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Afghan boomer targets crowd of kiddies
Today's Headlines
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Page 2: WoT Background
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2 00:00 Fleash Greaper4919 [5] 
13 00:00 JosephMendiola [5] 
11 00:00 Grurong Threatle4376 [3] 
6 00:00 DarthVader [2] 
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6 00:00 Eric Jablow [2] 
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4 00:00 tu3031 [4] 
1 00:00 gorb [2] 
3 00:00 Mullah Da Killah [2] 
Page 1: WoT Operations
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Page 3: Non-WoT
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Page 4: Opinion
15 00:00 leroidavid [5]
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2 00:00 mojo [2]
11 00:00 RD [9]
3 00:00 Anguper Hupomosing9418 [3]
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Page 5: Russia-Former Soviet Union
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24 00:00 Carl in N.H. [4]
14 00:00 Charles [3]
3 00:00 RWV [4]
1 00:00 mcsegeek1 [5]
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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Man arrested after breach attempt at Capitol
WASHINGTON - A man crashed his vehicle into a security barricade at the U.S. Capitol on Monday, ran into the building and was arrested, forcing the complex to briefly be locked down, authorities said.

Police shut down the complex as they investigated the incident, and to ensure that all people there were authorized to be there. The incident happened shortly before 8 a.m. EDT, witnesses said.

The Capitol complex was reopened within the hour. Hill staffers were briefly instructed to remain in their offices while police searched to ensure there were no other interlopers.

Construction workers and police said the man drove his SUV through a barricade at the Capitol, where a major visitors’ center is under construction. His vehicle also crashed into a water fountain on the plaza in the middle of the construction area.

Witnesses said the man, wearing a blue ballcap, ran into the Capitol near the Rotunda and was pursued by police. A construction supervisor said the man was apprehended in a construction area on the third floor of the building.

Capitol police were searching room by room, hallway by hallway, Eric Ueland, chief of staff for Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., told CNN.

There have been a string of security alerts involving evacuations of the Capitol and various surrounding office buildings since the Sept. 11 attacks five years ago. “This individual was apprehended before he could get his way too far in the Capitol and if he intended to do any damage, not be able to follow through on that,” Ueland said.

A congressional aide said she had received e-mail from police saying the Capitol building was in “lock down” because of a security breach and that no one would be allowed access to the building pending a security sweep.
Gee, funny, we get to the end of the article and there's not one word about the identity of the perpetrator. How 'bout that?
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 10:51 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It was that damn Ambien again, I tell ya!
Posted by: Rep. Patrick Kennedy || 09/18/2006 11:28 Comments || Top||

#2  Thanks for 'saying it in Salmon' Fred. My unworthy impotent Yellow just doesn't have the same 'impact'.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 11:47 Comments || Top||

#3  Fred is light yellow. Steve White is salmon, newspaperman Scooter McGruder is Pepto Bismol (or chewing gum, if you are so inclined) pink, the just returned from Barthelona (a pronounciation, not a spelling) Seafarious is light blue, lotp is light sage green (possibly sage -- we are now venturing well beyond my non-artistic non-expertise), Pappy is battleship grey, Army of Steves Steve is bright green, and I'm still a bit confused on the identity of the goldenrod guy.

Study hard. There will be a test later. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 12:02 Comments || Top||

#4  I'm still a bit confused on the identity of the goldenrod guy.

So's he!! LOL
Posted by: lotp || 09/18/2006 12:13 Comments || Top||

#5 
It's not "goldenrod"; it's Diaper Dirt Brown.
Posted by: Dave D. || 09/18/2006 12:57 Comments || Top||

#6  At first I thought a Kennedy was late for a floor vote or possibly McKinney trying to go out in style. I think it’s bad that he go into the building before he was stopped. Just think if he had an explosive vest and detonated it?
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 09/18/2006 13:02 Comments || Top||

#7  Dude appears to have been packing heat:

The man was armed with a gun, said one security officer speaking anonymously pending an official briefing. The officer said the man was captured by police after running through the Rotunda in the center of the Capitol and down a stairway into the basement. He said the man appeared to be having a seizure, and was taken to a hospital. A congressional aide said the man appeared to be carrying a small weapon and that an ambulance had been called because of the apparent seizure. The aide said that police were reviewing a videotape of the incident and were expected to release a statement soon.

"Is that a small weapon in your pocket or are you just a democratic senator?"
Posted by: Steve || 09/18/2006 13:36 Comments || Top||

#8  The man was armed with a gun

Impossible! Guns are not allowed in D.C.! No one with criminal intent would be so brazen as to break a gun-control law! Clearly false report.
Posted by: psychohillbilly || 09/18/2006 13:43 Comments || Top||

#9  "Is that a small weapon in your pocket or are you just a democratic senator?"

lol!
Posted by: tired and beat down || 09/18/2006 13:50 Comments || Top||

#10  "the man appeared to be having a seizure"

Nah, he's just a Muzzy Moonbat Dhimmicrat poor guy with issues.
Posted by: flyover || 09/18/2006 13:51 Comments || Top||

#11  Looks like a test run to me and a good one.....
Posted by: Grurong Threatle4376 || 09/18/2006 15:46 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Iran and Venezuela ink bilateral agreements
Iran and Venezuela have signed a string of bilateral agreements at the start of Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to the Latin American country.
Mr Ahmadinejad and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez signed accords including oil exploration and car production.

President Chavez said the visit would strengthen the strategic alliance between the two states.

The Iranian leader was earlier welcomed to the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, with full military honours
Posted by: lotp || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  That means that when we slam Iran, we also get to toss a couple of Tomahawks into the Presidential Palace in Caracas, too, right??? I'll go along with that. No nukes, though - the Venezuelan people have enough problems. At the same time, we'll nationalize Citgo, and then sell it to the highest bidder WITHIN the United States. There's some equally heavy crude up in Michigan and in a couple of other places for the Citgo refineries. Venezuelan crude has just been cheaper.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 09/18/2006 15:21 Comments || Top||

#2  "Mr Ahmadinejad and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez signed accords including... car production."
That makes sense. They both have the same kind of car production: from a U.S. parking lots, to freighters, to their docks. Voila, they have produced cars.
Posted by: Darrell || 09/18/2006 15:35 Comments || Top||

#3  apparently the followup to the POS Yugo is the Hugo™
Posted by: Frank G || 09/18/2006 16:46 Comments || Top||

#4  Wonder how much money these two mooks are losing with the price of crude coming down fast?
Posted by: tu3031 || 09/18/2006 20:30 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
'Japan to start North Korean reconnaissance'
TOKYO: Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) plans to submit a bill to parliament as early as this year allowing military use of space for defensive purposes, the Yomiuri Shimbun daily said on Sunday. If passed, the new law would enable the government to launch reconnaissance satellites for defence purposes, enabling it to detect North Korean missile launches and other military incidents, the paper said. Japan's use of space is currently limited to non-military purposes under a strict interpretation of a UN treaty that Tokyo ratified in 1967.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Things are a changin in the East. There is a very big chess game going on.
Posted by: Thomort Flomoling3198 || 09/18/2006 6:56 Comments || Top||

#2  Oh shit.
Posted by: Jintao Hu || 09/18/2006 9:44 Comments || Top||

#3  Careful, Kimmy, I saw a Japanese space-based death ray in a circa 1950s movie
Posted by: Captain America || 09/18/2006 11:02 Comments || Top||

#4  Thomort, this isn't a chess game. It's a go game, and Japan wants sente.
Posted by: Eric Jablow || 09/18/2006 12:59 Comments || Top||

#5  Hee hee hee....
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 09/18/2006 15:51 Comments || Top||

#6  Does anyone here feel that we're playing an updated version of GMT Games' Twilight Struggle?

Barbara, as long as North Korea still has some [go] liberties through China, we won't get anywhere.
Posted by: Eric Jablow || 09/18/2006 17:58 Comments || Top||


N Korea renews demand for lifting US sanctions
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sorry, we only hear you about as well as you hear us.
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 3:45 Comments || Top||

#2  Get in line behind Cuba. At least they have some ball players to offer.
Posted by: Chang Cholunter4501 || 09/18/2006 9:12 Comments || Top||

#3  But North Korea's forged 100 dollar bills are much better than Cuba's...
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 13:42 Comments || Top||


North Korean detains 1,000 SKorean tourists
SEOUL - Up to 1,000 South Korean tourists were detained briefly in North Korea on Sunday after a lawmaker amongst them offered snacks and ice cream to a soldier, a report said.
What I want to know: how did the soldier respond? And his pals?
The group was visiting Mount Kumgang, a craggy tourist enclave in the eastern part of the Stalinist state, when the incident happened, according to tour operator Hyundai Asan, who was quoted by Yonhap news agency.

The tourists were detained for some 40 minutes after the contact between a North Korean military guard and Cha Myung-jin, a lawmaker of South Korea’s opposition Grand National Party, the report said. The South Koreans were later released and deported home, reportedly after the South Korean side apologized and promised such unauthorized interaction would not happen again.

Amid easing tensions between the two Koreas, more than a million tourists have visited the rugged terrain just a few miles (kilometres) north of the border with South Korea since tours began in November 1998. Visitors to Mount Kumgang enjoy circuses, listen to old Korean ballads, and soak their limbs in natural hot springs, but they are prohibited from stepping outside the zone to talk with North Korean people.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sounds like a nice place. Come and spend your money, but dont step over that white line or the guy with the machine gun will cut you in half. Who the hell would go to a shithole like this? Don't they have rocky crags in South Korea? Probably even without military guards, you can probably even give someone an ice cream bar without getting deported in Skor.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 09/18/2006 7:01 Comments || Top||

#2  They might have relatives there.
Posted by: Jackal || 09/18/2006 9:04 Comments || Top||

#3  i wouldn't care if i did have relatives there, i would stay at home with the thought they might not let you come back
Posted by: sinse || 09/18/2006 9:41 Comments || Top||

#4  So the Sother Korean extended his hand in friendship and the North Koreans bit him? LOL a lesson to be learned there.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 09/18/2006 10:12 Comments || Top||

#5  I told ya, the sign says, "Don't Feed The SoKos"
Posted by: Captain America || 09/18/2006 11:05 Comments || Top||

#6  I forgot to add that the poor soldier (and prob his family) are in prison or killed. He was tainted by those filthy SoKor tourists and therefor can't be trusted to upjhold the glory of Juiche.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 09/18/2006 12:50 Comments || Top||

#7  A lot of the South Koreans have this mystic nationalism thing going, a sacred land of Korea/Korean master-race idea.

