Archive for April, 2008
Tuesday, April 15th, 2008
by Daniel Pipes*
The future of Europe is in play. Will it turn into “Eurabia,” a part of the Muslim world? Will it remain the distinct cultural unit it has been over the last millennium? Or might there be some creative synthesis of the two civilizations?
The answer has vast importance. Europe may constitute a mere 7 percent of the world’s landmass but for five hundred years, 1450-1950, for good and ill, it was the global engine of change. How it develops in the future will affect all humanity, and especially daughter countries such as Australia which still retain close and important ties to the old continent.
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Posted in Islam, Europe, Society, Philosophy / Ideology | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, April 15th, 2008
By Barry Rubin
The Middle East today is driven by five big conflicts: Among states for power; the Iran-Syria alliance’s war on everyone else; the struggle between Arab nationalists and Islamists to control each country, and the Sunni-Shia and Arab-Israeli conflicts.
No wonder there’s so much turmoil.
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Posted in Arab/Muslim World, Political Correctness, Elections, Philosophy / Ideology | No Comments »
Monday, April 14th, 2008
by Michael Rubin*
As Iraqis marked five years since Baghdad’s fall on April 9, Democrats — including Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama — grilled Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker. Before the testimony, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi warned Gen. Petraeus and Mr. Crocker to avoid undue optimism: “We have to know the real ground truths of what is happening there [in Iraq], not put a shine on events.”
Among Democrats, it is conventional wisdom that the Bush administration rushed to war, botched planning and ignored dissent. “Whether out of hubris or incompetence,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid explained, “the president and his men willfully ignored the experts and sent our troops to battle unprepared for the consequences.”
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Posted in Political Correctness, Elections, Pure Politics, Foreign Policy | No Comments »
Monday, April 14th, 2008
By Andrew L. Jaffee
Jimmy Carter once again has demonstrated his strident anti-Israel bias, stating this weekend that, “I think someone should be meeting with Hamas to see what we can do to encourage them to be cooperative and to find out what their attitude is.” This is Hamas’ attitude, as collected from its own TV broadcasts by PMW:
My message to the loathed Jews is that there is no god but Allah, we will chase you everywhere! We are a [Palestinian] nation that drinks blood, and we know that there is no blood better than the blood of Jews. We will not leave you alone until we have quenched our thirst with your blood, and our children’s thirst with your blood. We will not leave until you leave the Muslim countries.
Is Carter naive enough to think that a terrorist group like Hamas will change its stripes to spots and become a genuine peace partner for Israel? Or is his bias against Israel so strong that he is willing to overlook the fact that Hamas’ “founding charter commits the group to the destruction of Israel, the replacement of the PA [Palestinian Authority] with an Islamist state on the West Bank and Gaza, and to raising ‘the banner of Allah over every inch of Palestine’ [including Israel]?”
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Posted in Israel, Arab/Muslim World, Palestinians, Political Correctness, Terrorist Groups, Anti-Semitism | No Comments »
Sunday, April 13th, 2008
Daniel Nassif is the news director of Alhurra, a U.S.-funded Arabic satellite television news network created in 2004, and has also been news director of its sister network, Radio Sawa, launched in 2002. Nassif was born in Lebanon in 1958. He immigrated to the United States in 1977 and finished his undergraduate and graduate studies in political science and public policy for international affairs at the University of Michigan in 1986. He currently resides in northern Virginia with his wife and two sons. Adam Pechter, deputy publisher of the Middle East Quarterly*, interviewed Nassif on October 19, 2007, in Alhurra’s offices in Springfield, Virginia.
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Posted in Arab/Muslim World, Media/Blogsphere | No Comments »
Saturday, April 12th, 2008
By Isaac Kfir
This article examines Pakistan following the assassination of Benazir Bhutto and the recent parliamentary elections within the confines of the challenges that arise from the need to embrace democracy. The article accepts that Pakistan must contend with a powerful military, rising Islamism, tribalism, an unstable political system, quarreling leaders, and difficult foreign policy issues while it strives to continue to play its role in the global war on terror. The author concludes that only by uniting the different actors and seeking a stable Pakistan can the Islamist threat be defeated.
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Posted in Islam, Pakistan, Elections | No Comments »
Saturday, April 12th, 2008
By Andrew L. Jaffee
Yeah, all us dumb, racist Midwestern (white?) folk — according to Barack Obama:
… “You go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, and like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing’s replaced them,” Obama, an Illinois senator, said.
“And it’s not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations,” he said. …
Talk about painting with a broad stroke. Does Harvard-educated Obama even know the folk he is stereotyping? Ad this to my long list of concerns about Obama, like his “spiritual” advisers…
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Posted in Elections, Racism | 1 Comment »
Friday, April 11th, 2008
By Andrew L. Jaffee
The Absolut Vodka company recently ran an ad campaign which re-drew the map of North America, showing California, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Colorado, and Texas as re-conquered by Mexico. The Absolut ad’s sentiments coincide with radical Latino groups who expouse “anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism, homophobia and other expressions of hatred.” Absolut has apologized for its ridiculous ad, but too little, too late. Vote with your wallet — buy SKYY Vodka, made in the USA:
… In 1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo officially ended the Mexican-America War (1846-1848). With the signing of this treaty, the United States gained control of what was to become the Golden West, including California, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and parts of Colorado and New Mexico. Today, SKYY® Vodka, the number-one vodka produced in the United States, spoke out against suggestions by Absolut® Vodka to disregard that treaty, as well as the joining of Texas to the Union in 1845, as depicted in Absolut’s recent advertising.
