Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Blair’s New Labour Government Guilty of ”Administrative and Constitutional Vandalism”, says Norman Tebbit

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Photo of Norman Tebbit courtesy of Google Images (UK)
WESTERN MAIL: CONSERVATIVE grandee Lord Tebbit yesterday took a swipe at David Cameron’s leadership of the party, accusing him of rebranding the Tories as “the party to implement New Labour policies more effectively”.

The comment from Margaret Thatcher’s former party chairman came in a speech in which he launched a ferocious broadside at Tony Blair’s Government for its administration of Britain.

“Administrative and constitutional vandalism” by the New Labour Government had cost Britain its historic freedoms, while bringing in a raft of oppressive state powers over the individual, he said. Tebbit slams constitutional vandalism (more)

Mark Alexander
Disappearing Human Rights

BBC: Powerful governments and armed groups have been deliberately fomenting fear to erode human rights worldwide, a report by Amnesty International says. Human rights ‘eroded worldwide’ (more)
SPIEGELONLINE: Amnesty International prangert an: Immer mehr Regierungen nutzen gezielt die Furcht vor Terror als Vorwand für die Einschränkung von Menschenrechten. Schwere Vorwürfe erhob die Generalsekretärin von Amnesty Deutschland, Lochbihler, gegen deutsche Geheimdienste. Terrorangst essen Menschenrechte auf (mehr)
Mark Alexander

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Clinton’s oral sex? Bah! C’est la vie!

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: New French President Nicolas Sarkozy wants to revamp his country, but will he manage to get his wife to move into the Élysée Palace with him? At present, the French seem more interested in the private lives of the Sarkozys, and of Socialist candidate Ségolène Royal, than in the big changes coming. France Fascinated by Its New First Couple (more) By Stefan Simons

Mark Alexander
Haleh Esfandiari Formally Charged

BBC: Iran's intelligence ministry has charged a prominent Iranian-American academic with trying to overthrow the country's Islamic system of government.

Haleh Esfandiari, who works for a research institute in Washington, was detained in Tehran earlier this month.

Mrs Esfandiari had gone to Iran in December, but was not able to leave after her passport was stolen.

Her husband has told the BBC that she was only involved in innocent academic activities such as conferences.

The US government described the charges as "silly" and "outrageous" and called for her immediate release. Iran formally charges US scholar (more)

Mark Alexander

Monday, May 21, 2007

Electing a President: The US at a Fork in the Road

EDITORIAL: Never in recent history has it been so critical for American voters to make a wise choice at the polls. Never in recent history has so much rested on one ballot. Americans are going to be faced with a decision of momentous importance in November 2008: Whom to elect to the White House.

It is always important to vote wisely, of course; but it is to be hoped that American voters will pay particular attention when voting the next time. Why? Because so much depends on electing the very best president the US can kick up.

Elections in the West have become an opportunity for media-hype on a grand scale. The MSM love to choose a candidate and run with their choice, all the while paying far too much attention to looks and glitz, and paying far too little attention to what each candidate has to offer, paying far too little attention to the candidates’ experience.

Barack Obama seems to be the darling of the media. He has been likened even unto Jesus Christ Himself! This, of course, is totally absurd. Barack Obama, whatever else he is, is a political greenhorn, an “empty suit”. Can this man really, truly offer the Americans public any form of salvation? Aren’t people just taken in by his so-called charisma?

This is no time to elect a man on charisma alone, nice though charisma is to have. This is a time for Americans to take stock – BIG time. We are witnessing the declining influence of the USA worldwide. The country has become very unpopular since the election of George W Bush. His obsession with trying to bring democracy to a part of the world which is impossible to democratize, his obsession with characterising Islam as a "religion of love and peace”, when it so clearly isn’t, his obsession with all things Christian, when in actual fact he couldn’t have done more to weaken Christendom, his obsession with pandering to the Muslim electorate - all have weakened America beyond anyone’s wildest dreams only ten or so years ago.

The American electorate is given to obsessing about abortion issues, gay rights issues, and all manner of issues which are only marginally important to the continued supremacy of a truly wonderful nation.

