Saturday, April 14, 2007

Presidential Murder: "Where is the Garbage Man?"

Office of the Press Secretary
April 14, 2007


Audio

THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. This week I extended an invitation to congressional leaders of both parties to come to the White House so we can discuss the emergency war funding our troops are waiting for. When we meet on Wednesday, I look forward to hearing how Members of Congress plan to meet their responsibilities and provide our troops with the funding they need.

Supporting our troops is a solemn responsibility of all elected officials in Washington, D.C. So 68 days ago, I sent Congress an emergency war spending bill that would provide the vital funds needed for our troops on the front lines. But instead of approving this funding, Democrats in Congress have spent the past 68 days pushing legislation that would undercut our troops. They passed bills that would impose restrictions on our military commanders and set an arbitrary date for withdrawal from Iraq, giving our enemies the victory they desperately want.

The Democrats' bills also spend billions of dollars on domestic projects that have nothing to do with the war, such as funding for tours of the United States Capitol and for peanut storage. And after passing these unacceptable bills in the House and Senate, Democratic leaders then chose to leave town without sending any legislation to my desk.

The Senate came back to Washington earlier this week, but the House is still on its Easter recess. Meanwhile, our troops are waiting for the funds. And to cover the shortfall, our military may be forced to consider what Army General Pete Schoomaker has called "increasingly draconian measures."

In the next few days, our military leaders will notify Congress that they will be forced to transfer $1.6 billion from other military accounts to make up for the gaps caused by Congress' failure to fund our troops in the field. That means our military will have to take money from personnel accounts so they can continue to fund U.S. Army operations in Iraq and elsewhere.

This $1.6 billion in transfer comes on top of another $1.7 billion in transfers that our military leaders notified Congress about last month. In March, Congress was told that the military would need to take money from personnel accounts, weapons and communications systems, so we can continue to fund programs that protect our troops from improvised explosive devices and send hundreds of mine-resistant vehicles to the front lines. These actions are only the beginning, and the longer Congress delays the worse the impact on the men and women of the Armed Forces will be.

I recognize that Republicans and Democrats in Washington have differences over the best course in Iraq, and we should vigorously debate those differences. But our troops should not be trapped in the middle. They have been waiting for this money long enough. Congress must now work quickly and pass a clean bill that funds our troops, without artificial time lines for withdrawal, without handcuffing our generals on the ground, and without extraneous domestic spending.

When you live in Washington, it's easy to get caught up in the complexities of legislative procedure. But for the American people, this is not a complicated debate. When Americans went to the polls last November, they did not vote for politicians to substitute their judgment for the judgment of our commanders on the ground. And they certainly did not vote to make peanut storage projects part of the funding for our troops.

The American people voted for change in Iraq, and that is exactly what our new commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, is working to achieve. And they expect their elected leaders to support our men and women on the front lines, so they have every resource they need to complete their mission.

We owe it to the American people and to our troops and their families to deliver our full support. I will continue working with Republicans and responsible Democrats to do just that. I call on Members of Congress to put partisanship on hold, resolve their differences, and send me a clean bill that gets our troops the funds they need.


Thank you for listening.

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Thank you Daily Kos!

Click HERE for the "Classic Laurel and Hardy Dance"

It's been a whole week since the 'tar and feathering' of our dear colleague Benjamin Heine at Daily Kos. The fuss has more or less died down after days of postings throughout the Web, on Blogs, on News sites, on almost every progressive site throughout the world.

This has resulted in an increase in the readership for all involved in the 'rallying of troops' to Ben's defense. It has also resulted in many other sites, truly democratic ones, to add links of our blogs onto their sites.

To this I say, Thank you Daily Kos! May you continue to stew in your bitterness and continue to expose yourselves as the true non-Democrats that you are.

-----------> This post originally appeared on DesertPeace
Thank you very much fellow's!

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It's the End of the World As We Know It


I


Feel


Fine!


How are you?





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The Israel Lobby (AIPAC): A Danger to the World

Introduction

by aoibhgreine

The first 10 minutes of a Dutch documentary series about the Israel lobby (particularly AIPAC) in the USA.

The whole episode was available on Google video,but was suppressed by the traditional enemies of the truth after it had more than 8500 views and 160 overwhelmingly positive ratings within one day: (see http://xrl.us/vrbs )

Blockbuster here:http://www.megaupload.com/?d=BFJ7OLV5 or WATCH IT HERE: http://xrl.us/vqu3 Spread these links far and wide and upload it to Google video so the censors shall not be able to throw it in the memory hole!

Featuring interviews with Mearsheimer, geostrategist Lawrence Wikerson, Richard Perle, historian and critic Tony Judt, John Hagee, former Congressman Earl Hilliard, Kenneth Roth of Human Rights Watch, Michael Massing and Daniel Levy.

(Note: The introduction of this documentary was adapted -- with footage of the former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad and with some other things)

Listen also to the revealing 2002 BBC radio reportage 'A lobby to deal with': http://www.supload.com/listen?s=S_ts9... or http://www.acidplanet.com/Components/...

http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research...Harvard report 'THE ISRAEL LOBBY AND U.S. FOREIGN POLICY'

http://xrl.us/vnzw Jewish newspaper Ynetnews article 'Stalin's Jews - We mustn't forget that some of greatest murderers of modern times were Jewish'

http://www.amazon.com/Red-Mafiya-Robe...http://www.amazon.com/Supermob-Crimin...Read these two books to understand how Russian zionist jews managed to get complete control over the United States.

http://www.govnn.com
http://www.vnnforum.com
http://www.jewwatch.com




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The Zionist Project in Palestine

When a "Jewish majority" was impossible to achieve based on Jewish immigration and natural growth, Zionists had concluded that forcible "population transfer" (Ethnic Cleansing) was the only solution to what they referred to as the "Arab Problem." To excuse the "Jewish state" from any WAR CRIMES perpetrated against the Palestinian people (specially the ones committed during the 1948 war), Zionists have concocted a myth that the Palestinian people had willingly left their homes, farms, and businesses, and as a result they have forfeited their right to return.

