Was Helen Thomas Right ?

Why Helen Thomas Was Right Hard Facts About Israeli/Palestinian Peace Peace Possibilities By JEFFERSON CHASE Now that all the accusations and insults about the Gaza Flotilla and Helen Thomas incidents have been hurled from both sides, it is time to look at the often-ignored facts underlying the Israel-Palestine conflict. Because while it is very hard to believe in the present atmosphere, peace and justice for both Palestinians and Jews is possible – extremely difficult to achieve to be sure, but possible nevertheless. 1. After the horrors of Hitler’s Germany it was natural for those Jews to want a country of … Continue reading Was Helen Thomas Right ?

10 Books That May Help America

10 Books That Might Help Change America Summer Reading By RALPH NADER Summer time is reading time. Here are ten suggested new books: 1. Toxic Talk (Thomas Dunne Books) by Bill Press, the liberal talk show host, unloads in his words, on “how the radical right has poisoned America’s airwaves.” The five major syndicates are dominated by the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, Michael Savage and Bill O’Reilly. Using their own statements, Press applies indignation, satire and humor to demonstrate the bigotry, the falsehoods and the propaganda that sustain the concentrated power of corporate oligarchs … Continue reading 10 Books That May Help America

Turkey and Israel’s Not-So-Secret Meeting

Business as Usual Behind Turkey and Israel’s Not-So-Secret Meeting By RANNIE AMIRI Recriminatory words exchanged between Turkey and Israel over the latter’s May 31 assault on the Gaza-bound Freedom Flotilla have given way to the pragmatism of national self-interest. On June 30, ministers from the two countries “secretly” met in Brussels to attempt to smooth over differences and repair bilateral ties marred in the wake of the attack. It was a startling development when contrasted with the indignation voiced by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan after eight Turkish activists and one dual U.S.-Turkish citizen aboard the Mavi Marmara were … Continue reading Turkey and Israel’s Not-So-Secret Meeting

Americans – Radicalising or helping Pakistanis tackle Terrorists?

Zigzag Follies Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban By BRIAN CLOUGHLEY A paper published on June 13 by the London School of Economics states that Pakistan, at the highest political and military levels, fosters and supports insurgents in Afghanistan. Its author, Matt Waldman of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, declares that “as the provider of sanctuary, and very substantial financial, military and logistical support to the [Afghan] insurgency, the ISI [Pakistan’s Directorate of Inter Services Intelligence] appears to have strong strategic and operational influence – reinforced by coercion. There is thus a strong case that the ISI and elements of [Pakistan’s] … Continue reading Americans – Radicalising or helping Pakistanis tackle Terrorists?

Secular Pakistan?

COMMENT: Secularity or secularities? —Ahmad Ali Khalid A person who calls for a greater role for religion is by no means a theocrat and a person who calls for the public sphere to be free from an assertive and populist religiosity is by no means anti-Islamic or an atheist. The differing shades of grey have to be appreciated in these complex debates We have scholars and intellectuals decrying secularism as the root of atheism, moral decadence and spiritual crisis, while on the other hand we have thinkers and intellectuals rooting for secularism. Why is there so much polarisation and so … Continue reading Secular Pakistan?

Pakistanis to experience a new phase of terror by Mullahs?

VIEW: A new phase of terror? —Naeem Tahir The attack on Data Darbar makes a naked and blatant declaration of terror against a peaceful Muslim community that does not subscribe to Wahabiism, Salafiism or Qutbism. It has shaken up the largest Muslim sect in the country The attacks on the shrine of Hazrat Data Ganj Bakhsh in Lahore killed 44 worshippers in prayer and injured another 100. The terrorists chose Thursday to execute their plan when the attendance was very high. There is no precedent for such an atrocity; an attack on peace-loving people in a shrine that symbolises sufi … Continue reading Pakistanis to experience a new phase of terror by Mullahs?

Psychotic? Suicide Bombers?

ANALYSIS: The terrorist archetype —Salman Tarik Kureshi These orgies of violence have little to do with ‘causes’ and everything to do with the psychotic aberrations bred into the terrorists. This is a psychosis that is primarily driven by the desire to achieve an enormous degree of notoriety, posthumously or otherwise, through committing violence For most of us, it would have been beyond belief that the atrocity perpetrated at Data Darbar could even have been contemplated. But it was and such acts are being contemplated, planned, organised and executed, even as I write. Nor was this perpetration different to the attack … Continue reading Psychotic? Suicide Bombers?

Why seek other nations to build a life?

BOOK REVIEW: Views from other worlds —by Afrah Jamal Mehwar Ki Talash By Sabuha Khan Academy Bazyaft; Pp 224; Rs 250 and Rs 350 (audio book) They head to other lands that guarantee the freedoms promised by their own and mould themselves in the image of the people that provide them. The immigrants’ transformation is complete but their quest for identity has just begun. Sabuha Khan, a Pakistani, is on a quest of her own as she steps into Toronto — a city she wryly observes to be ninth from the top from a place that is probably ninth from … Continue reading Why seek other nations to build a life?

The trouble with Twitter

As the sacking of a CNN journalist for a tweet on an ayatollah’s death has shown, it’s hard to convey nuance in 140 characters Brian Whitaker guardian.co.uk, Thursday 8 July 2010 11.30 BST Article history When Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Fadlallah died in Lebanon on Sunday, tributes poured in from Lebanese politicians and religious leaders of almost every hue. There were official condolences, too, from further afield: from Bahrain, Jordan, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Yemen, and from the Arab League and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference. Britain’s ambassador to Lebanon, Frances Guy, praised him in her blog, … Continue reading The trouble with Twitter

The sad demise of celibate love

It is symptomatic of modern values that we conclude Cardinal Newman’s intense love for a man meant he was a homosexual Jack Valero guardian.co.uk, Thursday 8 July 2010 17.00 BST Article history In October 2008 there was excitement over the exhumation, in the outskirts of Birmingham, of an eminent Victorian. The remains of Cardinal John Henry Newman were being dug up as part of the process towards declaring him a saint – Pope Benedict XVI will declare him “blessed” (the first stage) during his September visit to the UK – but the move disturbed more than the ground. The controversy … Continue reading The sad demise of celibate love