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Is
God Saying Something About Our Justice System? (November
28, 2005)
- A basketball-sized piece of marble moulding fell from the facade
over the entrance to the Supreme Court, landing on the steps near
visitors waiting to enter the building. No one was hurt. The chunk
of Vermont marble was part of the dentil molding that serves as a
frame for nine sculptural figures completed in 1935. The piece that
fell was over the figure of Authority, near the peak of the
building's pediment, and to the right of the figure of Liberty, who
has the scales of justice on her lap. (Video: Chunk
falls from Supreme Court facade) A short time later, workers
loaded the roughly 40 pieces into plastic fruit crates and carried
them away. Architects estimated a 12 inch by 10 inch piece broke off
from the pediment, Court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg said. A structural
engineer and photographer from the Architect of the Capitol's office
planned to use a lift to inspect the pediment, Arberg said.
Officials with the Office of the Architect of the Capitol conducted
a routine check of the pediment two years ago and found no
indications of problems, spokeswoman Eva Malecki said. The weight of
the chunk was not immediately available. However, a cubic foot of
Vermont marble weighs 172 pounds, said Robert Pye, director of the
Vermont Marble Museum in Proctor, Vt. Earlier in the morning, dozens
of people had lined up in hopes of getting a seat for arguments
inside the court — a practice that is not unusual. Justices were
back on the bench Monday following a two-week recess. The fallen
marble lay directly in the center of the path up to the court
entrance. more... (Will we
see a change soon in the supreme court?)
-
Toward
a partnership of hope
By Javier Solana
This week we mark the 10th anniversary of the Euro-Mediterranean
partnership by returning to the city where it all began: Barcelona.
Ten years ago I was particularly proud to preside over the launch of
a unique venture: the "Barcelona process." At the heart of
that lay an inspiring vision of our relations with the Mediterranean
partners, but also a call to duty. To create a zone of shared
security and shared solidarity, of open markets and open societies
across the Mediterranean. The way we pledged to achieve these goals
was through true partnership and close cooperation between
governments and citizens.
The launching of the Barcelona
process was an integral part of Europe's response to the post-Cold
War situation and to globalization. Above all it was a
political act. It not only recognized our interdependence, but also
created a new "Mediterranean identity." In the past 10
years, there is much that we have achieved. We are working together
across the full spectrum of government responsibilities: economy,
security, governance and more. No issue is considered "too
sensitive" to put on the agenda. The Barcelona process has also
solidified a network of interlocutors beyond governments and it has
been a great laboratory of ideas.
But clearly our world has also changed since 1995. This is the
post-9/11 era and we have to come to terms with it. In many
respects, the Mediterranean runs the risk of becoming a dangerous
crossroads of many of the perils of the modern world: poverty, poor
governance, terrorism, human trafficking and political extremism. At
the same time, this sea remains our joint heritage and a unique
platform for cooperation. I believe we should remain true to the
original Barcelona vision, while adjusting our partnership to focus
on new challenges. Above all, we must inject a greater dose of
urgency in everything we do. The problems are piling up fast while
our capacity to respond has to keep pace.
The Euro-Med partnership is not the only international framework for
multilateral cooperation with this region. But it is the most
developed and in many ways preferred one. The reason is that it
promotes both security and reform simultaneously. We reject those
who insist that we should sequence things, saying that either
conflict resolution or political reform must come first.
Barcelona is about pursuing both reform and security at the same
time.
It is true that the
Barcelona process was born of the hopes of the Oslo peace talks. And
clearly, the absence of peace between Israelis and Palestinians
casts a shadow over our work. But Barcelona was about supporting the
peace process, not supplanting it.
Moreover, we
Europeans have been working nonstop to promote a peace accord. We have long been by far
the largest donor to the Palestinians. We are now also engaged in
the diplomatic process through the Quartet and in the area of
security. Take our training efforts for the Palestinian police plus,
our new mission as third-party monitors at a border-crossing in
Gaza. These are big changes since 1995 when Europe was not directly
engaged, either diplomatically or operationally, in the peace
process.
Security and reform go hand in hand. Thus, we must step up our
cooperation on new security threats and inject new impetus into our
work on political and economic modernization. There can be no
mistake: Promoting democracy, pluralism and human rights was part of
the original Barcelona recipe. For us Europeans, these are essential
values. That is why it is natural to seek to promote them abroad and
why we are glad that our Mediterranean partners agree on their
importance. We all know that successful governments must meet the
aspirations of their people.