BASED On Declassified Israeli Documents & Personal Diaries



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Zionist Project in Palestine: Colonial Settlement, Land Robbery and Ethnic Cleansing

Nizar Sakhnini, 7 October 2005

About 8,000 Jews were living in Palestine before 1882. Creation of a “Jewish State” in such a small country with such a small Jewish community, which owned virtually no land to settle on, was practically impossible. Consequently, building an exclusive Jewish State in Palestine implied bringing Jews from the four corners of the world, acquisition of the land and ethnically cleansing it from its indigenous Arab population.


COLONIAL SETTLEMENT:

Hovevei Zion, the precursor of the Zionist Organization, sponsored the first wave of pioneer settlers, which started in 1882 and ended in 1903. About 35,000 immigrants arrived in Palestine within this wave. Almost half of them left within several years of their arrival.

Eliezer Ben Yehuda, a fanatical Zionist, was one of the settlers of the first wave. When his ship arrived in Jaffa in 1882, he found himself watching the Arab passengers on board and suddenly he realized that they were far more at home in the “Promised Land” than he was. Eventually he found that he could not swallow his doubts so he left “Eretz Yisrael” and became a Territorialist, believing that the Jews should seek a country in a land other than Palestine. (Karen Armstrong, Holy War: The Crusades and their Impact on Today’s World. Macmillan, London, 1988, pp. 60-64)

The second wave started in 1904 and ended with the break of WWI in 1914. It brought about 40,000 immigrants to Palestine. As with the first wave, nearly half of them left the country in later years.

According to Bar-Zohar, when the first immigrants from the Russian Zionist societies came to Palestine “it was no land flowing with milk and honey that greeted them… The hard labor, malaria, and hunger claimed many victims. Of those who survived, many decided to leave that accursed land on the first available ship. Later, Ben-Gurion was to contend that of every ten immigrants who arrived with the Second Aliyah, nine later left the country”. (Michael Bar-Zohar, Ben-Gurion: A Biography. New York: Delacorte Press, 1977, pp. 13-14)

This 2nd wave included a number of Socialist Zionists. Prominent among the new Socialist Zionist immigrants was Ben Gurion. Another socialist Zionist, Yitzhak Ben Zvi (2nd President of the State of Israel) arrived in Palestine within this wave as well.

The 3rd wave, which started in 1919 and ended in 1923, brought another 40,000 settlers. As conditions improved under the British Mandate in Palestine, few of them returned to their countries of origin.

The 4th wave, 1924 – 1929, brought 82,000 immigrants of who 23,000 left in later years.

In order to boost Jewish immigration to Palestine, the Zionist Organization entered into negotiations with the Nazis to facilitate emigration of German Jews. As a result of these negotiations, an agreement was signed, which allowed tens of thousands of German Jews to immigrate to Palestine. The 5th wave of Jewish immigrants, which took place during the period 1929-1939, brought 250,000 settlers and the 6th brought another 150,000 who arrived in Palestine between 1939 and 1948. (For a detailed discussion of the Transfer Agreement, see: Edwin Black, The Transfer Agreement: The Untold Story of the Secret Pact Between the Third Reich & Jewish Palestine. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co. London: Collier Macmillan Publishers, 1984)

The total number of Jews in Palestine in 1946 was 608,225 and the total land owned by them was 1,585,365 donums, which represented less than 7% of the area of Palestine. (Walid Khalidi, From Haven to Conquest, Appendix I, pp.841-843)

The ethnic cleansing operations perpetrated during the 1948 war and the Absentees Law as well as the Law of Return issued in 1950 facilitated confiscation of Arab homes and lands to build settlements for more colonial settlers who flooded Palestine following the creation of Israel.

LAND ROBBERY:

A pre-meditated and pre-planned campaign of land theft started shortly following the ethnic operations of 1948. A law was passed in the Israeli Knesset in 1950, the “Absentees Property Law ”. According to this law, any body that was not present directly before, during or after the war was, regardless of the reason, defined as “absentee” and his land as surrendered. Thus it was confiscated.

About 20 percent of the Palestinians in Israel were internally displaced in the 1948 war – in other words, while remaining in Israel, have been prevented from returning to their homes and villages. These displaced persons were considered as “absentees” and became refugees in their own country while their lands were confiscated.

More significantly was the fact that Palestinian Arabs who were driven out or obliged to leave during the war in 1948 were not allowed to return to their homes and lands. Those who tried to return were considered “infiltrators” and were shot to death by Unit 101 of the IDF, a company of paratroopers, which was formed under the command of Ariel Sharon.

Another law, “The Land Requisition Law”, was passed in 1953 to “legitimize” the expropriation of Arab lands. According to this law acts of theft and robbery of land were legal.

Moshe Smilansky, one of the pilgrim fathers of Zionism, published an article stating that: “When we came back to our country after having been evicted two thousand years ago, we called ourselves ‘daring’ and we rightly complained before the whole world that the gates of the country were shut. And now when they [Arab refugees] dared to return to their country where they lived for one thousand years before they were evicted or fled, they are called ‘infiltrees’ and shot in cold blood. Where are, Jews? Why do we not at least, with a generous hand, pay compensation to these miserable people? Where to take the money from? But we build palaces...instead of paying a debt that cries unto us from earth and heaven... And do we sin only against the refugees? Do we not treat the Arabs who remain with us as second-class citizens? Did a single Jewish farmer raise his hand in the parliament in opposition to a law that deprived Arab peasants of their land? How does sit solitary, in the city of Jerusalem, the Jewish conscience!” (From Haven to Conquest, p. 834)

ETHNIC CLEANSING:

Subjecting Palestinian Arabs to ethnic cleansing was an integral part of the implicit and explicit political Zionist thought and parlance all along.

