WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) - It'll be Barry Manilow versus the mall rats. The New Zealand city of Christchurch hopes that putting the American crooner's smooth and gentle tones into the mix of music to be broadcast through the central mall district can pacify unruly teens who congregate there- or at least convince them to go elsewhere.
"The intention is to change the environment in a positive way ... so nobody feels threatened or intimidated," Central City Business Association manager Paul Lonsdale told The Associated Press. "I did not say Barry Manilow is a weapon of mass destruction."
A group of several dozen young people regularly spread rubbish, spray graffiti, get intoxicated, use drugs, swear and intimidate patrons at the outdoor mall, he said. The city council, police and local property owners covering 410 businesses agree that "nice, easy listening" music like Manilow's "Can't Smile Without You,""Mandy" and other hits might change the behavior of loitering teens.
But one 16-year-old told The Press newspaper that unfashionable music wouldn't deter them. "We would just bring a stereo and play it louder," Emma Belcher said. ...
Posted by: Mike ||
03/03/2009 17:16 ||
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#1
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO, NOT BARRY!
D *** NG IT, MORIARITY, ONCE AGAIN THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU DON'T SEND IN THE MARINES AND AIRBORNE TO INVADE NEW ZEALAND!
#2
See, instead the mall should hire themselves a few mafia goons who will quietly take the teens outside, beat them up, steal their money and gadgets and ensure happiness for all. You can even put the videos of the beatings on display for the normal mallgoers to enjoy as they shop in peace and quiet.
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico | The U.S. Defense Department thinks Mexico's two most deadly drug cartels together have fielded more than 100,000 foot soldiers - an army that rivals Mexico's armed forces and threatens to turn the country into a narco-state.
"It's moving to crisis proportions," a senior U.S. defense official told The Washington Times. The official, who spoke on the condition that he not be named because of the sensitive nature of his work, said the cartels' "foot soldiers" are on a par with Mexico's army of about 130,000.
The disclosure underlines the enormity of the challenge Mexico and the United States face as they struggle to contain what is increasingly looking like a civil war or an insurgency along the U.S.-Mexico border. In the past year, about 7,000 people have died - more than 1,000 in January alone. The conflict has become increasingly brutal, with victims beheaded and bodies dissolved in vats of acid.
Continued on Page 49
#8
Various Net sources indic the number could be as high as 150,000, mostly well-armed or possessing deadly weapons which the Mexi Govt-Army may NOT be able to contain or eradicate.
IFF THESE NUMBERS ARE CORRECT, IT MAY MEAN THE MEXI GANGS MAY NOT BE INTIMIDATED OR FRIGHTENED OF THE MEXI ARMED FORCES OR LOCAL POLICE.
Monday the government announced an additional 3200 troops to patrol the city, for a total of 8000. Sergio Lozano Renteria, 37, a Juarez native said "I haven't seen the Army make a difference. Things are getting worse every day, and every day more and more people get killed." A fruit vendor who requested anonymity said, "If things don't change, I think you will see every citizen carrying a gun soon."
So far in 2009, more than 300 homicides have been committed in Juarez, including nine last weekend. In 2008, about 1,600 people died violently. The troops are wearing new uniforms to distinguish them from drug cartel gunman, who also wear military style fatigues.
U.S. citizens rarely visit Juarez.
"We need the gringitos to come back," said Maria Guadalupe Santiago Gutierrez. "The violence is not aimed at them, and if you are not involved in the drug business, nothing will happen to you. Please put that in the paper. People in El Paso don't understand that if they don't come buy things from us, we don't eat."
#1
"The violence is not aimed at them, and if you are not involved in the drug business, nothing will happen to you. Please put that in the paper. People in El Paso don't understand that if they don't come buy things from us, we don't eat."
Well, those countless years of hassling and extorting the gringos by the local corrupt police didn't help either amigo.
#3
maybe the gringos will come back. What division is stationed at Ft. Bliss now?
