Today was odd. But, I guess since these are odd times, then odd is normal. There are parallels that my third eye sees but I'm unable to focus clearly. This causes my vision to be annoyingly obscured. I know that it's obscured, but have not figured out a way to clear it up.
1. Islam is not a religion
2. Islam is being revered as a religion. Hypocrisy
3. Hypocrisy is something that liberals use to use
4. Nothing is against Islam as long as it benefits or furthers it's domination
5. Domination is the superior and Submission is necessary for domination to be. So, the "RELIGION" is that of Domination. We all aspire to be g-d like. If the g-d is "domination", then it is reasonable to infer that submission is only to the G-d. And domination is to be in the image of g-d.
Hypocrisy--------hmmmm.
I submit the following:
Here are 2 articles from the same day that show the hypocrisy of IRAN
Iran condemns Virginia Tech shooting
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1176152818054&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Iran on Tuesday condemned a gunman's rampage the previous day at Virginia Tech university which left 33 people dead and was the deadliest shooting rampage in modern US history.
"While condemning this [attack], [Iran] expresses condolences with the nation and the families of those killed," Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini said in a statement, a copy of which was made available to The Associated Press.
"Attacking innocent people, irrespective of their race and nationality, is contrary to divine and human values no matter which group or person carries out such an act under any name," the Iranian statement said.
Despite lack of diplomatic relations between the two, Iran has in the past condemned violence and terrorist attacks in the United States, including the September 11, 2001 attacks, the deadliest on US soil.
The US and Iran broke relations in 1979, after Iranian students stormed the US Embassy in Teheran and held its occupants hostage for 444 days.
Relations somewhat thawed after reformist former President Mohammad Khatami called for dialogue to bring down the "wall of mistrust," but ties worsened after US President George W. Bush named Iran as part of the "the axis of evil."
The United States and Iran are also at odds over Teheran's controversial nuclear program. Washington accuses Teheran of seeking to build nuclear weapons, a charge Iran denies.
Three cars damaged by stones thrown in West BankBy JPOST.COM STAFF
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1176152828312
Three Israeli vehicles were damaged by stones thrown by Palestinians in the West Bank on Wednesday night.
Two cars were struck southeast of Kalkilya while the other was hit west of Hebron.
No one was wounded.
Then you have THIS article:
Espionage Galore under a Middle East Nuclear Cloud
DEBKAfile Special Analysis
April 17, 2007, 9:19 PM (GMT+02:00)
It sounded like a contest.
On Tuesday, April 17, the Shin Bet intelligence service reported Iranian intelligence had intensified its efforts to recruit Israelis as spies, targeting former Iranians applying for visas to visit their families. One young man had been snared and paid “expenses” for enlisting a friend in security and collecting information. The Shin Bet detained him on landing home, before he did any harm.
Two hours later, in Cairo, a nuclear engineer Mohammed Gaber, was accused by Prosecutor-General Abdul-Maquid Mahmoud of spying on Egypt’s nuclear program on behalf of the Mossad, which was said to have paid him $17,000. An Irishman and Japanese were sought in connection with the affair. Israel dismissed the charge as another of Cairo’s unfounded spy myths, whose dissemination was not conducive to good relations.
Neither case is isolated. Two days earlier, the Israeli-Arab parliamentarian Azmi Beshara admitted from a safe distance to the Qatar-based al Jazeera TV channel that he was under suspicion of spying for Hizballah during its war with Israel and would not be returning home any time soon.
Add on the US defense secretary Robert Gates’ visits to Jordan, Israel and Egypt this week reportedly to coordinate and oversee preparations connected to a potential military operation against Iran and, in the view of DEBKAfile’s intelligence sources, these espionage rumbles denote a far greater upheaval boililng up below ground.
Most can be traced one way or another to the mysterious disappearance of the Iranian general Ali Reza Asgari from Istanbul in February. Tehran’s job description of the missing general – a former deputy defense minister, who also worked with the Lebanese Hizballah in the 1980 - is correct as far as it goes. But the failure to bring it up to date is an attempt to obfuscate the fact that, at the time of his disappearance, he headed Iran’s Middle East spy networks.
The cases disclosed Tuesday may be just the tip of the iceberg, with more spy dramas on the way. But even at this early stage of a potential intelligence earthquake, certain conclusions are indicated.
Firstly, Israeli will soon have no choice but to declare Iran an enemy state and ban Israeli travel to the Islamic Republic for the first time in the 28 years since Ayatollah Khomeini’s revolution. Surprisingly, Israelis are still legally permitted to visit Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Iran.
The Shin Bet did not need to publicize Iran’s intense hunt for Israeli spies in order to stop those visits; there are other ways. The espionage case would not have been brought out in the open without the knowledge of the relevant ministers – certainly not a graphic account of how the Iranian consulate in Istanbul, whence Gen. Asgari vanished, doubles as the distribution center for visas to Iran and a recruiting center for spies. Israelis applying for visas are obliged to deposit their Israeli passports there and issued with travel documents which gain them entry to Tehran. This process is drawn out to enable Iranian intelligence agents to make their first pitch to the targeted Israeli. It is followed up after he enters Iran.
