Sunday, October 21, 2007

Anti-Semitic Remarks of Belarus President

BBC: The president of Belarus has been called "anti-Semitic" after he reportedly blamed Jews for turning a town into a "pigsty".

President Alexander Lukashenko allegedly made the remarks last week after hearing complaints from residents of the eastern town of Bobruisk.

He added that he had been to Israel and seen that "Jewish people do not take care of where they live". Belarus president 'anti-Semitic' (more)

Mark Alexander
Stop and Search

BBC: The number of people from Asian backgrounds stopped and searched by police has increased by 300% since the Terrorism Act 2000 came into force.

Home Office figures for England and Wales show that in 2002/2003 nearly 3,000 Asians were stopped and searched.

The total number of stop and searches under terror laws more than doubled in 2002/2003 from 8,550 to 21,577.

Muslim groups have criticised the rise, saying it showed prejudice and "Islamophobia" were evident. Rise in police searches of Asians (more)

Mark Alexander
Imran Khan on Benazir Bhutto

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: I'm sorry to say this, but the bombing of Benazir Bhutto's cavalcade as she paraded through Karachi on Thursday night was a tragedy almost waiting to happen. You could argue it was inevitable.

Everyone here knew there was going to be a huge crowd turning up to see her return after eight years in self-imposed exile.

Everyone also knows that there has been a spate of suicide bombings in Pakistan lately, especially in the frontier region where I am campaigning at the moment.

How was it ever going to be possible to monitor such a large crowd and guarantee that no suicide bombers would infiltrate it?

This may sound equally harsh, but she has only herself to blame. By making a deal with Musharraf's government — a deal brokered by the British as well as the Americans, by the way — she was hoping to get herself off the corruption charges that have been levelled against her.

What she hadn't taken into account was Musharraf's unpopularity. He is regarded in Pakistan as an American stooge. And the US war on terror, which he supports, is now perceived as a war against Islam. Benazir Bhutto has only herself to blame (more) By Imran Khan

THE SUNDAY TIMES:
Bhutto’s return became a bloodbath

THE SUNDAY TIMES:
Returning exile Benazir Bhutto has a long list of enemies who want to see her dead

Mark Alexander
Mike Oldfield to Quit Britain Because of Lack of Freedom

MAIL ON SUNDAY: Tubular Bells composer Mike Oldfield has quit Britain because the smoking ban and health-and-safety culture have made life "intolerable".

The multi-millionaire is selling his £3.5million Gloucestershire mansion and has moved to Spain, where he says people have more freedom.


He said Britain had become too strict, with its "ludicrous" emphasis on health-and-safety rules and the increased use of CCTV and speed cameras.

The 54-year-old musician told The Mail on Sunday: "I went to a very strict prep school. You were so restricted. It was one of the worst times in my life.

"Britain has been getting more and more like that, what with this health-and-safety business.

"In my local town, Thornbury, the old man who runs the hardware shop has to sneak out to the backyard to have a cigarette.

What's the harm in him being in the office in the back of his shop?" Mike Oldfield quits 'prep school Britain' over smoking ban (more) By James Tapper and Dave Newman

Mark Alexander
Iran May Harden Its Nuclear Stance

MAIL ON SUNDAY: The West could face a harder line with Iran over its atomic ambitions following the resignation of the country's chief nuclear negotiator.

Saturday's announcement of Ali Larijani stepping down exposed a rift over tactics with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who accepted the resignation and has taken an uncompromising approach in the nuclear stand-off.

Analysts say Saeed Jalili, the senior foreign ministry official replacing Larijani, is close to the president and his appointment showed that those determined to defy the West were gaining a greater influence in decision-making. Fears Iran may harden its nuclear stance after chief negotiator resigns (more)

BBC:
Iran’s hard-line nuclear reshuffle

Mark Alexander

Saturday, October 20, 2007

And They’ll All Be Called Muhammad!

THE TELEGRAPH: The number of people living in the United Kingdom will exceed 75 million by the middle of the century, population experts now believe.

Rising immigration, a higher birthrate among migrant families and longer lifespans are on course to lift the population by at least 15 million by 2051, from last year's 60 million total. There are fears it could even hit 77 million. UK 'will swell to 75m' as migrants raise births (more) By Ben Leapman, Home Affairs Correspondent

Mark Alexander
Wall Street Caught in a Perfect Storm

BBC: The Dow Jones plunged almost 370 points in a perfect storm of surging oil costs, a sliding dollar, and fresh fears of paralysis in the credit markets.

Twenty years to the day since Black Monday, when the Dow slumped 508 points in a day, Wall Street was rocked by rumours of defaults and heightened fears that the US economy may be heading for a recession.

There were frantic scenes in the last hour of trading on Wall Street yesterday, as traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange fell over one another to place sell orders in all of America's biggest companies.

The Dow finally closed down 366.94 points at 13522.02 recording its biggest one-day loss since August 9, the start of this summer's credit crisis.

In total, 1.75bn shares changed hands on the NYSE, 1.65bn were sell orders. The panic selling was compounded by the unwinding of options. Wall St caught in a perfect storm (more) By James Quinn in New York and Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in London

Mark Alexander
Cardinal Signals Firm Vatican Stance with Muslims

PARIS (Reuters) - The top Vatican official for Islam has praised a novel Muslim call for dialogue but said real theological debate with them was difficult as they saw the Koran as the literal word of God and would not discuss it in depth.

Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, in an interview on Friday with the French Catholic daily La Croix, also said Christians would have to discuss curbs on building churches in the Islamic world in the dialogue advocated by 138 Muslim scholars in the appeal.

His interview, coming after mostly positive comments by other Catholic Islam experts, signaled the world's largest Christian church wanted a serious dialogue with Muslims that did not avoid some fundamental issues dividing the religions.

"Muslims do not accept that one can discuss the Koran in depth, because they say it was written by dictation from God," Tauran said. "With such an absolute interpretation, it is difficult to discuss the contents of faith."