9/11 has weakened America. There is no doubt about this fact. Osama bin Laden could not have wished for a better outcome! But there was no need for this to have happened. The war on Islamic terrorism has been handled so badly that one couldn’t have written a believable book of fiction depicting this outcome. Look at what has happened to the States since 9/11! Its standing in the world has gone down and down; the dollar, especially in recent times, has declined in value to a staggering extent; thousands have been killed in a war that should never have been started (democracy and Islam are totally immiscible); thousands of American jobs are going overseas to countries where labour costs are much lower than at home; illegal immigration has soared to breaking point; and the US National Debt is totally out of control. Yet the US continues to give away billions of dollars in aid to countries which it can ill afford to give aid to in the hope of buying influence. Influence, however, is not being bought; rather, the money is being squandered. It’s like throwing it into the four winds!

When the Americans go to the polls in November 2008, they need to think about what is important for their country: they shouldn’t be taken in by personalities.

One of the first things that needs to happen is that the national debt, now standing at the staggering figure of trillions of dollars, be reduced severely. The US needs a good dose of Thatcherism at this time. Remember what she said about government spending. She said that governments don’t have any money to spend; governments, she said, spend only other people’s money, collected in the form of taxes!

So what is going to be important for the American voters is to choose a president who is going to restore US supremacy, restore confidence in the US, reduce its colossal national debt (which has grown exponentially under George W Bush), and the country needs to start working with the rest of the West, not against it. The rest of the West needs a strong America as much as a strong America needs the rest of the West.

Only today, it has been reported that Kuwait has unpegged its dinar to the dollar. This is not a good thing for the US. On the contrary, since the Kuwaiti dinar has been pegged to the US dollar for so long, it shows a complete lack of confidence in the dollar! Don’t be surprised if Saudi Arabia follows suit!

Are we witnessing a United States of America in terminal decline? Don’t forget these facts: Europe is gaining in strength. France may well be about to surprise us all with its ability to renew itself. Yes, it has problems, but at least it has a president, in Sarkozy, with a will and determination to overcome those difficulties and problems (if he can overcome his own). Then we have China and India on the up and up. All these countries pose a long-term threat to the continued hegemony of the USA.

And all this says nothing about the growth of Islam in the US, and the danger that religious group poses for the continued existence of the States as we know it – as a land which is whole and peaceful and free. When the USA is no longer counted as ‘the land of the free’, then all of the free world will be in trouble. The forces at work within the USA to turn the country Islamic should not be underestimated. We have already seen the first Muslim elected to Congress in Keith Ellison. This is no harbinger of good fortune for the United States; on the contrary, it shows that there are great problems ahead for the country.

It is my belief, as much as it hurts me to say it, that America has come to a fork in the road. The one turning will return the US to its former glory, whilst the other will take it down the road to oblivion: it will make the country an irrelevance to the world. It is up to you, the American voter, to choose a president who will lead you and your great country to a place of unparalleled supremacy.

Remember this: The free world needs YOU! And it needs a STRONG AMERICA, too!

©Mark Alexander

All rights reserved

The Dawning of a New Dark Age

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Many thanks go to all people that have reviewed my book in the past. Only a matter of a few days ago, I received this excellentcomment from Norm Ridler, for which I should like to show my deep appreciation.

Mark’s book,’The Dawning of a New Dark Age’, is both forthright and revealing.- Norm Ridler, May 16, 2007

Here are a couple of others I recently received. I would like to thank them, too:

"Mark, I have you to thank for two nights in a row of very little sleep! I have just finished reading your book. Awesome, but very worrying. I have been researching Islam for years now and your book is the latest. I feel that your book is probably the most amazing, and by far the most frank and to-the-point book about this very real and massive problem at hand. From one page to the other I thought about people in my street, my town and my country who are blissfully unaware of the impending peril." - Liberty Lover

“Recently, I took a competitive exam that would enable me to be a candidate for permanent hire. The odds of passing this writing test are around 15%. The vast preponderance of people who pass are people fresh out of college and lawyers. We were told we cannot study for this exam. We were told that either one has the ability or one does not. I refused to accept those myths. I quickly realized that my style would not pass that exam. I went through books of short essays and one book stood out above the rest: Mark Alexander's. His simple, no-frills writing style, his eloquence, worked like a charm! Before the exam, I examined Mark Alexander's sentence style for one hundred hours. Mark's style made the rules of grammar come alive! I have to give credit to Mark Alexander for this. Going into the test, I knew I had to produce a first rate essay, and I did. My boss has noted the drastic improvements in my writing style. He even asked me if I had taken a brush-up course at the local University!” – Beakerkin

Mark Alexander
Australians Urged Not to Pull Out of Iraq

THE AUSTRALIAN: A SENIOR Iraqi Government minister has urged Australia not to "cut and run" from Iraq as the struggle to stabilise the country enters a critical phase.

Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said yesterday his country still faced serious challenges in its fight against insurgents, including al-Qa'ida forces.

"We all see the pressures building up in Washington, in London, in Europe, here, but I think this is not a time to cut and run," he said in Canberra.

"I think this is the time to stand with the people who you helped to liberate and to assist." Don’t pull out, urges Iraqi minister (more)

Mark Alexander
Can the Web Really Be Unspun?

GLOBE AND MAIL: For the past few decades, a huge network infrastructure has provided billions of people with access to information and technology that was inconceivable to earlier generations.

But if the cybergelicals of the 1990s were right about how the Internet would transform everyday life, they were less prophetic about what exactly those transformations would look like. As the number of users and applications has expanded, so have the frustrations and risks of plugging in.

This week, the United States banned soldiers from websites such as YouTube and MySpace – concerned that downloads and social networking could overload military systems and lead to security breaches. Some banks have reverted to snail mail to help customers steer clear of phishers trying to bilk them out of their money.

“Over all, the situation is not getting better, it's getting worse,” says David Clark, a senior researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and one of the early creators of the Internet. Untangling the World Wide Web (more) By Christopher Dreher

GLOBE AND MAIL: Study finds 25 countries censor websites

GLOBE AND MAIL:
YouTube doubtful of Pentagon explanation for blocking sites By Scott Lindlaw

Mark Alexander
Sweeping Changes to US Immigration Proposed

LA TIMES: As the U.S. Senate prepares this week to debate the most sweeping proposed change to the nation's immigration system in more than four decades, Irvine technology executive Bruce Warren and Los Angeles homemaker Monsorat Jaldon symbolize the high stakes looming for millions of families, businesses and workers.

The proposal would shift the way the nation awards green cards from a heavy preference on applicants with family ties — a system adopted in 1965 — to those with advanced skills, college degrees and English-speaking ability. Businesses, families have a lot riding on immigration change (more) By Teresa Watanabe

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR:
To immigrants, US reform bill is unrealistic

Mark Alexander
5% Fall in Value of US Dollar Against the Euro and Pound Sterling So Far This Year; Equivalent to a 20% Decline

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR: NEW YORK - It's like a summer movie: the incredible shrinking dollar.

Since the beginning of the year, the buck has shrunk 5 percent – the equivalent of a 20 percent annual decline – compared with the pound and the euro.

But the shriveling value of the dollar may eventually help solve one of the most intractable US economic problems: the enormous trade deficit, which hit $63.9 billion in March, the highest level since September of last year.

Already, giant European companies are taking advantage of their strong currency by announcing huge investments in the United States. And US exporters such as Boeing and Caterpillar are getting an order boost as the lower-valued dollar allows them to undercut their competition.

"The forces are in place now to slowly over time cause the trade deficit to shrink," says Jay Bryson, a senior international economist for Wachovia Securities Research in Charlotte, N.C.

The change in the dollar's value also comes with ramifications for US consumers. It's now more expensive for Americans to travel abroad. Italian leather, Belgian chocolates, and English cheddar will cost more. In addition, many Americans may find they have a new boss – one who is based overseas or relocating to the States. Dollar buying ever less of the world’s goods (more) By Ron Scherer

Mark Alexander
"Liban: les combats meurtriers se poursuivent"

LE FIGARO: Alors que les affrontements entre l'armée libanaise et des militants extrémistes ont repris ce matin au nord du pays, un attentat a frappé la capitale.

C'est le premier incident du genre à Beyrouth depuis plusieurs mois. Dimanche, peu avant minuit, une Libanaise de 63 ans a été tuée et dix autres personnes blessées par l’explosion d’un engin piégé dans le quartier chrétien d'Achrafié. "Il s'agit d'un attentat terroriste qui vise à faire peur à la population et à déstabiliser la sécurité au Liban", a déclaré un officier de police. "La charge explosive placée dans une voiture garée dans un parking jouxtant un centre commercial pesait environ 40 kg et a provoqué un cratère de 1,5 mètre de profondeur et de 3 mètres de diamètre", a ajouté ce policier. Après Tripoli, la violence gagne Beyrouth (encore)

THE AUSTRALIAN:
Australians urged to avoid Lebanese fighting

BBC:
Lebanon clashes’ kill civilians

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Fresh fighting in Lebanon

Mark Alexander
Islam-Compliant Funds Defy the Odds

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR: The strategy is almost heresy on Wall Street: Find a top-performing investment by seeking out a mutual fund with some of the industry's strictest ethical screening requirements.