The NK's have been pushing the idea for a long time, and tying it to the holy Il's.
Posted by: buwaya || 09/18/2006 13:42 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Unions Have Embraced Anti-War Extremism, Report Says
Labor leaders have established a close relationship with anti-American, anti-war activists as part of a move to the political left that began more than three decades ago, according to a recent report produced by a conservative think tank.

"Prominent self-styled 'peace activists' such as Cindy Sheehan, Leslie Cagan and Ramsey Clark rarely waste an opportunity to portray America as the number one obstacle to world peace," said Carl Horowitz, author of "Common Cause With America's Enemies: How Labor Unions Embraced Antiwar Extremism."

"What may be less known is the prominent role that many of the nation's labor unions have had in promoting this view," added Horowitz, who serves as director of the National Legal and Policy Center's Organized Labor Accountability Project.

"For more than 30 years, unions in this country have moved steadily leftward," the report stated, "forging strategic alliances with people who oppose America's rights of sovereignty and self-defense far more than they oppose war."

Continued on Page 49
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 10:08 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  the unions werent ALL supportive of Meany during the cold war, in particular the UAW, the Drug and Hospital Workers, the West Coast Long Shore were not. And similarly, unions were divided on Iraq. Like Americans in general.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 09/18/2006 11:06 Comments || Top||

#2  The real story of the Unions in the last 3 decades has been the collapse of the private sector unions and the resulting domination of the movement by the public sector unions.

The union movement has moved left because it now depends on big government and left wing politicians. They are simply supporting their economic best interests.

Al
Posted by: Frozen Al || 09/18/2006 11:33 Comments || Top||

#3  The unions may embrace the LLL Mo0b@+5 but the rank and file doesn’t necessarily fall in lock step with them. Most of the union members are like me, I have to join in order to work here. Even though I am a union member I am no where close to there political leanings. I would add that if they made union membership optional, over half the members would leave.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 09/18/2006 13:07 Comments || Top||

#4  It simple the rank and file have to take the unions back from the 'leadership', the deck is stacked against the rank and file. There are plenty of true believers in a 'workers paridise' in the rank and file who are just silent about their commie tendencies, I have run into them.

I my state the trade Unions are in bed with the enviromental lawyers who kill all projects that do not have union labor doing the work too. Wonderful ain't it.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom || 09/18/2006 15:20 Comments || Top||

#5  It's still criminal that FDR forcibly unionized the railroads in 1942, and that illegal action has never been overturned by either Congress or the Supreme Court. There are hundreds of other examples where unionism has been forced upon companies. I admire Walmart for standing up against the union pressure, if for nothing else.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 09/18/2006 15:45 Comments || Top||

#6  Not surprising. The Union leaders are all pretty much communist anyway.
Posted by: DarthVader || 09/18/2006 17:01 Comments || Top||


Sen. Hillary Clinton blasts Bush assassination film
CHAPPAQUA — Sen. Hillary Clinton this morning blasted the producers of a new film depicting the assassination of Pres. George W. Bush.

"I think it's despicable," Clinton said of "Death of a President," a fictional film that features a staged assassination of the president in 2007. "I think it's absolutely outrageous. That anyone would even attempt to profit on such a horrible scenario makes me sick."

Clinton made the comments in her adopted hometown of Chappaqua at the annual New Castle Community Day.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 10:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  See ya'll, she's not so bad after all!

The fact that Hillary thinks she can fool the American people I think will be her downfall.
Posted by: Bama Marine || 09/18/2006 10:23 Comments || Top||

#2  Or she is thinking, "Hey, that could be me".
Posted by: ed || 09/18/2006 10:28 Comments || Top||

#3  As Ed said.
Posted by: twobyfour || 09/18/2006 10:44 Comments || Top||

#4  Exactly Ed
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 09/18/2006 11:19 Comments || Top||

#5  Yeah, don't want to start the ball rolling on 'just cap the Prez' politics. It's so, so, Roman. Like getting the mob up to remove those pesky Gracchus boys from power by blood. Ended up with a civil war, several purges of Senators and a Caesar in the end. Not that something like that could ever happen to this republic. No. Not here.
Posted by: Phineque Cleang4302 || 09/18/2006 11:25 Comments || Top||

#6  :-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 12:22 Comments || Top||

#7  Word, ed.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 14:02 Comments || Top||

#8  #5 - not as long as I can still hold a gun and point and fire it, it won't happen here... and I come from a VERY large Southern family, with lots of cousins that think as I do. I believe most Americans wouldn't put up with a Ceaser longer than it would take to re-establish the Will of the People - by force, if necessary. As long as we have a Second Amendment, we're safe from that disaster.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 09/18/2006 15:48 Comments || Top||

#9  Either that, #2 ed, or she had an opinion poll done to see what her position should be.

"Clinton this morning blasted the producers"

Seeing as to how this was in the news last week....
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 09/18/2006 15:50 Comments || Top||

#10  Oh. Now the bitch finds religion...
Posted by: The Ghost of Vince Foster || 09/18/2006 20:17 Comments || Top||

#11  POTUS or Senator only, all Men + America will be blamed.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/18/2006 23:31 Comments || Top||


Obama Urges Dems to be Tougher on Security
INDIANOLA, Iowa - Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., warned Democratic activists Sunday that the party must take a tougher stance on national security if it wants to succeed in the November elections. "What Democrats have to do is to close the deal," said Obama, the keynote speaker at Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin 29th annual steak fry. "We have got to show we have a serious agenda for change."

Obama's appearance in Iowa, where precinct caucuses launch the presidential season, has raised a number of eyebrows about his intentions for a presidential run in 2008. Though only a first-term senator, Obama has burst onto the national scene. But he wouldn't say Sunday whether he was considering a run at the White House. "My only attentions right now are focused on '06," said Obama. "Whoever is looking toward 2008 without focusing on 2006 makes a mistake."

Obama said he and other Democrats want to take the nation in a different direction, but he vowed not to "demonize" Republicans. He said a carefully cast message could lure moderate Republicans who are uncomfortable with the White House's hard-line conservative stance.

"The American people are ready for change," he said. "The American people recognize the path (of) the last five years has not made us more competitive, has not opened more opportunities and has not made us safer."
Too bad. I thought I was beginning to like this guy. Unless the writer screwed up, and this is Warner's quote, which I deleted as old news.
Obama called the attention he has received "flattering," recalling how he was treated like a hero when he traveled to Kenya this summer to visit his father's home village. He also noted that rumors of his presidential ambitions began the day after he was elected to the Senate in 2004, when someone asked him about his plans for 2008. "I said you'll have to wait a little while," he said.

In his speech to more than 2,000 activists gathered in a county park, Obama also warned that many voters are losing hope that the government is on their side. "Even those of us in public life get a certain cynicism," he said. "We've got a lot of self-important leaders who are long on rhetoric and short on ideas.
I'm thinking of some folks from Mass and Calif....
"People still believe that in America the promise is limitless, but they aren't sure their leaders do."
Posted by: Bobby || 09/18/2006 08:48 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Nothing quite so dangerous as a man with the gift of taking old, discredited and bankrupt ideas, and putting shiny new wrappers on them.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 12:06 Comments || Top||

#2  You are correct on the agenda, but unfortubately all you have are hollow words. No serious actions to back it up. By the way, do you have an agenda ? As much as this administration tees me off, the Dummocrats offer even less. The choices become bad and worse. I think this Obama has no chance of any widespread support. It's just that he's so new on the scene that his dirty laundry is yet to be exposed , unlike Pelosi, Reid, Conyers, ad infinitum. Until this party disavows it's communist bent, it's going nowhere.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat || 09/18/2006 13:03 Comments || Top||

#3  a wolf in sheeps clothing. His words and actions do not match. Hopefully the good bloggers will call him to task.
Posted by: tired and beat down || 09/18/2006 13:53 Comments || Top||

#4  "We've got a lot of self-important leaders who are long on rhetoric and short on ideas.

Yes indeed. We need more here built upon the Kenyan, Congo, Somalia models.
Posted by: Besoeker || 09/18/2006 16:18 Comments || Top||


W.House: deal possible on CIA interrogations
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Still not ready to fight, eh? Pressure them all you want, just try not to kill or maim them. End of discussion.
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 2:32 Comments || Top||

#2  NEWSMAX.com > CIA desires to keep 7 methods of interrogation. Lets feed 'em PRAWNS-AND-STEAK ala KARR/NON-BENET-GATE.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/18/2006 3:20 Comments || Top||

#3  I don't see where you find a compromise in this. Either you give the agents legal coverage or you don't; either you have an effective interrogation program or you don't.

Bush needs to go to the mat on this one.
Posted by: Captain America || 09/18/2006 11:10 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Experts baffled by Indo-Pak deal
New Delhi, Sept. 18: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf’s decision to put in place an India-Pakistan anti-terrorism institutional mechanism to identify and implement counter-terrorism initiatives and investigations has outraged and baffled diplomats and security analysts alike.Naive and ill-advised is how they chose to describe the joint statement that has been thrust upon an unsuspecting nation barely a few weeks after the Mumbai serial blasts.

“Prime Minister Manmohan Singh seems to have been smitten with the Stockholm Syndrome ever since the Mumbai blasts of July 11, in which 184 suburban train commuters were killed by suspected members of the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, a Pakistan-based terrorist organisation and a member of Osama bin Laden’s International Islamic Front,” according to Mr B. Raman, a retired additional secretary in the Cabinet Secretariat. The expression Stockholm Syndrome, which came into vogue in 1973, refers to a psychological condition in which a victim of terrorism, finding himself powerless in the hands of a terrorist, starts empathising with the terrorist.

“At a time when a growing number of Western analysts and policy-makers have begun doubting the sincerity of Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf and suspecting that he has been playing a double role — openly as a front-line ally in the war against terrorism and covertly as a supporter of Pakistan-based jihadi terrorists — our Prime Minister has sought to play down the extent of Gen Musharraf’s perfidy with regard to jihadi terrorism directed against India from Pakistani territory with the help of organisations such as Lashkar which operate under the control of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence,” Mr Raman has said.

Mr G. Parthasarathy, a former high commissioner to Islamabad, wondered how anybody could equate a country like India, which faced the problem of terrorism, with a country like Pakistan, which sponsored terrorism. “[The move] is ill-advised,” he asserted, “Four days ago, in Brussels, Gen Musharraf said that violence by militants will continue till the Kashmir issue is resolved. To pretend that [a change will happen] is naive and misplaced.” India, he reminded, faced a threat from the terrorists trained by the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan and it was inconceivable how the ISI or Gen.

