In House speech suggests pontiff trying to bolster church membership
Rep. Tom Tancredo – who vied for the Republican presidential nomination
to make illegal immigration a priority issue – suggested in a House
speech yesterday that Pope Benedict XVI is encouraging Latin Americans
to come to the U.S. to bolster flagging membership in the Catholic
Church.
The pontiff, asked by reporters on his flight to the U.S. Tuesday if he
would address Hispanic immigration, said the U.S. must do "everything
possible to fight ... all forms of violence so that immigrants may lead
dignified lives."
Tancredo, a former Catholic, told House colleagues, "I would like to
know what part of our lax immigration policy is considered 'violent.' I
fail to see how accepting more refugees than any other nation while
providing free health care, free education, free housing and free
social service benefits to millions of illegal aliens in this country
is any way 'degrading' to them or 'undignified.'"
See Tancredo's speech
About 40 percent of the 70 million Catholics in the U.S. are Hispanic.
Tancredo also took exception to the pope telling U.S. bishops Wednesday
in Washington, "I want to encourage you and your communities to
continue to welcome ... more »
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Sunday, April 20
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 11:12 AM AKDT
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 11:07 AM AKDT
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's hard-line president declared that crude oil prices, now above $115 a barrel, are too low, state media reported Saturday. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told an oil and gas exhibition in Tehran on Friday that he thought the commodity still had to "discover its real value," according to the Web site of Iran's state-run television. Oil prices have hit all-time highs above $115 a barrel in recent weeks, amid reports that oil and gasoline reserves in the United States were lower than expected and as the dollar sinks to record lows. "The oil price of $115 a barrel in today's global markets is a deceiving figure. Oil is a strategic commodity that needs to discover its real value," the Web site quoted Ahmadinejad as saying. Crude oil futures surged to a new trading record of $117 a barrel Friday following an attack on a key pipeline in Nigeria. The increase capped a week of record highs fueled by supply woes and the dollar's weakness relative to other major currencies. Ahmadinejad said despite high oil prices, the true value of crude oil, adjusted for inflation, is currently less than what it was in 1980.... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 11:06 AM AKDT
WASHINGTON — A U.S. report projects a concerted effort by Saudi Arabia
to match Iran's nuclear weapons program.
The report, submitted to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, took note of a U.S. assessment that Teheran's nuclear program frightens the Saudi royal family "to their core." "The future Middle East landscape may include a number of nuclear armed or nuclear weapons-capable states vying for influence in a notoriously unstable region," the report, released in early April 2008, said. The report, ordered by ranking Republican Sen. Richard Lugar, was authored by staff member Bradley Bowman. The assessment on Saudi nuclear plans was based on discussions with senior U.S. diplomats in Riyad. Saudi Arabia would be followed by other Middle East states bent on producing or acquiring nuclear weapons, the report said. The report, based on interviewing hundreds of analysts, diplomats in Washington and the Middle East in the last half of 2007, cited Turkey. In contrast, Egypt would not develop a nuclear weapons program, the report said. Bowman said such a program would encounter strong opposition from Israel and the United States. The report warned Congress that U.S. credibility in the region was being eroded amid Iran's nuclear program. Bowman ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 10:58 AM AKDT
'They cause doubt. If one of their members is caught, who will be
named?'
Editor's Note: The following report is excerpted from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin, the premium online newsletter published by the founder of WND. Subscriptions are $99 a year or, for monthly trials, just $9.95 per month for credit card users, and provide instant access for the complete reports. FBI chief Robert Mueller, III LONDON – The high level of frustration expressed by British intelligence officials over their government's failure so far to win parliamentary support to extend the time terrorists can be held without charges from 28 to 42 days could be solved, according to America's top counter-terrorist officer, says a report in Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin. At a closed conference in London last week FBI chief Robert Mueller III warned that Britain's detention laws had created "a dark hole of intelligence" which was having a global effect. The solution, he said, was "plea-bargaining -- offering a deal in exchange for a sentence cut." Mueller said the frustration of MI5 and MI6 due to the restrictions on how they can obtain "vital information" from suspects was seriously hampering the war on terror. The conference was attended by ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 10:43 AM AKDT
The New York-based Conference Board raised its forecast of future
economic activity this week, reversing five months of decline, the AP
reported.