The fact that Muslims can build mosques in Europe while many Islamic states limit or ban church building cannot be ignored, he said. "In a dialogue among believers, it is fundamental to say what is good for one is good for the other," he said.

The appeal last week by 138 scholars representing a large majority of Islamic views invited Christian leaders to a dialogue based on their common belief that love of God and neighbor is the cornerstone of their religions.

It was unprecedented because Islam has no central authority to speak for all believers, especially not the silent minority that does not agree with radicals whose preaching of jihad and rejection of other faiths often dominates the headlines. Cardinal signals firm Vatican stance with Muslims (more)

Hat tip: Robert Spencer

Mark Alexander
Ali Larijani Resigns

BBC: Iran's chief negotiator with the West over Tehran's nuclear programme, Ali Larijani, has resigned.

A government spokesman said Mr Larijani had repeatedly offered his resignation and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had finally accepted it.

Mr Larijani had differences with the president over how to proceed with the negotiations, correspondents say. Iran’s nuclear negotiator resigns (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Factors that may have led to Larijani's resignation

Mark Alexander
Wanted: A National Culture

TIMESONLINE: Multiculturalism has run its course, and it is time to move on. It was a fine, even noble idea in its time. It was designed to make ethnic and religious minorities feel more at home, more appreciated and respected, and therefore better able to mesh with the larger society. It affirmed their culture. It gave dignity to difference. And in many ways it achieved its aims. Britain is a more open, diverse, energising, cosmopolitan environment than it was when I was growing up.

But there has been a price to pay, and it grows year by year. Multiculturalism has led not to integration but to segregation. It has allowed groups to live separately, with no incentive to integrate and every incentive not to. It was intended to promote tolerance. Instead the result has been, in countries where it has been tried, societies more abrasive, fractured and intolerant than they once were.

Liberal democracy is in danger. Britain is becoming a place where free speech is at risk, non-political institutions are becoming politicised, and a combination of political correctness and ethnic-religious separatism is eroding the graciousness of civil society. Religious groups are becoming pressure groups. Boycotts and political campaigns are infecting professional bodies. Culture is fragmenting into systems of belief in which civil discourse ends and reasoned argument becomes impossible. The political process is in danger of being abandoned in favour of the media-attention-grabbing gesture. The politics of freedom risks descending into the politics of fear.

Multiculturalism emerged, more as a fact than a value, in the 1970s in the wake of mass migration from nonWestern to Western nations. It found a supportive environment in the intellectual mood of the time. The idea of one nation, one culture had come to seem dangerous and wrong.

But there was something else happening at the same time, of great consequence: the slow demise of morality itself, conceived as the moral bond linking individuals in the shared project of society.

In 1961, suicide ceased to be a crime. This might seem a minor and obviously humane measure, but it was the beginning of the end of England as a Christian country; that is, one in which Christian ethics was reflected in law. It was a prelude to other and more significant reforms. In 1967 abortion was legalised, as was homosexual behaviour.

Collectively these changes represented a decisive move away from the idea that society had, or was entitled to have, a moral code at its base, covering many areas of life that might otherwise be regarded as private. Society was no longer conceived of in terms of a moral consensus. The law would intervene only to prevent individuals from harming one another.

What happens when we lose moral consensus? Morality is reduced to taste. “Good” and “bad” become like yum and yugh: I like this; I don’t like that. Imagine two people, one of whom says: “I like ice cream”; the other: “I don’t”. They are not arguing. Each is simply declaring his or her taste.

We have lost the basis of morality as a shared set of values holding society together. We are living “after virtue”; that is to say, in an age in which people no longer have roles and duties within a stable social structure. When that happens, morality becomes a mere façade. Arguments become interminable and intolerable. The only adequate answer to an opposing viewpoint is: “Says who?” In a debate in which there are no shared standards, the loudest voice wins. The only way to defeat opponents is to ridicule them. Wanted: a national culture: Multiculturalism is a disaster By Jonathan Sacks

THE GUARDIAN:
Riven by class and no social mobility - Britain in 2007 By Julian Glover

Mark Alexander
Blair’s Warning to Iran


WATCH HERE


Mark Alexander
The Chilling of US-Russian Relations

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: George W. Bush once thought he could look into Vladimir Putin's eyes and see his soul. But now that the Russian leader has tightened his grip on power, the strained friendship between these two major statesmen could turn to outright enmity. The conflict over Iran is just one example.

Senator John McCain spoke in a low voice, as he often does at campaign appearances. The Republican presidential hopeful had just discussed Iran, and now it was time to say a word or two about Russia. "When I looked into Vladimir Putin's eyes," he told the audience in a conspiratorial whisper, "I saw three things: a K and a G and a B."

On Wednesday, at a White House press conference with George W. Bush, a reporter asked the president what he thought of McCain's words. "Pretty good line," said Bush with a chuckle -- and threw some more rhetorical coal on the fire. He said Putin was "wily" over the question of who might succeed him at the Kremlin. "He wouldn't tip his hand."

Bush had just used unusually hawkish words at this press conference to describe the nuclear tension with Iran. Clearly referring to Putin, Bush had told reporters, "If you're interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing Iran from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon."

That reference to "World War III" was reminiscent of earlier presidential rhetoric like "The Axis of Evil" (Bush, 2002) and "The Evil Empire" (Reagan, 1983). The choice of words reflected a deep chill in US-Russian relations -- and differences over Iran are not the only reason for the falling out.

"The relationship is really shaken. Both sides appear determined to verbally assault each other as often as possible over the coming months," says Rose Gottemoeller, Director of the Moscow office of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in an interview with SPIEGEL ONLINE. Cold War Tension, Reloaded (more)

Mark Alexander

Friday, October 19, 2007

We’ve Got the Power, Says America’s Top Military Officer

THE TELEGRAPH: America's top military officer said the country does have the resources to attack Iran, despite the strain of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Adm Michael Mullen, who took over as chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff three weeks ago, said diplomacy remained the priority in dealing with Iran's suspected plans to develop a nuclear weapon and its support for anti-US insurgents in Iraq.