Musharraf would “cooperate with us.” Asked whether the joint initiative has come about without help from the United States, Mr Parthasarathy said the Americans have been making such suggestions. He nevertheless felt no initiative can deliver positive results until there was “change in the political intention” to stop the use of terrorism. However, there were some like strategic analyst K. Subrahmanyam who supported the decision announced by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf in Havana.

He was of the opinion that once a joint mechanism was in place, India can give Pakistan whatever evidence India has of terrorists operating from Pakistan. “They (Pakistan) have to now answer specific allegations and charges. It’s a step forward. Pakistan has accepted that terrorism is a problem between the two countries. It has accepted that terrorism exists on its soil,” Mr Subrahmanyam said.
Posted by: john || 09/18/2006 17:41 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  “At a time when a growing number of Western analysts and policy-makers have begun doubting the sincerity of Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf and suspecting that he has been playing a double role — openly as a front-line ally in the war against terrorism and covertly as a supporter of Pakistan-based jihadi terrorists — our ________ has sought to play down the extent of Gen Musharraf’s perfidy with regard to jihadi terrorism directed against ________ from Pakistani territory with the help of organisations such as _______ which operate under the control of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence,”
Yeah, you can fill in the blanks a lot of ways.
Posted by: Darrell || 09/18/2006 19:34 Comments || Top||

#2  I always love a headline that includes the phrase "Experts Baffled"...
Posted by: Fleash Greaper4919 || 09/18/2006 22:29 Comments || Top||


India to seek extradition of Dawood, Salahuddin
India said on Sunday that the joint anti-terrorism mechanism with Pakistan meant that New Delhi would now be able to take up terror-related extradition issues with Islamabad.

Talking to reporters, Indian Foreign Secretary-designate P Shivshankar Menon said the mechanism meant that New Delhi would soon raise its long-standing demand for the extradition of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and Hizbul Mujahideen leader Syed Salahuddin, both of whom it believed were residing in Pakistan.

He also rejected claims that there had been a "shift" in New Delhi's stance regarding cross-border terrorism after recent comments by Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh that acknowledged Pakistan was a victim of terrorism, stressing that there could not be a guarantee that all kinds of terrorist acts would come to an end with the establishment of the joint anti-terror mechanism. Menon went on to deny that New Delhi had accused Pakistan of playing a role in the July 11 Mumbai train blasts, saying that investigations were still underway.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  In other news, the Pakistan President has offered to sell one of his bridges to India.
The structure, located in Brooklyn, is in good condition.
The Indian PM has accepted the offer
Posted by: john || 09/18/2006 18:28 Comments || Top||


No Taliban in Pakistan: Gen Sultan
There are no Taliban in Pakistan, but there are millions of Afghan refugees, but they must not be confused with the Taliban. However, there could be stray individuals part of or sympathetic to the group, Maj Gen Shaukat Sultan, press secretary to the president and head of Inter-Services Public Relations, told journalists here on Saturday.

Gen Sultan said there should be no misgivings about the deal reached with tribal elders in North Waziristan. He dismissed as utterly baseless allegations that some kind of a deal had been entered into with the Taliban in Afghanistan. He said no foreigner would be accorded asylum nor Waziristan would turn into a haven for terrorists. He said there was no question of any "cross-border terrorist movement" from Pakistan to any neighbouring state.
His lips moved, words came out, none of it made any sense.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Pakistan is as free of the Taleban as General Sultan's words are of the truth.

People's heads need to explode when they spew transparently false shit like this.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 1:14 Comments || Top||

#2  Then you wouldn't mind us coming in and taking a look around, would you?
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 1:24 Comments || Top||

#3  Nice thought, gorb, but I'm beginning to think that the only sure way to guarantee Pakistan no longer has any terrorists is to scrub the entire country with a free Neutron Bath™.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 2:25 Comments || Top||

#4  Depends on your definition of "Taliban" is, not to mention what your definition of "is" is.
Posted by: W. J. Clinton || 09/18/2006 6:05 Comments || Top||

#5  How do you tell when a Muslim is lying?

"Son, I'll give a method far past improvin',
Just look for the one whose lips are movin' "
Benny Hill, RIP
Posted by: SR-71 || 09/18/2006 6:50 Comments || Top||

#6  Once Taliban enter Pakistan they are just a department of the ISI so off course there are no Taliban in Pakistan!
Posted by: 3dc || 09/18/2006 10:06 Comments || Top||

#7  And a combover? What combover?
Posted by: Gen. Shaukat Sultan || 09/18/2006 11:18 Comments || Top||

#8  I suppose Quetta is not part of Pakistan and that the BBC visit to the head of pakistan taliban was a lie then????
Posted by: Cheregum Crelet7867 || 09/18/2006 11:45 Comments || Top||

#9  And there's no al qaeda either. The Pak army retreated from the Waziristan's because of good will.
Posted by: anymouse || 09/18/2006 12:26 Comments || Top||

#10  Absolutely no Taliban in Pakistan, no, never ...

Posted by: DMFD || 09/18/2006 18:22 Comments || Top||

#11  I see it, I see it, seperated at birth! Man DMFD your good!
Posted by: 49 Pan || 09/18/2006 18:28 Comments || Top||

#12  I agree totally: there is no Taliban in Pakistan, and Chirac is not stupid.
Posted by: leroidavid || 09/18/2006 23:26 Comments || Top||


Iraq
US Holds AP Sunni Iraqi (not PC) Photographer
The U.S. military in Iraq has imprisoned an Associated Press photographer for five months, accusing him of being a security threat but never filing charges or permitting a public hearing.

Military officials said Bilal Hussein, an Iraqi citizen, was being held for "imperative reasons of security" under United Nations resolutions. AP executives said the news cooperative's review of Hussein's work did not find anything to indicate inappropriate contact with insurgents, and any evidence against him should be brought to the Iraqi criminal justice system.
Be careful what you ask for.
Hussein, 35, is a native of Fallujah who began work for the AP in September 2004. He photographed events in Fallujah and Ramadi until he was detained on April 12 of this year. "We want the rule of law to prevail. He either needs to be charged or released. Indefinite detention is not acceptable," said Tom Curley, AP's president and chief executive officer. "We've come to the conclusion that this is unacceptable under Iraqi law, or Geneva Conventions, or any military procedure."

Hussein is one of an estimated 14,000 people detained by the U.S. military worldwide — 13,000 of them in Iraq. They are held in limbo where few are ever charged with a specific crime or given a chance before any court or tribunal to argue for their freedom.
But they're off the battlefield. Like the Gitmo commander said the other day, they're not 'imprisoned' for punishment or rehabilitation, they are detained to save American lives.

Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Bobby || 09/18/2006 06:10 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  he just so happened to be a cell phone and comp salesman too. wonder how many ied's they made when he gave them his inventory?
Posted by: sinse || 09/18/2006 9:28 Comments || Top||

#2  Michelle Malkin is all over this today. My sympathy meter is currently at minus 10.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 10:44 Comments || Top||

#3  Some goodies when Bilal was arrested:

Michelle Malkin: WHERE IS BILAL HUSSEIN?

Jawa Report: Bilal Hussein and the Continuing Saga of Insurgent Propaganda via the Media or Bilal Hussein, Fauxtographer
Posted by: ed || 09/18/2006 11:13 Comments || Top||

#4  The U.S. military in Iraq has imprisoned an Associated Press photographer for five months, accusing him of being a security threat but never filing charges or permitting a public hearing

I believe SCOTUS said they can be kept till the war is over. No hearing necessary. Caught on the battlefield with a weapons cache, tough tiddly wats. New Bulletin - Flashing a Press Card is not a 'Get Out of Jail Free' card. You are not special people. Get over yourselves. So when was the last article you ran on SPC Matt Maupin? We'll show as much concern for your boy.
Posted by: Phineque Cleang4302 || 09/18/2006 11:46 Comments || Top||

#5  "Journalists have always had relationships with people that others might find unsavory," she said.

Hands up everyone who remembers when it was decided that the CIA cannot associate with "people that others might find unsavory".

Now, shouldn't our freaking intelligence service have wider lattitude in dealing with criminals and our enemies than the freaking press? Shouldn't the press be held account for what amounts to their funding terrorists and propagating enemy, um, propaganda?

Shouldn't any AP execs who authorized the continuing employment of "stringers" like Belial be investigated for treason?
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 12:15 Comments || Top||


Videos may put Iraqi lives at risk
Australian forces may have to protect Iraqi civilians who could be marked for death after appearing in amateur videos shot by Diggers serving in Iraq. The videos were made by shot by bored Australian troops as part of an unofficial film-making competition and it is thought thousands of videos were made, with many being edited on army equipment, Time magazine said in an online report today.

Fourteen of the videos were posted on the video website Youtube and have created a furore with their depictions of soldiers horsing around with weapons, exposing themselves and posing in apparently mock scenes of subduing a captive in an Arab headdress. The videos also show aspects of the troops' day-to-day life in Iraq and include apparent scenes of fraternising with locals.

Iraqis who work and mix with occupying Coalition forces are frequently targeted by insurgents for grisly execution-style killings to make an example of those they see as collaborators.

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) said it was moving to ensure the safety of any locals who may be compromised by appearing in the Australian troop videos. "We will be having a close look," said ADF head Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston. "Where we feel the security of an individual is at risk we will be doing everything we can to make sure they feel safe," he said, according to Time.


Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Oztralian || 09/18/2006 05:26 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Geesh! Talk about a stick in the mud.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 09/18/2006 7:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Images of insurgents being killed, often accompanied by a raw, ecstatic 'commentary' by the soldier were deemed too embarassing by the Pentagon.

Naw. They were deemed "too embarassing" by the lilly-livered in the press and on the left.
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 7:17 Comments || Top||

#3  "by bored Australian troops "
In the midst of a civil war, they are bored?
Posted by: plainslow || 09/18/2006 7:33 Comments || Top||

#4  Soldierly humour, especially regarding the enemy, has always been deemed too rough for tender civilian feelings. It's generally wisest to keep such things amongst yourselves to prevent exactly this kind of overreaction.
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 8:42 Comments || Top||

#5  Juz the MSM trolling for Abu Ghraib redux materials.

Move along, nothing newsworthy here.
Posted by: Captain America || 09/18/2006 10:57 Comments || Top||

#6  In the midst of a civil war, they are bored?

Months of boredom punctuated by seconds of sheer terror. Even WWII vets have described their times of service -- outside of actual combat -- as boring.

Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 12:11 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Israel charges captured Hezbollah men
ISRAELI state prosecutors have indicted three captured Lebanese Hezbollah guerillas on criminal charges including murder and membership in a terrorist organisation, Justice Ministry officials have said.

The trial in Nazareth District Court reflected Israel's refusal to recognise Hezbollah as a legitimate fighting force, despite the Shi'ite group's broadbased support in Lebanon and representation in the Beirut government and Parliament.

The defendants were named as Mahmoud Ali Suleiman, Mohammed Sarur, and Mahar Qurani. Officials said they were captured during an offensive in southern Lebanon launched after Hezbollah seized two Israeli soldiers and killed eight in a July 12 raid.

It was not immediate clear how the defendants would plead to the charges, which carry lengthy potential prison sentences. Trying the three in open criminal court rather than in a military tribunal may signal a desire by Israeli authorities for a public reckoning that could off-set unhappiness in Israel with the war's inconclusive end in an August 14 truce.

Convictions might complicate any future swap of the Hezbollah men for the two Israeli army reservists still held captive in Lebanon.
Posted by: Oztralian || 09/18/2006 05:24 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Livni to meet with Abbas in New York
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is scheduled to meet with Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas in New York on Monday. Livni will demand the speeding up of efforts to bring about the release of kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit. She will also urge that the Palestinian Authority's unity government recognize the principles set down by the Quartet -the US, Russia, UN and EU - for the Middle East "road map." Livni told CNN on Sunday that "the world has only few months to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons." The foreign minister and Abbas will also meet with US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Unity talks frozen until Abbas' return from US
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas said Sunday that negotiations between his Fatah party and Hamas on establishing a national unity government had been suspended until his return from the United States. Abbas is scheduled to meet with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on Monday in New York. Abbas said the talks were frozen because Hamas had reneged on recognizing past agreements with Israel.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Israeli cabinet approves inquiry of Lebanon war
Israel's cabinet appointed a commission on Sunday to investigate the way the government and military handled the Lebanon war, bowing to calls for an inquiry but rejecting veterans' demands for an independent probe.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has come under fire from critics who say he launched an ill-prepared campaign in Lebanon that failed to crush the Lebanese Hizbollah guerrilla group after it abducted two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid in July. Hizbollah fired nearly 4,000 rockets into Israel during the 34-day conflict and Israeli reservists who fought in Lebanon have complained of poor planning and tactics.

Thousands of Israelis have taken part in protests to demand an independent inquiry into the war by a so-called state commission whose members would be appointed by a supreme court judge. Olmert has said such an investigation, which in past Israeli-Arab wars has led to high-level resignations, would be too time-consuming. Instead, the cabinet approved by a vote of 20-2, with one abstention, Olmert's nomination of retired judge Eliayhu Winograd and four other members to a panel that will examine how political leaders and military commanders conducted the war.

Outside the prime minister's office, dozens of veterans held a demonstration, holding signs calling on Olmert, Defense Minister Amir Peretz and the military's chief of staff, Lieutenant-General Dan Halutz to resign. The protesters brought along a donkey and a sign reading: "Only an ass does not see that the Winograd Committee is a whitewash."
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  They must have their story straight now.
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 2:45 Comments || Top||


Olde Tyme Religion
Iraq al-Qaeda: Pope, West are doomed
An al-Qaeda-linked extremist group warned Pope Benedict XVI on Monday that he and the West were "doomed," as protesters returned to the streets across the Muslim world to demand more of an apology from the pontiff for his remarks about Islam and violence.

The Mujahedeen Shura Council, an umbrella organization of Sunni Arab extremist groups that includes al-Qaeda in Iraq, issued a statement on a Web forum vowing to continue its holy war against the West. The authenticity of the statement could not be independently verified.

The group said Muslims would be victorious and addressed the pope as "the worshipper of the cross" saying "you and the West are doomed as you can see from the defeat in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya and elsewhere. ... We will break up the cross, spill the liquor and impose head tax, then the only thing acceptable is a conversion (to Islam) or (killed by) the sword."
Posted by: tipper || 09/18/2006 10:54 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Ya, ya, ya.
Posted by: Spong Ominese1251 || 09/18/2006 11:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Let's see... Rifle: Check
Shotgun: Check
Pistol: Several-Check
Ammunition: Check

Moonshine: Nope - but I sure do know how to make it... and if I want to make it I will!

Come collect your head tax cause I ain't converting!

Blackvenom-2001
Posted by: Blackvenom-2001 || 09/18/2006 11:21 Comments || Top||

#3  Moonshine is best shared amongst friends. Your ever in KY stop by for a taste. Many a county has representation in my freezer.
Posted by: 49 Pan || 09/18/2006 11:28 Comments || Top||

#4 
The group said Muslims would be victorious and addressed the pope as "the worshipper of the cross" saying "you and the West are doomed as you can see from the defeat in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya and elsewhere. ... We will break up the cross, spill the liquor and impose head tax, then the only thing acceptable is a conversion (to Islam) or (killed by) the sword."


In other words, the Pope was EXACTLY right.
Posted by: eLarson || 09/18/2006 11:33 Comments || Top||

#5  Truth hurts, don't it?
You can take my homebrew from my cold, dead Carboy.
Sod off, you muzzie bastards!
Posted by: DarthVader || 09/18/2006 11:56 Comments || Top||

#6  The Pope should use some of that Vatican's vast wealth for an ad campaign showing the world after Al Queda won....

+ Rosie O'Donnel being killed for being gay.
+ Supermodels in Burqas.
+ Woman as property.
+ Anti-War protesters gunned down in the streets.
+ Alchohal banned world wide.

Put things in a way they (the useful idiots) can actually understand. This is Al Qaedas goal. They are not kidding. They are not almost as bad as Bush. Wake up. That sort of thing.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 09/18/2006 12:08 Comments || Top||

#7  Let's hear Hugo Chavez's view on this. Let his countrymen know who he backs more, the Pope or Iran.
Posted by: plainslow || 09/18/2006 12:16 Comments || Top||

#8  'We will break up the cross, spill the liquor and impose head tax'

Whoah, whoah, whoah. Wait a minute there. The cross bit's annoying, but the part about spilling liquor and taxing head?

That's just evil.
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 12:18 Comments || Top||

#9  Just curious cause they didn't mention this in their trite response... do ya think there going to have a problem with the strip club across the county line?

#3... If I am ever in KY I might take you up on that... but where I am at here in VA getting a readily available supply isn't too much of a problem... lol...

Blackvenom-2001
Posted by: Blackvenom-2001 || 09/18/2006 12:28 Comments || Top||

#10  Moonshine: Nope - but I sure do know how to make it... and if I want to make it I will!

That's my hobby, but don't tell anyone.
I make the best top shelf liquor around, at least I think so.
Once I gave a lot of people at a party a tasting of Midori and my concoction.
One hundred percent said mine was the best.
I get the same feed back from my whiskey (note spelling) and Brandy.
Posted by: tipper || 09/18/2006 12:46 Comments || Top||

#11  Dayum, I knew there was an explanation for the quality of your posts, tippler.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 16:19 Comments || Top||

#12  My great-uncle used to make blackberry-flavored moonshine in Louisiana. That stuff had enough of a whallop to put a guy in orbit - around Jupiter. He sent me a couple of quarts when I was in tech school. The only thing that kept me from being dishonorably discharged is that our XO was from Arkansas, and had a taste for the stuff himself.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 09/18/2006 16:24 Comments || Top||

#13  Hmmmmmmm, so IOW "PAY US, OR WE'LL DESTROY YOU", andor "CONVERT, OR WE'LL YOU DESTROY YOU" andor "WE RULE, OR WE'LL DESTROY YOU".
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/18/2006 23:37 Comments || Top||


The archbishop downunder gets it
SYDNEY'S Catholic Archbishop has hit out at Muslims protesting over comments by the Pope, saying their reaction shows the link in Islam between religion and violence. Cardinal George Pell has also labelled the response of some Australian Muslim leaders to the issue as "unhelpful". Cardinal Pell today backed Pope Benedict, saying the violent reaction to his comments on Islam and violence illustrated his fears.

"The violent reactions in many parts of the Islamic world justified one of Pope Benedict's main fears," Cardinal Pell said in a statement. "They showed the link for many Islamists between religion and violence, their refusal to respond to criticism with rational arguments, but only with demonstrations, threats and actual violence.

"Our major priority must be to maintain peace and harmony within the Australian community, but no lasting achievements can be grounded in fantasies and evasions."

Dr Pell said it was a "sign of hope" that no organised violence had flared in Australia following Pope Benedict's comments. But he said the responses of Australia's mufti, Sheik Taj Aldin Alhilali, and of Dr Ameer Ali, of the prime minister's Muslim reference group, were "unfortunately typical and unhelpful". "It is always someone else's fault and issues touching on the nature of Islam are ignored.

"Sheik Alhilali often responds to criticism by questioning the intelligence and competence of the questioner or critic," Dr Pell said.

Later, on ABC radio, he added of Sheik Alhilali: "I'm tempted to say almost never does he address the criticism of Islam but diverts the question away from it and I think resorts to evasions."

Dr Ali said yesterday Muslims in Australia were disappointed by the Pope's comments. "We expect the Pope to follow (in) the footsteps of his predecessor who had been a great builder among communities for the last so many years and not a pope of the crusades," Dr Ali said.

Dr Pell said Dr Ali had called on Pope Benedict to be more like Pope John Paul II than Pope Urban II, who called the First Crusade. "In fact the Pope's long speech was more about the weaknesses of the Western world, its irreligion and disdain for religion and he explicitly rejected linking religion and violence," Dr Pell said. "He won't be calling any crusade."

Dr Pell sought to draw a distinction between Westerners and Muslims. "Today Westerners often link genuine religious expression with peace and tolerance.

"Today most Muslims identify genuine religion with submission (Islam) to the commands of the Koran.

"They are proud of the spectacular military expansion across continents, especially in the decades after the Prophet's death. This is seen as a sign of God's blessing."

Dr Pell said while he was grateful for the contributions of moderate Muslims, "evil acts done falsely in the name of Islam around the world need to be addressed, not swept under the carpet".

