Thursday, September 16, 2010

UK Is a 'Force for Good', Says Pope

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The Queen accompanies the Pope as he leaves the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Photograph: The Independent

THE INDEPENDENT: Pope Benedict XVI praised the UK as a "force for good" today as he arrived for a historic visit.

But he also delivered a warning about "aggressive forms of secularism" when he urged the nation not to lose its traditional values as it "strives to be a modern and multicultural society".

The pontiff was officially welcomed by the Queen at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh for the first papal state visit to the UK.

In a speech at the palace, delivered in English, the Pope spoke of the UK's important place in history.

He said: "Your forefathers' respect for truth and justice, for mercy and charity, come to you from a faith that remains a mighty force for good in your kingdom, to the great benefit of Christians and non-Christians alike."

He cited anti-slave campaigners William Wilberforce and David Livingstone, and women such as Florence Nightingale, as examples of that force for good.

And he praised Britain's fight against Hitler's "atheist extremism", saying that "Britain and her leaders stood against a Nazi tyranny that wished to eradicate God from society and denied our common humanity to many, especially the Jews, who were thought unfit to live".

The Pope, who was forced to join the Hitler Youth as a 14-year-old schoolboy, said the UK remained "a key figure politically and economically on the international stage".

"Your Government and people are the shapers of ideas that still have an impact far beyond the British Isles. This places upon them a particular duty to act wisely for the common good."

And, referring to the future, he delivered an apparent warning about the risks to the nation's traditional values.

He said: "Today, the United Kingdom strives to be a modern and multicultural society.

"In this challenging enterprise, may it always maintain its respect for those traditional values and cultural expressions that more aggressive forms of secularism no longer value or even tolerate." >>> PA | Thursday, September 16, 2010

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Top Muslimah Says Coalition Will Restore Faith to Heart of Britain! Big Question Is: Which Faith?

THE TELEGRAPH: Religion will play a crucial role in Coalition policy and should remain at the "heart of society", a senior Tory minister pledged ahead of the Pope's historic visit to Britain.

Baroness Warsi, the Conservative Party chairman, said that the new Government "understands" faith and wanted religious groups to play a greater and more prominent role in Britain, including the provision of public services.

She attacked the previous government for seeking to undermine "the positive power of faith", saying that the Coalition "does God" – a reference to the remark by Alastair Campbell, Tony Blair's former spin doctor, who boasted that New Labour did not "do God".

Pope Benedict XVI's four-day tour – the first state papal visit to Britain following the pastoral trip made by John Paul II in 1982 – will begin today in Edinburgh. He will then travel to London where he is expected to urge MPs and peers to show more respect to believers in a key speech in Parliament tomorrow. He is due to meet the Prime Minister privately on Saturday and speak alongside him at Birmingham Airport before his departure on Sunday.

Controversial comments from a senior Vatican figure threatened to overshadow the visit last night. Cardinal Walter Kasper, who has been in charge of promoting Christian unity for the past decade, said that Britain resembled a "Third World country" and was characterised by a "new and aggressive atheism".

Ahead of the Pope's arrival, ministers have sought to stress their religious credentials. David Cameron said earlier this week that the visit provided a "unique opportunity" to celebrate the work of religious groups.

In a speech to Church of England bishops in Oxford, Lady Warsi said that the Coalition was on the side of religion.

The minister without portfolio, the first Muslim woman to serve in the Cabinet, said: "The fact is that our world is more religious than ever. Faith is here to stay. It is part of the fabric of human experience. And in Britain faith is very much alive and kicking."

She added that Britain needed a government that "understands faith, which is comfortable with faith, and which, when necessary, is prepared to speak out about issues of faith". Coalition: 'We will restore faith to heart of Britain’ >>> Robert Winnett and Martin Beckford | Wednesday, Septemebr 15, 2010

Oh Christ! We really do have problems when the most senior Muslimah in the Conservative Party, nay government, starts spouting forth that faith is to be restored to the heart of British society and politics! Is this what David Cameron meant when he spoke of the “Big Society”?

If by “restoring faith” she means restoring the Christian faith, she may have a point. But if she means restoring faith in society, and intending that faith to be Islam, I have a great problem with that statement. She can stuff her Islam! I don’t want amputations for theft in this country, nor stonings to death for adultery, nor beheadings for capital criminals. All those barbaric punishments belong in the sandy regions, in the desert, the home of Islam.
– © Mark
Turks Believe Focus Should Be On Middle East and Away from Europe

THE GUARDIAN: New survey finds support for European Union dwindling in Turkey, while nuclear-armed Iran would be welcome

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Turkey signed a nuclear fuel deal with Iran earlier this year, signalling a move toward closer Middle East integration. Photo: The Guardian

Turkey sees its interests increasingly better served by greater involvement in the Middle East, and is relatively untroubled by the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran, according to an opinion poll today which highlighted the widening gulf between Ankara and the west.

Growing frustration in Turkey at the lack of progress towards joining the European Union, as well as strong popular hostility in Germany and France to having the Turks in the union, were also underlined by the survey.

The annual Transatlantic Trends survey was conducted in 11 EU countries, the US and Turkey, by the institution called The German Marshall Fund of the United States. The poll found that 20% of Turks believed their primary partners should be Middle East countries, while 13% favoured the EU. Compared with last year, that almost halved support for the EU while doubling the figure for engagement with the Middle East. >>> Ian Traynor in Brussels | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Banking Bailout Was Unfair, Mervyn King Tells TUC

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said he believed it was vital the Government set out a clear plan for reducing the deficit. Photograph: The Independent

THE INDEPENDENT: The Bank of England governor Mervyn King today described the huge banking bailout as "unfair" and appeared to sympathise with calls for multibillion-pound tax evasion to be tackled when he spoke to union activists.

Mr King told the TUC Congress in Manchester that he understood the strength of feeling over the size of bankers' bonuses and said "radical reform" of the UK's financial system was needed.

The 62-year-old faced minor protests from some banner-waving delegates and a walkout by the Rail Maritime and Transport union delegation, who retreated to their exhibition stand to watch children's TV.

He was also told bluntly that bankers were "greedy bullshitters" and that he had failed in his job.

As he waited to speak, delegates called for a high pay commission to investigate the "out of control" wages of executives and other high earners.

The Communication Workers Union said a commission should examine the difference between the highest and lowest pay in leading companies.

General secretary Billy Hayes said: "The blatant double standards in pay for those at the top of companies compared to those at bottom is outrageous and leads to dissatisfaction and a divided society of haves and have-nots." >>> Alan Jones, PA | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
New York Plans to Ban Smoking Outdoors

THE TELEGRAPH: New York City officials have announced a plan to ban smoking outdoors.

City officials said that the new legislation would outlaw smoking in parks, beaches, marinas, boardwalks and pedestrian plazas throughout the American city.

That means no smoking in Central Park or on the Coney Island boardwalk.

