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Reported from harpazo
Ready:
-
Israel
presses militant crackdown as tensions soar (October
28, 2005)
- Israel's hardline defence minister has dismissed the Palestinian
leadership as a partner for peace and ruled out any Palestinian
state in the foreseeable future after a night of attacks by Israeli
warplanes. In an echo of the Israeli stand against the late Yasser
Arafat, Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz said Friday: "I doubt very
much that one day we can reach a peace accord with the present
leadership of the Palestinians. We must wait for the next
generation." Quoted by the Yediot Aharonot newspaper, Mofaz
added: "I don't think that a Palestinian state will see the
light of day in the coming years." The minister, a close aide
of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, was speaking two days after a
suicide bomber blew himself up in northern Israel and killed five
civilians. As Israel forged ahead in the early hours with its
offensive against militants, Palestinians on Friday prepared for the
funerals of two militants and six bystanders killed in an airstrike
late Thursday in the Gaza Strip. They died late on Thursday when
Israeli planes slammed three missiles into a vehicle in the northern
Gaza Strip, in a targeted operation against a senior Islamic Jihad
operative and his assistant. Mofaz's comments brought swift
condemnation from chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat who
accused the Jewish state of taking "one sided measures"
and not wanting a partner to revive the largely non-existent peace
process. more...
-
Iranians
hold anti-Israel street protests (October
28, 2005)
- Tens of thousands of Iranians have joined anti-Israeli protests in
support of their president's call for the destruction of Israel.
Iranians staged multiple protests in the capital, Tehran, and other
cities such as Mashad in Iran's east, holding banners carrying
anti-Israeli and pro-Palestinian slogans. "Death to Israel,
death to America," read many placards. The street
demonstrations are being held as part of annual al-Quds Day
(Jerusalem) protests, first held in 1979 after Shia Muslim clerics
took power in Iran. The state-organised rallies were expected to
grow throughout Friday as worshippers gathered for midday sermons
and prayers at mosques across Iran. At the same time, however,
Iran's embassy in Moscow has sought to smooth the effects of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's comments, saying the president did
not mean to speak in such "sharp terms". The statement was
the first official Iranian reaction since the president's speech on
Wednesday to a meeting of consevative Islamic students. "Mr
Ahmadinejad did not have any intention to speak up in such sharp
terms and enter into a conflict" more...
-
How
the cult of the guru puts gullible nation under its spell (October
28, 2005)
- They are everywhere - the life coaches, the supernannies, the
makeover experts, the celebrity chefs, the fashion police. They tell
us what not to wear, what not to eat, what not to do with our lives,
our children's lives and our bathrooms. Tony and Cherie Blair
famously defer to a lifestyle guru, Carole Caplin, who applies Mrs
Blair's lipstick and was depicted in a television satire this month
calling Mr Blair "Toblerone" and offering him a Reiki
massage. According to a leading academic, the nation is in
"thrall to a new priesthood of gurus". In a speech at the
Battle of Ideas Festival tomorrow at the Royal College of Art, Prof
Frank Furedi says the collapse in traditional authority figures has
not produced a less deferential or more questioning society.
Instead, we are now slaves to therapists and "hustlers"
and taking advice on saving Africa from pop singers. Prof Furedi,
the professor of sociology at the University of Kent in Canterbury,
said the "unquestioning and fatalistic deference" to
relationship and other types of experts was coming from the
"very top of society". He added: "It is so sad when
you see grown-up people - people of my age - on television needing
someone to take them shopping for clothes. There is this myth that
we live at the end of an age of deference, but we are entirely
subservient to unacknowledged forms of authority. more...
-
UN's
Annan expresses dismay over Iranian anti-Israel comments (October
28, 2005)
- UN Secretary General Kofi Annan expressed dismay about remarks
made by Iran's hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad suggesting
that Israel should be 'wiped off the map'. 'The secretary general
has read with dismay the remarks about Israel attributed to Mr
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,' a statement released by his spokesman said.
Annan reminded all member states that Israel is a long-standing
United Nations member 'with the same rights and obligations as every
other member.' 'He recalls in particular that, under the United
Nations Charter, all members have undertaken to refrain from the
threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or
political independence of any state,' the statement said. Noting
that he had already planned to visit Iran in the next few weeks to
discuss other issues, Annan said he now intended 'to place the
Middle East peace process, and the right of all states in the area
to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries free from
threats or acts of force, at the top of his agenda for that visit.'
Ahmadinejad told a conference Wednesday in Tehran entitled 'The
World without Zionism' that 'the establishment of the Zionist regime
was a move by the world oppressor against the Islamic world.' more...
