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Reported from harpazo
Ready:
Euro
Up Against Dollar; Central Banks Hint at Switch
(April 5, 2006)
- The euro rose against the dollar Tuesday as some
Middle Eastern central banks indicated that they could switch more
of their currency reserves to euros. The euro bought $1.2257 in
afternoon European trading, up from $1.2141 in New York late Monday.
The British pound rose to $1.7557 from $1.7384. The dollar also was
down slightly against the Japanese currency, sinking to 117.46 yen
from 117.65 yen. At a meeting of central bank governors and monetary
agencies of the Gulf Cooperation Countries in Abu Dhabi, some
officials said they were considering switching more of their
reserves to the 12-nation currency from the dollar. The governor of
Qatar's central bank, Abdulla Bin Khaled al-Attiyah, said up to 40
percent of its foreign exchange reserves could be held in euros.
"The percentage we are at right now is confidential, but we are
looking at the movement of currencies and we are considering the
overall return to our portfolio," he told reporters. At the
same conference, the head of the United Arab Emirates' central bank
said a decision on whether to shift 10 percent of its foreign
reserves into euros from dollars was postponed until next month. more...
Tornado,
Sand-Storms and Oversized Hail Strike Israel
(April 5, 2006)
- A small tornado ripped across the western Galilee
Tuesday evening. Hail the size of golf balls also fell in the
region. Scores were hospitalized. Freak stormy weather across Israel
continues. The tornado touched down during a hailstorm in the Acco
region, striking the Arab villages of Julis, Fassouta and Jedaideh.
Hail as big as ping-pong balls was reported as far away as Nahariya.
In southern Israel, sandstorms reduced visibility to less than three
feet. Nine foot waves were reported on the Red Sea in Eilat, with
telephone and cellular service knocked out for the entire city. The
highways through the Negev were also covered completely by several
inches of sand. On Sunday, four Israeli Arabs were killed in
northern Israel due to flooding. Sahar Mehamid, 23, from Umm al-Fahm
was killed in Wadi Ara and three women from the lower Galilee
village of Touran were killed in a car accident after driving
through floodwater covering the road. PA resident Iyad Taha, from a
village near Ramallah, also drowned in the floodwaters. Tuesday's
hail and tornado broke electric poles, overturned cars, uprooted
trees, damaged crops and injured more than 75 people - most lightly.
Most of those injured were struck by objects whipped up by the
strong winds, including two children, who suffered deep lacerations.
The villages lost electricity for many hours. Farmers report that
avocado, lychee and banana crops were severely damaged by the winds
and hail. Vadim Amar, Mayor of Julis, said that the tornado damaged
dozens of homes and asked that the region be declared a natural
disaster site. Tornados are rare in Israel. The occasional ones that
have occurred have mostly taken place over the ocean and along the
coast. Hail was also experienced in elevated areas such as Gush
Etzion on both Tuesday and Wednesday. Elsewhere in Gush Etzion, an
earthquake simulation exercise is being held Wednesday in Beitar
Illit, in conjunction with the Defense Ministry, MDA, Israel Police,
Israel Fire Department and others. The three-hour training event
began at 11 AM.
20
EU states warned to toe Brussels line
(April 5, 2006)
- The European Commission launched a barrage of legal
proceedings against more than 20 member states yesterday, demanding
that they obey EU laws on everything from energy monopolies to
subsidies for airlines. Fearing for the health of the single market
after an outbreak of protectionism in various countries, the
Brussels commission challenged a French decree blocking foreign
ownership of firms in 11 "sensitive sectors", from
cryptology and arms to casinos. The decree, which came into force on
Dec 31 last year, was part of the policy of "economic
patriotism" declared by the prime minister, Dominique de
Villepin. France could face huge fines at the European Court of
Justice. The commission sent 28 "letters of formal notice"
to 17 states for failing to open gas and electricity markets to more
competition. It renewed a warning to Greece to recover £108 million
in illegal subsidies given to Olympic Airways between 1998 and 2002.
The commission also took the Czech Republic, Italy, Hungary and
Spain to task for not banning tobacco advertising at motor races and
other events.
The
West vs. Christianity?
(April 4, 2006)
- While recognizing the universal and appropriate
appeals for tolerance for Muslims, I'd like to draw your attention
to the strange attitude of the Western political elite, which has
recently become so acute. I do not know what stands behind the lack
of foresight, but too many of the political elite's actions have
dealt a devastating blow to Christianity. I read the latest report:
Andreas Abuna, Auxiliary Bishop of the Chaldean Catholic Church in
Iraq, said the strength of the Christian communities of Iraq was
diminishing at a shocking rate. Despair, constant fear and lack of
hope are compelling more and more Christians to leave Iraq. People
do not want to leave their country, but they have to go because of
the situation, he said. Christian rights and the status of believers
went from bad to worse after the parliamentary elections last
December. Iraq is flooded with police, their number is constantly
growing, especially in the suburbs of Baghdad, but the protection
they offer is very mediocre, said the bishop. U.S. President George
W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair say Iraq is becoming
more democratic and the situation is improving, but eyewitnesses of
what is happening there are not rejoicing over the democratic
parliamentary elections or the growing number of the local police.