People who break the ban could be issued with quality-of-life summonses by the parks department. >>> | Wednesday, September 15, 2010

NYC Will Pursue Smoking Ban in Parks, Beaches

THE GLOBE AND MAIL: Broad extension of city’s smoking ban would mean no smoking in Central Park, on Coney Island boardwalk

New York City wants to take its tough smoking ban outdoors.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other officials announced Wednesday that they will pursue a broad extension of the city's smoking ban to parks, beaches, marinas, boardwalks and pedestrian plazas throughout the city.

That would mean no smoking in Central Park, no lighting up on the Coney Island boardwalk and putting the cigarettes away if you're lounging on the traffic-free Broadway pedestrian plaza in Times Square.

Officials said they are basing the proposed law on claims that even brief exposure to secondhand smoke can pose health risks.
“The science is clear: prolonged exposure to secondhand smoke, whether you're indoors or out, hurts your health,” Mr. Bloomberg said in a statement. “Today, we're doing something about it.” >>> Sara Kugler Frazier, New York , The Associated Press | Wednesday, September 15, 2010

How do New Yorkers put up with Bloomberg? He’s a despicable little tyrant. And I mean little. At 5’6” he’s diminutive! But that means he’s just the sort to have a Napoleonic complex.

This man is tyrannical, arrogant, and self-righteous.

Many years ago, I remember reading that he used to be a chain-smoker. He decided to give up. That was good for his health. Unfortunately, at the same time as he decided to quit, he decided that the whole world should quit smoking along with him. Ex-smokers are often like that. By the way, Google seems to have been purged of all reference to Michael Bloomberg having been a heavy smoker. I wonder why?

I am an ex-smoker; and I have successfully quit. I derived years of pleasure from smoking; but the time came to stop; and I did so. But at the same time, I promised myself that I wouldn’t become an insufferable ex-smoker. That means to say, an ex-smoker who cannot tolerate other people’s smoking faiblesse. In fact, even though I have given up smoking, I am quite happy to be in the company of smokers: it gives me great pleasure to see others enjoying themselves, and feeling relaxed. Unlike Mayor Bloomberg, I am not a killjoy.

I like to think that I take a balanced view of the evils of smoking. Of course it’s not a healthy habit. But then so many things in life aren’t healthy either. Is it healthy to have tattoos? Is it healthy to have piercings? Is it healthy to eat a lot of saturated fat, or salt, or cholesterol-rich foods? Is it healthy to walk for a long period on the sidewalks, or pavements, with vehicles belching out exhaust fumes? What is Mayor Bloomberg going to do about the pollution from the traffic in New York? Surely that is far more injurious to the health of New Yorkers than a small amount of second-hand smoke, sitting next to someone on a park bench in Central Park!

Come to think of it, what is Mayor Bloomberg doing about the infestation of bedbugs there in New York city? I can’t imagine anything more important for him to tackle than bedbugs. I certainly think he’d be better advised to tackle that problem first. The problem is acute.

I remember visiting the Big Apple when times were very different. In those days, not so long ago actually, prior to Bloomberg becoming Mayor of the city, one could enjoy oneself there. Really enjoy oneself. Even though I am a non-smoker, I really can’t imagine getting much enjoyment from a trip to that once great city now. It would be far, far too restricting and oppressive for me. I think I’ll wait for Mayor Bloomberg to be ejected from office before my next visit. Surely it can’t be that much longer before New Yorkers get the great idea of ridding their wonderful city of such a mean-spirited, domineering character.
– © Mark


THE TELEGRAPH: New York smoking ban: a lot of huff over not much puff – New York's proposed smoking ban is a bad idea, argues Jenny McCartney. >>> Jenny McCartney | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Expulsions : CONTRE-ATTAQUE - Nicolas Sarkozy suggère à Viviane Reding d'accueillir des Roms au Luxembourg

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Nicolas Sarkozy a affirmé devant les sénateurs UMP que la France ne faisait qu'appliquer les règlements européens en matière d'expulsions. Photo : Le Point

LE POINT: "Malveillantes". C'est ainsi que le ministre luxembourgeois des Affaires étrangères, Jean Asselborn, a qualifié les attaques de Nicolas Sarkozy, après que celui-ci a suggéré mercredi à la commissaire européenne Viviane Reding, qui a critiqué les renvois de Roms par la France, d'accueillir des Roms au Luxembourg, son pays d'origine. >>> Source AFP | Mercredi 15 Septembre 2010

THE GUARDIAN: Nicolas Sarkozy tells Luxembourg to take in Roma: French president angered by EU justice commissioner's attack as party defends expulsion policy as 'applying EU regulations' >>> Ian Traynor in Brussels | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Papstbesuch: Benedikts heikle Mission

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Von der Vorfreude der Briten auf den Papst ist nicht viel geblieben. Foto: Focus Online

FOCUS ONLINE: Historisch und schwierig: Papst Benedikt XVI. reist am Donnerstag nach Großbritannien – nie zuvor gab es einen Staatsbesuch eines Papstes auf der Insel. Aber die Briten zeigen sich „not amused“.

Nein, die Briten fiebern dem Papst nicht entgegen. Der erste offizielle Staatsbesuch des katholischen Oberhauptes im Vereinigten Königreich seit sich vor einem halben Jahrtausend die anglikanische von der katholischen Kirche lossagte, ist den Briten schnurzegal. Nahezu 80 Prozent gaben bei einer Umfrage an, „kein persönliches Interesse“ an dem Besuch zu haben. Auf die Frage, ob Benedikts viertägige Anwesenheit in Schottland und England gut oder schlecht für Großbritannien sei, antworteten die meisten mit „weiß nicht“.

Dabei haben britische Offizielle den Papst seit Langem heftig umworben: Bereits 2006 bat der damalige Erzbischof von Westminster den ein Jahr zuvor ins Amt gewählten Benedikt XVI. um einen Besuch. Im selben Jahr sprach Tony Blair, damals noch Premierminister und noch nicht zum katholischen Glauben übergetreten, eine Einladung aus. 2007 folgte Gordon Brown mit derselben Bitte – noch bevor er Blair auch als Premier nachgefolgt war. Weitere Aufforderungen kamen gleich von mehreren Labour- und Toryabgeordneten. Im vergangenen Jahr fragte sogar Margaret Thatcher. Und als schließlich und endlich klar war, dass Benedikt annehmen würde, sprach die Königin ihre offizielle Einladung aus. „Wir haben ihn mit Einladungen beworfen wie mit Konfetti“, schrieb die „Sunday Times“. „Er muss geglaubt haben, wir seien absolut verrückt nach ihm.“ Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> Von FOCUS-Korrespondentin Imke Henkel, London | Mittwoch, 15. September 2010
Walter Kasper: Irritationen über Kardinal überschatten Papst-Reise

Walter Kasper
Kurienkardinal Walter Kaspers Äußerungen werden auch im Ausland genau beobachtet. Foto: Focus Online

FOCUS ONLINE: Ist Kardinal Walter Kasper zu peinlich, um den Papst nach Großbritannien zu begleiten? Das jedenfalls finden britische Medien nach Kaspers Interview mit FOCUS.