In his diaries, Herzl made it clear that “the existing landed property was to be gently expropriated, any subsequent resale to the original owners was prohibited, and all immovables had to remain in exclusively Jewish hands. The poor population was to be worked across the frontier ‘unbemerkt’ (surreptitiously)… This population was to be refused all employment in the land of its birth… In 1901, the 5th Zionist Congress founded the Jewish National Fund. According to the by-laws of the JNF, acquired land became inalienable Jewish property and could no longer be sold or leased to non-Jews…” (Documented article published by L.M.C. Van Der Hoeven Leonhard in Libertas, (Holland) Lustrum, number 1960, pp. 1-5, reproduced in Walid Khalidi, From Haven to Conquest, pp. 115-124. See also, Benny Morris, Righteous Victims: A History of the Zionist-Arab Conflict, 1881-1999. New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1999, pp. 21-22)

David Ben-Gurion believed that the Zionists had to exert pressure to force the British to act. But if necessary, he wrote in his diary, “We must ourselves prepare to carry out the removal of the Palestinians”. (Michael Palumbo, The Palestinian Catastrophe, p. 4, citing Ben-Gurion's Diary - published in Hebrew - vol. IV, p. 299)

In a report to the Jewish Agency Executive on 12 June 1938, Ben-Gurion stated “I am for a compulsory transfer; I don't see anything immoral in it...” (Simha Flapan, Zionism and the Palestinians, London: Croom Helm, 1979, p. 263)

Encouraged by the possibility of establishing a Jewish state as a result of the partition plan proposed by the Peel Commission in its report published in July 1937, a “Population Transfer Committee” was appointed by the Jewish Agency to come up with plans to rid the Jewish State of its Palestinian Arabs. Joseph Weitz, director of the Jewish National Fund, who served on the Population Transfer Committee, developed a plan for this purpose. In his report, Weitz wrote that the transfer of the Arab population from the Jewish areas “does not serve only one aim - to diminish the Arab population. It also serves a second purpose by no means less important, which is to evacuate land now cultivated by Arabs and thus release it for Jewish settlement.” (Michael Palumbo, The Palestinian Catastrophe, p. 4, citing CZA, Minutes of the Population Transfer Committee, 22 Nov., 1937)

The Peel Commission’s partition plan, which proposed to divide the country between the “Jewish colonists and the indigenous Arab population” was discussed in the meeting of the Jewish Agency Executive held on 12 June 1938. Partition as proposed by the Peel Commission would leave over 200,000 Arabs in the proposed “Jewish State”. The Jewish Agency Executive was discussing the problem of how best to get rid of these Arabs. The seventy-five year old Zionist leader, Menahem Ussishkin, stated that “There is no hope that this new Jewish State will survive, to say nothing of develop, if the Arabs are as numerous as they are today.” Berl Katznelson of Ben-Gurion’s Mapai party saw only disaster in a Jewish State with a large Arab minority and proposed a development plan to eliminate the Palestinian Arabs. He urged negotiations, with neighboring Arab States that might be persuaded to receive the expellees. (Michael Palumbo, The Palestinian Catastrophe, pp. 1-2, citing CZA, Executive Proceedings, 12 June 1938)

Other “Transfer Committees” were appointed during the 1948 war. An unofficial “self-appointed” committee, headed by Joseph Weitz, started its activities as of the end of March 1948. After the creation of the state of Israel the Provisional Government appointed an official committee the recommendations of which were submitted to Ben-Gurion in due course and were being implemented under the cover of war.

One of the key questions from June 1967 onwards was not whether Israel should maintain a presence in the newly acquired territories, but how it could be maintained without adding over one million Palestinians to the Arab minority of Israel. The old Zionist dilemma of non-Jews in a Jewish state had to be resolved. Against this background of Zionist expansionism, transfer ideas were revived in public debates, in popular songs, in articles in the Hebrew press and, most importantly, in cabinet discussions and government schemes and policies. (Nur Masalha, A Land Without a People: Israel, Transfer and the Palestinians 1949 - 96. London: Faber and Faber ltd., 1997, pp. 60 - 61)

New proposals for ethnic cleansing were outlined in an article entitled “A Strategy for Israel in the 1980s”, which appeared in the World Zionist Organization's periodical Kivunim in February 1982. The article was written by Oded Yinon, a journalist and analyst of Middle Eastern affairs and former senior Foreign Ministry official.

In his article, Yinon called for Israel to bring about the dissolution and fragmentation of the Arab states into a mosaic of ethnic groupings. He called for a policy of Israel that aims at bringing about “the dissolution of Jordan; the termination of the problem of the [occupied] territories densely populated with Arabs west of the [River] Jordan; and emigration from the territories, and economic-demographic freeze in them.” He added, “we have to be active in order to encourage this change speedily, in the nearest time”.

Yinon believed, like many advocates of transfer in Israel, that “Israel has made a strategic mistake in not taking measures [of mass expulsion] towards the Arab population in the new territories during and shortly after the [1967] war.... Such a line would have saved us the bitter and dangerous conflict ever since which we could have already then terminated by giving Jordan to the Palestinians.”

