----------------------
SEPTEMBER 20 2014
In his sermon Mr Hargey condemned the increasing hatred in the world between Muslims and Christians and blamed it on "warped theology", reports AFP news agency.
When asked about his qualifications as a religious leader he said: "I have a PhD in Islamic studies from Oxford University, unlike my opponents who went to some donkey college in Pakistan or Saudi Arabia."
He told the BBC that he wanted to revive "the original mosque of the Prophet Muhammad, where there were no barriers".
Mr Hargey, who was born in Cape Town, said the mosque would welcome people from all genders, religions and sexual orientations.
As well as leading prayers, women would be allowed to pray in the same room as men, he said.
He contrasted this to the current Islamic practice which sees "women at the back of the street, back of the hall, out of sight, out of mind".
Cape Town pro-gay mosque opens in South Africa
A Muslim academic has opened a gay-friendly mosque in South Africa, despite receiving death threats and fierce criticism from parts of the local Muslim community.
Women will also be allowed to lead prayers at Taj Hargey's "Open Mosque" in Cape Town.
"We are opening the mosque for open-minded people, not closed-minded people," Mr Hargey told the BBC.
He says the mosque will help counter growing Islamic radicalism.
Mr Hargey, a professor at the Muslim Educational Centre of Oxford in the UK, told the BBC's Newsday programme it was time for a "religious revolution".
"In South Africa 20 years ago, there was a peaceful revolution changing from apartheid to democracy and we need to have a similar development in the area of religion," he said.
Taj Hargey
Taj Hargey denies going against Muslim teaching
A woman listens to the sermon during the opening of the Open Mosque, on September 19, 2014 in Wynberg, Cape Town.
Women will be allowed to preach and pray alongside men
A Muslim man (R) argues with people going to the opening of the Open Mosque, on September 19, 2014 in Wynberg, Cape Town.
Some Muslim groups are opposed to the mosque
Mr Hargey, who was born in Cape Town, said the mosque would welcome people from all genders, religions and sexual orientations.
As well as leading prayers, women would be allowed to pray in the same room as men, he said.
He contrasted this to the current Islamic practice which sees "women at the back of the street, back of the hall, out of sight, out of mind".
However, members of Cape Town's large Muslim community have taken to social media to criticise the new mosque, with some labelling him a "heretic" or "non-believer".
One group tried to block the opening of the mosque.
South Africa's umbrella body for Islamic groups, the Muslim Judicial Council (MJC), says it is investigating the new mosque and has noted concerns raised in the community.
In his sermon Mr Hargey condemned the increasing hatred in the world between Muslims and Christians and blamed it on "warped theology", reports AFP news agency.
When asked about his qualifications as a religious leader he said: "I have a PhD in Islamic studies from Oxford University, unlike my opponents who went to some donkey college in Pakistan or Saudi Arabia."
He told the BBC that he wanted to revive "the original mosque of the Prophet Muhammad, where there were no barriers".
"This idea of female invisibility is an innovation that came after Muhammad, unfortunately it has become entrenched," he said.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29279879
-------------
AUGUST- 2014- From Canada - Nova Scotia- VOICE OF THE PEOPLE- God's First People- We stand with Israel- 3.4 Billion Christians- enough, enough, enough
VOICE
OF THE PEOPLE | AUG. 23, 2014
GAZA WAR OF WORDS
SUPERFLUOUS MASSACRE
Re: “Rockets not mostly harmless," (Aug. 21 opinion piece). So let me get this straight: Israel had all these wonderful defensive measures in place and pre-emptively destroyed the projectiles in Gaza on the ground in some cas es.
The Iron Dome system worked to protect Israelis, as well as concrete bus shelters and so on. With such protection for its population, why was it necessary to massacre almost 2,000 people, many of them women and children?
There are two reasons: the first was to destroy Palestinian businesses and factories while creating a terrorized population, and second, to try to prevent the unity of Palestinian factions in Gaza and the West Bank and therefore, no “partner for peace."
The shameful Harper government has of course, supported this slaughter. The next time someone in politics asks for your vote, ask them where they stand on Palestine. If they support a continuing slaughter of Gazans (“mowing the lawn") every two years, tell them right then why you are not going to vote for them and find someone who cares for humanity to represent you.
Lor na Smith, Kentville
INSANE NOT TO RESPOND
The way to stop Palestinian civilians from b eing killed is for Hamas to stop launching rockets from civilian areas. Supporters of Palestinians wou ld do well to pressure Hamas to stop its rocket attacks, rather than pressuring Israel to stop defending itself.
What country in the world wou ld sit on its hands while a terrorist neighbour fired thousands of rockets into its land?
Would Canada do nothing if St.
Pierre and Miquelon were to try to reclaim former French lands by bombarding Canada with rockets? Supporters of Palestine seem to forget that blockading Gaza is an attempt to prevent military equipment from getting in to be used against Israel. It would be insane for Israelis not to attack rocketlaunching sites and personnel. It is insane for Hamas to continu e placing its civilians in danger by continuing rocket attacks.
Maida Follini, Dar tmouth
CASUALTY INFO DOCTORED
Re: “Opposition tries to save face over Gaza" (Aug. 21 opinion piece). Saint Mary’s University professor Judy Haiven grossly distorts Palestinian casualty figures by claiming all were “civilians" and yet, while the true percentage and makeup (civilians vs.
combatants) of the casualties is unknown, Israel contends it killed some 900 Palestinian terrorists from Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and other terror groups since July 8.
Even the BBC and the New York Times have acknowledged that Israel’s casualty statistics are most likely accurate and that stats from Gaza health officials, A.K.A.
Hamas, lack credibility due to their strategic interest in inflating the numb ers.
While every civilian death is regrettable, Hamas bears ultimate responsibility for instigating the conflict through its campaign of terror: firing 3,700 rockets at Israel, abducting and murdering three Israeli teenagers, and for building terror tunnels into Israel to massacre children.
Importantly, the United Nations estimates that for conflicts worldwide, such as Afghanistan, there is an average of a three-to-one ratio of civilians to combatant deaths. Fighting in Iraq and Kosovo was higher at four-to-one, and in Gaza, thanks to Israel’s surgical pinpoint operations, the ratio was one-to-one.
Mike Fegelman, HONEST-Repor ting Canada, Toronto
BLATANT HARPER BIAS
Stephen Harper says, “Canada will not stand idly by while ISIL continues its murder of innocent civilians" in Iraq. Yet Harper fully approved of Israel’s brutal assault on Gaza in which 2,000 people (453 children) were killed, more than 10,000 Gazans were severely injured, 400,000 (one in four residents of Gaza) were left homeless, 63 mosques were destroyed, 83 hospitals were damaged, as well as patients injured or killed and a handful of UN schools used to protect homeless Gazans bombed, killing and injuring families desperately seeking shelter. Harper’s double standard is morally indefensible.
Violet Rosengar ten, Dar tmouth
HOSTILE TO HARDLINERS
Re: “Polls dismay Israeli envoy," (Aug. 19 story). No surprise. No cause for “dismay." Neither the polls nor his impressions lie.
For freshly minted Israeli ambassador to Canada, Rafael Barak, there’s an important lesson here.
Canadians are by and large civil, cordial, welcoming and gracious, whatever diverging opinions they might espouse — neither in-yourface strident like Americans nor nativist intransigent like the Israeli government he represents.
Rober t Coane, Wolfville
HAMAS NOT INFLEXIBLE
The Aug. 15 Associated Press article, “In Gaza, quiet blame of Hamas" is a typical bit of North American journalism. Not untrue, but it us es the despair o f the victims of Israeli aggression to keep the blame focused on Hamas.
Writing about the conflict in Al-Jazeera on Aug. 9, Avi Shlaim, an emeritus professor of international relations at Oxford, describes terrorism as “attacking civilians for p olitical ends" and says this is exactly what Israel is doing. “The political end in this instance is to maintain Israel’s illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories; to prevent unity between Gaza and the West Bank; and to deny the Palestinian people their natural right to independence and statehood on their land, on the 22 per cent they have left of historic Palestine."
An historian who sorts documented truth from national propaganda, Shlaim writes, “The historical record shows that despite its terrible Charter, Hamas is led by pragmatic political leaders who have settled for a two-state solution along the 1967 lines, and who have made every effort to end the conflict by diplomatic means."
He also writes, “. . . Hamas is not a terror organization though it does resort to terrorist attacks on Israeli civilians in its otherwise legitimate resistance to Israeli occupation. Nor is it a jihadist movement as its critics claim."
Don Rushton, Amherst Head
ALL HANDS STAINED RED
As a young teen, I was inspired by the works of Leon Uris, a Jewish writer who recites the story o f the Israeli people. In 1940, the German government of Poland rounded up all the Jews and confined them to the “Warsaw ghetto."
Through his words, I watched as a breed of hero emerged from the oppression of this ghetto. I was with them as they dug tunnels to get food and support. I cheered them as they reluctantly picked up weapons and made the choice to fight their oppressors.
They fought with sticks and rocks against a vastly superior enemy.
They became my heroes as they went from a vanquished people to stand proudly against seemingly insurmountable odds. They stored weapons in orphanages, hid in tunnels and sewers; as a child, I was proud to stand with them.
These stories impacted my life.
I have ever since considered the Jewish story as one of inspiration.
I find the parrallels between Gaza and Warsaw to be eerie these days, and while I don’t really take any side in the conflict, I have to wonder how many of today’s teens will be impacted as I was, but in a different direction.
All my Uris books are tattered from many readings, and I’m sure I’ll indulge them a few more times yet. But as I listen to propaganda from all sides, including my own less-than-honest government, I wonder if we’ve forgotten to see history as the teacher it is.
No conflict involving mass death is one-sided, and all sides are failing their citizens. I highly suspect Israel’s larger enemy is not the citizens of Gaza, but millions like myself whose respect and admiration for the Jewish people is somewhat harder to justify. Let’s hope for better from all sides, with an understanding that all hands in this conflict are stained red at this point.
Art Fenerty, Halifax
Editor’s note: Our cartoonist’s take on the Middle East in 2001. It’s more vivid in colour today, but no less morbid. BRUCE MacKINNON
-----------------------
I STAND WITH ISRAEL- 3.4 Billion Christians.... enough of this sheeeeet
The LORD will protect him and preserve his life; he will bless him in the land and not surrender him to the desire of his foes.-Psalm 41-2
We Stand with Israel- COMMENT:
Great quote from Prime Minister Netanyahu:
'We are using missile defense to protect our civilians, and they're using their civilians to protect their missiles.'?
Israel Palestinian Conflict: The Truth About the West Bank- JULY 2011
Israel's Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Danny Ayalon explains the historical facts relating to the Israeli Palestinian conflict. The video explains where the terms "West Bank", "occupied territories" and "67 Borders" originated and how they are incorrectly used and applied. Also follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DannyAyalon and http://facebook.com/DannyAyalon
------------
AUGUST 21 2014-
i.s.i.s. –hamas-hezbollah- no place 4 women and gays.... thank u NDP-
hmmmmmmm this is going 2 make a big difference elections 2015- Mulcair is dumping the freaks... watch him
win Quebec hands down....
NDP MP quits over Mulcair’s stance on
Israel
http://www.nationalnewswatch.com/2014/08/20/new-democrat-mp-quits-party-complains-that-mulcair-is-too-pro-israel/#.U_T_8_nIaTQ
AND...
The history of the people who live in Gaza is something that should infuriate.
AND...
and... lookee at Green
Party Canada...
how incredible... the bravery Of Canada’s
Green's Party President- 4 pointing 2 the disgrace that is HAMAS...... Greenie
President- Estrin may just save the Green party with a rare thing... called
integrity 2 many Canadians..... GOD KNOWS GREENPEACE IS BEING SUED AS A TERROR
ORGANIZATION...ON MANY FRONTS... BUT DELIBERATELY HUGGING HAMAS???? AREN'T
THERE ANY GAY BROTHERS AND SISTERS OF THE GREEN PARTY??? GETCHA CANADA ON WHY
DON'T YA...
When we think on how we fought 4 Elizabeth May
(would never vote Green... they are way 2 disorganized and trendy) as a woman
and her party 2 be part of Canada's debate process- well that's about as useful
as titties on a bull- thank u very much Elizabeth May.... We considered Elizabeth
May on the same lines as our beloved Hilary Rodham Clinton and her horrific
betrayal by the Democratic party (and we can all see how that's working)....
ARTICLE:
Why Gaza makes me sad
25 July
2014 - 9:41pm Paul Estrin’s essay — “Why Gaza makes me sad
************************************************
Comment from the moderator:
Comment from the moderator:
Views
expressed on Green Party members' blogs are representative of the members
themselves and are not official party policy. The following motion was passed
by the Green Party membership at the 2014 Convention on July 20, 2014.
G14-P58
Israel – Palestine Conflict
Be it resolved that the GPC urges the immediate cessation of hostilities between Israel and Palestine. The GPC will adopt a posture of engaged neutrality, opening all available diplomatic avenues in both Palestine and Israel to press for a peaceful resolution to the conflict consistent with the GPC’s commitment to justice and custom of speaking truth to power.
Be it resolved that the GPC urges the immediate cessation of hostilities between Israel and Palestine. The GPC will adopt a posture of engaged neutrality, opening all available diplomatic avenues in both Palestine and Israel to press for a peaceful resolution to the conflict consistent with the GPC’s commitment to justice and custom of speaking truth to power.
************************************************
The history of the people who live in Gaza is something that should infuriate.
(Before
I go on, a disclaimer as seen below as well: These are my personal thoughts and
my personal perspective and do not necessarily speak to the thoughts and
persectives of the membership and direction of the Green Party of Canada.)
We
could delve into their history of the Egyptian rule over Gaza, or further back
during the rule of the Ottoman Empire, or we could even go as far back as
biblical histories of the people that lived in that same region, for which some
of the place names have stayed unchanged for millennia.
Instead,
we can just look at what has happened since Israel left Gaza. Yes, it was
occupied by Israel, from 1967 to 2005, 38 years. And then, in a decision that
rocked many people, Israel said that although it did not see a partner for
peace in Gaza, and although Israel has a very clear policy that it will trade
land for recognition and peace, Israel decided to leave, fighting its own
citizens, showing once more that it sticks to its word about the settlements
not being permanent, but instead something to be removed painfully if peace is
achievable to be had.
And
then Hamas took power. It has nearly been ten years. Since August 2005, Gazans
have been in control of their own destiny. Some might say otherwise, yet Gazans
have their own government and they are their own people: If their neighbours,
Egypt and Israel, close their borders to Gaza, one must look to a Gaza run by a
terrorist organization cum government that teaches and propagates hate, death
and destruction to understand why.
Since
then, stories of resources being used, such as concrete supposed to be used for
infrastructure for civil use instead used for purposes of terrors, or stories
of repression of the people there by its own government, or stories of how
under Hamas rule people no income or ways to support themselves … I’m reminded
of Bill Clinton’s remark “It’s the economy, stupid” … but instead of showing
openness to the world, or managing, or caring ... Gaza has instead shown that
it is not interested in peace, in building a stable economy, in a secure future.
The
Gazan government has had ample opportunity over these past years, nearly a
decade, to alter its ways, change its mantra of death to the Jews, and become
respectable caretakers of the people in their charge.
They
have not.
Surely
they could have done more. Should have done more.
We can
forgive them for at first being overjoyed with the departure of the Israeli
forces, and them as a terrorist organization unable to initially take up the
challenge of good governance.
We can
forgive them for not immediately changing their charter. In Canada and
elsewhere, national charters protect the people. In Gaza, the first article
calls for the death of Israel and the Jew. (Let me quote just a bit: “Israel
will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as
it obliterated others before it." I would like to believe all of us in our
organization can see how atrocious such a statement is, and that we would
believe in things like the right of people to not be obliterated …)
They
said, they being the Hamas government newly in power, they needed time. They
have had nearly a decade. What is the holdup … oh, wait, the hate and desire to
obliterate.
So, let
us fast forward past a decade’s worth of battles, wars, incursions, etc.
How
much aide has Israel given Gaza? How much has the world given Gaza?
Giving
aid is worthwhile, a noble cause. But, has it gone to the people that need it?