Ein FOCUS-Interview macht Schlagzeilen in Großbritannien: Kardinal Kaspers Vergleich der Insel mit einem Land der „Dritten Welt“ soll dazu geführt haben, dass Kasper, anders als geplant, den Papst nicht auf seine Reise nach England und Schottland begleitet, spekulieren britische Medien.

In dem Interview in der aktuellen Ausgabe des FOCUS hatte Kasper auf die Frage, warum so viele Briten Unmut über den Papst äußerten, geantwortet: „England ist heute ein säkularisiertes, pluralistisches Land. Wenn Sie am Flughafen Heathrow landen, denken Sie manchmal, Sie wären in einem Land der Dritten Welt gelandet.” Kasper bejahte außerdem die Frage, ob Christen im Königreich benachteiligt würden, und erläuterte: “Vor allem in England ist ein aggressiver Neu-Atheismus verbreitet. Wenn Sie etwa bei British Airways ein Kreuz tragen, werden Sie benachteiligt. Wir wollen aber unseren Glauben öffentlich zeigen. Jeder, der England kennt, weiß, dass es dort auch eine große christliche Tradition gibt. Europa wäre nicht mehr Europa, wenn es diese Tradition nicht bewahren könnte.”

Kasper bezog sich damit auf einen vier Jahre alten Fall einer Angestellten von “British Airways”, der untersagt worden war, während der Arbeit eine Halskette mit Kreuz über ihrer Uniform und damit für Kunden sichtbar zu tragen. Der Fall war seinerzeit auch in Großbritannien kontrovers diskutiert worden. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> Von den FOCUS-Korrespondentinnen Imke Henkel (London) und Eva Kallinger (Rom) | Mittwoch, 15. September 2010
Oz Taxpayers Footing the Bill for Oprah's 'Gift'

YAHOO! TV UK: Taxpayers in Australia are reportedly furious after discovering they will be paying to fly Oprah Winfrey's audience to the country.

The Daily Mail claims that the Australian tourist board is splashing out more than $2.3 million to take 300 of the chat show host's guests on an all-expenses-paid trip. >>> Paul Johnston | Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Related >>>
Carla Bruni's Rivalry with Michelle Obama Has Damaged US Relations with France

THE TELEGRAPH: French President Nicolas Sarkozy's wife Carla Bruni's alleged rivalry with Michelle Obama has strained relations between the French and US presidential couples.

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Michelle Obama and Carla Bruni-Sarkozy in June 2009. Photo: The Telegraph

The author of "Carla: A Secret Life" - a biography chronicling her transformation from an allegedly tempestuous man-eater into an apparent model spouse - suggests Carla Bruni-Sarkozy has become something of a political liability for her husband.

Besma Lahouri says Mrs Bruni-Sarkozy's image of distant, well-heeled perfection has kept her at arm's length from the French people.

At a time when the conservative president's popularity has plummeted, and he is being criticised for raising the retirement age and cracking down on Eastern European Gypsy immigrants, having a more accessible first lady might soften his image, she said.

"The French don't know their first lady, and her worries seem to them very far removed from their own," Lahouri. >>> The Telegraph’s Foreign Staff | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Chinese Think Tank Warns US It Will Emerge as Loser in Trade War

THE TELEGRAPH: A State Council think-tank in China has warned Washington that the US will come off worst in a trade war if it imposes sanctions against Beijing over the two nations' currency spat.

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The US is considering legislation to punish Beijing for holding down the yuan. Photo: The Telegraph

Ding Yifan, a policy guru at the Development Research Centre, said China could respond by selling holdings of US debt, estimated at over $1.5 trillion (£963bn). This would trigger a rise in US interest rates. His comments at a forum in Beijing follow a string of remarks by Chinese officials questioning US credit-worthiness and the reliability of the dollar.

China's authorities seem split over how to respond to moves on Capitol Hill for legislation to punish Beijing for holding down the yuan. The central bank has ruled out use of its "nuclear weapon", insisting that it would not exploit its $2.45 trillion of foreign reserves for political purposes. "The US Treasury market is a very important market for China," it said.

However, the mood is hardening on both sides of the Pacific. The dispute risks escalating if China's trade surplus with the US climbs further and more US jobs are lost. US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, who has taken a softly-softly line in the past, said on Friday that China had done "very little" to correct the undervaluation of the yuan since ending the dollar peg in June. >>> Ambrose Evans-Pritchard | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Van Rompuy Accused of Power Grab Over EU Foreign Policy

THE TELEGRAPH: Herman Van Rompuy, the EU president, has tried to sideline Baroness Ashton to seize control over key aspects of foreign policy.

Mr Van Rompuy, the President of the European Council which brings together EU leaders, has been accused of supporting a French proposal to set up a "special task force" on strategic relations that would rival Lady Ashton, who is supposed to be in charge of Europe's foreign policy.

"He tried to overreach himself by getting Ashton and member states to report to him on their strategic relationships with China, India, Russia and the US. Meanwhile preparations for Thursday have not been up to standard," said an official.

The Daily Telegraph understands that the disarray and the squabble between the EU's president and foreign minister has been blamed for a "lack of focus" at a time when Europe is trying, and failing, to punch its weight against the US and China on the global stage. >>> Bruno Waterfield in Brussels | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Bank of England Governor Mervyn King Warns Unions Accept Cuts or 'Fail Your Children'

THE TELEGRAPH: Meryn King, the Governor of the Bank of England, has urged the unions to accept public sector reforms and jobs cuts by warning that anything short of tackling the UK's record Budget deficit would “fail the next generation”.



Addressing the Trades Union Congress, he described the current deficit as “unsustainable” and, in an implicit defence of the Coalition's policy, argued that “the current plan ... to reduce the deficit steadily over five years [is] a more gradual fiscal tightening than in some other countries”.

“Vague promises would not have been enough,” he told the Manchester conference, where union leaders have described the Government as the “Demolition Coalition” and threatened civil disobedience in protest at the planned reforms.

“Market reaction to rising sovereign debt can turn quickly from benign to malign, as we saw in the euro area earlier this year. It is not sensible to risk a damaging rise in long-term interest rates that would make investment and the cost of mortgages more expensive,” Mr King said.

“The costs of this crisis will be with us for a generation. And we owe it to the next generation to seize this opportunity to put in place the reforms that will make another crisis much less likely and much less damaging.”

He stressed that reducing the Budget deficit, which is forecast to hit £149bn this year – the largest peacetime deficit in history and the biggest as a proportion of GDP in Europe, is one of a number of necessary reforms, and will require co-operation from the unions. >>> Philip Aldrick, Economics Editor | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
The RAF Can Be Trimmed but to Cut the Navy and Army Is Insane

THE TELEGRAPH: The modern world is looking very dangerous – we need defence more than an overseas aid budget, says Simon Heffer.