- Terrorist:
All Israeli citizens 'are military targets' (October
28, 2005)
- While Israelis were burying casualties from this week's suicide
bombing and over a dozen injured were still lying in hospitals –
some in critical condition – a senior leader of a terror group
reportedly involved in the attack told WND the blast just north of
Tel Aviv was "legitimate" because all Israelis are
"military targets, they are not civilians." "As long
as Israelis do not react against their government and its policy, we
will never consider them as innocent civilians and they will always
be a legitimate goal for our attacks," said Abu Carmel, a West
Bank leader of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the military wing of PA
President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah Party. Abu Carmel was speaking to WND
after a suicide bomber exploded in an open-air market in the coastal
city of Hadera Wednesday, killing five people and wounding more than
two dozen others. The attack was carried out in front of a falafel
stand at the entrance to the market. Hadera has been a frequent
target of bombings during the past five years. The Islamic Jihad
terror group immediately claimed responsibility for the blast,
saying the bombing was retaliation for the death of one of its
senior leader in an Israel Defense Forces raid in the West Bank
earlier this week. Sources close to the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades
told WND the group was involved in the attack as well. more...
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
- Sun's
Direct Role in Global Warming May Be Underestimated: Physicists (October
28, 2005)
- The physicists said that their findings indicate that climate
models of global warming need to be corrected for the effects of
changes in solar activity. However, they emphasized that their
findings do not argue against the basic theory that significant
global warming is occurring because of carbon dioxide and other
"greenhouse" gases. Nicola Scafetta, an associate research
scientist working at Duke's physics department, and Bruce West, a
Duke adjunct physics professor, published their findings online
Sept. 28, 2005, in the research journal Geophysical Research
Letters. West is also chief scientist in the mathematical and
information sciences directorate of the Army Research Office in
Research Triangle Park. Scafetta's and West's study follows a
Columbia University researcher's report of previous errors in the
interpretation of data on solar brightness collected by
sun-observing satellites. The Duke physicists also introduce new
statistical methods that they assert more accurately describe the
atmosphere's delayed response to solar heating. In addition, these
new methods filter out temperature-changing effects not tied to
global warming, they write in their paper. According to Scafetta,
records of sunspot activity suggest that solar output has been
rising slightly for about 100 years. However, only measurements of
what is known as total solar irradiance gathered by satellites
orbiting since 1978 are considered scientifically reliable, he said.
more...
- Viewpoint:
The Oil Tsunami
(October 28, 2005)
- The global oil market environment is becoming a
target of opportunity for terrorists and world powers. The
terrorists increasingly see disruptions of oil facilities as a valid
strategy in their war against governments that they oppose. World
powers like China, Japan, the United States and India are driven
into increasing confrontation fighting for diminishing oil supplies.
These are sinister developments, ingredients for the next
tsunami to hit the already turbulent world of oil where prices have
gone so high that they are depressing world economies. The trouble
from insurgents blowing up oil facilities is no less dangerous than
the pressures from China, India and Japan's voracious appetite for
more oil. China is a major superpower showing that it will not
hesitate to use pressure to secure oil. The Chinese are developing a
strong foothold in Pakistan, where thousands of Chinese workers are
building a new port in Baluchistan at Gwadar, right at the entrance
to the Persian Gulf. One of the main causes of friction between
China and Japan now involves access to oil and gas deposits in the
East China Sea. When the Security Council tried to impose sanctions
on Sudan - one of China's main oil suppliers - over the issue of
Darfur, the Chinese said no. In May when a massacre occurred in
Uzbekistan with hundreds of people killed on the orders of President
Islam Karimov, the United States and Europe asked for an
international investigation. China, which had signed a $600 million
gas deal with Uzbekistan, blocked it. One needs to ring the alarm
bell as this Asian pressure combines with terrorist attacks to form
the elements of the perfect storm heading directly toward the
Arabian Peninsula. more...
-
Hottest
October 27 Ever. A Reason to be Cheerful? Hardly (October
28, 2005)
- Just four days before Hallowe'en, Britain was enjoying the warmest
27 October since records began in 1880. As the UK basked in the
freakish heat, it seemed almost churlish to seek an explanation. But
these days, in the shadow of global warming, extreme weather
patterns come with a health warning attached. Why was it so warm?
The weather experts explained that the mini-heatwave was the result
of a large area of high pressure over southeastern Europe and low
pressure well to the west of Ireland. Sandwiched in between these
two weather systems was Britain, which happily found itself right in
the way of a warm southerly breeze blowing directly from the hot
sands of north Africa. The dryness of the air was explained by it
coming from the continent rather than from the Atlantic. The
Scottish glens enjoyed the added benefit of a meteorological
phenomenon known as the Fone effect, when air warms even further
after descending from higher ground. Is this yet more evidence of
climate change? Was this the sort of October day Britain might
expect in a world where global warming has become reality? more...
-
A
Separate Peace (October 28, 2005)
- It is not so hard and can be a pleasure to tell people what you
see. It's harder to speak of what you think you see, what you
think is going on and can't prove or defend with data or numbers.