Yet that approach, if adopted, would work in at least one case. The Amana Income Fund, which avoids not only alcohol, tobacco, and gambling stocks but also pork producers and lenders who charge interest, received a Lipper award earlier this year for outperforming 180 equity income funds – screened and unscreened – over the past three years.

Amana Funds dominate the relatively small niche of socially responsible investing (SRI) that aims to reflect Islamic law, or sharia. The idea is for an entire portfolio to reflect moral values from the Koran, which deems pork products unclean and regards the charging and paying of interest as immoral endeavors that foster exploitative relationships.

"If Islam forbids it, then we're not going to buy it," says Monem Salam, deputy portfolio manager at Amana Funds. That principle generally "keeps us out of trouble," he says, by requiring the funds to avoid such ticking time bombs as Enron and WorldCom, which imploded in accounting scandals a few years back. Both were too heavily leveraged to pass muster at Amana. A market edge for Muslims (more) By G Jeffrey MacDonald

Mark Alexander
Dubai Ruler Shows the Arab World the Way Forward

GLOBE AND MAIL: AMMAN — The Middle Eastern version of the World Economic Forum held each year in Jordan is known as a talking shop, one that produces little action. But simply talking has never been Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum's style.
The ruler of Dubai and prime minister of the United Arab Emirates left the other delegates at the forum almost speechless when he announced on the weekend that he would spend $10-billion (U.S.) of his own money to improve the level of education in the Arab world.

The announcement was greeted by thunderous applause at the forum being held on the shores of the Dead Sea, and was immediately hailed as the largest charitable donation ever given in the Muslim world.

"Without exaggeration I think this is the greatest thing anyone has done for Arab youth. This money will be well spent to improve human beings," said Abdulaziz al-Namalah, a Jordanian businessman and a participant at the forum. "I think the Arab world would look much different today if this was done many years ago." Dubai ruler donates $10-billion to boost education in Arab world (more) By Mark MacKinnon

Mark Alexander
”Ginger Beer” No ‘Small Beer’ for Clarkson

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Photo of Jeremy Clarkson courtesy of Google Images (UK)
YAHOO NEWS: LONDON (Reuters) - "Top Gear" presenter Jeremy Clarkson was criticised by the media watchdog on Monday for describing a car as "very ginger beer", rhyming slang for "queer".

In a written ruling, Ofcom said the phrase could offend homosexuals and should not have been used. Clarkson rapped for “ginger beer” rhyming slang (more)

Mark Alexander
Kuwaiti Dinar No Longer Pegged to the Sliding US Dollar

FINANCIAL TIMES: Kuwait on Sunday removed its currency peg to the US dollar, throwing plans for a Gulf currency union by 2010 into doubt and raising the prospect that other oil-producing states might abandon long-held dollar pegs.
Sheikh Salem Abdelaziz Al Sabah, governor of the Central Bank of Kuwait, told the official Kuwait news agency that the decision had been made owing to the “detrimental effects of the pegging system to the national economy”.

Since late last year, Kuwaiti officials have hinted that the country would revert to a basket of currencies to prevent the sliding dollar increasing the cost of imports, which has stoked inflation to more than 4 per cent, double the historic average. This has encouraged speculators to plough billions of dollars into the dinar over the past few months, betting that the central bank would allow the dinar to appreciate. Kuwait abandons US dollar peg (more) By Simeon Kerr

KUWAIT TIMES:
Kuwait drops dollar peg

Mark Alexander
Negroponte Warning Over Al-Qaeda Expansion

FINANCIAL TIMES: A top US official has warned of the increasing risks of terrorism and violence in Africa and the Middle East, in a sobering account of the current state of the Bush administration’s “war against terror”.
John Negroponte, deputy US secretary of state, highlighted increased al-Qaeda activity in northern parts of Africa as well as the risk of Iraq violence spreading further across the Middle East.