But at a press conference he said: "there is more than enough reserve to respond (militarily) if that, in fact, is what the national leadership wanted to do".

Defence Secretary Robert Gates warned that Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons could set off an arms race in the Middle East. "The risk of an accident or a miscalculation or of those weapons or materials falling into the hands of terrorists seem to me to be substantially increased," he added.

The two leaders appeared together just days after George W Bush raised the spectre of "World War Three" if Iran went nuclear. We can attack Iran, says US commander (more) By Alex Spillius in Washington

Mark Alexander
Tosh from David Milliband

THE TELEGRAPH: In the 20th century, Britain's national security came under threat from hostile nations. Today, the threat is from terrorist groups, such as al-Qa'eda, operating within failed states, seeking to fracture the world along religious lines.

The response by the police and the Army, at home and abroad, is necessary, but on its own not enough. To marginalise extremists, we have to address causes as well as symptoms.

We must tackle the gulf of understanding and empathy that too often exists between religions and regions of the world. This does not have to be only the stuff of sermons; it needs to be central to hard-headed diplomacy.

The activities and narrative of al-Qa'eda seek to emphasise that which divides us. Our task is the reverse: to nurture understanding, tolerance and commitment across religions, ethnicities and nations and to marginalise extremists.

That solidarity is founded on shared values and interests, whether a belief in individual human dignity or a common determination to tackle climate change or promote free trade. But shared interests and shared values are not enough to unite us. They need to be embodied in shared projects and shared institutions. Turkey is vital to Europe’s future (more)

Mark Alexander
The Dutch Gates of Vienna

MELANIEPHILLIPS.COM: This is what happens when you appease the unconscionable. After its shameful treatment of Ayaan Hirsi Ali whom it has thrown to the jihadi wolves, the Dutch have further run up the white flag for their culture by allowing the jihadis to take over the Dutch TV Muslim broadcaster, as this story reports:
Until recently, the Netherlands had two Islamic public broadcasters: the moderate NMO and the orthodox Dutch Islamic Broadcasting Organisation (NIO). Media watchdog Commissariaat voor de Media demanded that the two would merge so that the Islamic faith would have a single representative body in the public system. But according to Nova, this resulted in NIO staging a coup of NMO…

One of the members of the new board of directors is Yahia Bouyafa, who ‘is believed to have close ties to the Muslim Brotherhood,’ as Nova reported. Another is Abdelmajid Kayroun, chairman of the Al Farouq mosque in Utrecht ‘whose imam was deported from the Netherlands in 2001 for espionage for the Libyan secret service’. Also among the eight directors is Mohammed Nanhekhan, a member of the ‘radical movement World Islamic Mission’.

The Commissionership for the Media says it has ‘no indications’ that anything is wrong. It will only instigate an inquiry if the Justice Ministry or the secret service AIVD requests it, as a spokesperson stated.
Moroccan-Dutch youth riot in Amsterdam following fatal incident

Mark Alexander
George & Tone: Endless Love


Mark Alexander
The End of the Road for Nicolas and Cécilia

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Photo of Nicolas and Cécilia courtesy of The Telegraph

THE TELEGRAPH: Cécilia Sarkozy says her marriage broke up because unlike her former husband, president Nicolas Sarkozy of France, she wanted to escape the limelight.

“For him it’s like a violinist, who has been given a Stradivarius, suddenly he has the chance to practice his art,” she told regional daily L’Est Republicain in her first interview since the couple’s divorce announcement.

“It’s not the same thing for me.”

The Elysee yesterday confirmed the couple had divorced “by mutual consent” after 11 years of marriage and a turbulent last two years.

“We tried everything, I tried everything. But it just wasn’t possible anymore...Public life doesn’t suit me,” she said.

“I am someone who likes to be in the shadows, who likes serenity, tranquility,” she said. Cécilia Sarkozy: Public life doesn’t suit me (more) By Henry Samuel in Paris

Mark Alexander
Tony Blair “Lifts Hearts” in the Waldorf Astoria

“Analogies [of Islamic extremism] especially with the rise of fascism can be misleading but, in pure chronology, I sometimes wonder if we’re not in the 1920s, if not the 1930s, I fear.”

THE TELEGRAPH: Tony Blair compared radical Islam to Nazi Germany as he urged that the rest of the world should “not be forced into retreat”.

In his first major public speech since leaving office, Mr Blair told an audience at a prestigious charity dinner in New York that the war on extremism and terror was “far from over”, especially with regard to Iran.

Repeatedly driving home a sentiment that conflicted sharply with a Downing Street successor trying to pull British troops out of Iraq, Mr Blair insisted that it was no time to take a “half-hearted” approach to terrorism.

He said: "There is a tendency even now, even in some of our own circles, to believe that they are as they are because we have provoked them and if we left them alone they would leave us alone.

"I fear this is mistaken. They have no intention of leaving us alone.” Tony Blair 'lifts hearts' in New York speech (more) By Tom Leonard in New York

Mark Alexander
Dollar Plummets to an All-Time Low

THE TELEGRAPH: The dollar has plummeted to all-time lows against both the euro and a basket of global currencies amid growing fears of a disorderly rout as the US property slump spreads to the broader economy.

The greenback dived after the US 'Philly' business index dropped 10.9 to 6.8 in October, with a shock fall in new orders and inventory, raising the chances of further rate cuts by the Federal Reserve this month.

The dollar crossed the barrier of $1.43 against the euro; the broader dollar index fell to 77.478, the lowest since the series began in 1973.

