By Joe Kaufman
With its similarity to popular online sites such as Facebook and
MySpace and its links to a network of grassroots blogs, Barack Obama’s
campaign website has been hailed as a testament to the candidate’s
transformative politics. But at least part of the senator’s online
outreach, “Muslim Americans for Obama ’08,” proposes installing Muslim
prayer areas in public places and giving Muslims time off for prayer
and has denounced Obama’s colleagues in the U.S. Senate who happen to
be Jewish. This segment of Obama's online outreach also has ties to
unindicted co-conspirators in terror trials and has recruited Obama
supporters from among the ranks of fundamentalist Muslim extremists.
On the blog, which is attached to BarackObama.com, viewers can read
about “the Senate pro-Israeli zionist hawk Joe Lieberman,” as well as
criticism aimed at Obama himself for getting too cozy with the Israeli
lobby. As stated on the blog, that last part was derived from
information found on Electronic Intifada (EI), a terror apologist
website based in Chicago, Illinois, Obama’s hometown. According to the
site’s co-founder, Ali Abunimah, Senator Obama once told him, regarding
Abunimah’s anti-American and anti-Israel writings, to “Keep up the good
work!”
While the Muslim Americans ... more »
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Tuesday, February 12
by
Publisher
on Tue 12 Feb 2008 07:12 AM AKST
by
Publisher
on Tue 12 Feb 2008 07:10 AM AKST
Hesham Islam's 'resume didn't add up,' official says
Hesham H. Islam (left), Muslim aide to the deputy secretary of defense, with Muslim military chaplain Abuhena M. Saifulislam (right) In a stunning turn of events, a high-level Muslim military aide blamed for costing an intelligence contractor his job will step down from his own Pentagon post, WND has learned. Meanwhile, his rival, Maj. Stephen Coughlin, a leading authority on Islamic war doctrine, may stay in the Pentagon, moving from the office of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the office of the secretary of defense. However, sources say a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey is trying to block his new contract. The top Pentagon aide, Egyptian-born Hesham H. Islam, came under a cloud of suspicion after reports raised doubt about his resume and contacts he had made with radical Muslims. He is expected to leave the government next month, officials say. Islam and Coughlin recently quarreled over intelligence briefings Coughlin presented showing a close connection between the religion of Islam and terrorism. Coughlin's contract with the Joint Chiefs, which But as a result of the ensuing firestorm that played out in the conservative press – led by Washington ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 12 Feb 2008 07:07 AM AKST
By christina boyle
Dangerous germs lurking around city gyms may be making you sick, the Daily News has found. A News spot check of health clubs - including several of the city's most expensive gyms - uncovered potentially harmful bacteria lingering all over exercise mats, bicycles, drinking fountains and other surfaces The germs could easily make you ill - especially if you're rundown, elderly or have a compromised immune system, experts said. The equipment posing the highest risks are cardiovascular machines used by many people in quick succession and equipment, including dumbbells or mats, that are passed around. "I believe it," said Alex Marquez, 34, from Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, who ended up taking antibiotics in a hospital after his foot swelled from an infection doctors said was caught at the gym. "They told me I probably got it when I stepped on the wet floor getting out of the shower," he said. "First my foot was itching and scratching made a cut so the infection got into the blood. "Now when I come out the shower I wear slippers. It wasn't fun. You've got to realize that everybody uses the equipment, and you don't know where they've been." The News ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 11:34 PM CST
Germany, Angela Merkel