What are we doing concretely? We are providing monitoring and
assistance for the organization of elections. This often attracts
headlines. But we are also working on the "building
blocks" of democracy, through support for civil society, by
strengthening the capacities and independence of the judiciary, and
by promoting respect for human rights.
Many Mediterranean countries say they want to advance on the path of
political reform but that it should be home-grown and that they need
help. I agree. So I am
pleased that the EU will launch a so-called governance facility.
This will not be a cosmetic initiative, but one that, over seven
years, will offer several hundred million euros to
those countries that are making the greatest efforts concerning
governance reform. They can then spend the extra money on the
priorities they have set themselves. This is what I call a true
partnership for political reform.
We should also give more money to education and we will. Education
is the silver bullet. Concretely, this means improving standards,
eradicating illiteracy, reforming the curriculum, and ensuring
equality between girls and boys. Education also means openness to
each other's ideas. That is why we should increase international
exchanges across the Mediterranean.
Managing the growing challenge of migration adroitly is another test
of our partnership. Legal migration is an economic and demographic
imperative for Europe, which must get better at integrating those
who seek a better life on its shores. But illegal migration is often
based on a cynical exploitation of the weak by human traffickers.
All of us, countries of origin, transit and destination, have an
interest in tackling these unscrupulous networks.
There will be a lot of speeches and declarations at the summit. Amid
all this, let us remember that the Euro-Med partnership is there to
serve our citizens, to prepare our societies for a challenging
future. For me, the Barcelona process is essentially a project of
hope and a means to banish hopelessness. It is our collective duty
and our common interest to realize its full potential.
Javier Solana is the EU's high representative for the Common Foreign
& Security Policy (CFSP).
For more prophecy discussion on current events in the Middle
East, go here.
And here
for coverage on the November 27/28 summit.
-
EU
stays mum on East Jerusalem as ties with Israel improve (November
23, 2005)
- The European Union has prepared a harsh report
on Israel's activity in East Jerusalem, but has decided to delay its
release in the wake of the recent warming of ties between Israel and
Europe. EU foreign ministers discussed the Middle East in a meeting
Monday and decided to express "deep concern" over Israel's
activities in East Jerusalem and its environs, including
establishing settlements, constructing the West Bank separation
fence and demolishing homes. According to the EU, such Israeli
activities minimize the chance for a final-status agreement over
Jerusalem, threaten to make any solution based on the coexistence of
two states impossible, and conflict with international law. The
foreign ministers called for certain EU officials to prepare a
detailed analysis of the situation in East Jerusalem, to be adopted
and publicized during the next foreign ministers meeting. Political
officials in Jerusalem said the EU report had already been prepared
by European consuls in East Jerusalem and that the report severely
criticizes Israel's actions in the area. However, the foreign
ministers apparently decided Monday that the timing was not
appropriate - Europe is finally set to play an active role in the
political process by sending monitors to the Rafah border crossing
and establishing a European delegation to improve the Palestinian
police. more...
-
Moscow
to close foreign groups (November 23, 2005)
- Russia's parliament is expected to approve legislation today that
would shut down foreign-funded human rights and pro-democracy groups
while tightening controls over domestic civic organizations. Among
the foreign groups that would have to close their Russian operations
are some of the world's most prominent nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs), including Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the
Ford Foundation. The Washington-based International Republican
Institute (IRI) and National Democratic Institute, which aim to
spread democracy by training political parties around the world,
also would be forced to restructure or halt operations. The
bill must pass a second reading in the State Duma on Dec. 9 and be
approved by the upper chamber of parliament, the Federation Council,
but with all major political parties supporting it, there is little
doubt that it will be passed. "If this law passes, we
would essentially be closed down along with a whole range of other
international organizations," said Diederik Lohman, a senior
researcher for New York-based Human Rights Watch, a frequent critic
of Russia's human rights record. "This goes beyond
anything else in the former Soviet Union. Uzbekistan and Belarus
have pretty draconian NGO laws, but even those countries don't have
a law that explicitly bars branch organizations of foreign
NGOs." Amnesty International yesterday expressed
"serious concern" over the draft law and called it "a
serious attack on freedom of association." more...