The Shin Bet’s sudden outburst of transparency indicates that the scene is being set for a major diplomatic, military or intelligence step in the summer. This time, the Israeli government will not repeat at least one of the mistakes committed in July 2006, when it refused to declare that Israel was at war and the Hizballah an enemy, even after its forces crossed in to northern Israel, kidnapped two soldiers and let loose with a Katyusha barrage.
Israel is now putting the horse before the cart and declaring Iran an enemy country before the event.
It is therefore vital to deter Israeli nationals from visiting Iran in advance of potential Middle East hostilities. If Iran is involved, even through its allies or the Hizballah, Israelis in the Islamic Republic would be in danger of being taken captive or hostage.
Israel’s latest posture and precautions are likely to have the dual effect of raising Middle East tensions and placing Iran’s ancient Jewish community, reduced now to 25,000, in jeopardy. “Israeli spy rings” may soon be “uncovered” by Iranian security agents.
Second, the Middle East has embarked on a nuclear arms race. It is no secret that at last month’s Arab summit in Riyadh, the Saudi ruler strongly urged his fellows to unite their national nuclear programs under a single roof. Though played down, this was the summit’s most important decision – not the so-called Saudi peace plan, although it made the most waves. It was a step intended to produce an Arab nuclear option versus the Iranian weapons program.
Every aspect of the unified Arab nuclear program is therefore extraordinarily sensitive and hemmed in with exceptional security measures. Each has become a prime intelligence target - and not only for Israel. Hence the song and dance the Egyptian prosecutor general made Tuesday of an alleged Israeli spy network said to operate out of Hong Kong, with an Irish and a Japanese agent charged with planting Israeli espionage software in Egyptian nuclear program’s computers, together with an Egyptian engineer. Egyptian intelligence was making sure to warn off any Egyptian tempted to work for Israeli intelligence, just as the Shin Bet was cautioning Israelis to beware of falling into Iranian intelligence traps.
The events of a single day brought Iran and its nuclear threat into sharp relief as the most pressing issues for Israel. Relations with the Palestinians and Syria, on which so many words are poured day by day, pale in comparison.
British journalists' call to boycott Israeli goods is condemned in many quarters - British and international
http://debka.com/headline.php?hid=4071
April 18, 2007, 8:47 PM (GMT+02:00)
Monday, April 16, the British National Union of Journalists voted to boycott Israeli goods as part of a protest against last year’s war in Lebanon. The vote, carried 66 to 54, read: “This ADM calls for a boycott of Israeli goods similar to those boycotts in the struggles against apartheid in South Africa. It also called for sanctions to be imposed on Israel by the British government and the United Nations.
After a show of hands twice failed to give a clear result, the conference room was closed for the final vote. The motion also called for the end of “Israeli aggression in Gaza and other occupied territories.”
DEBKAfile notes that no sanctions were proposed against the Palestinian kidnappers of the British journalists’ BBC colleague Alan Johnston [who claimed two days later to have killed him.] On the contrary; the NUJ’s national executive committee was instructed to support pro-Palestinian organizations.
DEBKAfile also reports a move to remove the Holocaust from the British schools curriculum on the grounds that the subject "offended" some members of the Muslim population, which claims it never occurred.
In 2006, the UK had the highest incidence of fast-rising anti-Semitic violence in the world, followed by France, Canada and Australia.
<>
The figures were released by Tel Aviv University’s Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Anti-Semitism and Racism on the occasion of the Day of Remembrance for victims of the Nazi Holocaust.
Democrats scramble to court Sharpton
By BETH FOUHY, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 6 minutes ago
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070418/ap_on_el_pr/campaign2008_sharpton
NEW YORK - Democratic presidential contenders are scrambling for support in what's being dubbed the Al Sharpton' name=c1>SEARCHNews News Photos Images Web' name=c3>Al Sharpton primary. The civil rights leader livened up the 2004 Democratic primary with his pompadour hairdo and sharp, witty oratory. This election, the high-profile Sharpton, fresh from the fight over Don Imus' derogatory remarks, is attracting all the party's major candidates this week for his annual National Action Network convention.
The solid attendance — starting with John Edwards' name=c1>SEARCHNews News Photos Images Web' name=c3>
John Edwards on Wednesday and continuing with Sens.
Hillary Rodham Clinton' name=c1>SEARCHNews News Photos Images Web' name=c3>
Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama (news, bio, voting record) later this week — reflects Sharpton's prominence in the party, concern that he might run again and the Democrats' effort to appeal to the base, particularly black voters.
He is in NO way a reverend.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
- 10/18 - 10/25 (5)
- 10/11 - 10/18 (10)
- 10/04 - 10/11 (10)
- 09/27 - 10/04 (17)
- 09/20 - 09/27 (2)
- 09/13 - 09/20 (1)
- 11/11 - 11/18 (1)
- 11/04 - 11/11 (5)
- 10/21 - 10/28 (6)
- 05/13 - 05/20 (1)
- 04/29 - 05/06 (2)
- 04/22 - 04/29 (2)
- 04/15 - 04/22 (4)
- 04/08 - 04/15 (4)
No comments:
Post a Comment