Saturday, May 26, 2007

One of Our So-Called ”Friends” in the War on Terror, Pakistan, to Introduce a Bill to Terrorize Apostates

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LIVE LEAK: Pakistan’s government sends draft bill tabled by six-party Islamic alliance to standing committee for review. Under the bill’s terms, apostates would be sentenced to death or life in prison. Testimony by two adults is the only independent evidence needed to determine or demonstrate apostasy. Lahore archbishop is praying the bill is never adopted.

Islamabad (AsiaNews) – A draft bill adopted in first reading by Pakistan’s National Assembly is now before a standing committee. Tabled by a six-party politico-religious alliance, the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal or MMA, the Apostasy Act 2006 which the government sent to the committee would impose the death penalty on Muslim men and life in prison on Muslim women in case they leave Islam. It would also force them to forfeit their property and lose legal custody of children. Pakistan: New apostasy bill to impose death on anyone who leaves Islam (more)

Mark Alexander
"The Trouble with Islam"

With many thanks to Roberts Spencer of Jihad Watch for drawing my attention to this wonderful video via his excellent website:

WATCH VIDEO: "THE TROUBLE WITH ISLAM"

Mark Alexander
Großbritannien: Der Überwachungsstaat

SPIEGELONLINE: In Großbritannien wird es bald flächendeckend Überwachungskameras geben, die nicht nur spitzeln, sondern auch sprechen - mit Kinderstimmen. Kritiker fürchten den Siegeszug der elektronischen Wächter: "Wir leben in einem Überwachungsstaat."

4,2 Millionen Überwachungskameras behalten in Großbritannien die Bevölkerung immer im Auge. Jetzt werden sie gesprächig: Sie sollen flächendeckend - wie George Orwells spitzelnde und sprechende Teleschirme in "1984" - durch Lautsprecher zu redenden Kameras aufgerüstet werden. Kameras sprechen mit Kinderstimmen (mehr)

Mark Alexander
A Must Read: Melanie Phillips’ Extremely Insightful Article - Liberalism v Islamism

MELANIE PHILLIPS: First of all, let me define my terms and say what I mean by Islamism and liberalism. Islamism is the politicised version of Islam which mandates jihad, or holy war against the infidel and conquest of the non-Islamic world for Islam. I’m well aware of the argument that there’s no difference between Islamism and Islam: that’s a theological argument for others to have.

By liberalism I mean the commitment to a free society, founded above all on the separation of secular government from religious worship — from which follow the concepts of equal respect for all people, freedom of conscience, tolerance and the rule of law.

These two concepts, Islamism and liberalism, are currently engaged in a fight to the death. My argument is that liberalism is in danger of losing this fight because it has so badly undermined itself and departed from its own core concepts that it is now paralysed by moral and intellectual muddle.

Liberalism is the creed of modernity. The driving force behind the Islamic jihad is the fight against liberalism and modernity. All the iconic conflicts — Iraq, Israel, Kashmir, Chechnya, Sudan —are secondary to the fundamental aim of the jihad to prevent liberalism and modernity from destroying Islam.

The founding ideologue of modern Islamism, Syed Qutb, made clear in his writings that at the core of the salafi interpretation of Islam was opposition to the separation of religion and temporal power that resulted in liberalism and democracy. His governing impulse was the fear that the instinct for liberty was so powerful it would spread to and infiltrate the Muslim mind unless it was checked by the most repressive possible form of Islam. Liberalism v Islamism (more)

Mark Alexander
Is Islam a Peaceful Religion? A Viewpoint



Mark Alexander
Sir John Major Gives Blair Some Advice

THE GUARDIAN: Sir John Major today calls on his successor to quit Downing Street and hand over power to Gordon Brown as soon as possible. In an interview with the Guardian, the former Tory prime minister criticises Tony Blair's drawn-out departure from office, mocking him for being "in the middle of the longest farewell since Dame Nellie Melba quit the stage". Major to Blair: stop acting like Nellie Melba and go now (more)

Mark Alexander
Islamophobia: An Arab View

”If you want to fight Islamophobia, the first step is to start clearing your own closet of racial prejudice.” - Iman Kurdi

ARAB NEWS: The European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) published its annual report this week. The report deplores the growing rise of Islamophobia across Europe and highlights ECRI’s concern over the climate of hostility toward Muslims.

