The usual Monday trip to NorVA, work-related things, and more work-related things.
I’m so glad I have cobloggers.
The usual Monday trip to NorVA, work-related things, and more work-related things.
I’m so glad I have cobloggers.
Two weeks ago Jeffrey Goldberg wrote, If He Could, Bin Laden Would Bomb the Cordoba Initiative (via memeorandum):
This seems like such an obvious point, but it is apparently not obvious to the many people who oppose the Cordoba Initiative’s planned mosque in lower Manhattan, so let me state it as clearly as possible: The Cordoba Initiative, which is headed by an imam named Feisal Abdul Rauf, is an enemy of al Qaeda, no less than Rudolph Giuliani and the Anti-Defamation League are enemies of al Qaeda. Bin Laden would sooner dispatch a truck bomb to destroy the Cordoba Initiative’s proposed community center than he would attack the ADL, for the simple reason that Osama’s most dire enemies are Muslims.
Goldberg insists that since Imam Rauf is a moderate, Bin Laden would fear him. Thus by showing understanding to Rauf, we are helping to fight Bin Laden.
The problem is that however slickly Imam Rauf presents himself he has a troubling history. Yes he talks about interfaith cooperation but he somehow can’t bring himself to condemn Hamas.
How do you know someone really isn’t a “moderate†on the question of Islamic radicalism? When he endorses a double standard for terrorism — appearing to condemn it when it is directed against Americans, refusing to condemn it when directed against Israelis.
Feisal Abdul Rauf, a self-styled champion of moderate Islam, was recently asked whether he thinks Hamas is a terrorist organization. “The issue of terrorism is a very complex question,†he replied. When pressed, he insisted that “I will not allow anybody to put me in a position where I am seen by any party in the world as an adversary or as an enemy.â€
But surely there should be no middle ground when it comes to Hamas, just as there can be no middle ground when it comes to Al-Qaeda.
Or as Charles Krauthammer noted the other day Imam Rauf told Ed Bradley of “60 Minutes” that the United States was an accessory to the terror of 9/11.
Perhaps there’s some poetic justice in that Imam Rauf can’t condemn Hamas, for yesterday (via memeorandum) Hamas endorsed the idea of the Islamic Center near ground zero.
A leader of the Hamas terror group yesterday jumped into the emotional debate on the plan to construct a mosque near Ground Zero — insisting Muslims “have to build” it there.
“We have to build everywhere,” said Mahmoud al-Zahar, a co-founder of Hamas and the organization’s chief on the Gaza Strip.
But if an Islamist terror organization approves this mosque doesn’t that refute the idea that Bin Laden would seek to destroy it. Yes, I know that the mosque’s developers say that Hamas doesn’t speak for them. But if you are going to argue that extremists would oppose the mosque and then they actually endorse it, it should be obvious that extremists do not see it as a threat.
One other reason I doubt Imam Rauf’s moderation is the name of his initiative. As I blogged last week, Cordoba doesn’t represent peaceful coexistence. At least it doesn’t represent tolerance in any 21st century understanding of the word. Jennifer Rubin yesterday noted Michael Lame’s observation:
The idea of an Andalusian golden age, when Christians and Jews lived contentedly under Muslim rule, has become a fixture of Western historical thinking over the last hundred years. But is it true?
Professor [Richard] Fletcher weighs in on the question: “Early medieval Spain was multicultural in the sense of being culturally diverse, a land within which different cultures coexisted; but not in the sense of experiencing cultural integration. Toleration for Christians and Jews as ‘Peoples of the Book’ is enjoined by the Koran. But in practice it was limited – Christians under Islamic rule were forbidden to build new churches, to ring church bells, to hold public processions – and sometimes it broke down altogether. In 1066 there was a pogrom in Granada in which its Jewish community was slaughtered. Thousands of Christians were deported to slavery in Morocco in 1126. Thoroughly dismissive attitudes to Christians and Jews may be found in the Arabic literature of al-Andalus. It is a myth of the modern liberal imagination that medieval Islamic Spain was, in any sense that we should recognize today, a tolerant society.â€
So in addition to Imam Rauf’s failure to condemn extremism, the name of his institute hardly evokes the toleration he says it does.