-
Sharon
Quits Likud, Calls for New Elections (November
21, 2005)
- Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon said Monday he gambled and broke away from his hardline Likud
Party because he did not want to squander peacemaking
opportunities created by Israel's pullout from the Gaza
Strip or waste time with political wrangling. Sharon, whose
split from Likud electrified Israeli politics and set the stage for
likely March elections, ruled out unilateral withdrawals from the West
Bank, however. He also said he remains committed to the
internationally backed "road map" plan, which calls for a
negotiated peace deal culminating in a Palestinian state.
"There is no additional disengagement plan," he told a
televised news conference, referring to the summer's Gaza
withdrawal. "There is the road map." Sharon's decision to
form a new party he described as "liberal" cemented his
transformation from the hawkish patron of Israel's settler movement
to a moderate peacemaker reconciled to the inevitability of a
Palestinian state. Weekend polls indicated Sharon, Israel's most
popular politician, could marshal enough support to return to the
prime minister's office for a third term at the head of a moderate
coalition. more...
Reported from harpazo
Ready:
-
Earthquake
Hits Iran: Kills 10, Flattens 7 Villages (November
28, 2005)
- An earthquake with a magnitude of at least 5.9 shook a sparsely
populated area of southern Iran on Sunday, flattening seven
villages, killing 10 people and injuring 70, officials and state-run
television said. The tremor was felt as far away as Oman and the
United Arab Emirates. Heidar Alishvandi, the governor of Qeshm, was
quoted by state television as saying rescue teams were deployed to
the affected area, and people in the wrecked villages moved quickly
to safely. Another provincial official, Ghasem Karami, told The
Associated Press that high casualties were not expected because the
area was not heavily developed. Tehran's seismologic center said the
quake was of magnitude 5.9, but the U.S. Geological Survey in
Golden, Colo., said it had a magnitude of 6.1. A magnitude-6.0 quake
can cause severe damage. Iran's seismologic center said the
epicenter was in the waters of the Persian Gulf between the port
city of Bandar Abbas and Qeshm Island, about 940 miles south of
Tehran. The USGS said the quake was 35 miles southwest of Bandar
Abbas, which has about 500,000 residents. more...
-
Man
held in child's 'ritual' abduction (November
28, 2005)
- David Rodriguez believed a satanic ritual would help him get his
girlfriend back, but he lacked a key ingredient -- a little girl,
prosecutors said. And so on Friday afternoon, Rodriguez, 18, and a
buddy allegedly kidnapped a 6-year-old girl and her 8-year-old
brother while they waited for their mother outside a Little Village
library, authorities say. But prosecutors said Rodriguez was
arrested before carrying out his demonic plan, which authorities
said involved carving a pentagram in the girl's chest. On Saturday,
Cook County Judge Kevin Sheehan ordered Rodriguez, charged with
aggravated kidnapping, held on $500,000 bond. The judge also ordered
that Rodriguez undergo a mental evaluation. His unidentified alleged
juvenile accomplice was also in custody, but there was no
information about any possible charges, authorities said.
Prosecutors said Rodriguez has no criminal history. In court, Cook
County Assistant State's Attorney Tracy Senica said Rodriguez and
his friend grabbed the girl and boy by their wrists and led them
through back alleys to Rodriguez's shabby two-story brick home in
the 4200 block of West 25th Street. Rodriguez didn't need the little
boy, so he gave him a fake note to take to a nearby clinic, Senica
said. It was unclear what the note said. While the little girl and
Rodriguez's friend waited outside the home, Rodriguez went inside to
retrieve some candles and incense. Meanwhile, several adults
apparently spotted the 8-year-old boy crying and standing alone. The
boy told them about the kidnapping and apparently helped lead them
back to Rodriguez, Senica said. Police arrived, and Rodriguez was
arrested. He later gave a handwritten statement to investigators,
detailing his plan, Senica said. "He hoped to conduct a demonic
ritual to [get] back his ex-girlfriend," Senica told the judge.
-
Pro-Saddam
insurgents embrace holy war-official (November
28, 2005)
- Saddam Hussein loyalists leading the insurgency in Iraq have
reinvented themselves as Islamic militants in a deadly new strategy
generating plenty of recruits and funding, Iraq's national security
adviser said on Sunday. Mowaffaq al-Rubaie said the image makeover
from secular insurgents to religious warriors was far more worrying
than a deadly campaign waged by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al Qaeda
in Iraq leader, and his suicide bombers. Embracing militant Islam
has enabled Saddam's former agents with long years of intelligence
and military experience to expand their support base, he said.