“I think there’s a concern that al-Qaeda might expand its efforts into the Sahel region [immediately south of the Sahara in Africa]”, he said, citing Chad, Mali and Niger. His comments, in an interview with the Financial Times and other European newspapers, follow a warning from countries such as Morocco that a growing number of terrorist training camps across the Sahel region are drawing in north Africans. Negroponte fears al-Qaeda expansion (more) By Daniel Dombay

Mark Alexander
How Much Is Too Much?

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Image courtesy of Google Images (Germany)
SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: A debate is raging in Istanbul about just how much skin advertising billboards should be allowed to show. The dispute highlights the deep divisions between Muslims and secularists in the country. And it may become an election issue.

The model, wearing a scanty bathing suit, leans back against sun-baked stones, her hip jutting playfully to the side. In one photo she even spreads her legs slightly -- suggestively. In a Europe where photos of half naked models staring alluringly out at passers by are simply part of the cityscape, such a billboard would hardly rate a second glance. But in Turkey, the swimwear ads are far from mainstream, and they have triggered a dispute that offers a taste of just what the upcoming general election campaign might be like. Too much skin on Istanbul boards (more) By Annette Grossbongardt

Mark Alexander
When it Comes to Allocating Council Houses, British Families Should Be Given Priority, Says Margaret Hodge

DAILY MAIL: British families should be given council housing ahead of immigrants, a Labour minister has claimed.
Margaret Hodge risked a race row by warning that it was "unfair" when new arrivals jumped to the top of the queue - leaving no homes for families in Britain for generations.

She said a points system giving weight to length of residence, citizenship and National Insurance contributions would be a better way of allocating homes. Don’t let migrants jump the housing queue, says minister (more) By Ian Drury

Mark Alexander
Österreichische Staatsbürgerschaft immer seltener verliehen

DIE PRESSE: Nach der Verschärfung des Staatsbürgerschafts-Rechts durch die alte Koalition wird die österreichische Staatsbürgerschaft immer seltener verliehen. Im ersten Quartal 2007 wurden um zwei Drittel weniger Personen eingebürgert, als im ersten Quartal 2006. Zahl der Einbürgerungen sinkt weiter stark (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Jalal Talabani: Too Well-Fed By Half

KUWAIT TIMES: BAGHDAD: Tired and battling obesity, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani flew to the United States yesterday for rest and help in tackling his weight problem. Talabani, in his early 70s, left from the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniya in northeastern Iraq for a trip that could take several weeks. His office denied local media reports that Talabani was suffering from any specific illness and said he was in general good health apart from his weight.

It issued a statement quoting the president from a news conference on May 15. "I don't have any health problems except my obesity and I will treat it, God willing," the statement quoted Talabani as saying. "I will go ... to the United States of America to undergo general medical checks to reduce my weight." The former Kurdish rebel leader returned to his office in mid-March after two weeks in a Jordanian hospital, vowing that he was with Iraqis "until the final breath". Overweight Iraqi president heads to US to lose weight(more)

Mark Alexander
Everyone, Regardless of Faith, Will Soon Have to Eat Halal in the UK as Multinationals Target the Untapped Muslim Market

TIMESONLINE: McDonald’s has been testing halal chicken burgers at its diner in Southall, West London. Boots is running a trial of halal baby food in 30 stores. Tesco, which, like other supermarkets, sells meat certified by Islamic organisations at some stores, is looking to include new products, such as ready meals. All are chasing what could be, according to the advertising agency JWT, Britain’s biggest untapped niche market.

A survey commissioned by JWT, believed to be the first of its kind to focus on the needs of two million Muslim consumers in the UK, says that businesses should strive to understand Islam and how the religion influences its followers’ spending habits.

The agency argues that the Muslim market in the UK is certain to grow: it comprises 3 per cent of the population, is Britain’s second-largest faith group and has the youngest age profile. Although Muslims are among the most deprived groups in Britain, collectively they have an estimated spending power of £20.5 billion. There are also more than 5,000 Muslim millionaires holding assets worth at least £3.6 billion. Business is urged to see opportunity in Muslim community (more)

Mark Alexander
Carter “increasingly irrelevant”, says White House

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Photo of Jimmy Carter courtesy of Google Images
BBC: The White House has dismissed former US President Jimmy Carter as "increasingly irrelevant", following his sharp criticism of President George W Bush.

Mr Carter on Saturday said the administration's impact on the world had made it "the worst in history".