Under the plan of the founders of Iraqi democracy, the latter should
replace occupational troops. more...
Cracks
emerge in front against Hamas
(April 3, 2006)
- France has established secret contacts with Hamas
representatives on behalf of the European Union, showing cracks in
the policy of rejecting the new Palestinian government, a special
report submitted to officials in Jerusalem revealed on Monday.
Israel also suspected that other countries including India, Japan
and China would soon publicly recognize the Hamas-led government,
Army Radio reported. According to the report, despite the refusal of
the US and Israel to negotiate with the Palestinians, the European
Union, Russia and India were already holding secret or open talks
with Hamas officials. Reportedly, the EU talks have been sponsored
by France, while India has already held official meetings with
senior Hamas officials and Russia held consultations with the
organization even prior to the Palestinian parliamentary elections,
publicizing the talks after Hamas' landslide victory. Japan and
China also expressed willingness to publicly recognize the Hamas
government. Israel was concerned that these countries and many
others would follow Russia's lead and hold official meetings with
the movement. The United States has remained a staunch supporter of
the policy of isolating Hamas. It has not backed down from its
policy of shunning the new Hamas-led Palestinian government and has
not made any attempts to pressure Israel into negotiating with the
organization.
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
-
The
Bush malaise
(April 4, 2006)
- Again the line of "Hamlet" comes to mind:
"When sorrows come, they come not single spies, but in
battalions." Three months after elections for a parliament that
was to give Iraq a democratic government of national unity, the Shia
cannot get their act together. Pressure from the U.S. ambassador to
get off the dime produced denunciations of U.S. interference. That
brought British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and Condi Rice to
Baghdad to instruct the Iraqis that Allied patience is wearing
thin... ...Historians will one day marvel that, as their Southwest
was slipping away from the United States – demographically,
linguistically and culturally – Americans were fighting to keep
Iraq together. Remarkable. Foreigners are invading and occupying
Arizona, while Americans are fighting for Anbar province. The
U.S. economy – 4 percent growth, unemployment under 5 percent, the
Dow above 11,000, NASDAQ at five-year highs – appears strong. But
with gold pushing $600 an ounce and silver closing in on $12, the
markets seem to be saying: Nobody's money is as good as gold.
But the economy is not helping the president. For,
while the nation blames him for Iraq, it does not credit him for the
economy. Why? While the top 20 percent of wage-earners are enjoying
days like the 1980s and 1990s, America's working class is not.
Not only are their factories and jobs being exported
to China and outsourced to India, they face ferocious competition
from mass Third World immigration and constant corporate hiring of
foreign high-tech workers. more...
-
Warning!
US Senate Amnesty bill contains in-state tuition for illegals!
(April 4, 2006)
- The controversial proposal to give illegal aliens
taxpayer subsidized in-state tuition at American universities is
included in the immigration "reform" bill that also
contains the Guest Worker Amnesty proposals according to the
Washington Times! Nine states allow illegal aliens to receive the
in-state tuition rates, but the law is under challenge in those
states and most slipped the provision in with little or no public
input. In states where public debate occurred, the measure failed in
NC, FL, GA, and VA. In liberal Massachusetts the measure failed by a
graphic 96-57 in the House. "If this bill passes, the American
taxpayers will be forced to pay for illegal aliens to replace their
own children in the limited seats in college" says William
Gheen of ALIPAC. "Professional polls in North Carolina show
over 81% opposition to in-state tuition for illegal aliens. It is
bad enough the Senate is proposing Guest Worker Amnesty. Now they
want us to pay college tuition for illegal aliens!" more...
-
They
Died For "Cheap" Labor
(April 4, 2006)
- Militant, seditious Mexican and Latin American
organizations are calling for a "brown
out" on May 1, 2006 (a pagan holiday). Illegals should stay
home from work that day, a day that will allegedly "bring the
American economy to its knees." Navito Lopez, president of the
Mexican American (notice Mexican comes before American) Political
Association said that one day without illegals working would
"send a stern message to Washington." Hear! Hear! I say go
for it! What arrogance. These jokers promoting this stop work day
live in a dream world if they think a few million illegals skipping
work for one day is going to even cause a ripple in our economy. If
50-75 million natural born Americans and legally naturalized
citizens stopped work for one day, that would send a thundering
message. It's just a matter of time and if you think I'm full of it,
watch
this flash presentation from the web site Wehategringos.com. You
can also find the list of traitorous counterfeit U.S. Senators who
have sold us out here. You watch these racist Mexicans with
their faces and heads covered and you're looking at the same
pictures we see in the Middle East of terrorists. Look at these
Mexicans grabbing their crotches, flipping us the bird, shouting
"death to the rednecks, " "up your f**ing ass, kill
the gringos" and wishing "Bin Laden had dropped a hydrogen
bomb on the "Jewish sh**hole called Manhattan." This WILL
come to your city, town and neighborhood and if this doesn't prompt
you to demand the state militias get organized and ready, you live
in dangerous denial. more...