"This is very dangerous. These people now have broader appeal
among angry Iraqis and money from Arabs in regional states," he
told Reuters in an interview. "It could take years to defeat
them." Saddam and his pan-Arab socialist Baath party imposed
secularism in Iraq throughout decades of iron-fisted rule. Muslim
militants either kept their beliefs to themselves or were jailed, or
worse. But Islamic fundamentalism has gained a foothold since a
U.S.-led invasion toppled the former president in 2003, with a
proliferation of Sunni Arab militants opposed to the Shi'ite- led
government backed by Washington.
FROM SOCIALISTS TO HOLY WARRIORS
Al Qaeda stepped in, forming loose alliances with Saddam's former
Baathists as the insurgency evolved into daily suicide bombings and
assassinations that have killed tens of thousands of civilians and
security forces. Rubaie said Saddam loyalists now portray themselves
as holy warriors, a potent and sophisticated force in a country
already plagued by Arab militant suicide bombers who enter over
porous borders. "They no longer refer to themselves as the Arab
Baath Socialists but Arab Baath al-Takfireen (those who declare
other Muslims infidels)," he said. more...
-
Senate
pressured to hold hearings on ET (November
27, 2005)
- A number of groups have joined forces with former Canadian Defence
Minister Paul Hellyer in urging Parliament to hold public hearings
on 'exopolitics' - or relations with extraterrestrials (ETs). Three
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) were reacting to a speech made
by Hellyer in September in Toronto in which he warned that
"UFOs are as real as the airplanes that fly over your head.''
Hellyer said he is concerned the United States is preparing weapons
for use against the aliens and could get the whole world into an
"intergalactic war.'' According to Hellyer, the Americans'
interest in returning to the moon is in part based on the desire to
build a forward military base there. The three organizations backing
Hellyer's request for hearings are the Institute for Co-operation in
Space (ICIS), the Toronto Exopolitics Symposium and the Disclosure
Project, a U.S.-based organization that has assembled high-level
military-intelligence witnesses of a possible ET presence. Earlier
this month, the Senate replied to the ICIS that their full agenda
precluded any hearings in the near future on ET issues. "That
does not deter us," one spokesman for the NGOs said, "We
are going ahead with our request to Prime Minister Paul Martin and
the official Opposition leaders in the House of Commons now, and we
will re-apply to the Senate of Canada in early 2006. "Time is
on the side of open disclosure that there are ethical
extraterrestrial civilizations visiting Earth.''
-
Fifty
babies a year are alive after abortion (November
27, 2005)
- A GOVERNMENT agency is launching an inquiry into doctors’
reports that up to 50 babies a year are born alive after botched
National Health Service abortions. The investigation, by the
Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH), comes
amid growing unease among clinicians over a legal ambiguity that
could see them being charged with infanticide. The Royal College of
Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, which regulates methods of
abortion, has also mounted its own investigation. Its guidelines say
that babies aborted after more than 21 weeks and six days of
gestation should have their hearts stopped by an injection of
potassium chloride before being delivered. In practice, few doctors
are willing or able to perform the delicate procedure. For the
abortion of younger foetuses, labour is induced by drugs in the
expectation that the infant will not survive the birth process.
Guidelines say that doctors should ensure that the drugs they use
prevent such babies being alive at birth. In practice, according to
Stuart Campbell, former professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at
St George’s hospital, London, a number do survive. “They can be
born breathing and crying at 19 weeks’ gestation,” he said. “I
am not anti-abortion, but as far as I am concerned this is
sub-standard medicine.” The number of terminations carried out in
the 18th week of pregnancy or later has risen from 5,166 in 1994 to
7,432 last year. Prenatal diagnosis for conditions such as Down’s
syndrome is increasing and foetuses with the condition are routinely
aborted, even though many might be capable of leading fulfilling
lives. In the past decade, doctors’ skill in saving the lives of
premature babies has improved radically: at least 70%-80% of babies
in their 23rd or 24th week of gestation now survive long-term.