Ten years …
So,
now, this month, what do we see:
Israel
is more threatened than even because its neighbour, instead of caring about the
welfare and well-being of its citizens, cares about the cause of killing, of
carrying the banner of martyrdom, and of watching its fellow people die.
And
yet, these are the same people who are embraced and loved by the international
community, with marches on Parliament Hill in Canada’s capital, and in cities
throughout the world, holding banners and chanting about the destruction of the
state of Israel and of death to the Jews.
Meanwhile,
Gaza uses UN locations to launch or house weapons … yet the international
community cries out, a day after the UN itself admitted this and said that this
practise puts at risk those in these facilities given that these places then
are not safe havens but rather places of war to be targeted ..
Meanwhile,
Gaza is giving children grenades … and asking their citizens to be sheep to the
slaughter.
Gazan
officials tell their people to be killed while they hide in bomb shelters.
Cowards?
No, this is worse than cowardice. It is vile and ugly and they should be put to
shame.
Instead,
it is Israel who is put to shame. It is easy enough to do.
In our
culture, often activists are against colonialism, yet forget that their
ancestors only a handful of generations ago partook in just that, enabling them
to live the secure lives they currently enjoy, and the lives the live is at the
benefit of economic colonialism …
… to
critique, is it better to know your roots and who you are, or is ignorance
better so that you can accuse the other without seeing just how similar the
other is to you?
It
looks very bad for Israel. 800+ Gazans dead. 1000s injured. Lots of destruction.
Meanwhile,
in Syria, how many hundreds of thousands of people, including so many
Palestinians, are dead or injured … where are the inflammatory protests …
Meanwhile,
throughout the world, injustices happen on a near-daily basis. But these same
activists, when they hear the cry of the moment, if it is anti-Israel it is an
easy band-wagon to get on, to get their anti-Israel war-paint on and join their
friends between potlucks, veggie smoothies and coffee breaks.
Ask
them about a warlord or abuser in another part of the world, I highly doubt
they will know .. or care .. but Netanyahu, or Sharon, those are names they
know and loath.
I
always found it interesting, the focus on such a small country .. is it because
then it is easy to know who is who, who to love, who to hate, as opposed to so
many other regions and countries many, many times larger that have atrocities
of a scale much larger than what has been seen in that one oh-so-small strip of
the Middle East known as Israel?
I am
sure that many people I know will be upset for my having the gall to write
these words.
I am
simply sick and tired of having to hear such hypocrisy and twisted logic.
I am
reminded of a seminar I attended at the University of Victoria a decade ago.
The
seminar was a group of Iranian professors who had fled Iran after the
revolution, and a central theme that repeated itself was the image of the
protests and marches in the city of Teheran.
I
remember how one of the lecturers painfully spoke about the European marchers
that were so caught up in the cause of overthrowing the Shah that they were all
chanting “Allah-hu akbar” at the tops of their lungs, and how she was looking
at these foreigners and wondering if they had any idea just what this chant was
going to mean for her country.
… That
history continues to be written, and it is a sad one.
We want
to see the world as black and white, right and wrong.
We want
to support the under-dog. Who doesn’t.
But,
terror is terror. Evil is evil.
When
Gazans are asked what they want, they want peace. They want to work in Israel.
They want security for their children and themselves. They don’t want to
live in the terror they have under Hamas … and yet the world cheers on Hamas
that spends the money and resources needed for infrastructure, housing, hospitals,
schools, and buys weapons, builds tools for terror.. I cannot help but feel sad
for this world. And we, as a green movement, should not be supporting such a
movement or government .. yes, their flag is green, but that is where the
resemblance stops. Or at least, that is where it should stop.
On the
other side of the coin, Israel is doing all it can with an untenable situation.
The world media vilifies it, to the point that when those firing missiles into
its borders and sending militias into its land need to see that they cannot do
this, it is Israel, and not Gaza, that feels the world’s hate. When al-Jazeera
does a more balanced job than CNN, and let’s not talk about here in Canada our
media, how that has been … …
Military
experts look at Israel’s military strategy: No carpet bombing, no quick
actions, but instead pinpoint strikes whilst warning the enemy in advance of
what their plans are, and slow movements.. they, military people the world
over, say that Israel’s military is the most moral of them all, above the
British, above the Americans, but at what price, when the enemy knows no
qualms, and would rather see hundreds of their own people die for a media blitz
against Israel than do all it can to save a single life. What other military
calls up the enemy on their phone to tell them that their building will be
bombed, to kindly leave, yes, you have enough time to leave, just thought it
would be the neighbourly thing to do … anyone else in war, and that is what
Hamas is calling this time in Gaza, would simply bomb, kill and destroy.
And
that is it in a nutshell: Whilst Israel does all that is in its power to
protect the lives of all its citizens and the lives of those it is attacking,
Gaza does all in its power to have all the more die.
We need
to re-examine our priorities if we are marching in the streets. Unless we want
to see another Mullah amongst us, where other religions aside from a certain
variety of Islam are not allowed, where synagogues are used as latrines and
garbage dumps and Christians are living in constant fear.
For
those of you who would say this is ridiculous, look at all the countries
surrounding Israel and read their track record. And yes, Jordan up until
Jerusalem was freed was using synagogues as garbage dumps and as latrines, it
is history, look it up and understand how Israel is different, a land where all
religions are free to practise and all its citizens are citizens … how many
Palestinian refugees are still not the citizens of their countries of
residence, the countries they were born in … But, that is a comment for another
article for another time, how the world doesn’t actually care about the
Palestinians, but rather cares about showing they care about the Palestinians.
Though it is interesting, in that it resounds so similarly to nations and
people saying they care about Jews and are appalled by anti-Semitism, but when
violence occurs … Again, another article for another time.
Priorities.
One
day, and soon, I hope that Gaza's government will act appropriately and show
that the life of every single person is precious. But I fear that our world’s
international media, international agencies and all the activists who noble
actions are grossly misplaced, although nonetheless noble, they are simply
enabling the terrorists, and so all they are having reinforced is that this is
a strategy that works.
I hope
and pray for a peace. That the borders will open. That trade starts up. That
the international airport in Gaza can be reopened. That Gazans can retake their
old jobs and through economic endeavours create and build upon a peace of
social and economic unity.
And
then maybe the other issues, such as water, air, and environment can be paid
the dire attention that is needed.
But I
feel that peace will take a miracle. Israel is losing patience, a country
cannot live in constant fear without hardliners coming to power .. oh
wait .. and then, while the world watches, Israel will be forced to conduct a
military manoeuver, one that perhaps it ought to have made years ago, to then
enable reconstruction and a manageable peace. I pray it will not come to that,
but if Gaza under Hamas continues its reign of terror, what choice will Israel
plausibly have.
Thank
you for reading.
These
are my personal thoughts and my personal perspective and do not necessarily
speak to the thoughts and persectives of the membership and direction of the
Green Party of Canada.
Sincerely,
Paul
Estrin
Edit: I
realize I initially signed this document with my name and title. I have removed
my title because I want to make it as clear as possible that my words are my
own, what I have written is my perspective.
comment:
Paul Estrin’s essay — “Why Gaza makes me sad” ---- Nailed it !
comment:
Farhad,
Regarding your comment stated above, you accuse Paul of justifying a Genocide. I know this can be a very emotional topic, but I think your emotions are getting the better of you and you are misinterpreting his words.
My interpretation of his statement is that Israel might be forced to take unfortunate military action in order to stop the constant threat of a ruthless terrorist organization (that does not even care about its own people). That is, to stop HAMAS, not the Palestinian people. Paul is not suggesting that the people of Palestine should be targeted.
However, since that Hamas hides behind innocent civilians in a cowardly, despicable, manipulative way in order to purposely endanger innocent civilians, I guess I can partly understand how you might think that taking out HAMAS would mean harming many innocent Palestinian civilians. That would be terrible. That IS currently terrible. But hopefully Israel will be able to better focus their efforts on singling out Hamas targets because Hamas just does not seem to want to negotiate any peace.
Regardless, I do not believe Paul is either suggesting or condoning a Palestinian genocide. Although some unintended victims seem to unfortunatley be unavoidable in this type of war.
I can see how people side with Israel and I can see how people feel for the Palestinans. However, anyone who sides with Hamas is on the wrong side of history.
comment:
It is also posted at the "Centre for Israel and Jewish affairs" website. (google that, plus the title of the article)
Comments allowed via Facebook.
It is a well written and spot on article in my opinion.
comment:
Paul Estrin should be congratulated for common sense.
He is exposing the loon base in the Green Party.
Arafat figured out how to get rich in the Arab world;
Do a couple of Google searches:
Arafat wealth
Gaza millionaires
Paul Estrin’s essay — “Why Gaza makes me sad” ---- Nailed it !
comment:
Farhad,
Regarding your comment stated above, you accuse Paul of justifying a Genocide. I know this can be a very emotional topic, but I think your emotions are getting the better of you and you are misinterpreting his words.
My interpretation of his statement is that Israel might be forced to take unfortunate military action in order to stop the constant threat of a ruthless terrorist organization (that does not even care about its own people). That is, to stop HAMAS, not the Palestinian people. Paul is not suggesting that the people of Palestine should be targeted.
However, since that Hamas hides behind innocent civilians in a cowardly, despicable, manipulative way in order to purposely endanger innocent civilians, I guess I can partly understand how you might think that taking out HAMAS would mean harming many innocent Palestinian civilians. That would be terrible. That IS currently terrible. But hopefully Israel will be able to better focus their efforts on singling out Hamas targets because Hamas just does not seem to want to negotiate any peace.
Regardless, I do not believe Paul is either suggesting or condoning a Palestinian genocide. Although some unintended victims seem to unfortunatley be unavoidable in this type of war.
I can see how people side with Israel and I can see how people feel for the Palestinans. However, anyone who sides with Hamas is on the wrong side of history.
comment:
It is also posted at the "Centre for Israel and Jewish affairs" website. (google that, plus the title of the article)
Comments allowed via Facebook.
It is a well written and spot on article in my opinion.
comment:
Paul Estrin should be congratulated for common sense.
He is exposing the loon base in the Green Party.
Arafat figured out how to get rich in the Arab world;
Do a couple of Google searches:
Arafat wealth
Gaza millionaires
AND...
Backstory: The
"Anti-Zionist" mob turns its attentions to Green Party president Paul
Estrin
Terry Glavin More from Terry Glavin
Published on: July 29, 2014Last Updated: July 29, 2014 4:49 PM EDT
As has been obvious for some long while now, there is a debilitating strain of “anti-Zionism” coursing through the arteries of the Canadian Left. It’s so toxic that reputable institutions like the New Democratic Party have ended up with no alternative but to resort to a policy of quarantine, and NDP leader Thomas Mulcair is to be credited for his most recent efforts to inoculate the NDP caucus and the party’s candidate list with an antidote policy: bar, isolate and marginalize.
Ever since Mulcair was elected NDP leader two years ago, erstwhile party loyalists have been whimpering that they will quit the party over their new leader’s offensively even-handed policy on the subject of Israel and Palestine. They threaten to ignore the party’s appeals for funds or to defect altogether to the Green Party, which is conventionally situated on the Left.
Green Party delegates went into their July 19-20 convention in Fredericton with a leadership-endorsed motion that was specifically intended to lure these disaffected “anti-Zionist” New Democrats.
Big mistake.
The motion itself was perfectly unobjectionable, declaring the Green Party’s opposition to the expansion of Israeli settlements in the Palestinian heartland of the West Bank. This put the Greens more or less in the same company on the subject, curiously, as the NDP, the Liberals and even the governing Conservatives. But the justification offered to the CBC by the Greens’ youth wing co-chair Ghaith El-Mohtar, the motion’s author, was that it might “win over former NDP supporters who oppose Thomas Mulcair’s unquestioning support of Israel.”
If that was the plan, Green Party president Paul Estrin wasn’t in on it, and he’s now being buried under the towering obscenities of an “anti-Zionist” dogpile over an essay he wrote last Friday on his personal weblog (hosted at the Green Party home page), titled “Why Gaza Makes Me Sad.” Estrin’s primary transgression appears to be his acknowledgement that the terrorist crime syndicate known as Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip by truncheon and firing squad, is an important reason why Gazans have been suffering so horribly in recent years.
If this poll is anything to go by, the overwhelming majority of Gazans appear to broadly agree with Estrin. But by Monday morning, on Twitter, Facebook and elsewhere, dozens of vicious, unhinged denunciations were being heaped upon him, and it hasn’t let up. Estrin has been called an “IDF spokesman,” a liar, “Anti-Palestinian to the core” and worse (small samplings can be found here and here). The ipolitics columnist Andrew Mitrovica, who has lately become a champion of the “anti-Zionists” and their anti-Mulcair cause, went so far as to insinuate on Monday that in his “long diatribe,” Estrin suggested that “Palestinian children are, in part, responsible for their own deaths.”
While not quite throwing Estrin under the bus, Elizabeth May has quickly distanced herself from him. “I do not agree with him. Those are his personal opinions. Not party policy. . . His views are contrary to #GPC position. We support peace. We condemn violence,” la la la, and this is where everything gets even curiouser.
Agree with it or not, Estrin’s essay, from top to bottom, is most obviously an expression of deep and sincere sympathy for the bloodied and brutalized people of Gaza. You could say it’s sloppy. You could say it overlooks the Israeli government’s irresponsible continuation of the West Bank settlements (which are in no way an immediately relevant issue anyway). You could say a lot of things about it, but at least it doesn’t retreat into the cowardice of some half-baked “neutrality” towards Hamas.
Widespread outbreaks of pathological “anti-Zionist” hysterics tend to erupt whenever the Israeli state asserts its security interests by force of arms, as it is now doing with Operation Protective Edge, and as it did with Operation Pillar of Defense in 2012 and with Operation Cast Lead in 2008-09. It is a pattern that leaves thousands of innocent Palestinians dead, injured, homeless, and further brutalized.
It shouldn’t be controversial to notice, as Estrin does, that the cycles of this pattern tend to be set off by such neighbourly entreaties as barrages of rockets launched at innocent Israeli citizens by a Jew-hating rejectionist cult and protection racket that funds its mischief by diverting international aid intended for the Gazan masses.
That Hamas has persisted in the costly acquisition of ever more deadly missile arsenals should not be anathema to a progressive analysis of the oppression of the people of Gaza. That Hamas has robbed the Palestinian people to pay for the construction of heavily-fortified underground command bunkers and a vast underground “terror tunnel” network that has taken the lives of at least 160 child labourers, “prized for their nimble bodies” should not be unmentionable.
But these things are very controversial to speak about out loud, especially if one is an official of, say, the Green Party, so much so as to induce moral panic. That is how far the “anti-Zionist” toxin has spread. It has gotten so that the Canadian Left has lost the practical capacity for a broadly decent and legitimately progressive, pro-peace critique on the question of Israel and Palestine. The hysterics drown out everything else.
The “anti-Zionists” are right about one thing: there isn’t much in the way of a robust and defensible Oppostion critique of Ottawa’s uniquely militant and unashamedly “pro-Israel” posture towards the conflict. The NDP’s Paul Dewar has been reduced to whining that Ottawa is just “rubber stamping everything that comes from Benjamin Netanyahu,” but has nothing to offer beyond a timid insistence that Ottawa should instead be telling Netanyahu that “there are too many civilian casualties and it’s unacceptable.”
When a Green Party president merely allows himself to think out loud in an honest and harmless essay that sets out the reasons why Gaza makes him sad, and for his trouble he’s subjected to a cyberlynching, it should tell you that we’ve entered a realm of moral bedlam. It becomes a nuthouse of the kind that saw the “anti-Zionist” crank, 911 Truther and Moammar Qadaffi devotee Cynthia McKinney elected leader of the Green Party in the United States.
Canada’s Greens will have to find their own way out of this mess, but the sooner they see the merits of the NDP leadership’s interim antidote – quarantine, inoculate, bar, isolate, marginalize – the better.
Terry Glavin More from Terry Glavin
Published on: July 29, 2014Last Updated: July 29, 2014 4:49 PM EDT
As has been obvious for some long while now, there is a debilitating strain of “anti-Zionism” coursing through the arteries of the Canadian Left. It’s so toxic that reputable institutions like the New Democratic Party have ended up with no alternative but to resort to a policy of quarantine, and NDP leader Thomas Mulcair is to be credited for his most recent efforts to inoculate the NDP caucus and the party’s candidate list with an antidote policy: bar, isolate and marginalize.
