Saturday, December 13, 2008

A Joyful Christmas

Anglican Priest No "O Little Town of Bethlehem”

By HRM Deborah

Anglican priest named Reverend Stephen Coulter, vicar in Blandford Forum in Dorset, England resounded his opinion of life in modern Bethlehem due to the apparent high security to protect Christians, Jews and Muslims from being attacked; which is a bit ironic due to the Christmas story of over two thousands years ago.

During the war I will admit I did not on this instance think of logistics‘, which in actuality if one thinks about it is actually very profound.

In the time period that Jesus was born, the country was under occupation by the Romans and the tyrannical thumb of Herod the great, to further being a time of extreme hardships for the citizens of Palestine, let alone Bethlehem.

As the Christmas story unfolds, Joseph was to take his family to the city of his kinship Bethlehem for a census so that the Roman Army could have stronger control and had a count of how many people was actually citizens of the country; so this is how this particular family and many other's came to be in this city in number at all.

Then when the birth of this child came within Christian tradition a stable, which to my memory is in modern times termed a grotto; nevertheless, the child is born to very happy parents.

Then we have a visit by the three wise men of the East baring gifts termed to be of great value for the child and also a coming of Palestinian Shepherd’s from the fields; not Canaanite for even in this time they bore Allah”s (G-d‘s) curse. It would be just as easy in Jesus’ time to modern times, for these two set of people to enter Bethlehem and what is more profound they would have been safer from Herod, then the time they actually lived and furthermore; this goes with the Prophet Jesus because through Herod’s jealously, chances are he would have been more safe from harm, because the army that not only came to attack him, but murder all Jewish children from two years down with there mother’s wouldn’t have occurred; for the armies wouldn’t have entered the city, but have been held back by the military of Palestine.

So if one thinks of the instances of the two time period’s, in our more modern time’s with the security measures, all three religions have such a greater of opportunity of safety than what occurred when the birth of Prophet Jesus occurred.

As to the Anglican priest, in Prophet Jesus time especially he may had trouble’s being in Bethlehem due to the fact people such as himself did not exist yet and due to the fact someone from England in this time period would have been very interesting, to no disrespect a bit of an oddity to even see.

Nevertheless, the three wise men and the shepherd’s would have an easier time entering the city then Anglican priest Reverend Stephen Coulter with his not wishing people to sing this year "O Little Town of Bethlehem.”

All Christians should have a joyful Christmas without the politics of the time, for this is what should enter not.

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Thursday, December 11, 2008

The Invisibles Against US Missile Defense

Masked protestors that call themselves the “Invisibles,”march through Wenceslas Square during a protest against the planned US radar base, on 7 December 2008; in Prague, Czech Republic.

The pacific movement Nenasili protested against the planned stationing of a U.S radar base, as part of the U.S missile defence shield, on Czech soil.
The petition mentioned in the video called, “No Star Wars;” which is with those who disagree with a U.S missile defence shield and the installation of a US military base being put on Czech Republic territory can be found here, along with more information about this situation.

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Miss. residents sue over Katrina housing funds

Damage to Long Beach, Mississippi following Hurricane Katrina, in 2005. (click to enlarge photograph)


10 December 2008
By
SHELIA BYRD

JACKSON, Miss. – Housing advocates and low-income residents sued Wednesday to stop Mississippi from spending a half-billion federal dollars to expand a damaged port rather than replace homes destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.

The Mississippi State Conference NAACP, Gulf Coast Fair Housing Center and residents sued the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in federal court in Washington, D.C.

Congressional leaders and others slammed HUD when it approved the state's plan to steer money to the Hurricane Katrina-damaged port despite a lingering housing crisis caused by the 2005 storm.

Gov. Haley Barbour maintains expanding the State Port at Gulfport, the third-busiest container port in the Gulf of Mexico, is key to the region's economic recovery.

The storm surge devastated Mississippi's coast, washing away much of the affordable housing. Three years later, about 6,000 families remain in temporary housing. Housing prices have more than doubled and insurance costs have increased, forcing some to relocate.

"They were just leaving us out to defend for ourselves," said Dorothy McClendon, 59, a disabled former state employee and plaintiff in the lawsuit who still lives in a trailer provided by the federal government after being denied assistance through the Katrina housing program. "Most people like myself are low-income, elderly people who own their homes, but don't have no other means."

In January, then-HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson said he had concerns about the plan to redirect the money but was obligated to OK the project because of congressional rules.

"Our basic claim is that HUD had a duty and responsibility to review the proposal and took a position we believe is inappropriate — that they did not have the discretion to reject it," said Joe Rich, an attorney helping the housing advocates with their lawsuit.

HUD spokesman Brian Sullivan declined comment because the agency had not received a copy of the lawsuit.

The agency that oversees federally funded Katrina recovery projects has said programs are under way to address the housing situation, including a $350 million plan to build thousands of homes for the region's working class.

Lee Youngblood, a spokesman for the agency, the Mississippi Development Authority, said the port project will proceed.