As the Trades Union Congress seeks to lose Labour the next election even more heavily than it lost the last one, by promising general strikes and a mindless and bankrupting commitment to spending money Britain hasn't got, we should not lose sight of one point: that there are, indeed, certain cuts that would be most unwise. I think of one in particular, discussed in our pages yesterday by the former head of the Army, General Sir Richard Dannatt: the precipitate, reckless and little-short-of-insane cuts being planned for our Armed Forces.

The TUC and its satraps in the Labour Party pretend to oppose cuts because of the impact they would have on "public services". What they really mean is on "the jobs of our members". Many public services, notably in quangos, local government and even the untouchable National Health Service, harbour tens of thousands of members of the Brownite client state who are about as socially useful as a phial of arsenic. This is even true of defence, but only up to a point. It should, and must, be cut less than any other department. Most of the public would hardly register any difference in other public services if they had 25 per cent of their flab cut out of them. If it went from defence, our security would be imperilled for a generation. Sir Richard has made the case for restraint admirably; but forgive me if I add some further thoughts.

The Ministry of Defence has, to an extent, asked for this. It has about 85,000 civil servants, roughly the same as the total complements of the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force put together. One of the first places to start a clear-out is there. Such numbers of pen-pushers are unsustainable. Drastic reductions in this establishment are no doubt tabled for the meeting of the defence review now rescheduled for next week (it was to be on Friday but for the death of the Prime Minister's father). So they should be. As for the rest, as Sir Richard has outlined this week, it all depends on what we conceive the potential threats to the realm to be in the 10 or 15 years ahead. It also depends – and here we get to the love that dare not speak its name – what conception we choose to have of ourselves as a nation, and of our place in the world, over the next decade or two.

The question of threat is real rather than imagined. The world is more dangerous now than at any time since the early 1960s, when a vodka-powered Khruschev was up against the inexperienced Kennedy, and we waited for nuclear war to break out. We have chosen through Nato to align ourselves with other nations committed to the continuation of what we might loosely call Western civilisation. Inevitably, other nations regard this either as a standing affront to them or, in one or two cases, possibly even a target. Suppose either Israel attacks Iran or Iran attacks Israel. Forget the so-called special relationship, and forget conceptions of our place in the world. Where would our national interest lie in the event of such a terrible conflict being initiated, whoever the initiator, and irrespective of what America or Europe may think? Have our diplomats, not least our rather preoccupied Foreign Secretary, deemed and defined what our national interest now is? For it would be too late to do so once we have inadequate martial force to back it up. Would we be happy to sit and watch America and Islam fight a war without having the resources to exert influence – with either side – ourselves? Would we be happy to have our existing, meagre part reduced to nothing? For that is what is at stake. Read on and comment >>> Simon Heffer | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
The Pope Deserves Better from Britain

THE TELEGRAPH: Pope Benedict XVI is a serious man whose message risks being drowned out by misguided noise, argues Michael Burleigh.

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Pope Benedict in Rome's Basilica of St. John Lateran. Photo: The Telegraph

”There cannot be a "dialogue" with Islam until there is meaningful reciprocity of such religious freedoms as the right to open places of worship or to convert without fear of death. To underline that, Benedict used St Peter's Basilica to receive the Italian Muslim convert Magdi Allam into the faith.” – Michael Burleigh

The two Bush presidents liked to refer to themselves as "41" and "43" in a democratic succession that goes back to George "1" Washington in 1789. This country is about to receive Benedict XVI who, were he vulgarly inclined, could highlight that he is "265" in an apostolic succession that originated with Christ's commission to St Peter.

Under normal circumstances, one might say "welcome" rather than "receive". But the multiple sexual scandals that have afflicted parts of the Catholic Church have created a window of opportunity for sundry chasers of limelight – including human rights militants, crusading gays, Islamist fanatics, and celebrity God-botherers – to band together to "arrest" the Pope under laws so obscure that few knew they existed. Because child abuse is involved, rather than the more widespread phenomenon of homosexual predation on young men, these manifestations will receive much media attention, especially from the BBC, to the guaranteed perplexity of a less involved general public in a nominally Protestant country. It will require some effort of mind to tune out this noise to hear what the Pope will be saying.

The stations of Josef Ratzinger's life are almost guaranteed to make unthinking liberals recoil, just as his classical European erudition does not sit well with a local culture that has taken irony and philistinism to levels whose self-satisfied provincialism are not hard to parody. Britain may be bankrupt, but we have "comedians" aplenty.

As a 14 year-old, the future Pope was conscripted into the Hitler Youth, along with the majority of his age cohort. That year, 1941, one of his cousins, who had Down's syndrome, was murdered in the Nazis' monstrous "euthanasia" campaign. As the Nazis ran out of cannon fodder, even young seminarians were drafted into such tasks as manning anti-aircraft batteries, which Ratzinger did in the years before he briefly entered Allied captivity.

That typical German experience made Ratzinger especially receptive to the Church's multiple condemnations of totalitarianism, perhaps nowhere better expressed than in Pius XI's 1937 encyclical "With burning anxiety". Rabid anticlericalism and credulity towards the wonder-working state was the common denominator between 19th-century liberalism and the totalitarian creeds of the 20th century. Starting with the Russian Bolsheviks, followed by revolutionary Mexico and Spain, the progressively murderous Left sought to wipe out the Christian churches, which were sometimes intimately associated with inequitable social orders. Ironically, the late 19th-century papacy of Leo XIII had been in the forefront of demanding that industrial workers receive their due dignity and respect.

Both Communism and Nazism inaugurated what Churchill accurately described as "man worship" while the state barged its way into such spheres as the family and education, usually through dedicated youth organisations of the kind Ratzinger was impressed into. Although the Pope is not a political animal, there can be little doubt that he was influenced by that remarkable generation of post-war Christian Democrat leaders, such as Adenauer or De Gasperi, who did so much to restore the self-confidence of a continent turned into a desert of despair by totalitarianism.

As a distinguished academic theologian, Ratzinger was again exposed to the rabidly intolerant Left during a spell at the University of Tübingen in the 1960s. Whereas it would be axiomatic to an apprentice cobbler or mechanic that a master craftsman knew his trade, campus Marxists imagined that their dogmas explained both the entirety of history and all human knowledge. Entire disciplines had either to be re-forged in accordance with their materialist creed or considered redundant. Read on and comment >>> Michael Burleigh | Wednesday, 15, 2010

My comment as it appears on The Telegraph:

A truly wonderful article. Thank you.

I believe that we should welcome Pope Benedict XVI as warmly as we can. For your information, I am not a Roman Catholic.