Ever since Mulcair was elected NDP leader two years ago, erstwhile party loyalists have been whimpering that they will quit the party over their new leader’s offensively even-handed policy on the subject of Israel and Palestine. They threaten to ignore the party’s appeals for funds or to defect altogether to the Green Party, which is conventionally situated on the Left.
Green Party delegates went into their July 19-20 convention in Fredericton with a leadership-endorsed motion that was specifically intended to lure these disaffected “anti-Zionist” New Democrats.
Big mistake.
The motion itself was perfectly unobjectionable, declaring the Green Party’s opposition to the expansion of Israeli settlements in the Palestinian heartland of the West Bank. This put the Greens more or less in the same company on the subject, curiously, as the NDP, the Liberals and even the governing Conservatives. But the justification offered to the CBC by the Greens’ youth wing co-chair Ghaith El-Mohtar, the motion’s author, was that it might “win over former NDP supporters who oppose Thomas Mulcair’s unquestioning support of Israel.”
If that was the plan, Green Party president Paul Estrin wasn’t in on it, and he’s now being buried under the towering obscenities of an “anti-Zionist” dogpile over an essay he wrote last Friday on his personal weblog (hosted at the Green Party home page), titled “Why Gaza Makes Me Sad.” Estrin’s primary transgression appears to be his acknowledgement that the terrorist crime syndicate known as Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip by truncheon and firing squad, is an important reason why Gazans have been suffering so horribly in recent years.
If this poll is anything to go by, the overwhelming majority of Gazans appear to broadly agree with Estrin. But by Monday morning, on Twitter, Facebook and elsewhere, dozens of vicious, unhinged denunciations were being heaped upon him, and it hasn’t let up. Estrin has been called an “IDF spokesman,” a liar, “Anti-Palestinian to the core” and worse (small samplings can be found here and here). The ipolitics columnist Andrew Mitrovica, who has lately become a champion of the “anti-Zionists” and their anti-Mulcair cause, went so far as to insinuate on Monday that in his “long diatribe,” Estrin suggested that “Palestinian children are, in part, responsible for their own deaths.”
While not quite throwing Estrin under the bus, Elizabeth May has quickly distanced herself from him. “I do not agree with him. Those are his personal opinions. Not party policy. . . His views are contrary to #GPC position. We support peace. We condemn violence,” la la la, and this is where everything gets even curiouser.
Agree with it or not, Estrin’s essay, from top to bottom, is most obviously an expression of deep and sincere sympathy for the bloodied and brutalized people of Gaza. You could say it’s sloppy. You could say it overlooks the Israeli government’s irresponsible continuation of the West Bank settlements (which are in no way an immediately relevant issue anyway). You could say a lot of things about it, but at least it doesn’t retreat into the cowardice of some half-baked “neutrality” towards Hamas.
Widespread outbreaks of pathological “anti-Zionist” hysterics tend to erupt whenever the Israeli state asserts its security interests by force of arms, as it is now doing with Operation Protective Edge, and as it did with Operation Pillar of Defense in 2012 and with Operation Cast Lead in 2008-09. It is a pattern that leaves thousands of innocent Palestinians dead, injured, homeless, and further brutalized.
It shouldn’t be controversial to notice, as Estrin does, that the cycles of this pattern tend to be set off by such neighbourly entreaties as barrages of rockets launched at innocent Israeli citizens by a Jew-hating rejectionist cult and protection racket that funds its mischief by diverting international aid intended for the Gazan masses.
That Hamas has persisted in the costly acquisition of ever more deadly missile arsenals should not be anathema to a progressive analysis of the oppression of the people of Gaza. That Hamas has robbed the Palestinian people to pay for the construction of heavily-fortified underground command bunkers and a vast underground “terror tunnel” network that has taken the lives of at least 160 child labourers, “prized for their nimble bodies” should not be unmentionable.
But these things are very controversial to speak about out loud, especially if one is an official of, say, the Green Party, so much so as to induce moral panic. That is how far the “anti-Zionist” toxin has spread. It has gotten so that the Canadian Left has lost the practical capacity for a broadly decent and legitimately progressive, pro-peace critique on the question of Israel and Palestine. The hysterics drown out everything else.
The “anti-Zionists” are right about one thing: there isn’t much in the way of a robust and defensible Oppostion critique of Ottawa’s uniquely militant and unashamedly “pro-Israel” posture towards the conflict. The NDP’s Paul Dewar has been reduced to whining that Ottawa is just “rubber stamping everything that comes from Benjamin Netanyahu,” but has nothing to offer beyond a timid insistence that Ottawa should instead be telling Netanyahu that “there are too many civilian casualties and it’s unacceptable.”
When a Green Party president merely allows himself to think out loud in an honest and harmless essay that sets out the reasons why Gaza makes him sad, and for his trouble he’s subjected to a cyberlynching, it should tell you that we’ve entered a realm of moral bedlam. It becomes a nuthouse of the kind that saw the “anti-Zionist” crank, 911 Truther and Moammar Qadaffi devotee Cynthia McKinney elected leader of the Green Party in the United States.
Canada’s Greens will have to find their own way out of this mess, but the sooner they see the merits of the NDP leadership’s interim antidote – quarantine, inoculate, bar, isolate, marginalize – the better.
AND..
Elizabeth May distances herself as Green Party
president faces backlash for strongly worded blogpost on Gaza
Mark Kennedy,
Postmedia News | July 30,
2014 10:19 AM ET
-------------
AUGUST 15TH-
Palestinians question leaders’ handling of crisis, express fatigue after years of war
Palestinian Ziad Rizk sits with others Monday in a shelter made of a blanket stretched over four boles next to one of the destroyed al-Nada Towers, where he lost his apartment and clothes shop, in the town of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip. (AP)
Exhausted by a month of pounding by Israel’s military — on top of seven years of stifling closure of the tiny Mediterranean coastal strip — they questioned Hamas’ handling of the crisis and the wisdom of repeatedly going to war with Israel.
“We do not want to be bombarded every two or three years. We want to lead a good life: Sleep well, drink well and eat well,” said Ziad Rizk, a 37-year-old father of two, a cigarette dangling from his mouth. He stared at the damaged apartment building where he lived. His sofa and a blue baby carriage were perched precariously on a tilting concrete slab that was his floor.
It is impossible to say how widespread such discontent is among Gaza’s 1.8 million residents. Under Hamas rule, it’s rare and dangerous to share even as much as a hint of criticism of the government with outsiders.
Still, the men’s boldness in voicing their opinions could be a telling sign that some Gazans see Hamas as weakened. It points to how desperate many Gazans have become after the most ruinous of three bouts of major Hamas-Israel violence since the militant group overran the territory in 2007. More than 1,900 Palestinians have been killed, mostly civilians, nearly 10,000 wounded and some 250,000 displaced since fighting started July 8.
Significantly, a Hamas rally last week attracted 2,000 to 3,000 people, a low number compared to its routinely massive rallies, particularly considering it was held at a time when the group is at war with Israel.
Hamas has ruled with an iron fist since it took over Gaza, expelling the Western-backed Palestinian Authority. It does not tolerate dissent, detains critics and carries out extrajudicial executions of alleged spies for Israel. It has filled government departments with loyalists and is particularly intolerant of any criticism of its handling of the conflict with Israel. It seeks to block unauthorized media coverage of its military wing.
In almost every square and major intersection in Gaza City, giant billboards extoll the battlefield valour of Hamas fighters, their quest for martyrdom and their locally manufactured rockets. Al-Aqsa television, the organization’s 24-hour news channel, tirelessly airs Hamas propaganda and reports news with a Hamas-friendly slant.
The men who spoke with the AP were all friends and neighbours who live in the Abraj al-Nada, or Al-Nada Towers, a collection of apartment buildings that was hit hard by Israeli airstrikes and tank shelling on July 17 in the northern Gaza district of Beit Lahiya.
Visiting their wrecked homes with their families during the current truce, they sat outside a tent or in an impromptu shelter they set up — cushions and a rug under a blanket hoisted on four poles, with a small red, white and green Palestinian flag. An Israeli drone menacingly hovered overhead as the men spoke.
Their grumbling is in part born from Gaza’s increasing economic hardship. Unemployment runs at around 50 per cent. The Hamas government owes workers several months’ back pay. The seven-year blockade by Israel and Egypt has choked businesses and jobs.
Even as they shared their views with the AP, they hedged their opinions. They never, for example, expressed a desire to see Hamas removed from power or abandon armed struggle against Israel. They have no love for Israel, though older members of the community fondly remembered the days when they commuted to Israel for day jobs that put food on the table.
“I respect the resistance. The fighters may be spending the night out there in open space facing the enemy while I have the comfort and satisfaction of being with my family,” said Loay Kafarnah, a taxi driver who lost his apartment in the shelling.
“But we also want to live. How can we have a war every two or three years? Is that a life?” he said, sitting on rickety plastic garden chairs with a group of close friends and neighbours.
Visible not far away were green fields and trees across the border in Israel. An Israeli train sped by. They could easily see across the border because, they said, Israel several years ago tore down a nearby orchard on the Gaza side that was impeding its soldiers’ view in.
“Look at what they have,” the 27-year-old Kafarnah said. “Why can’t we live like that too?”
His friend, a school teacher who also lost his home, delivered a more pointed criticism of Hamas.
“We have put up with a great deal. They take us to war, fire rockets on Israel from outside our homes and invite destruction to our homes. Fine, but now what?” said the green-eyed teacher in his late 20s, who did not want to be named for fear of retaliation.
“Does anyone in the government know what happened to us? Shouldn’t they come offer us help? Or a few comforting words?”
Rizk said he had hoped government officials would be there to take details from residents to offer assistance or future compensation.
“But I have been wasting my time,” he said.
Ramadan Naufal said his family has moved from the house of one relative to another since the strikes on his home.
“They are fed up with us and I know it,” said the portly 46-year-old. So he buys groceries every day for his hosts “to cushion our intrusion.”
“This war was something else. No rock, tree or man has been spared,” he said, then adding the refrain said by many: “How can we cope with a war every couple of years?”
In the latest truce, dozens of residents of the al-Nada Towers visited their homes to salvage what they can. All seemed stunned and heavy with bereavement, even as they traded greetings with former neighbours, now partners in yet another journey to piece together their lives. Many traded advice on how to seek compensation.
Around a third of the 25 buildings in the complex were crushed in airstrikes and heavy tank fire. Most of the rest are too damaged to live in. Residents collected metal and wood from the debris and loaded them onto donkey carts to sell as scrap. Others looked for pillows, blankets and any usable food items like sugar, tea or flour. Some looked inside water tanks for anything left to bathe with.
Salah Abu Shabab, one of a group of Bedouin who live nearby, said he lost 27 head of sheep, a donkey and a 1984 Mercedes-Benz he used as a taxi. “This is where I buried the donkey,” he said, pointing at a mound of dirt.
The 54-year-old and his family of 12 now live in a UN school, like thousands of others. He vows he won’t leave it until the government assures him of accommodation. “I know the school year begins next month, but that is their problem.”
Rizk, the father of two, tried to salvage a rug from his third-story apartment. As he pulled it, the concrete slabs started falling and he gave up, fearing he’d be crushed.
“I have lost everything, so I should at least try and stay alive.”
DISBANDED ON THE ASHES OF THE JEWISH HOLOCAUST AND BUTCHERING OF 6 MILLION JEWS
UNITED NATIONS FORMED 1948 ON THE ASHES OF THE JEWISH HOLOCAUST- WITH THE PROMISE- NEVER AGAIN AND HUMANITY MUST COME FIRST
AUGUST 9TH.... AGAIN....
Hamas violates cease fire hours before end
misguidedchildren.com/foreign-affairs/2014/08/hamas.../27871 - Cached6 hours ago ... Hamas cannot even wait till the end of the cease fire to try and kill innocent
people. ... Posted by Barr Phite / In Foreign Affairs / August 9, 2014.Hamas Breaks Cease Fire by Sending Rockets Into Israel Again ...
townhall.com/.../2014/.../hamas-breaks-cease-fire-with-israel-again-fight-1 day ago ... Hamas Breaks Cease Fire by Sending Rockets Into Israel Again, Fightingresumes-n1876402 - Cached
Resumes. Katie Pavlich ... IDF (@IDFSpokesperson) August 8, 2014.hamas unleashes rockets on israel after breaking ceasefire
linksterdiversions.blogspot.com/2014/.../hamas-unleashes-rockets-on-israel-Saturday, August 9, 2014 ... News (BIN) — As the Egyptian-brokered 72-hourafter.html - Cached
ceasefire between Israel and Hamas expired at ... Breaking Israel News | Web
Site
-----------------------------
Rex Murphy: How the specious concept of ‘proportionality’ became code for Israel-bashing
AUGUST 9-2014 - All the evil of these Muslim Heretics -who hate women and gays and the media mind owning masses still weep 5 hamas..... luckily the majority of silence and action billions stand and work 4 Israel...... - God bless the innocents. God Bless Israel and God bless the day that the evil that is spreading round the world stealing little Muslim Girls, killing women and children with glee and stealing treasuries etc... days are numbered.... cause they are EBOLA has come.... and the monsters will be taken down by Ebola... wait and see...
Rex Murphy: How the specious concept of ‘proportionality’ became code for Israel-bashing
Rex Murphy | August 9, 2014 6:59 AM ET
More from Rex Murphy
.
Pakistani demonstrators hold banners and chant slogans during a protest against Israel's military campaign on Gaza in Karachi on August 3, 2014. The head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees expressed "shock and disbelief" over the shelling of another UN school in Gaza on August 3, 2014 that killed at least 10 people. AFP PHOTO/Asif HASSANASIF HASSAN/AFP/Getty Images
“Do you feel your actions, Israel’s actions, were proportionate? … And were you using the appropriate precision weapons, even if Hamas is using [innocent Palestinians] as human shields?”
— Question asked of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during his August 6 press conference.
.
Even other terrorists shun ISIS, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The brutal, merciless Sunni terrorist group has been rampaging through town after town along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Now they are besieging the “infidels” known as the Yazidi, a Kurdish ethnic subgroup with an obscure religion all their own. About 40,000 Yazidi have fled their homes and now are encamped on Mount Sinjur without either food or water. Within the Muslim Middle East, the Yazidi are a tiny people, easily extinguished. Western activists throw around the word “genocide” all too lightly. But atop that mountain, the word might become grimly appropriate.
And yet, the advance of ISIS and its horrors has inspired no campaigns of outrage in the streets of the West. No marches in Toronto or Paris. “Proportionality,” a piece of international legal jargon thrown around promiscuously as a shorthand to indict Israel for its (allegedly) excessive reprisals against Hamas’ (allegedly) insignificant provocations, apparently does not govern the scale of protestors’ response to the world’s many injustices.
When Gaza burns, so do parts of Paris. But Mount Sinjur? Hey, where’s that?
.
In editorial cartoons, Benjamin Netanyahu sits astride mountains of skulls. But apparently, ISIS’ leaders are more difficult to draw. As for the UN, it has yet to call a special session to bring ISIS to account, despite the dozens that have been convened over the years to embarrass Israel.
And what about Ukraine, much of which now sits within range of Vladimir Putin’s guns. Crimea already has been effectively become Russia’s possession. In Donetsk, in Western Ukraine, 300,000 citizens have fled the city. Pro-Russian forces barely try to hide the advanced weapons of war they get from Moscow — one of which was used to shoot down a Malaysian airliner. Any day now, Russian troops themselves may come streaming in.
Russia bullies and seizes real estate, and the world — after mouthing its platitudes — moves back to Israel
.
Many have deplored Putin’s invasion of sovereign Ukraine. There have been the usual timid pieties from the UN. And yet we hear no real clarion calls about the injustice of all this — no calls for Russia, or for Putin, to observe the recently invented doctrine of proportionality. Russia bullies and seizes real estate, and the world — after mouthing its platitudes — moves back to Israel.
Yes, there are a few chanting protestors outside Russian embassies — though, if you talk to them, you find that they are mostly Ukrainian immigrants and descendants; not the professional activists who have made anti-Zionism their life’s calling.
Like the Yazidis, the Ukranians, are a diversion for the protest set: When Israel is in conflict, all other wars are relegated to the sideshow tents.