The plunge follows data released this week by the US Treasury showing a record $163bn (£80bn) exodus from all forms of US assets, led by unprecedented levels of US bonds sales by Japan, China and Taiwan.

Bundesbank chief Axel Weber gave the euro an extra lift by hinting strongly at more rate rises in Europe to head off inflation, expected to reach 2.6pc in Germany.

The growing belief the European Central Bank may keep tightening despite the credit crunch has caused traders to shift gear, renewing bets on the euro. But the surging currency has hit confidence in Europe, where industries in France, Italy and some German firms are warning of serious knock-on effects. Dollar dives as US slump spreads (more) By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard and Joe Moulds

FINANCIAL TIMES:
Dollar falls to fresh record low against euro By Peter Garnham


FINANCIAL TIMES:
Oil jumps above $90 a barrel By Javier Blas

Mark Alexander
Suicide Bomb Attack on Benazir Bhutto Less Than 24 Hours After She Returned to Pakistan from Self-Imposed Exile

FINANCIAL TIMES: The Pakistan government blamed Islamist militants for twin explosions that killed more than 130 supporters of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto during her homecoming parade in the early hours of Friday morning.

The attack underscored the turbulence which lay in store for Pakistan ahead of an election due by January, but it was unclear how the assassination attempt might affect a possible power-sharing deal between Ms Bhutto and President Pervez Musharraf.

No-one claimed responsibility, but Ms Bhutto’s husband held Pakistan’s intelligence agency to blame, while police were investigating whether the attack was connected to al-Qaeda linked militants in tribal regions bordering Afghanistan.

Militants linked to al-Qaeda, angered by the former prime minister’s support for the US war on terrorism, had this week threatened to assassinate her, and officials said there were intelligence reports of plots by three separate groups.

”Definitely, it is the work of the militants and terrorists,” said Javed Iqbal Cheema, interior ministry spokesman, adding it was too early to say which group was involved. Pakistan blames Islamist militants for bombs (more) By Jo Johnson and Farhan Bokhari in Karachi and Reuters

Mark Alexander

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Brown, the Man Who Refuses to Give the People a Referendum on the EU Treaty, Tells Us What He Thinks, Tells Us What He Thinks, Tells Us What He Thinks…

BBC: EU leaders are beginning talks in Lisbon to try to agree on a landmark treaty to reform the 27-member bloc.

The treaty is designed to replace the European Constitution that was rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005.

It includes plans for an EU foreign policy supremo, a longer-term president and fewer national veto rights. EU leaders hold key treaty talks (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Brown defends EU treaty reform

BBC:
A close look at the Reform Treaty By Stephen Mulvey

Mark Alexander
A Watchman’s Call

With gratitude to Richard Williams for this excellent review:

An easily accessible read outlining the dangers that Islamism presents, not just to western civilisation, but to all cultures, for Islam's intent, made plain in this book of short essays, is nothing short of that age old plague of man's existence - world domination. A dramatic statement, yes, but unless we awake to the dangers clearly outlined in this book, a drama that will unfold under our very noses, with catastrophic consequences for us all. Make no mistake, the Qur’an says it, the pious Muslims say it, and Mark shows you exactly where and how they say it, in a format that is easy to read and follow.

Islam is immiscible with other cultures, 1400 years of history and countless tales of cultures lost tell us in unmistakable detail that this is so. Mark's book gives you an insight as to why this is so. As Mark shows, by adhering to the idols of our age, 'political correctness' and 'multiculturalism', we are facilitating Islam's age old dream. This book goes against the prevailing orthodoxies of our times and in so doing, delivers a clear warning of the danger which faces us all. – Richard Williams


Mark Alexander
The Unvarnished Truth

Many thanks to Always for this great review:

A book of reader-friendly and short essays, Mark Alexander's The Dawning of a New Dark Age examines the tenets of Islam and clearly delineates what those tenets mean for Western civilization. Concentrating on the present danger, the signs of which continue to proliferate since the book's publication in 2003, the author passionately spells out and proves the bottom line: Islam is not just another religion. Mr. Alexander writes from the Christian perspective, but his book will also appeal to those who are not Christians because he uses excellent sources as well as his personal observations. READ THIS BOOK! – Always On Watch

Mark Alexander
Single Best Book to Start to Learn Truth about Islam

A BOOK WORTH READING

The Dawning of a New Dark Age, A Collection of Essays on Islam, by Mark Alexander (1st Books, ISBN: 1-4107-9037-1, paperback; 2003.)

I thought I knew almost all of the current books (past few years) about Islam. I had not encountered this book, however, until the author alerted me to it, for which I am grateful.

After reading the book, I can recommend it enthusiastically to readers new to Islam and its dangers, but I must offer a qualification to that recommendation.

First, the writing is excellent. The author's style flows, with great grammar and syntax as well as thought formulation and progression, i.e., he is clear and easy to follow. I would love to see more writing from him.

The book is presented as a series of short essays. One may start at any point reading these and lose absolutely nothing by skipping about, as long as one reads the entire book. If you start reading from the beginning and proceed systematically to the end, you may notice repetitions, but probably not if you dip in and out until finished.

Second, and more importantly, his grasp of Islam meets many criteria of depth and breadth. He lived in Saudi Arabia long enough to come to terms with Islam, particularly the Saudi variety (Wahhabism), and Arabs. He knows the subject well and covers almost all of the concerns people should have about Islam. There is so very much I agree with that I almost had déjà vu. Some of the 47 chapters are more appealing to me than others, but these chapters are like 47 unique facets, each giving insight to this huge problem of Islamism. Someone beginning the work of studying Islam will find valuable nuggets of information in all 47 chapters.

Anyone unfamiliar with Islam will get a terrific education, delivered quickly and painlessly. It is such an easy introduction that I would put this book into the MUST READ category for those who want to understand why Islam is a threat to American culture and values, and who want a good place to start understanding the problems Islam creates for our civilization.