This will come as no surprise to Muslims living in Europe. Hostility, whether real, projected or imagined, has become part of every day life.

Islamophobia is a difficult term. Whereas anti-Semitism clearly denotes hostility, prejudice and discrimination aimed at people of a specific race, Islamophobia confuses hostility toward Islam as a religion and hostility toward Muslims as individuals. It is an all-encompassing term that describes not only a hatred toward Islam but a view of Islam that — to my mind — is directly derived from the deranged teachings of Al-Qaeda et al. It draws a direct line between Muslim, Islam and extremist fanatic: We all get tarred by the same brush. But that is the essence of much — though not all — of the hostility toward Muslims today. Islamophobia Worryingly on the Rise in Europe (more) By Iman Kurdi

Mark Alexander
Thinking About Reform of US Healthcare

BBC: "If a politician declares that the United States has the best health care system in the world today, he or she looks clueless rather than patriotic or authoritative."

So says Dr Ezekiel Emanuel, an ethicist at the US National Institutes of Health.

The US health system is in a state of crisis and serious politicians, including several presidential candidates, say the time has come to reform it along the lines of the European or Canadian model. US mulls over healthcare reform (more) By Justin Webb

Mark Alexander
US in “Fundamental Opposition” to Germany on Climate Change

BBC: The US appears to have rejected draft proposals by Germany for G8 members to agree tough measures in greenhouse gas emissions, leaked documents have shown.

Wide-ranging US amendments to a draft communique prepared ahead of June's G8 in Germany summit cite a "fundamental opposition" to the proposals.

Germany wants all G8 members to agree timetables and targets for major cuts. US ’opposes’ G8 climate proposals (more)

Mark Alexander
Muqtada Al-Sadr Demands US Quit Iraq

KUWAIT TIMES: BAGHDAD: Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr resurfaced yesterday after nearly four months in hiding and demanded US troops leave Iraq, a development likely to complicate US efforts to crack down on violence and broker political compromise in the country. Hours later, the notorious leader of Al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia in the city of Basra was killed in a shootout as British and Iraq troops tried to arrest him, police and the British military said, further enflaming tensions in the Shiite areas of southern Iraq. Radical cleric demands US quit Iraq (more)

LE FIGARO:
Irak : Moqtada Sadr apparaît en public

Mark Alexander
Changing the Islamic Weekend in Kuwait Proves to Be a Sensitive Issue

KUWAIT TIMES: KUWAIT: Several Islamist MPs issued statements yesterday opposing the government's plans to shift the weekend from Thursday-Friday to Friday-Saturday following such a move by a number of Gulf states. The MPs said their opposition is based on the fact that such a move will mean imitating the West and could undermine some religious obligations, especially that many Muslims fast on Thursday. The Thawabet Al-Ummah convention also slammed the Civil Services Commission's moves to grant Saturdays off in place of Thursdays without reviewing religious or social issues. "The issue can never be considered a mere weekend one," said members of the convention, reminding authorities that Muslim scholars considered it a religious violation and called for further studies on the sensitive issue. Islamists oppose Fri-Sat weekend (more) By B Izzak and A Saleh

Mark Alexander
Are We About to Witness a Scramble for Atomic Weapons in the Middle East?

LA TIMES: Iran's program appears to be stirring interest that some fear will lead to a scramble for atomic weapons in the volatile region.