Abortion on demand is allowed in Britain up to 24 weeks — more
than halfway through a normal pregnancy and the highest legal limit
for such terminations in Europe. France and Germany permit
“social” abortions only up to the 10th and 12th weeks
respectively. Doctors are increasingly uneasy about aborting babies
who could be born alive. “If viability is the basis on which they
set the 24-week limit for abortion, then the simplest answer is to
change the law and reduce the upper limit to 18 weeks,” said
Campbell, who last year published a book showing images of foetuses’
facial expressions and “walking” movements taken with a form of
3-D ultrasound. more...
-
Tehran
to Pyongyang: Trade oil for nuke help (November
27, 2005)
- Western intelligence sources, cited in yesterday's edition of Der
Spiegel, say Iran has asked North Korea for assistance with its
nuclear missile program in exchange for oil and natural gas.
According to the German daily, a senior Iranian official visited
Pyongyang in October to tender the offer. While North Korea's
response to the deal was unclear, revelation of Tehran's outreach
fuels further suspicion Iran is attempting to develop nuclear
weapons and the means to deliver them. Last week, the U.N.'s atomic
watchdog agency revealed that Iran had received what appeared to be
blueprints for the core of a nuclear warhead in 1987 through the
network run by Abdul Qadeer Khan, father of Pakistan's nuclear
program. During the same week, Tehran announced it had begun
converting a second batch of uranium into gas, a necessary step
toward enrichment for generation of electricity or development of a
nuclear bomb. As WorldNetDaily has previously reported, Tehran is
getting secret help for its Shahib 3 missile program from former
Russian military personnel who are acting as go-betweens on a deal
struck in 2003 between North Korea and Iran. The weapons technology,
Western intelligence analysts believe, will be sufficient for Iran
to develop a missile with a range of 2,200 miles while carrying a
1.2-ton payload – enough to deliver a nuclear weapon to Israel and
most of Europe. more...
14
die, hundreds injured in China 5.7 Magnitude (November
27, 2005)
- At least 14 people died, hundreds more were injured and thousands
of houses collapsed when a magnitude-5.7 earthquake struck near a
popular tourist destination in east China on Saturday, officials
said. The quake, the biggest in the region in half a century, could
be felt in cities hundreds of kilometres away when it hit at 8:49am,
according to the China National Seismic Observation Network.
“We’d just finished our breakfast, when we heard a huge roar,
like someone setting off really loud firecrackers,” said a Civil
Affairs official in the city of Ruichang in Jiangxi province.
“Then, the houses started shaking, and we just jumped outside,”
the official, surnamed Liu, said. Seven hours after the quake,
official media reported that 14 were confirmed dead, while more than
370 had been injured, 20 of them seriously. Hundreds of thousands of
people were also reported to have fled their homes, fearing further
quakes. The epicentre was near the city of Jiujiang, home to half a
million people and a traditional scenic spot that was praised by
Tang dynasty poets more than a millennium ago. Thousands of rural
homes were flattened in the quake, one official said. more...
Sharon
readies plan for total West Bank pullout by '08 (November
25, 2005)
- Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has drafted a plan for Israel's
withdrawal from virtually all of the West Bank by 2008. Political
sources said Sharon has begun briefing senior U.S. officials of his
intention to withdraw unilaterally from more than 95 percent of the
West Bank. They said Sharon, who quit the ruling Likud Party on Nov.
21, would seek a U.S. and international security presence in the
area as well as a commitment for the dismantling of Palestinian
insurgency groups. On Wednesday, Haim Ramon, a Cabinet minister who
joined Sharon's new party, said the prime minister plans to withdraw
unilaterally to what would constitute Israel's final borders, Middle
East Newsline reported. Ramon said Sharon does not plan to discuss
this before the parliamentary elections, scheduled for March 28.
"His decision [to quit the Likud] stems from his desire to
bring the state of Israel to permanent borders during his term of
office," Eli Landau, a longtime confidante of Sharon, said.
"He knows that this step will be a dramatic one." The
sources said Sharon's plan was based on an assessment that the
Palestinian Authority was not prepared to sign a formal peace
agreement with Israel. They said that under this scenario Sharon
would order a unilateral withdrawal from more than 90 percent of the
West Bank, but retain control over air space. more...