Third, the author is not just pro-Western culture, but he is unabashedly pro-American. He sees with objectivity about the threat that Islam poses to our country and the entire civilized world, and he minces no words presenting his thoughts fearlessly, without concessions made to the "sensitivities" of this or that person or group or nation. I greatly admire how he identifies multiculturalism and political correctness for the evils that they are, and identifies Islam and its evils for what they are. Since he spent significant time in school in England, he speaks to how the Brits have severely endangered themselves by being so obliging to the Muslims infesting their country. He also has excellent chapters on France and Turkey.

My sole complaint is that, for all of the author's excellent qualities, he is not philosophically-oriented; I wish so much that he was. Were he so oriented, his case against Islam could be even stronger, perhaps unassailable. He wants very much to wake people up, to shake them out of their passive unconcern, to fill their minds with good information, and to neutralize the poison of relativism, multiculturalism, and political correctness, all of which are sustained by today's wide-spread moral uncertainty among Americans. He is looking for answers in terms of guiding principles, and he comes close to finding them.

However, he relies on Western religion as a philosophical base, particularly Christianity, rather than philosophical principles, and this perspective just does not take him as far as he obviously wants to go. Religions have values which differ from religionist to religionist, and which separate religions from a strong system of philosophy. Rational, integrated philosophical principles complete the armamentaria, and take those who hold these principles the full distance.

What religionists and non-religionists have in common is a shared vision of the incredible danger Islam poses. We also support the Constitution, which guarantees our freedom of thought and Rights of Man. We must stand united and well-armed through the discipline of philosophy rather than distracted by differences in details of various belief systems.

[We discuss the philosophical elements of Islam and dealing with it within our website, 6th Column Against Jihad (http://www.6thcolumnagainstjihad.com).]

Otherwise, I enjoyed this book very much, and I think it offers much of value to an intelligent reader who wants a good place to start to understanding Islam. – George Mason


Mark Alexander
”Compelling Reading”

Deep gratitude to Jim Ball, Australia’s Number 1 overnight broadcaster, for this great review:

I have read a lot of books on the issue of Islam and by no means consider my self totally across it. As is the case with most subjects, it has the capacity to glaze the eyes if you let it. This book though is a breezy and comprehensive easy read. You can pick it up and put it down at will and not lose the plot. The introduction of Mark Alexander's easy to read reality check, The Dawning of a New Dark Age is Wake Up, West! It is compelling reading. – Jim Ball, 15 April 06

Jim Ball’s Recommended Reading List

Mark Alexander
’A Must-Read for Lovers of Liberty Everywhere’

'The Dawning of a New Dark Age' is an invaluable set of powerfully-written essays on Islam, the most critical issue of our time. A must-read for lovers of liberty everywhere! - The Anti-Jihadist, June 19, 2007

Mark Alexander
A Debt of Gratitude to Mark Alexander

And a "debt of gratitude" to Beakerkin for this great review of my book:

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
’Your Book Is Probably the Most Amazing’

My gratitude to Liberty Lover for this wonderful review:

"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, October 23, 2006

Mark Alexander
A Wonderful Review of My Book

Many, many thanks to Friendly Saviour for this great review:

I can heartily recommend this book.

I obtained it from my local bookshop but it is available online and from the big book-sellers.

It helped clear up a lot of my mixed-up ideas and mis-conceived notions that had accumulated, concerning Islam.

We have all been taken for a ride by the mainstream media, who have been too lazy to analyse the situation vis-a-vis the progression of islam from the cozy religion of peace, to the World-wide threat to our way of life.

There is no doubt that big shocks are planned against the Western countries, indeed even the far-off territories of the Australasias are not immune. With many opening shots already ricocheting around the daily news-stories, who can afford to wait any longer to get their facts straight?

The author has spent time amongst the isalmic culture and has intimate knowledge of the real islam, the one you will hardly ever find out about, outside some weighty academic book.

It is not too late to be aware of these threats and the ideas that support the attacks on our own unique civilisation.

Forewarned is forearmed, they say.

We owe it to our selves, our partners and especially our children, who will have to live the longest in the gathering darkness that closes in on our world.


It is all to easy to dismiss these fears about the growing problems between Islam and every other religion and society.


Why has this all begun to take focus? How much of it it paranoia?

Don't wait until you are forced to learn the hard way, what barbaric fate the Christian world will be thrown into. Why has islam singled out the Jewish people for destruction at the "end of times," which moslems believe we are entering, and towards which, the islamic terrorists are thrusting us ever closer.

Do yourself a favour and read this book soonest! You will not regret it. CercasiDemocrazia - Friendly Saviour


Mark Alexander
’Let the UK Take a Swiss Role in the EU,’ Says Sir Rocco Forte

THE TELEGRAPH: There are many things to celebrate about Europe. We enjoy the freedom to travel on the Continent with few, if any, obstructions.

Some of us own houses, live, work and do business there. We enjoy the French wine, Spanish sun and German cars. Many of us appreciate the openness of Europe and the cultural exchanges.

Many European nationals work here, bringing us economic benefits. There are considerable lifestyle benefits of being part of a "European family". And many of us would feel substantially poorer if we lost these benefits.

Similarly, many nationals from the other EU member states benefit from their relationship with Britain. They value the freedom to travel and work here. And they import over £200bn of our goods and services – from pharmaceuticals to financial services.

The relationship between the UK and the other EU member states is positive and mutually beneficial.

If we were to adopt a looser relationship with the EU, based on trade and cooperation, whilst opting out of political and economic union, the critical question has to be, would we lose out on these benefits?

The simple answer is that it would depend on how the British Government negotiated our new relationship with the EU.

But it is inconceivable that, in the negotiations, they would throw away the lifestyle benefits that so many, on both sides of the Channel, value.

Switzerland is an interesting "model" which we can learn from. The Swiss trade freely with the EU through agreements going back to the early 1970s – though they do retain their customs controls as they are not in the EU's Customs Union.