VIENNA — As Iran races ahead with an illicit uranium enrichment effort, nearly a dozen other Middle East nations are moving forward on their own civilian nuclear programs. In the latest development, a team of eight U.N. experts on Friday ended a weeklong trip to Saudi Arabia to provide nuclear guidance to officials from six Persian Gulf countries.

Diplomats and analysts view the Saudi trip as the latest sign that Iran's suspected weapons program has helped spark a chain reaction of nuclear interest among its Arab rivals, which some fear will lead to a scramble for atomic weapons in the world's most volatile region. Arabs make plans for nuclear power(more) By Bob Drogin and Borzou Daragahi

LE FIGARO:
Larijani : "La France de Sarkozy pourrait jouer le rôle d’intermédiaire sincère"

Mark Alexander
Bush: Twice Warned

LA TIMES: Prewar reports alerted the president to the difficulty of establishing democracy, among other assessments that proved accurate.

WASHINGTON — Two months before the invasion of Iraq, U.S. intelligence agencies twice warned the Bush administration that establishing a democracy there would prove difficult and that Al Qaeda would use political instability to increase its operations, according to a Senate report released Friday.

The report, issued by the Senate Intelligence Committee, brought to light once-classified warnings that accurately forecasted many of the military and political problems the Bush administration and Iraqi officials have faced since the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003. Bush was twice warned of Iraq challenges (more) By James Gerstenzang

Mark Alexander

Friday, May 25, 2007

Deportation

BBC: Race hate preacher Sheikh Abdullah al-Faisal, who influenced one of the 7 July bombers, has been deported from Britain, the home secretary said.

He left Gatwick for Jamaica at 1200 BST, accompanied by two police escorts and an immigration officer.

Al-Faisal, who is of Jamaican origin, lost his appeal against deportation. Race hate cleric Faisal deported (more)

Mark Alexander
Fears Grow Over Military in China

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BBC: The US has expressed concern over China's growing military might.

A Pentagon report given to Congress says Beijing is spending far more on its military budget than admitted and calls for greater transparency.

The report highlights China's greater ability to mount pre-emptive strikes, citing new submarines, unmanned combat aircraft and sophisticated missiles. US fears grow over China military (more)

FINANCIAL TIMES:
Beijing upgrades nuclear arsenal

Mark Alexander
The Shameful State of Women’s Rights in Iran

WFAFI: Limitations on the lives of women are legalized in laws prohibiting women from the presidency, leadership, judgeship and certain educational fields, as well as by inheritance laws. Firmly rooted in the principle of vali-e-faqih, Iran’s constitution controls both the public and private lives and role of women. The concept of male surrogate and guardianship of females is one of the main pillars of Islamic Fundamentalism in Iran. Iranian women are not free to choose or control various aspects of their lives. Evidence of such state-sponsor of violence against women is seen in Iran’s constitution. Official Laws against Women in Iran (more)

Mark Alexander
Schwierigkeiten beim Finden einer geeigneten Vene

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Die Hinrichtung eines übergewichtigen Straftäters im amerikanischen Bundesstaat Ohio hat fast zwei Stunden gedauert, weil die Injektionsnadel mit dem tödlichen Gift mindestens zehn Mal neu angesetzt werden musste. Üblicherweise dauert die Vollstreckung der Todesstrafe in den Vereinigten Staaten etwa 20 Minuten. Die Amerikanische Bürgerrechtsunion rief die Justizbehörden von Ohio auf, wegen der Probleme bei der Tötung von Christopher Newton alle Hinrichtungen bis auf weiteres zu stoppen. Hinrichtung in Ohio dauert fast zwei Stunden (mehr)

Mark Alexander
The Wonders of Childhood

GLOBE AND MAIL: Study adds to research on ability of infants to recognize dialects long before they can speak themselves

Even with the sound turned off, babies can tell whether a person speaking on video has switched between English and French, a new study suggests.

The findings are the latest contribution to a growing body of research on the remarkable ability of very young infants to process languages.