Judith Apter Klinghoffer’s approach is correct.
The most apt comparison between the debate surrounding the planned ground zero mosque is with the one which surrounded the planned Nazi marches in Skokie, a Chicago suburb inhabited by a large number of Jewish holocaust survivors. The US constitution guarantees the right of American Muslims to disregard the pain they will cause the victims of the Islamist terrorist attack on 9/11 just as the constitution guaranteed American Nazis the right to disregard the pain of the victims of the Nazi holocaust.
Legally, there may be nothing we can do to stop the Islamic Center from being built but we certainly have every right to protest it as an affront to those killed and targeted on 9/11. Those who argue that protests against the mosque are somehow acting against freedom of religion, are saying that we must show toleration to a religion that doesn’t tolerate others. If Imam Rauf’s efforts are constitutionally protected surely too are those who oppose his plans. There is nothing un-American about protesting insensitivity.
Finally this is breaking mostly along partisan lines as Robert Avrech observes:
The Ground Zero Mosque is a stark political issue that divides Democrats from Republicans.
If you support the Ground Zero Mosque vote for the Democrats.
If not, vote Republican.
This scares Mark Halperin:
Yes, Republicans, you can take advantage of this heated circumstance, backed by the families of the 9/11 victims, in their most emotional return to the public stage since 2001.
But please don’t do it. There are a handful of good reasons to oppose allowing the Islamic center to be built so close to Ground Zero, particularly the family opposition and the availability of other, less raw locations. But what is happening now — the misinformation about the center and its supporters; the open declarations of war on Islam on talk radio, the Internet and other forums; the painful divisions propelled by all the overheated rhetoric — is not worth whatever political gain your party might achieve.
The ground zero mosque is a potent issue for many voters. Halperin isn’t asking the Republicans to be noble. He’s asking them to surrender.
Finally, will those defending Imam Rauf, defend Glenn Beck too?
Crossposted on Soccer Dad.
I have stumbled on a curious letter to the Guardian, titled Hiroshima, Israel and nuclear tests, signed by Dr David Lowry, former director, European Proliferation Information Center (EPIC). He starts with the background:
I visited the exhibition on images of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Face to Faith, 7 August) at the Quaker Friends House in London on Hiroshima commemoration day (6 August)…
Then comes the central issue:
However, I did notice one odd thing in the Quaker exhibition…: it lists Israel as a one of nine nations that have tested nuclear weapons.
Now some undoubtedly interesting background of the issue:
It is now accepted that Israel has around 200 nuclear warheads, although Tel Aviv declines to confirm its atomic weapons status. But, despite the fact that Israel has undoubtedly received considerable atomic assistance from the US, as is told in detail in Seymour Hersh’s excellent 1991 expose, The Samson Option, there are no published details of Israel actually testing a nuclear device.
And all this is crowned by a question addressed to the general public:
I wonder if anyone else knows more details?
Ahead of answering this question, I’ve decided to look at the questioner.
David Lowry is an independent research policy consultant, specialising in nuclear issues and a member of the Nuclear Waste Advisory Associates. He does some research for Dai Davies, Independent MP for Blaenau Gwent; previously he worked with the late independent MP Peter Law and now retired Labour MP Llew Smith.
Beside that blurb, Guardian presents a respectable body of work by Dr Lowry, although one of the recent pieces should have been classified as an attempt at stand-up comedy, having a lede that reads: “With a few more olive branches and a bit less hypocrisy, there is new hope for progress over Iran’s nuclear ambitions“. That in April 2009… but so what, anyone can fall victim to own well-wishing, can’t anyone?
Now, to gather my thoughts: Dr Lowry confused me quite mightily. On one hand, he sports an inordinate body of knowledge on the subject. On the other, he is easily thrown by a notice on some Quaker-born presentation stand – and doesn’t even ask the Quakers for a comment. Then, being an expert in the subject, he a) uses Seymour Hersh’s “expose” as input for his deliberations on the subject (imagine a physicist using an article from Examiner as a base for his/her doctoral thesis or summat) and b) asks the general public for help with a question that confuses him. To top this, the question about Israeli nuclear tests is submitted to the general public via the Guardian – oy vey…
Anyhow, being a member of general public and in a generous mood, I’ve decided to give Dr Lowry a hand with his research, using the premise “have Google – will research” (oh, well). And it was laughably easy – almost half a million hits for a search string “israel nuclear test”. Follow some exciting results, without links for many reasons. Anyone interested can find the source by searching for the text or part of it.