This is, however, no block on trade. Their economy is more closely integrated with the EU than Britain's. And, principally through two sets of bilateral agreements negotiated with the EU, they have close associations in many other policy areas.*

Indeed they have more bilateral agreements with the EU than any other state. Let the UK take a Swiss role in the EU (more) By Sir Rocco Forte

*Clive Church (ed), Switzerland the European Union, Routledge, 2007.

Looser EU ties can only help the British economy By Norman Lamont

How Britain can get the best out of Europe By Ruth Lea

Mark Alexander
Sarkozy’s Marriage On the Rocks

THE TELEGRAPH: President Nicolas Sarkozy of France and his wife Cécilia have divorced "by mutual consent", the Elysée Palace confirmed today.

Pressure had been building on Mr Sarkozy to make a statement about his marriage amid fears that the issue could overshadow the EU summit in Lisbon, where European leaders are due to agree a text for a simplified European treaty.

Mr Sarkozy, 52, and Cécilia, a 49-year old former model, have been married for 11 years and have five children: two each from their first marriages and their own son, Louis.

The television news channel LCI and the Liberation newspaper quoted judicial sources yesterday as saying that Cécilia had applied to a judge for a divorce on Monday and that a judge visited the Elysée Palace later that evening to see Mr Sarkozy to validate the procedure. Nicolas Sarkozy announces end of his marriage (more) By Henry Samuel in Paris

Nicolas Sarkozy 'struck by lightning' at Cécilia By Henry Samuel in Paris

Frankreichs Präsident Sarkozy und seine Frau trennen sich: Bestätigung nach wochenlangen Gerüchten

LE FIGARO:
Nicolas et Cécilia Sarkozy divorcent de Samuel Laurent

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE:
Nicolas Sarkozy et son épouse Cécilia officialisent leur separation

Mark Alexander
Putin drängt kaspische Staaten zu Pakt gegen USA

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Im Streit um das iranische Atomprogramm haben sich die Anrainerstaaten des Kaspischen Meers gegen die USA gestellt und einen Angriff auf das Nachbarland von ihrem Territorium aus kategorisch ausgeschlossen. Das amerikanische Militär hatte erst kürzlich Flugplätze in Aserbeidschan besichtigt.

(sda/Reuters) Auf Drängen des russischen Präsidenten Wladimir Putin unterzeichneten die Anrainerstaaten des Kaspischen Meeres einen Pakt, der sich vor allem gegen eine militärische Zusammenarbeit Aserbeidschans mit den USA und der Nato richtete.

Keine Angriffe vom eigenen Gebiet aus

«Unter keinen Umständen werden wir es einem Drittstaat erlauben, unsere Gebiete für einen Angriff oder eine andere militärische Aktion gegen einen der Mitgliedsstaaten zu nutzen», hiess es in dem Vertrag, den Aserbeidschan, Kasachstan, Turkmenistan, Russland und Iran bei ihrem Gipfeltreffen in Teheran schlossen. Putin drängt kaspische Staaten zu Pakt gegen USA: Irans Nachbarn wollen Territorium für Angriff nicht zur Verfügung stellen

Mark Alexander
Putin plant Aufrüstung mit neuen Atomwaffen

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Der russische Präsident Putin hat den Bau neuer Atomwaffen angekündigt. Russland verfolge «grandiose» Pläne, um seine Verteidigung zu stärken, sagte er am Donnerstag in einer Fragestunde für russische Bürger.

(sda/Reuters/dpa) «Wir werden eine Raketentechnologie entwickeln, einschliesslich vollkommen neuer nuklearstrategischer Systeme, vollkommen neu», sagte Putin in der Fragestunde, die im Fernsehen übertragen wurde. «Wir arbeiten daran und sind sehr erfolgreich.»

Im Streit über den in Osteuropa geplanten Raketenschild hat Putin in jüngster Zeit wiederholt mit dem Rückzug aus wichtigen Abrüstungsverträgen gedroht, die den Kalten Krieg beendet haben. Russland sieht durch das Abwehrsystem direkt vor seiner Grenze seine Sicherheitsinteressen bedroht. Die USA haben erklärt, der Schild sei zur Abwehr von Angriffen aus Staaten wie Iran und Nordkorea geplant. Russland plant Aufrüstung mit neuen Atomwaffen: Präsident Putin kündigt «grandiose» Vorhaben an

Mark Alexander
Another Great Review of My Book, 'The Dawning of a New Dark Age'

With many, many thanks to Limewoody for this excellent review of my book:

Accurate, authoritative and readable essays on the threat to western civilization of Islam Mark's format, a collection of essays, makes this an extremely readable text that can be picked up and put down as opportunity allows, giving 'thinking time' between reads in order to fully process the knowledge and insights imparted here. Still too much is misunderstood about this aggressively invasive ideology which threatens to overwhelm and subvert our Western civilization. Since Islam seeks to progress an agenda of world-wide domination and universal submission of all to Allah, by the sword if necessary, we most certainly need to understand far more about it. Mark knows Islam intimately, and his writing is both perceptive and authoritative. He clearly outlines the dangers posed by Islam, describing the process of 'Islamicization' that is already happening, supporting his concerns with references (in context) to the Qur'an and to history, identifying the factors in our own civilization that fosters erosion of our Judeo-Christian heritage and invites the incursion of Islam, and suggesting means by which this could be stopped and reversed. There is a great deal of information packed between the covers of this book and much food for serious thought. To some it will be a horror story, but as frightening as the subject may be, we are wise to have our eyes opened in order to recognize what is happening hopefully in time to help stop the situation from worsening. It may already be too late unless radical measures are put in place, but we all need to know and properly understand the real threat in order that something effective can be done about it. This is an absolute 'must read' for anyone who wishes to know the truth rather than be lulled into complacency by the 'taqiyya' (holy hypocrisy) of the Islamic clerics and apologists. If you have never read anything on this subject before, this is a good place to start. Likewise, it is also an essential read for those who do know the subject, the author becoming increasingly well known for his contributions to major websites devoted to the education of the web-savvy general population interested in knowing more about Islam. I have become well-read on this subject myself, and can testify that the author writes in accord with all else that I have read by other authors with impeccable and relevant credentials. I can recommend Mark's book to all who wish to be properly informed on this subject and, as the author puts it so well, the 'dawning of a new dark age' under Islam. - Limewoody