A White House spokesman responded by saying that Mr Carter had engaged in "reckless personal criticism". White House hits back at Carter (more)

Mark Alexander

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Demonstrations for Secularism in Turkey Again

BBC: Tens of thousands of Turks have massed in the city of Samsun in the latest demonstration in support of secularism.

The crowds waved national flags and chanted slogans opposing any change to Turkey's secular political model.

The protest in Samsun, a port on the Black Sea, followed huge rallies in Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir. New rally for Turkish secularism (more)

NZZ:
Erneut Grossdemonstration in der Türkei: Kundgebung gegen Islamisierung

Mark Alexander
Italian University Closes Because of Holocaust Denial

BBC: An Italian university has closed down one of its campuses to prevent a planned lecture by a controversial French professor and Holocaust denier.

Robert Faurisson has been convicted five times in France for denying crimes against humanity.

He was due to speak at the University of Teramo in central Italy as part of a Masters course in Middle East studies.

But the university decided to close part of the campus to prevent him addressing students.

It said the "climate of tension" might endanger the safety of its students. University shut in Holocaust row (more)

Mark Alexander
The Rôle of Saudi Women: A Non-Committal Response from a Non-Committal Saudi Princess


Mark Alexander
Wafa Sultan dit la verité sur l’islam



TIME:
Wafa Sultan By Asra Q Nomani

NYT:
For Muslim Who Says Violence Destroys Islam, Violent Threats

WAFA SULTAN.ORG:
Wafa Sultan

MEMRI.ORG:
Arab-American Psychiatrist Wafa Sultan: There is No Clash of Civilizations but a Clash between the Mentality of the Middle Ages and That of the 21st Century

Mark Alexander
Identität zu definieren: Ist es die Rolle des Staates?

DIE PRESSE: Es sei nicht die Rolle des Staates, die Identität zu definieren. Außenminister Kouchner wurde aus der PS ausgeschlossen.

Einen Tag nach der Bekanntgabe der neuen französischen Regierung ist bereits ein Streit um das neue Ministerium für Immigration und nationale Identität entbrannt. Menschenrechtsvereinigungen warnten am Samstag vor einer "Ausländerfeindlichkeit per Gesetz". Aus Protest gegen das neue Ministerium traten acht der zwölf Historiker zurück, die im Komitee des Museums für Immigration saßen.

"Es ist nicht die Rolle eines demokratischen Staates, die Identität zu definieren", erklärten die Historiker. "Die Nennung der beiden Begriffe Immigration und nationale Identität in einem Atemzug ist nicht zu akzeptieren." Frankreich: Streit um Ministerium für Immigration (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Saudi Arabien: Gnade von den Richtern

SPIEGELONLINE: Rettung in buchstäblich letzter Minute wurde einem Todeskandidaten in Saudi-Arabien zuteil. Der Mann sollte enthauptet werden. Als der Henker schon das Schwert zückte, fand der Verurteilte Gnade vor den Richtern. Enthauptung in letzter Minute gestoppt (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Asmaa Stokes Controversy in Denmark with Her Hijab Demands

KUWAIT TIMES: COPENHAGEN: With a headscarf elegantly draped over her hair, Asmaa Abdol-Hamid, a Palestinian-born Dane, has sparked a heated debate in Denmark by declaring that she would wear her veil in parliament if elected in 2009. A member of the ex-communist Unity List, Abdol-Hamid has a good chance of becoming what could be the first veiled Muslim in Europe to be voted into parliament. The 25-year-old social worker and former television host from the Danish city of Odense is known for her commitment to politics and equal rights, as well as her headscarf and her refusal to shake hands with men. But the prospect of a woman in parliament wearing the traditional headscarf, or hijab, has further disrupted sensitibilities in Denmark, a country still shaken by last year's Mohammed cartoons row that swelled from a domestic Danish affair into a worldwide crisis pitting Muslim values against Western ideals. Headscarf controversy rocks Denmark’s election Campaign (more)

Mark Alexander
Enge Beziehung zwischen London und Washington wird unter Druck kommen

SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG: Großbritanniens designierter Premierminister Gordon Brown will Zeitungsangaben zufolge eine Kehrtwende in der Irak-Politik vollziehen und die britischen Soldaten rasch abziehen. Die Position der USA dürfte damit stark geschwächt werden.