That can get tricky. It involves hunches. But here goes. I think
there is an unspoken subtext in our national political culture right
now. In fact I think it's a subtext to our society. I think that a
lot of people are carrying around in their heads, unarticulated and
even in some cases unnoticed, a sense that the wheels are coming off
the trolley and the trolley off the tracks. That in some deep and
fundamental way things have broken down and can't be fixed, or won't
be fixed any time soon. That our pollsters are preoccupied with
"right track" and "wrong track" but missing the
number of people who think the answer to "How are things going
in America?" is "Off the tracks and hurtling forward,
toward an unknown destination." I'm not talking about "Plamegate."
As I write no indictments have come up. I'm not talking about
"Miers." I mean . . . the whole ball of
wax. Everything. Cloning, nuts with nukes, epidemics; the growing
knowledge that there's no such thing as homeland security; the fact
that we're leaving our kids with a bill no one can pay. A sense of
unreality in our courts so deep that they think they can seize
grandma's house to build a strip mall; our media institutions
imploding--the spectacle of a great American newspaper, the New York
Times, hurtling off its own tracks, as did CBS. The fear of parents
that their children will wind up disturbed, and their souls actually
imperiled, by the popular culture in which we are raising them.
Senators who seem owned by someone, actually owned, by an interest
group or a financial entity. Great churches that have lost all sense
of mission, and all authority. Do you have confidence in the CIA?
The FBI? I didn't think so. more...
What
NASA Isn't Telling You About Mars (October
28, 2005)
- We've all listened for years since we were children, to the
endless stories about what the environment on Mars is and how no
life could have ever lived on the planet. So let's get right to the
point. It's past time to look at the overall picture of what we have
been told, using the sanitizing light of common sense. We will use
NASA data to start connecting the dots. Let's look at some of these
common statements made about the planet.
- IS THE MARTIAN SKY IS RED?
- A NASA statement from two years ago - "It's very hard
to get the color right on Mars, images." Utter non-sense!
All the spacecraft sent to Mars over the past 30 years have
color calibration charts in one form or another, and have even
included the American Flag. They have been caught not
consistently using the charts. Blue color squares on some of
the images are found to be red. So who is tampering with the
color and why? Because it's psychological: since the early
days of astronomy the planet has appeared red as viewed from
earth in a telescope. Viewed from the moon, our earth appears
like a "big, blue marble" as one astronaut described
it. Are rocks and dirt on earth BLUE because the sky is blue?
Of course not. NASA conveniently forgets this "minor
detail" and INSISTS that their images remain reddish -
regardless of the negative impact good science. The book
covers this in detail shows proof of color tampering. more...
Reported from World
News Network:
- Israeli
DM: No peace likely with Palestinians in this generation (October
28, 2005)
- Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz launched a blistering attack
on Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, calling him "a one-man
show" bereft of support from his own people and saying he sees
little chance that a permanent peace deal can be reached between the
sides in the present generation. In an interview published Friday in
Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot, Mofaz said he had complained to
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak at a meeting in Cairo Wednesday at
Abbas' lack of leadership and Israel's increasing frustration with
him. "I'm not at all sure that we can ever reach a peace
agreement with the present Palestinian leadership," Mofaz told
the paper. "We shall have to wait for the next
generation." He went on to say that for the time being the best
that could be expected was another round of interim agreements
between the sides rather than any final peace agreement. more...
- Good
News for the Church in Iraq (October
28, 2005)
- There's good news for the Church coming out of Iraq. According to Charisma
News, in Baghdad, a total of 15 evangelical congregations have
started since the removal of Saddam Hussein's regime in April 2003.
Officially, only two evangelical churches existed during Hussein's
rule. Now there are Baptists, Methodists, and Christian and
Missionary Alliance (CMA) congregations, all led by local Iraqi
pastors. "The people are open like never before," says
Ghassan Thomas, pastor of a CMA church in Baghdad. "It is
because we have no peace. This is how we connect our message to the
nation: I preach on the topic, 'How do we get peace?' and everyone
listens, especially when I talk about the deeper peace that Christ
brings." "Muslims, too, want peace," Thomas adds.
"Many of them are frightened. When the hostages are killed,
often a Quranic verse is used to justify it. So many Muslims are
scared of their own god. When we preach that God is love, it is so
liberating to them." Pastor Thomas told Charisma of an incident
that occurred when he received death threats written on cardboard
after erecting a sign outside his church that said, "Jesus is
the Light of the World." On the cardboard was scrawled:
"Jesus is not the light of the world. Allah is, and you have
been warned." It was signed, "the Islamic Shiite
Party."
Thomas reportedly loaded up a van full of children's gifts from a
Christian relief agency, together with some Bibles and medicines,
and drove to the headquarters of the Islamic Shiite Party. When he
came to the compound, he demanded to "see the big sheikh, I
have gifts for him."
He was taken to meet the leader, and he introduced himself as a
pastor.
"We respect you," the sheikh said.
Thomas said, "Christians have love for you, because God is
love, our God is a God of love."
Again the sheikh replied: "We respect your God. We respect
Jesus." more...
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