The index is designed to forecast economic activity in the next three to six months based on 10 economic components, including stock prices, building permits and initial claims for unemployment benefits. By any logical standard, this should be good news. Maybe not the kind of news where everybody puts on silly hats and marches down Main Street, but it is good news. I think. I suppose it could be argued that it isn't good, or good enough, or stupendous news, but I think it ought to be difficult to argue that an economic uptick is bad news. In what has become the AP's "new" style of mixing facts with opinion and presenting what emerges as "news," the reverse in America's economic slide is actually not good news at all. The AP report stressed consumer confidence and how important consumer confidence was to the health of the overall economy. The AP's report about the economic upturn was headlined, "Economy Sends Signals of More Weakness to Come." The American economy is backed only by the confidence of those who invest ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 10:41 AM AKDT
Are you having a hard time paying your bills, making your mortgage
payments or putting your kids through college? You need to know how
much of your hard-earned income the government is skimming off and
diverting into handouts to immigrants and illegal immigrants.
You can read the depressing details in the new 70-page document called "The Economic and Fiscal Impact of Immigration" by Edwin S. Rubenstein. A Manhattan Institute adjunct fellow with a mile-long scholarly resume, he has been doing financial analysis ever since he directed the studies of government waste for the Grace Commission of 1984. The bottom line, which you need to know for your own bottom line, is that U.S. taxpayers are giving more than $9,000 a year in cash or benefits to each immigrant, a third of whom are in the country illegally. That's $36,000 for each immigrant household of four. Because the U.S. has 37 million immigrants, legal and illegal, the national cost was more than $346 billion last year, which was twice our fiscal deficit. The cost of immigrants is so high because, as Rubenstein writes, "Immigrants are poorer, pay less tax and are more likely to receive public benefits than natives." Big Brother ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 10:23 AM AKDT
By J. Matt Barber
Can you imagine officials at a middle school, junior high or high school setting aside a day to promote "tolerance" for heavy smoking and drinking among children? How about a day where teachers encourage kids to "embrace who they are," pick up that crack pipe and give it a stiff toke? Neither can I. The public would go ballistic, and for good reason. But that hasn't stopped officials in thousands of schools across the country from promoting other politically correct and socially "in-vogue" behaviors that – both statistically and manifestly – are every bit as dangerous as the aforementioned frowned-upon behaviors. That's exactly what the homosexual activist "Day of Silence" is all about – advancing, through clever, feel-good propaganda and full acceptance of the homosexual lifestyle among children. Just the facts, Ma'am By recently admitting that "HIV is a gay disease," Matt Foreman, outgoing executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, acknowledged what the medical community has known for decades: The homosexual lifestyle is extremely high risk and often leads to disease and even death. In fact, multiple studies have established that homosexual conduct, especially among males, is considerably more hazardous to one's ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 10:11 AM AKDT
VIENNA, April 20 (Reuters) - Global food price rises are leading to
"silent mass murder" and commodities markets have brought "horror" to
the world, the United Nations' food envoy told an Austrian newspaper on
Sunday. Jean Ziegler, UN special rapporteur on the right to food, told
Kurier am Sonntag that growth in biofuels, speculation on commodities
markets and European Union export subsidies mean the West is
responsible for mass starvation in poorer countries. Ziegler said he
was bound to highlight the "madness" of people who think that hunger is
down to fate. "Hunger has not been down to fate for a long time -- just
as (Karl) Marx thought. It is rather that a murder is behind every
victim. This is silent mass murder," he said in an interview. Ziegler
blamed globalisation for "monopolising the riches of the earth" and
said multinationals were responsible for a type of "structural
violence". "And we have a herd of market traders, speculators and
financial bandits who have turned wild and constructed a world of
inequality and horror. We have to put a stop to this," he said. Ziegler
said he believed that one day starving people could rise up against
their persecutors. "It's ... more »
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