The earthquake that struck the Indian Ocean on December 26, triggering a series of huge waves called tsunami, “was possibly†caused by an Indian nuclear experiment in which “Israeli and American nuclear experts participated,†an Egyptian weekly magazine reported Thursday.
[Seymour] Hersh_revelations_and_allegations: that Israel collaborated with South Africa on a nuclear test over the Indian Ocean in 1979. [Notice that, although Hersch stated the “fact”, for some reason Dr. Lowry didn’t use this. This is the “Vela incident”, frequently referenced in the media.]
Israel has most probably conducted several nuclear bomb tests. They have continued to modernize and vertically proliferate and are now one of the world’s larger nuclear powers.
And why should we limit ourselves to tests only? Here are few examples of operational use of Israeli nukes:
Hi Readers.. The gist of this report is that the convicted bombers did indeed detonate a device in Bali at the critical time, which they never denied, however their bomb was a crude home made device that did relatively little damage, the enormous explosion that killed the people and leveled the buildings, was an Israeli “Micro Nuke.”
The use of the micro nuke last week in Iraq against Shiite’s on their holiest day, I knew was Israeli…
Zionists Nuke The Australian Embassy in Indonesia
And my personal fave:
I think that someone needs to find out if Israel sent [sic!] an underground Nuke. I have a strong feeling that they did this to cause an earthquake in Iran. When I get feelings like this I’m usually right. I don’t know how to reach the Iranian Government, but this needs to be investigated.
Mmm… enough? There is so much more where these ones come from that I am afraid I will die of fright if I continue will this stuff for a bit longer.
So, where were we? Yes – you see, dear Dr Lowry, if you have started with using Seymour Hirsch as your personal scientific oracle, you might as well go the whole hog. There is no lack of proof, then, so there…
P.S. In addition to all of the above, I was quite startled by the following: “…after attending a moving ceremony that included speeches from a survivor of the city’s atomic immolation, former London mayor Ken Livingstone…” While being an unintentional turn of phrase, it explains quite a lot to fans of the former mayor.
P.P.S. How do you like the title of that letter? Is Enola Gay a Hebrew name or something?
P.P.P.S. Meanwhile, another learned cove, Emeritus professor Norman Dombey, answered the question by Dr Lowry. Not that he added much to the body of knowledge presented in this post, but I feel compelled to quote the following pearl:
A clandestine nuclear test by Israel would have been useful.
From where I stand, this is all the proof one would ever need.
Cross-posted on SimplyJews
According to Globes: (via memeorandum)
In another blow to Israeli shares, the Harvard Management Company notified the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday that it had sold all its holdings in Israeli companies during the second quarter of 2010. No reason for the sale was mentioned. The Harvard Management Company manages Harvard University’s endowment.
The first assumption was that this was the result of political pressure from the BDS (Boycott, Divest, Sanction) movement.
Prof Bainbridge, though, notices that many of the companies from Israel listed were losing money. However that may not even be the real reason as Solomonia notes:
In other words, Israel’s economy is so good it’s no longer considered “developing,” it’s just a category shift…which sounds plausible to me. How much do you want to bet that that’s pretty close to what it’s going to be all about when we start hearing from on the record sources?
Yid with Lid and Israel Matzav have updated their posts accordingly.
In other BDS news, Johnny Rotten disagrees with the movement.
Most musicians, particularly those who have been around for 30 years, wouldn’t let hate mail upset them. They probably wouldn’t even read it. But John’s anger is genuine. He wants me to record it, for posterity. “I really resent the presumption that I’m going there to play to right-wing Nazi jews,” he tells me. “If Elvis-f******-Costello wants to pull out of a gig in Israel because he’s suddenly got this compassion for Palestinians, then good on him. But I have absolutely one rule, right? Until I see an Arab country, a Muslim country, with a democracy, I won’t understand how anyone can have a problem with how they’re treated.”