Mark Alexander
Benazir Bhutto Returns to Pakistan After Eight Years in Exile

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Photo of Benazir Bhutto courtesy of the New York Times

NEW YORK TIMES: KARACHI, Pakistan, Oct. 18 — Benazir Bhutto, the Pakistani opposition leader and former prime minister, arrived in Pakistan this afternoon, ending her eight-year exile in a return that is expected to reconfigure the country’s already unsettled political landscape.

She stepped down onto the tarmac at Karachi airport at around 2 p.m. local time after a flight from Dubai, wearing a green shalwar kameez — a traditional Muslim outfit — and white headscarf, the colors of the Pakistani flag.
“The most important step — to be back on Pakistani soil,” Ms. Bhutto said, after praying before an upheld Koran. She was clearly tearful.

Later, she began what was expected to be a long procession through the heavy throng of crowds to the tomb of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, in Karachi. She left the airport standing on the upper deck of a sided truck, surrounded by party members and waving at the people in the streets. Students wearing Pakistan Peoples’ Party shirts held hands and formed five concentric rings around the truck to keep back the crush. As the procession inched forward, people stood with flags and banners on the tops of trucks and sat in nearby trees. Bhutto Returns to Pakistan After 8-Year Exile (more) By Carlotta Gall and Salman Masood

Mark Alexander
”Some Societies Are Just More Evolved Than Others,” Says Martin Amis

DAILY MAIL: The author Martin Amis has claimed he feels 'morally superior' to Muslim states which are not as 'evolved' as the Western world.

Responding to long-running accusations that he is Islamophobic, Amis launched a fresh invective against the Muslim faith and many of its followers.

He admitted his late father and grandfather had been racist but then claimed radical Muslims were the real racists, misogynists and homophobes.

The 58-year-old defended a proposal he made last year that Muslims be deported and strip-searched in a crackdown on terrorism.

His latest comments came in a TV news interview last night and during the Cheltenham Literature Festival last week.

The Muslim Council of Britain branded them racist and 'shameful'.

In an interview with Jon Snow on Channel Four News, Amis declared: 'I feel morally superior to Islamists, by some distance. I feel an intellectual distance to Islam.

'There are great problems with Islam. The Koran recommends the beating of women.

'The anti-Semites, the psychotic misogynists and the homophobes are the Islamists.'

Days earlier, Amis shocked festivalgoers in Cheltenham with claims that Muslim states are less 'civilised' than Western society.

'Some societies are just more evolved than others,' he said. 'I am not saying these people are genetically incapable of not being terrorists.

'These societies are arming themselves with weapons like the AK47 and blowing people up on buses and Tubes.'

When one member of his audience suggested not all Muslims were terrorists he retorted: 'No one else is doing it. Martin Amis launches fresh attack on Muslim faith saying Islamic states are 'less evolved' (more) By Laura Clark and Tahira Yaqoob

Mark Alexander
Self-Satisfied Gordon Has Every Intention of Reneging on His Promise of a Referendum on the EU Constitution

DAILY MAIL: Gordon Brown is today poised to sign Britain up to the revived EU constitution, dismissing claims from David Cameron that if he breaks his pledge to hold a referendum "no one will trust him on anything else".

The Prime Minister is flying to Lisbon ready to accept the controversial new blueprint despite mounting protests at home.

Downing Street said it hoped the final text could be agreed by the end of the first day of a two-day summit of EU leaders, suggesting Mr Brown does not intend to raise any objections.

In the Commons, the Prime Minister again refused to give way to demands for a referendum, insisting the treaty was an 'amending' document and not a new constitution.

A series of other EU leaders have admitted the new document is almost identical to the 2005 constitution, on which Labour promised a referendum before it was rejected by voters in France and Holland.

It will still create an EU president, give the EU its own "legal personality" like that of a country, end Britain's right to veto EU policy in more than 40 areas, and strengthen EU courts. Gordon Brown is set to fly out for the great European Union cave in

Mark Alexander
First Big Test of Sarkozy’s Resolve

BBC: France is waking to a nationwide one-day strike by public transport workers that has left the country with almost no train, bus or metro services.

The strike began on Wednesday at 2000 local time (1800 GMT).

It is the first test of President Nicolas Sarkozy's resolve to push through public sector reform including plans to scrap pension privileges.

Workers in jobs deemed physically demanding will no longer be able to retire at the age of 50.

The strike comes as France prepares to host Saturday's Rugby World Cup final.
Tens of thousands of English and South African fans are expected to arrive in Paris. France wakes to transport misery (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Strike hits French transport

Mark Alexander
Turkish Parliament Gives Green Light for Military Operations in Iraq

BBC: Turkey's parliament has given permission for the government to launch military operations into Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish rebels.

The vote was taken in defiance of pressure from the US and Iraq, which have called on Turkey for restraint. Turkish MPs back attacks in Iraq (more)

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL:
Turkish Parliament Approves Cross-Border Attacks

NEW YORK TIMES:
Parliament in Turkey Approves Iraq Incursion

Mark Alexander
A View from the Top of Qatari Society: Sheikha Mozah Speaks to Ian Black

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Photo courtesy of The Guardian

THE GUARDIAN: With freedoms and opportunities unavailable elsewhere in the region, the people of Qatar have no need of extremism, Sheikha Mozah of the Gulf state tells Ian Black

Sipping sweet Arabic coffee from a delicate porcelain cup, one of the most influential women in the Middle East is pondering the challenges of reconciling globalisation, identity and tradition, explaining how one small country is facing its future - and how to build bridges between civilisations.