AFP/Getty Images
.
Even more murderous than ISIS, perhaps, is Syria’s Bashar Assad, who has been conducting a mass-murder campaign against his own citizens. Conservative estimates put the number of dead at almost 200,000 — the Gaza war multiplied by more than a hundred, in other words. Has Assad been arraigned by the world’s judges for his lack of “proportionality?” Do reporters ask questions even remotely like those that are routinely asked of Israel’s leaders? Other conflicts rage, are more bloodly, see civilians deliberately and mercilessly hounded and murdered, yet this standard of proportionality never seems to make an appearance.
Israel, embattled from its birth, facing an implacable enemy (Hamas wants Israel eliminated from tip to toe), surrounded by terrorists who deplore its very existence, is asked to be subtle, to be precise, to hit the terrorists firing missiles from the vestibule of the mosque rather than the congregants who sit huddled 10 feet away.
Which should expose the so-called doctrine of proportionality for what it is: a specious, meretricious conceit designed to tie the hands of armies that strike back against agressors — and, in particular, one army: Israel’s. With this one word, Zionism’s enemies seek to twist its legitimate self-defense into a war crime.
National Post
-----------
It's a new Egypt and Women matter- ONE BILLION RISING- Breaking the Chains- No more excuses-No more abuses- this is good...
Egypt sentences 2 to life for sexual assaults
via @metrohalifax
------------
AUGUST 4TH \\
ONE BILLION RISING- NO MORE EXCUSES
News - Afghanistan
Woman Kills Four Taliban Before Dying
Sunday, 03 August 2014 23:12 Written by Anisa Shaheed
----------------
Lebanese Army Advances in Border Battle WithIslamists
OUTSKIRTS OF ARSAL Lebanon - The Lebanese army advanced on Monday into a border town attacked by Islamists at the weekend in the most serious spillover of the three-year-old Syrian civil war into Lebanon, and the Beirut government said the deadly assault would not go unpunished.
------------
MORE HAMAS ROCKETS HITTING ISRAEL- Heretic Muslim killing Muslims hiding behind and under children and mothers whilst the 'leaders' sneak around in Qatar- OLD MUSLIM 300 FAMILIES OF IRAN, QATAR AND SAUDIS- U CREATED THIS DISASTER- FIX THIS SHIT
ONE BILLION RISING- BREAKING THE CHAINS OF ABUSE OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN
ONE BILLION RISING- 2014- no more excuses - no more abuses
-----------------
OUR BELOVED AFGHANISTAN.... THIS IS JUST SO HEARTBREAKING....
Monday, 04 August 2014 18:59
Last Updated on Monday, 04 August 2014 19:30
The Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) on Monday summoned the Pakistani ambassador in Kabul to protest against the Pakistani attacks on the eastern regions of Afghanistan and the involvement of the Pakistani military forces in attacks against the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF).
This past Saturday, MoFa said that Pakistan's foreign affairs officials summoned Afghan embassy diplomats in Islamabad accusing Afghanistan of supporting surge groups has received harsh criticisms from Kabul.
"Evidence reveals that Pakistan has not honored its commitments in regards to the war against terror," MoFA Spokesman Ahmad Shekib Mustaghna said. "Pakistan has continued supporting the Taliban and the presence of the Taliban and their Pakistani advisors has increased in Afghanistan."
The Afghan National Security Council has said that Pakistan's rocket bombardments on Afghan borders and Pakistan's support of the surge groups are against international charters. Furthermore, MoFA asserted that Afghanistan could take economic, political and military actions against Pakistan if the attacks continue.
In the western parts of Afghanistan, concerns have risen over mysterious killings and assassinations of security personnel. On Sunday, Herat Police Chief Gen. Samiullah Qatrah accused Iran of being involved in the insecurity in the province.
"In their confessions, they [the assassins] have said that their network is funded by Iran," Gen. Qatrah asserted. "We ask our neighboring countries not to train elements of terror on their soil and not to subject the Afghan nation to injustice and oppression."
In reaction to the accusation made by Gen. Qatrah, MoFA has stated that the claims about Iran's involvement in the instability of the country need further assessments.
"Herat police chief's statements are based on preliminary investigations conducted by the security and intelligence organs of the province," Mustaghna said. "It requires further and more inclusive investigations and assessments."
The Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has rejected the allegations, asking the Afghan MoFA to respond to the issue in an appropriate manner.
Analysts believe that the prolongation of the election process is the main factor behind the growing insecurity and instability of Afghanistan.
http://www.tolonews.com/en/afghanistan/15832-pakistan-and-irans-role-in-the-instability-of-afghanistan
-------------
CANADA
Aug 4 2014 — Vancouver Sun —
Sunny skies and warm temperatures greeted the colourful crowd for the 36th
annual Pride Parade in downtown Vancouver.
NOVA SCOTIA
20 Nov 2013 ... A gay
Iranian couple is set to land in Halifax on Wednesday, two of the
first refugees to be sponsored by the Rainbow Refugee Association
of ...
The LORD will protect him and preserve his life; he will bless him in the land and not surrender him to the desire of his foes.-Psalm 41-2
Our Canada includes everyone.... most civilized
nations do.... why do we focus on Muslim/Arab Nations that cannot and refuse 2
control their Heretic Muslims who have butchered 1,000,000,000 Muslims????
Israel is the last hope 4 this world... because if we lose Israel... we have
lost humanity on this planet....imho
I STAND WITH ISRAEL- Look at
Syria- 150,000 innocents dead by hands of brother Arabs/Persians and 4 MILLION
SYRIANS REFUGEES- Arab Nations get ur
Heretics under control- Israel is the last face of civilized humanity.... if Israel
goes- basic human decency dies.... and u all know it.- imho
------------
God bless our beloved Afghanistan- stay brave - u are the face of the new Muslim world.... u bring a bit of hope 2 the billions who do NOT believe in Muslims anymore.... Abdullah Abdullah u stayed in Afghanistan while the Karzai puppet went 2 America and took up American citizenship- u supported Muslim women and dignity and basic freedom and education- and Muslim youth... u are the last hope of the great religion of Islam...imho... we love u
--------------
OVER 2 BILLION STAND WITH ISRAEL GLOBALLY- REGARDLESS OF THE NEWS ATTEMPT AT BRAINWASHING.....
THIS IS SYRIA.... REMEMBER FOLKS...
POINT:SYRIA- over 150,000
butchered -over 7 million turned in2 refugees by the hands of Arab
Brothers. THE ARAB SPRING WAS SUPPOSED 2
B ABOUT MUSLIM YOUTH-HOPE.. A LIFE... instead it reverted in2 a death struggle
between Sunni and Shiite (Qatar, Saudis, Iran etc) Global Heretic Jihadists and
the old order of Arab/Persian strongmen. No middle ground or a beautiful modern
Middle East where religious and tribal ties r less important than decent
governance and progress.
POINT: 300 FAMILIES OWN ALL THE OIL MONEY IN THE
MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICAS.... over 1.7 billion Muslims live on less than $4 a
day.... and no education and no better life... than the time of Jesus Christ,
our Lord and Saviour... who was born a Jew...
POINT: Gay women and men.... WOMEN.... these vicious
Heretic Muslims butchered over 1, 000,000,000 Muslims.... if u raise the flag 4 Palestine-Hamas..... u
cannot have a woman or gay family member... seriously...
POINT: EBOLA IS SPREADING IN R BEAUTIFUL AFRICAS
POINT: ALMOST A MILLION AMERICANS CANNOT DRINK
THEIR WATER- FIRES ARE RAGING ACROSS
CALIFORNIA.... AND DETROIT HAS REFUSED THEIR POOR... WATER...
POINT: COLONIZED NATIONS AND USA HAVE 37% UNEMPLOYED
YOUTH.... and on and on and on...
------------------
3.4 Billion Christians are tired of this sheeeeet..... HEY ARAB/PERSIAN WORLD- GET UR F**KING HERETIC MUSLIMS UNDER CONTROL..... UNITED NATIONS- DISBAND- ur useless
Hundreds protest persecution of Christians by ISIS in Iraq
Special Report - The doubt at the
heart of Iraq's Sunni 'revolution'
Crown prince Ali Hatem Suleiman leads one of the biggest factions fighting Iraq’s government
CANADA MILITARY NEWS- July
27 2014- from Canadian Point of View- God bless our troops. God bless
Israel-God Bless Canada-God bless Afghanistan- u choose Palestine- we choose
our gay brothers and sisters and ISRAEL- equality trumps ur
Hamas-Iran-Syria-Hezbollah-Muslim killing Muslims without a care….
CANADA MILITARY NEWS-
GLOBAL YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT- June/July 2014- Canada is flying high over some
nations- and education does matter- and poverty in 2014 is UNITED
NATIONS DISGRACE
CANADA MILITARY NEWS: Jul 22 2014- Canada Unions-CUPE
(POSTIES) N GREEN PARTY SUPPORTING HAMAS??? - Remembering Randy and Janet
Connors and the horrific nightmare of AIDS and betrayal of innocent Canadians
from Presidents 2 Red Cross donor institutions-CANADA'S STORY
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/30-000-canadians- are-homeless...An estimated 25 to 40 per cent of homeless youth are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transsexual or transgender. ... The vast majority of Canada's homeless ..
F**king Female Castration- One Billion Rising-UNITED
NATIONS COUNTRIES- No more excuses- FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION- END FEMALE
CIRCUMCISM NOW- GETCHA CANADA ON- this is what actually happens 2 these little
girls and young women- IMAGINE!!!!! ewwwww
CANADA MILITARY NEWS JULY 20 2014- What would Mother Teresa
say, Princess Diana say, Michael Jackson say in this f**ked up evil world that
is run by despots, political greed and thieves- HUMANITY - WE MUST TAKE BACK
OUR WORLD- IT'S TIME-Afghanistan/Canada/USA/Lord and Saviour's Israel/stolen
childrens souls
IDLE NO MORE CANADA- WHAT
THE F**K???- u deal with China 4 Oil???? – u betray millions and millions of
Canadians who stepped up and supported u and our environment- entrusting u with
our nature- some tribes will die 2 save environment- others sell out??? WTF???
CANADA’S BROKEN HEART
3.4 Billion Christians are tired of this sheeeeet..... HEY ARAB/PERSIAN WORLD- GET UR F**KING HERETIC MUSLIMS UNDER CONTROL..... UNITED NATIONS- DISBAND- ur useless
Hundreds protest persecution of Christians by ISIS in Iraq
Canadians are Passive??? I don't think so!!!@
LOOK WHAT AM FINDING ALL AROUND THE WORLD.... THE MEDIA MIGHT BE USELESS.. BUT BY GOD THE INTERNET IS ACTUALLY BECOMING USEFUL AGAIN....
SIGN THIS PETITION TO DEPORT ALL ISLAMIC
EXTREMISTS/RADICALS FROM OUR CIVILIZED SOCIETY. ISLAMIC SUPPORTERS OF HAMAS,
MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD, BOKO HARAM, ISIS, AL QAEDA, TALIBAN, SYRIAN ISLAMIC REBELS,
AL SHABAB, ETC. WHO ARE WAGING WAR - JIHAD AGAINST ALL NON
MUSLIMS BY KILLING THEM, ARE THE WORST SUBHUMAN ON THIS PLANET !!! STOP
SPREADING ISLAMIC RADICALISM NOW... BE THE VOICE FOR PEACE AND DO NOT SUPPORT
ISLAMIZATION OF THE WORLD !!!http://www.thepetitionsite.com/tell-a-friend/12170420
--------------
Special Report - The doubt at the
heart of Iraq's Sunni 'revolution'
ARBIL Iraq
(Reuters) - Sheikh Ali Hatem
Suleiman, one of the leaders of the Sunni revolt against the Shi'ite-led
government of Iraq, sat cross-legged on a couch last month, lit another
Marlboro Red, and discussed the struggle with visitors from his home city of
Ramadi, where the uprising began late last year. http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/08/04/uk-iraq-security-alisuleiman-specialrepo-idUKKBN0G40NW20140804
Crown prince Ali Hatem Suleiman leads one of the biggest factions fighting Iraq’s government
-------------
SYRIA-
www.businessinsider.com/syrian-refugees-in-lebanon-2014-5
2014-05-13 · More than
one million Syrians ... which has k
illed at least 150,000 people, and Lebanon has bore ... Lebanon's population is about 4.4 million.
'I
will sell them,' Boko Haram leader says of kidnapped Nigerian girls
By
Aminu Abubakar and Josh Levs, CNN
updated
11:42 AM EDT, Tue May 6, 2014
-----
BLOGGED:
CANADA MILITARY NEWS- July
27 2014- from Canadian Point of View- God bless our troops. God bless
Israel-God Bless Canada-God bless Afghanistan- u choose Palestine- we choose
our gay brothers and sisters and ISRAEL- equality trumps ur
Hamas-Iran-Syria-Hezbollah-Muslim killing Muslims without a care….
----------
Hundreds
protest persecution of Christians by ISIS in Iraq
Assyrians
demand aid for Christians forced to flee their homes
CBC
News Posted: Aug 03, 2014 4:28 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 04, 2014 5:39 AM ET
CANADA- USA- EU- LATIN AMERICA-AUSSIES-KIWIS-
BALKINS-ASIAS-AFRICAAS- CIVILIZED NATIONS - ALONG WITH CHINA AND RUSSIA-
CLIMATE IS CAUSING $$$$TRILLIONS IN DAMAGES.... WHILST HERETIC MUSLIMS DESTROY
MUSLIMS AND HUMANITY....
2014-06-20 · Ebola outbreak in West Africa ... exposed to Ebola, the virus behind anoutbreak that has ... three million euros responding to the outbreak and ...
www.who.int › Media
centre › Notes for the
media
The emergence of an Ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa in 2014 ... virusdisease outbreak in West Africa in 2014 has ... can kill up to 90% of those
...
www.toledoblade.com/local/2014/08/03/Water-crisis-grips-area.html
2014-08-03 · The decision on when Toledo’s water is going to be safe enough to drink again is ... The Ohio EPA is ... drinking water from their taps ..
--------------
www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/07/26/detroit-shuts-off-water...
2014-07-26 · But
businesses owing hundreds of thousands of dollars have not been
disconnected, Detroit Water and Sewerage ... It
doesn’t mean they won’t get shut ...
ipezone.blogspot.com/2014/05/europes-refugee-crisis-made-in-usa.html
... it is a refugee crisis caused by political
... These are not just ... The honest
truth is that the idiots dumb enough to try it have made
their countries worse ...
-------------------
www.eubusiness.com/news-eu/eurozone-economy.q3n
Eurozone unemployment continued
at record highs in June and while a first fall in "horrendous" jobless ...
Eurostat noted that youth jobless numbers in the EU ...
www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2013/07/31/eu-jobless-data-horrendous...
EU jobless data 'horrendous':
official ... Eurostat noted that youth jobless numbers
in the EU had fallen by 43,000 to 5.51 million but in the
eurozone, ...
------------------
GLOBAL YOUTH JOBLESS AND HOMELESS...IS OUT OF CONTROL IN EU
USA CANADA AUSTRALIA KIWIS ETC..
BLOGGED:
CANADA MILITARY NEWS-
GLOBAL YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT- June/July 2014- Canada is flying high over some
nations- and education does matter- and poverty in 2014 is UNITED
NATIONS DISGRACE
---------------
BLOGGED:
CANADA MILITARY NEWS: April 14- United States, Europe, Canada etc. ur hypocracy is telling- why not fix ur own countries horrible injustices and severe breakdown of communication of the people u serve- WTF??? seriously- get away from Ukraine- and stop slapping Russia and China when ur warts are as deep- IDLE NO MORE AMERICAS FIRST PEOPLES- u are all immigrants 4 God’s sake
CANADA MILITARY NEWS: April 14- United States, Europe, Canada etc. ur hypocracy is telling- why not fix ur own countries horrible injustices and severe breakdown of communication of the people u serve- WTF??? seriously- get away from Ukraine- and stop slapping Russia and China when ur warts are as deep- IDLE NO MORE AMERICAS FIRST PEOPLES- u are all immigrants 4 God’s sake
-------------
BLOGGED:
CANADA MILITARY NEWS: Jul 22 2014- Canada Unions-CUPE
(POSTIES) N GREEN PARTY SUPPORTING HAMAS??? - Remembering Randy and Janet
Connors and the horrific nightmare of AIDS and betrayal of innocent Canadians
from Presidents 2 Red Cross donor institutions-CANADA'S STORY
-------------------
YOUTH HOMELESSNESS IN OUR CANADA...
www.raisingtheroof.org/RaisingTheRoof/media/RaisingTheRoofMedia/... · PDF file
a clear
assessment of the problem and have developed ... Youth
Homelessness inCanada: The Road to Solutions | 41 APPENDIx 5
YoutHworkS FUnDInG PaRTneRs
www.chra-achru.ca/media/content/Ending%20Youth%20Homelessness(1).pdf · PDF file
The
official estimate of Canada’s homeless ... the problem is
lacking. We do know thathomeless youth are a ...
through Canada’s Youth Employment Strategy and ...
www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/std-mts/reports_06/pdf/street_youth_e.pdf · PDF file
Parental
or caregiver addiction / health problem 4.2 6.1 ... onto the street.