Moreover, Yinon suggested to encompass the whole Arab world, including the imposition of a Pax Israela on, and the determination of the destiny of, Arab societies: re invading Sinai and “breaking Egypt territorially into separate geographical districts.” As for the Arab East: “...the total disintegration of Lebanon into five regional, localized governments as the precedent for the entire Arab world...the dissolution of Syria, and later Iraq, into districts of ethnic and religious minorities....” (Ibid, pp. 196 - 198, citing Oded Yinon, A Strategy for Israel in the 1980s, [Hebrew], Kivunim, Jerusalem, No. 14, February 1982, pp. 53 - 58)

Failure of the different efforts to “transfer” all the Palestinians did not mean that such efforts were abandoned. Benjamin Netanyahu told Bar-Ilan University students on 16 November 1989 that the government had failed to exploit internationally favorable situations, to carry out “large-scale” expulsions at a time when “the damage [to Israel's public relations] would have been relatively small...” Netanyahu was referring to the Tiananmen Square massacre in June 1989 when world attention and the media were focused on China. He added, “I still believe that there are opportunities to expel many people.” Netanyahu later denied making the remarks but the Jerusalem Post presented a tape recording of his speech. (Ibid, p. 190, citing The Jerusalem Post, 19 November, 1989; Michael Palumbo, Imperial Israel: The History of the Occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, London: Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd., 1990 pp. 302 - 303)

After decades of Zionist efforts, Arab “demographic threat” was still haunting Israel. A conference was held on 19-20 December 2000 at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya to deal with the issue. The conference was the first of what became a series of annual conferences dealing with the strength and security of Israel. A major part of the recommendations was related with the ‘demographic threat’ posed by the Arab citizens of Israel. (For a detailed account on the conference and its recommendations see: The Herzliya Conference on the Balance of National Strength and Security in Israel, Journal of Palestine Studies, # 121, Volume XXXI, Number 1, Autumn 2001, pp. 50-61)


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Israel Land Laws (Preliminary List)

1. 1943 Land (Acquisition for Public Purposes) Ordinance. Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 34, p. 190.
2. 1945 British Mandate Defense (Emergency Regulations). The Palestine Gazette 1442, no. 2 (27 Sept. 1945): 1058.
3. 1948 Abandoned Areas Ordinance, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 1, Ordinances, 5708 (1948), p. 25-26.
4. 1948 Emergency Regulations Concerning Absentee Property, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 1, Ordinances, 5708 (1948), p. 8.
5. 1949 Emergency Regulations (Security Zones), Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 3, 5079 (1949), p. 56.
6. 1949 Emergency Regulations (Cultivation of Waste [Uncultivated] Lands), Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 2, 5709 (1948/49), pp. 71-77.
7. 1949 Emergency Law Requisition (Regulations) Law, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 4, 5710 (1949/50), p. 3.
8. 1950 Absentees’ Property Law, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 4, Ordinances, 5710 (1949/50), pp. 68-82.
9. 1950 Development Authority (Transfer of Property) Law, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 4, Ordinances, 5710 (1949/50), p. 151.
10. 1951 State Property Law, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 5, p. 45.
11. Amendment to the Emergency Land Requisition (Regulations) Law of 1949.
Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 6, 5712 (1951-1952), p. 103.
12. 1953 Land Acquisition (Validation of Acts and Compensation) Law, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 7, 5713 (1952/53), pp. 43-45.
13. Absentees’ Property (Amendment) Law, 5716 (1956), Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 10, 5716 (1955-56), p. 31.
14. Amendment to the Emergency Land Requisition (Regulations) Law of 1949. Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 9, 5715 (1954-55), p. 109.
15. 1958 Prescription Law (No. 38), Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 12 (1958), pp. 129-33.
16. 1965 Absentees’ Property (Amendment No. 3) (Release and Use of Endowment Property) Law, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 19 (1953), p. 55.
17. Israel Land Law 1969. Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 23, p. 283.
18. 1970 Legal and Administrative Matters (Regulation) Law (Consolidated Version), Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 27 (1973), p. 176.
19. 1976 Absentees’ Property (Compensation) (Amendment) Law, Laws of the State of Israel, (1976).
20. Land Acquisition (Validation of Acts and Compensation) Law, 7 Laws of the State of Israel, 5713 (1952-1953), pp. 43-45.
21. The Negev Land Acquisition (Peace Treaty with Egypt) Law 1980, Laws of the State of Israel, Vol. 34, p. 1990.

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Friday, April 13, 2007

Sabra and Shatila Documentary

Extract from TV Raha Iraq explain the massacre at Sabra and Chatila.


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Palestine a Wonderment of Living

What Famous Leader are You?


April 12, 2007

by Housewife4Palestine

Just for fun, I thought I would try the same test as I love Munich did. While I came out one time as Abe Lincoln, Mother Teresa and once Albert Einstein which I was a little surprised.

What made me fall over backs words is the majority of times I came out as Gandhi, while I do not think I am in the same league as him; it was still interesting.

I have to admit every once and awhile, people need a little diversion to the everyday grind.

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Thursday, April 12, 2007

Israeli jets came close to opening fire on U.S. airliner

April 12, 2007

Israel Air Force fighter planes scrambled yesterday to intercept a U.S. airliner after it lost communication with air controllers, security officials said.

The passenger plane was flying in from the U.S. when it lost contact. Following anti-terror procedures, two Israeli warplanes intercepted the plane and guided it back over the Mediterranean Sea until communications were restored.

When it was determined that there were no problems on board and the pilot was in control, the plane was allowed to land at Ben-Gurion International Airport, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the incident.

The Israel Air Force planes were close to opening fire on the airliner when it restored contact. The pilot was interrogated after landing.

In 1973, Israel Air Force planes shot down a Libyan passenger plane that strayed over Israeli-controlled territory, killing more than 100 passengers and crew and triggering wide international criticism.

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Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Children See, Children Do


What kind of life, do we wish for our children?