Dr Pell has repeatedly said Islam is more warlike than Christianity. In June this year he told the National Catholic Reporter in the US: "It's difficult to find periods of tolerance in Islam."
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 09/18/2006 08:24 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  More evidence that if you want simple, plain language from leaders on the true nature of islam, then you need to go to Australia.
Posted by: remoteman || 09/18/2006 12:46 Comments || Top||

#2  Once again, Aussies holding their ground. It's obvious they are taking the Muzzie menace more seriously than the US, who basically remain blase. Most in US put more credence in the vapid shit coming from the Rotund Rosie than from the Murderous Muzzies. I wonder if that fat slob realizes she would be among the first to be beheaded if her wonderful Muzzie friends took over. They would grab and muzzle her in a heartbeat. She's the kind of vision that frightens them to the core.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat || 09/18/2006 12:51 Comments || Top||

#3  Hell, I'm almost willing to accept Islam so I can chop up fat Rosie. Die infidel pig !
Posted by: wxjames || 09/18/2006 12:54 Comments || Top||

#4  James, James, James ...
Posted by: Steve White || 09/18/2006 14:34 Comments || Top||

#5  There's another one too, Archibishop of Denver has said pretty much the same things. Courageous, and Truman-like in statinf the truth without recourse.

Funny that they are both Monks of the same order - the Capuchins (a sub-order fo the Franciscans).





Posted by: Oldspook || 09/18/2006 15:28 Comments || Top||

#6  The Capuchin thing with Islam isn't recent either.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 09/18/2006 16:50 Comments || Top||

#7  I suppose the Capuchins knowing their history are much less inclined to coddle Muslims.
Posted by: Oldspook || 09/18/2006 19:31 Comments || Top||


Pope's Speech at University of Regensburg (full prepared text)
Posted by: Jesing Ebbease3087 || 09/18/2006 01:54 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Mussies, repeat after me...Sticks and stones will break my bones...(recurring seething)
Posted by: Captain America || 09/18/2006 11:08 Comments || Top||

#2  Most of these protesters have not even read the text its just an excuse to attack Christians/infidels!!!!!.
Posted by: Cheregum Crelet7867 || 09/18/2006 11:16 Comments || Top||

#3  muzzies do not read. they do whatever their mullah tells them
Posted by: Shuns Uleating3851 || 09/18/2006 14:03 Comments || Top||

#4  As he actually delivered it, the speech differed slightly

Yes, the offical Vatican English text now has a bolded correction which brings it in line with the original German:

"...he addresses his interlocutor with a startling brusqueness, a brusqueness which leaves us astounded, on the central question..."

link

The German text is available by going up a level at the link. It seems to me it's an important correction.
Posted by: KBK || 09/18/2006 15:12 Comments || Top||


Pak religious parties not satisfied with Pope’s apology
Leaders of Islamist parties are not happy with the apology extended by Pope Benedict for his recent remarks against Islam and Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). They said that a man of his stature should have avoided making such comments in the first place. “However, it is good to hear that he has realized he hurt religious sentiments of Muslims and our emotional attachment with the Prophet (PBUH),” remarked Syed Munawwar Hasan, secretary general of the Jamaat-e-Islami. “The stature he enjoys is fragile and he should have avoided targeting our religion and prophet as his predecessors did in the past.”

Qari Gul Rehman, secretary general of the breakaway faction of Maulana Samiul Haq’s Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam and an MMA MNA, said Muslim scholars and people had never targeted any religion and their revered personalities but the Pope’s statement against the Prophet Muhammad (PTUI PBUH) deserved the highest condemnation. “True, he has apologized to Muslims but what he did is unforgivable,” Rehman said.

Qari Hanif Jalandhari, secretary general of the Wafaqul Madaris, the largest of five educational boards, which control over 9,000 out of 14,000 seminaries across the country, said the Pope’s words were not unintentional but it was part of the West’s agenda against Muslims. “The Pope is yet another ally of George W Bush and what he has said must be part of the agenda the US-led West has conceived against the Muslim world. His apology cannot heal the Ummah’s wounds.” Other religious parties, including the Sunni Tehrik and Ahle Sunnat Jamaat, held demonstrations outside the Karachi Press Club to express their anger. Liberal parties such as the Tehrik-e-Istaqlal also staged a similar demonstration at the same place.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This one needs the surprise meter. I can only hope that the Pope issues no further "apologies", letters of concern or anything that can even be remotely construed as an apology.

Islam needs to sit and stew in their own juices. As VDH puts it:

If a fart hiccup sniffle belch sneeze cough giggle sentence, indeed a mere phrase can be taken out of context, twisted, manipulated to show an absence of deference to Islam, furor ensues, death threats follow, assassins load their belts—even as the New York Times or the Guardian issues its sanctimonious apologies in the hope that the crocodile will eat them last.

The catch phrase is "absence of deference". Muslims will forever be able to find insufficient deference in anything a non-Muslim does, says, thinks about or dreams of in their sleep. To put it plainly, Muslims wouldn't be happy if you hung them with a brand new rope.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 0:52 Comments || Top||

#2  “True, he has apologized to Muslims but what he did is unforgivable,”

I'm sure Moohamhead would agree with your take on things.
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 1:22 Comments || Top||

#3  Cartoongate, the Sequel
Posted by: Alaska Paul at Homer, Alaska || 09/18/2006 1:31 Comments || Top||

#4 

Did the most prominent Imams, A$$ayatollahs and Muslim clerics act responsibility and explain that the Pope was quoting a dialogue between others and attempt to dampen down the fricken uproar, shit conniptions, riots etc?

Nope..they've exploited it and sure as hell are about setting an endless string of rhetorical traps to force dhimmitude and submission.
Posted by: RD || 09/18/2006 5:37 Comments || Top||

#5  “The stature he enjoys is fragile and he should have avoided targeting our religion and prophet as his predecessors did in the past.”

What do they mean fragile.Is that a threat???!!!
Posted by: Cheregum Crelet7867 || 09/18/2006 5:40 Comments || Top||

#6  Is that a threat???!!! Ummmmmmm ... YES!
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 5:56 Comments || Top||

#7  Yup, it sure was. But that's nothing new. Just the natural progression of lunitics left unchecked. Now we will see crosses being burned, churches attacked, etc... We will just continue to sit and watch. these people understand fear, we should give them a life full of it.
Posted by: 49 Pan || 09/18/2006 8:00 Comments || Top||

#8  Now we will see more crosses being burned, churches attacked, etc...

There -- that's much better. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 8:23 Comments || Top||

#9  They keep this shit up, and there are a lot of mosqes to be burned...

... at several thousand degrees in the plasma cloud of a hydrogen detonation.

Yeah, Islamists, keep thwacking that beehive. You'l be preaying to a large radioactive glass area in Mecca eventually.



Posted by: Oldspook || 09/18/2006 8:34 Comments || Top||

#10  I believe this comes under the heading of "tough shit", boys.
Posted by: mojo || 09/18/2006 10:41 Comments || Top||

#11  Thanks TW. A muzzie hit on the Vatican will change the whole scope of this war. I think this is going to force Europe out of their state of denial and belief this is a muzzie-US only war.

At the strategic level I see the centers of gravity Teheran and their leadership, Syria and its leadership. We must strike strategically, and destroy the leaders and Iran’s ability move forward with nuclear weapons. I don’t give a rat’s ass if they are five or even ten years out from a bomb. End the capability today, why wait???

At the operational level we are doing things right. Troops and presence showing we mean what we say and the determination to stay the course. It’s not perfect, but as the old timers know, the best of plans go out the window on first contact.

At the tactical level we need to get serious. We need to grow the mettle require to go and kill these mullahs that are recruiting and stirring up the hate. Our legal system is broken when it comes to dealing with these idiots. They preach hate and incite violence. We need to identify them, kill them, and hang a note on their shirt for all to see we are done with this, not unlike Columbia and Pablo.
Posted by: 49 Pan || 09/18/2006 10:46 Comments || Top||

#12  Dear Qari Jalandhari,

Sod off.

Yours truely,

The Pope.
Posted by: DarthVader || 09/18/2006 11:06 Comments || Top||

#13  We need an Islamic 'seethe-o-meter' in the Rantburg images library. How 'bout it Fred?
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 11:54 Comments || Top||

#14 

Here we come,
Walking down the street.
Gettin' funniest looks from,
Everyone we meet!


Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 12:04 Comments || Top||

#15  We need an Islamic 'seethe-o-meter' in the Rantburg images library. How 'bout it Fred?

Malking had a good one yesterday. Always pegged at "Red Alert".
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 12:04 Comments || Top||

#16  How come I picture these boyz strutting to a disco beat?

Well, you can tell by the way I use my walk,
I'm a madrassa man, no time to talk.
Music smashed and women covered.
I've been kicked around since I was born.
And now it's all right, it's O.K.
And you may look the other way.
We can try to understand
The koran's effect on man.
Whether you're a brothah
Or whether you're a mullah,
You're stayin' alive, stayin' alive.
Feel the city breakin'
And the infidels shakin'
And we're stayin' alive, stayin' alive.
Posted by: ed || 09/18/2006 13:08 Comments || Top||

#17  In a word, f**k you Paks and the jackasses you rode in on. 49 Pan, I couldn't agree more. We need to directly go after these imam assholes and let it be widely known. Take them out and flame the mosk they operate out of. As the outcry grows, accelerate the exterminations. Even dumbass animals eventaully catch on. Standing idly by, encourages these rabid fools.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat || 09/18/2006 13:14 Comments || Top||

#18  We need to grow the mettle require to go and kill these mullahs that are recruiting and stirring up the hate.

There will be no significant change until this policy is implemented on a global basis.

.com, Frank and myself (plus some others) have been hollering about this for a long time now. Hunter-killer wetwork teams need to be deployed around the world in order to sanction, Bashir, bin Laden, Qaradawi, al Masri, Hamza, mullah Omar, Nasrallah and every single other one of these damned thugs.

We will have made progress only when these extremists have to look over their shoulder before yelling, "Death to America!"
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 13:52 Comments || Top||

#19  Oh, look! It's the Global Sharia Council!

God that picture gives me the urge to kill heebie jeebies.
Posted by: flyover || 09/18/2006 13:58 Comments || Top||

#20  49 Pan, a very helpful summary. Thanks!
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 14:00 Comments || Top||

#21  ed, that is soo-perb!, good one!
Posted by: Tony (UK) || 09/18/2006 14:33 Comments || Top||

#22  Best time for a 7+ Richter one to hit if only to test the Sympathy Meter.
Posted by: Duh! || 09/18/2006 15:02 Comments || Top||

#23  Yes, good filk job, ed.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 15:10 Comments || Top||

#24  All that seething is hard on the throat. A little napalm would do wonders in soothing it. We need to offer this remedy to our poor suffering muzzie brothers.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 09/18/2006 16:28 Comments || Top||


Muslim Brotherhood demands new apology
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood retracted their acceptance of Pope Benedict XVI's apology, issued earlier Sunday just hours before the group ackowledged the apology as "sufficient."