PA
admits Jewish towns turned into 'training camps' (November
25, 2005)
- The Palestinian Authority admitted in an official document
published that today parts of Gush Katif, the former Jewish
communities of Gaza, are now "training camps" for terror
groups. In an exclusive story last week, WND reported Hamas has
turned Neve Dekalim, the former capital of Gush Katif, into a
"martyrs training camp," and has used the territory to
fire rockets into Israel. Palestinian Interior Minister Nasser
Yousef yesterday toured Gaza's former Jewish communities and
detailed a PA plan to bring security to the area. Since Israel's
withdrawal from Gaza in August, the land that comprised Gush Katif
has been the scene of regular internal Palestinian clashes. An
official dossier of Yousef's schedule released today by the Interior
Ministry states, "The Minister Nasser Yousef toured the newly
liberated areas of Gaza, parts of which are used by the Palestinian
groups as training camps." As WND reported, in what some
expelled Jewish residents of the area called the "ultimate
insult," Hamas leaders said they turned Neve Dekalim into a
"martyr training camp" and have used the territory to
launch rockets into Israel. more...
Colombian
volcano spews ash, fumes (November
25, 2005)
- A volcano erupted Thursday in southwestern Colombia, spewing smoke
and ash, and raising fears for the safety of nearby villagers,
officials said. Police and emergency officials were on high alert
after the 14,110-foot Galeras volcano became active at dawn and
dumped heaps of ash on the city of Pasto, 12 miles away. "It
was a brief eruption of ash for 30 minutes that was not preceded by
a temblor inside the volcano," said Marta Lucia Calvache of
Colombia's Volcanology Institute. "But there is still a thin
plume of ash leaving the crater, and we can't rule out the
possibility of further eruptions." The government this month
ordered the preventive evacuation of thousands of people living in
the shadow of the volcano amid signs of an imminent eruption. But
many farmers are believed to have defied the order and stayed
behind, fearful of losing their livelihoods by leaving crops
unattended. more...
US
Marines are locked in battle with Syrian troops (November
25, 2005)
- US Marines are locked in battle with Syrian troops after crossing
the border from Iraq into Syria at a point west of al Qaim. Both
sides have suffered casualties. US soldiers crossed over after
Damascus was given an ultimatum Thursday, Nov. 24, to hand over a
group of senior commanders belonging to Abu Musab al Zarqawi’s al
Qaeda force. According to US intelligence, the group had fled to
Syria to escape an American attack in Mosul. Syrian border guards
opened fire on the American force.
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
- Cold
Snap Grips Europe (November 28, 2005)
- A sudden winter freeze gripped parts of northern Europe on
Saturday with heavy snowfalls cutting power, cancelling football
matches and spreading air and road traffic chaos. In Paris,
the Eiffel Tower was shut for most of Saturday as ice made its
staircases treacherous, while heavy snowfalls meant thousands of
people in France and Germany faced plummeting temperatures without
electricity. "We hope power will be restored tonight. Our teams
are out there working on it," a spokeswoman for Electricite de
France said. Some 7,000 homes out of 17,000 that suffered power
failures in France's western Vendee region overnight were still
without electricity by nightfall on Saturday, she added. A quarter
of a million people were also without electricity in Germany's most
populous state of North-Rhine Westphalia (NRW), authorities there
said on Saturday. Soccer fans in the Belgian city of Liege were
disappointed when a keenly awaited clash between Anderlecht and
Standard, two giants of the premier division, was postponed because
of the cold. A German league match between MSV Duisburg and Cologne
was also postponed because of heavy snow. more...
- Erasing
America (November 28, 2005)
- The United States of America, once—long ago—a Constitutional
republic, is being erased. The erasure of America isn’t reported
on the 6 o’clock news, of course. It isn’t much noticed, because
it is happening too slowly—although the pace has increased over
the past couple of decades. Be this as it may, there is no need to
speak of “conspiracy theories.” For one thing, it isn’t a
theory. It is as much a fact as gravity. It is being carried out in
plain sight, not behind closed doors in smoke filled rooms. Anyone
with Web access can follow the process. Those in the business of
erasing America know, however, that they are operating in a culture
whose educational system has been strip-mined, so to speak.
America’s masses by and large don’t know what a Constitutional
republic is, and use the Web the same way they use television—for
entertainment. But all you need to know is there, and you don’t
have to stick with NewsWithViews.com
or Steven Yates’s blog.