The paper also shows that babies growing up in bilingual households are better able to retain that ability to visually perceive a switch to another language, whereas such a skill declines among those raised in unilingual settings. French and English look different to babies (more) By Tu Thanh Ha

Mark Alexander
Capitalists keen to capitalize on profits from the sukuk should read the following about Islamic economics, al iqtisad al islamy. Open thine eyes O profit-maximizer, before it’s too late!

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Image courtesy of the University of Southern California
"O you who believe! do not devour your property among yourselves falsely, except that it be trading by your mutual consent, and do not kill yourselves. Surely Allah is Merciful to you." Qur'an [4:29] - [Source: University of Southern California]

ISLAMIC-WORLD.NET: Islam uniquely considers distribution as the economic problem, and Muslims do not share the obsession of capitalists and communists with production. Because Islam differentiates between the basic needs and luxuries, there exists no concept of relative scarcity of resources in Islam. The resources available on earth are sufficient to secure the basic needs (food, clothing, and shelter) of fifty billion human beings. Such a misunderstanding has concealed the reality that starvation, poverty, and economic backwardness, result from maldistribution exasperated by man-made laws and systems. Under the Islamic system, Nigeria alone could support the whole of Africa, as occurred in the past when, under the system of Islam, Africa sent food to relieve the famine in Medinah during the rule of Omar bin al-Khattab.
By using labels like "Third World" and "First World," this economic conspiracy has worked behind a deceived populace who fail to realize that the "Third World" countries are actually First World in terms of resources. While organizations like Mercy International and UNICEF keep the masses content under the circus act of "humanitarian aid," the capitalist machine works behind the stage to gobble up the resources of the world. Iqtisad al Islamy (Islamic economics): Introduction (more)

Mark Alexander
Scientologen versuchen Ethik und Religionsunterricht in deutschen Schulen einzuprägen

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WELT ONLINE: Scientologen versuchen Einfluss auf den Ethik- und Religionsunterricht an deutschen Schulen zu nehmen. Im gesamten Bundesgebiet verschicken Mitglieder zweifelhafte Informationsmaterialien an Schulleitungen. Davor warnt jetzt der Deutsche Philologenverband. Scientologen drängen in die Schulen (mehr)

Mark Alexander
La Corée du Norde à procédé vendredi à plusieurs tirs de missiles en direction de la mer du Japon

LE FIGARO: Dix mois après la crise des missiles, Pyongyang provoque une nouvelle fois ses voisins régionaux. Tokyo et Washington minimisent.

Dix mois après la crise des missiles entre Pyongyang et Tokyo, la Corée du Nord a procédé vendredi à plusieurs tirs de missiles à courte portée en direction de la mer du Japon. Cette information, révélée par l'agence de presse japonaise Kyodo, a rapidement été confirmée par les services de renseignements sud-coréens. «Il semble que les tirs de missiles par la Corée du Nord fassent partie des exercices militaires de routine qui se tiennent chaque année», a expliqué un porte-parole de renseignement sud-coréens (NIS).

Le premier ministre japonais Shinzo Abe a quant à lui déclaré que ces tirs ne constituaient "pas un grave problème pour la sécurité du Japon". La Corée du Nord tire des missiles en mer du Japon(encore)

Mark Alexander
Is the US Changing Its Nature?

BBC: The BBC Persian Service's Kambiz Fattahi recounts his own experience of being singled out on the basis of his appearance and asks whether fears of terrorism are undermining America's traditional values. Does US insecurity put liberty at risk (more) By Kambiz Fattahi

Mark Alexander
Whither Turkish Democracy?

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: After the bomb attack on Tuesday, tensions are mounting in Turkey. The government blames the Kurds and the military has not ruled out hunting down Kurdish fighters in northern Iraq. German commentators fear that Turkey could be sliding deeper into chaos.