German Chancellor Angela Merkel met Prime Minister Ehud Olmert on Monday to discuss Israel's conflict with Hamas Islamists in the Gaza Strip as well as Iran's controversial nuclear program, Israeli officials said. An Israeli official said before the meeting that Merkel was "very curious" about the situation along the Gaza border, where violence threatens to complicate Palestinian statehood talks that resumed after the Annapolis peace conference in November. Public pressure has been mounting in Israel for Olmert to order a wide scale military operation against Hamas to curb cross-border rocket fire that has been disrupting life in towns and communities along the frontier. While Olmert toured Berlin's Jewish Museum, pausing to tell reporters that Israel was "at war" with Hamas, residents of the southern Israeli town of Sderot disrupted traffic in Tel Aviv to protest against his government's failure to end the launchings. A senior Israeli official declined to comment on whether Olmert would lobby Merkel to support stronger Israeli military action in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, where 1.5 million Palestinians live in densely populated areas. Israel's recent tightening of a Gaza blockade and cutback in fuel supplies, part of a declared bid to pressure militants to ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 11:29 PM CST
By Mazal Mualem, Haaretz Correspondent, and Haaretz Service
Tags: Israel, peace process Shas Chairman Eli Yishai on Monday stepped up his party's threats to resign from the government over the ongoing peace talks with the Palestinians, warning against moving forward in the peace process as long as terrorism against Israelis continues. "If there is any diplomatic progress in the negotiations with Palestinians beyond the current situation, and we are still under fire from Qassams and West Bank incidents, Shas will quit the government immediately," he said. Shas has taken a tougher stance on diplomatic issues, and stepped up threats to resign from the government, since the right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu party walked out of the government in protest over the decision to launch talks on the core issues of the conflict, including Jerusalem, refugees, and borders. The ultra-Orthodox Sephardic party has said that talks on Jerusalem would constitute a red line, and in recent weeks has demanded that other core issues like permanent borders and refugees be kept off the table as well. On Thursday, the Shas Knesset faction intends to tour the City of David in Jerusalem in order to express its commitment to the capital and make ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 11:26 PM CST
By Stan Goodenough
The Israel Defense Forces have been ordered to prepare for a ground invasion of the Gaza Strip as terrorism from the "Palestinians" there continues unabated. So said Defense Minister Ehud Barak in a meeting of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Monday as anger boiled over in the Negev town of Sderot following a week of intensive Kassam rocket attacks which left a number of residents wounded, some seriously. "The residents of Sderot and the Gaza periphery are in the midst of a severe trial," Barak said, according to The Jerusalem Post. "The cry and the pain are difficult and understandable, and it is the duty of our government - in conjunction with the military and defensive effort - to assist them in every way." Cynics wondered whether the minister's threat of a Gaza invasion was made simply to pacify citizens' anger. Israelis have been calling with increasing stridency for effective action to defend the south. While the IDF has upped its targeted killings of Hamas and other "Palestinian" terrorists, however, the attacks have only increased in intensity and efficiency. Some commentators questioned the wisdom of sending the IDF into the Gaza Strip on the ground.... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 11 Feb 2008 11:21 PM CST
Prime minister repeatedly denies negotiations to split up holy city
By Aaron Klein JERUSALEM – Current behind-the-scenes Israeli-Palestinian talks include negotiations aimed at dividing Jerusalem, according to a senior Palestinian negotiator involved in the negotiations. "Since [last November's U.S.-sponsored] Annapolis [summit], our regular meetings have been dealing with all the core issues, yes, of course including Jerusalem," said the Palestinian negotiator, who agreed to speak only on condition of anonymity. The official said he was talking off-the-record for fear of contradicting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who has repeatedly insisted Israeli-Palestinian negotiations are not dealing with the status of Jerusalem. The Israeli Shas party, an important coalition partner in Olmert's government, has stated it would bolt the prime minister's coalition if it becomes clear the Israeli government is negotiating the ceding any part of Jerusalem. Shas' departure could collapse Olmert's government. "Nobody is talking about Jerusalem. The moment Jerusalem is being discussed Shas will leave the government – period," Shas Spokesman Roi Lachmanovitch told Israel National News. Olmert must maintain a majority of the Knesset's 120 seats to continue ruling. He currently rules with a slight plurality. If Shas, with its 12 seats, bolts the government, Olmert would be forced ... more » |
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