We must make their world, a better place for them!






Make your influence positive!


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Feedom of Speech: Use It Or Lose It

Over the last four years, I've put over 4,000 signs against the war on the freeways of California and the western United States.


60 feet long and only lasted about fifteen minutes, but well worth it according to the artists. Made with cheap latex paint and disposable plastic tablecloths: about ten dollars for a hundred foot roll. Brilliant.-Chicago



We're bad.
We're nationwide.

Daily weblog!


Here's how it works:
When you put a sign on the freeway people will read it until someone takes it down.

Depending on its size, content and placement it can be seen by hundreds of thousands of people.

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There are no strangers, Only friends we haven't met

A friend is someone we turn to,
When our spirits need a lift.
A friend is someone we treasure,
For our friendship is a gift.
A friend is someone who fills our lives,
With beauty, joy, and grace.
And makes the world we live in,
A better and happier place.

(Author Unknown)

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The Thinking Blogger Award Through Generosity



In the blogging sphere, I never thought that awards existed and to be honored by such an exceptional person as DesertPeace.

I had to take a little time to think about this, because I was a bit taken back to think someone felt so kind to me, with such an impeccable reputation towards the feeling’s and world that I was born into.

I contemplated for a few days now what five links I was to honor with the continuation of this award and to the extent that I have to admit teaches a good lesson on not just the political situation in my country of Palestine, but the real extent of Islamic/ Jewish relations.

For as many know DesertPeace is a true Jewish man and not a Zionist, as well as I am on this other side as a Palestinian striving to have Peace returned to my country. As I have mentioned numerous times, the Palestinian people have no animosity towards the Jewish people, but towards the Zionist and their cohorts in crime.

Their has been a few times in my life that I have been associated with people of the Jewish religion and will go so far as call them my friends. I was asked by an Palestinian sister once, if they even noticed I was Palestinian, to be honest it may have never crossed their mind or friendship outlived the war.

The five people I chose is not just for their brilliance in thinking, but for their honesty which I found more came from their heart and while I do write in English, I do have to admit sometimes I have to contemplate what some people put across towards their mod of expression into words.
Lastly, I must admit with a little humility, that it is nice to be included with the finest blogger’s on the net today.

Note: While Dr. Batarfi, has this blog among other’s, I have found his regular journalistic ability in the media very interesting and informative.

While I am sure their are numerous other’s out there that are blogging their heart's out, I must admit it was difficult to only pick five.
Update:
Just Wondering was unable to except because of a previous nomination of this award, so in turn I decided to nominated Crossing The Line: Life In Occupied Palestine. While I do not know enough about the contributors of this blog, I must admit I find it intriguing.

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Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Guantánamo Detainees Stage Hunger Strike

By TIM GOLDEN

Published: April 9, 2007

A long-term hunger strike has broken out at the American detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, with more than a dozen prisoners subjecting themselves to daily force-feeding to protest their treatment, military officials and lawyers for the detainees say.

Lawyers for several hunger strikers said their clients’ actions were driven by harsh conditions in a new maximum security complex. About 160 of the roughly 385 Guantánamo detainees have been moved to the complex since December.

Thirteen detainees are now on hunger strikes, the largest number to endure the force-feeding regimen on an extended basis since early 2006, when the military broke a long-running strike with a new policy of strapping prisoners into restraint chairs while they are fed by plastic tubes inserted through their nostrils.

The hunger strikers are now monitored so closely that they have virtually no chance to starve themselves. Yet their persistence underscores how the struggle between detainees and guards at Guantánamo has continued even as the military has tightened its control in the past year.

“We don’t have any rights here, even after your Supreme Court said we had rights,” one hunger striker, Majid al-Joudi, told a military doctor, according to medical records released recently under a federal court order. “If the policy does not change, you will see a big increase in fasting.”

A military spokesman at Guantánamo, Cmdr. Robert Durand of the Navy, played down the significance of the current strike, calling the prisoners’ complaints “propaganda.”

But the protests come as criticism of Guantánamo continues to rise in the United States and abroad. Last week, after the Supreme Court denied a new appeal on behalf of the detainees, the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross delivered a rare public reprimand to the Bush administration, saying the prisoners’ ability to contest their detention was inadequate.

Newly released Pentagon documents show that during earlier hunger strikes, before the use of the restraint chairs, some detainees lost more than 30 pounds in a matter of weeks. By comparison, the current hunger strike — in which 12 of the 13 detainees were being force-fed as of Friday — seems almost symbolic.

For instance, the medical records for Mr. Joudi, a 36-year-old Saudi, showed that when he was hospitalized on Feb. 10, he had been fasting for 31 days and had lost more than 15 percent of his body weight.

By the time he was transferred a few days later to a “feeding block” where more serious hunger strikers are segregated from other prisoners, his condition had stabilized and his weight was nearly back to an ideal level for a man his size. (His exact weight gain was not recorded.) Mr. Joudi was subsequently flown home and turned over to the Saudi authorities, his lawyer said.

Lawyers for several detainees held in the new maximum security complex, known as Camp 6, compared it to “supermax” prisons in the United States. The major differences, they said, are that the detainees have limited reading material and no television, and only 10 of the Guantánamo prisoners have been charged.

The Camp 6 inmates are generally locked in their 8-foot-by-10-foot cells for at least 22 hours a day, emerging only to exercise in small wire cages and to shower. Besides those times, they can talk with other prisoners only by shouting through food slots in the steel doors of their cells.

“My wish is to die,” one reported hunger striker in the camp, Adnan Farhan Abdullatif, a 27-year old Yemeni, told his lawyer on Feb. 27, according to recently declassified notes of the meeting. “We are living in a dying situation.”