US-Präsident George W. Bush sei von Beratern gewarnt worden, dass der Nachfolger von Tony Blair bereit sei, die traditionell besonders engen Beziehungen zwischen London und Washington durch einen baldigen Abzug der bislang noch 7100 britischen Soldaten zu gefährden, berichtete die konservative Zeitung The Sunday Telegraph. Panik im Weißen Haus (mehr)

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH:
Bush gets ready for Iraq U-turn by Brown

Mark Alexander
Tout n’est pas rose pour les gays: “Les gays ont des difficultés à progresser dans une structure hiérarchique traditionnelle…”, souligne Ben Summerskill de Stonewall

LE MONDE: Peu regardante sur l'origine des richesses qu'elle gère à bon escient, la City a toujours été une "vieille dame permissive". En revanche, la première place financière européenne se montre stricte en matière de moeurs, en particulier sur l'homosexualité. Dans la haute finance, le gay n'est pas toujours rose. La mésaventure survenue à Lord Browne, contraint de quitter le 1er mai la direction générale du géant des hydrocarbures BP après la révélation par la presse tabloïde d'une liaison avec un prostitué, souligne la persistance de l'homophobie ordinaire dans la vie britannique des affaires.

Les penchants de M. Browne étaient certes connus du microcosme industriel. La presse présentait le patron de la troisième compagnie pétrolière au monde comme "un célibataire endurci", façon de dire sans le dire qu'il était gay. Mais l'intéressé avait choisi de ne jamais parler de sa vie privée aux médias. S'il avait avoué son homosexualité, Lord Browne n'aurait jamais pu gagner l'ultime marche du piédestal de la multinationale. En effet, rares sont les patrons britanniques à avoir franchi le pas en avouant leur orientation sexuelle. Ceux qui en ont eu le courage étaient en fin de carrière, comme le président fondateur de la compagnie aérienne BMI, Michael Bishop, ou étaient des entrepreneurs, à l'instar de Lord Alli, le magnat de l'audiovisuel. Homophobie ordinaire à la City, par Marc Roche (encore)

Mark Alexander
Iran’s Global Ambitions

THE BOSTON GLOBE: Iran, in its effort to become a regional and global power, is reaching out across the Sunni-Shi'ite divide, exhorting Muslims worldwide to tolerate their differences -- and march under one Islamic banner.

TEHRAN -- Hamid Almolhoda, deputy director of the Center for Rapprochement of Islamic Schools of Thought, wears the white turban of a Shi'ite Muslim cleric. His budget comes from the world's only Shi'ite theocracy, the Iranian government, better known for bristling revolutionary rhetoric than for sunny public outreach. But Almolhoda's message of brotherhood wouldn't sound out of place at an ecumenical church breakfast.

His mission, approved at the highest levels of the Iranian government, is to convince the world's Muslims that the increasingly violent divide between Sunnis and Shi'ites -- on lurid display in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East -- is no big deal, just a matter of minor theological differences.

"Let's cooperate on what we have in common," he says. "Regarding our differences of opinion, we can tolerate each other."

In a campaign that is little-noticed in the West, Iran is trying to convince Sunni Muslims that Shi'ism, the form of Islam practiced by 90 percent of Iranians but only 20 percent of Muslims worldwide, is not the heresy that many Sunni hard-liners have branded it, nor a dangerous subversion of their faith, but just another legitimate school of thought within a unified Islam. Across the divide (more)

Mark Alexander
Hans Küng: The Dreamer

Hans Küng is the Catholic who wants to unite all religions

THE SUNDAY TIMES: Tony Blair will “declare himself Roman Catholic” once he leaves Downing Street. That’s the reported view of Father Michael Seed, who is without peer in luring high-profile figures into the church. But another Catholic priest, hundred of miles away in the German town of Tübingen, may yet have a far more influential role in Blair’s future.

Professor Hans Küng is widely regarded as the most influential living Christian theologian. Although, where the Vatican is concerned, for influential read dangerous: after his 1971 book questioning the doctrine of papal infallibility Küng was stripped of his licence to teach as a Roman Catholic theologian. The turbulent high priest who has Blair’s ear (more) By Martin Wroe

Mark Alexander
The French Prime Minister’s Wife

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: “I'm just a country peasant, this is not my natural habitat," laughs Penelope Fillon. It seems a somewhat unlikely claim from a woman who is this weekend moving into the Hotel Matignon, the 18th-century official residence of the French prime minister.