Manyhomeless youth indicated that they had lost respect
... Street Youth in Canada, ...
www.covenanthousetoronto.ca/homeless-youth/Youth-Homelessness
youth
homelessness. The problem of youth
homelessness has reached crisis proportions in Canada, [1]
but the plight of street kids remains largely misunderstood.
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/30-000-canadians-
------
AND...
--------------
AND...
and what about the 47 million that don’t even
qualify.... have nothing but dirt 2 eat... seriously...
But the 109,631,000 living in households taking federal welfare
benefits as of the end of 2012, according to the Census Bureau, equaled 35.4
percent of all 309,467,000 people living in the United States at that time.
USA- The 35.4 Percent: 109,631,000 on Welfare
August 20, 2014 - 4:35 AM
When America re-elected President Barack Obama in 2012, we had not
quite reached the point where more than half the country was taking
benefits from the federal government.
It is a reasonable bet, however, that with the implementation of Obamacare — with its provisions expanding Medicaid and providing health-insurance subsidies to people earning up to 400 percent of poverty — that if we have not already surpassed that point (not counting those getting veterans benefits) we soon will.
What did taxpayers give to the 109,631,000 — the 35.4 percent of the nation — getting welfare benefits at the end of 2012?
82,679,000 of the welfare-takers lived in households where people were on Medicaid, said the Census Bureau. 51,471,000 were in households on food stamps. 22,526,000 were in the Women, Infants and Children program. 20,355,000 were in household on Supplemental Security Income. 13,267,000 lived in public housing or got housing subsidies. 5,442,000 got Temporary Assistance to Needy Families. 4,517,000 received other forms of federal cash assistance.
How do you put in perspective the 109,631,000 people taking welfare, or the 150,026,000 getting some type of federal benefit other than veterans' benefits?
Well, the CIA World Factbook says there are 142,470,272 people in Russia. So, the 150,026,000 people getting non-veterans federal benefits in the United States at the end of 2012 outnumbered all the people in Russia.
63,742,977 people live in the United Kingdom and 44,291,413 live in the Ukraine, says the CIA. So, the combined 108,034,390 people in these two nations was about 1,596,610 less than 109,631,000 collecting welfare in the United States.
It may be more telling, however, to compare the 109,631,000 Americans taking federal welfare benefits at the end of 2012 to Americans categorized by other characteristics.
In 2012, according to the Census Bureau, there were 103,087,000 full-time year-round workers in the United States (including 16,606,000 full-time year-round government workers). Thus, the welfare-takers outnumbered full-time year-round workers by 6,544,000.
California, the nation's most-populated state, contained an estimated 38,332,521 people in 2013, says the Census Bureau. Texas had 26,448,193 people, New York had 19,651,127, and Florida had 19,552,860. But the combined 103,984,701 people in these four massive states still fell about 5,646,299 short of the 109,631,000 people on welfare.
In the fourth quarter of 2008, when President Obama was elected, there were 96,197,000 people living in households taking benefits from one or more federal welfare programs. After four years, by the fourth quarter of 2012, that had grown by 13,434,000.
Those 13,434,000 additional people on welfare outnumbered the 12,882,135 people the Census Bureau estimated lived in Obama's home state of Illinois in 2013.
It is a reasonable bet, however, that with the implementation of Obamacare — with its provisions expanding Medicaid and providing health-insurance subsidies to people earning up to 400 percent of poverty — that if we have not already surpassed that point (not counting those getting veterans benefits) we soon will.
What did taxpayers give to the 109,631,000 — the 35.4 percent of the nation — getting welfare benefits at the end of 2012?
82,679,000 of the welfare-takers lived in households where people were on Medicaid, said the Census Bureau. 51,471,000 were in households on food stamps. 22,526,000 were in the Women, Infants and Children program. 20,355,000 were in household on Supplemental Security Income. 13,267,000 lived in public housing or got housing subsidies. 5,442,000 got Temporary Assistance to Needy Families. 4,517,000 received other forms of federal cash assistance.
How do you put in perspective the 109,631,000 people taking welfare, or the 150,026,000 getting some type of federal benefit other than veterans' benefits?
Well, the CIA World Factbook says there are 142,470,272 people in Russia. So, the 150,026,000 people getting non-veterans federal benefits in the United States at the end of 2012 outnumbered all the people in Russia.
63,742,977 people live in the United Kingdom and 44,291,413 live in the Ukraine, says the CIA. So, the combined 108,034,390 people in these two nations was about 1,596,610 less than 109,631,000 collecting welfare in the United States.
It may be more telling, however, to compare the 109,631,000 Americans taking federal welfare benefits at the end of 2012 to Americans categorized by other characteristics.
In 2012, according to the Census Bureau, there were 103,087,000 full-time year-round workers in the United States (including 16,606,000 full-time year-round government workers). Thus, the welfare-takers outnumbered full-time year-round workers by 6,544,000.
California, the nation's most-populated state, contained an estimated 38,332,521 people in 2013, says the Census Bureau. Texas had 26,448,193 people, New York had 19,651,127, and Florida had 19,552,860. But the combined 103,984,701 people in these four massive states still fell about 5,646,299 short of the 109,631,000 people on welfare.
In the fourth quarter of 2008, when President Obama was elected, there were 96,197,000 people living in households taking benefits from one or more federal welfare programs. After four years, by the fourth quarter of 2012, that had grown by 13,434,000.
Those 13,434,000 additional people on welfare outnumbered the 12,882,135 people the Census Bureau estimated lived in Obama's home state of Illinois in 2013.
--------------
WHY ARE 70 MILLION USA BROTHERS AND SISTERS STARVING?
Millions of working Americans don’t know where their next
meal is coming from. We sent three photographers to explore hunger in three
very different parts of the United States, each giving different faces
to the same statistic: One-sixth of
Americans don’t have enough food to eat.
On a gold-gray morning in Mitchell County, Iowa, Christina Dreier sends
her son, Keagan, to school without breakfast. He is three years old,
barrel-chested, and stubborn, and usually refuses to eat the free meal he
qualifies for at preschool. Faced with a dwindling pantry, Dreier has decided
to try some tough love: If she sends Keagan to school hungry, maybe he’ll eat
the free breakfast, which will leave more food at home for lunch.
Dreier knows her gambit might backfire, and it does. Keagan ignores the
school breakfast on offer and is so hungry by lunchtime that Dreier picks
through the dregs of her freezer in hopes of filling him and his little sister
up. She shakes the last seven chicken nuggets onto a battered baking sheet,
adds the remnants of a bag of Tater Tots and a couple of hot dogs from the
fridge, and slides it all into the oven. She’s gone through most of the food
she got last week from a local food pantry; her own lunch will be the bits of
potato left on the kids’ plates. “I eat lunch if there’s enough,” she says.
“But the kids are the most important. They have to eat first.”
The fear of being unable to feed her children hangs over Dreier’s days.
She and her husband, Jim, pit one bill against the next—the phone against the
rent against the heat against the gas—trying always to set aside money to make
up for what they can’t get from the food pantry or with their food stamps,
issued by the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Congressional
cuts to SNAP last fall of five billion dollars pared her benefits from $205 to
$172 a month.
On this particular afternoon Dreier is worried about the family van,
which is on the brink of repossession. She and Jim need to open a new bank
account so they can make automatic payments instead of scrambling to pay in
cash. But that will happen only if Jim finishes work early. It’s peak harvest
time, and he often works until eight at night, applying pesticides on
commercial farms for $14 an hour. Running the errand would mean forgoing
overtime pay that could go for groceries.
It’s the same every month, Dreier says. Bills go unpaid because, when
push comes to shove, food wins out. “We have to eat, you know,” she says, only
the slightest hint of resignation in her voice. “We can’t starve.”
“It’s Not Enough” Christina
Dreier describes the difficulty of feeding her family on an inadequate budget.
Chances are good that if you picture what hunger looks like, you don’t summon an image of
someone like Christina Dreier: white, married, clothed, and housed, even a bit
overweight. The image of hunger in America today differs markedly from
Depression-era images of the gaunt-faced unemployed scavenging for food on
urban streets. “This is not your grandmother’s hunger,” says Janet Poppendieck,
a sociologist at the City University of New York. “Today more working people
and their families are hungry because wages have declined.”
In the United States more than half of hungry households are white, and
two-thirds of those with children have at least one working adult—typically in
a full-time job. With this new image comes a new lexicon: In 2006 the U.S.
government replaced “hunger” with the term “food insecure” to describe any
household where, sometime during the previous year, people didn’t have enough
food to eat. By whatever name, the number of people going hungry has grown
dramatically in the U.S., increasing to 48 million by 2012—a fivefold jump
since the late 1960s, including an increase of 57 percent since the late 1990s.
Privately run programs like food pantries and soup kitchens have mushroomed
too. In 1980 there were a few hundred emergency food programs across the
country; today there are 50,000. Finding food has become a central worry for
millions of Americans. One in six reports running out of food at least once a year.
In many European countries, by contrast, the number is closer to one in 20.
To witness hunger in America today is to enter a twilight zone where
refrigerators are so frequently bare of all but mustard and ketchup that it
provokes no remark, inspires no embarrassment. Here dinners are cooked using
macaroni-and-cheese mixes and other processed ingredients from food pantries,
and fresh fruits and vegetables are eaten only in the first days after the SNAP
payment arrives. Here you’ll meet hungry farmhands and retired schoolteachers,
hungry families who are in the U.S. without papers and hungry families whose
histories stretch back to the Mayflower. Here pocketing food from work and skipping meals to make food stretch
are so common that such practices barely register as a way of coping with
hunger and are simply a way of life.
It can be tempting to ask families receiving food assistance, If you’re
really hungry, then how can you be—as many of them are—overweight? The answer
is “this paradox that hunger and obesity are two sides of the same coin,” says
Melissa Boteach, vice president of the Poverty and Prosperity Program of the
Center for American Progress, “people making trade-offs between food that’s
filling but not nutritious and may actually contribute to obesity.” For many of
the hungry in America, the extra pounds that result from a poor diet are
collateral damage—an unintended side effect of hunger itself.
Help for the Hungry
More than 48 million Americans rely on
what used to be called food stamps, now SNAP: the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program.
In 2013 benefits totaled $75 billion, but payments
to most households dropped; the average monthly benefit was $133.07 a person,
less than $1.50 a meal. SNAP recipients typically run through their monthly
allotment in three weeks, then turn to food pantries. Who qualifies for SNAP?
Households with gross incomes no more than 130 percent of the poverty rate. For
a family of four that qualifying point is $31,005 a year.*
*Qualifying incomes
in Alaska and Hawaii are higher than in the contiguous U.S.
As the face of hunger has changed, so has its address. The town of Spring, Texas, is where
ranchland meets Houston’s sprawl, a suburb of curving streets and shade trees
and privacy fences. The suburbs are the home of the American dream, but they
are also a place where poverty is on the rise. As urban housing has gotten more
expensive, the working poor have been pushed out. Today hunger in the suburbs
is growing faster than in cities, having more than doubled since 2007.
Yet in the suburbs America’s hungry don’t look the part either. They
drive cars, which are a necessity, not a luxury, here. Cheap clothes and toys
can be found at yard sales and thrift shops, making a middle-class appearance
affordable. Consumer electronics can be bought on installment plans, so the
hungry rarely lack phones or televisions. Of all the suburbs in the country,
northwest Houston is one of the best places to see how people live on what
might be called a minimum-wage diet: It has one of the highest percentages of
households receiving SNAP assistance where at least one family member holds
down a job. The Jefferson sisters, Meme and Kai, live here in a four-bedroom,
two-car-garage, two-bath home with Kai’s boyfriend, Frank, and an extended
family that includes their invalid mother, their five sons, a daughter-in-law,
and five grandchildren. The house has a rickety desktop computer in the living
room and a television in most rooms, but only two actual beds; nearly everyone
sleeps on mattresses or piles of blankets spread out on the floor.
Though all three adults work full-time, their income is not enough to
keep the family consistently fed without assistance. The root problem is the
lack of jobs that pay wages a family can live on, so food assistance has become
the government’s—and society’s—way to supplement low wages. The Jeffersons
receive $125 in food stamps each month, and a charity brings in meals for their
bedridden matriarch.
Like most of the new American hungry, the Jeffersons face not a total
absence of food but the gnawing fear that the next meal can’t be counted on.
When Meme shows me the family’s food supply, the refrigerator holds takeout
boxes and beverages but little fresh food. Two cupboards are stocked with a smattering
of canned beans and sauces. A pair of freezers in the garage each contain a
single layer of food, enough to fill bellies for just a few days. Meme says she
took the children aside a few months earlier to tell them they were eating too
much and wasting food besides. “I told them if they keep wasting, we have to go
live on the corner, beg for money, or something.”
Stranded in a Food
Desert
Tens
of thousands of people in Houston and in other parts of the U.S. live in a food
desert: They’re more than half a mile from a supermarket and don’t own a car,
because of poverty, illness, or age. Public transportation may not fill the
gap. Small markets or fast-food restaurants may be within walking distance, but
not all accept vouchers. If they do, costs may be higher and nutritious options
fewer.
Jacqueline Christian is another Houston mother who has a full-time job,
drives a comfortable sedan, and wears flattering clothes. Her older son,
15-year-old Ja’Zarrian, sports bright orange Air Jordans. There’s little clue
to the family’s hardship until you learn that their clothes come mostly from
discount stores, that Ja’Zarrian mowed lawns for a summer to get the sneakers,
that they’re living in a homeless shelter, and that despite receiving $325 in
monthly food stamps, Christian worries about not having enough food “about half
of the year.”
Christian works as a home health aide, earning $7.75 an hour at a job
that requires her to crisscross Houston’s sprawl to see her clients. Her
schedule, as much as her wages, influences what she eats. To save time she
often relies on premade food from grocery stores. “You can’t go all the way
home and cook,” she says.
On a day that includes running a dozen errands and charming her payday
loan officer into giving her an extra day, Christian picks up Ja’Zarrian and
her seven-year-old, Jerimiah, after school. As the sun drops in the sky,
Jerimiah begins complaining that he’s hungry. The neon glow of a Hartz Chicken
Buffet appears up the road, and he starts in: Can’t we just get some gizzards,
please?
Christian pulls into the drive-through and orders a combo of fried
gizzards and okra for $8.11. It takes three declined credit cards and an
emergency loan from her mother, who lives nearby, before she can pay for it.
When the food finally arrives, filling the car with the smell of hot grease,
there’s a collective sense of relief. On the drive back to the shelter the boys
eat until the gizzards are gone, and then drift off to sleep.
Christian says she knows she can’t afford to eat out and that fast food
isn’t a healthy meal. But she’d felt too stressed—by time, by Jerimiah’s
insistence, by how little money she has—not to give in. “Maybe I can’t justify
that to someone who wasn’t here to see, you know?” she says. “But I couldn’t
let them down and not get the food.”
To supplement what they get from the food pantry,
the cash-strapped Reams family forages in the woods near their Osage home for
puffball mushrooms and grapes. Kyera Reams cans homegrown vegetables when they
are in season and plentiful, so that her family can eat healthfully all year.
“I’m resourceful with my food,” she says. “I think about what people did in the
Great Depression.”