Commander Durand, the Guantánamo spokesman, dismissed such accounts as part of an effort by the prisoners and their lawyers to discredit the detention mission. He described the new unit as much more comfortable than the detainees’ previous quarters, and denied that they suffered any greater sense of isolation in the new cell blocks.

“This was designed to improve living conditions,” Commander Durand said, “and we think it has.”

Camp 6 was originally designed as a modern, medium-security prison complex for up to 200 inmates, with common areas where they could gather for meals and a large fenced athletic field where they could jog or play soccer outside the high concrete walls.

But after a riot last May and the suicides of three prisoners in June, the unit was retrofitted before opening to limit the detainees’ freedom and reduce the risk that they might hurt themselves or attack guards, military officials said.

As Camp 6 was opening, senior officials expressed concern about how prisoners would react to its greater isolation. Most had been held in makeshift blocks of wire-mesh cells that — while often hot, noisy and lacking privacy — allowed them to communicate easily, pray together and even pass written messages.

Guantánamo’s other maximum-security unit, Camp 5, has cells that face each other across a short hallway, allowing the roughly 100 detainees there to converse fairly easily. In Camp 6, the prisoners can see one another from their cells only when one of them is being moved. At other times, they look out on the stainless-steel picnic tables in the common areas they are not allowed to use.

Lawyers for several Camp 6 detainees said their clients were despondent about the move even though, as military officials note, the new cells are 27 square feet larger than the old ones and have air-conditioning, nicer toilets and sinks, and a small desk anchored to the wall.

“They’re just sitting on a powder keg down there,” said one lawyer, Sabin Willett, who, like others, described growing desperation among the prisoners. “You’re going to have an insane asylum.”

Lawyers who visited Guantánamo recently said the detainees reported a higher number of hunger strikers than had the military — perhaps 40 or more. Military officials said there were sometimes “stealth hunger strikers,” who pretend to eat or surreptitiously vomit after eating, but they dismissed the detainees’ estimates as exaggerations.

Because reporters are prevented from speaking with detainees or visiting most of their cell blocks, it is difficult to verify the conflicting accounts.

Hunger strikes have been part of life at Guantánamo almost since the detention center opened in January 2002.

They reached a peak in September 2005, when more than 130 detainees were classified as hunger strikers, having refused at least nine consecutive meals, military records show. As the strikes went on, some detainees being force-fed continued to lose weight by vomiting or siphoning their stomachs with the feeding tubes. But by early February 2006, shortly after the military began using restraint chairs during the forced feedings, the number of hunger strikers plunged to three.

The number rose again sharply but briefly last May, reaching 86 after three detainees attempted suicide and a riot broke out as the guards searched for contraband. Yet even then, no more than seven strikers were forced into the restraint chair regimen.

Three detainees who had been hunger strikers hung themselves on June 10. After July, no more than three detainees subjected themselves to extended forced feeding.

That number began to grow again as detainees were moved into Camp 6 in December. By mid-March, the number of hunger strikers reached 17. For the first time, as many as 15 detainees continued with the strikes despite being force-fed in the restraint chairs.

Military officials have described the restraint chair regimen as unpleasant but necessary. They originally said prisoners needed to be restrained while digesting, so they could not purge what they were fed.

Now, the rationale has changed. The restraints are generally applied “for safety of the detainee and medical staff,” records show, and they are kept on for as little as 15 minutes at a time, rather than the two hours commonly used before. Afterward, the prisoners are moved to a “dry cell” and monitored to make sure they do not vomit.

Even so, some detainees describe the experience as painful, even gruesome.

One Sudanese detainee, Sami al-Hajj, a 38-year-old former cameraman for Al Jazeera, described feeling at one point that he could not bear the tube for another instant. “I said I would begin to scream unless they took it out,” he wrote in a recent diary entry given to his lawyer.

“They finally did.”

Stephen H. Oleskey, who represents Saber Lahmar, an Algerian religious scholar whom military officials accused of propagating a religious legal ruling that was linked to the suicides, said of his client: “The man has been in segregation — virtual isolation — for over nine months. Physically and emotionally, he’s collapsing. We think this punishment does exceed what the law allows, and that he won’t survive.”

Military officials said Mr. Lahmar and other detainees had received adequate medical attention.

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Israel sees "disappointment" over Hamas prisoner list

April 10, 2007

JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's office said on Tuesday ministers had expressed "disappointment and reservation" over a list of prisoners Hamas has demanded freed in exchange for a captured Israeli soldier.

Hamas, which leads the Palestinian government, has handed over the names of Palestinian prisoners it wants Israel to free in exchange for Israeli Corporal Gilad Shalit, who has been held by militants in Gaza for 10 months.

Olmert's office said in a statement the Prime Minister had held his first discussion on the list on Tuesday with security officials, who included Defence Minister Amir Peretz and the head of Israel's Mossad spy agency, Meir Dagan.

"During the discussion, disappointment and reservation was expressed over the list of prisoners Hamas is asking to be freed," the statement said.

"Israel will continue its contacts with Egypt on the matter," the statement added.

Hamas handed the names of the prisoners to Israel via mediator Egypt.

Israeli Corporal Gilad Shalit was seized last June by militants from Hamas and two other armed groups who tunneled into Israel from Gaza.

A Hamas cabinet minister, Wasfi Kabha, told Reuters on Monday that there are around 1,400 names on the list, including Marwan Barghouthi, a Fatah leader widely seen as a possible successor to the moderate President Mahmoud Abbas.

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Iraq's bloggers record life of fear

Four years after the US invasion, Baghdad's Firdous square is a quieter place [AFP]

April 07, 2007

By Firas Al-Atraqchi

A day after the statue of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was toppled in Baghdad's central Firdous square, Zeyad Kasim was relieved that the Baathist government's reign of terror was nearing its end.