That’s our Johnny Rotten. Always lively. Always entertaining. Often wrong. But, whatever you may think of him, never afraid to stick that bog-brush haircut exuberantly over the parapet.
Crossposted on Soccer Dad.
The Arab League is pushing to end Israel’s nuclear secrecy and demanding that it come under the Non-Proliferation Treaty as a non-nuclear nation. The Obama Administration asked the Arab League NOT to do this because Israel would clearly resist and it would become less likely that the Middle East would become a nuclear free zone any time soon. The Obama Administration has focused on non-proliferation from the start. There were hints in the President’s speech in Cairo to this effect and then much more overt statements in his speech to the United Nations Security Council.
In Cairo, he said, “When one nation pursues a nuclear weapon, the risk of nuclear attack rises for all nations.” Shortly thereafter in the same speech, the President said, when speaking of Iran:
But it is clear to all concerned that when it comes to nuclear weapons, we have reached a decisive point. This is not simply about America’s interests. It is about preventing a nuclear arms race in the Middle East that could lead this region and the world down a hugely dangerous path.
I understand those who protest that some countries have weapons that others do not. No single nation should pick and choose which nations hold nuclear weapons. That is why I strongly reaffirmed America’s commitment to seek a world in which no nations hold nuclear weapons. And any nation – including Iran – should have the right to access peaceful nuclear power if it complies with its responsibilities under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. That commitment is at the core of the Treaty, and it must be kept for all who fully abide by it. And I am hopeful that all countries in the region can share in this goal.
Clearly, these paragraphs in general, and specifically those verses that I have highlighted, concern Israel.
Speaking to the UN General Assembly this past September, the President noted that he had “outlined a comprehensive agenda to seek the goal of a world without nuclear weapons.” The first of the “four pillars” the President cited as being important for “the future that we want for our children concerned nuclear non-proliferation. He said:
First, we must stop the spread of nuclear weapons, and seek the goal of a world without them.
This institution was founded at the dawn of the atomic age, in part because man’s capacity to kill had to be contained. For decades, we averted disaster, even under the shadow of a superpower stand-off. But today, the threat of proliferation is growing in scope and complexity. If we fail to act, we will invite nuclear arms races in every region, and the prospect of wars and acts of terror on a scale that we can hardly imagine….
All of this must support efforts to strengthen the NPT. Those nations that refuse to live up to their obligations must face consequences. Let me be clear, this is not about singling out individual nations — it is about standing up for the rights of all nations that do live up to their responsibilities. Because a world in which IAEA inspections are avoided and the United Nation’s demands are ignored will leave all people less safe, and all nations less secure.
A fragile consensus stands in the way of this frightening outcome, and that is the basic bargain that shapes the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It says that all nations have the right to peaceful nuclear energy; that nations with nuclear weapons have a responsibility to move toward disarmament; and those without them have the responsibility to forsake them.
Certainly, with these two speeches in mind, the Arab world must have expected the Obama Administration to sign the NPT. Yet, now the Obama Administration seems to be against this. Why? It may have something to do with ideals meeting reality.
As Israel clearly benefits from nuclear ambiguity and even more-so from the belief that it indeed possesses nuclear weapons, it makes no sense for Israel to sign on to the NPT. More importantly for the issue at hand, and another issue that has been ignored for the most part entirely, is that the United States benefits by Israel’s nuclear ambiguity. As an ambiguous nuclear power, the threat of Israeli nuclear action has helped the United States maintain dominance in the region. As a declared nuclear power, the United States would have to deal with Arab nations demanding Israel’s disarmament while at the same time facing other Nations such as North Korea and Iran who are working on nuclear weapons programs, with North Korea already possessing them and Iran nearing that point. Other nations may demand to be allowed to obtain them. If Israel were to be disarmed, chemical and biological weapons take on much larger importance and conventional armies become significantly more useful against it. The threat of another major war would increase dramatically. Israel’s nuclear ambiguity is not only best for US interests, but best for peace in the region. Thus, the reality of the situation is that it remains best for the United States not to pressure Israel to sign the NPTÂ in spite of the fact that nuclear non-proliferation is the Obama Administration’s top foreign policy goal.