Of course it is possible to eat well cheaply in America, but it takes resources and know-how that
many low-income Americans don’t have. Kyera Reams of Osage, Iowa, puts an
incredible amount of energy into feeding her family of six a healthy diet, with
the help of staples from food banks and $650 in monthly SNAP benefits. A
stay-at-home mom with a high school education, Reams has taught herself how to
can fresh produce and forage for wild ginger and cranberries. When she learned
that SNAP benefits could be used to buy vegetable plants, she dug two gardens
in her yard. She has learned about wild mushrooms so she can safely pick ones
that aren’t poisonous and has lobbied the local library to stock field guides
to edible wild plants.
“We wouldn’t eat healthy at all if we lived off the food-bank food,”
Reams says. Many foods commonly donated to—or bought by—food pantries are high
in salt, sugar, and fat. She estimates her family could live for three months
on the nutritious foods she’s saved up. The Reamses have food security, in
other words, because Kyera makes procuring food her full-time job, along with
caring for her husband, whose disability payments provide their only income.
But most of the working poor don’t have the time or know-how required to
eat well on little. Often working multiple jobs and night shifts, they tend to
eat on the run. Healthful food can be hard to find in so-called food
deserts—communities with few or no full-service groceries. Jackie Christian
didn’t resort to feeding her sons fried gizzards because it was affordable but
because it was easy. Given the dramatic increase in cheap fast foods and
processed foods, when the hungry have money to eat, they often go for what’s
convenient, just as better-off families do.
Senior Care In rural Arkansas many elderly people don’t have
enough to eat and rely on food banks for help. Charolette Tidwell and Ken
Kupchick work tirelessly to make sure every person is fed.
It’s a cruel irony that people in rural Iowa can be malnourished amid forests of cornstalks
running to the horizon. Iowa dirt is some of the richest in the nation, even
bringing out the poet in agronomists, who describe it as “black gold.” In 2007
Iowa’s fields produced roughly one-sixth of all corn and soybeans grown in the
U.S., churning out billions of bushels.
These are the very crops that end up on Christina Dreier’s kitchen table
in the form of hot dogs made of corn-raised beef, Mountain Dew sweetened with
corn syrup, and chicken nuggets fried in soybean oil. They’re also the foods
that the U.S. government supports the most. In 2012 it spent roughly $11
billion to subsidize and insure commodity crops like corn and soy, with Iowa
among the states receiving the highest subsidies. The government spends much
less to bolster the production of the fruits and vegetables its own nutrition
guidelines say should make up half the food on our plates. In 2011 it spent
only $1.6 billion to subsidize and insure “specialty crops”—the bureaucratic
term for fruits and vegetables.
Those priorities are reflected at the grocery store, where the price of
fresh food has risen steadily while the cost of sugary treats like soda has
dropped. Since the early 1980s the real cost of fruits and vegetables has
increased by 24 percent. Meanwhile the cost of nonalcoholic beverages—primarily
sodas, most sweetened with corn syrup—has dropped by 27 percent.
“We’ve created a system that’s geared toward keeping overall food prices
low but does little to support healthy, high-quality food,” says global food
expert Raj Patel. “The problem can’t be fixed by merely telling people to eat
their fruits and vegetables, because at heart this is a problem about wages,
about poverty.”
When Christina Dreier’s cupboards start to get bare, she tries to
persuade her kids to skip snack time. “But sometimes they eat saltine crackers,
because we get that from the food bank,” she said, sighing. “It ain’t healthy
for them, but I’m not going to tell them they can’t eat if they’re hungry.”
The Dreiers have not given up on trying to eat well. Like the Reamses,
they’ve sown patches of vegetables and a stretch of sweet corn in the large
green yard carved out of the cornfields behind their house. But when the garden
is done for the year, Christina fights a battle every time she goes to the
supermarket or the food bank. In both places healthy foods are nearly out of
reach. When the food stamps come in, she splurges on her monthly supply of
produce, including a bag of organic grapes and a bag of apples. “They love
fruit,” she says with obvious pride. But most of her food dollars go to the
meat, eggs, and milk that the food bank doesn’t provide; with noodles and sauce
from the food pantry, a spaghetti dinner costs her only the $3.88 required to
buy hamburger for the sauce.
What she has, Christina says, is a kitchen with nearly enough food most
of the time. It’s just those dicey moments, after a new bill arrives or she
needs gas to drive the kids to town, that make it hard. “We’re not starved
around here,” she says one morning as she mixes up powdered milk for her
daughter. “But some days, we do go a little hungry.”
Crops Taxpayers
Support With Subsidies
Federal
crop subsidies began in the 1920s, when a quarter of the U.S. population worked
on farms. The funds were meant to buffer losses from fluctuating harvests and
natural disasters. Today most subsidies go to a few staple crops, produced
mainly by large agricultural companies and cooperatives.
How Subsidized
Crops Affect Diet
Subsidized corn is used for biofuel, corn syrup,
and, mixed with soybeans, chicken feed. Subsidies reduce crop prices but also
support the abundance of processed foods, which are more affordable but less
nutritious. Across income brackets, processed foods make up a large part of the
American diet.
-----------------------
GOP candidate for California governor did not believe the state’s economic
comeback story. So he lived a week on the street to prove it
Juliet Williams, Associated
Press | August 1, 2014 3:59 PM ET
More from Associated Press
Twitter Google+ LinkedIn Email Comments More
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The
Republican candidate for California governor said Thursday he spent a week
living as a homeless person in Fresno to highlight the disparity between the
governor’s claim that the state is making an economic comeback and the reality
faced by the working poor in the nation’s most populous state.
Neel Kashkari, a millionaire
and former Goldman Sachs banker who is far behind Gov. Jerry Brown in
pre-election polls, released a short documentary about the six nights he spent
sleeping in parking lots and on park benches, and wrote about his experience in
an opinion piece published in the Wall Street Journal.
Kashkari, 41, said he had
hoped to find work and stay in low-priced motels, but he was turned away from
dozens of businesses where he offered to wash dishes, sweep floors, pack boxes
and cook meals after taking a bus from Los Angeles to Fresno with $40 in his
pocket. He eventually turned to a homeless shelter for food.
Kashkari acknowledged that
his experiment gave him “just a taste” of the struggles faced by poor people
and said he could not truly understand their plight because he knew his
situation was only temporary.
Still, he said he wanted to
force a discussion about poverty.
“Gov. Brown is not talking
about poverty,” Kashkari said at a news conference outside a Sacramento food
bank. “He’s not talking about unemployment in our state. He’s not talking about
our failing schools. He’s declared a California comeback.”
Kashkari, a former U.S.
Treasury official who helped lead the federal bank bailout at the height of the
recession, also criticized the media for failing to challenge the Democratic
governor about endemic poverty in some parts of the state amid an economic boom
in others, such as Silicon Valley.
Dan Newman, a spokesman for
Brown’s campaign, said he was having difficulty reconciling Kashkari’s “bizarre
campaign stunt” with his assistance for big banks.
“If one truly cared about
the homeless and had $700-billion to spend, would he give it all to big banks
and ignore families struggling to stay in their homes?” Newman wrote in an
email.
California’s unemployment
rate fell to 7.3% in June, higher than the national average of 6.1%, but it
remained at 9.8% in the Central Valley city of Fresno. Still struggling with
fallout from the recession, the Central Valley has also been hit hard by the
state’s epic drought, which has fallowed fields and left many day labourers
without work in the region.
In the agriculture-dependent
city of Mendota 35 miles west of Fresno, unemployment is 29.8 per cent. Yet a
tech boom in the San Francisco Bay Area 150 miles west has fueled massive
growth, pushing the median home price above $1 million for the first time last
month. In San Mateo, south of San Francisco, unemployment is just 3.3 per cent.
Brown has touted what he
calls a California comeback, saying in his January State of the State address,
“And what a comeback it is: A million new jobs since 2010, a budgetary surplus
in the billions and a minimum wage rising to $10 an hour.” He did not directly
mention poverty.
AP Photo/Scott Smith
AP Photo/Scott SmithPeople
prepare meals in the kitchen of the Poverello House homeless shelter Thursday,
July 31, 2014, in Fresno, Calif.
Asked for specifics on his
plan to solve poverty in California, Kashkari said he would try to create jobs
through “pro-growth economic policies” such as fewer regulations, investing in
an overdue water storage solution, allowing greater development of oil and
natural gas resources, and bringing back manufacturing jobs.
Gabriela McNiel, a
spokeswoman for the Poverello House homeless shelter in Fresno, believes a
clean-cut man who recently asked about a job was Kashkari. Other people shown a
photo of the candidate on Thursday didn’t recognize him.
Kashkari wrote that five
days into his job search, “I asked myself: What would solve my problems? Food
stamps? Welfare? An increased minimum wage? No. I needed a job.”
“That’s an easy thing for a
millionaire to say,” Fresno County Democratic Party Chairman Michael D. Evans
said in a written response to Kashkari. He said welfare would have given
Kashkari safe, temporary housing with at least a shower and a bed.
“As for his being ‘hungry,’
well, food stamps would have provided some sustenance, ensuring his job search
was conducted on at least a half-full stomach,” Evans wrote.
Kashkari is considered a
longshot against the 76-year-old Brown, who is seeking an unprecedented fourth
term as governor after first serving from 1975 to 1983. A poll earlier this
month found Kashkari trailing Brown by 19 points and the race so far has
generated only sporadic public interest.
AP Photo/Scott Smith
AP Photo/Scott SmithA sign
is affixed to a fence at Poverello House homeless shelter Thursday, July 31,
2014, in Fresno, Calif. Republican candidate for governor Neel Kashkari said he
used services at the shelter when he spent a week living as a homeless person
in Fresno to highlight the disparity between Gov. Jerry Brownís claim that the
state is making an economic comeback and the reality faced by the working poor
in the nation's most populous state.
Kashkari said he walked for
miles with a backpack, change of clothes and toothpaste in 100-degree heat
searching for work. He said he showered once and was awakened five of the six
nights by security guards or police asking him to move on.
He said he was committed to
finding a job and had to change his focus about halfway into the experiment as
his money was running out.
“It was find a job, find a
job, find a job. And then it switched: I’ve got to find food,” he said.
Aaron McLear, a spokesman
for the campaign, said Kashkari later donated $500 to the homeless shelter that
gave him food, which the shelter confirmed.
Associated Press writer
Scott Smith in Fresno contributed to this story.
AP Photo/Kashkari For
Governor campaign
AP Photo/Kashkari For
Governor campaignIn this still frame from video provided by the Kasakari For
Governor campaign, Neel Kashkari, the Republican candidate for California
governor, speaks to the camera during a week he posed as a homeless and
unemployed person on the streets of Fresno, Calif.
BLOGGED :
ONE BILLION RISING
F**king Female Castration- One Billion Rising-UNITED
NATIONS COUNTRIES- No more excuses- FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION- END FEMALE
CIRCUMCISM NOW- GETCHA CANADA ON- this is what actually happens 2 these little
girls and young women- IMAGINE!!!!! ewwwww
BLOGGED:
CANADA MILITARY NEWS JULY 20 2014- What would Mother Teresa
say, Princess Diana say, Michael Jackson say in this f**ked up evil world that
is run by despots, political greed and thieves- HUMANITY - WE MUST TAKE BACK
OUR WORLD- IT'S TIME-Afghanistan/Canada/USA/Lord and Saviour's Israel/stolen
childrens souls
--------------------
BLOGGED:
IDLE NO MORE CANADA- WHAT
THE F**K???- u deal with China 4 Oil???? – u betray millions and millions of
Canadians who stepped up and supported u and our environment- entrusting u with
our nature- some tribes will die 2 save environment- others sell out??? WTF???
CANADA’S BROKEN HEART
-----------------
God Bless Afghanistan... such beautiful people.... Islam is such a beautiful Faith... all this Muslim hate on Muslims is just so ongoing and heartbreaking.... so tired of it... why can't there be progress and peace?
Afghanistan election crisis deepens with new fraud
allegations
By Hamid Shalizi and Jessica Donati
KABUL
Sun Aug 3, 2014 12:10pm EDT
(Reuters)
- Afghanistan's troubled presidential election plunged deeper into crisis on
Sunday when one of the main contenders accused a deputy of President Hamid
Karzai of orchestrating fraud in favour of his rival.
Supporters
of Abdullah Abdullah, a former foreign minister, released an audio recording
they said was Vice President Mohammad Karim Khalili encouraging vote-rigging in
favour of Ashraf Ghani, the other contender in the race.
Khalili's
and Ghani's staff dismissed the recording as a fake.
Allegations
of mass fraud have overshadowed the outcome of the vote, which was meant to be
the first democratic transition of power in Afghanistan's history and came
before the withdrawal of international combat troops at the end of this year.
The
eight million votes cast in the second round of the election, held in June, are
currently being audited under U.N. supervision, according to a deal brokered by
the United States.
The
audit has also been dogged by delays as Abdullah and Ghani have not been able
to agree on some technicalities, such as how to disqualify votes.
The
recording released on Sunday is the most recent that Abdullah's campaign
alleges is evidence of high-level collusion in an effort to ensure Ghani, a
former finance minister and World Bank technocrat, is declared the winner.
The
speaker allegedly encourages cheating at the highest level of the
administration to help Ghani win.
"I
am aware that in all efforts within the government and within the electoral
commissions and with his Excellency the President of Afghanistan there exists
an agreeable perception of the victory of this team and this candidate,"
the speaker says after referring to one of Ghani's running mates, Sarwar
Danish.
STOP-START
AUDIT
In
what is purportedly an address to close political associates before the June 14
run-off, the speaker is heard saying: "The election outcome must turn in
favour of this team... even if these means are against electoral
mechanisms."
Abdullah's
team did not say where the speech was delivered, or how the recording was
obtained. Its authenticity could not be independently verified by Reuters.
Karzai's
office said it had no immediate comment.
Both
Khalili's and Ghani's staff said the tape was fake.
"The
audio is completely fake ... Khalili does not speak like that," said Abbas
Basir, chief of staff for Khalili. "Our rival team is resorting to such an
act because they are under immense pressure," he added.
Results
from early counting, which was halted by previous allegations by Abdullah of
vote rigging, showed Ghani leading with a substantial majority.
The
auditing process re-started on Sunday after a week-long delay, but without
Abdullah's auditors who boycotted the process. However, after another day of
intense discussions, his team agreed to resume work on Monday.
The
U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, James Cunningham, told reporters on Sunday he
was hopeful an outcome would be reached in coming weeks and that the new
president would be known by the end of the month.
That
said, the original roadblock - a disagreement over how votes should be
invalidated - remained apparently unresolved and diplomats privately worry that
it could be months before Karzai's replacement is known. Afghanistan had been
due to swear in a new president at the weekend.
The
delay complicates the signing of two agreements that would allow the United
States and NATO to maintain a small military presence in Afghanistan for
training and counter-insurgency operations.
Karzai
has refused to sign the security deals, but both Ghani and Abdullah say they
will enact the pacts.
(Writing
by Jeremy Laurence; Editing by Lynne O'Donnell and Gareth Jones)
--- ---
Civilized people are so horrified by the continuous cruelty.... it ha 3 get better... God bless our Nato troops
PTSD rises by a fifth in
British military
Post-traumatic stress
disorder among military personnel rose by 19% last year as Britain prepared to
end operations in Afghanistan
The number of service personnel diagnosed with
post-traumatic stress disorder rose by nearly a fifth last year amid concern
about the enduring psychological toll of the Iraq and Afghan campaigns.
The Ministry of Defence’s
latest figures show there was also a 12 per cent increase in the rate of mental
disorders as a whole, including depression and anxiety.
Combat Stress said the
substantial increase in PTSD cases was a “matter of concern” and came at the
same time as an unprecedented surge in demand for military mental health
treatment.
The veterans’ mental health
charity warned earlier this year it had seen a 57 per cent increase in former
soldiers, sailors and airmen needing treatment after serving in Afghanistan.
Referrals from those who had
served in Iraq rose by a fifth, the charity said, even though combat operations
ended in 2009.
------------------
Islamic State grabs Iraqi
dam and oilfield in victory over Kurds
By
Ahmed Rasheed and Raheem Salman
BAGHDAD Sun Aug 3, 2014 2:58pm EDT
(Reuters) - Islamic State fighters seized control of Iraq's biggest
dam, an oilfield and three more towns on Sunday after inflicting their first
major defeat on Kurdish forces since sweeping across much of northern Iraq in
June.