I was stationed at Beumont hospital in El Paso after coming back from Nam. Couldn't tell much difference between the culture in Juarez and the one outside the gate at Tan Son Nhut.
HAVANA -- President Raul Castro abruptly removed some of Cuba's most powerful officials Monday, putting a personal stamp on the government in the biggest shakeup since he took over from his ailing brother Fidel Castro a year ago.
The changes replaced some key Fidel loyalists, including the longtime foreign minister and the secretary of the Council of State, with men closer to Raul. They also reduced the enormous powers of a vice president credited with saving Cuba's economy after the fall of the Soviet Union.
But analysts saw no immediate indication that the changes are related to hopes for closer U.S.-Cuban ties now that both countries have new presidents.
The abrupt shakeup, which also consolidated some of Cuba's many ministries to create a "more compact and functional structure," was the first major reorganization under Raul Castro. It was announced at the end of the midday news, after the weather and sports.
The most prominent of those ousted, Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque, was the youngest of Cuba's top leaders and had been widely mentioned as a possible future president. Perez Roque, 43, had been Fidel Castro's personal secretary before becoming foreign minister almost a decade ago.
EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia on Tuesday refused to rule out further downgrades to the European economic outlook, warning of deepening risks from the global downturn.
On January 19, the European Commission estimated that the eurozone economy would shrink by 1.9 percent this year while the 27-nation European Union would see a contraction on the order of 1.8 percent. It forecast that Europe would return to growth in 2010 with economic expansion of 0.4 percent among the 16 countries using the euro single currency, and 0.5 percent in the EU.
"When we presented the forecasts on January 19, I said the risks are broadly balanced," Almunia said at the European Policy Centre think-tank. "Now I can say downside risks are bigger," he said.
Almunia also held out the possibility that EU governments might have to ramp up their economic stimulus plans if existing packages fail to snap Europe out of an increasingly dire recession.
European governments are ploughing hundreds of billions of euros into their economies in hope of reviving activity, but economic data keep going from bad to worse while their budget deficits balloon in the meantime. Concerns are growing about how to finance the widening gap between government revenues and spending. One of the most radical ideas in Europe is for countries to issue bonds together as a group.
Almunia said that it was up to member states to decide on such a joint bond issue, adding that "if you ask is it reasonable? Yes, it's reasonable."
"It's not politically viable today, but perhaps one day in the future" it would be, he said.
While Italy has led calls for the issue of so-called euro bonds, economic powerhouse Germany, which enjoys the lowest interest rates on its government debt, has poured cold water on the idea.
Almunia also dismissed lingering market concerns about the possibility that a member of the eurozone could be forced to leave the 16-nation bloc if deficits get out of control. "Who's crazy enough to leave the euro area? Nobody," he said.
Almunia said that the EU had means of aiding a eurozone country with financing troubles before it would have to turn to the International Monetary Fund, but refused to say precisely what could be done. "We're equipped to face ... a crisis scenario but these kind of things should not be talked about in public," he said.
Currently, there is no formal solidarity mechanism within EU treaties to assist eurozone countries that run into financing troubles, although there is an arrangement for non-euro members of the European Union.
#1
For the last 2 years economic forecasts haven't been worth the air they were written on. The MSM scrupulously avoids mentioning this comprehensive failure of foresight.
Olexander Pavlenko, a young computer programmer, is one of tens of thousands of Ukrainians who cannot get their money out of the bank. He stood in line in Kiev at Nadra Bank and Ukrprombank, two big troubled banks, planning to withdraw more than $10,000 (7,950, £7,125). But like many others, he was told the cash was not available. "I stood in line a couple times with other bank clients who were protesting, crying and screaming. But the bank told me: 'Sorry, we simply don't have the money now and can't help you.'"
With about nine banks now under the central bank's special control, Ukrainians are increasingly worried. Even those with their money in apparently solid banks, including those controlled by west European banking groups, are concerned because the central bank has banned the early redemption of term deposits, the most popular form of saving in Ukraine.