Q: Doctor, I’ve heard that cardiovascular exercise can prolong life. Is this true?
A: Your heart only good for so many beats, and that it… Don’t waste on exercise. Everything wear out eventually. Speeding up heart not make you live longer; it like saying you extend life of car by driving faster. Want to live longer? Take nap.Q: Should I reduce my alcohol intake?
A: No, not at all. Wine made from fruit. Brandy is distilled wine, that mean they take water out of fruity bit so you get even more of goodness that way. Beer also made of grain. Bottom up!Q: How can I calculate my body/fat ratio?
A: Well, if you have body and you have fat, your ratio one to one. If you have two bodies, your ratio two to one, etc.Q: What are some of the advantages of participating in a regular exercise program?
A: Can’t think of single one, sorry. My philosophy is: No pain…good!Q: Aren’t fried foods bad for you?
A: YOU NOT LISTENING! Food are fried these day in vegetable oil. In fact, they permeated by it. How could getting more vegetable be bad for you?!?Q: Will sit-ups help prevent me from getting a little soft around the middle?
A: Definitely not! When you exercise muscle, it get bigger. You should only be doing sit-up if you want bigger stomach.Q: Is chocolate bad for me?
A: Are you crazy?!? HEL-LO-O!! Cocoa bean! Another vegetable! It best feel-good food around!Q: Is swimming good for your figure?
A:Â If swimming good for your figure, explain whale to me..Q:Â Is getting in shape important for my lifestyle?
A: Hey! ‘Round’ is shape!
Well… I hope this has cleared up any misconceptions you may have had about food and diets.And remember:
Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well-preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways – Chardonnay in one hand – chocolate in the other – body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming “WOO-HOO, what a ride!!”AND…..
For those of you who watch what you eat, here’s the final word on nutrition and health. It’s a relief to know the truth after all those conflicting nutritional studies.
1. The Japanese eat very little fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
2. The Mexicans eat a lot of fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
3. The Chinese drink very little red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
4. The Italians drink a lot of red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans..
5. The Germans drink a lot of beer and eat lots of sausages and fats and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
CONCLUSION: Eat and drink what you like.
Speaking English is apparently what kills you.
I think the “U” in UNIFIL should really stand for “Useless.” Witness:
In an interview with The Associated Press on Mount Adir, a hill overlooking the border, an officer from the military’s Northern Command pointed through the summer haze at the village of Aita al-Shaab.
One of its southernmost buildings, a white structure housing mentally handicapped children, is a Hezbollah lookout post, the officer said. Several guerrilla command posts are in civilian buildings in the center of Aita al-Shaab, she said, with several dozen fighters able to move among houses through underground tunnels. The military would not allow her name to be used because of the sensitivity of her job.
The village also houses a network of warehouses holding arms trucked in from Iran via Syria, she said, some in stand-alone structures and some in smaller stashes in garages, basements and buried under backyards.
The officer said the guerrillas now have 5,000 fighters operating in the buffer zone between the border and the Litani River – a strip ranging from 5 kilometers to 30 kilometers (3 miles to 18 miles) wide – which is supposed to be free of militant activity under the 2006 cease-fire. In late 2009, Nasrallah said Hezbollah’s rocket arsenal stood at 30,000. Israel says it’s now about 40,000.
The article goes on to quote a hapless UNIFIL officer, who grudgingly admits that UNIFIL are not allowed to search private property—which is where Hezbollah is putting the arms, tunnels, and fighters.
If you remember the 2006 Lebanon war, you will remember the world screaming for international observers instead of the IDF in Lebanon, insisting that the UN peacekeepers would prevent arms from being cached in southern Lebanon, and preventing Hezbollah from ever threatening Israel again.
Good job, guys!
And they wonder why Israel refuses to have international peacekeepers administer their borders with Hamas.
I think I’ve already posted about this, but it just keeps getting funnier.
Our rabbi was away this weekend, so various members of the congregation led services. I volunteered for Friday night. Sarah and family were there as well, since Jake had agreed to assist me (on condition that we sing “Adon Olam” to the tune of “The Ants Go Marching,” which is also known as “When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again” here in the former capital of the Confederacy).
