by James R. Crowe
Anything or anyone is better than Hillary Rodham Clinton
KENTUCKY - USA - Imperial Wizard, Ronald Edwards has stated that,
"anything is better than Hillary Clinton."
White Christian Supremacist group the Ku Klux Klan has endorsed Barack
Obama to be the next President of the United States of America.
Speaking from his Kentucky office in Dawson Springs, the Imperial
Wizard exclaimed that anything or anyone is better than having that
"crazy ass bitch" as President.
This is the first time in Klan history that any member of the KKK has
ever publicly supported an African American candidate for the
presidency.
KKK lodges all over America have been gathering and holding rallies
supporting the black presidential candidate.
KKK members in Tennessee rally against Hillary Clinton and support
Barack Obama
Grand Turk Cletus Monroe has also been very vocal about the election
and has donated thousands of dollars to Obama's election fund.
"The boy's gonna do it. My Klan group has donated up to $250,000 to the
Obama fund. Anything is better than Hillary Clinton. Hell I'll even
adopt a black kid from Africa before I vote for Hillary."
"A few years back we were lynching Negroes. ... more »
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Monday, February 11
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 07:53 PM AKST
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 07:12 AM AKST
Japan has accused Russia of violating its airspace over the Pacific Izu
islands and demanded an explanation.
A Russian Tupolev 95 bomber flew for about three minutes over the isle of Sofugan, 650km (400 miles) south of Tokyo, Japanese officials said. Japan responded by scrambling 22 jets and lodging an official protest with the Russian embassy. But a spokesman for the Russian air force denied any incursion into Japanese airspace had occurred. Alexander Drobyshevsky told Russia's Itar-Tass news agency that strategic bomber flights had been "carried out in strict accordance with international rules on flying over neutral waters, without violating the border between the two countries". Rally Russia last violated Japan's airspace in January 2006 near Rebun Island near the northern island of Hokkaido, Japanese officials said. On Thursday, Japan held an annual rally to demand the return of four disputed islands - known as the Kurils in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan - which Russia seized in the closing days of World War II. The dispute has prevented the two countries from signing a peace treaty to formally end the war. It was not clear whether Saturday's flyby was related to the rally. Despite their territorial disputes, ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 07:01 AM AKST
Dipesh Gadher, Christopher Morgan and Jonathan Oliver
A government minister has warned that inbreeding among immigrants is causing a surge in birth defects - comments likely to spark a new row over the place of Muslims in British society. Phil Woolas, an environment minister, said the culture of arranged marriages between first cousins was the “elephant in the room”. Woolas, a former race relations minister, said: “If you have a child with your cousin the likelihood is there’ll be a genetic problem.” The minister, whose views were supported by medical experts this weekend, said: “The issue we need to debate is first cousin marriages, whereby a lot of arranged marriages are with first cousins, and that produces lots of genetic problems in terms of disability [in children].” Woolas emphasised the practice did not extend to all Muslim communities but was confined mainly to families originating from rural Pakistan. However, up to half of all marriages within these communities are estimated to involve first cousins. Medical research suggests that while British Pakistanis are responsible for 3% of all births, they account for one in three British children born with genetic illnesses. The minister’s comments come as Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 06:56 AM AKST
SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea warned the United States on Friday
pressure over its nuclear weapons programs will only aggravate the
standoff and could lead to an "explosive crisis."
North Korea's Rodong Sinmun newspaper issued the warning, accusing what it called "hardline conservative forces in the U.S." of seeking to increase pressure on Pyongyang in an attempt to disrupt efforts to end the nuclear dispute through dialogue. "As shown in the previous nuclear crises on the Korean peninsula, pursuing a policy of force would only bring about an explosive crisis, not a resolution of the problem," the paper said in a commentary, carried by the country's Korean Central News Agency. "Everything achieved through dialogue so far would evaporate into the air," it said, warning of an unspecified "corresponding response if bellicose U.S. forces" continue to put pressure on North Korea. The paper accused hardline U.S. officials of calling for an end to negotiations with North Korea on the nuclear dispute, raising the North's human rights record and seeking to build a missile-defence system in the region. The warning came as six-country talks on the nuclear dispute, which made progress in shutting down and disabling the North's nuclear reactor, are ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 06:53 AM AKST
By Kaveh L Afrasiabi
In light of the latest news regarding Iran's rapid advances in nuclear centrifuge technology and Tehran's warning that it will reject any new UN measures aimed at halting its nuclear progress, it's clear that Iran's nuclear standoff has entered a new phase - one that may have global consequences and cause irreparable harm to the pillars of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The connection between the two issues has been presented in a different light by Western pundits who have maintained that the NPT will deteriorate in the absence of effective action to counter the Iranian "proliferation activities". Foremost among such pundits is a former official of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Pierre Goldschmidt, who has called for proactive initiatives by the UN Security Council to address proliferation risks often attributed to "NPT loopholes". Of course, first among the "loopholes" is the right to produce nuclear fuel under Article IV of the NPT. In the words of IAEA chief Mohammad ElBaradei, this means that the non-nuclear weapons nations exercising nuclear power would become "virtual nuclear weapon states". The gap between "virtual" and "actual" can be rather wide, however, and may remain so as long as a ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 06:48 AM AKST
By D. PARVAZ
We live in a world where the satisfaction that comes with the resolution of something major is hard to come by. And it's not just that things are determined in good time -- which Democratic candidate "won" on Super Tuesday, how did Natalie Holloway die, what came of Sen. Larry Craig's resignation, etc. -- it's that few seem to ever finish anything they've started. Then again, sometimes, the stated mission is nothing short of impossible. Case in point: Will disgraced evangelical pastor Ted Haggard ever be straight again (if he ever was)? He reportedly dropped out of that homosexual rehab (or "restoration" program) he signed up for a year ago. Well. It was not so much a "program" as it was a peculiar sort of voluntary observation. For those who have forgotten, Haggard was president of the National Association of Evangelicals, a powerful group with about 30 million members. He had serious pull with the Republican Party and even acted as an adviser to President Bush and occasionally -- or every Monday, depending on whom you care to believe -- took and listened in on calls with the president. Then a former male escort went to the ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 06:43 AM AKST
Federal authorities say a high-level Muslim Pentagon aide, who led a
campaign to silence a Pentagon intelligence analyst for taking a hard line against Islam, is running an "influence operation" on behalf of U.S. Muslim groups fronting for the radical Muslim Brotherhood. Hesham H. Islam, a special assistant to Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England, recently criticized Maj. Stephen Coughlin, one of the military's leading authorities on Islamic war doctrine, for making the connection between the religion of Islam and terrorism. After Islam lodged complaints, Coughlin's contract with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon was not renewed. Islam also was upset with briefings Coughlin recently prepared for the U.S. military warning that major U.S. Muslim groups were fronting for the Muslim Brotherhood, a worldwide jihadist movement based in Egypt. Islam, who was born and raised in Egypt, is heavily involved with one of the groups – the Islamic Society of North America, which U.S. prosecutors last year named as a member of the U.S. branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and an unindicted co-conspirator in a major terror-funding case. Islam has persuaded his boss, England, to conduct various outreach with ISNA, including hosting the group's leaders in ... more » |
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