In my opinion, Pope Benedict XVI is a wonderful man, a scholar in the true sense, a man of erudition, a learned man. He is also an aesthete.

For me, it is a privilege to welcome this pope to our shores. It is to be hoped that the ridiculous crowd will not embarrass the British people by trying to pull stunts. I hope they'll go to the pub for a pint instead.

Pope Benedict XVI is a man of great dignity. He should be treated accordingly.
– © Mark


David Cameron’s welcome message >>>
Cameron's Welcome Message For Pope

SKY NEWS: David Cameron has recorded a welcome message for the Pope ahead of the Pontiff's visit to the UK.

Terror Group In Warning To 'Criminal' Bankers

YAHOO! NEWS: The Real IRA has said it will resume attacks on the UK mainland - with banks and bankers its principal targets.

Vowing to alternate between "military, political and economic targets", the republican terror group has said that bankers are "criminals" and their role in funding Britain's colonial and capitalist system "has not gone unnoticed".

Responding to questions from The Guardian, a spokesman for the Real IRA said: "We have a track record of attacking high-profile economic targets and financial institutions.

"The bankers grease the politicians' palms, the politicians bail out the bankers with public funds, the bankers pay themselves fat bonuses and loan the money back to the public with interest.

"It's essentially a crime spree that benefits a social elite at the expense of many millions of victims." >>> Sky News | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Slovenian Newsreader Caught without Trousers

THE TELEGRAPH: A newsreader in Slovenia has been caught on camera reading the news in a his underpants.



The newscast, which has become a hit on YouTube, shows the presenter finishing reading the news.

He then moves his swivel chair away from the desk to reveal that he is only wearing boxer shorts with his shirt and suit jacket. >>> | Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Australian TV Bans Pro-euthanasia Advert

THE TELEGRAPH: Australia has banned the first televised pro-euthanasia advert which featured a terminally ill man saying: "I did not choose this."



The 45-second advert featured an ill-looking man sitting on a bed talking about the choices he has made in life.

"I chose to marry Tina, have two great kids. I chose to always drive a Ford," the actor says. "What I didn't choose is being terminally ill.

"I didn't choose to starve to death because eating is like swallowing razor blades. I certainly didn't choose to have to watch my family go through it with me. I've made my final choice. I just need the government to listen." >>> | Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Tuesday, September 14, 2010


Obama will weitere Millionen für Kontrolle der Öl-Industrie: Bohrungen im offenen Meer sollen strenger überwacht werden

NZZ ONLINE: Die Aktivitäten der Öl- und Gasindustrie in den USA auf dem offenen Meer sollen nach dem Willen von Präsident Barack Obama wirkungsvoller überwacht werden. Bohranlagen will die Regierung besser auf ihre Umweltverträglichkeit überprüfen.

Obama beantragte für die besseren Kontrollen von Offshore-Bohrungen beim Kongress mehr als 90 Millionen Dollar. Der Antrag erfolgt, nachdem die Ölkatastrophe im Golf von Mexiko zahlreiche Missstände bei den Bohrungen vor der Küste gezeigt hat. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> sda/afp | Dienstag, 14. September 2010
Lionel Richie: You Are My Destiny



And then chill out to the sound of Lionel Richie singing Do It To Me
Eiffel Tower Evacuated After Bomb Alert

THE TELEGRAPH: Police have evacuated the Eiffel Tower and the park surrounding the Paris landmark after a bomb alert

Tourists were evacuated from the Eiffel Tower just before 9pm local time (8pm in the UK), according to French newspaper Le Figaro.

The company that runs the Tower received an anonymous phone call saying that there was a bomb planted there at 8.20pm. >>> | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Iran Releases Detained American Woman

ARAB NEWS: TEHRAN, Iran: An American woman detained for more than a year in Iran was released Tuesday on a bail of $500,000, according to state television, more than a year after she was jailed with two other Americans and accused of spying.

The announcement came days after conflicting statements by Iranian authorities on whether Sarah Shourd would be released as the process was complicated by political feuds among the leadership and questions over how a payment could be made for her freedom without violating international sanctions.

The English-language Press TV reported only that Shourd, 32, had been released "on a bail of $500,000" but did not specify whether the money had been paid or give more details. Her family had said it was having difficulty raising the money.

Her lawyer, Masoud Shafiei, said Shourd had been released but was still undergoing formalities inside the Evin Prison, where she has been held in solitary confinement. He said he had no information about her departure route or any details about bail.

A spokesman for the Swiss Foreign Ministry, Lars Knuchel said the release had not been formally confirmed but "we are very confident that things are moving into the right direction." The US broke off ties with Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and Switzerland handles US interests in Iran. Read on and comment >>> Associated Press | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
The West’s Unholy Alliance

YNET NEWS: Op-ed: West increasingly currying favor with Islamists while ignoring their murderous tendencies

When philosophy professor Tom Hickey, one of the initiators of the British academic boycott on Israel, was asked why he refrained from imposing a boycott on the US and Russia too over their actions in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Chechnya, he responded without flinching that these states are too big and powerful, making such boycott ineffective.

Indeed, too often size dictates one’s position, even when it comes to philosophy professors, who on normal days would be horrified by the very thought that their students would seek to apply ethical principles based on considerations of size, power, and effectiveness.

And so, the greater the Islamic threat becomes, the more we see the Free World growing silent on the moral front. The clear tendency of Hickey and his ilk is to endorse almost any Islamist fanatic just to elicit some moderate tunes; for example, the growing Obama Administration’s tendency to “understand” the Muslims, among other things because “Islam is part of promoting global peace,” because “Jihad is about purifying,” and because “there is no connection between Islam and the murder of innocents.”

The above explains why people all over the world in recent days became so horrified by the pyromaniac fantasies of some crazy Florida minister, while completely ignoring Islamic threats to reignite America and the rest of the West, nine years after the September 11 attacks. >>> Shaul Rosenfeld * | Tuesday, September 14, 2010

* Dr. Shaul Rosenfeld is a philosophy lecturer
McDonald's Targeted in US Health Ad

THE GUARDIAN: Unhappy meals: American doctors' TV ad features a corpse holding a hamburger and the line 'I was lovin' it'. McDonald's, which has thrived in the recession, isn't laughing



It is an image to sap the flabbiest of appetites. An overweight, middle-aged man lies dead on a mortuary trolley, with a woman weeping over his body. The corpse's cold hand still clutches a half-eaten McDonald's hamburger.

A hard-hitting US television commercial bankrolled by a Washington-based medical group has infuriated McDonald's by taking an unusually direct shot at the world's biggest fast-food chain this week, using a scene filmed in a mortuary followed by a shot of the brand's golden arches logo and a strapline declaring: "I was lovin' it."

The line is a provocative twist on McDonald's long-standing advertising slogan, "I'm lovin' it" and a voiceover intones: "High cholesterol, high blood pressure, heart attacks. Tonight, make it vegetarian."