After we sing the Alenu, there are a few lines of another prayer at the end that we say. It ends with the Hebrew words “oo-sh’moh echad”, translated by my Siddur as meaning that God shall be acclaimed as One. Max and Rebecca, Sarah’s eight-year-old twins, have been mispronouncing that line for months, and Sarah and I find it so cute and funny that we refuse to correct them. We figure they’ll catch on eventually. In the meantime, every time they attend services, they sing, “MOO-sh’moh echad” which, loosely translated, I think, means “The cow is one.”
A week ago Friday, we were all at services for the first time in a while, what with various vacations. The twins belted out “Moo sh’mo,” and Sarah and I started laughing so hard that Max wanted to know what was so funny, and I had to fib to him that it was a grownup joke.
Last night, I was facing the Ark during Alenu, so I couldn’t see Rebecca’s face, but she also belted out “Moo sh’moh” at the proper time, and I struggled and struggled and struggled not to laugh out loud while leading services.
I succeeded, but man, that was hard.
I’m going to be so sad when Max and Rebecca finally sing the prayer correctly, but at least I’ll have the memories.
Aussie Dave aka Israelly Cool noticed it:
The palestinians, their supporters, and those who do not, but should know, better have been portraying Gaza as a concentration camp/prison camp – replete with widespread poverty and starvation.
…
The proliferation of such proof that the reality in Gaza does not support the concentration camp/prison camp comparison has engendered a paradigm shift in the palestinian’s Gaza narrative. So while they are still arguing that it is a prison, they have shifted the essence of their Gaza narrative from physical prison to mental one.
Indeed, the change is remarkable. The article that Dave quotes, says it quite unequivocally:
Gaza’s residents will concede that there is no hunger crisis in the Strip. Residents do love the beach; and the store shelves are stocked. But if you’re focused on starvation, they say, you’re probably missing the point.
What, no starvation? That after years of being taught by Gazan propaganda and their many tame supporters west and east of Gaza that death of starvation is but a few hours away? Google for “gaza starvation” – a small effort that returns almost 200,000 hits in a blink of an eye.
Yeah, well, after all you cannot fool all of the people all the time. Too much information on the real situation in Gaza leaked out, and the media lately is saturated by the pictures of stores, bazaars and hotels, so the old tackle doesn’t work as well as it has done for years.
Gaza’s Siege Mentality: Not Deprivation but Desperation – was the title of the article Dave uses in his post. Easy to see the shift. And then I have encountered another example of the shift, with a headline that is even more fascinating: Calling Gaza a prison camp is an understatement. The author, Laila El-Haddad is a Palestinian freelance journalist, photographer, and blogger who divides her time between Gaza and the United States.
It’s a strong start, ain’t it? And Laila doesn’t mince her words to start with:
Gaza was never a place with a quantitative food shortage…
Do you notice that “never”? Of course, Laila qualifies that bombshell with “it is a place where many people lack the means to buy food and other goods…”. You would have thought that such people are precisely the reason that UNWRA and the West in general (but not the Arab and Muslim brethren for some reason) are pumping hundreds of millions yearly into Hamastan, but let’s leave it alone.
So, the above mentioned “concentration camp/prison camp – replete with widespread poverty and starvation” is not replete with starvation, as we have learned. And there is a keyword missing now from the formula. And the formula, anyway, is insufficient for the horrors Laila is presenting in her article – concentration camp is, you see, an understatement. I shall leave that concentration camp missive to Laila’s expertise (no, I don’t want to go that easy way, really). Anyway, what makes Gaza worse than a concentration camp? Here it is:
But people don’t want handouts and uncertainty and despair; they want their dignity and their freedom, employment and prosperity and possibility. Perhaps most significantly, they want to be able to move freely – something they still cannot do.
So, if we gather the wishlists from the two articles, what is it the people of Gaza desire?
How interesting: the same list will be, for sure, collated by the people of Sderot, Beer Sheva, Ashkelon – the whole million Israelis that were in the reach of Gazan rockets (still are, and for all we know, there are new and more potent rockets in Hamas’ warehouses).