"It's somewhat surprising that they would file a lawsuit, but at the same time, we're moving forward," said Youngblood, who said the state has dedicated $700 million to low-income construction projects.

The lawsuit contends that so far Mississippi has devoted only 21 percent of $5.4 billion in federal hurricane recovery funding to projects that benefit low- to moderate-income households. HUD's Community Block Grant Program, which provided most of the money, requires 50 percent of all spending to benefit such households.

Several congressional Democrats tried unsuccessfully to stop Mississippi from diverting the funds to the port.

"Safe, affordable housing was touted as the hallmark of Mississippi's recovery efforts," said Charmel Gaulden, executive director of the Gulf Coast Fair Housing Center. "Now, our own government is seeking to leave the least among us out in the cold."

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Pop stars tell the U.S. military to stop using their songs to torture detainees

Guantanamo Bay Concentration Camp: One of the Concentration Camps (detention centres) where the US has been using popular American music to torture detainees. Song under the photograph is Bruce Springsteen’s, "Born in the USA;" which is on the US torture music list.

10 December 2008
By
Daily Mail Foreign Service

Musicians and pop stars are joining forces with British human rights activists to stop U.S. military interrogators from using their songs to torture detainees.

The campaign has brought together groups including Massive Attack and musicians such as Tom Morello, who played with Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave.

It will feature minutes of silence during concerts and festivals, said Chloe Davies of the law group Reprieve, which represents dozens of Guantanamo Bay detainees.

Military contractor Donald Vance told how he was subjected to blaring rock music for 20 hours a day when he was held in Iraq.

The auditory assault went on for days, then weeks, then months at the U.S. military detention centre in Baghdad.

At least Vance, who says he was jailed for reporting illegal arms sales, was used to rock music.

For many detainees who grew up in Afghanistan - where music was prohibited under Taliban rule - interrogations by U.S. forces marked their first exposure to the pounding rhythms, played at top volume. The experience was overwhelming for many.

Binyam Mohammed, now a prisoner at Guantanamo Bay, said men held with him at the CIA's 'Dark Prison' in Afghanistan wound up screaming and smashing their heads against walls, unable to endure more.

'There was loud music, (Eminem's) 'Slim Shady' and Dr. Dre for 20 days. I heard this nonstop over and over,' he told his lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith.

'The CIA worked on people, including me, day and night for the months before I left. Plenty lost their minds.'

Rear Adm. David Thomas, the commander of Guantanamo's detention centre, said the music treatment is not currently used at Guantanamo but added that he could not rule out its use in the future.

'I couldn't speculate and I wouldn't speculate but I can tell you it doesn't happen here at Guantanamo and it hasn't happened since I've been here,' Thomas, who has been at Guantanamo for a half-year.

The spokeswoman for Guantanamo's detention centre, Navy Cmdr Pauline Storum, wouldn't give details of when and how music has been used at the prison.

FBI agents stationed at Guantanamo Bay reported numerous instances in which music was blasted at detainees, saying they were 'told such tactics were common there.'


(Click to Enlarge)

According to an FBI memo, one interrogator at Guantanamo Bay bragged he needed only four days to 'break' someone by alternating 16 hours of music and lights with four hours of silence and darkness.

Ruhal Ahmed, a Briton who was captured in Afghanistan, describes excruciating sessions at Guantanamo Bay.

He said his hands were shackled to his feet, which were shackled to the floor, forcing him into a painful squat for periods of up to two days.

'You're in agony,' Ahmed, who was released without charge in 2004, told Reprieve.

He said the agony was compounded when music was introduced, because 'before you could actually concentrate on something else, try to make yourself focus on some other things in your life that you did before and take that pain away.

'It makes you feel like you are going mad,' he said.

Not all of the music is hard rock. Christopher Cerf, who wrote music for 'Sesame Street,' said he was horrified to learn songs from the children's TV show were used in interrogations.

'I wouldn't want my music to be a party to that,' he said.

Bob Singleton, whose song 'I Love You' is beloved by legions of Barney fans, wrote in a newspaper opinion column that any music can become unbearable if played loudly for long stretches.

'It's absolutely ludicrous,' he wrote in the Los Angeles Times. 'A song that was designed to make little children feel safe and loved was somehow going to threaten the mental state of adults and drive them to the emotional breaking point?'

Morello, of Rage Against the Machine, has been especially forceful in denouncing the practice. During a recent concert in San Francisco, he proposed taking revenge on President George W. Bush.

'I suggest that they level Guantanamo Bay, but they keep one small cell and they put Bush in there ... and they blast some Rage Against the Machine,' he said to whoops and cheers.

Some musicians, however, say they're proud that their music is used in interrogations. Those include bassist Stevie Benton, whose group Drowning Pool has performed in Iraq and recorded one of the interrogators' favorites, 'Bodies.'

'People assume we should be offended that somebody in the military thinks our song is annoying enough that played over and over it can psychologically break someone down,' he told Spin magazine.

'I take it as an honor to think that perhaps our song could be used to quell another 9/11 attack or something like that.'

The band's record label said Benton did not want to comment further.