Go, for example, to the website of the Council on Foreign Relations
(CFR). There you will find a document entitled Building
a North American Community. It first appeared on the site
this past spring. Checking in at 47 pages excluding acknowledgements
and other front matter, Building a North American Community
provides a blueprint for the integration of the United States,
Mexico and Canada under a single supranational authority. This plan
would, for all practical purposes, dissolve the borders between each
nation and end the lip-service that must still be paid to the
Constitution within our own. It would bring NAFTA to fruition,
building more of the “architecture of a new international
system” about which Dr. Henry Kissinger spoke candidly back in
1993 when NAFTA was being accorded bipartisan support as a “free
trade” agreement. more...
- Scatterbrained?
You Need a Thought Bouncer (November
28, 2005)
- When you forget a face or can't find your car keys, it's not
because your brain is out of storage space. You just aren't
filtering out other thoughts well enough, a new study finds. The
research contradicts a popular notion that memory capacity is solely
dependent on how much information you can cram into your noggin.
Rather, it shows that if you can disregard some of what you see,
you'll do a better job remembering the visual input you deem
important.
Ignore this - Researchers measured
brainwaves as objects popped into the minds of the test subjects,
who watched colored rectangles appear on a computer screen. In one
experiment, researchers told the subjects to focus on two red
rectangles and ignore two blue ones. Without exception, one group
had all the rectangles in mind, while another group of individuals
-- who were already deemed to have high memory capacity --
consistently excelled at dismissing the blue rectangles.
"People differed systematically, and dramatically, in their
ability to keep irrelevant items out of awareness," said study
leader Edward Vogel of the University of Oregon. Vogel thinks of
this ability to focus as akin to having a thought bouncer in the
brain, managing crowd control. The results, detailed in the Nov. 24
issue of the journal Nature, suggest ways to improve memory
abilities. "Being 'scatterbrained' is often a symptom of a
hectic modern life in which we are often overcommitted, overworked,
and inundated with information," Vogel told LiveScience.
"Given such an environment, it would not be surprising if many
of our important cognitive control processes become overtaxed and
less efficient. Attentional training may be able to improve one's
ability to bounce irrelevant information from awareness."
Imagine that - Not that the lack of a bouncer is
necessarily bad thing. "There may be advantages to having a lot
of seemingly irrelevant information coming to mind," Vogel
points out. "Being a bit scattered tends to be a trait of
highly imaginative people." But for those who would like to do
better at keeping track of their thoughts, help might be on the way.
Vogel's team is working on focusing drills based on the new
research. Other work by Vogel's University of Oregon colleague
Michael Posner has found that five days of attention training helped
children develop their memory bouncer and raise scores on general
intelligence tests. "It appears that these functions can be
improved through training, at least during childhood," Vogel
says. "Interestingly, there has been some recent evidence that
similar improvements can also be seen in adults who have been
trained on certain video games." more...
Reported from Bridges
for Peace:
- Tel Aviv To Become Gay Capital of the World (November
25, 2005)
- Israeli tourism officials announced this week that they plan on
turning Tel Aviv into the gay capital of the world. Tel Aviv is
known throughout the world as “The White City” due to the many
Bauhaus-style structures that adorn its streets, but the city may
soon be called “The Pink City,” as tourism industry heads are
planning on transforming the city into the gay capital of the world,
Israel’s leading newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported.
“Tel Aviv and gay people are a perfect fit,” an Israel Hotel
Association (IHA) official said. The idea was born when IHA
Director-General Eli Ziv visited London recently to participate in
the 2005 World Travel Market exhibition. During the exhibition Ziv
met with representatives of the homo-lesbian travel industry, and
discovered an audience that would travel just about anywhere for a
good party, even to the Middle East. “The gay community has
amazing consumer power, and Tel Aviv has a lot to offer to this
community,” Ziv explained. “We have the beach, sun, culture, and
nightclubs. To our knowledge, gays are capable of hopping on a plane
and traveling to the other side of the world just to participate in
parties and events that are related to the gay community.” Tourism
Ministry Director-General Eli Cohen said he would offer any
financial assistance necessary to turn Tel Aviv into the gay capital
of the world, and he is not alone: TUI, Europe’s largest tourism
conglomerate, has recently decided to offer charter flights to Tel
Aviv. Israeli tourism officials said they believe the decision would
facilitate the travel of thousands of gays to the country. During
the biblical period, the coastal area of modern day Israel was
inhabited by the Philistines, while the Israelites lived in the
hilly regions. The cultic practices of the Philistines included
temple prostitution, noted for its debauchery, and the worship of
multiple gods. In contrast, the children of Israel worshipped one
God and were given a code of ethics, called the Torah
(Gen.–Deut.). In the Torah, homosexual activity was forbidden.