Altogether, hryvnia bank deposits have dropped 20 per cent since September and those in foreign currency 10 per cent.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Steve White ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele says he has reached out to Rush Limbaugh to tell him he meant no offense when he referred to the popular conservative radio host as an "entertainer" whose show can be "incendiary."
"My intent was not to go after Rush -- I have enormous respect for Rush Limbaugh," Steele said in a telephone interview. "I was maybe a little bit inarticulate. ... There was no attempt on my part to diminish his voice or his leadership."
The dust-up comes at a time when top Democrats are trying to make Limbaugh the face of the Republican Party, in part by using ads funded by labor. Americans United for Change sent a fund-raising e-mail Monday that begins: "The Republican Party has turned into the Rush Limbaugh Party."
Posted by: Fred ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
He apologized. Good for him. Apology accepted. The left will make hay of this. BFD. Move on. We've got work to do if we don't want to become serfs..or worse.
What happened to Limbaugh's thick skin? And of course Rush is never "inarticulate" or at a loss for words. Nor has he ever taken a verbal swing at anybody. Nothing Steele said was inaccurate. Limbaugh takes great pride in being "incendiary" and he is very entertaining. Limbaugh owes Steele the apology. Just my umble opinion.
scoff. An apology only matters if the intent was benign to begin with. You must be a leftist as they always value words and feelings over substance. What we need right now is meaningful action if we are to avoid the blatant grasp for power happening right before our eyes.
#4
Steele had a good point. There's a difference between being a bomb thrower and a motivator. It sounds as if Limbaugh moved from the one to the other at CPAC, which is good.
But there's also a difference between being a motivator and being a leader who can get things done. That's Steele's job at RNC.
I haven't forgotten that Rush organized a move to make Obama the candidate over Clinton. Sure, it seemed to many like a clever move at the time -- but how many people here are happy about the results? Do you really think that Hillary, with all her faults, would be doing as much damage as this administration is?
#6
Lotp's point, I take it, is that Hillary is less of an America-hating race baiter than O, and with far less of a cult of personality, she would be doing less damage than the False Messiah.
#8
The surprising comment by Steele on his CNN interview was his endorsement of Affirmative Action. Not that his position prohibits him speaking about his personal beliefs but his suggestion that the RNC should temper their opposition to a failed social engineering scheme. This isnt a reach out as much as it is a reach around. The conservative message needs to be articulated better not changed to accommodate the squeamish. Hiring Madison Avenue to re-brand the RNC as a way to appeal to larger audience is fine as long as core principles are retained. If Steele hasnt noticed, The US Constitution and the Bill of Rights are quite well crafted. Try this one on for size Michael Equal opportunity for all. Cause the DNCs Equal outcome for all is getting stale by the Trillions.
#9
I am not at all convinced that BO would have won had it not been for 9/15 and McCain's ridiculous suspension of his campaign. Whereas, Hildebeast would have been a much more formidable candidate under any circumstances.
But then, I also believe that by 2012 BHO, the New New Deal and the Old New Deal will be seen as inadequate to address the needs of the 21st century.
#10
Excellent point NS. Barry knows his "campaign of economic crisis" won't have any legs by 2010 or 2012. I suspect his staff are all hard at work designing a new crisis or conflict to confound the little please long before 2012.
#11
But then, I also believe that by 2012 BHO, the New New Deal and the Old New Deal will be seen as inadequate to address the needs of the 21st century.
That is supposing Obama's and Soros wild plans have not succeeded in their goals: destroying the United States either through submission to mullahs or through secession. But this time, since I am fond of them I advise you (the secessionists) keep the hymn, the flag, the name, the Constitution and after winning, force a twenty years reconstruction period on the losing side (aka the side of losers) in order to desintoxicate them from socialism.
#12
"campaign of economic crisis" won't have any legs
Beso,
FDR was elected after 3 years of economic crisis, and re-elected twice more on his (failed) handling of it. Absent WWII, he probably could have been re-elected on it a third time. When you control their food supply, the people will tend to vote for you rather than risk starvation.