“Like SKYY Vodka, the residents of states like California, Texas and Arizona are exceptionally proud of the fact that they are from the United States of America,” said Dave Karraker, SKYY Vodka. “To imply that they might be interested in changing their mailing addresses, as our competitor seems to be suggesting in their advertising, is a bit presumptuous.” …
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Posted in Economy, Latin America, Racism | 1 Comment »
Thursday, April 10th, 2008
by Mary Madigan*
The poster advertising New York University’s “Academic Freedom in the Age of Permanent Warfare” conference featured a scolding Statue of Liberty pointing an accusatory finger and stating: “YOU! Stop Asking Questions. You’re Either With US or You’re With the TERRORISTS!”
The speakers and attendees gathered around the pastry-laden table at NYU’s new Frederic Ewen Academic Freedom Center last week didn’t appear to be oppressed or under attack. But once they wiped the sugar from their mouths and stood up to speak, they assured the audience that they were, in fact, victims in an “age of permanent warfare.”
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Posted in Arab/Muslim World, Islam, Political Correctness, Academia, Constitution | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008
A briefing by David Wurmser, Summary account by Mimi Stillman*
Mr. Wurmser calls Lebanon a “key battleground between the West as a whole and the forces that seek to drag the Middle East down.” The situation in Lebanon must be viewed in the context of the larger conflict in the region, which is becoming far more dangerous. Two years after the Cedar Revolution in March 2005, which was brought on by the assassination of Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, the Lebanese are still living through a tragedy. The inability to install a new president today is indicative of the situation. It is because of the size and success of the popular demonstrations by the Lebanese, however, that Lebanon has become the focal point of the enemies of the West, namely Iran, Syria, and Hezbollah.
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Posted in Israel, Iran, Palestinians, Lebanon, Foreign Policy | No Comments »
Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
by Diana Muir*
“A land without a people for a people without a land” is one of the most oft-cited phrases in the literature of Zionism—and perhaps also the most problematic. Anti-Zionists cite the phrase as a perfect encapsulation of the fundamental injustice of Zionism: that early Zionists believed Palestine was uninhabited,[1] that they denied—and continue to reject—the existence of a distinct Palestinian culture,[2] and even as evidence that Zionists always planned on an ethnic cleansing of the Arab population.[3] Such assertions are without basis in fact: They both deny awareness on the part of early Zionists of the presence of Arabs in Palestine and exaggerate the coalescence of a Palestinian national identity, which in reality only developed in reaction to Zionist immigration.[4] Nor is it true, as many anti-Zionists still assert, that early Zionists widely employed the phrase.
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Posted in Israel, Arab/Muslim World, Anti-Semitism, Judaism, History | No Comments »
Monday, April 7th, 2008
By Andrew L. Jaffee
The Washington Post reported on “Obama’s penchant while serving in the Illinois legislature for merely voting ‘present’ when faced with some tough issues.” He shows no sign of clarifying what he stands for, most recently regarding Tibet and the Olympics:
… Sen. Barack Obama has said he is torn in his views on the issue.
“I’m of two minds about this,” said the Illinois senator in a CBS interview last week. “On the one hand, I think that what’s happened in Tibet, [and] China’s support of the Sudanese government in Darfur, is a real problem.”
But, he added, “I’m hesitant to make the Olympics a site of political protest because I think it’s partly about bringing the world together.” …
A definite maybe for U.S. foreign policy?
Posted in China, Elections | No Comments »
Monday, April 7th, 2008
Join the Boycott, a watchdog and protest website addressing anti-Israel bias in the Los Angeles Times and the rest of the media, and hosted by Yahoo Geocities, is calling for a high level investigation of Yahoo’s practices, following Yahoo’s repeated interruption of its website service.
In early March, Yahoo took Join the Boycott offline and has kept it offline since. When surfers click on the Join the Boycott website
http://www.geocities.com/truthmasters/jointheboycott.htm
they receive the message “this page is not available”.
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Posted in Israel, Media/Blogsphere, Pure Politics, Constitution | No Comments »
Saturday, April 5th, 2008
By Barry Rubin
It’s hard to satirize a lot of media coverage about Israel and the Arab-Israeli or Israeli-Palestinian conflicts. The truly dreadful stuff is in the details, the small stories and big assumptions on which they are based, rather than in any "scoops" or blockbuster articles.
There are basically two types of such articles. In one, the author’s basic and extreme political bias comes out clearly. The writer is consciously determined to slam Israel. This happens more often in large elements of the European press and in Reuters.
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Posted in Israel, Palestinians, Political Correctness, Media/Blogsphere | 1 Comment »