Interestingly, In Israel today, the more liberal, secular society
tends to live in the coastal areas, and the more Torah observant
live in the inland and more hilly areas, just as in days of old. more...
- Multi-Pronged Hizbullah Attack on Northern Israel (November
22, 2005)
- In a massive offensive, Hizbullah terrorists fired Katyusha
rockets and mortar shells at Israeli targets and infiltrated an
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) position in the Har Dov region on
November 21, wounding nine–three seriously. Dozens of Katyusha
rockets were fired at the cities of Kiryat Shemona, Metulah, and
other targets in the Galilee throughout the afternoon and evening of
Monday, November 21. In addition, two Hizbullah terrorists
infiltrated the IDF's Gladiola position, wounding four soldiers,
including one seriously. The injured soldiers were evacuated to
Haifa's Rambam Hospital. Reports from the scene say the rocket
attacks were particularly intense. The attacks then continued later
in the evening, with rockets launched at the Galilee city of Metulah,
followed by an IDF Northern Command announcement for all residents
of the northern Galilee to enter their bomb shelters. The Metulah
attack directly struck a home. Residents of nearby Kibbutz Snir
(communal settlement), in the Galilee panhandle below Har Dov, took
cover in their bomb shelters during the afternoon attack, as one
rocket struck the kibbutz itself. As a precaution, children in three
other Galilee kibbutzim were also rushed into bomb shelters due to
the bombardment. During the barrage, Israeli security forces
exchanged fire with several terrorists near the Arab village of
Rajar, which straddles the Israeli-Lebanese border. Four Hizbullah
terrorists were killed in the exchange. The IDF launched an air
strike against a Hizbullah command post and surrounding roads used
by the terrorists. Political commentators predict that Israel will
not offer a stronger response than that already taken for fear that
a more intense reaction would play into the hands of Hizbullah Chief
Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, who would benefit politically from an
escalated conflagration. There has been a heightened alert along the
northern border in recent days, with the reception of intelligence
information pointing to planned Hizbullah attacks and kidnappings.
- Hamas
Lays Out Post-Election Agenda (November
20, 2005)
- The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) on November 18
published a translation of an October interview in which Gaza-based
Hamas Chief Mahmoud al-Zahar laid out his group's post-election
agenda. “Hamas' mission upon joining the [Palestinian Authority]
Legislative Council will be to eliminate the last remnants” of the
so-called “Oslo” peace process, Zahar told elaph.com. Should
Hamas one day control a majority of seats in the parliament and be
asked to form the government, it will go one step further and end
all relations with the Jewish state. “The national interest
demands that we not cooperate with Israel in the security,
political, or economic spheres,” Zahar explained. “The facts
should lead us to cut off our relations with the Israeli enemy by
all means. The question is whether to do this gradually or all at
once.” Hamas is expected to garner up to 40% of the vote when
Palestinians go to the polls in late January, giving the group
considerable influence over official policy. Due to its overtly
destructive agenda, Israel continues to insist the Palestinian
Authority (PA) and western nations involved in the peace process
prohibit Hamas from participating in the election, or risk the
collapse of everything they have worked for. But following this
summer's withdrawal from Gaza, Hamas views Israel as a vanquished
foe, and “the defeated [party] does not dictate conditions,”
Zahar said. Public opinion polls have consistently shown a majority
of Palestinian Arabs agree with that view. And as for disarming,
Zahar said everyone concerned can forget about it. “We will join
the Legislative Council and serve the Palestinian street with our
weapons in hand,” he insisted. “We want to turn into the weapon
of resistance in all the Land.” more...
- Hamas Leader Signals Resurgence of Terror Attacks (November
18, 2005)
- Hamas political leader Khaled Meshal says there is no reason to
maintain the "calm" to which his group has agreed,
signaling a possible resurgence of terror attacks against Israeli
targets, Israel Radio reported on November 18. Apparently basing
their report on Arabic-language newspapers, the radio said Meshal
called for the postponement of a summit of Palestinian groups
scheduled to take place in Cairo at the end of the month because
there was no reason to refrain from attacks. Israel Radio also said
that Meshal had spoken by cell phone to Palestinian prisoners held
in Israel's Ketziot Prison and told them that the Palestinian
Authority security services were aiding Israel by arresting
suspected militants in the West Bank.
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