#14
Steele made the same mistake as the Dems - talking about Rush. He loves it when someone like Reid or Emmanuel or Obama mention his name. He adds beaucoup bucks to his bank account since it attracts all the popcorn eaters to his show to watch the blood flow on the streets. He engenders controversy since it allows him to grow the audience and become even more influential. That's his schtick and he lives by it. People keep making the same mistakes with Rush.
Posted by: Jack is Back! ||
03/03/2009 13:32 Comments ||
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#15
Rush has ZERO experience in real matters of State, he's an entertainer nothing more, allowing him to be equated with a leadership role of the GOP is foolish and an easy way out, dont let his comments replace your own thought processes
Agreed, Think for yourself. He entertains by agitating. Although he does a great service by getting critical information to his audience, thus confounding the gatekeepers at the legacy media, his insistence on keeping emotions boiling is harmful rather than helpful, as his vast audience then is fixated on issues that are too often not very important, to the detriment of critical issues.
Nonetheless, Mr. Limbaugh's audience is a critical segment of the Republican party, so he must be appeased. Mr. Steele did the politically necessary thing, even though what he originally said was completely true. Mr. Limbaugh is going to seriously injure the Republican party if he continues to indulge in such egotistical nonsense.
#17
So Rush is an incendiary entertainer. I thought we all knew that. But he wouldn't be as successful as he is if he didn't articulate the views of a very large segment. If he tried to tell people that Affirmative Action is good, that we can't deport illegal aliens, that we can't put tariffs on plastic crap from China and we can't resist Obama's move to socialism he would very quickly lose his audience. People like Steele ignore him at their own peril just like McCain did.
#19
E.U. is onto something. Although Rush is pretty much always a blowhard, he is right, even insightful, often enough that he matters. Like him or not.
Posted by: no mo uro ||
03/03/2009 17:38 Comments ||
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#20
I think he reflects his audience, Undisciplined (fat) , Inciniary, (jingoistically so) , Unable to correlate information in a meaningful way (reflects ONLY his agenda), and very angry all the time weather Bush is in the White house or Obama.
#21
Glating S #20 this country might take a clue from Rush and China, and start being more self-centered, and anti-illegal immigrant! it would do us some good to stop being the shoulder to lean on internationally, quit bellyaching about what a-holes we are to poor foreigners, and start cleaning up our own act. as for Rush's audience, im not sure how you can systematically separate out his audience as fat? 60+% of americans are obese! and from what ive observed i think thats a low estimate! if about every other person in the US is fat, its safe to say many arent rush listeners? i have to agree he does seem surly a lot of the time, maybe has blood pressure problem.
#22
Lotp, the One didn't create the US EUropenization---it was the work of decades by your entire "educated" classes. Things became soo bad, only a Second American Revolution can help. And, if the One cannot provoke it, who can?
JUI-F chief Fazlur Rehman on Monday telephoned PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif and discussed the mounting tension between the PPP and the PML-N after Sharif brothers' disqualification by the SC, a private TV channel reported. According to the channel, the conversation lasted for 30 minutes. The channel said a meeting between the two leaders was also likely in the coming days. Earlier, the JUI-F chief told another TV channel he was making efforts for reconciliation between the two major parties.He said Pakistan was passing through a critical phase in which such confrontation could prove dangerous. Fazl said the current crisis could harm democracy.
Posted by: Fred ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
now there's a hell-fire invitation
Posted by: Frank G ||
03/03/2009 5:58 Comments ||
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Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla Sunday said Islamic banking had escaped the global economic crisis relatively unscathed as he took a swipe at the Western financial system.
"The latest global crisis has taught us that an economic (system) which is based on unreal transactions will be easily ruined," he told a pre-opening conference of the fifth world Islamic economy forum.
He said the Islamic banking and finance system had proved its strength by escaping relatively untouched by the global financial crisis.
"We all know that Muslim countries with an Islamic economic system during this current (crisis) situation are relatively unaffected by serious problems," he added.