"[The Pope's apology] is not a detailed apology, and because of this we call on the Pope to offer a detailed apology which will put a definitive end to the confusion," the the group's second in command, Mahmoud Habib said on Sunday. Previously, Habib, said "We see the Pope's latest statement as a retraction of his previous statements."

"We see it as a sufficient apology, even though we would like the Pope to give a picture of his position on and vision of Islam."
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  FOAD on them
Posted by: 3dc || 09/18/2006 0:31 Comments || Top||

#2  Man, what a touchy bunch of bitches.
Posted by: Secret Master || 09/18/2006 1:02 Comments || Top||

#3  OK, here it is:

I'm feel sorry that the extremists wasted their lives reviving a dead branch of Islam. I'm sorry some guy dreamed it up in the first place. I'm sorry some guy thought it wise to keep a copy of that filth around. I'm sorry that guys with less than four functioning neurons in their brain seem to gravitate to extremism. I'm sorry you're so ignorant. I'm sorry you guys have the guns and the rest of Islam feel compelled to keep quiet. I'm sorry for what might happen if everybody doesn't figure out a way to get rid of you pretty soon. I'm sorry you can't take a joke or read between the lines. I'm sorry defeatists will need more concrete examples of terrorist successes before they figure it out. I'm sorry you guys are so hopelessly lost you'll never figure it out. I'm sorry you guys are trapped among other extremists who seem to be making a contest out of the whole thing as to see who can get away with being the most uncivilized.

Oh, and Moohamhead(FOAD) would be so proud!
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 1:34 Comments || Top||

#4  Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood retracted their acceptance of Pope Benedict XVI's apology, issued earlier Sunday just hours before the group ackowledged the apology as "sufficient."

I can only suppose that the Pope's missive was insufficiently deferential. Begin watching for this, it is the absolute all time mega-cop-out for Islam. Victor Davis Hansen mentions this "absence of deference", and I predict it to be the trigger for everything from temper tantrums to all out nuclear war.

Every single stinking thing that Islam does all points to the need for some sort of massive retaliation. One that will shut them the fuck up for years. Nothing short of devasting a city with nuclear weapons will probably do the trick. The last vestiges of my humanity pleads that we should detonate a nuclear weapon somewhere in a vast swath of the Middle East's desert and issue a proclamation of "who's next?".

Sadly, I know that this will only generate more endless seething and further headlong races to build nuclear weapons. I know down deep inside that we are going to have to get all Medieval on one portion or the other of Islam. I'd really hate to begin with Iran, no matter how much the mullahs deserve it. The Iranian people are very much pro-American, regardless of how helpless they act. If we need to do this, I'd sooner see Pakistan get the Glass & Windex™ treatment, pour encourager les autres . Pakistan's near-constant deceit and continued sourcing of so many jihadists make it a prime candidate for this demonstration of power. No-fucking-thing else is going to do it, unless we go all the way and simply fuse every Muslim majority nation on earth.

What we are going to see now is a constant stream of extortion and blackmail involving the murder and kidnapping of Christians until the Pope gives in and flagellates himself while kneeling at the base of the Kabbah. And we all know that ain't gonna happen anytime soon, so let's just get this over with. If we thought the cartoonifada was bad, we ain't seen nothing yet. Islam has an endless supply of this vitriolic bile and they will spew it until someone slaps their collective mouth shut and stiches it closed.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 1:53 Comments || Top||

#5  Oh, and one more thing to add to that apology:

I'm sorry all you guys blowing spittle are such mindless drones. But hey, who else would that kind of ideology attract?

Hope that works for you.

Have a nice day. FOAD again.
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 2:43 Comments || Top||

#6  What we are witnessing is their utter arrogance brainwashed into them that they alone possess that certitude of righteousness for which our disagreement by way of merely being infidels is THE REAL affront to them. The rest is just opportunistic excuses.
Posted by: Duh! || 09/18/2006 3:24 Comments || Top||

#7  Yup, Duh!. Being mere infidels can't possibly explain to them why we have enough nuclear weapons to blow them back to the stone age mezozoic era and still bounce the rubble a few hundred thousand more times afterwards.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 4:32 Comments || Top||

#8  How DARE you say we are a violent religion! We will KILL YOU FOR THAT!
Posted by: PlanetDan || 09/18/2006 5:24 Comments || Top||

#9  We apologize that we have not captured you, tied you down, gouged your eyes out with spoons, lacerated every inch of your bodies, cut off your private parts, and boiled you in oil. How that for a 'specific apology'?
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 8:58 Comments || Top||

#10  I still don't undersand why Islamic nations don't seem to have institutions to lock the criminally insane in. Instead they let them run wild spouting religious bullshit. Letting their mentally ill run wild attacking the rest or the world is a criminal act of "moderate islam".

ISLAM GIVE YOUR SCHITZOS PROZAC AND LOCK THEM UP!
Posted by: 3dc || 09/18/2006 10:13 Comments || Top||

#11  What kind of apology do they want? Do they want him to get on a prayer rug and face east?
Posted by: Art || 09/18/2006 10:15 Comments || Top||

#12  What kind of apology do they want? Do they want him to get on a prayer rug and face east?

Personally, I like to face west when I pray, so my a** is pointed to Mecca.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 10:34 Comments || Top||

#13  First experiment (2001-2006): offer democratic institutions to two Moslem countries. Still unstable.

Second experiment (2007): insert Prozac into everything they drink. Abandoned due to lack of delivery mechanism.

Third experiment (2007): sun on earth. Repeated thousands of times. Add salt where symbolically needed.
Posted by: Kalle (kafir forever) || 09/18/2006 10:55 Comments || Top||

#14  Let's drop a few thousand pounds (or few thousand tons) of sewage on Mecca.
Posted by: Rob Crawford || 09/18/2006 12:01 Comments || Top||

#15  sewage on Mecca

Of the porcine variety, I would hope.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 12:08 Comments || Top||

#16  I still want to see the stealth bomb from Tom Clancy's book "Clear & Present Danger".

It does a great immitation of a car bomb. We could send over a B-2 or F-117 and deposit them in appropriate places when appropriate people were around and then deny everything.

"What?? Wasn't us, we didn't do nothin'." Everytime one of the turds opens his mouth on Friday his parking lot gets a makeover.

How many do you think it would take?
Posted by: AlanC || 09/18/2006 12:57 Comments || Top||

#17  How many do you think it would take?

Sadly, more than any American politician has the cojones spine to authorize.

We need to exterminate all of Islam's jihadist clergy. It should be the last measure we take before resorting to nuclear weapons.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 14:00 Comments || Top||

#18  Sadly, more than any American politician has the cojones spine to authorize.

Which was Tom Clancy's point. The count was one.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/18/2006 14:36 Comments || Top||

#19  I am sorry that after the Reconquesta kicked Islamic ass out of Andalusia the Papacy pushed for a series of Holy Wars in Europe rather than uniting to kick the Mulsim religion into the dustbin of history. For that I am truly sorry, but the Vatican is working on a plan to rectify this mistake.
Posted by: The Pope || 09/18/2006 16:42 Comments || Top||

#20  Best "apology" I've seen so far:
In editio televisium is oriens, Pontifex Benedict XVI ferito sicco procul velico of suus mane ineo in Muslimum dicum ut said velico ut a "sarcina of crybaby snake - lepor lepos" quod suadeo they tractare varius humanus impossible pluma of lentesco quod colonia facultas...
It gets better!
Posted by: Old Grouch || 09/18/2006 18:28 Comments || Top||

#21  "Charlie 34, flight of two you are cleared to the target. Happy hunting and sorry bout making you hold over Mecca for so long. Beer is on me when you get back."

Now thats my kind of apology!!!!
Posted by: 49 Pan || 09/18/2006 18:35 Comments || Top||

#22  How about this one?

I'm sorry our military dipped all our bullets and bombs in lard prior to arrival at your little terrorist training camp. I'm also sorry we buried them all on their left sides, facing away from Mecca. Bob oversaw the whole operation, and he's kinda "directionally challenged", you could say. I guess that means you ain't getting to Paradise. Our bad!

(I can dream, can't I?)
Posted by: Swamp Blondie || 09/18/2006 20:02 Comments || Top||


Chief Rabbi unhappy with Pope's condemnation of Islam
In an official statement presented to Muslim leaders over the weekend, Chief Sephardi Rabbi Shlomo Amar expressed sorrow over Pope Benedict XVI's condemnation of Islam. "I am very sorry about the deprecating things said against Islam," said Amar, in a letter that seemed to put the blame for the turmoil between Muslims and Christians on the shoulders of the Pope. "Our way is to respect all religions, nations and peoples according to their customs," continued Amar. "As the prophet [Micah] said: 'For let all people walk everyone in the name of his god, and we will walk in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever. "And even when there is a struggle between peoples it is wrong to make it a religious struggle. Love truth and peace.'"

Fruman passed on Amar's statement to Sheikh Abdala Nimer Darwish, head of the Israeli Islamic Movement's moderate wing who relayed it to Sheikh Yusef Darwish, a popular Muslim leader living in Qatar. In an interview with the Jerusalem Post, Amar called on both Christians and Muslims to put their differences behind them. "These are two religions that have millions of followers," said Amar. "If they start quarreling who knows where it will lead. Both must stop the unnecessary talk and actions."

Only after being questioned repeatedly was Amar willing to denounce Muslim violence against Churches in the Holy Land. "Our Muslim brothers would add respect to their religion if they outdid themselves and overcame the feelings of humiliation."
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Amar called on both Christians and Muslims to put their differences behind them

I guess it depends on what he means by "differences". But you have to admire his courage, standing up and admonishing those fanatical, rabid Christians for calling attention to the murder comitted by Islamics.
Posted by: tired and beat down || 09/18/2006 0:44 Comments || Top||

#2  We can't put our differences behind us.

I believe in God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit. They don't. That can't be reconciled. End of discussion.
Posted by: Steve White || 09/18/2006 1:43 Comments || Top||

#3  "And even when there is a struggle between peoples it is wrong to make it a religious struggle. Love truth and peace.'"

Why didn't he just say "ditto"?

Ooooh, he's going to pay for that!
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 2:28 Comments || Top||

#4  "Our way is to respect all religions, nations and peoples according to their customs," continued Amar.