Walter Bagehot, the 19th-century British constitutional thinker, would have recognised what he called the "mystique of monarchy" in Sheikha Mozah, the consort (and second of three wives) of the emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani. But alongside the visible trappings of power, wealth and style, there is a remarkable sense, too, of intellectual rigour, of a woman thinking hard about youth, education and the troubled relations between Islam and the west.

Sheikha Mozah bint Nasser al-Missned is unveiled and unusual - a sociology graduate and force for modernisation on the edge of a deeply conservative peninsula. Her high-profile role at home is matched by regular appearances abroad: hence her visit to London this week to receive the prestigious Chatham House prize for international relations, with Prince Andrew on hand at a City banquet to present it.

The difficulty for Qatar, she explains in a wide-ranging conversation at her discreetly opulent Surrey mansion, has been to advance socially without being swept away on the homogenising tide of global change.

"We were confused. Our youth were very close to losing their identity," she says. "We needed something that could be acceptable to young minds and also be part of our heritage and culture."

The emirate is a lucky little place. Its oil and gas reserves generate a whopping per capita annual income of $63,000 (£32,000), placing it among the world's wealthiest countries. The capital, Doha, is a booming cityscape of cranes, glittering towers, five-star hotels and shopping malls. All that is serviced by an army of expats who far outnumber the 250,000 Qatari natives, whose grandparents lived in a world of pearl-divers, falconry and camel racing.

The Qatar Investment Authority is close to buying Sainsbury's, and Qatar Airways is a byword for luxury. There is enough spare cash to spend an enviable 2.8% of GDP on research and development.

"The physical landscape has changed but the real difference is in people's minds, in their style of thinking," says Sheikha Mozah. "Pride and confidence allow them to be open to the rest of the world without hesitation. Now they feel they are part of this process [of change], and they feel responsibility. If you want to achieve a prosperous society, you need that. And I like to think we have achieved that." The satisfaction guarantee (more) By Ian Black

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Bush warnt vor einem “Dritten Weltkrieg” (Bush Warns of a “Third World War”)

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Foto von Bush dank der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: 17. Oktober 2007 Der amerikanische Präsident George W. Bush hat vor einer Zuspitzung des Atomstreits mit Iran bis hin zu einem „Dritten Weltkrieg“ gewarnt. Die politischen Führer der Welt müssten eine atomare Aufrüstung Irans verhindern, wenn sie „an der Vermeidung eines Dritten Weltkriegs interessiert“ sind, sagte Bush am Mittwoch bei einer Pressekonferenz im Weißen Haus.

Bush bezog sich dabei auf die von Irans Präsident Mahmud Ahmadinedschad ausgesprochene Drohung mit der Vernichtung Israels: „Wir haben im Iran einen Führer, der erklärtermaßen die Zerstörung Israels will.“ Zugleich bekräftigte Bush seine Hoffnung auf eine diplomatische Beilegung der Krise.

Appell an Russland

Bush warnte: „Wenn der Iran die Atombombe hätte, dann wäre dies eine gefährliche Bedrohung für den Weltfrieden.“ Den Begriff vom „Dritten Weltkrieg“ ließ Bush im Zusammenhang mit seinen Äußerungen zu den diplomatischen Beratungen mit den Partnerländern fallen: „Ich habe den Leuten gesagt, wenn Ihr an der Vermeidung eines Dritten Weltkriegs interessiert seid, dann solltet Ihr wohl daran interessiert sein, wie man sie (die Iraner) davon abhalten kann, die nötigen Kenntnisse zum Bau einer Nuklearwaffe zu haben.“

Bush erneuerte seinen Vorwurf, dass Iran unter dem Deckmantel seines Nuklearprogramms den Bau von Atomwaffen anstrebe. „Ich weiß, dass sie (die Iraner) die Fähigkeit und das Wissen anstreben, eine Atombombe zu bauen“, sagte Bush. „Und ich weiß, dass es im Interesse der Welt liegt, dies zu vermeiden.“ Bush bekräftigte seine Bereitschaft, mit Russland und anderen Staaten an einer diplomatischen Beilegung des Atomstreits mit Teheran zu arbeiten. Ziel sei es, Iran klarzumachen, dass ihm bei einer Fortsetzung seines Atomprogramms die internationale Isolierung drohe, sagte Bush. Bush warnt vor „Drittem Weltkrieg“ (mehr)

DAILY MAIL:
'Don't let Iran cause World War Three', warns George Bush

THE TELEGRAPH:
George Bush warns Putin over 'World War III' By Alex Spillius in Washington

Mark Alexander
Sir Winston Churchill: “We Shall Outlive the Menace of Tyranny”



Mark Alexander
Ronald Reagan on Appeasement



Mark Alexander
Poll Shows Quarter of Germans Believe National Socialism Had a Positive Side

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Photo of Hitler courtesy of YNet News

YNET NEWS: Talk show host fired for praising Nazi Germany's attitude toward motherhood; poll conducted later shows quarter of Germans believe National Socialism also had some 'good sides'

A German talk show host was fired for praising Nazi Germany's attitude toward motherhood. After that a poll showed that a quarter of Germans believe there were at least some positive aspects to Nazi rule.

Pollsters for the Forsa agency, commissioned by the weekly Stern magazine, asked whether National Socialism also had some "good sides (such as) the construction of the highway system, the elimination of unemployment, the low criminality rate (and) the encouragement of the family."

Forsa said 25 percent responded "yes" - but 70 percent said "no." Germans believe in positive aspects to Nazi rule (more)

Mark Alexander
Dhimmi Brown Sends His Greetings to the Muslim Community on the Occasion of Eid ul-Fitr



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Mark Alexander