Capture of the electricity-generating Mosul Dam,
after an offensive of barely 24 hours, could give the Sunni militants the
ability to flood major Iraqi cities or withhold water from farms, raising the
stakes in their bid to topple Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite-led
government.
"The terrorist gangs of the Islamic State
have taken control of Mosul Dam after the withdrawal of Kurdish forces without
a fight," said Iraqi state television.
The swift withdrawal of Kurdish
"peshmerga" troops was an apparent severe blow to one of the only
forces in Iraq that until now had stood firm against the Sunni Islamist
fighters who aim to redraw the borders of the Middle East.
The Islamic State, which sees Iraq's majority
Shi'ites as apostates who deserve to be killed, also seized the Ain Zalah oil
field - adding to four others already under its control that provide funding
for operations - and three towns.
Initially strong Kurdish resistance evaporated
after the start of an offensive to take the town of Zumar. The Islamists then
hoisted their black flags there, a ritual that has often preceded mass
executions of their captured opponents and the imposition of an ideology even
al-Qaeda finds excessive.
The group, which has declared a caliphate in
parts of Iraq and Syria to rule over all Muslims, poses the biggest challenge
to the stability of OPEC member Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.
FIGHTING FOR TOWNS
On Sunday its members were also involved in
fighting in a border town far away in Lebanon, a sign of its ambitions across
the frontiers of the Middle East.
It controls cities in Iraq's Tigris and Euphrates
valleys north and west of Baghdad, and a swathe of Syria stretching from the
Iraqi border in the east to Aleppo in the northwest.
Iraq's Kurds, who rule themselves in a northern
enclave guarded by the "peshmerga" units, had expanded areas under
their control in recent weeks while avoiding direct confrontation with the
Islamic State, even as Iraqi central government troops fled.
But the towns lost on Sunday were in territory
the Kurds had held for many years, undermining suggestions that the Islamic
State's advance has helped the Kurdish cause.
Witnesses said Islamic State fighters were also
trying to take control of the town of Rabia near the Syrian border and were
engaged in clashes with Syrian Kurds who had crossed the frontier after Iraqi
Kurds withdrew.
The latest gains have placed Islamic State
fighters near Dohuk Province, one of three in the autonomous Kurdish region,
which has been spared any serious threat to its security while war raged
throughout the rest of Iraq.
Since thousands of U.S.-trained Iraqi soldiers
fled the Islamic State offensive, the Kurdish fighters were seen alongside
Shi'ite militia to the south as the main lines of defense against the
militants, who vow to march on Baghdad.
By calling into question the effectiveness of the
Kurdish fighters, Sunday's advances may increase pressure on bickering Iraqi
leaders to form a power-sharing government capable of countering the Islamic
State.
LITTLE RESISTANCE
Two people who live near Mosul Dam told Reuters
Kurdish troops had loaded their vehicles with belongings including air
conditioners and fled.
Islamic State fighters attacked Zumar from three
directions in pick-up trucks mounted with weapons, defeating Kurdish forces
that had poured reinforcements into the town, witnesses said.
The Islamic State later also seized the town of
Sinjar, where witnesses said residents had fled after Kurdish fighters put up
little resistance. It was not immediately clear why the Kurds, usually known as
formidable fighters, pulled back without a fight.
On its Twitter site, the Islamic State posted a
picture of one of its masked fighters holding up a pistol and sitting at the
abandoned desk of the mayor of Sinjar. Behind him was the image of a famous
Kurdish guerrilla leader.
In a statement on its website, the Islamic State
said it had killed scores of peshmerga, the Kurdish fighters whose name means
"those who confront death". Those deaths could not be independently
verified. "Hundreds fled leaving vehicles and a huge number of weapons and
munitions and the brothers control many areas," the Islamic State
statement said. "The fighters arrived in the border triangle between Iraq,
Syria and Turkey."
The Islamic State has systematically blown up
Shi'ite mosques and shrines in territory it has seized, fuelling levels of sectarian
violence unseen since the very worst weeks of Iraq's 2006-2007 civil war.
The group, which shortened its name after June's
offensive from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), has stalled in
its drive to reach Baghdad, halting just before the town of Samarra, 100 km (62
miles) north of the capital.
ISLAMIC STATE ADVANCES
The Islamic State has been trying to consolidate
its gains, setting its sights on strategic towns near oil fields, as well as
border crossings with Syria, so that it can move easily back and forth and
transport supplies.
So far, the Islamic State is not near the major
oil fields of the northern city of Kirkuk, which were seized by the Kurds in
the chaos that followed the Islamic State's advance. It controls part of a pipeline
from Kirkuk to Turkey which has been idle for months because of its attacks in
the area.
The Islamic State has capitalized on Sunni
disenchantment with Maliki by winning support or at least tolerance from some
more moderate Sunni communities in Iraq that had fought against al Qaeda during
the U.S. "surge" offensive of 2006-2007.
Maliki's opponents say the prime minister, a
Shi'ite Islamist who is negotiating to try to stay in power for a third term
after an inconclusive parliamentary election in April, is to blame for
galvanizing the insurgency by excluding Sunnis from power. Kurdish leaders have
also called for Maliki to step down to create a more inclusive government in
Baghdad.
The Kurds have long dreamed of their own
independent state, an aspiration that has angered Maliki, who has frequently
clashed with the non-Arabs over budgets, land and oil.
In July, the Kurdish political bloc ended
participation in Iraq's national government in protest against Maliki's
accusation that Kurds were allowing "terrorists" to stay in Arbil,
capital of their semi-autonomous region.
SEEKING WEAPONS
In another move certain to infuriate the Baghdad
government, the Kurdish region is pressing Washington for sophisticated weapons
it says Kurdish fighters need to push back the Islamist militants, Kurdish and
U.S. officials said.
Sunday's withdrawal may help them press their
case.
Maliki needs the Kurds, who gained experience
fighting Saddam Hussein's forces, to help defend his country from the Islamic
State, whose leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has a $10 million U.S. bounty on his
head.
The Islamic State's ambitions have alarmed other
Arab states who fear their success could embolden militants region-wide.
Islamic State fighters were among militants who
clashed with Lebanese forces overnight in and around Lebanon's border town of
Arsal. At least 10 Lebanese soldiers and an unknown number of militants and
civilians died in the fighting, security officials said.
There has been no indication so far whether the
advance in northern Iraq and the fighting in Lebanon were coordinated.
On Friday, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah urged
regional leaders and religious scholars to prevent Islam from being hijacked by
militants.
Sunni Saudi Arabia considers the Islamic State a
terrorist organization, but Maliki and other Iraqi Shi'ites blame it for
sustaining Sunni militancy by backing other sectarian groups.
(Writing by
Michael Georgy; Editing by Peter Graff
and Tom Heneghan)
comment:
These
insurgents are funded by the Saudis, in an effort to upsurp Shia majorities.
The financial clearing house is in Ciudad del Este. They realized they couldn’t
win against Assad w/the FSA and don’t stand a chance against Erdogan.
Oil can be sold quietly, on the “spot market”.
Holy moly, Lebanese Hezbollah all the way to Iraq? I smell Iran.
Oil can be sold quietly, on the “spot market”.
Holy moly, Lebanese Hezbollah all the way to Iraq? I smell Iran.
THE
EVIL VS THE GOOD
In the history of modern warfare, no terrorist
group has ever honored a cease-fire.
QUOTE:
Muslim
Brotherhood parent group of Hamas, ISIS. Boko whatever, Alqaeda, Taliban...
whatever evil snake ...spawns hatred and
persecution of Christians, secular
women, non-believing Muslims, infidels and gays.
QUOTE:
“…[W]hat
we’re seeing happen between Israel and Gaza is not a localized conflict, but is
much, is part of a much bigger regional war. And that war has Iran, Hezbollah
and the Muslim Brotherhood on one side and it has the forces of what I would
call reason and moderation on the other side – being Israel, Egypt, Jordan,
Saudi Arabia and the countries of the Gulf. And United States has an interest
in ensuring that the forces of reason and moderation prevail." (imho.... saudis????? Saudis????
4ukidding???)
In
the history of modern warfare, no terrorist group has ever honored a
cease-fire. Hamas has broken every cease-fire it ever said it would honor.
Every single one.
Even
the Israel-Hamas 2012 cease fire, brokered by then-Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, was simply agreed to by Hamas to give it an opportunity to restock its
military arsenal, pressure Israel to lift its restrictions on the import of
cement and steel into Gaza – material that Clinton said would be used to build
hospitals and schools, but in fact was used to build a network of underground
tunnels into Israel and build a subterranean network of underground bunkers,
weapons storage facilities and launching pads.
Hamas
simply used the cease-fire to rebuild its military infrastructure and as predicted
by Israeli military intelligence, would simply break the cease-fire when it
felt ready to take on the Israelis once again.
And on
Friday, Hamas did the exact same thing. It agreed, through its main financial
backer Qatar (which is the world’s largest financial sponsor of terrorist
groups including Hamas, Hizbollah, Al Qaeda and Al Nusra in Syria) and which
the U.S. inexplicably anointed as its interlocutor to Hamas, that it would
honor a 72-hour cease-fire initiated by the Obama-Kerry administration.
The
underlying causes of the current Israeli-Hamas war, initiated by Hamas with its
launching of tens of thousands of missiles into Israel and its use of
underground tunnels from Gaza to carry out murderous attacks against Israel
civilians, is that Hamas, like Al Qaeda, is a nihilistic radical Islamic
organization dedicated to the destruction of the Jewish state and the
establishment of an Islamic caliphate.
The
term “underlying causes” directly implies there are legitimate rational
grievances by Hamas. Yes, the same “underlying causes” that motivated Adolph
Hitler to carry out a worldwide war of conquest, including the Holocaust of six
million Jews. Hamas is the embodiment of pure evil. And its motivation is the
same as that of Al Qaeda and ISIS.
Hamas
on Friday succeeded in kidnapping an Israeli officer, after launching a suicide
bombing against Israeli soldiers in a well-planned operation 90 minutes after
the cease-fire had gone into effect.Immediately following the suicide bombing
that killed several Israeli soldiers (still unreported), a group of up to 10
Hamas terrorists immediately descended upon the scene of the bombing where
chaos reigned supreme, and kidnapped the Israeli officer in charge of the
company stationed in Gaza.
This
is a classic war of good versus evil. The only difference between the Muslim
Brotherhood and its terrorist offspring is the deception perpetrated by the
Muslim Brotherhood in portraying itself as opposed to violence and committed to
political pluralism. Nothing could be further from the truth. All one needs to
do is read the covenant of the Muslim Brotherhood in which it states its
commitment to carry out jihad to dominate the world, read the contemporary
incendiary statements of Muslim Brotherhood officials issued in Arabic and not
in English, and observe the Muslim Brotherhood hatred and persecution of of
Christians, secular women, non-believing Muslims, infidels and gays.
AND...
A
weakened Hamas clings on to the people's support in Gaza
Jason
Burke in Gaza City
The
Observer, Saturday 2 August 2014 20.29 BST
Palestinians
may question the armed struggle but they won't speak out against Hamas in the
middle of a conflict
------------
Two
Wolves – A Cherokee Legend
An
old Cherokee chief is teaching his grandson about life:
“A
fight is going on inside me,” he said to the boy. “It is a terrible fight and
it is between two wolves.
“One
is evil – he is anger, envy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity,
guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, self-doubt, and
ego.
“The
other is good – he is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness,
benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion, and faith.
“This
same fight is going on inside you – and inside every other person, too.”
The
grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather, “Which
wolf will win?”
The
old chief simply replied, “The one you feed.”
---
HUMOUR....
MIND U A FEW YEARS BACK... MILLIONS WATCHING THE BACKS OF OUR TROOPS WERE VERY
ANGRY....
A
Canadian female libertarian wrote a lot of letters to the Canadian government,
complaining about the treatment of captive insurgents (terrorists) being held
in Afghanistan National Correctional System facilities. She demanded a response
to her letter. She received back the following reply:
National
Defense Headquarters
M Gen George R. Pearkes Bldg.,
15 NT 101 Colonel By Drive Ottawa , ON
K1A 0K2
Canada
Dear Concerned Citizen,
Thank
you for your recent letter expressing your profound concern of treatment of the
Taliban and Al Qaeda terrorists captured by Canadian Forces, who were
subsequently transferred to the Afghanistan Government and are currently being
held by Afghan officials in Afghanistan National Correctional System
facilities. Our administration takes these matters seriously and your opinions
were heard loud and clear here in Ottawa . You will be pleased to learn, thanks
to the concerns of citizens like yourself, we are creating a new department
here at the Department of National Defense, to be called 'Liberals Accept
Responsibility for Killers' program, or L.A.R.K. for short.
In accordance with the guidelines of this new
program, we have decided, on a trial basis, to divert several terrorists and
place them in homes of concerned citizens such as yourself, around the country,
under those citizen's personal care. Your personal detainee has been selected
and is scheduled for transportation under heavily armed guard to your residence
in Toronto next Monday.
Ali Mohammed Ahmed bin Mahmud is your
detainee, and is to be cared for pursuant to the standards you personally
demanded in your letter of complaint. You will be pleased to know that we will
conduct weekly inspections to ensure that your standards of care for Ahmed are
commensurate with your recommendations.
Although Ahmed is a sociopath and extremely
violent, we hope that your sensitivity to what you described as his
'attitudinal problem' will help him overcome those character flaws. Perhaps you
are correct in describing these problems as mere cultural differences. We
understand that you plan to offer counseling and home schooling, however, we
strongly recommend that you hire some assistant caretakers.
Please advise any Jewish friends, neighbors or
relatives about your house guest, as he might get agitated or even violent, but
we are sure you can reason with him. He is also expert at making a wide variety
of explosive devices from common household products, so you may wish to keep
those items locked up, unless in your opinion, this might offend him. Your
adopted terrorist is extremely proficient in hand-to-hand combat and can
extinguish human life with such simple items as a pencil or nail clippers. We
advise that you do not ask him to demonstrate these skills either in your home
or wherever you choose to take him while helping him adjust to life in our
country.
Ahmed will not wish to interact with you or
your daughters except sexually, since he views females as a form of property,
thereby having no rights, including refusal of his sexual demands. This is a
particularly sensitive subject for him.
You also should know that he has shown violent
tendencies around women who fail to comply with the dress code that he will
recommend as more appropriate attire. I'm sure you will come to enjoy the
anonymity offered by the burka over time. Just remember that it is all part of
'respecting his culture and religious beliefs' as described in your letter.
You take good care of Ahmed and remember that
we will try to have a counselor available to help you over any difficulties you
encounter while Ahmed is adjusting to Canadian culture.
Thanks again for your concern. We truly
appreciate it when folks like you keep us informed of the proper way to do our
job and care for our fellow man. Good luck and God bless you.
Cordially,
Gordon O'Connor
Minister of National Defense
---------
BRILLIANT
ARTICLE...
One
Pissed off Canadian Housewife ON DEVOTION 2 OUR TROOPS... CANADA STYLE
This is very good PLEASE read....
Thought you might like to read this
letter to the editor. Ever notice how some people just seem to know
how to write a letter?
This one surely does!
This was written by a Canadian woman, but oh
how
it also applies to the U.S.A., U.K. and
Australia .
THIS ONE PACKS A FIRM PUNCH
Written by a housewife in New Brunswick , to
her local newspaper. This is one ticked off
lady...
"Are
we fighting a war on terror or aren't we? Was
it or was it not, started by Islamic people
who
brought it to our shores on September 11, 2001
and have continually threatened to do so
since?
Were
people from all over the world, not brutally murdered
that day, in downtown Manhattan , across the
Potomac from
the capitol of the USA and in a field in
Pennsylvania?
Did nearly three thousand men, women and
children die a horrible, burning or crushing death that day, or didn't they?
Do you think I care about four U. S. Marines
urinating on some dead Taliban insurgents?
And I'm supposed to care that a few Taliban
were
claiming to be tortured by a justice system of
a
nation they are fighting against in a brutal
Insurgency.
I'll care about the Koran when the fanatics in
the Middle
East, start caring about the Holy Bible, the
mere belief
of which, is a crime punishable by beheading
in Afghanistan .