And yet there is no denying that Mrs Fillon, whose husband François has been elevated to the office by France's new president, Nicolas Sarkozy, has come a long way. She was raised Penelope Kathryn Clarke, in a large and close-knit family in Abergavenny. She’ll always have Paris… (more)

Hôtel Matignon: The residence of the Prime Minister of France >>>

An inside view of the salon >>>

Wikipedia: Hôtel Matignon >>>

Presidentielles : François Fillon soutien Nicolas Sarkozy


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Photo of St Bartholemew's Church at Llanover where the Fillons were married
Mark Alexander
Bloomberg Ruffles Some Feathers Over Guns

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Michael Bloomberg, the multi-billionaire mayor of New York who is considering a self-financed run for president as an independent, is lauded in his home city for the crackdown on guns that has helped slash crime there.

But firearms enthusiasts who gathered at a "Bloomberg Gun Giveaway" near Washington last week had a very different view. In a show of defiance, the Virginia Citizens Defence Group, a gun rights lobby, was raffling tickets for weapons to support two local gun dealers who are being sued for alleged illegal arms sales. Gun lobby takes aim at ‘Yankee’ Bloomberg (more) By Philip Sherwell

Mark Alexander
The Neocons Sail Into the Night

Paul Wolfowitz’s departure from the World Bank signals the end of an ideological era in Washington

THE SUNDAY TIMES: As Tony Blair was bidding farewell to President George W Bush in the Rose Garden on Thursday, the World Bank was preparing to kick out Paul Wolfowitz as president. Allies to the left and right in the Iraq war were falling by the wayside that day.

Was he responsible for Blair’s departure from office, Bush was asked. There had to be a reason why a prime minister who had never lost an election was being dumped. “Could be . . . I don’t know,” the president mused above the distant chant of war protesters outside the White House gates.

And what did he make of Wolfowitz’s likely resignation? “I respect him a lot and I’m sorry it has come to this,” Bush said, leaving the World Bank head to his fate. Decline and fall off the neocons (more) By Sarah Baxter

Mark Alexander

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Evil Behind the Veil

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Photo courtesy of the GLOBE AND MAIL
This is the sinister ‘face’ of Islam: Women have to hide their faces and their identity in Islam; and this allows them to perpetrate all kinds of evil deeds in the name of Islam. How much easier it is to do bad things, to commit evil deeds, when we can hide our faces!

©Mark Alexander
Manouchehr Mottaki, Iran’s Foreign Minister: Removing a Country From the Map is Not Possible

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Photo of Manouchehr Mottaki courtesy of Google Images
HAARETZ: Iran's foreign minister said on Saturday that no country could be removed from the map, contradicting a previous statement made by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad calling for Israel to be "wiped off the map."

"Every primary school student knows that it is not possible to remove a country from the map and that is very clear," Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told a conference in Jordan when asked about Ahmadinejad's controversial remarks. Iranian FM: It isn’t possible to remove a country from the map (more)

Mark Alexander
The King of Saudi Arabia and the Peace Initiative

YNET NEWS: As it turns out, Saudi king apparently doesn’t back peace initiative

It may well be assumed that the Olmert government, which is currently under great pressure at home, will seek a way to revive the diplomatic process so as, among other reasons, to also create a political agenda. It will seek a legitimate political initiative as long as it is premised on accurately reading regional reality.

Prior to the publication of the Winograd Report, senior Israeli officials praised the Saudi initiative despite reservations regarding its content. The Saudi initiative was backed by the Bush Administration, a fact which influenced Israeli considerations.

Yet something strange happened during the last visit to the Middle East by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice: When Rice praised the Saudi initiative, which calls for full Israeli withdrawal in exchange for "normalization" of ties between Israel and the Arab world, the Saudi king cancelled his participation at a festive dinner with President Bush at the White House and condemned the American invasion of Iraq, calling it an "illegal foreign occupation." Don’t count on Saudi plan (more) By Dore Gold

Mark Alexander
Al Gore has fallen out of love with politics; but the greens haven’t fallen out of love with him

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TIME: Let's say you were dreaming up the perfect stealth candidate for 2008, a Democrat who could step into the presidential race when the party confronts its inevitable doubts about the front-runners. You would want a candidate with the grassroots appeal of Barack Obama—someone with a message that transcends politics, someone who spoke out loud and clear and early against the war in Iraq. But you would also want a candidate with the operational toughness of Hillary Clinton—someone with experience and credibility on the world stage. The Last Temptation of Al Gore (more)

Mark Alexander