The attack was the worst in Ankara in 10 years. On Tuesday, a suicide bomb in the Turkish capital killed six people and injured 100. The government immediately fingered the Kurdish separatist group Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) of carrying out the attack, but the group denies any involvement. ’Turkish Democracy Is in Danger’ (more)

BBC:
Turkey president vetoes vote plan

Mark Alexander
The Sukuk Goes From Strength to Strength

MIDDLE EAST BANKER: Sukuk is the hot topic in Islamic finance, and we will soon see the industry reach a value of some tens of billions, as Michael Saleh Gassner from IslamicFinance.de writes.

Islamic finance has for some time missed investment opportunities for Muslims that offer a predictable return with low risk. The majority of investment opportunities are based either on stock markets with high volatility or on real estate transactions. The investment galaxy for the Islamic investor is lacking the variety of instruments to create an efficient portfolio in line with portfolio theory and financial planning. Sukuk certificates meet the pressing need for a medium term investment and reached, in 2004, a market volume of nearly US $7 billion. This volume will multiply in coming years to tens of billions of dollars annual volume. Already a number of world-class borrowers have used the new Islamic Sukuk market: Germany; the IMF Group; and Sovereign states like Qatar and Malaysia. Reasons to issue Sukuk and the structures behind them (more)

Mark Alexander
The Pay Gap Widens; Top Executives Paid More Than Ever

NEW YORK TIMES: Like most companies, Office Depot has long made sure that its chief executive was the highest-paid employee. Ten years ago, the $2.2 million pay package of its chief was more than double that of his No. 2. The fifth-ranked executive received less than one-third.

But the incentive for reaching the very top of the company is now far greater. Steve Odland, who runs Office Depot today, made almost $12 million last year, more than four times the compensation of the second-highest-paid executive and over six times that of the fifth-ranking executive in the current hierarchy.

As executive pay has surged in most American companies, attention has focused on the growing gap between the earnings of top executives and the average wage of workers in cubicles or on the shop floor. Little noticed, though, is how much the gap has also widened between the summit and the next few echelons down. More Than Ever, It Pays to Be the Top Executive (more)

FINACIAL TIMES:
Tycoon to 'fight on' after £48m ruling

Mark Alexander
The Jihad Must Be Stopped, But Time Is Tight

FINANCIAL TIMES: Editorial - It was perfectly forseeable, and indeed predicted, that the US-led invasion of Iraq, far from striking a decisive blow against terrorism, would proliferate militant Islamism all over the Arab and Muslim worlds, from where a new generation of jihadis would strike into Europe and the west. The roll-call of atrocities, from Casablanca to Istanbul, Bali to Mumbai, Riyadh to Amman, London to Madrid, is bloody indeed. Now, however, jihadi extremism is sprouting like poisonous mushrooms in the darkness enveloping the Middle East.

It is not just that all America’s enemies – al-Qaeda, the Taliban, Iran, Hizbollah and Hamas – have been strengthened by the policies of the US and its allies. The totalitarian jihadism peddled by Osama bin Laden and his growing following is emerging in new chapters all over the Middle East, including in places it has never before been seen. Time is short to halt spread of Jihadism (more)

Mark Alexander

Thursday, May 24, 2007

”We have to stay on the offence”, says Bush

BBC: US President George W Bush has warned that the coming weeks and months will be critical for the success of the new security strategy for Iraq.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Mr Bush said the last of the US troop reinforcements would arrive in Baghdad by the middle of June.

He said he expected heavy fighting to continue in Iraq during this time. Critical time for Iraq says Bush (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Bush: Critical time for Iraq

Mark Alexander
„Es gibt im Koran nichts, was mit den Werten Amerikas unvereinbar ware”, so eine CAIR Sprecherin!