Posted by: Fred ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
right--take away the oil and those banks would be used for storage of dead locusts so the izzlamoids could eat some protein other than the occasional desert rat
Posted by: SON OF TOLUI ||
03/03/2009 3:50 Comments ||
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#2
Muslim countries with an Islamic economic system during this current (crisis) situation are relatively unaffected by serious problems except for Islam.
No company has ever lost as much as AIG did last quarter. All told, it lost almost $100 billion last year, with $61.7 billion of those losses in just the last quarter of 2008. Few companies have ever been worth that much, or been able to put anything like that much at risk. It's almost unfathomable.
Let's see if we can break it down into a more reasonable number.
Every day AIG lost: $670 million.
Every hour AIG lost: $27.9 million.
Every minute AIG lost: $465 thousand.
Every second AIG lost: $7,750.
That's more like it. It means that every six and half seconds, AIG loses the equivalent of the median household income in the US.
#3
It's just another ponzi scheme coming to an end. I suspect many insurers are just legal, slow-motion ponzi schemes. They charge what the market will bear, live lavishly, and then fold when the insured risks become realities.
#5
AIG is something of a special case because as one line of business they carved out a niche in offsetting risk for major banks, some of which are in effect national banks of European countries.
As we now know, many of those banks in places like Germany used AIG to circumvent national regulations and international agreements regarding capital and other soundness measures. Those banks treated AIG policies as if they were solid assets when they constructed their balance sheets.
AIG's not the primary cause, nor is their executive leadership entirely to blame for this fiasco. In reality AIG is the canary in the coal mine re: both national and international banking in many countries. They played a role in constructing the tower of cards that is now collapsing, but a lot of the blame belongs to the bankers who lied, cheated and faked their way to profits.
#7
I heard on street talk this morning that if AIG failed it would cause a "run" on the insurance companys. What would a "run" do to people that have life insurance policies with say Kansas City Life?
#8
socialist governments who's policies and regulations drove capital out of their own systems into the hands of the confidence men. This puts the cart before the horse. Governmental regulation of financial transactions has been largely driven by the abuses financiers themselves foisted on the public, e.g., the South Sea Bubble, the Tulip Mania, the Mississippi Company, and the origins of the Securities & Exchange Commission & the Glass-Steagall Acts.
#11
Back in the good times, AIG gambled with money they didn't have. Now the US government is forced to back up their bets, or 500 large companies will be out of business.
#12
Ben Bernanke had this to say in today's testimony before Congress: A.I.G. exploited a huge gap in the regulatory system.
What he didn't say was that any regulatory system will have huge gaps waiting to be exploited, due to human nature.
Hardly. There existed regulatory principles before socialism. Those principles where to provide 'integrity' to the system not to exploit the system for social engineering. The socialists move from the amoral natural system of commerce to an agenda based extension of government control and power. In doing so they've driven capital to other markets. It's been the classical model of killing the goose that lays the golden egg.
Stocks broadly sold off on Monday amid fears that a recovery for the global economy and the banking system may still be a long way off, sending market benchmarks past another set of milestones. The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 299.64 points, or 4.2%, to 6763.29, its lowest close since April 25, 1997. The stock measure has fallen four straight days and in 10 of the last 12 sessions, declining 14.8% in that span. The Dow is down 25% from its January 2 peak for this year and down 52.25% from its high of 14164.53 on Oct. 9, 2007.
"This market will only stop when people run out of stock to sell"
All 30 Dow components dropped on Monday. Citigroup declined 20% to $1.20. General Electric sank 11% to fall under $8. Other big industrial companies like Boeing, Caterpillar and 3M swooned after a report from the Institute for Supply Management showed that the factory sector remains in dire condition.
Citigroup declined 20% to $1.20. General Electric sank 11% to fall under $8.
"Investors finally understand this recession will be deeper and longer, and the recovery will be shallow," said Joe Battipaglia, chief market strategist for the private client group at Stifel Nicolas. "And the government doesn't have a sense of any solution that might instill confidence."