- Unraveling
The Agenda Of China In The Middle East
(April 4, 2006)
- China's newly appointed special
envoy to the Middle East Sun Bigan begins work Saturday with few
analysts expecting any immediate change in PRC regional policy. The
People's Republic of China goals in the Middle East are driven by
one dominant concern: access to energy supplies. It
pursues this policy with moves that are a masterful combination of
subtlety and stealth falling off most radar screens. "I
think China's strategic interests in the Middle East are clear to
all," said Wang Shijie, the man stepping down after three and a
half years in the post. "China
is now pushing forward its reform and opening up policy and trying
to develop its economy therefore what we need is a peaceful
international environment...peace in the Middle East has a direct
impact on this, he added." more...
- A
Civil War By Any Other Name
(April 4, 2006)
- Despite President Bush's repeated
denials, the figures are clear: 900 sectarian killings in a single
month in Iraq means a civil war is well under way. Iraq is a nation
of 25 million people. In the United States, that level of killing
would proportionately equal almost 11,000 people killed in riots,
reprisal killings and sectarian clashes in a single month.
By comparison, the 30 years of
sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland from 1968 to 1998 saw 3,600
people killed in a small population of 1.5 million. Proportionately,
that would equate to 60,000 dead over 30 years in Iraq, or 2,000
killed per year. Instead, if the current Iraqi violence simply stays
at the current level and does not escalate any further, it will take
10,800 Iraqi civilian lives this year. That rate would be more than
five times the average rate of the Northern Irish conflict.
The rate of killings in Iraq is
already as bad as during the horrendous 1975-1991 Lebanese Civil
War, in which 150,000 to 200,000 people were killed over 16 years --
an average of between 9,375 and 12,500 people were killed there per
year. more...
- Alien
Bases: The Mystery of the Moon
(April 4, 2006)
- When Neil Armstrong took that historical first step
on the moon on July 21st 1969, it seemed that mankind had finally
conquered our enigmatic satellite. But did we, or did we simply
scratch the surface and beat a hasty retreat? There are dozens of
anomalous facts concerning the moon that science is at a loss to
explain, not least of which is how it is that according to the
analysis of moon rocks, the moon, is at least a billion years older
than the Earth itself. This fact alone seems to defy logic, and is
something that modern cosmology is unable to explain, if the moon
isn’t a fragment of the Earth, what is it, and how did it get
here? When you couple that with the fact that an awful lot of people
believe the moon to be an alien base of some kind, we begin to
realise that we no nearer understand the moon now, than our
ancestors did thousands of years ago.
Telling Transcripts and the NASA
Officials who spoke out
Ten years after the moon landings, Maurice Chatelain, the former
chief of NASA Communications Systems, confirmed that Armstrong did
report seeing two UFOs on the rim of a crater. "The encounter
was common knowledge in NASA," he revealed, "but nobody
has talked about it until now." Another NASA official,
Christopher Kraft, who was director of the NASA tracking base in
Houston during the Apollo Moon missions, revealed the following
conversation between Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Mission Control
after he left NASA:
Apollo 11: "Those are giant things. No, no, no .... this
is not an optical illusion. No one is going to believe this!"
Mission Control (Houston Center): "What...what...what?
What the hell is happening? What's wrong with you?"
Apollo 11: “They're here
under the surface.”
Mission Control: "What's
there? Emission interrupted...interference control calling Apollo
II."
Apollo 11: "We saw some
visitors. They were there for awhile, observing the
instruments."
Mission Control: "Repeat
your last information."
Apollo 11: "I say that
there were other spaceships. They're lined up on the other side of
the crater."
Mission Control:
"Repeat...repeat!"
Apollo 11: "Let us sound
this orbit a ..... In 625 to5...automatic relay connected...My hands
are shaking so badly I can't do anything. Film it? God, if these
damned cameras have picked up anything. What then?"
Mission Control: "Have
you picked up anything?"
Apollo 11: "I didn't
have any film at hand. Three shots of the saucers or whatever they
were that were ruining the film."
Mission Control:
"Control, control here. Are you on your way? Is the uproar with
the U.F.O's. over?
Apollo 11: "They've
landed there. There they are and they are watching us."
Mission Control: "The
mirrors, the mirrors...have you set them up?"
Apollo 11: "Yes, they're
in the right place. But whoever made those space ships surely can
come tomorrow and remove them. Over and out."
If the Apollo report was a one off, we could maybe put it down to
the effects of space or some unknown anomalous lunar phenomena.
However, there have been several other ‘contacts’ between NASA
craft and UFOs, notably in the early 90’s when according to author
William Kliner the following conversation between David Walker,
Endeavours shuttle and mission control was recorded.
more...
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