Instead, the band issued a statement reading: 'Drowning Pool is committed to supporting the lives and rights of our troops stationed around the world.'

Vance, in a telephone interview from Chicago, said the tactic can make innocent men go mad. According to a lawsuit he has filed, his jailers said he was being held because his employer was suspected of selling weapons to terrorists and insurgents.

The U.S. military confirms Vance was jailed but won't elaborate because of the lawsuit.

He said he was locked in an overcooled 9ft by 9ft cell that had a speaker with a metal grate over it. Two large speakers stood in the hallway outside. The music was almost constant, mostly hard rock, he said.

'There was a lot of Nine Inch Nails, including 'March of the Pigs,'' he said. 'I couldn't tell you how many times I heard Queen's 'We Will Rock You.''

He wore only a jumpsuit and flip-flops and had no protection from the cold.

'I had no blanket or sheet. If I had, I would probably have tried suicide,' he said. 'I got to a few points toward the end where I thought, 'How can I do this?' Actively plotting, 'How can I get away with it so they don't stop it?''

Asked to describe the experience, Vance said: 'It sort of removes you from you. You can no longer formulate your own thoughts when you're in an environment like that.'

He was released after 97 days. Two years later, he says, 'I keep my home very quiet.'

Further Information

The Tipton Three, a trio of British Muslims who were held and tortured in Guantanamo Bay for two years:


One of the methods of torture that was recounted in interviews and the movie by the Tipton Three was the use of loud music and being put in contortion type positions, while being handcuffed to the floor; to further having to defecate in there jumpsuit style clothing, while being in this position for extreme amount of hours at a time.

Interview with Ruhal Ahmed

The Road To Guantanamo (A movie about the Tipton Three)

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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Manger Square Getting Ready for Christmas

A Palestinian municipality worker decorates the Manger Square outside the Church of the Nativity in the ancient city of Bethlehem, on 10 December 2008; two weeks before Christmas.
As foreign tourists pray inside the Church of the Nativity, believed in Christendom to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ.

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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Hundreds of Shia Muslim Worshippers in Prayers for Eid

Hundreds of Shia Muslim worshippers took part in the early morning prayers as they mark the start of the Eid al-Adha according to the Shia denomination in the holy city of Karbala; some 120 km’s south of Baghdad, on 9 December 2008.

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Letters to God Post Marked 'Jerusalem'

A Jewish man prays at the spot where letters addressed to G-d were inserted into the cracks of the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City, on 9 December 2008.
Western Wall's Rabbi Shmuel Rabinovich places letters addressed to G-d into the cracks of the Jewish holiest site in Jerusalem's Old City, on 9 December 2008.
A letter from the US addressed to 'God' sits at the main Jerusalem post office, on 9 December 2008.
Thousands of letters addressed to 'God' and ‘Jesus Christ’ reach Jerusalem's main post office every year from all over the world. The missives are collected and placed at the Western Wall.

There is also internet websites, where people can do the same as these postal mailed letters and these are also put in the Western Wall; from my understanding.

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Youth's Enjoy Themselves on Second Day of Eid

Palestinian youths enjoy themselves at an entertainment park in the city of Ramallah, on 9 December 2008, the second day of the Eid al-Adha holiday.
Palestinian boys ride a horse-drawn wagon at an entertainment park on the Eastern side of Jerusalem, on 9 December 2008; on the second day of the Eid al-Adha holiday.

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The Environment Doesn’t Take a Light Bulb

By HRM Deborah

I can not help thinking these days of how people are being set to be so focused on the environment, especially with former US Vice President Al Gore saying do this or do that especially with such example’s as buying special light bulbs; that in too many cases cost’s a fortune which many people these days can ill-afford; when the most important way to rebalance the earth and for everything upon the earth to become as it should be again, is done by people themselves and not by manmade devices.

If all people on the earth started doing everything that Allah (G-d) has taught people through His laws to live by and be just basic custodians of the earth as Allah (G-d) has requested from the beginning of time; to further as I have always said, as one would keep there house clean so should they also do the same for the earth and how people live there lives whether good or bad, does effect the delicate balance of the global environment itself.

For something, maybe mankind has forgotten; the earth and everything upon it belongs to Allah (G-d).

Years ago, I happen to read an article by some scientist’s that explained how the atom, does make everything upon the earth if it is put together in the different ways, where one configuration could make a tree, to the next being an animal, but nevertheless, even there conclusion that the signature of this was by one central element and that there was differently a G-d, for no one else could have created an intricate structure such as this.

So to rebalance the environment, doesn’t take a light bulb, but mankind themselves.

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Sunday, December 7, 2008

Palestinian's Throng Stalls in Front of Damascus Gate

Palestinians throng the stalls in front of Jerusalem's Damascus Gate, on 6 December 2008; preparing for the upcoming Eid al-Adha festivities. Muslims throughout the world are gearing up to celebrate Eid al-Adha, the feast of the sacrifice, which marks the end of the Hajj pilgrimage to Makkah (Mecca), Saudi Arabia.
While Palestinian woman shop for Eid al-Adha in the main market in Gaza City, on 6 December 2008.

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