"I stood in front of the house watching, M1 Bradleys, Humvees, Abrams tanks, APC's. I was impressed. Most of the Americans were so young. They waved at us, and I waved back. Everyone in the street looked happy," he would later recount on his blog Healing Iraq.

But four years later, Kasim's hopes for a brighter, happier future have all but been stifled.

"The level of chaos that Iraq is presently witnessing is unprecedented in the history of the country," the former dentist told Al Jazeera.net.

"Long gone is the social harmony that has characterised Iraq for centuries. Instead, it has been replaced with hatred, prejudice, mistrust and an insatiable desire for revenge. I do not recognise my Iraq any more."

In 2006, Kasim moved to the US to pursue an advanced degree in journalism.

Fear replaces hope

On the fourth anniversary of the Firdous square incident, debate on whether the US-led invasion of Iraq has been worth the cost in human lives, monies and resources still dominates headlines.

But Iraqi bloggers, who have come to be seen as alternative sources of news and information on the war-ravaged country, believe foreign media is failing to ask the right questions.

BT, a journalist who worked with US media organisations in the Iraqi capital before moving to the US to study and who wishes to remain anonymous, says he is astounded how "the American people around me are unaware of the reality I went through and the daily fear and horror my people are still going through in Iraq in the past four years".

In his blog
Treasure of Baghdad, BT recounts how once peaceful Baghdad neighbourhoods have succumbed to sectarian politics and violence.

He laments the loss of hope that Iraq could have emerged from an era of dictatorship and reconstruct itself into a young democracy.

"I can barely recognize Baghdad these days," he told Al Jazeera.net in an email exchange.

"Baghdad once was the setting for the famous Arabian Nights, but is now comprised of wreckage, rubble, destroyed buildings, burned houses, empty bridges and streets. People in Baghdad have changed as well. Fear, anger, and pessimism haunt their lives. They worry about everything."

Hidden sectarian strife

But blogger 24 Steps to Liberty, a journalism colleague of BT's who is also studying in the US, believes that Iraq's problems began before the invasion and were only allowed to rise to the surface once Saddam Hussein was removed from power.

"The culture in Iraq dramatically changed after the invasion," he says.

Communal relations in Iraq declined sharply following a series of attacks on mosques [AP]

"The hatred and hostility that were forced to stay inside many people's minds were suddenly released with no law to prevent the revenge mentality in the community. That started brutal sectarian-motivated and massive assassinations that eventually led Iraqis to hate each other".

Like BT, 24 Steps believes Iraqis have lost hope.

Changing views

In the first three years of the occupation of Iraq, many bloggers chose to remain in Baghdad and other main cities. Some saw hope that the violence and lawlessness, exemplified by the looting immediately after Baghdad fell, would eventually ebb and order would be restored.

But now that such bloggers as Kasim, BT and 24 Steps have left the country, there is a pronounced fear that Iraq will soon be drained of the very human resources required for its reconstruction and rehabilitation.

"In 20 years, Iraq will have lost all its teachers and professors and the children now are not getting education. Who will lead Iraq in 20 years? Who will teach the next generations?" asks 24 Steps.

Baghdad Burning

In an interview with Al Jazeera.net Riverbend of the blog Baghdad Burning, acknowledged that many Iraqi professionals she knows have left or are preparing to make permanent moves.

"The only Iraqis tasting democracy after four years of America's catastrophe, are the ones who had the insight to leave Iraq behind and attempt to continue their lives somewhere safe, free from American 'liberation'," Riverbend, who describes herself as a 28-year-old computer specialist, said.

Her blog Baghdad Burning has spawned two books, a play, a possible screenplay for a motion picture and several nominations for prestigious literary awards including being shortlisted as a finalist for the 2006 Samuel Johnson Prize for contemporary non-fiction.

When she first began blogging her writings were sobering but there was always a hope that the political momentum would overcome the daily violence.

"I remember four years ago, we would tell ourselves it would take at least five years for things to be 'normal'- and that was the pessimistic view," she told Al Jazeera.net.

"Five years! Who could wait five years for security, electricity, water and stability? Now, upon entering the fifth year of this catastrophe, only a miracle will bring the modicum of normality millions of Iraqis fervently desire."

Escape

Many Iraqis have given up entirely on such a miracle, however. The United Nations estimates that at least two million Iraqis have left the country in the past four years with most settling in Syria, Jordan and Egypt.

They have established their own schools, businesses, restaurants and even bakeries.

But neighbouring countries are beginning to feel strained at the influx of so many refugees. Egypt, like Syria and Jordan, last week enforced more stringent visa restrictions on incoming Iraqis.

Tens of thousands are now displaced from their homes inside and outside Iraq


Nevertheless, Iraqis are pouring out of the country at such a pace that the United Nations estimates 10% of the population will have left by the end of 2007.

Some say they will never return, while others fear they will be unable to return.

For 24 Steps, those are trepidations he would rather not entertain.

"My fear is that in a few years I will be called 'an exile'," he said.

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Slow Dance


Have you ever watched kids on a merry-go-round
Or listened to the rain slapping on the ground?
Ever followed a butterfly's erratic flight
Or gazed at the sun into the fading night?
You better slow down
Don't dance so fast
Time is short
The music won't last
Do you run through each day on the fly
When you ask "How are you?", do you hear the reply?
When the day is done, do you lie in your bed
With the next hundred chores running through your head?
You'd better slow down
Don't dance so fast
Time is short
The music won't last
Ever told your child, we'll do it tomorrow
And in your haste, not see his sorrow?
Ever lost touch, let a good friendship die
'Cause you never had time to call and say "Hi!"?
You'd better slow down Don't dance so fast
Time is short
The music won't last.
When you run so fast to get somewhere,
You miss half the fun of getting there.
When you worry and hurry through you day,
It is like an unopened gift..thrown away.
Life is not a race.
Do take it slower.
Hear the music
Before the song is over

(Author Unknown)

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Sunday, April 8, 2007

Five Reasons Why God Uses Problems

The problems you face will either defeat you or develop you - depending on how you respond to them.

