombardi am Montag Abend – kurz nachdem Aziz von einem irakischen Sondertribunal zum Tod durch den Strang verurteilt worden war. Der Jesuit wörtlich: „Wir hoffen wirklich, dass das Urteil nicht vollstreckt wird“: Eine solche Geste könne „Versöhnung und Wiederaufbau“ im Irak nach all den „großen Leiden“ fördern. >>> (rv 27.10.2010 sk) | Mittwoch, 27. Oktober 2010
Police Trained by SAS to Prepare for Mumbai-style Attacks

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Police are being trained by the SAS and armed with more powerful weapons to prepare for a possible Mumbai-style terror attack in the UK.

Security chiefs are staging a series of counter-terrorism exercises with police sharpshooters training alongside special forces units, the BBC said.

The development follows the interception last month by British intelligence officials of a credible al-Qaeda-linked plot.

That would have reportedly been similar to the deadly commando-style raids in Mumbai, India, two years ago, which left 166 people dead and several hundred injured.

Cities in France and Germany were also targeted as part of the plot. >>> | Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Guide for Homosexual Fathers Launched

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A guide for gay fathers has been launched, offering advice on adoption, fostering and surrogacy to gay couples who want to become parents.

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The book gives practical tips on how to become a father as well as facts about sperm donation and co-parenting. Photo: The Daily Telegraph

The Guide For Gay Dads is written by gay equality charity Stonewall which said "there's never been a better time for gay men to start a family".

The book, which is sponsored by the London Sperm Bank, gives practical tips on how to become a father as well as facts about sperm donation and co-parenting.

It also spells out legal changes affecting gay couples and contains a glossary of key terms in parenting.

Ben Summerskill, chief executive of Stonewall, said: "There's never been a better time for gay men to start a family in Britain. The law is now on their side. >>> | Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Monday, October 25, 2010

Democratic Hopeful Tells Obama to 'Shove It'

THE TELEGRAPH: The Democratic candidate for governor in Rhode Island said on Monday that President Barack Obama can "shove it" for withholding his endorsement in elections just eight days away.

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Frank Caprio is the Democratic candidate for governor in Rhode Island. Photo: The Daily Telegraph

"He can take his endorsement and really shove it, as far as I'm concerned," Frank Caprio told local WPRO-AM radio, even as Mr Obama was due to visit the small east coast state for two Democratic party fund-raisers and a visit to a factory.

Mr Caprio was running against Republican John Robitaille as well as former Republican Lincoln Chafee, an independent who backed Mr Obama's 2008 presidential bid, in the November 2 ballot.

"I've never asked President Obama for his endorsement. And what's going on here is really Washington insider politics at its worst," complained Mr Caprio.

"What I'm saying to President Obama very clearly is, I'll wear as a badge of honour and a badge of courage that he doesn't want to endorse me as a Democrat, because I am a different kind of Democrat," he told the station. >>> | Monday, October 25, 2010
American Newspaper Refused to Publish Gay Wedding Announcements

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: A newspaper in New Hampshire has come under fire for refusing to print wedding announce-ments for homosexual couples, despite same-sex marriage being legal in the US state.

The [sic] Union Leader, New Hampshire's largest newspaper, declined to publish a notice of the marriage of two men in Portsmouth on Saturday.

New Hampshire is one of five US states to have legalised homosexual marriage.

It became legal on January 1, two years after civil partnerships were allowed.

Joseph McQuaid, the publisher of the Manchester-based newspaper, said that it was not "anti-gay", but its stance was that marriage should only be between a man and a woman.

"While the law sanctions gay marriage, it neither demands that churches perform them or that our First Amendment right to choose what we print be suspended," Mr McQuaid said in a statement. >>> Jon Swaine, New York | Sunday, October 24, 2010

["This newspaper has never published wedding or engagement announcements from homosexual couples. It would be hypocritical of us to do so, given our belief that marriage is and needs to remain a social and civil structure between men and women, and our opposition to the recent state law legalizing gay marriage.

That law was not subject to public referendum and the governor (John Lynch) who signed it was elected after telling voters that he was opposed to gay marriage. Indeed, in no state where the public has been allowed a direct vote on the subject has gay marriage prevailed.

We are not "anti-gay." We are for marriage remaining the important man-woman institution it has always been.

While the law sanctions gay marriage, it neither demands that churches perform them or that our First Amendment right to choose what we print be suspended. In accordance with that right, we continue our longstanding policy of printing letters to the editor from New Hampshire citizens, whether or not they agree with us."

-Joseph W. McQuaid Publisher
Source]
Michael Bublé - Crazy Love Album Trailer


Nicolas Sarkozy Most Unpopular French President in More Than 50 Years

THE TELEGRAPH: Nicolas Sarkozy has become the most unpopular French president in more than 50 years, according to a new poll.

As his country teetered on the brink of economic chaos because of strikes, blockades and riots, new polls put his approval rating at less than 30 per cent.

The figures made Mr Sarkozy even less popular than President Charles de Gaulle was in 1968 - the year millions took to the streets to demand a complete overhaul of French society.

The then ageing wartime leader fled France and prepared to call in the army to deal with rioters.

But while De Gaulle resigned in 1969, Mr Sarkozy shows no sign of quitting despite his new pension bill raising the retirement age from 60 to 62 being met with nationwide protests.

It came as thousands of British half term holidaymakers faced fuel shortages, 9,000 tons of rubbish lay uncollected in Marseilles, and the government estimated the cost of strikes at more than £350 million a day. >>> Peter Allen in Paris | Monday, October 25, 2010