Although, come to think of it, most Israelis would add one wish missing from that list. It is peace. It was the reason for the botched disengagement from Gaza, when we have really hoped for a prosperous and peaceful neighbor and got instead that “We have decided to make Sderot a ghost town” promise.
Laila’s article, however, doesn’t mention peace. It is all about things that people of Gaza miss and desire. Not about what they are ready to do about it – aside of continuing the efforts to kill more Jews at their own convenience and demand more freedom and prosperity in between.
Anyhow, now you see the way propaganda winds have started to blow. Be ready for more mental anguish and more uber-concentration-camp headology.
And meanwhile enjoy this clip – Welcome to Gaza.
Cross-posted on SimplyJews
According to the Washington Post:
Two Republican members of Congress, Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida and Peter T. King of New York, called government sponsorship of Rauf’s trip “unacceptable” in a joint statement. They said he had suggested in at least one interview that the United States was to blame for the 2001 attacks.
I love the qualifications: “They said” and “he had suggested.” Why not just write Imam Rauf made the charge? It’s right here:
Bradley: Are you in any way suggesting that we in the United States deserved what happened?
Faisal: I wouldn’t say that the United States deserved what happened, but united states policies were an accessory to the crime that happened.
As I noted earlier, the Post also is ignorant of the meaning of “Cordoba.”
With a major newspaper failing to exercise any sort of oversight over the intentions of the leaders of the Ground Zero mosque effort, it’s funny to read in the New York Times that For Mosque Sponsors, Early Missteps Fueled Storm. In a nutshell:
The organizers built support among some Jewish and Christian groups, and even among some families of 9/11 victims, but did little to engage with likely opponents.
With a media that has been incurious about its organizer’s motives or the sources of its funding, the effort to build the Islamic center in lower Manhattan, has faced only grass roots opposition. The building has been cast in simple terms of freedom of religion with opponents being characterized as intolerant and bigoted. But the real issue is sensitivity. True, there may be no legal grounds to prevent Imam Rauf and his organization from building. However, in Sacrilege at Ground Zero, Charles Krauthammer makes a strong case for fighting the mosque on sensitivity grounds.
Location matters. Especially this location. Ground Zero is the site of the greatest mass murder in American history — perpetrated by Muslims of a particular Islamist orthodoxy in whose cause they died and in whose name they killed.
Of course that strain represents only a minority of Muslims. Islam is no more intrinsically Islamist than present-day Germany is Nazi — yet despite contemporary Germany’s innocence, no German of goodwill would even think of proposing a German cultural center at, say, Treblinka.
Which makes you wonder about the goodwill behind Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf’s proposal. This is a man who has called U.S. policy “an accessory to the crime” of 9/11 and, when recently asked whether Hamas is a terrorist organization, replied, “I’m not a politician. . . . The issue of terrorism is a very complex question.”
(It is through Krauthammer, that I found the interview of Imam Rauf by Ed Bradley.)
Krauthmmer concludes:
The governor of New York offered to help find land to build the mosque elsewhere. A mosque really seeking to build bridges, Rauf’s ostensible hope for the structure, would accept the offer.
The city may not have the legal means to block the building, however it is up to Imam Rauf to show that he understands what an affront it would be for him to build in lower Manhattan, so close to the scene of the Islamist attack on America.
Crossposted on Soccer Dad.
Guess the ethnicity gets even better on the updates! Now you just know he’s from Israel, and is a “religious, God-fearing man“. So once again, I’m going to perform a public service: Elias Abuelazzam (Abu al-Azzam) is NOT a Jewish serial killer. He is a Christian Arab from the Israeli town of Ramle. (And why will I keep harping on this? Go do a Google search on “Jewish serial killer.” My blog may not be as popular as some, but my posts have a pretty high Google ranking.) Good for ABC, who identifies al-Azzam as an Israeli Arab in the lead. By the way: The blaming of the Jews continues even after the news is out. Imagine if this really was a Jewish Israeli. His religion/ethnicity would be in every headline.
Oh, joy. Russia’s going to continue to help Iran get nukes: Say, think that “Reset” button worked yet?
I call bullshit on this one: Shyeah, right—Netanyahu’s going to offer the Palestinians 90% of the West Bank and uproot settlements, in a plan modeled on the failed Oslo Accords—without getting an agreement to end the conflict or give up on Jerusalem. The Prime Minister’s office denies it. It’s bogus.