The commercial, bankrolled by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), goes further than most non-profit advertising and has drawn an angry reaction from both the Chicago-based hamburger multinational and the broader restaurant industry. >>> Andrew Clark in New York | Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Al hamdu lillah! French Senate Approves 'Burka Ban'

THE TELEGRAPH: The French parliament has approved a ban on wearing a full-face veil in public.

The law will come into force early next year if it is not overturned by senior judges. The bill had already cleared the lower house in July and was passed by the Senate with 246 votes to one.

The text makes no mention of Islam, but President Nicolas Sarkozy's government promoted the law as a means to protect women from being forced to wear Muslim full-face veils such as the burqa or the niqab.

France's five-million-strong Muslim minority is Western Europe's largest, but fewer than 2,000 women are believed actually to wear a full face veil. Many Muslim leaders have said they support neither the veil nor the law banning it. >>> | Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Lien en relation avec l’article ici.

Was die Schweiz betrifft, hier

Britain Could Never Debate the Burka Like France

THE TIMES: President Sarkozy's proposed ban may be pure politicking, but it does expose a fundamental cross-Channel difference

"The burka is not a religious problem, it's a question of liberty and women's dignity. It's not a religious symbol, but a sign of subservience and debasement. I want to say solemnly, the burka is not welcome in France. In our country, we can't accept women prisoners behind a screen, cut off from all social life, deprived of all identity. That is not our idea of freedom.”

So spoke Nicolas Sarkozy in Versailles during his first state of the nation address to France's two chambers, the National Assembly and the Senate. He won rapturous applause and there is little doubt that an overwhelming majority of the French agreed with his every word. I say an overwhelming majority because this issue crosses all party lines in France. Republican principles of equality and secularism are so deeply grounded in the French mind that they belong as much to the Left as to the Right.

For someone like me, firmly on the Left, the defence of secularism is the only way to guarantee cultural diversity and national cohesion. One cannot go without the other. However, when I get on Eurostar to London, I feel totally alien. To my horror, my liberal-left British friends find such a position closer to that of the hard Right.

So does Mr Sarkozy's speech mean France is about to forbid its citizens to wear the burka on the streets? Unlikely. Mr Sarkozy's speech should be seen as piece of politics; he wants to reassure his party of his allegiance to the ideals of the French Republic and to undermine even further the awkward position of the Left.

The resurgence of a public debate on religious symbols in France is not innocent on Mr Sarkozy's part. It is another instance of his extraordinary ability to fill the public agenda with new debates and new ideas for yet more reforms to maintain a state of frenzied agitation, which leaves the French feeling both weary and wary. Despite good results at the European election, Mr Sarkozy and his Government are not popular. >>> Agnès Poirier | Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Schweiz: Aargauer Parlament fordert nationales Verhüllungs-Verbot

SCHWEIZER FERNSEHEN: Der Bund soll ein nationales Verhüllungs-Verbot im öffentlichen Raum erlassen. Das verlangt der Aargauer Grosse Rat in einer Standesinitiative an die Bundesversammlung. Das Parlament hat die Initiative mit 76 gegen 42 Stimmen beschlossen.

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Das Aargauer Parlament will das Tragen von «Kleidungsstücken, die das Gesicht ganz oder hauptsächlich verhüllen», in der ganzen Schweiz verbieten lassen. Bild: Schweizer Fernsehen

Zum Artikel >>> sda/godc | Dienstag, 14. September 2010

Verhüllungsverbot *

SCHWEIZER FERNSEHEN: Aargauer Kantonsparlament fordert ein nationales Verhüllungsverbot. Es hat eine Standesinitiative an die Bundesversammlung beschlossen.

Schweiz aktuell vom 14.09.2010

* Das Video wurde in Schwyzertüütsch gemacht.
Operation South Coast: Germany's Plans for the Invasion of Britain Revealed in Rare Nazi Book Not Seen for 70 Years

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446-page Nazi war dossier details Hitler's planned 'Operation Sealion'. Photograph: Mail Online

MAIL ONLINE: With obscure technical diagrams and notes scrawled over its pages of faded colour maps, this book might appear as nothing more than an uninspiring aerial survey.

But these pictures are taken from Adolf Hitler's original war dossier of the planned Nazi invasion of Britain.

Unveiled for the first time 70 years to the day of Hitler's planned onslaught on England's south coast, the blueprints offer a chilling insight into what might have been on the morning of September 15, 1940.

The booklet pinpoints the quaint English coastal towns in the path of the Nazi ground assault, which could have been a grim reality had the RAF not performed so valiantly against the Luftwaffe during the Battle of Britain.

The invaders' guide book also eerily shows how postcards identifying unmistakable landmarks such as Brighton Pier and Land's End were given to Nazi troops to identify their targets in preparation for their blitz of the British Isles. Read on and comment >>> Daily Mail Reporter | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Achtung!


Das Tragen von Burkas ist während des Oktoberfestes strengstens verboten! >>>
Burqa : les intégristes prêts à défier la loi

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Le port de la burqa sera passible d'une amende de 150 euros. Photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Le texte interdisant de dissimuler son visage dans l'espace public doit être définitivement adopté ce mardi.

La loi interdisant de dissimuler son visage dans l'espace public pourrait être adoptée ce mardi, si les sénateurs approuvent le texte déjà voté à l'Assemblée, sans le modifier. Toute personne contraignant une femme à se dissimuler sous un voile intégral sera immédiatement passible d'un an de prison et de 30.000 euros d'amendes. En revanche, les femmes portant le niqab ne seront verbalisées qu'au printemps. Car la loi prévoit six mois de médiation.

Sans préciser qui doit porter la bonne parole aux intéressées. Le Conseil français du culte musulman a déjà mobilisé ses imams pour qu'ils «engagent le dialogue théologique avec ces femmes pour les convaincre que ce voile n'est pas le vêtement préconisé», explique son président, Mohammed Moussaoui. Avec un succès mitigé. Les salafistes, ce courant radical qui prône le niqab, jugent les musulmans traditionnels «ignorants» voire mécréants.

Quant aux policiers qui devront informer d'abord, puis appliquer une amende de 150 euros ou préconiser un «stage de citoyenneté», beaucoup avouent en aparté «n'avoir reçu aucune consigne et ne pas savoir comment s'y prendre». Avec la crainte d'embraser des quartiers déjà sous tension. Car les salafistes n'entendent pas déserter la voie publique. Au contraire. Certains sont prêts à contester la loi. >>> Par Cécilia Gabizon | Lundi 13 Septembre 2010
Foreign Accent Syndrome (Kay Russell)



Grandmother Goes to Bed with Migraine... and Wakes Up Speaking with a French Accent

MAIL ONLINE: Rare condition cost 49-year-old her job as sales executive

A grandmother who went to bed suffering from a migraine was amazed to wake up speaking with a French accent.

Kay Russell, 49, is now left with a voice that is unrecognisable to family and friends.