Unfortunately, most people fail to see how God wants to use problems for good in their lives.


They react foolishly and resent their problems rather than pausing to consider what benefit they might bring.

Here are five ways God wants to use the problems in your life:

1.God Uses Problems To DIRECT YOU


Sometimes God must light a fire under you to get you moving.

Problems often point us in a new direction and motivate us to change.Is God trying to get your attention? "Sometimes it takesa painful situation to make us change our ways."

2. God Uses Problems To INSPECT YOU


People are like tea bags...if you want to know what's inside them,just drop them into hot ever water! Has God testedyour faith with a problem What do problems reveal about you?

"When you have many kinds of troubles, you should be full of joy, because you know that these troubles test your faith,and this will give you patience."

3. God Uses Problems To CORRECT YOU


Some lessons we learn only through pain and failure.It's likely that as a child your parents told you not to touch a hotstove.

But you probably learned by being burned. Sometimes we only learn the value of something... health, money, a relationship. ..by losing it. "It was the best thing that could have happened to me,for it taught me to pay attention to your laws."

4. God Uses Problems To PROTECT YOU


A problem can be a blessing in disguise if it prevents you from being harmed by something more serious. Last year a friend was fired for refusing to do some thing unethical that his boss had asked him to do. His unemployment was a problem - but it saved him from being convicted and sent to prison a yearlater when management's actions were eventually discovered.

"You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good...

5. God Uses Problems To PERFECT YOU


Problems, when responded to correctly, are character builders.God is far more interested in your character than your comfort.Your relationship to God and your character are the only two things you're going to take with you into eternity.

"We can rejoice when we run into problems...they help us learn to be patient. And patience develops strength of character in us and helps us trust God more each timewe use it until finally our hope and faith are strong and steady."

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AT& T is Spying on You, America!

EFF's Class-Action Lawsuit Against AT&T for Collaboration with Illegal Domestic Spying Program

And you wonder, the how and why AT&T is buying out other telecommunication company's?

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300 Reason’s From Propaganda Hell

Introduction

April 8, 2007
by Housewife4Palestine
I had one of those days rare opportunities to go to the cinema and seen a most profuse propaganda movie to not disguise a blatant insult towards not just the people of Iran, but point in fact the people of Greece.

While this movie was based on a graphic novel by Frank Miller and Lynn Varley, while I do not know if just insulting history or the countries mentioned was intended by their modernistic interpolation of an immoralist time; I have to admit this was put across at a time when propaganda against people is running rampant towards the world, especially any country that is not in the United States or Israeli favor at the moment.

This movie was extremely violent and filled with immorality and naked sexual innuendo, please forget any attempt at historical fact.

I published in part the following article, because in my opinion they did an exceptional interpitation of the 300 reason’s not to waste your money and that the for mentioned countries should be commended not taken down propaganda’s path of misery.

Finally, this movie fit’s more in toon to the low budget movies of yesteryear, where is the politically incorrect Ronald Reagan with "Bedtime for Bonzo?"


There must be 300 reasons to avoid this violent exercise in military propaganda.

Paul Byrnes, reviewer

April 6, 2007

This adaptation of the story of the 300 Spartans at the battle of Thermopylae, based on a graphic novel by Frank Miller and Lynn Varley, would have Herodotus turning in his grave and Hitler rising from his.

It is violent enough to make you shudder and close enough to fascist art to make your skin crawl. It celebrates all the things the Fuehrer loved - the glorious, operatic spectacle of senseless death, the ruthless weeding out of the weak, the gross caricaturing of the enemy, the indoctrination of the young, even a mountain-climbing ordeal for the hero - and all as it purports to be a movie about freedom.

Welcome to the new double-speak: Sparta as a metaphor for America, courtesy of Warner Bros, in which the politics of eugenics is reborn amid one of the most sickeningly violent and mindless films of the new millennium. Adolf would have been pleased: he may have lost the war, but his ideas live on in mystical, military propaganda like this, aimed at spotty boys in need of heroes. God help us.

Of course, latent fascism isn't new in American military movies. It's just that it's rarely as politically naive as it is in 300. That's me being charitable. It's just possible the filmmakers intended it to be as inflammatory as it is. These are strange times and 300 fits the mood of a part of the West that would like to see the Middle-Eastern barbarians bathed in their own blood. This is their kind of movie, complete with references to "barbarians" and "Asian hordes". Perhaps the Klan has become a new demographic for Hollywood.

Much of the blame goes to Miller, who wrote the original comic and takes a credit as executive producer on the movie. He is a cult figure in the world of American comics. He revitalised Batman in the Dark Knight series, and he wrote and drew Sin City, which was turned into a popular film by Robert Rodriguez. The indisputable graphic power of Miller's comic-book art is reproduced in the film with sepia monumentalism; his politics are another thing entirely.

Much of the historical inaccuracy in the movie flows directly from his book, including the way the movie Spartans don't wear any body armour or even crests on their helmets. We don't know that much about the Spartans but we have a fair idea of what they wore in battle, and it included leg and chest plates for protection. Miller dispenses with these in favour of men in loincloths and red shawls, so we can see their rippling muscles. Read more...

Battle of Thermopylae: Persian Warrior


300 Trailer





Depiction of the real Battle of Thermopylae

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