Have you heard about the Israeli serial killer/stabber who was apprehended this week while boarding a flight to Israel? Is he a Jew?
A suspect in a string of 20 stabbings that terrorized people across three states and left five dead was arrested in front of startled passengers at an airport gate as he tried to board a plane for Israel, officials said Thursday.
A judge in Flint, Mich., where the attacks began in late May, signed a warrant Thursday charging Elias Abuelazam, 33, with assault with intent to murder in connection with a July 27 stabbing.
Need a hint? Take another look at the name.
Elias Abu Elazam was arrested while waiting to board a Delta flight bound for Tel Aviv, Israel, on Wednesday night in Atlanta. A warrant charging him with assault with intent to commit murder was issued today in Flint.
Abu Elazam, who spoke a Palestinian dialect, was waiting to board a plane for Israel at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport when he was arrested. Michigan authorities had contacted Atlanta-based officials about 9:30 and U.S. Customs Border Protection officers arrested the suspect there about 10 p.m. Wednesday.
Isn’t it fascinating that although the fact that he is a dual-national, an Israeli citizen, has made every single news report, few are reporting that this serial killer is not a Jew. He speaks with a Palestinian dialect. That might even make him, you know, a Palestinian Arab serial killer. The Detroit News, however, seems to be the rare media outlet reporting that fact.
CNN managed to find two sources to call him an Israeli, but still couldn’t call him either an Arab-Israeli or a Palestinian. The headline? Israeli identified as man held in stabbings probe
Two sources said the man is an Israeli citizen who is in the United States legally. A federal law enforcement official involved in the investigation said the man was traveling on an expired Israeli passport.
The MSNBC headline: Israeli held in investigation of serial stabbings
ABC: Serial Stabber Suspect Named, Nabbed in Airport Trying to Flee to Israel
The WaPo can’t figure out he’s not a Jew.
And the Atlanta Journal-Constitution has mixed feelings.
The 33-year-old Israeli citizen was arrested last week in Arlington, Va., during a traffic stop. He was released a few hours later, according to the Flint Journal.
Little is known about Abuelazam — even his name.
His name is spelled four different ways in public documents. The Michigan Secretary of State records had it as Elian Abuelazam. It was Abu Elazam on his Michigan driver’s license that expired in 1997. Records show he had it changed in 1995 to Elias Abullazam. And the Atlanta police report and the warrant the judge signed listed it as Elias Abuelazam.
So this is your public service notice from Yourish.com: This creep is not a Jew. (Not that I don’t expect the neo-Nazi sites to claim he is, though.) One more time: The Israeli serial stabber/killer is not a Jew.
Update: The JPost says he’s a Christian from Ramle, a mixed Arab and Jewish town. And so, I repeat: Not a Jew.
Update 2: Flint Arab-Americans “fear backlash” over the arrest of an Arab-American serial killer. Because that’s what we do here in America: Mob justice. No, idiots, that’s what happens where you came from. By the way, countdown to the “Oppression by the Israelis caused him to kill people” excuse in 3, 2….
Arutz-7 quotes Elder of Ziyon about the worsening security situation in Gaza.
Arutz-7 quotes Debka to the effect that this is the result of a proxy power struggle between Iran (which supports Islamic Jihad) and Syria (which supports Hamas).
An article in Ynet, though, suggests that Gaza violence is the result of Hamas attempting to consolidate its hold. Hamas is scared by the apparent number of Gazans who help Israel. (via Daily Alert blog)
The number of such bodies isn’t huge, yet not all those drowning victims chose to go swimming voluntarily. The Gazans who found their death at sea include mid-level officials at sensitive government ministries, the Interior Ministry for example, alongside police and security officers.
Some of them were shot in the head before being sent on their swim.
There is a common denominator to these deaths: All of the victims were designated as traitors by the secret service of Hamas’ military wing in charge of counter-espionage and executed as collaborators.
Regardless it appears that Hamas is engaged in “extrajudicial killings” and “state sponsored terrorism” but no one seems much bothered.
Crossposted on Soccer Dad.