Doctors say she has Foreign Accent Syndrome, a condition which damages the part of the brain that controls speech and word formation.

Mrs Russell has suffered from migraines for 20 years.

Their effects are normally limited to temporarily paralysing her limbs and causing slurred speech.

But since January 4 this year, she has not spoken with her natural accent.

After one bad migraine, she was left with slurred speech for two weeks and made an appointment to have an MRI scan and see a neurologist.

Then one day she simply woke up with a French accent. Continue reading and comment >>> Daily Mail Reporter | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Islam’s Progression through Societies



HT: Infidel Rising >>>
America Will Need Another Ronald Reagan to Reverse President Obama’s Pitiful Legacy of US Decline

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Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan on the White House lawn. Photo: The Telegraph

THE TELEGRAPH – BLOGS – NILE GARDINER: The Obama administration is bracing itself for more bad news this week with the release of stunning census figures which are projected to show the biggest increase in poverty in the United States since the 1960s. As Associated Press reports:
The number of people in the U.S. who are in poverty is on track for a record increase on President Barack Obama’s watch, with the ranks of working-age poor approaching 1960s levels that led to the national war on poverty. Census figures for 2009 — the recession-ravaged first year of the Democrat’s presidency — are to be released in the coming week, and demographers expect grim findings.

Interviews with six demographers who closely track poverty trends found wide consensus that 2009 figures are likely to show a significant rate increase to the range of 14.7 percent to 15 percent. Should those estimates hold true, some 45 million people in this country, or more than 1 in 7, were poor last year. It would be the highest single-year increase since the government began calculating poverty figures in 1959. The previous high was in 1980 when the rate jumped 1.3 percentage points to 13 percent during the energy crisis.
The new figures are an indictment of President Obama’s handling of the economy, and will add to the growing perception that his Big Government agenda has been a spectacular flop. Despite a huge $787 billion stimulus package (with another $50 billion in spending on the way), and a wave of public bailouts, unemployment continues to rise towards 10 percent, and the housing market remains on a downward trajectory.

Added to this grim picture is a spiraling budget deficit which threatens America’s long-term economic prosperity. As I’ve noted before, the United States is drowning under a mountain of debt, with a Greek-style financial crisis a strong possibility. Under its alternative fiscal scenario, the Congressional Budget Office projects that US debt could rise to a staggering 87 percent of GDP by 2020, to 109 percent of GDP by 2025, and to 185 percent of GDP in 2035. >>> Nile Gardiner | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Barack Obama to Release Children's Book

THE TELEGRAPH: Barack Obama has written a book for children about inspirational Americans called Of Thee I Sing: A Letter to My Daughters.

The book is a tribute to 13 Americans, from the first president, George Washington, to baseball great Jackie Robinson to artist Georgia O'Keeffe.

It will be released on November 16 by Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Children's Books. The book was due to be officially announced on Tuesday. >>> | Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Where on earth doest thou, O Lord and Saviour, find the time to write a book whilst in your prestigious office? Oh verily, verily, I say unto you O Master! You truly are a wondrous man, a man who works many, many miracles! – Mark
Lesbians Flock to Greek Island of Lesbos for Festival

THE TELEGRAPH: Lesbians from across Europe have flocked to Greece's Lesbos island for the tenth annual International Women's Festival.

In a country strongly influenced by the Greek Orthodox church and where roughly half the population is against same-sex marriage, the lesbian-run event has been quietly growing in this corner of the Aegean Sea.

Over the past decade, attendance at the two-week International Women's Festival in the village of Eressos has jumped from 30 to hundreds of women – mainly German, British, Dutch and Scandinavian, but also Greek and Italian.

The busy programme of events includes women-only walks and sunset cruises, breathing and drumming workshops, Greek dance classes and lesbian film screenings. >>> | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Oprah Winfrey’s Surprise Gift


YAHOO! TV UK: Oprah Winfrey's suprise gift: American chat show star Oprah Winfrey surprised her 300-strong audience yesterday by offering to sending them all on an eight-day trip to Australia. >>> | Tuesday, September 14, 2010
The Heat Is Being Turned On the Coalition

THE TELEGRAPH: Britain faces widespread civil unrest, strikes and more crime as a result of cuts in public spending, one of the country's leading police officers will warn.

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The PCS union mount picket lines outside Treasury in whitehall [sic] on the day of the Budget. Photo: The Telegraph

Derek Barnett, the president of the Police Superintendents' Association, will say that the harshest austerity drive since the Second World War is likely to lead to a period of rising "disaffection, social and industrial tensions".

In a speech to his association's conference, he will suggest that history shows that widespread disorder is "inevitable" at some point. Chief Supt Barnett will also warn that crime will rise if front-line policing is cut too severely.

Fears of widespread civil disobedience are being voiced as unions threaten co-ordinated strikes and a "campaign of resistance not seen for decades" against spending cuts.

Delegates at the Trades Union Congress yesterday voted almost unanimously in favour of a motion that called for a co-ordinated campaign against the cuts.

One union leader branded the Government the "demolition Coalition" and said it had declared war on working people.

Brendan Barber, the usually moderate general secretary of TUC, said the cuts would make Britain "a darker, brutish, more frightening place".

Mr Barnett will say that it is "disingenuous" to suggest that any warnings of rising crime under the cuts is scaremongering. Theresa May, the Home Secretary, will be at the superintendents' conference to hear him say that there was "surprise and disappointment" that the police service was not offered protection from cuts like some other public services, such as the NHS.

"In an environment of cuts across the wider public sector, we face a period where disaffection, social and industrial tensions may well rise," Mr Barnett, of Cheshire Police, will say. "We will require a strong, confident, properly trained and equipped police service, one in which morale is high and one that believes it is valued by the government and public." Cuts will bring civil unrest, says police leader >>> Tom Whitehead, Home Affairs Editor | Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Monday, September 13, 2010

Islamic Supremacist Paid Obama's Law School / Dr. Khalid al-Mansour



HT: American Thinker >>>
Hospitals Back Down Over Smoking Ban

THE TELEGRAPH: Managers at two hospitals who banned smoking have been forced to back down over fears that staff and patients trying to light up illicitly could start a fire.

Patients, visitors and staff have repeatedly been caught flouting the no-smoking restrictions at the hospitals in Bournemouth, Dorset.

So for "Health and Safety reasons" the smoking areas have been brought back in – after firefighters were repeatedly called and staff have had to put out small bed blazes with water.

Patients have been caught smoking under the bedclothes, in stairwells, lavatories, storerooms, courtyards and even next to the oxygen store.

Employees were caught smoking in a total of 21 areas around the Royal Bournemouth Hospital and six at the Christchurch Hospital, Bournemouth, leading to piles of cigarette butts and debris forming.