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Die New Jersey Avenue läuft schnurgerade aufs Kapitol zu. Wo sie die E Street kreuzt, drei Blocks südlich des Parlaments, nimmt ein Backsteingebäude die Nordwestecke ein. Mit seinen drei Stockwerken ist es weiter nicht auffällig, nur das Gerippe eines Türmchens, das sich unverkleidet über dem Flachdach erhebt, setzt einen sehr eigenen Akzent. Ganz gewiss sieht es aber nicht wie ein Minarett aus. CAIR, der Council on American-Islamic Relations, der hier seinen Hauptsitz hat, vertritt zwar die Sache der amerikanischen Muslime, begreift sich jedoch nicht vorrangig als ihre religiöse Lobby. Unser Land, unsere Truppen, unsere Unterschiede (mehr) Von Jordan Mejias

Mark Alexander
Bald wird in Großbritannien die Internet-Scheidung möglich: schnell, leicht und presigünstig!

DIE PRESSE: In Großbritannien können sich Paare bald online scheiden lassen. Damit will der Anbieter allerdings keine Trennungen fördern. Scheidung: Schnell, preisgünstig und via Internet (mehr)

Mark Alexander
France Exasperated by “Uncontrolled Immigration”: Incentives to Be Given for Immigrants to Return Home

BBC: France has said it plans to offer incentives to more immigrants - especially those from Africa - to return home voluntarily. Paris to pay immigrants to return (more)
SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: New French President Nicolas Sarkozy made immigration a central issue of his campaign. Now, his new minister for immigration and national identity says its time to start paying immigrants to leave the country. France to Pay Immigrants to Return Home (more)
Mark Alexander
A Case of Anti-Semitism? Geneva Synagogue, Hekhal Hanes, Set Ablaze

BBC: A fire has gutted a synagogue in the city of Geneva, in what Swiss police suspect was an arson attack. Blaze destroys Geneva synagogue (more)

NZZ:
Synagoge in Genf ausgebrannt

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE:
La synagogue de Malagnou incendiée: la communauté juive est sous le choc

LE FIGARO:
Une synagogue de Genève part en fumée

Mark Alexander
Israel Detains Hamas Officials

BBC: More than 30 senior officials from the Palestinian militant group Hamas have been detained by Israeli forces in overnight raids in the West Bank.

Those taken, mainly in Nablus, include the Palestinian education minister, three lawmakers and three mayors. Israel detains thirty Hamas officials (more)

BBC:
A young Briton’s fight for Israel

Mark Alexander
L’homophobie en France

LE FIGARO: Près de la moitié des homosexuels déclarés seraient victimes de discriminations dans leur entreprise.

INSULTES, brimades, discriminations, carrière au point mort, renvois ou démissions forcées : l'en­treprise serait aujourd'hui l'un des derniers lieux où vivre son homosexualité reste difficile. « L'homophobie au travail est le premier motif de saisie de notre association », rappelle Jacques Lizé, président de SOS Homophobie. L'association vient de sortir son rapport annuel à l'occasion de la troisième journée de lutte mondiale contre l'homophobie. L'homophobie toujours présente en enterprise (encore)

Mark Alexander
Shark has ‘Virgin Birth’

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Photo of hammerhead shark courtesy of Google Images
BBC: Female hammerhead sharks can reproduce without having sex, scientists confirm.

The evidence comes from a shark at Henry Doorly Zoo in Nebraska which gave birth to a pup in 2001 despite having had no contact with a male.

Genetic tests by a team from Belfast, Nebraska and Florida prove conclusively the young animal possessed no paternal DNA, Biology Letters journal reports. Captive shark had virgin birth (more)

BBC AUDIO:
Captive shark's virgin birth

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Unintended Consequences of the Smoking Ban

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Photo of the ’Marlboro Man’ courtesy of Google Images (US)
BBC: Like most things in life, when the smoking ban comes in force in England on 1 July, it will have unintended consequences. So who and what are the unexpected winners and losers?

The law of unintended consequences is always at work, in every area of daily life. The results can be good, bad and just plain odd. Oops, look what happened… (more)

FOREST:
Scots reject further restrictions on smoking

Mark Alexander
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

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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