Nice shot at moral equivalency, but this Rabbi is teched in the haid. Christians and Jews don't cut off heads, hands and genitals. He fails to explain how one is supposed to "respect" that sort of psychotic bullshit.

"And even when there is a struggle between peoples it is wrong to make it a religious struggle."

Yet, somehow this dweeb manages to omit how it is Islam, and Islam alone, that has turned every aspect of this conflict into a "religious struggle".

"Love truth and peace."

Glaring omission there, he left out the brown rice.

Steve, if the differences you speak of are things like 9-11 and Islam's hypocriitcal persecution of "people of the book", then I'm behind you 100%. If the differences you cite are something other than what I've referred to, please clarify.

Christians now have their golden opportunity to learn about loathing Islam. I'll even go so far to say that hatred may come into play. In this case, hatred probably is a family value, because a healthy hatred of Islam is about the only thing guaranteed to keep Christian families alive in the face of Islamic fascism.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 2:39 Comments || Top||

#5  Christians now have their golden opportunity to learn about loathing Islam

That makes no sense. Would you say that "People who believe in freedom of speech now have their golden opportunity to learn to stifle speech?"

That you don't allow people to yell fire in a crowded theater or to slander others does not mean that those who believe in free speech would relish an opportunity to prosecute those who threaten free speech by abusing it. But sometimes you do what you have to do.
Posted by: tired and beat down || 09/18/2006 2:52 Comments || Top||

#6  Pray tell, tabd, where in the world do I make any mention of "free speech" or the stifling thereof? This oughta be good.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 2:58 Comments || Top||

#7  It's an analogy. I'm sure you are smart enough to make the connection.
Posted by: tired and beat down || 09/18/2006 2:58 Comments || Top||

#8  Ummmm ... no. Your definition of "smart enough" probably varies quite significantly with mine. Big clue:

loathe - [lohth] –verb (used with object), loathed, loath-ing.
to feel disgust or intense aversion for; abhor: I loathe people who spread malicious gossip.
—Synonyms detest, abominate, hate.

All better?
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 3:23 Comments || Top||

#9  Just so your last lonely neuron doesn't misfire:

a-nal-o-gy - [uh-nal-uh-jee]
–noun, plural -gies.

1. a similarity between like features of two things, on which a comparison may be based: the analogy between the heart and a pump.

2. similarity or comparability: I see no analogy between your problem and mine.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 3:30 Comments || Top||

#10  My apologies. I have misjudged you.
Posted by: tired and beat down || 09/18/2006 3:44 Comments || Top||

#11  I'll take you at your word. Just this once.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 4:33 Comments || Top||

#12  Stupidity is the dominant force in human affairs.
Posted by: gromgoru || 09/18/2006 5:05 Comments || Top||

#13  Stupidity is the dominant force in human affairs.

Thank you, gromgoru, for reaffirming what tabd struggled with so much difficulty to convey.

As Einstein said, "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe."
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 6:03 Comments || Top||

#14  I'll note he's the Chief Sephardi Rabbi. His primary concern is probably damage control on behalf of the small jewish communities that still exist in some Arab countries.

If you are going to burn down a church, you might as well burn down a synagoge while you have the petrol and mob handy.
Posted by: phil_b || 09/18/2006 6:17 Comments || Top||

#15  I've met this fellow. He doesn't speak English. Doesn't seem to actually like non sephardi jews. Doesn't trust other rabbis to do proper conversions. Etc.
Posted by: mhw || 09/18/2006 6:41 Comments || Top||

#16  We can't put our differences behind us.

I believe in God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit. They don't. That can't be reconciled. End of discussion.


I do not believe in Jesus and the Holy Spirit either, Steve. And yet we agree that faith is a personal thing -- offered perhaps, but never imposed on others by force. Islam mandates imposing itself by force on others whenever possible, and with that I will never be reconciled.

Just because the gentleman is a chief rabbi doesn't mean he isn't a prime idiot, as mhw's post certainly suggests. But in the end this war is not about two religions fighting for primacy; it's about free men refusing to be enslaved to the carriers of the latest totalitarian ideology, yet another one whose byword is, "First we kill all the Jews, then we'll finish off the rest of you... unless you surrender and join us."
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 7:46 Comments || Top||

#17  We can't put our differences behind us.

I believe in God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit. They don't. That can't be reconciled. End of discussion.


Steve, I also believe these things, but let me throw in my 2 cents. The Rabbi believes in Jehovah, the God of the Bible as well. But that's not the crux of the problem. The problem is, what do you believe about people who don't believe the same thing as you?

We CAN accomodate the differences between people of differing religious beliefs, as long as their beliefs and ours include tolerating or accomodating people who differ. For a religion whose adherants believe anyone who disagrees must DIE, putting our 'differences' behind us is an impossibility. This is the reason for the total incompatibility of Islam with a civilized world---not the fact that our beliefs differ from theirs.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 8:46 Comments || Top||

#18  Thank you, mcsegeek1. You said that much better than I.
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 9:04 Comments || Top||

#19  This is apropos:

So what was the pope really saying in that lecture he gave in Regensburg, his old stamping ground in Bavaria? It was a rich and elegant reflection on the rationality of faith, couched in the erudite language of a very German philosophical discourse.

But the message was, at heart, a straightforward one. The Jewish or Christian God acts in accordance with reason: In the beginning was the Word, the Logos. Benedict emphasizes that this new, logocentric understanding of God is already present in the Hebrew Bible, long before the fusion of Jerusalem and Athens in the New Testament. Our knowledge of God — the God of Israel or the God of Christianity — emerges in the unfolding of the encounter between faith and reason.

The contribution of Hellenic thought to this gradual enlightenment is, for Benedict, essential. He laments the "dehellenization" of Christianity ... Its effect, he thinks, has been to "relegate religion to the realm of subcultures" and to treat scientific rationality as if it had nothing whatever to do with faith. "The West has long been endangered by this aversion to the questions which underlie its rationality," he warns. If the West ignores this theological perspective, it "can only suffer great harm."

But the Pope was saying that there is an alternative to the Jewish or Christian God: the God of medieval Islam. Allah is "absolutely transcendent," above even rationality. Benedict cites a Muslim authority to the effect that "God is not bound even by his own word."

It is in this context that the pope invokes the Emperor Manuel II Paleologus, who recorded his dialogue with a learned Persian Muslim about the year 1400. Byzantium would finally succumb to Turkish conquest only half a century later, and Manuel wants to know how the doctrine of jihad can be justified, given that it is incompatible with God as Logos. For this Hellenic Christian, Muhammad's command to spread Islam by the sword must indeed be "evil and inhuman."


Years ago a teacher of mine pointed out that whereas shamans in various cultures often see visions, by and large the Hebrew prophets HEAR the word of God. It's an important distinction, for it implies that the prophet and his or her people are actively involved in responding to and interpeting what has been revealed.

The poignant story of Abraham struggling with the command to sacrifice Isaac is an example for us all. What we believe to be commanded by God must fit both our faith and our reason, if we are not to be led astray.
Posted by: lotp || 09/18/2006 10:32 Comments || Top||

#20  Way to get R. Amar upset with Muslims. Tell him theyre actually Reform :)
Posted by: liberalhawk || 09/18/2006 10:59 Comments || Top||

#21  "We can't put our differences behind us.

I believe in God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit. They don't. That can't be reconciled. End of discussion."

I dont think R. Amar meant everyone should believe the same thing.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 09/18/2006 11:01 Comments || Top||

#22  Actually, LOPT, de-hellenization is to me less of a problem than those who would de-hebrewize christianity and leave just another hellenistic mystery cult in its wake. But maybe that's a comment for another time, and I've, er, pontificated enough on religious matters for today.
Posted by: Phil || 09/18/2006 11:33 Comments || Top||

#23  I dont think R. Amar meant everyone should believe the same thing.

I don't think that Steve was saying that they should. He was simply stating his belief and noting that it was a difference that could not be reconciled by accepting Islam by the Sword. Sometimes it seems that all beliefs, no matter how anti-social, are acceptable to "liberals" except Christianity. JMHO
Posted by: tabd || 09/18/2006 14:15 Comments || Top||


Indians demand pope apologises
Indian Muslim leaders and political parties have demanded an apology from Pope Benedict XVI for his remarks implicitly linking violence and Islam. The chief cleric of the 17th-century Jama Masjid mosque in New Delhi said the comments were a deliberate attempt to hurt the feelings of Muslims worldwide. "He should apologise to the Muslims of the world," said Syed Ahmed Bukhari. "What the Pope said is absolutely wrong. Prophet Muhammad preached only love and peace."
"And if you don't agree, we'll kill you all!"
The main opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said the pontiff's remarks could create "hurdles in the way of world harmony".

"The pope should immediately clarify his position and if his reported statement is true, he should apologise," said BJP spokesperson Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi in New Delhi.

The ruling Congress party also condemned the pope's remarks in which he talked about the "issue of jihad, holy war".

"The pope is not only the leader of a religion, he is also the head of a state and therefore he should be more careful in making statements," Congress spokesperson Satyavrat Chaturvedi told the Press Trust of India.

Protests erupted on Friday in revolt-hit Indian Kashmir where Islamic rebels are fighting Indian rule, New Delhi, the northern city of Lucknow and other cities with Muslims denouncing both the pope and the United States. Maulana Rashid, a member of the powerful All-India Muslim Personal Law Board, said the pope's statement was more insulting than the Danish cartoons of the Prophet, which led to worldwide demonstrations by Muslims after their publication in September 2005.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "And if you don't agree, we'll kill you all" > Awwww, I wanted to say it.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/18/2006 1:34 Comments || Top||

#2  LOL, Fred you're such a tease... you left "Muslims" out of the title on purpose...
Posted by: flyover || 09/18/2006 1:37 Comments || Top||

#3  You beat me to it, flyover. I just couldn't believe that the Hindus hadn't had their own fill of standard issue, four star rated, black tie service, prix fixe, health inspected, USDA compliant, haute cuisine, ten course, halal prepared Islamic bullshit.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 2:47 Comments || Top||

#4  LOL, Zenster. *applause* I presume you missed your calling in the advertising industry and do something far more useful, LOL.
Posted by: flyover || 09/18/2006 3:35 Comments || Top||

#5  I love the graphic! Are extremists an insult to Islam? Hand that guy a Buck knife and tell him to get busy on himself! :-)
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 3:44 Comments || Top||

#6  I presume you missed your calling in the advertising industry

Not at all, pal. I've cold-called my way into some of America's largest corporations. Personally, I blame Toastmasters International for letting me win all of their group seminar presentation ribbons without even having to join. The nerve of them!
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 4:55 Comments || Top||

#7  You guys should know that Pakis and Indian Muslim share the same outlook and behaviour. They tend to be indoctrinated think they are holier than holely. Wanna impress Araby. Wherever they work in East Asia as migrant workers, they are particularly aloof.
Posted by: Duh! || 09/18/2006 9:17 Comments || Top||

#8  I'm sorry I suggested Islam could debate rationally, without violence and seething. It was an inexcusable mistake proven by centuries of history. I should not have made such a stupid mistake and I will not make it again.