After five years banning cigarettes on-site they have been allowed back – although only in designated areas. >>> | Monday, September 13, 2010
Saudi Arabia's Juggling Act on Homosexuality

THE GUARDIAN: As a gay diplomat seeks US asylum, Saudi Arabia seems torn between wanting a civilised image and appeasing traditionalists

Saudi Arabia may be a miserable place to live, but it's not very often that a Saudi diplomat seeks refuge in the United States. The last time it happened was in 1994.

At the weekend, though, it emerged that Ali Ahmad Asseri, first secretary of the Saudi consulate in Los Angeles, has applied for asylum in the US on the grounds that he is gay. He says his employers have refused to renew his diplomatic passport – effectively terminating his job – after finding out about his sexuality. He adds they were also unhappy about his friendship with a Jewish woman.

The Saudis are reportedly demanding his return to the kingdom, where Asseri fears he would be killed "in broad daylight".

The conservative American Thinker website is rather excited about this and suggests it "will pose a real problem for the Obama administration, which loves to cozy up to (and bow before) Saudi power" – though I doubt that it will.

If American officials accept Asseri's story he is almost certain to be granted asylum. The Saudis may grumble a bit about that for the sake of appearances, but letting him stay in the US would spare them the embarrassing and potentially damaging question of what to do about him if he returned home.

Unless I'm very much mistaken, Asseri is the first Saudi ever to publicly declare himself gay. So, in a way, this is uncharted territory – but territory where the authorities in Riyadh would probably rather not go. If he went home they would either have to charge him or provide him with lifelong protection – and no matter which course they chose, it would anger someone. >>> Brian Whitaker | Monday, September 13, 2010

Related >>>
Call for 10-year Coalition Pact

BBC: David Cameron and Nick Clegg should bind their parties into an electoral pact by the end of the year, according to a close political ally of the Prime Minister.

Conservative MP Nick Boles warns that unless the two parties form a ten year-programme for the government, MPs will look to "bolt" from the coalition when they are faced with the electoral consequences of its "harsh but necessary measures". Listen to the BBC audio: Conservative MP Nick Boles suggests there is a need for the coalition parties to agree a 10-year pact >>> | Monday, September 13, 2010

US Secures Record $60 Billion Arms Sale to Saudi Arabia

THE TELEGRAPH: The United States is selling $60 billion (£40 billion) worth of aircraft to Saudi Arabia in a huge deal that will increase unease about a gathering arms race in the Middle East.

In what is the largest ever US arms sale of its kind, Riyadh has agreed to spend $30 billion up front on top range fighter jets and helicopters, with the rest following at an undisclosed date. The two countries are also discussing an upgrade naval package potentially worth $30 billion, but the timing of that deal is not clear.

The deals are a coup for the Obama administration ahead of the midterm Congressional elections. The aircraft contracts are set to benefit defence manufacturers in 44 states and help to protect 77,000 jobs. Democratic candidates are expected to come under severe pressure in the elections in part because of the US's high unemployment rate.

But the deal will raise concerns about the militarisation of the Gulf states and the Middle East, which in part seems to be being driven by the Iranian nuclear development programme. The rush by Tehran towards nuclear weapons, which it denies but is widely disbelieved, is prompting defence reviews across the whole region. >>> Alex Spillius in Washington | Monday, September 13, 2010
TUC: Unions Warn of Strikes Over 'Reckless' Cuts

THE TELEGRAPH: Unions put the Government on notice today that workers will launch strikes against spending cuts as the Coalition came under furious attack for its "reckless" axing of public services.



The TUC agreed to co-ordinate campaigns and industrial action amid warnings that some unions have already started preparing to launch stoppages.

Millions of workers are now on a collision course with the Government which could lead to a wave of strikes in the coming months as the scale of the austerity measures unfolds.

Leaders of the country's biggest unions lined up at the TUC conference in Manchester to lambast the Coalition for its spending cuts, which they said had already led to over 200,000 job losses or threats of redundancies among public sector workers.

Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison, said it was a "lie" that the country could not afford decent public services, arguing that the Government was making cuts because it wanted to promote privatisation.

"If there's money available to bail out banks and bonuses, if there's money for war and Trident, there's money for our public services.

"If money is tight, never mind a pay freeze for our members, how about a pay freeze for bankers? We've seen enough of what they've done, we've had enough of their greed and arrogance. It's them, not our members, who should be doing more for less." >>> | Monday, September 13, 2010
Niederlande: Wilders hält die Fäden wieder in der Hand

WELT ONLINE: Anderthalb Wochen nachdem die Gespräche geplatzt waren, soll der Islamgegner nun wieder eine Hauptrolle bei der Regierungssuche spielen.

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Königin Beatrix will Geert Wilders wieder an den Regierungsgesprächen beteiligen. Fotos: Welt Online

Der holländische Rechtspopulist Geert Wilders bekommt nun doch wieder eine Hauptrolle bei der Suche nach einer neuen Regierung für die Niederlande. Der Islamgegner solle erneut mit den Rechtsliberalen (VVD) und den Christdemokraten (CDA) über die Bildung eines von ihm geduldeten Minderheitskabinetts verhandeln.

Mit dieser Empfehlung schloss der von Königin Beatrix eingesetzte Vermittler Herman Tjeenk Willink seine Sondierungsgespräche mit allen zehn im Parlament vertreten Parteien ab.

Die Verhandlungen über einen Koalitionsvertrag zwischen VVD und CDA sowie einen Duldungsvertrag mit Wilders' Partei für Freiheit (PVV) sollten rasch wieder aufgenommen werden, erklärte Willink nach einer Unterredung mit der Königin. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar hinterlassen >>> dpa/sip | Montag, 13. September 2010
L'imam défend son projet de mosquée proche de Ground Zero

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: ÉTATS-UNIS | L'imam à l'origine du projet de mosquée près de Ground Zero à New York l'a défendu lundi face à ses détracteurs qui y voient une injure à la mémoire des victimes du 11-Septembre.

L'imam a défendu lundi son projet de mosqué près de Ground Zero, en insistant sur le fait que l'emplacement choisi n'était pas une terre "sacrée".

"C'est absolument malhonnête (de prétendre) que ce pâté de maison est une terre sacrée", a déclaré Feisal Abdul Rauf, qui s'exprimait devant le centre de réflexion Council of Foreign Relations, rappelant que ce quartier animé abritait notamment un club de strip-tease.

Les opposants au projet de construction du centre islamique à deux rues de l'emplacement du World Trade Center, détruit par un commando d'Al-Qaïda le 11 septembre 2001, jugent qu'une présence musulmane constituerait une offense à la mémoire des 2.752 victimes.

Certaines critiques sont allées plus loin, affirmant qu'une mosquée si près du lieu de l'attentat désacraliserait le site et ferait l'apologie du terrorisme.

Pour Feisal Abdul Rauf, le débat a été confisqué par des extrémistes qui diffusent "de la désinformation délibérée et des stéréotypes nuisibles". >>> AFP | Lundi 13 Septembre 2010