Since the top of the government doesn't have any sense ...
Posted by: Steve White ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
Banks and FIRE institutions don't wanna come clean about the condition of their books, so this is musical chairs, the DJIA version, in which all chairs but one are removed.
#2
When Barack Obama met with TV anchors at a White House lunch last week, he assured them he likes being president. "And it turns out I'm very good at it," he added.
#4
"This market will only stop when people run out of stock to sell," said Ms. Mogavero.
Safe bet I'd say. Unfortunately Barry could care less, the lower it goes the more Obama Bonds he can cell. He'll be the only interest and dividend paying act in town.
#5
"This market will only stop when people run out of stock to sell," said Ms. Mogavero. This statement is silly and ignorant. The "market" will stop when there are no bids to buy stock.
#6
Why put money into something that obviously lacks integrity Indeed, it's more a "scam market" than a "stock market." When I figured that out, I sold all my stock holdings, about 18 months ago.
#10
Back on November 5th, I wrote that Americans were going to be living in "Zimbabwe North" with the election of Hussein. Unfortunately, that prediction is coming true.
The U.S. government has agreed to provide an additional $30 billion in taxpayer money to the American International Group and loosen the terms of its huge loan to the insurer, the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve said Monday.
AIG also reported a $62 billion fourth quarter net loss Monday, the biggest quarterly loss in history. For all of 2008, AIG's loss was $99.3 billion.
The intervention is the fourth time that the United States has had to step in to help AIG, the giant insurer, avert bankruptcy. The government already owns nearly 80 percent of the insurer's holding company as a result of the earlier interventions, which included a $60 billion loan, a $40 billion purchase of preferred shares and $50 billion to soak up the company's toxic assets.
Posted by: Fred ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
Another vampire living on the blood of taxpayers.
American Muslims are more likely than their counterparts in the rest of the world to feel accomplished and successful even if they feel socially alienated from mainstream society, according to a poll published Monday. Muslim-Americans had a more positive outlook on the world than Muslims in other countries but also experienced higher levels of discontent than other religious groups in the U.S. according to the poll by the Gallup Organization.
Racially and politically diverse but very religious, Muslim Americans are younger and more highly educated than the typical American but resemble Americans in their outlook on life more than that of Muslims in predominantly Muslim countries.
The Gallup survey Muslim Americans: A National Portrait, was conducted by the Gallup's Center for Muslim Studies, is the first of its kind to conduct research on a random selection of American Muslims. Out of 300,000 people interviewed by telephone, Gallup identified 946 Muslims who were selected for the study.
"It is a national portrait in every sense of the word," Magali Rheault, senior analyst with the Gallup's Center for Muslim Studies told AlArabiya.net. "We found that American Muslims signified the mosaic that is America."
Muslim-Americans were found to be thriving more than Muslims in nearly every Muslim-majority country but were less content than other religious groups in the U.S. at 41 percent, 15 percent below Jewish-Americans, for example.
The poll found that Muslims in Saudi Arabia and Germany ranked higher than U.S. Muslims under the "thriving" category, with Saudi Arabia ranking the highest at 51 percent followed by Germany at 47 percent. But less than 20 percent of Muslims in Indonesia, Pakistan, Egypt, Bangladesh, Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan were thriving while those who were "suffering" ranged between 20 and 45 percent.
Posted by: Fred ||
03/03/2009 00:00 ||
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#1
"US Muslims thriving but not content"
Then haul your whiny asses back to the hell-holes you came from, where you can again be content to not thrive.
BTW, love the new illustration, Fred. ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut ||
03/03/2009 0:10 Comments ||
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#2
Mooselimbs ≠ Contentment
Never Have; Never Will
Posted by: Mullah Richard ||
03/03/2009 9:45 Comments ||
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#3
They are not content because their very success in a non-muslim country makes them feel guilty and question Islam. That questioning of their very beliefs, even if they do not come to any conclusions, leads to discomfort and discontent.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.