In that light I would like to present my plans for Crusade 2006 and the restoration of the crusader kingdom of Antioch. Any questions?
Posted by: The Pope || 09/18/2006 11:56 Comments || Top||

#9  Oh, a question from a member of the press from soon to be Coptic Egypt... No, no, quiet down. The fellow from future Zorastrian Persia will just have to wait his turn.
Posted by: The Pope || 09/18/2006 12:00 Comments || Top||

#10  [sniff] I LOVE THIS PLACE!
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 14:09 Comments || Top||


Head of Christian community in Lebanon defends pope
The head of Lebanon's Christian Maronite community defended Pope Benedict XVI Sunday against what he termed a 'misunderstanding' over the pope's comments on violence and Islam earlier this week.
“the criticism of the pope is part of a political campaign based on a misunderstanding...”
Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir said that 'the criticism of the pope is part of a political campaign based on a misunderstanding.' Pope Benedict had 'not spoken directly about Islam' in his speech, said Sfeir.

During his Sunday sermon in Bkirki, north of Beirut, the patriarch expressed 'sorrow about the reactions in the Islamic world' over the speech which the pope made Tuesday in Germany. Sfeir said 'the speech was misunderstood.'
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Let's keep count: Conservatives replacing Liberals in governments, religious and political leaders speaking up about the unacceptability of Muslim behaviour... The Path to 9/11 getting shown despite Clintonista seething, along with all the other 9/11 rememberences... we may have actually crossed a tipping point.
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 9:13 Comments || Top||

#2  Las Vegas now has a line on how long it will take some mentally deranged islamist (and are 100s of 1000s of them) to pop his cap.
Posted by: anymouse || 09/18/2006 12:28 Comments || Top||

#3  That's as courageous as Benedict. Thank God some men still have spines. Hezbs probably schemming to blow him up already.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat || 09/18/2006 13:22 Comments || Top||

#4  Nah, SOP, more. He's right there in the middle of the pissy throngs.
Posted by: Swamp Blondie || 09/18/2006 19:46 Comments || Top||


Orthodox Church Archbishop attacks 'Islamic fanatism'
Hat tip Gateway Pundit.
Johannesburg (AND) In yet another furore to grip the Christian community, the head of the Orthodox Church of Greece has joined the Pope controversy by attacking what he calls Islamic fanaticism in Africa.

“The Muslim world is seething with anger over Pope Benedict XVI’s quoting of a 14th-century Byzantine emperor who said innovations introduced by the Prophet Mohammed were 'evil and inhuman'.”
In a scathing attack, barely 48 hours after a Somali Islamic cleric called for Muslims to kill the Pope for his Tuesday utterances, Archbishop Christodoulos told a sermon in Athens that Christians in Africa were suffering at the hands of ‘fanatic Islamists'. "Many Christians on the Black Continent (Africa) suffer from fanatic Islamists. The example of Roman Catholic monks who were slaughtered last year... because they wore the cross and believed in our crucified Lord is still recent,” said Christodoulos.
True - and it needs saying and saying loudly.
The Archbishop’s remarks come as the Muslim world is seething with anger over Pope Benedict XVI’s quoting of a 14th-century Byzantine emperor who said innovations introduced by the Prophet Mohammed (the Islamic supreme leader) were "evil and inhuman".
Posted by: Steve White || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Too much seething and they'll all get heart attacks. Hmm, I have an idea . . . .
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 2:47 Comments || Top||

#2  'bout freakin' time some other high ranking Christian backed up the Pope. Not that I expect many of them to come rushing to his side....
Posted by: Swamp Blondie || 09/18/2006 6:53 Comments || Top||

#3  I hearby issue a fatwa that this guy must die. (Well, actually, we all must die, but I mean, like sooner, violently, and at the hands of faithful Muslims.)
Posted by: Mullah Da Killah || 09/18/2006 8:05 Comments || Top||


Science & Technology
Fish Is Used to Detect Dangerous Contaminants in Drinking Water
San Francisco, New York, Washington and other big cities are using bluegills _ also known as sunfish or bream _ as a sort of canary in a coal mine to safeguard their drinking water. Small numbers of the fish are kept in tanks constantly replenished with water from the municipal supply, and sensors in each tank work around the clock to register changes in the breathing, heartbeat and swimming patterns of the bluegills that occur in the presence of toxins.

"Nature's given us pretty much the most powerful and reliable early warning center out there," said Bill Lawler, co-founder of Intelligent Automation Corporation, a Southern California company that makes and sells the bluegill monitoring system. "There's no known manmade sensor that can do the same job as the bluegill." Big cities employ a range of safeguards against chemical and biological agents, constantly monitoring, testing and treating the water. But electronic protection systems can trace only the toxins they are programmed to detect, Lawler said.

Bluegills _ a hardy species about the size of a human hand _ are considered more versatile. They are highly attuned to chemical disturbances in their environment, and when exposed to toxins, they experience the fish version of coughing, flexing their gills to expel unwanted particles. The computerized system in use in San Francisco and elsewhere is designed to detect even slight changes in the bluegills' vital signs.

San Francisco's bluegills went to work about a month ago, guarding the drinking water of more than 1 million people from substances such as cyanide, diesel fuel, mercury and pesticides. Eight bluegills swim in a tank deep in the basement of a water treatment plant south of the city. They do have limitations. While the bluegills have successfully detected at least 30 toxic chemicals, they cannot reliably detect germs.

New York City has been testing its system since 2002 and is seeking to expand it. The New York City Department of Environmental Protection reported at least one instance in which the system caught a toxin before it made it into the water supply: The fish noticed a diesel spill two hours earlier than any of the agency's other detection devices.

More than a dozen other cities have ordered the anti-terror apparatus, called the Intelligent Aquatic BioMonitoring System, which was originally developed for the Army and starts at around $45,000.
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/18/2006 21:03 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  PETA protests in 5, 4, 3....
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 09/18/2006 22:19 Comments || Top||

#2  In Paris, since the end of the 19th century, carps are constantly kept in the biggest parisian reservoir (the Montsouris reservoir, located on the highest hill in the south of Paris) to detect any contamination of the water.
Posted by: leroidavid || 09/18/2006 23:21 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Nasrallah calls 'victory rally'
HEZBOLLAH leader Hassan Nasrallah has called for a "victory" rally on Friday in the Shiite southern suburbs of Beirut that were battered by air strikes during his militant group's 34-day war with Israel. "The victory rally will be dedicated to the martyrs, the wounded, the prisoners (held by Israel) and all those who supported the resistance," he said in a statement broadcast by his Shiite group's Al-Manar television overnight.

Al-Manar did not specify if Nasrallah would appear in public for the first time since the war erupted on July 12 and was ended by a UN-brokered August 14 ceasefire after some 1300 people were killed in Lebanon alone.

Nasrallah said last week in an interview with Al-Jazeera television that Hezbollah had won "a strategic and historic victory" over Israeli forces, whose objective, he said, had been to crush the Syrian-backed Lebanese group. But in late August, he expressed regret for the capture of two Israeli soldiers in a Hezbollah raid on the two countries' border that sparked the devastating war between his guerrillas and Israel.
Posted by: Fred || 09/18/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Think Nasty will poke his head out of his bunker? Naaah. Me neither.
Posted by: PBMcL || 09/18/2006 0:47 Comments || Top||

#2  Waited until what's left his guys got out of the hospital or out from under the bed, I guess.
Posted by: gorb || 09/18/2006 2:33 Comments || Top||

#3  About ten more of these "victories" should be about all Nostrillah Nasrallah can stand. Give them to him. Now.
Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 2:52 Comments || Top||

#4  target-rich environment?
Posted by: PlanetDan || 09/18/2006 5:22 Comments || Top||

#5  site #1 'victory rally '


site #2 'victory rally'
Posted by: RD || 09/18/2006 5:55 Comments || Top||

#6  I've always wondered if the photo in "Site #2" was actually a fauxtograph. The explosion looks ... faux.
Posted by: Bobby || 09/18/2006 6:07 Comments || Top||

#7  The photo in Site #2 is a still taken from a video. I saw the video on Fox a while back.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/18/2006 7:48 Comments || Top||

#8  I vote for site #2. And once the revelers have arrived, lets try to make it look just like the photo...you know....for authenticity.
Posted by: mcsegeek1 || 09/18/2006 9:02 Comments || Top||

#9  Let's just hope the Israelis don't have the same set of JAG lawyers our guys have been saddled with.
Posted by: Chang Cholunter4501 || 09/18/2006 9:11 Comments || Top||

#10  Victory Rally....seems to me the tory of why Hitler never had a victory parade in Paris is applicable here: he was afraid the RAF would do a flyover, and I think the IAF neds to do the same thing.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 09/18/2006 9:26 Comments || Top||

#11  I think the IAF neds to do the same thing.

pour encourager les autres.


Posted by: Zenster || 09/18/2006 14:12 Comments || Top||



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Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2006-09-18
  Afghan boomer targets crowd of kiddies
Sun 2006-09-17
  Mujahideen Army threatens Pope with suicide attack
Sat 2006-09-16
  Somali cleric calls for Muslims to hunt down and kill Pope
Fri 2006-09-15
  Muslims seethe over Pope's remarks
Thu 2006-09-14
  General Udi Adam resigns
Wed 2006-09-13
  Law, order restored to outskirts of US Embassy in Damascus
Tue 2006-09-12
  Bush rallies nation to ‘struggle for civilization’
Mon 2006-09-11
  Five Years: Never Forgive, Never Forget, Never "Understand"
Sun 2006-09-10
  NATO troops kill 60 Taliban in Afghanistan
Sat 2006-09-09
  5 more suspects held in Danish terror probe
Fri 2006-09-08
  Blasts near Indian mosque kill 20
Thu 2006-09-07
  Iraq hangs 27 on terrorism charges
Wed 2006-09-06
  7 held in Denmark after anti-terror sting
Tue 2006-09-05
  Peace deal signed in Wazoo
Mon 2006-09-04
  British police search 17 terror suspects' homes


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