I'll
care when these thugs tell the world they are
sorry for hacking off Nick Berg's head, while
Berg
screamed through his gurgling slashed throat.
I'll
care when the cowardly so-called insurgents
in Afghanistan , come out and fight like men,
instead of disrespecting their own religion by
hiding in Mosques and behind women and
children.
I'll care when the mindless zealots who blow
themselves up in search of Nirvana, care about
the
innocent children within range of their
suicide Bombs.
I'll
care when the Canadian media stops pretending that
their freedom of Speech on stories, is more
important than
the lives of the soldiers on the ground or
their families waiting
at home, to hear about them when something
happens.
In
the meantime, when I hear a story about a
CANADIAN soldier roughing up an Insurgent
terrorist to obtain information, know this:
I don't care.
When I see a wounded terrorist get shot in the
head when he is told not to move because he
might be booby-trapped, you can take it to the
bank:
I
don't care. Shoot him again.
When I hear that a prisoner, who was issued a
Koran and a prayer mat, and fed 'special' food, that is paid for by my tax
dollars, is complaining that his holy book is being 'mishandled,' you can
absolutely believe, in your heart of hearts:
I don't care.
And
oh, by the way, I've noticed that sometimes
it's spelled 'Koran' and other times 'Quran.'
Well, Jimmy Crack Corn you guessed it.
I
don't care!!
If
you agree with this viewpoint, pass this on to
all your E-mail Friends. Sooner or later,
it'll get to
the people responsible for this ridiculous
behavior!
If
you don't agree, then by all means hit the delete
button. Should you choose the latter, then
please don't
complain when more atrocities committed by
radical
Muslims happen here in our great Country! And
may I add:
Some
people spend an entire lifetime wondering, if
during their life on earth, they made a
difference in
the world. But, the Soldiers don't have that
problem.
I have another quote that I would like to
share AND...I hope you forward All this.
One
last thought for the day:
Only
five defining forces have ever offered to die for you:
1.
Jesus Christ
2. The British Soldier.
3. The Canadian Soldier.
4. The US Soldier, and
5. The Australian Soldier
One died for your soul,
the other four, for you and your children's
Freedom.
YOU
MIGHT WANT TO PASS THIS ON,
AS MANY SEEM TO FORGET!
and....
very critical 2 mid- 2000s..... and treatment of the monsters???
CANADIANS
ARE POLITE??? PASSIVE???- I DON'T THINK SO... hugs and love folks
Yet
another highly-illuminated tabloid-esque ‘Breaking News’ report attempts to
steal my attention as it makes its way upon my screen. It was
only four minutes since the last one scrolled across. My eyes
are reading the details linked to the atrocities that I am attempting
to process in the images above; more Palestinian children dead in another
rocket launch by the Israelis..
But
what am I really seeing? There is no disputing the horrendous stories
that I am bearing witness to through the media – this is humanity at
its lowest, but still the question remains; what am I really seeing? The
‘facts’ of this age-old war are unclear and require careful analysis; the
majority of the media leans towards supporting Israel’s right to defend itself,
and perhaps in retaliation to the negligence shown by these multi-national
corporations, it would seem that a large percentage of the public actually side
with the Palestinians.
Let’s
not be blind-sided by either though; the Palestinians fire their many
rockets from suburban areas and the Israelis are the proverbial ‘Goliath’ –
neither are innocent, but their individual causes are understandable. So how do
we solve the issue and what side should we really be taking? After all, sharing
articles or having a discussion over a coffee in Nero’s (or any High Street
coffee chain) is not changing a thing but only serving our self-righteous egos
from our outsider side-lined perspective.
The
truth is, to solve the issue requires an abstinence from side-taking and a
removal of finger pointing. Listen, Israel have killed and Hamas have
killed – one life is not worth more than anyone else’s, and so both are guilty.
What is to blame however is their Ideals. Attack the ideals and you dismantle
the argument. The Jewish people, the Jewish faith and Israel are not
guilty of a thing, but perhaps Zionism is. The Palestinians, Islam and the
Arab world share in many ways the same innocence as the Jews, but when Islam is
tainted with the political intentions of power-hungry fanatics,
then groups such as Hamas or the Islamic State (ISIS) are allowed to
run riot in whatever fashion they choose. The West is guilty in much the same
way, but that’s a whole other article.
So
when you next share an article or have your discussion over your tasty
beverage, remember that you cannot dismantle their guns, but you can break
down their ideas. Get to their minds and you will win the battle.
-----------------
Late news... our Israel
child is dead.... am so sorry...
Israel’s employs ‘Hannibal Procedure’ to bombard kidnappers’ escape routes
— even if it kills captured soldier
----------------
PHOTO- ROCKETS- OMG....
------------------
Pro-Israel Rallies March
Across the Globe Despite Genocidal World Media: Go Freedom Lovers!
It is nothing short of
glorious to report on the number of pro-Israel marches worldwide in the past
few days.
Last night, thousands
marched in Helsinki, Finland here.
And New York City here.
Thousands in EDL in London.
Rallies in Brussels,
Hamburg, Los Angeles and Miami.
Jewish youth movements were
planning to demonstrate in Brussels at 5 p.m. local time, outside the
Israeli consulate. An
afternoon demonstration was also planned for
Hamburg.
A spokesman for the
organizers, Zvika Klein of
World Bnei-Akiva, told The
Jerusalem
Post that "all public
Jewish events
in Europe require police
protection" and that a Paris event in support
of Israel was canceled due
to information regarding threats from
pro-Palestinian groups.
Jewish organizations in
Los-Angeles and
Miami were also planning
rallies and Klein expected a large turn-out.
demonstration in support of
Israel was held in Vienna on Friday. (here)
UPDATE: The beautiful in
Montreal
-----
J uly 29, 2014 7:00 pm JST
Middle East chaos: history of intermixing ethnic groups, religions, states
YUZO WAKI, Nikkei columnist
TOKYO -- It has been 100 years since the outbreak of
World War I. Three powers -- Germany and the Austro-Hungarian and
Ottoman empires -- eventually were defeated, and in the wake of the
conflict, numerous nation-states were born. Syria, which is now gripped
by civil war, and Iraq, which is fracturing, were once parts of the
Ottoman Empire.
Pursuing the origins of today's problems in the Middle East, one discovers that many arose from the national borders drawn by Britain and France as a result of that war. Those borders were made without regard to the distribution of ethnic groups, tribes, religions or sects.
The common feeling of belonging that constitutes national identity is forged through shared history. Even in the Middle East, many individuals share the experience of cheering on their teams in international soccer matches. On the other hand, when the makeup of ethnic groups and religions within a country is complex and overlaps, conflicts over the distribution of political leadership rights and economic benefits weakens the sense of national unity and divisions can grow.
In Iraq, Sunni Muslims in the central part of the country have revolted against the political administration led by Shia, who account for 60% of the population and reside primarily in the south. Kurds in the north, meanwhile, have also strengthened their opposition to the central government. These waves of opposition have helped extremists gather strength.
Sunni extremist forces that repeatedly carried out acts of terrorism within the country and have been involved in the Syrian civil war have taken control of some Iraqi cities, including Mosul. They have widened their zone of support, which straddles the two countries, and at the end of June proclaimed the establishment of the Islamic state. They emphasize the repudiation of national borders based on the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 between Britain and France.
Secrecy
The agreement, negotiated in secret, carved up the Ottoman Empire. Partially revised, it placed Syria and Lebanon within France's sphere of influence, and Iraq, Jordan and Palestine under British control. It became the foundation of the political map of today's Middle East.
Following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, which encompassed numerous ethnic groups, religions and religious sects, Turkey itself was reorganized into a "nation of Turkish people." But a nationality and an ethnic group are not the same thing. If people of Georgian descent or Albanian descent share a sense of belonging as Turkish people, they are Turkish. However, there was also an ethnic group that did not share this sense of nationality -- the Kurds, who missed the chance for independence and autonomy in the immediate aftermath of World War I.
One Kurd who spoke to me came to Europe as a stowaway in the early 1990s and sought to be recognized as a refugee in Austria. However, no matter how many times he applied, he could not gain refugee status. The authorities wanted to know what country he came from. When he answered "Kurdistan," he was then told, "There is no such country; it is Turkey." His response was to tell them that they were wrong, and that he was from Kurdistan.
For many years, Turkey propped up the image that it had no ethnic problems within its borders. It was only when the Welfare Party came to power in 1996, touting "ethnic coexistence within an Islamic collective," that a policy of reconciliation with the Kurds was promulgated. The Welfare Party was crushed by the military, but the Justice and Development Party (AKP), which was of the same essence, has held power since 2002 and has pursued a peaceful route with the Kurdish armed anti-government organization.
Iraq and new lands
The biggest current issue regarding the situation of the Kurds is whether its regional government, which began self-rule in three provinces of northern Iraq under the protection of the U.S. following the Gulf War, is heading toward independence as the Iraqi state fractures.
The regional government has seized the Kirkuk oil fields, which it asserts are part of the Kurdish region, despite being outside the zone of self-rule. Masoud Barzani, president of the region, has even said he will hold a public referendum on the question of independence. The problem is whether the region can become economically self-sufficient.
Iraq's Kurdistan region is heavily dependent on Turkey economically, relying on it to supply electricity and improve infrastructure. Crude oil produced within the region and transportation routes all run through Turkey. Over the border, voices have emerged saying that an independent state contained within Iraq's national borders could be recognized.
However, the U.S. government, which has stressed that a unified Iraq should be maintained, is seeking cooperation to create a national unity government. At the present time, the Kurdistan Regional Government has two aims -- to secure its interests within Iraq and to strengthen the economic foundations needed to become independent.
What has led to the fracturing of Iraq? Following the collapse of the Saddam Hussein government, which has primarily composed of minority Sunnis, the majority of political power went to Shias after elections. In response, "forces that understand they cannot win through elections have the incentive to overthrow the structure through different forces," University of Tokyo Associate Professor Satoshi Ikeuchi explained.
There has also been a backlash against Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who has been criticized for becoming dictatorial. Some Sunni tribes have begun cooperating with the extremists, who have managed to quickly gain control of a broad swathe of Iraqi land. Such Sunni tribes also reside in Syria, and are cooperating with forces seeking to overthrow the Bashar Assad government. Political power in Syria lies with the Alawis, who are close to the Shias. Such a complicated regional and ethnic makeup means extremists in the area are operating in a way that transcends national borders.
In the Gaza Strip, which has no prospects for independence, the human cost of the Israeli military onslaught is growing. Regarding the latest clashes and delays in implementing a cease-fire, Arab nations have censured Israel while simultaneously criticizing Hamas, the fundamentalist organization that is the de facto ruler of Gaza. They are giving priority to restoring peace and order in the region while seeking flexibility from Hamas.
Merely underscoring the inconsistency of the order imposed by the U.S. and Europe will not resolve the current upheaval. The idea of Iraq transitioning to a federal system has been discussed. But with an intermixture of ethnic groups and religions that differs from a century ago, there is also a risk that strengthening the independence of the Sunni region could lead to the oppression of the Shia minority living there.
Regardless, what is important now is to create a broad agreement for avoiding any further upheaval.
Pursuing the origins of today's problems in the Middle East, one discovers that many arose from the national borders drawn by Britain and France as a result of that war. Those borders were made without regard to the distribution of ethnic groups, tribes, religions or sects.
The common feeling of belonging that constitutes national identity is forged through shared history. Even in the Middle East, many individuals share the experience of cheering on their teams in international soccer matches. On the other hand, when the makeup of ethnic groups and religions within a country is complex and overlaps, conflicts over the distribution of political leadership rights and economic benefits weakens the sense of national unity and divisions can grow.
In Iraq, Sunni Muslims in the central part of the country have revolted against the political administration led by Shia, who account for 60% of the population and reside primarily in the south. Kurds in the north, meanwhile, have also strengthened their opposition to the central government. These waves of opposition have helped extremists gather strength.
Sunni extremist forces that repeatedly carried out acts of terrorism within the country and have been involved in the Syrian civil war have taken control of some Iraqi cities, including Mosul. They have widened their zone of support, which straddles the two countries, and at the end of June proclaimed the establishment of the Islamic state. They emphasize the repudiation of national borders based on the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 between Britain and France.
Secrecy
The agreement, negotiated in secret, carved up the Ottoman Empire. Partially revised, it placed Syria and Lebanon within France's sphere of influence, and Iraq, Jordan and Palestine under British control. It became the foundation of the political map of today's Middle East.
Following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, which encompassed numerous ethnic groups, religions and religious sects, Turkey itself was reorganized into a "nation of Turkish people." But a nationality and an ethnic group are not the same thing. If people of Georgian descent or Albanian descent share a sense of belonging as Turkish people, they are Turkish. However, there was also an ethnic group that did not share this sense of nationality -- the Kurds, who missed the chance for independence and autonomy in the immediate aftermath of World War I.
One Kurd who spoke to me came to Europe as a stowaway in the early 1990s and sought to be recognized as a refugee in Austria. However, no matter how many times he applied, he could not gain refugee status. The authorities wanted to know what country he came from. When he answered "Kurdistan," he was then told, "There is no such country; it is Turkey." His response was to tell them that they were wrong, and that he was from Kurdistan.
For many years, Turkey propped up the image that it had no ethnic problems within its borders. It was only when the Welfare Party came to power in 1996, touting "ethnic coexistence within an Islamic collective," that a policy of reconciliation with the Kurds was promulgated. The Welfare Party was crushed by the military, but the Justice and Development Party (AKP), which was of the same essence, has held power since 2002 and has pursued a peaceful route with the Kurdish armed anti-government organization.
Iraq and new lands
The biggest current issue regarding the situation of the Kurds is whether its regional government, which began self-rule in three provinces of northern Iraq under the protection of the U.S. following the Gulf War, is heading toward independence as the Iraqi state fractures.
The regional government has seized the Kirkuk oil fields, which it asserts are part of the Kurdish region, despite being outside the zone of self-rule. Masoud Barzani, president of the region, has even said he will hold a public referendum on the question of independence. The problem is whether the region can become economically self-sufficient.
Iraq's Kurdistan region is heavily dependent on Turkey economically, relying on it to supply electricity and improve infrastructure. Crude oil produced within the region and transportation routes all run through Turkey. Over the border, voices have emerged saying that an independent state contained within Iraq's national borders could be recognized.
However, the U.S. government, which has stressed that a unified Iraq should be maintained, is seeking cooperation to create a national unity government. At the present time, the Kurdistan Regional Government has two aims -- to secure its interests within Iraq and to strengthen the economic foundations needed to become independent.
What has led to the fracturing of Iraq? Following the collapse of the Saddam Hussein government, which has primarily composed of minority Sunnis, the majority of political power went to Shias after elections. In response, "forces that understand they cannot win through elections have the incentive to overthrow the structure through different forces," University of Tokyo Associate Professor Satoshi Ikeuchi explained.
There has also been a backlash against Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who has been criticized for becoming dictatorial. Some Sunni tribes have begun cooperating with the extremists, who have managed to quickly gain control of a broad swathe of Iraqi land. Such Sunni tribes also reside in Syria, and are cooperating with forces seeking to overthrow the Bashar Assad government. Political power in Syria lies with the Alawis, who are close to the Shias. Such a complicated regional and ethnic makeup means extremists in the area are operating in a way that transcends national borders.
In the Gaza Strip, which has no prospects for independence, the human cost of the Israeli military onslaught is growing. Regarding the latest clashes and delays in implementing a cease-fire, Arab nations have censured Israel while simultaneously criticizing Hamas, the fundamentalist organization that is the de facto ruler of Gaza. They are giving priority to restoring peace and order in the region while seeking flexibility from Hamas.
Merely underscoring the inconsistency of the order imposed by the U.S. and Europe will not resolve the current upheaval. The idea of Iraq transitioning to a federal system has been discussed. But with an intermixture of ethnic groups and religions that differs from a century ago, there is also a risk that strengthening the independence of the Sunni region could lead to the oppression of the Shia minority living there.
Regardless, what is important now is to create a broad agreement for avoiding any further upheaval.
http://asia.nikkei.com/Politics-Economy/International-Relations/Middle-East-chaos-history-of-Intermixing-ethnic-groups-religions-states
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.